UNITED STATES 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Washington, D.C. 20549 
 
FORM N-CSR 
 
CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED 
MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES 
 
Investment Company Act file number 811- 4186 
 
John Hancock Income Securities Trust 
(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter) 
 
601 Congress Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210 
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code) 
 
Salvatore Schiavone
Treasurer
601 Congress Street 
 
Boston, Massachusetts 02210 
 
(Name and address of agent for service) 
Registrant's telephone number, including area code:       617-663-4497   
 
 
Date of fiscal year end:  October 31 
 
 
Date of reporting period:  October 31, 2009 



ITEM 1. REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS.






Management’s discussion of
Fund performance

By MFC Global Investment Management (U.S.), LLC

U.S. bonds generated double-digit gains for the 12 months ended October 31, 2009. The period began with the U.S. economy in the throes of a severe recession and the financial sector struggling with a liquidity crisis in the credit markets. As 2009 began, however, market conditions changed dramatically as efforts by the federal government to ease the credit crisis and stimulate the economy began to bear fruit. Improving economic and credit conditions led to a resurgence in corporate bonds, which were the best performers in the bond market for the 12-month period.

For the year ended October 31, 2009, John Hancock Income Securities Trust produced a total return of 39.06% at net asset value (NAV) and 47.95% at market value. The Fund’s NAV return and its market performance differ because the market share price is subject to the dynamics of secondary market trading, which could cause it to trade at a discount or premium to the Fund’s NAV share price at any time. By comparison, the average UBS leveraged closed-end investment-grade bond fund returned 33.13% at NAV and 38.60% at market value, while the Barclays Capital Government/Credit Bond Index returned 14.60%.

The Fund’s outperformance of the broad bond market indexes and its peer group average resulted primarily from a significant increase in the Fund’s exposure to corporate bonds. With corporate bonds trading at severely distressed prices in late 2008, we took advantage of the depressed valuations to substantially increase our holdings, and we were rewarded as corporate bonds rebounded sharply in 2009. The increase in corporate bonds was matched by a corresponding decrease in the portfolio’s mortgage-backed securities, where the risk/reward trade-off had become unfavorable. Contributors among the Fund’s corporate bond holdings included insurance company Genworth Financial, Inc., broadcaster Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. and telecommunication services provider West Corp. On the downside, telephone directory publisher R.H. Donnelley Corp. and casino operator Little Traverse Bay Band of Odawa Indians were the weakest performers.

This commentary reflects the views of the portfolio managers through the end of the Fund’s period discussed in this report. The managers’ statements reflect their own opinions. As such, they are in no way guarantees of future events, and are not intended to be used as investment advice or a recommendation regarding any specific security. They are also subject to change at any time as market and other conditions warrant.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

The major factors in this Fund’s performance are interest rate and credit risk. When interest rates rise, bond prices usually fall. Generally, an increase in the Fund’s average maturity will make it more sensitive to interest-rate risk. Higher-yielding bonds are riskier than lower-yielding bond, and their value may fluctuate more in response to market conditions.

6  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Portfolio summary

Portfolio Diversification1       

Corporate Bonds      68% 

U.S. Government & Agency Obligations      19% 

Collateralized Mortgage Obligations       9% 

Preferred Stocks       3% 

Other Securities       1% 

 
Sector Composition1,2       

Financials  22%  Materials       5% 


U.S. Government & Agency  18%  Consumer Staples       5% 


Collateralized Mortgage Obligations  9%  Telecommunication Services       5% 


Energy  9%  Health Care       3% 


Consumer Discretionary  8%  Information Technology       2% 


Utilities  7%  Asset-Backed Securities       1% 


Industrials  6%     

 
 
Quality Composition1       

AAA  20%     

 
AA  5%     

 
A  21%     

 
BBB  30%     

 
BB  8%     

 
B  7%     

 
CCC  6%     

 
Short-Term Investments and Other  3%     

 

1 As a percentage of the Fund’s total investments on October 31, 2009.

2 Sector investing is subject to greater risks than the market as a whole. Because the Fund may focus on particular sectors of the economy, its performance may depend on the performance of those sectors.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  7 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

Fund’s investments

Securities owned by the Fund on 10-31-09

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Corporate Bonds 92.73%        $142,866,237 

(Cost $141,904,288)         
 
Consumer Discretionary 10.03%        15,449,835 
 
Auto Components 0.80%         

Allison Transmission, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)(Z)  11.000%  11-01-15  $485,000  494,700 

Exide Technologies,         
 Sr Sec Note Ser B (Z)  10.500  03-15-13  445,000  442,775 

Tenneco Automotive, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Sub Note (Z)  8.625  11-15-14  320,000  301,600 
 
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure 2.92%         

Arcos Dorados BV,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  7.500  10-01-19  265,000  255,725 

Chukchansi Economic Development Authority,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  8.000  11-15-13  460,000  299,000 

Fontainebleau Las Vegas,         
 Note (H)(S)(Z)  10.250  06-15-15  705,000  24,675 

Greektown Holdings LLC,         
 Sr Note (H)(S)(Z)  10.750  12-01-13  1,015,000  203,000 

Jacobs Entertainment, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  9.750  06-15-14  600,000  546,000 

Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians,         
 Sr Note (H)(S)(Z)  10.250  02-15-14  500,000  157,500 

MGM Mirage, Inc.,         
 Sr Sec Note (S)(Z)  10.375  05-15-14  80,000  85,200 

MTR Gaming Group, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  12.625  07-15-14  175,000  171,500 
 Gtd Sr Sub Note Ser B (Z)  9.000  06-01-12  390,000  323,700 

Seminole Indian Tribe of Florida,         
 Sr Sec Bond (S)(Z)  6.535  10-01-20  650,000  585,410 

Turning Stone Resort Casino,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  9.125  09-15-14  1,540,000  1,470,700 

Waterford Gaming LLC,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  8.625  09-15-14  290,000  185,600 

Yonkers Racing Corp.,         
 Sr Sec Note (S)  11.375  07-15-16  180,000  187,200 
 
Household Durables 0.49%         

Whirlpool Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  8.600  05-01-14  335,000  382,419 
 Sr Note (Z)  8.000  05-01-12  335,000  364,321 

See notes to financial statements

8  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Media 5.16%         

AMC Entertainment, Inc.,         
 Sr Note   8.750%  06-01-19  $125,000  $128,125 

Cablevision Systems Corp.,         
 Sr Note (S)  8.625  09-15-17  135,000  139,725 

Canadian Satellite Radio Holdings, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  12.750  02-15-14  979,000  594,742 

Charter Communications Holdings II LLC,         
 Gtd Sr Note (H)(S)  10.250  10-01-13  447,000  502,875 

Cinemark USA, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  8.625  06-15-19  180,000  186,300 

CSC Holdings, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.875  02-15-18  390,000  401,700 

DirecTV Holdings LLC,         
 Gtd Sr Note  7.625  05-15-16  350,000  379,750 
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  4.750  10-01-14  280,000  285,648 

News America Holdings, Inc.,         
 Gtd Note (Z)  7.750  01-20-24  1,020,000  1,068,625 
 Gtd Note (Z)  7.600  10-11-15  1,000,000  1,145,247 

News America, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note  6.900  03-01-19  205,000  229,830 

Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.,         
 Gtd Note PIK (S)(Z)  7.000  01-15-14  254,089  170,557 

Nexstar Finance, Inc.,         
 Sr Sub Note (Z)  7.000  01-15-14  84,000  56,490 

R.H. Donnelley Corp.,         
 Sr Disc Note Ser A–1 (H)(Z)  6.875  01-15-13  200,000  11,500 
 Sr Disc Note Ser A–2 (H)(Z)  6.875  01-15-13  300,000  17,250 
 Sr Note Ser A–4 (H)(Z)  8.875  10-15-17  495,000  28,463 

Regal Cinemas Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  8.625  07-15-19  115,000  119,025 

TCI Communications, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  9.800  02-01-12  1,500,000  1,718,172 

Time Warner Cable, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.750  07-01-18  605,000  666,023 

XM Satellite Radio, Inc.,         
 Sr Sec Note (S)  11.250  06-15-13  100,000  105,000 
 
Specialty Retail 0.39%         

Staples, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  9.750  01-15-14  500,000  605,926 
 
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods 0.27%         

Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note  11.125  04-15-14  395,000  407,837 
 
Consumer Staples 6.30%        9,706,920 
Beverages 1.66%         

Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  5.375  01-15-20  250,000  254,151 
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  4.125  01-15-15  355,000  357,942 

Dr. Pepper Snapple Group, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.820  05-01-18  280,000  319,904 
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.120  05-01-13  200,000  219,063 

Miller Brewing Co.,         
 Gtd Note (S)(Z)  5.500  08-15-13  365,000  390,259 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  9 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Beverages 1.66%         

PepsiCo, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)   7.900%  11-01-18  $395,000  $496,415 

SABMiller PLC,         
 Note (S)(Z)  6.500  07-15-18  465,000  517,480 
 
Food & Staples Retailing 0.55%         

CVS Caremark Corp.,         
 Jr Sub Bond (6.302% to 6-1-12 then         
 variable) (Z)  6.302  06-01-37  990,000  851,400 
 
Food Products 1.66%         

Bunge, Ltd. Finance Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note  8.500  06-15-19  210,000  244,751 
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  5.350  04-15-14  1,040,000  1,067,103 

Kraft Foods, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.000  02-11-13  685,000  738,028 

Smithfield Foods, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Sec Note (S)  10.000  07-15-14  300,000  315,000 

Tyson Foods, Inc.,         
 Sr Note  10.500  03-01-14  170,000  193,800 
 
Household Products 0.28%         

Yankee Acquisition Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Sub Note (Z)  8.500  02-15-15  455,000  434,525 
 
Tobacco 2.15%         

Alliance One International, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  8.500  05-15-12  245,000  248,675 
 Sr Note (S)  10.000  07-15-16  1,000,000  1,040,000 

Altria Group, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  8.500  11-10-13  800,000  928,170 

Reynolds American, Inc.,         
 Sr Sec Note (Z)  7.250  06-01-13  1,000,000  1,090,254 
 
Energy 11.81%        18,190,314 
 
Energy Equipment & Services 1.59%         

Drummond Co., Inc.,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  7.375  02-15-16  290,000  265,350 

NGPL Pipeco LLC,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  7.119  12-15-17  1,580,000  1,746,365 

Petrobras International Finance Co.,         
 Gtd Sr Note  5.750  01-20-20  215,000  215,648 

Questar Market Resources, Inc.,         
 Sr Note  6.800  03-01-20  205,000  214,412 
 
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels 10.22%         

Arch Coal, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (S)  8.750  08-01-16  100,000  102,500 

Cenovus Energy, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  5.700  10-15-19  205,000  213,005 
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  4.500  09-15-14  385,000  395,317 

ConocoPhillips,         
 Gtd Note (Z)  4.400  05-15-13  1,000,000  1,064,359 

Devon Energy Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  5.625  01-15-14  1,025,000  1,113,032 

Energy Transfer Partners LP,         
 Sr Note (Z)  9.700  03-15-19  330,000  408,606 
 Sr Note (Z)  8.500  04-15-14  330,000  383,520 

See notes to financial statements

10  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (continued)         

Enterprise Products Operating LLC,         
 Gtd Jr Sub Note (7.000% to 6-1-17         
 then variable)   7.000%  06-01-67  $695,000  $608,257 
 Gtd Jr Sub Note (7.034% to 1-15-18         
 then variable) (Z)  7.034  01-15-68  590,000  542,800 
 Gtd Sr Note Ser G (Z)  5.600  10-15-14  650,000  696,547 

Gulf South Pipeline Co. LP,         
 Sr Note (S)  5.750  08-15-12  1,000,000  1,056,377 

Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP,         
 Sr Bond (Z)  9.000  02-01-19  505,000  615,664 
 Sr Bond (Z)  7.750  03-15-32  195,000  218,047 
 Sr Bond (Z)  5.125  11-15-14  740,000  770,907 

MarkWest Energy Partners LP,         
 Gtd Sr Note Ser B (Z)  8.500  07-15-16  545,000  553,175 

McMoRan Exploration Co.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  11.875  11-15-14  340,000  342,550 

Nustar Logistics,         
 Gtd Sr Note  7.650  04-15-18  345,000  380,594 

ONEOK Partners LP,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.150  10-01-16  705,000  741,661 
 Sr Note (Z)  8.625  03-01-19  350,000  419,224 

Petro-Canada,         
 Debenture (Z)  9.250  10-15-21  1,000,000  1,250,606 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.050  05-15-18  400,000  425,956 

Petroleos Mexicanos,         
 Gtd Note (S)(Z)  4.875  03-15-15  490,000  482,699 

Plains All American Pipeline LP,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.500  05-01-18  345,000  372,036 
 Sr Note (Z)  4.250  09-01-12  600,000  616,523 

Regency Energy Partners LP,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  9.375  06-01-16  280,000  295,400 

Southern Union Co.,         
 Jr Sub Note, Ser A (7.200% to 11-01-11         
 then variable) (Z)  7.200  11-01-66  360,000  295,200 

Williams Partners Finance Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  7.250  02-01-17  800,000  795,792 

XTO Energy, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  5.900  08-01-12  545,000  588,185 
 
Financials 28.10%        43,284,525 
 
Capital Markets 3.12%         

Charles Schwab Corp.,         
 Sr Note  4.950  06-01-14  350,000  372,935 

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.500  02-15-19  485,000  567,159 
 Sr Note (Z)  5.125  01-15-15  760,000  800,763 

Jefferies Group, Inc.,         
 Sr Note  7.750  03-15-12  490,000  529,847 

Macquarie Group, Ltd.,         
 Sr Note (S)  7.300  08-01-14  270,000  293,067 

Morgan Stanley Co.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.300  05-13-19  485,000  543,392 
 Sr Note (Z)  5.375  10-15-15  1,000,000  1,037,259 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  11 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Capital Markets (continued)         

Northern Trust Co.,         
 Sub Note (Z)   6.500%  08-15-18  $225,000  $258,808 

Northern Trust Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  4.625  05-01-14  370,000  397,100 
 
Commercial Banks 4.06%         

Barclays Bank PLC,         
 Jr Sub Note (6.860% to 6-15-32         
 then variable) (S)(Z)  6.860  06-15-32  1,655,000  1,340,550 

Chuo Mitsui Trust & Banking Co.,         
 Jr Sub Note (5.506% to 4-15-15         
 then variable) (S)(Z)  5.506  04-15-15  940,000  817,800 

Credit Suisse New York,         
 Sr Note (Z)  5.300  08-13-19  415,000  429,207 

Groupe BPCE,         
 Sub Bond (12.500% to 9-30-19         
 then variable) (S)  12.500  09-30-19  330,000  392,581 

Mizuho Financial Group, Ltd.,         
 Gtd Sub Bond  8.375  12-29-49  260,000  260,000 

Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC,         
 Jr Sub Bond Ser MTN (7.640% to         
 9-29-17 then variable) (Z)  7.640  03-31-49  400,000  196,000 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.400  10-21-19  375,000  382,064 

Santander Issuances S.A. Unipersonal,         
 Sub Note (S)  6.500  08-11-19  1,200,000  1,268,998 

Sovereign Capital Trust VI,         
 Gtd Note (Z)  7.908  06-13-36  480,000  427,899 

Wachovia Bank NA,         
 BKNT (Z)  6.600  01-15-38  325,000  353,943 
 Sub Note (Z)  5.850  02-01-37  390,000  384,981 
 
Consumer Finance 3.06%         

American Express Credit Corp.,         
 Sr Note Ser C (Z)  7.300  08-20-13  670,000  752,460 

Capital One Financial Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.375  05-23-14  990,000  1,123,634 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.750  09-15-17  1,000,000  1,062,333 

Discover Financial Services,         
 Sr Note  10.250  07-15-19  585,000  686,131 

Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC,         
 Sr Note (Z)  8.000  12-15-16  140,000  135,241 
 Sr Note  7.500  08-01-12  90,000  87,647 

Nelnet, Inc.,         
 Note (7.400% to 9-1-11 then variable) (Z)  7.400  09-29-36  715,000  519,552 

SLM Corp.,         
 Sr Note Ser MTN (Z)  8.450  06-15-18  395,000  347,878 
 
Diversified Financial Services 9.77%         

American Honda Finance Corp.,         
 Note (S)(Z)  7.625  10-01-18  655,000  752,723 

Astoria Depositor Corp.,         
 Ser B (S)(Z)  8.144  05-01-21  1,000,000  750,000 

Bear Stearns Companies, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.250  02-01-18  1,000,000  1,143,815 

Beaver Valley Funding Corp.,         
 Sec Lease Obligation Bond (Z)  9.000  06-01-17  598,000  657,489 

See notes to financial statements

12  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Diversified Financial Services (continued)         

Bosphorus Financial Services, Ltd.,         
 Sec Floating Rate Note (P)(S)(Z)  2.240%  02-15-12  $312,500  $297,116 

Citigroup, Inc.,         
 Sr Bond (Z)  5.850  12-11-34  300,000  273,589 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.375  08-12-14  810,000  859,308 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.125  11-21-17  1,935,000  1,974,733 

CME Group, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  5.750  02-15-14  490,000  537,456 

ERAC USA Finance Co.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)(Z)  6.375  10-15-17  465,000  476,351 

ESI Tractebel Acquisition Corp.,         
 Gtd Sec Bond Ser B (Z)  7.990  12-30-11  617,000  617,000 

General Electric Capital Corp.,         
 Sr Note Ser MTN (Z)  6.000  08-07-19  335,000  352,115 

Hyundai Capital Services,         
 Note (S)  6.000  05-05-15  430,000  428,035 

JPMorgan Chase & Co.,         
 Jr Sub Note Ser 1 (7.900% to 4-30-18         
 then variable) (Z)  7.900  04-30-18  655,000  658,622 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.000  01-15-18  765,000  819,053 
 Sr Note (Z)  4.650  06-01-14  590,000  622,373 

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.,         
 Jr Sub Bond (Z)  7.750  05-14-38  495,000  557,230 
 Sr Note Ser MTN (Z)  6.150  04-25-13  1,000,000  1,071,955 

PNC Funding Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  4.250  09-21-15  695,000  697,136 

SMFG Preferred Capital,         
 Sub Bond (6.078% to 1-25-17 then         
 variable) (S)(Z)  6.078  01-25-17  590,000  509,624 

USB Realty Corp.,         
 Perpetual Bond (6.091% to 1-15-12 then         
 variable) (S)(Z)  6.091  01-15-12  800,000  558,400 

Voto-Votorantim Overseas Trading         
 Operations NV,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  6.625  09-25-19  450,000  432,000 
 
Insurance 4.66%         

Aflac, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  8.500  05-15-19  335,000  393,370 

Genworth Financial, Inc.,         
 Jr Sub Note (6.150% to 11-15-16         
 then variable) (Z)  6.150  11-15-66  430,000  288,100 

Horace Mann Educators Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.850  04-15-16  395,000  388,607 

Liberty Mutual Group, Inc.,         
 Bond (S)(Z)  7.300  06-15-14  750,000  753,106 
 Gtd Bond (S)(Z)  7.800  03-15-37  705,000  592,200 
 Gtd Bond (S)(Z)  7.500  08-15-36  885,000  771,968 

Lincoln National Corp.,         
 Jr Sub Bond (6.050% to 4-20-17         
 then variable) (Z)  6.050  04-20-67  250,000  193,750 
 Sr Note (Z)  8.750  07-01-19  510,000  593,797 

Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.,         
 Note (S)  8.875  06-01-39  210,000  255,811 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  13 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Insurance (continued)         

MetLife, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)   6.750%  06-01-16  $335,000  $374,611 

New York Life Insurance Co.,         
 Sub Note (S)  6.750  11-15-39  540,000  547,579 

Progressive Corp.,         
 Jr Sub Debenture (6.700% to 6-1-17         
 then variable) (Z)  6.700  06-15-37  330,000  289,063 

Prudential Financial, Inc.,         
 Sr Note Ser MTND  7.375  06-15-19  210,000  234,628 

QBE Insurance Group, Ltd.,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  9.750  03-14-14  486,000  555,182 

Symetra Financial Corp.,         
 Jr Sub Bond (8.300% to 10-1-17         
 then variable) (S)(Z)  8.300  10-15-37  235,000  195,050 

Unum Group,         
 Sr Note  7.125  09-30-16  390,000  400,915 

W.R. Berkley Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  5.600  05-15-15  365,000  351,465 
 
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT’s) 3.43%         

Boston Properties LP,         
 Sr Note  5.875  10-15-19  265,000  267,343 

Brandywine Operating Partnership LP,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  7.500  05-15-15  345,000  345,208 

Dexus Finance Pty, Ltd.,         
 Gtd Note (S)(Z)  7.125  10-15-14  495,000  499,800 

Duke Realty LP,         
 Sr Note (Z)  8.250  08-15-19  500,000  532,597 

Health Care, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.200  06-01-16  505,000  504,872 

Healthcare Realty Trust, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  8.125  05-01-11  175,000  183,665 

HRPT Properties Trust,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.650  01-15-18  285,000  266,996 

Mack-Cali Realty Corp.,         
 Sr Note  7.750  08-15-19  330,000  348,698 

Plum Creek Timberlands LP,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  5.875  11-15-15  365,000  376,017 

ProLogis,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.625  05-15-18  605,000  583,659 
 Sr Note (Z)  5.625  11-15-15  385,000  367,525 

Simon Property Group LP,         
 Sr Note (Z)  10.350  04-01-19  345,000  434,013 

WEA Finance LLC,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  6.750  09-02-19  290,000  295,339 
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  5.400  10-01-12  275,000  284,239 
 
Health care 4.24%        6,532,458 
 
Health Care Equipment & Supplies 1.30%         

Covidien International Finance SA,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  5.450  10-15-12  930,000  1,011,063 

Hospira, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.050  03-30-17  485,000  511,037 
 Sr Note Ser GMTN (Z)  6.400  05-15-15  170,000  188,917 

See notes to financial statements

14  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Health Care Equipment & Supplies (continued)       

Inverness Medical Innovations, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (S)   7.875%  02-01-16  $305,000  $300,425 
 
Health Care Providers & Services 2.54%         

CareFusion Corp.,         
 Sr Note (S)  5.125  08-01-14  225,000  236,413 

CIGNA Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.375  10-15-11  640,000  681,576 

Express Scripts, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.250  06-15-14  935,000  1,027,325 

Medco Health Solutions, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.250  08-15-13  850,000  953,346 

Sun Healthcare Group, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Sub Note (Z)  9.125  04-15-15  1,000,000  1,012,500 
 
Pharmaceuticals 0.40%         

Elan Corp. PLC,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  8.750  10-15-16  195,000  180,862 

Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.125  08-15-19  415,000  428,994 
 
 
Industrials 8.43%        12,995,701 
 
Aerospace & Defense 0.23%         

Embraer Overseas, Ltd.,         
 Gtd Sr Note  6.375  01-15-20  380,000  360,050 
Airlines 2.10%         

Continental Airlines, Inc.,         
 Ser 1981-1 Class A  6.648  09-15-17  172,260  161,924 
 Ser 2000-2 Class B (Z)  8.307  04-02-18  365,717  330,059 
 Ser 2001-1 Class C (Z)  7.033  06-15-11  97,742  87,968 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.545  02-02-19  278,199  265,680 

Delta Air Lines, Inc.,         
 Ser 2002-1 Class G2 (Z)  6.417  07-02-12  825,000  775,500 
 Sr Note (S)  9.500  09-15-14  360,000  367,200 
 Ser 2007-1 Class A (Z)  6.821  08-10-22  704,658  650,047 

Northwest Airlines, Inc.,         
 Gtd Collateralized Note Ser 2007-1 (Z)  7.027  11-01-19  443,607  397,028 

United Air Lines, Inc.,         
 Gtd Note  10.400  11-01-16  195,000  201,825 
 
Commercial Services & Supplies 0.10%         

ACCO Brands Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  10.625  03-15-15  80,000  85,600 

The Geo Group, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  7.750  10-15-17  70,000  71,050 
 
Electrical Equipment 0.65%         

Roper Industries, Inc.,         
 Sr Note  6.250  09-01-19  205,000  215,103 

Thomas & Betts Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.250  06-01-13  775,000  792,536 
 
Industrial Conglomerates 0.53%         

Hutchison Whampoa International, Ltd.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)(Z)  6.500  02-13-13  365,000  396,941 
 Gtd Note (S)  5.750  09-11-19  415,000  419,882 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  15 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Machinery 1.82%         

Case New Holland, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)(Z)   7.750%  09-01-13  $335,000  $332,487 

Ingersoll-Rand Global Holding Co., Ltd.,         
 Gtd Note (Z)  6.875  08-15-18  545,000  602,973 
 Gtd Note (Z)  6.000  08-15-13  540,000  585,849 

Manitowoc, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  7.125  11-01-13  500,000  448,750 

Terex Corp.,         
 Sr Note  10.875  06-01-16  250,000  270,000 

Volvo Treasury AB,         
 Sr Note (S)  5.950  04-01-15  555,000  564,207 
 
Marine 0.64%          

Navios Maritime Holdings, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  9.500  12-15-14  1,000,000  980,000 
 
Road & Rail 1.61%         

CSX Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  5.500  08-01-13  620,000  665,013 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.300  03-15-12  1,000,000  1,081,703 

Kansas City Southern,         
 Sr Note  9.375  05-01-12  445,000  453,900 

RailAmerica, Inc.,         
 Sr Sec Note (S)(Z)  9.250  07-01-17  265,000  276,925 
 
Trading Companies & Distributors 0.49%         

GATX Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  8.750  05-15-14  550,000  624,376 

United Rentals North America, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)(Z)  10.875  06-15-16  125,000  135,625 
Transportation Infrastructure 0.26%         

CMA CGM SA,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  7.250  02-01-13  700,000  395,500 
 
Information Technology 2.36%        3,629,879 
 
Electronic Equipment, Instruments & Components 1.34%       

Amphenol Corp.,         
 Sr Note  4.750  11-15-14  540,000  543,002 

Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  8.875  12-15-14  1,000,000  812,500 

Tyco Electronics Group SA,         
 Gtd Note  6.000  10-01-12  415,000  442,017 
 Gtd Sr Note  6.550  10-01-17  260,000  272,849 
 
IT Services 0.34%         

Fiserv, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.800  11-20-17  460,000  514,600 
 
Office Electronics 0.68%         

Xerox Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  8.250  05-15-14  275,000  316,849 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.750  02-01-17  670,000  728,062 
 
Materials 6.55%        10,087,362 
 
Chemicals 1.64%         

American Pacific Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  9.000  02-01-15  590,000  548,700 

See notes to financial statements

16  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Chemicals (continued)         

Dow Chemical Co.,         
 Sr Note (Z)   8.550%  05-15-19  $320,000  $365,319 
 Sr Note  5.900  02-15-15  370,000  382,764 

Mosaic Co.,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  7.625  12-01-16  480,000  516,741 

RPM International, Inc.,         
 Sr Note  6.500  02-15-18  325,000  329,313 

Sterling Chemicals, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Sec Note (Z)  10.250  04-01-15  400,000  379,000 
Construction Materials 0.17%         

Holcim US Finance SARL & Cie SCS,         
 Gtd Note (S)  6.000  12-30-19  260,000  268,112 
 
Containers & Packaging 1.13%         

Bemis Co., Inc.,         
 Sr Note  5.650  08-01-14  165,000  175,031 

BWAY Corp.,         
 Sr Sub Note (S)(Z)  10.000  04-15-14  315,000  334,687 

Graphic Packaging International Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)(Z)  9.500  06-15-17  115,000  120,750 

Smurfit-Stone Container Enterprises, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (H)(Z)  8.375  07-01-12  1,000,000  782,500 
 Sr Note (H)(Z)  8.000  03-15-17  245,000  188,650 

US Corrugated, Inc.,         
 Sr Sec Note  10.000  06-12-13  160,000  134,400 
 
Metals & Mining 2.19%         

Allegheny Technologies, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  9.375  06-01-19  280,000  318,464 

ArcelorMittal,         
 Sr Note (Z)  9.850  06-01-19  540,000  636,410 

CII Carbon LLC,         
 Gtd Sr Sub Note (S)(Z)  11.125  11-15-15  1,015,000  999,775 

Commercial Metals Co.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.350  08-15-18  310,000  329,720 

Rio Tinto Alcan, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.125  12-15-33  415,000  419,416 

Rio Tinto Finance USA, Ltd.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  8.950  05-01-14  365,000  431,383 

Teck Resources, Ltd.,         
 Sr Sec Note  10.750  05-15-19  200,000  233,000 
 
Paper & Forest Products 1.42%         

International Paper Co.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  9.375  05-15-19  385,000  466,076 
 Sr Note (Z)  7.950  06-15-18  505,000  562,889 

NewPage Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Sec Note (S)  11.375  12-31-14  135,000  134,662 

PE Paper Escrow GmbH,         
 Sr Sec Note (S)  12.000  08-01-14  100,000  109,500 

Solo Cup Co.,         
 Sr Sec Note (S)  10.500  11-01-13  85,000  90,100 

Verso Paper Holdings LLC,         
 Gtd Sr Note Ser B (Z)  9.125  08-01-14  1,000,000  830,000 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  17 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Telecommunication Services 5.74%        $8,849,440 
 
Diversified Telecommunication Services 3.71%       

Axtel SAB de CV,         
 Sr Note (S)   9.000%  09-22-19  $160,000  164,800 

Bellsouth Corp.,         
 Debenture (Z)  6.300  12-15-15  774,937  834,298 

Cincinnati Bell, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Sub Note (Z)  8.375  01-15-14  1,025,000  1,019,875 

Citizens Communications Co.,         
 Sr Note  6.250  01-15-13  256,000  252,800 

Intelsat Jackson Holdings, Ltd.,         
 Gtd Sr Note  11.500  06-15-16  365,000  383,250 

Qwest Corp.,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  8.375  05-01-16  330,000  340,725 
 Sr Note (Z)  7.875  09-01-11  445,000  459,463 

Telecom Italia Capital SA,         
 Gtd Sr Note  6.175  06-18-14  1,110,000  1,204,129 

Verizon Wireless Capital LLC,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  7.375  11-15-13  355,000  410,348 

West Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Sub Note (Z)  11.000  10-15-16  630,000  645,750 
 
Wireless Telecommunication Services 2.03%         

American Tower Corp.,         
 Note (S)  4.625  04-01-15  340,000  344,034 

Digicel Group, Ltd.,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  8.875  01-15-15  1,080,000  1,026,000 

NII Capital Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  10.000  08-15-16  230,000  242,650 

Rogers Cable, Inc.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.750  03-15-15  455,000  511,593 

SBA Telecommunications, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)  8.000  08-15-16  135,000  139,725 

Sprint Capital Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.900  05-01-19  1,000,000  870,000 
 
Utilities 9.18%        14,139,803 
 
Electric Utilities 5.28%         

Allegheny Energy Supply Co. LLC,         
 Sr Note (S)  5.750  10-15-19  290,000  285,852 

Aquila, Inc.,         
 Sr Note  11.875  07-01-12  405,000  470,049 

BVPS II Funding Corp.,         
 Collateralized Lease Bond (Z)  8.890  06-01-17  659,000  741,592 

Commonwealth Edison Co.,         
 Sec Bond (Z)  5.800  03-15-18  705,000  761,011 

Delmarva Power & Light Co.,         
 1st Mtg Bond (Z)  6.400  12-01-13  345,000  385,610 

Duke Energy Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  6.300  02-01-14  340,000  375,945 

Exelon Corp.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  4.900  06-15-15  985,000  1,022,165 

FirstEnergy Solutions Corp.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (S)(Z)  4.800  02-15-15  370,000  379,178 

See notes to financial statements

18  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
Electric Utilities (continued)         

FPL Energy National Wind LLC,         
 Sr Sec Note (S)(Z)   5.608%  03-10-24  $297,656  $277,389 

ITC Holdings Corp.,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  5.875  09-30-16  175,000  177,794 

Monongahela Power Co.,         
 Note (S)(Z)  7.950  12-15-13  635,000  702,858 

Pepco Holdings, Inc.,         
 Note (Z)  6.450  08-15-12  565,000  607,051 

PNPP II Funding Corp.,         
 Debenture (Z)  9.120  05-30-16  367,000  407,260 

Southern Power Co.,         
 Ser D (Z)  4.875  07-15-15  270,000  282,770 

Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Co. LLC,         
 Ser A (Z)  10.250  11-01-15  1,000,000  710,000 

Waterford 3 Funding Corp.,         
 Sec Lease Obligation Bond (Z)  8.090  01-02-17  523,591  545,436 
 
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders 0.58%       

AES Eastern Energy LP,         
 Sr Pass Thru Ctf Ser 1999-A (Z)  9.000  01-02-17  905,884  887,767 
 
Multi-Utilities 2.11%         

CalEnergy Co., Inc.,         
 Sr Bond (Z)  8.480  09-15-28  550,000  707,456 

DTE Energy Co.,         
 Sr Note (Z)  7.625  05-15-14  910,000  1,004,244 

Sempra Energy,         
 Sr Bond (Z)  8.900  11-15-13  345,000  408,913 
 Sr Note (Z)  6.500  06-01-16  415,000  455,780 

Teco Finance, Inc.,         
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  7.000  05-01-12  337,000  361,494 
 Gtd Sr Note (Z)  6.572  11-01-17  298,000  308,848 
 
Water Utilities 1.21%         

DCP Midstream LLC,         
 Sr Note (S)(Z)  9.750  03-15-19  405,000  483,834 

Indiantown Cogeneration LP,         
 1st Mtg Note Ser A–9 (Z)  9.260  12-15-10  161,446  163,086 

Midwest Generation LLC,         
 Note Ser B (Z)  8.560  01-02-16  329,746  335,517 

Oncor Electric Delivery Co.,         
 Sr Sec Note (Z)  6.375  05-01-12  820,000  890,904 
 
       Shares  Value 
Preferred Stocks 3.44%        $5,300,749 

(Cost $5,800,917)         
Consumer Staples 0.51%        793,750 
 
Food & Staples Retailing 0.51%         

Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc., 6.250%, Ser A (S)(Z)       12,500  793,750 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  19 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

      Shares  Value 
Financials 1.70%        $2,626,119 
 
Diversified Financial Services 0.40%         

Bank of America Corp., 8.625% (Z)      26,575  617,869 
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT’s) 1.30%         

Apartment Investment & Management Co.,         
 8.000%, Ser T (Z)      55,000  1,143,450 

Public Storage, Inc., 6.500%, Depositary         
 Shares, Ser W (Z)      40,000  864,800 
 
Materials 0.63%        963,680 
 
Metals & Mining 0.63%         

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc., 6.750% (Z)      3,532  377,924 

Vale Capital II, 6.750%      7,564  585,756 
 
Telecommunication Services 0.60%        917,200 
 
Wireless Telecommunication Services 0.60%         

Telephone & Data Systems, Inc., 7.600%, Ser A (Z)      40,000  917,200 
 
    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 

Municipal Bonds 0.24%        $363,161 
(Cost $363,781)         
 
California 0.24%        363,161 
State of California,         
 General Obligation  6.200%  10-01-19  $360,000  363,161 

 
Term Loans 0.20%        $301,836 
(Cost $497,883)         
 
Consumer Discretionary 0.20%        301,836 
 
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure 0.20%         

East Valley Tourist Development  7.775%  08-06-12  $503,060  301,836 

 
U.S. Government & Agency Obligations 25.80%      $39,752,381 
(Cost $39,081,038)         
 
U.S. Government 4.79%        7,379,493 

U.S. Treasury Bonds,         
 Bond  4.250%  05-15-39  $1,020,000  1,022,391 

U.S. Treasury Notes,         
 Note  3.625  08-15-19  1,065,000  1,085,468 
 Note  2.375  08-31-14  5,245,000  5,271,634 
 
U.S. Government Agency 21.01%        32,372,888 
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.,         
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  4.500  03-01-39  4,259,638  4,309,389 

Federal National Mortgage Assn.,         
 15 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  4.000  06-01-24  3,919,575  3,996,436 
 15 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  4.000  06-01-24  3,673,737  3,745,777 
 15 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  4.000  06-01-24  1,955,784  1,994,136 
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  5.500  02-01-36  3,256,862  3,440,061 
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  5.500  06-01-37  1,839,898  1,939,655 
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  5.500  06-01-38  3,960,985  4,175,126 
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  4.500  03-01-38  2,774,886  2,811,415 
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  4.500  04-01-39  973,814  986,633 

See notes to financial statements

20  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
 
U.S. Government Agency (continued)         

Government National Mortgage Assn.,         
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  5.500%  11-15-38  $929,307  $983,251 
 30 Yr Pass Thru Ctf  4.500  03-15-39  3,927,192  3,991,009 

 
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations 12.78%      $19,690,394 
(Cost $29,960,851)         
 
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations 12.78%      19,690,394 
 
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations 12.78%         

American Home Mortgage Assets,         
 Ser 2006-6 Class XP IO  3.039%  12-25-46  $12,451,523  591,447 
 Ser 2007-5 Class XP IO  3.340  06-25-47  9,044,273  520,046 

American Home Mortgage Investment Trust,         
 Ser 2007-1 Class GIOP IO  2.078  05-25-47  7,750,510  479,563 

American Tower Trust,         
 Ser 2007-1A Class D (S)  5.957  04-15-37  865,000  865,000 

Banc of America Commercial Mortgage, Inc.,         
 Ser 2005-6 Class A4 (P)  5.179  09-10-47  300,000  302,079 

Banc of America Funding Corp.,         
 Ser 2006-B Class 6A1 (P)  5.828  03-20-36  772,734  548,014 
 Ser 2006-D Class 6B2 (P)  5.823  05-20-36  1,821,792  15,477 

Bear Stearns Adjustable Rate Mortgage Trust,         
 Ser 2005-1 Class B2 (P)  4.879  03-25-35  802,389  90,082 

Bear Stearns Alt-A Trust,         
 Ser 2005-3 Class B2 (P)  5.162  04-25-35  551,007  40,883 
 Ser 2006-4 Class 3B1 (P)  6.078  07-25-36  2,394,748  10,666 

Bear Stearns Commercial         
 Mortgage Securities, Inc.,         
 Ser 2006-PW14 Class D (S)  5.412  12-11-38  655,000  141,680 

Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.,         
 Ser 2005-10 Class 1A5A (P)  5.838  12-25-35  628,499  411,230 
 Ser 2005-5 Class 2A3  5.000  08-25-35  352,515  336,101 

Citigroup/Deutsche Bank Commercial         
 Mortgage Trust,         
 Ser 2005-CD1 Class C (P)  5.225  07-15-44  295,000  186,297 

ContiMortgage Home Equity Loan Trust,         
 Ser 1995-2 Class A–5  8.100  08-15-25  48,843  43,221 

Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust,         
 Ser 2005-59 Class 2X IO  2.986  11-20-35  9,425,617  337,060 
 Ser 2006-0A12 Class X IO  3.413  09-20-46  15,678,455  685,932 
 Ser 2006-11CB Class 3A1  6.500  05-25-36  2,537,400  1,581,910 

DB Master Finance LLC,         
 Ser 2006-1 Class-M1 (S)  8.285  06-20-31  340,000  276,539 

DSLA Mortgage Loan Trust,         
 Ser 2005-AR5 Class X2 IO  0.151  08-19-45  17,710,683  686,289 

First Horizon Alternative Mortgage Securities,         
 Ser 2004-AA5 Class B1 (P)  4.643  12-25-34  410,290  57,336 

GSR Mortgage Loan Trust,         
 Ser 2004-9 Class B1 (P)  4.100  08-25-34  808,895  197,212 
 Ser 2006-4F Class 6A1 (Z)  6.500  05-25-36  3,112,486  2,625,188 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  21 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

    Maturity     
  Rate  date  Par value  Value 
 
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (continued)       

Harborview Mortgage Loan Trust,       
 Ser 2005-11 Class X IO  2.984%  08-19-45  $4,055,268  $169,814 
 Ser 2005-8 Class 1X IO  2.855  09-19-35  6,557,881  248,995 
 Ser 2007-3 Class ES IO  0.350  05-19-47  19,108,818  179,623 
 Ser 2007-4 Class ES IO  0.350  07-19-47  19,754,264  185,690 
 Ser 2007-6 Class ES IO (S)  0.342  08-19-37  14,557,864  136,844 

Harborview NIM Corp.,         
 Ser 2006-9A Class N2 (I)(S)  8.350  11-19-36  323,137  0 

IndyMac Index Mortgage Loan Trust,       
 Ser 2004-AR13 Class B1  5.296  01-25-35  329,426  54,923 
 Ser 2005-AR18 Class 1X IO  2.806  10-25-36  13,375,953  409,304 
 Ser 2005-AR18 Class 2X IO  2.521  10-25-36  13,212,349  322,381 
 Ser 2005-AR5 Class B1 (P)  4.396  05-25-35  436,436  15,408 

JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage       
 Securities Corp.,         
 Ser 2005-LDP4 Class B (P)  5.129  10-15-42  2,035,000  1,041,247 

JPMorgan Mortgage Trust,         
 Ser 2005-S3 Class 2A2  5.500  01-25-21  572,448  545,435 

Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors Trust,       
 Ser 2006-AF1 Class MF1 (P)  6.209  08-25-36  1,180,857  98,736 

MLCC Mortgage Investors, Inc.,         
 Ser 2007-3 Class M1 (P)  5.919  09-25-37  419,885  128,153 
 Ser 2007-3 Class M2 (P)  5.919  09-25-37  154,959  23,478 
 Ser 2007-3 Class M3 (P)  5.919  09-25-37  104,973  34,562 

Morgan Stanley Capital I,         
 Ser 2005-HQ7 Class A4 (P)  5.207  11-14-42  840,000  847,889 
 Ser 2006-IQ12 (P)  5.538  12-15-43  640,000  122,726 

Provident Funding Mortgage Loan Trust,       
 Ser 2005-1 Class B1 (P)  4.381  05-25-35  408,276  104,334 

Residential Accredit Loans, Inc.,         
 Ser 2005-QA12 Class NB5 (P)  5.941  12-25-35  2,763,118  1,654,206 

Washington Mutual, Inc.,         
 Ser 2005-6 Class 1CB  6.500  08-25-35  381,612  276,072 
 Ser 2005-AR4 Class B1 (P)  4.647  04-25-35  1,508,908  436,188 
 Ser 2007-0A4 Class XPPP IO  0.840  04-25-47  16,387,664  163,877 
 Ser 2007-0A5 Class 2XPP IO  1.072  06-25-47  46,640,481  757,908 
 Ser 2007-0A5 Class 1XPP IO  0.891  06-25-47  40,474,041  467,981 
 Ser 2007-0A6 Class 1XPP IO  0.830  07-25-47  23,536,783  235,368 

 
Asset Backed Securities 1.16%      $1,784,904 
(Cost $2,183,221)         
 
Asset Backed Securities 1.16%      1,784,904 
Dominos Pizza Master Issuer LLC,       
 Ser 2007-1 Class M1 (S)  7.629%  04-25-37  $1,000,000  750,000 

Hertz Vehicle Financing LLC,         
 Ser 2009-2A Class A2 (S)  5.290  03-25-16  760,000  762,880 

TXU Corp.,         
 Sec Bond (Z)  7.460  01-01-15  383,922  272,024 

See notes to financial statements

22  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 


 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T So
  Par value  Value 
Short-Term Investments 0.19%    $293,000 

(Cost $293,000)     
 
Short-term investments 0.19%    293,000 
Repurchase Agreement with State Street Corp. dated 10-30-09     
 at 0.01% to be repurchased at $293,000 on 11-2-09,     
 collateralized by $295,000 Federal Home Loan Bank, 3,375%     
 due 8-13-10 (valued at $303,850, including interest)  $293,000  293,000 
 
Total investments (Cost $220,084,979)136.54%    $210,352,662 

Other assets and liabilities, net (36.54%)    ($56,293,800) 

Total net assets 100.00%    $154,058,862 


The percentage shown for each investment category is the total value of that category as a percentage of the net assets applicable to common shareholders.

IO Interest Only Security — Interest Tranche of Stripped Mortgage Pool

MTN Medium-Term Note PIK Paid In Kind

(H) Non-income-producing issuer filed for protection under the Federal Bankruptcy Code or is in default of interest payment.

(I) Non-income producing security.

(P) Variable rate obligation. The coupon rate shown represents the rate at period end.

(S) These securities are exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. Such securities may be resold, normally to qualified institutional buyers, in transactions exempt from registration. Rule 144A securities amounted to $41,168,028 or 26.72% of the Fund’s net assets as of October 31, 2009.

(Z) All or a portion of this security is segregated as collateral for the Committed Facility Agreement (see Note 9). Total collateral value at October 31, 2009 was $126,387,359.

† At October 31, 2009, the aggregate cost of investment securities for federal income tax purposes was $220,658,782. Net unrealized depreciation aggregated $10,306,120, of which $15,457,399 related to appreciated investment securities and $25,763,519 related to depreciated investment securities.

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  23 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

Financial statements

Statement of assets and liabilities 10-31-09

This Statement of Assets and Liabilities is the Fund’s balance sheet. It shows the value of what the Fund owns, is due and owes. You’ll also find the net asset value per share.

Assets   

Investments, at value (Cost $220,084,979)  $210,352,662 
Cash  163 
Cash held at broker for futures contracts  62,100 
Receivable for investments sold  632,230 
Dividends and interest receivable  3,676,991 
Prepaid Committed Facility Agreement arrangement fees (Note 9)  63,907 
Other receivables and prepaid assets  36,404 
 
Total assets  214,824,457 
 
Liabilities   

Payable for investments purchased  1,390,598 
Committed facility agreement payable (Note 9)  58,000,000 
Unrealized depreciation of swap contracts (Note 3)  1,219,458 
Payable for futures variation margin  20,484 
Interest payable (Note 9)  5,285 
Payable to affiliates   
 Accounting and legal services fees  2,795 
 Transfer agent fees  34,741 
Other liabilities and accrued expenses  92,234 
 
Total liabilities  60,765,595 
 
Net assets   

Capital paid-in  $181,978,821 
Undistributed net investment income  1,010,933 
Accumulated net realized loss on investments, futures contracts and   
 swap contracts  (17,965,025) 
Net unrealized depreciation on investments, futures contracts and swap   
 contracts  (10,965,867) 
 
Net assets  $154,058,862 
 
Net asset value per share   

Based on 11,482,332 shares of beneficial interest outstanding — unlimited   
 number of shares authorized with no par value  $13.42 

See notes to financial statements

24  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

Statement of operations For the year ended 10-31-09

This Statement of Operations summarizes the Fund’s investment income earned, expenses incurred in operating the Fund and net gains (losses) for the period stated.

Investment income   

Interest  $16,015,905 
Dividends  299,550 
Less foreign taxes withheld  (803) 
 
Total investment income  16,314,652 
 
Expenses   

Investment management fees (Note 5)  1,097,547 
Accounting and legal services fees (Note 5)  28,678 
Interest expense (Note 9)  1,077,104 
Transfer agent fees  113,990 
Trustees’ fees (Note 6)  50,155 
Printing  76,720 
Professional fees  315,891 
Custodian fees  49,725 
Stock exchange listing fees  24,040 
Other  26,489 
 
Total expenses  2,860,339 
 
Net investment income  13,454,313 
 
Realized and unrealized gain (loss)   

Net realized gain (loss) on   
Investments  (6,132,005) 
Financial futures contracts (Note 3)  11,314 
Swap contracts (Note 3)  (859,732) 
  (6,980,423) 
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of   
Investments  38,041,676 
Financial futures contracts (Note 3)  (14,092) 
Swap contracts (Note 3)  (93,197) 
  37,934,387 
Net realized and unrealized gain  30,953,964 
 
Increase in net assets frotm operations  $44,408,277 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  25 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

Statements of changes in net assets

These Statements of Changes in Net Assets show how the value of the Fund’s net assets has changed during the last three periods. The difference reflects earnings less expenses, any investment gains and losses, distributions, if any, paid to shareholders and the net of Fund share transactions.

  Year  Period  Year 
  ended  ended  ended 
  10-31-09  10-31-081  12-31-07 
 
Increase (decrease) in net assets       

 
From operations       
Net investment income  $13,454,313  $11,880,844  $15,109,704 
Net realized loss  (6,980,423)  (526,797)  (1,642,786) 
Change in net unrealized appreciation       
 (depreciation) of investments, financial futures       
 contracts and swap contracts  37,934,387  (43,911,252)  (6,071,134) 
Distributions to Auction Preferred Shares (APS)    (1,747,235)  (4,740,155) 
 
Increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from       
 operations  44,408,277  (34,304,440)  2,655,629 
 
Distributions to shareholders       
From net investment income  (12,871,827)  (9,560,908)  (10,400,867) 
From Fund share transactions (Note 7)  1,059,251  515,172  889,931 
Total increase (decrease)  32,595,701  (43,350,176)  (6,855,307) 
 
Net assets       

Beginning of period  121,463,161  164,813,337  171,668,644 
End  of period  $154,058,862  $121,463,161  $164,813,337 
 
Undistributed net investment income  $1,010,933  $717,231  $276,098 

1 For the ten month period ended October 31, 2008. The Fund changed its fiscal year end from December 31 to October 31.

See notes to financial statements

26  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

Statement of cash flows 10-31-09

This Statement of Cash Flows shows cash used or provided by operating and financing activities for the period stated.

  For the 
  year ended 
  10-31-09 

 
Cash flows from operating activities   
Net increase in net assets from operations  $44,408,277 
Adjustments to reconcile net increase in net assets from operations to net   
 cash provided by operating activities:   
Long-term investments purchased  (174,460,005) 
Long-term investments sold  169,068,314 
Increase in short term investments  (293,000) 
Net amortization of premium (discount)  4,114,494 
Increase in dividends and interest receivable  (261,139) 
Decrease in receivable from affiliates  15,854 
Increase in payable for investments purchased   153,028 
Decrease in receivable for investments sold  100,615 
Increase in cash held at broker for futures contracts  (62,100) 
Increase in other receivables and prepaid assets  (36,404) 
Decrease in prepaid arrangement fees  9,786 
Increase in unrealized depreciation of swap contracts  93,197 
Increase in payable for futures variation margin  20,484 
Decrease in payable to affiliates  (69,985) 
Decrease in payable for interest  (17,031) 
Increase in accrued expenses  5,105 
Net change in unrealized (appreciation) depreciation on investments  (38,041,676) 
Net realized loss on investments  6,132,005 
 
Net cash provided by operating activities  $10,879,819 

Cash flows from financing activities   
Borrowings from committed facility agreement payable  $66,000,000 
Repayments of committed facility agreement payable  (66,000,000) 
Distributions to common shareholders net of reinvestments  (11,812,576) 
 
Net cash used in financing activities  ($11,812,576) 
 
Net decrease in cash  ($932,757) 
 
Cash at beginning of period  $932,920 
 
Cash at end of period  $163 
  
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information   

Cash paid for interest  $1,114,028 
Noncash financing activities not included herein consist of   
reinvestment of distributions  1,059,251 

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  27 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

Financial highlights

The Financial Highlights show how the Fund’s net asset value for a share has changed since the end of the previous period.

COMMON SHARES             
Period ended  10-31-09  10-31-081  12-31-07  12-31-06  12-31-05  12-31-04 
 
Per share operating performance          

Net asset value, beginning             
 of year  $10.67  $14.53  $15.22  $15.30  $16.19  $16.53 
Net investment income2  1.18  1.05  1.34  1.26  1.20  1.22 
Net realized and unrealized gain             
 (loss) on investments  2.70  (3.92)  (0.69)  (0.03)  (0.81)  (0.25) 
Distributions to APS*    (0.15)  (0.42)  (0.38)  (0.25)  (0.12) 
Total from investment             
 operations  3.88  (3.02)  0.23  0.85  0.14  0.85 
Less distributions to common             
 shareholders             
From net investment income  (1.13)  (0.84)  (0.92)  (0.93)  (1.03)  (1.19) 
Net asset value, end of year  $13.42  $10.67  $14.53  $15.22  $15.30  $16.19 
Per share market value, end             
 of year  $12.94  $9.67  $12.85  $14.75  $13.68  $15.68 
Total return at net asset             
 value (%)3  39.06  (21.36)  1.97  6.24  1.365  5.705 
Total return at market             
 value (%)3  47.95  (19.41)  (6.94)  15.15  (6.42)  9.95 
 
Ratios and supplemental data             

Net assets applicable to common             
 shares, end of year (in millions)  $154  $121  $165  $172  $172  $180 
Ratios (as a percentage of average             
 net assets):             
 Expenses (excluding interest             
    expense)  1.40  1.416  1.167  1.177  1.167  1.147 
 Interest expense (Note 9)  0.85  0.766         
 Expenses (including interest             
    expense)  2.25  2.176  1.167  1.177  1.167  1.147 
 Net investment income  10.56  9.376  8.878  8.308  7.628  7.448 
Portfolio turnover (%)  94  40  54  94  148  135 
 
Senior securities             

Total value of APS outstanding             
   (in millions)      $90  $90  $90  $90 
Involuntary liquidation preference             
 per unit (in thousands)      25  25  25  25 
Average market value per unit             
 (in thousands)      25  25  25  25 
Asset coverage per unit9    10 $71,228  $73,375  $72,470  $75,049 
Total debt outstanding end of             
 year (in millions) (Note 9)  $58  $58         
Asset coverage per $1,000 of             
 APS11      $2,851  $2,928  $2,928  $3,027 
Asset coverage per $1,000 of             
 debt12  $3,656  $3,094         

* Auction Preferred Shares (APS)

See notes to financial statements

28  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 F I N A N C I A L   S T A T E M E N T S

1 For the ten month period ended October 31, 2008. The Fund changed its fiscal year end from December 31 to October 31.

2 Based on the average daily shares outstanding.

3 Total return based on net asset value reflects changes in the Fund’s net asset value during each period. Total return based on market value reflects changes in market value. Each figure assumes that dividend and capital gain distributions, if any, were reinvested. These figures will differ depending upon the level of any discount from or premium to net asset value at which the Fund’s shares traded during the period.

4 Not annualized.

5 Unaudited.

6 Annualized.

7 Ratios calculated on the basis of expenses relative to the average net assets of common shares. Without the exclusion of preferred shares, the annualized ratio of expenses would have been 0.76%, 0.77%, 0.77%, and 0.76% for the periods ended 12-31-07, 12-31-06, 12-31-05 and 12-31-04, respectively.

8 Ratios calculated on the basis of net investment income relative to the average net assets of common shares. Without the exclusion of preferred shares, the annualized ratio of net investment income would have been 5.82%, 5.45%, 5.06% and 4.99% for the periods ended 12-31-07, 12-31-06, 12-31-05 and 12-31-04, respectively.

9 Calculated by subtracting the Fund’s total liabilities from the Fund’s total assets and dividing that amount by the number of APS outstanding, as of the applicable 1940 Act Evaluation Date, which may differ from the financial reporting date.

10 In May 2008, the Fund entered into a Credit Facility Agreement with a third-party commercial bank in order to refinance the APS. The redemption of all APS was completed on June 12, 2008.

11 Asset coverage equals the total net assets plus APS divided by the APS of the Fund outstanding at period end (Note 8).

12 Asset coverage equals the total net assets plus borrowings divided by the borrowing of the Fund outstanding at period end (Note 8).

See notes to financial statements

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  29 



Notes to financial statements

Note 1
Organization

John Hancock Income Securities Trust (the Fund) is a closed-end diversified investment management company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act).

Note 2
Significant accounting policies

The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Events or transactions occurring after period end through the date that the financial statements were issued, December 18, 2009, have been evaluated in the preparation of the financial statements. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Security valuation

Investments are stated at value as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally at 4:00 P.M., Eastern Time. Equity securities held by the Fund are valued at the last sale price or official closing price (closing bid price or last evaluated price if no sale has occurred) as of the close of business on the principal securities exchange (domestic or foreign) on which they trade. Debt obligations are valued based on the evaluated prices provided by independent pricing services, which utilizes both dealer-supplied quotes and electronic data processing techniques, which take into account factors such as institutional-size trading in similar groups of securities, yield, quality, coupon rate, maturity, type of issue, trading characteristics and other market data. Foreign securities and currencies are valued in U.S. dollars, based on foreign currency exchange rates supplied by an independent pricing service. Securities traded only in the over-the-counter market are valued at the last bid price quoted by brokers making markets in the securities at the close of trading. Equity and debt obligations, for which there are no prices available from an independent pricing service, are valued based on bid quotations, or evaluated prices, as applicable, obtained from broker-dealers or fair valued as described below. Certain short-term debt instruments are valued at amortized cost.

Other assets and securities for which no such quotations are readily available are valued at fair value as determined in good faith by the Fund’s Pricing Committee in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Generally, trading in non-U.S. securities is substantially completed each day at various times prior to the close of trading on the NYSE. The values of such securities used in computing the net asset value of the Fund’s shares are generally determined as of such times. Occasionally, significant events that affect the values of such securities may occur between the times at which such values are generally determined and the close of the NYSE. Upon such an occurrence, these securities will be valued at fair value as determined in good faith under consistently applied procedures established by and under the general supervision of the Board of Trustees.

Fair value measurements

The Fund uses a three-tier hierarchy to prioritize the assumptions, referred to as inputs, used in valuation techniques to measure fair value. The three-tier hierarchy of inputs and the valuation techniques used are summarized below:

Level 1 — Exchange traded prices in active markets for identical securities. This technique is used for exchange-traded domestic common and preferred equities, certain foreign equities, warrants, rights, options and futures.

Level 2 — Prices determined using significant observable inputs. Observable inputs may include quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds and credit risk. Prices for securities valued using these techniques are received from independent

30  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



pricing vendors and are based on an evaluation of the inputs described. These techniques are used for certain domestic preferred equities, certain foreign equities, unlisted rights and warrants, and fixed income securities. Also, over-the-counter derivative contracts, including swaps and certain options use these techniques.

Level 3 — Prices determined using significant unobservable inputs. In situations where quoted prices or observable inputs are unavailable, such as when there is little or no market activity for an investment, unobservable inputs may be used. Unobservable inputs reflect the Fund’s Pricing Committee’s own assumptions about the factors that market participants would use in pricing an investment and would be based on the best information available. Securities using this technique are generally thinly traded or privately placed, and may be valued using broker quotes, which may not only use observable or unobservable inputs but may also include the use of the brokers’ own judgments about the assumptions that market participants would use.

The inputs or methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

The following is a summary of the inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of October 31, 2009, by major security category or security type. Other financial instruments are derivative instruments not reflected in the Portfolio of Investments, such as futures and swap contracts, which are stated at value.

INVESTMENTS IN SECURITIES  LEVEL 1  LEVEL 2  LEVEL 3  TOTALS 

Asset Backed Securities    $1,034,904  $750,000  $1,784,904 
Collateralized Mortgage         
 Obligations    13,112,272  6,578,122  19,690,394 
Corporate Bonds    141,981,837  884,400  142,866,237 
Municipal Bonds    363,161    363,161 
Preferred Stocks  $ 3,921,243  1,379,506    5,300,749 
Term Loans    301,836    301,836 
U.S. Government &         
 Agency Obligations    39,752,381    39,752,381 
Short-Term Investments    293,000    293,000 
Total Investments         
 in Securities  $3,921,243  $198,218,897  $8,212,522  $210,352,662 
Other Financial         
 Instruments  (14,092)  (1,219,458)    (1,233,550) 
 
Totals  $3,907,151  $196,999,439  $8,212,522  $209,119,112 

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  31 



The following is a reconciliation of Level 3 assets for which significant unobservable inputs were used to determine fair value:

    COLLATER-         
  ASSET  ALIZED         
  BACKED  MORTGAGE  CORPORATE  PREFERRED     
  SECURITIES  OBLIGATIONS  BONDS  STOCKS  TERM LOANS  TOTAL 

Balance as of             
 10-31-08  $615,000  $6,631,510  $890,938  $1,093,750  $350,000  $9,581,198 
Accrued discounts/             
 premiums    (274,678)  308      (274,370) 
Realized gain (loss)    686,381        686,381 
Change in unrealized             
 appreciation             
 (depreciation)  135,000  3,244,050  (6,846)      3,372,204 
Net purchases (sales)    (4,927,565)        (4,927,565) 
Net transfers in             
 and/out of Level 3    1,218,424    (1,093,750)  (350,000)  (225,326) 
Balance as of             
 10-31-09  $750,000  $6,578,122  $884,400      $8,212,522 

Repurchase agreements

The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements. When the Fund enters into a repurchase agreement through its custodian, it receives delivery of securities, the amount of which at the time of purchase and each subsequent business day is required to be maintained at such a level that the market value is generally at least 102% of the repurchase amount. The Fund will take receipt of all securities underlying the repurchase agreements it has entered into until such agreements expire. If the seller defaults, the Fund would suffer a loss to the extent that proceeds from the sale of underlying securities were less than the repurchase amount. The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements maturing within seven days with domestic dealers, banks or other financial institutions deemed to be creditworthy by the Adviser.

Security transactions and related
investment income

Investment security transactions are accounted for on a trade date plus one basis for daily net asset value calculations. However, for financial reporting purposes, investment transactions are reported on trade date. Interest income is accrued as earned. Dividend income and distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Discounts/premiums are accreted/amortized for financial reporting purposes. Debt obligations may be placed in a non-accrual status and related interest income may be reduced by ceasing current accruals and writing off interest receivables when the collection of all or a portion of interest has become doubtful. The Fund uses the identified cost method for determining realized gain or loss on investments for both financial statement and federal income tax reporting purposes.

Overdrafts

Pursuant to the custodian agreement, the Fund’s Custodian may, in its discretion, advance funds to the Fund to make properly authorized payments. When such payments result in an overdraft, the Fund is obligated to repay the Custodian for any overdraft, including any costs or expenses associated with the overdraft. The Custodian has a lien, security interest or security entitlement in any Fund property, that is not segregated, to the maximum extent permitted by law to the extent of any overdraft.

Expenses

The majority of expenses are directly identifiable to an individual fund. Fund expenses that are not readily identifiable to a specific fund are allocated in such a manner as deemed equitable, taking into consideration, among other things, the nature and type of expense and the relative size of the funds. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

32   Income Securities Trust | Annual report



Stripped securities

Stripped mortgage backed securities are finan-cial instruments that derive their value from other instruments so that one class receives all of the principal from the underlying mortgage assets (principal only (PO)), while the other class receives the interest cash flows (interest only (IO)). Both the PO and IO investments represent an interest in the cash flows of an underlying stripped mortgaged backed security. If the underlying mortgage assets experience greater than anticipated prepayments of principal, the Fund may fail to fully recoup its initial investment in an interest only security. The market value of these securities can be extremely volatile in response to changes in interest rates. Credit risk reflects the risk that the Fund may not receive all or part of its principal because the issuer or credit enhancer has defaulted on its obligation.

Federal income taxes

The Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by complying with the applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and will not be subject to federal income tax on taxable income that is distributed to shareholders. Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required.

For federal income tax purposes, the Fund has $17,399,381 capital loss carryforward available, to the extent provided by regulations, to offset future net realized capital gains. To the extent that the carryforward is used by the Fund, it will reduce the amount of capital gain distributions to be paid.

The loss carryforward expires as follows: October 31, 2012 — $2,123,466, October 31, 2013 — $2,443,482, October 31, 2014 —$3,342,775, October 31, 2015 — $1,351,797, October 31, 2016 — $1,367,076 and October 31, 2017 — $6,770,785.

As of October 31, 2009, the Fund had no uncertain tax positions that would require financial statement recognition, de-recognition or disclosure. The Fund’s federal tax return is subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service for a period of three years.

Distribution of income and gains

The Fund records distributions to shareholders from net investment income and net realized gains, if any, on the ex-dividend date. The Fund generally declares and pays dividends quarterly. Capital gain distributions, if any, are paid at least annually. During the years or periods ended October 31, 2009 and 2008 and December 31, 2007, the tax character of distributions paid was $12,871,827, $11,308,143 and $15,141,022 of ordinary income, respectively.

As of October 31, 2009, the components of distributable earnings on a tax basis included $1,020,636 of undistributed ordinary income.

Such distributions and distributable earnings, on a tax basis, are determined in conformity with income tax regulations, which may differ from accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Material distributions in excess of tax basis earnings and profits, if any, are reported in the Fund’s financial statements as a return of capital.

Capital accounts within financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period. Permanent book-tax differences are primarily attributable to derivative transactions, amortization and accretion on debt securities, defaulted bonds and paydowns.

Statement of cash flows

The cash amount shown in the Statement of Cash Flows of the Fund is the amount included in the Fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities and represents the cash on hand at its custodian and does not include any short-term investments.

Note 3
Financial instruments

 Futures

The Fund may purchase and sell financial futures contracts, including index futures and options on these contracts. A future is a contractual agreement to buy or sell a particular commodity, currency, or financial instrument

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  33 



at a pre-determined price in the future. The Fund may use futures contracts to manage against a decline in the value of securities owned by the Fund due to anticipated interest rate, currency or market changes. In addition, the Fund will use futures contracts for duration management or to gain exposure to a securities market.

An index futures contract (index future) is a contract to buy a certain number of units of the relevant index at a fixed price and specific future date. The Fund may invest in index futures as a means of gaining exposure to securities without investing in them directly, thereby allowing the Fund to invest in the underlying securities over time. Investing in index futures also permits the Fund to maintain exposure to common stocks without incurring the brokerage costs associated with investment in individual common stocks.

Futures contracts are valued at the quoted daily settlement prices established by the exchange on which they trade. Upon entering into a futures contract, initial margin deposits, as set by the exchange or broker to the contract, are required and are met by the delivery of specific securities (or cash) as collateral to the broker. Futures contracts are marked to market daily and an appropriate payable or receivable for the change in value (“variation margin”) is recorded by the Fund. Gains or losses are recognized but not considered realized until the contracts expire or are closed. Futures contracts involve, to varying degrees, risk of loss in excess of the variation margin disclosed on the Statements of assets and liabilities.

During the year ended October 31, 2009, the Fund held futures whose total notional values have ranged from approximately $2.5 to $5.3 million.

During the year ended October 31, 2009, the Fund used futures to manage duration of the portfolio. The following summarizes the open futures contracts held as of October 31, 2009:

OPEN  NUMBER OF        UNREALIZED 
CONTRACTS  CONTRACTS  POSITION  EXPIRATION DATE  NOTIONAL VALUE  DEPRECIATION 

U.S. Treasury 10-Year           
Note Futures  23  Short  Dec 2009  $2,728,016  ($14,092) 

Interest rate swap contracts

The Fund may enter into transactions such as interest rate, credit default, cross-currency, and other forms of swaps to manage its exposure to credit, currency and interest rate risks, to gain exposure in lieu of buying in the physical market, or to enhance the Fund’s income. Interest rate swaps represent an agreement between two counterparties to exchange cash flows based on the difference in the two interest rates, applied to the notional principal amount for a specified period. The payment flows are usually netted against each other, with the difference being paid by one party to the other. The Fund settles accrued net receivable or payable under the swap contracts on a periodic basis. In connection with these agreements, the Fund will hold cash and/or liquid securities equal to the net amount of the Fund’s exposure, in order to satisfy the Fund’s obligations in the event of default or bankruptcy/insolvency.

Swaps are marked to market daily based upon values from third party vendors or quotations from market makers to the extent available, and the change in value, if any, is recorded as unrealized appreciation/depreciation on the Fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities. If market quotations are not readily available or deemed reliable, certain swaps may be fair valued in good faith by the Fund’s Pricing Committee in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Net periodic payments received or paid by the Fund are included as part of realized gains or losses on the Statement of operations.

Entering into swaps involves, to varying degrees, elements of credit, market, counterparty and legal documentation risk in excess of the amounts recognized on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Such risks involve the possibility that there will be no liquid market for these agreements, that a counterparty may

34  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



default on its obligation under the swap or disagree as to the meaning of swap’s terms, and that there may be unfavorable interest rate changes. The Fund may also suffer losses if it is unable to terminate outstanding swaps or reduce its exposure through offsetting transactions or the Fund may be liable for early termination of the derivative.

The Fund is a party to International Swap Dealers Association, Inc. Master Agreements (ISDA Master Agreements) with select counterparties that govern OTC derivative transactions, which may include foreign exchange derivative transactions, entered into by the Fund and those counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreements typically include standard representations and warranties, as well as a Credit Support Annex

(CSA) that accompanies a schedule to ISDA master agreements outlining the general obligations of the Fund and counterparties relating to events of default, termination events and other standard provisions. Termination events may include a decline in the Fund’s net asset value below a certain point over a certain period of time that is specified in the Schedule to the ISDA Master Agreement; such an event may entitle the counterparty to elect to terminate early and calculate damages based on that termination, with respect to some or all outstanding transactions under the applicable damage calculation provisions of the ISDA Master Agreement. An election by one or more counterparties to terminate ISDA Master Agreements could have a material impact in the financial statements of the Fund.

During the year the Fund entered into interest rate swaps in anticipation of rising interest rates. The following summarizes the contracts held as of October 31, 2009:

      PAYMENTS     
  USD NOTIONAL  PAYMENTS MADE RECEIVED BY      UNREALIZED 
COUNTERPARTY  AMOUNT  BY FUND  FUND  EFFECTIVE DATE  MATURITY DATE  DEPRECIATION MARKET VALUE 

      3-month       
Bank of America  $29,000,000  4.6875%  LIBOR (a)  9-14-2007  9-14-2010  ($1,219,458) ($1,219,458) 

(a) At October 31, 2009, the 3-month LIBOR rate was 0.28063%.

Interest rate swap notional amounts at October 31, 2009 are representative of the activity during the year.

Fair value of derivative instruments by risk category

The table below summarizes the fair values of derivatives held by the Fund at October 31, 2009 by risk category:

  STATEMENT OF ASSETS  FINANCIAL  ASSET  LIABILITY 
  AND LIABILITIES  INSTRUMENTS  DERIVATIVES FAIR  DERIVATIVES 
  LOCATION  LOCATION  VALUE  FAIR VALUE 

Interest rate contracts  Payable for futures  Futures                      ($14,092) 
  variation margin;       
 
  Net unrealized  Interest     
  depreciation on  rate swaps     
  investments,       
  futures and swap       
  contracts      (1,219,458) 
 
  Total                       ($1,233,550) 

† Reflects cumulative appreciation/depreciation on Futures as disclosed in Note 3. Only the year end variation margin is separately disclosed on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  35 



Effect of derivative instruments on the Statement of Operations

The table below summarizes the realized gain (loss) recognized in the net increase (decrease) in net assets from operations, classified by derivative instrument and risk category for the year ended October 31, 2009:

  FUTURES CONTRACTS  SWAP CONTRACTS  TOTAL 

Statement of Operations location —       
Net realized gain (loss) on       
Interest rate contracts  $11,314  ($859,732)  ($848,418) 
Total  $11,314  ($859,732)  ($848,418) 

The table below summarizes the change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) recognized in the net increase (decrease) in net assets from operations, classified by derivative instrument and risk category for the year ended October 31, 2009:

  FUTURES CONTRACTS  SWAP CONTRACTS  TOTAL 

Statement of Operations location —       
Change in unrealized appreciation       
(depreciation) of       
Interest rate contracts  ($14,092)  ($93,197)  ($107,289) 
Total  ($14,092)  ($93,197)  ($107,289) 

Note 4
Guarantees and indemnifications

Under the Fund’s organizational documents, its Officers and Trustees are indemnified against certain liabilities arising out of the performance of their duties to the Fund. Additionally, in the normal course of business, the Fund enters into contracts with service providers that contain general indemnification clauses. The Fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown, as this would involve future claims that may be made against the Fund that have not yet occurred.

Note 5
Management fee and transactions with
affiliates and others

The Fund has an investment management contract with John Hancock Advisers, LLC (the Adviser), a wholly owned indirect subsidiary of Manulife Financial Corporation (MFC). Under the investment management contract, the Fund pays a daily management fee to the Adviser, equivalent on an annual basis, to the sum of (a) 0.650% of the first $150,000,000 of the Fund’s average daily net assets value and the value attributable to the credit facility agreement (collectively, managed assets), (b) 0.375% of the next $50,000,000, (c) 0.350% of the next $100,000,000 and (d) 0.300% of the

Fund’s average daily managed assets in excess of $300,000,000. The Adviser has a subadvi-sory agreement with MFC Global Investment Management (U.S.), LLC, a subsidiary of MFC and an affiliate of the Adviser. The Fund is not responsible for payment of subadvisory fees.

The investment management fees incurred for the year ended October 31, 2009, were equivalent to an annual effective rate of 0.60% of the Fund’s managed assets.

Pursuant to the Advisory Agreement, the Fund reimburses the Adviser for all expenses associated with providing the administrative, financial, legal, accounting and recordkeeping services of the Fund, including the preparation of all tax returns, annual, semiannual and periodic reports to shareholders and the preparation of all regulatory reports. The accounting and legal services fees incurred for the year ended October 31, 2009, were equivalent to an annual effective rate of 0.02% of the Fund’s managed assets.

Note 6
Trustees’ fees

The compensation of unaffiliated Trustees is borne by the Fund. The unaffiliated Trustees may elect to defer, for tax purposes, their receipt of this compensation under the

36  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



John Hancock Group of Funds Deferred Compensation Plan. The Fund makes investments into other John Hancock funds, as applicable, to cover its liability for the deferred compensation. Investments to cover the Fund’s deferred compensation liability are recorded on the Fund’s books as an other asset. The deferred compensation liability and the related other asset are always equal and are marked to market on a periodic basis to reflect any income earned by the investments, as well as any unrealized gains or losses. The Deferred Compensation Plan investments had no impact on the operations of the Fund.

Note 7
Fund share transactions

Common shares

The Fund is authorized to issue an unlimited number of common shares with no par value. Transactions in common shares for the year ended October 31, 2009, the period ended October 31, 2008 and the year ended December 31, 2007, are as follows:

  Year ended 10-31-09  Period ended 10-31-081  Year ended 12-31-07 
   
  Shares  Amount  Shares  Amount  Shares  Amount 
Distributions             
reinvested  95,623  $1,059,251  40,345  $515,172  64,325  $889,931 

1For the ten month period ended October 31, 2008. The Fund changed its fiscal year end from December 31 to October 31.

Note 8
Leverage

The Fund utilizes a Committed Facility Agreement (CFA) to increase its assets available for investment. In prior fiscal periods, the Fund used Auctioned Preferred Shares (APS) for leverage. When the Fund leverages its assets, common shareholders pay all fees associated with and have the potential to benefit or be disadvantaged from leverage. The Adviser’s fee is also incurred from the use of leverage. Consequently, the Fund and the Adviser may have differing interests in determining whether to leverage the Fund’s assets. Leverage creates risks which may adversely affect the return for the holders of common shares, including:

• the likelihood of greater volatility of net asset value and market price of common shares

• fluctuations in the interest rate paid for the use of the CFA

• increased operating costs, which may reduce the Fund’s total return to the holders of common shares

• the potential for a decline in the value of an investment acquired through leverage, while the Fund’s obligations under such leverage remains fixed

• the fund is more likely to have to sell securities in a volatile market in order to meet asset coverage or other debt compliance requirements

To the extent the income or capital appreciation derived from securities purchased with funds received from leverage exceeds the cost of leverage, the Fund’s return will be greater than if leverage had not been used, conversely, return would be lower if the cost of the leverage exceeds the income or capital appreciation derived.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  37 



The Fund issued APS on November 4, 2003, in a public offering. Effective May 2, 2008, the Fund’s Trustees approved a plan whereby a third party commercial bank has agreed to provide a revolving credit agreement that will enable a refinancing of the Fund’s APS. The facility was used to redeem the outstanding APS and allowed the Fund to change its form of leverage from APS to debt. The redemption of all series was completed on June 12, 2008. Below is a comparison of the leverage methods utilized by the Fund:

  APS  CFA 

Required Asset Coverage  200%  200% (300% at time of draw) 
 
Maximum Leverage  $90 million  $58 million 
amount     
 
Costs Associated with  Dividends paid to preferred  Interest expense (one month LIBOR 
Leverage  shareholders (maximum rate  (reset daily) plus 0.85%).* 
  equals the overnight commercial   
  paper rate plus 1.25%)   
  APS auction fees  Arrangement fee** 
 
  Auction agent expenses  Commitment fees (0.60% 
    per annum). 
  Preferred share transfer agent   
  expenses   

* Prior to June 2, 2009, the rate was the annualized Eurodollar rate plus 0.95% or alternative rates.

** Arrangement fee is $145,000 amortized over the first 270 days of the CFA.

Note 9
Committed facility agreement

Effective June 2, 2009, the Fund entered into a CFA with a third party financial institution that allows it to borrow up to an initial limit of $58 million and to invest the borrowings in accordance with its investment practices. Borrowings under the CFA are secured by the assets of the Fund as disclosed in the schedule of investments. Interest is charged at the monthly LIBOR rate (reset daily) plus 0.85% and is payable monthly. Under the terms of the CFA, the Fund also pays an arrangement fee of 0.25% in the first year of the agreement on the committed financing and a commitment fee of 0.60% payable monthly on the unused portion of the commitment. The Fund incurred a $145,000 arrangement fee upon execution of the CFA. The arrangement fee is amortized during the first year of the agreement over 270 days.

Prior to June 2, 2009 the Fund had a Revolving Credit Agreement (RCA) agreement with a third party commercial bank that allowed it to borrow up to $77 million. Interest was charged at the annualized Eurodollar rate plus 0.95% and was payable at least monthly. In addition, the Fund paid a facility fee of 0.20% per annum on the unused portion of the facility and an administration fee of $38,500 in each year of the agreement.

Arrangement and commitment fees expensed for the year ended October 31, 2009 amounted to $125,107 and $28,461, respectively, and are included in interest expense in the Statement of Operations. As of October 31, 2009, the Fund had borrowings of $58,000,000 at an interest rate 1.0935%. For the period from November 1, 2008 to October 31, 2009, the average borrowings under the CFA and the effective average interest rate were $55,463,014 and 1.6651%, respectively.

To renew the CFA, a renewal fee equal to the product of the Maximum Commitment Financing and 0.25% is due on each 540th calendar day (Renewal Due Date) following the date of the CFA, and is payable on the related Renewal Due Date. The Fund may terminate the agreement with 60 days’ notice if the Board of Trustees has determined that the elimination of all indebtedness leveraging the Fund’s investments is in the best interest of the Fund’s shareholders. In certain circumstances, the CFA may automatically terminate, and

38  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



in other specified circumstances it may be reduced to a 30-day facility. In addition, upon the occurrence of certain defaults, the lender may terminate the agreement, and it may modify or terminate the agreement upon 270 days’ notice.

Note 10
Purchase and sale of securities

Purchases and proceeds from sales or maturities of securities, other than short-term securities and obligations of the U.S. government, during the year ended October 31, 2009, aggregated $146,185,995 and $148,218,463, respectively. Purchases and proceeds from sales or maturities of obligations of the U.S. government aggregated $28,274,010 and $20,849,851, respectively, during the year ended October 31, 2009.

Note 11
Subsequent event

On December 17, 2009, the Fund entered into an amendment to the CFA, increasing the amount the Fund can borrow under the CFA up to $90 million. Under the terms of the amendment, the Fund pays an arrangement fee of 0.25% on the increased amount of the committed financing upon execution of the amendment.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  39 



Auditors’ report

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Board of Trustees and Shareholders of John Hancock Income Securities Trust:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations, of changes in net assets and of cash flows and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of John Hancock Income Securities Trust (the “Fund”) at October 31, 2009, and the results of its operations, the changes in its net assets, its cash flows and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Fund’s management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements 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, which included confirmation of securities as of October 31, 2009 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, and the application of alternative auditing procedures where securities purchased confirmations had not been received, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
December 18, 2009

40  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Tax information

Unaudited

For federal income tax purposes, the following information is furnished with respect to the distributions of the Fund, if any, paid during its taxable year ended October 31, 2009.

With respect to the ordinary dividends paid by the Fund for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2009, 1.71% of the dividends qualifies for the corporate dividends-received deduction.

The Fund hereby designates the maximum amount allowable of its net taxable income as qualified dividend income as provided in the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003. This amount will be reflected on Form 1099-DIV for the calendar year 2009.

Shareholders will be mailed a 2009 U.S. Treasury Department Form 1099-DIV in January 2010.

This will reflect the total of all distributions that are taxable for calendar year 2009.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  41 



Investment objective and policy

The Fund is a closed-end diversified management investment company, common shares of which were initially offered to the public on February 14, 1973, and are publicly traded on the NYSE. The Fund’s investment objective is to generate a high level of current income consistent with prudent investment risk. The Fund invests in a diversified portfolio of freely marketable debt securities and may invest an amount not exceeding 20% of its assets in income-producing preferred and common stock. Under normal circumstances, the Fund will invest at least 80% of net assets in income securities. Income securities will consist of the following: (i) marketable corporate debt securities, (ii) governmental obligations and (iii) cash and commercial paper. “Net assets” is defined as net assets plus borrowings for investment purposes. The Fund will notify shareholders at least 60 days prior to any change in this 80% investment policy.

It is contemplated that at least 75% of the value of the Fund’s total assets will be represented by debt securities, which have at the time of purchase a rating within the four highest grades as determined by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. or Standard & Poor’s Corporation. The Fund intends to engage in short-term trading and may invest in repurchase agreements.

Bylaws and Declaration of Trust

In November 2002, the Board of Trustees adopted several amendments to the Fund’s bylaws, including provisions relating to the calling of a special meeting and requiring advance notice of shareholder proposals or nominees for Trustee. The advance notice provisions in the bylaws require shareholders to notify the Fund in writing of any proposal which they intend to present at an annual meeting of shareholders, including any nominations for Trustee, between 90 and 120 days prior to the first anniversary of the mailing date of the notice from the prior year’s annual meeting of shareholders. The notification must be in the form prescribed by the bylaws. The advance notice provisions provide the Fund and its Trustees with the opportunity to thoughtfully consider and address the matters proposed before the Fund prepares and mails its proxy statement to shareholders. Other amendments set forth the procedures that must be followed in order for a shareholder to call a special meeting of shareholders. Please contact the Secretary of the Fund for additional information about the advance notice requirements or the other amendments to the bylaws.

On August 21, 2003, shareholders approved the amendment of the Fund’s bylaws effective August 26, 2003, to provide for the issuance of preferred shares.

On March 31, 2008, the shareholders approved an amendment to the Fund’s Declaration of Trust to permit the Fund’s Board of Trustees to delegate the authority to declare dividends to a Dividend Committee consisting of officers, employees or agents of the Fund.

Effective September 9, 2008, the Fund’s Bylaws were amended with respect to notice requirements for Trustee nominations and other proposals by the Fund’s shareholders. These provisions require the disclosure of the nominating shareholder and the nominee’s investment interests as they relate to the Fund, as well as the name of any other shareholder supporting the nominee for election as a Trustee or the proposal of other business. In order for notice to be proper, such notice must disclose the economic interests of the nominating shareholder and nominee, including his or her holdings of shares in the Fund, the intent upon which those shares were acquired, and any hedging arrangements (including leveraged or short positions) made with respect to the shares of the Fund. Additionally, any material interest that the shareholder has in the business to be brought before the meeting must be disclosed.

Financial futures contracts and options

The Fund may buy and sell financial futures contracts and options on futures contracts to hedge against the effects of fluctuations in interest rates and other market conditions. The Fund’s ability to hedge successfully will depend on the Adviser’s ability to predict accurately the future direction of interest rate changes and other market factors. There is no assurance that a liquid market for futures and options will always exist. In addition, the

42  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Fund could be prevented from opening, or realizing the benefits of closing out a futures or options position because of position limits or limits on daily price fluctuations imposed by an exchange.

The Fund will not engage in transactions in futures contracts and options on futures for speculation, but only for hedging or other permissible risk management purposes. All of the Fund’s futures contracts and options on futures will be traded on a U.S. commodity exchange or board of trade. The Fund will not engage in a transaction in futures or options on futures if, immediately thereafter, the sum of initial margin deposits on existing positions and premiums paid for options on futures would exceed 5% of the Fund’s total assets.

Dividends and distributions

During the year ended October 31, 2009, dividends from net investment income totaling $1.1266 per share were paid to shareholders. The dates of payments and the amounts per share were as follows:

  INCOME 
PAYMENT DATE  DIVIDEND 

December 31, 2008  $0.2672 
March 31, 2009  0.2601 
June 30, 2009  0.2791 
September 30, 2009  0.3202 

Dividend reinvestment plan

The Fund offers its common shareholders a Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the Plan), which offers the opportunity to earn compounded yields. Any holder of common shares of record of the Fund may elect to participate in the Plan and receive the Fund’s common shares in lieu of all or a portion of the cash dividends. The Plan is available to all common shareholders without charge. Mellon Investor Services (the Plan Agent) will act as agent for participating shareholders.

Shareholders may join the Plan by notifying the Plan Agent by telephone, in writing or by visiting the Plan Agent’s Web site at www. melloninvestor.com showing an election to reinvest all or a portion of dividend payments. If received in proper form by the Plan Agent prior to the record date for a dividend, the election will be effective with respect to all dividends paid after such record date. Shareholders whose shares are held in the name of a broker or nominee should contact the broker or nominee to determine whether and how they may participate in the Plan.

The Board of Trustees of the Fund has authorized the Dividend Committee to declare dividends from net investment income payable in cash or, in the case of shareholders participating in the Plan, partially or entirely in the Fund’s common shares. The number of shares to be issued for the benefit of each shareholder will be determined by dividing the amount of the cash dividend, otherwise payable to such shareholder on shares included under the Plan, by the per share net asset value of the common shares on the date for payment of the dividend, unless the net asset value per share on the payment date is less than 95% of the market price per share on that date, in which event the number of shares to be issued to a shareholder will be determined by dividing the amount of the cash dividend payable to such shareholder, by 95% of the market price per share of the common shares on the payment date. The market price of the common shares on a particular date shall be the mean between the highest and lowest sales price on the NYSE on that date. Net asset value will be determined in accordance with the established procedures of the Fund. However, if as of such payment date the market price of the common shares is lower than such net asset value per share, the number of shares to be issued will be determined on the basis of such market price. Fractional shares, carried out to four decimal places, will be credited to the shareholder’s account. Such fractional shares will be entitled to future dividends.

The shares issued to participating shareholders, including fractional shares, will be held by the Plan Agent in the name of the participant. A confirmation will be sent to each shareholder promptly, normally within five to seven days, after the payment date of the dividend. The confirmation will show the total number of shares held by such shareholder before and after the dividend, the amount of the most recent cash dividend that the shareholder has

Annual report | Income Securities Trust   43



elected to reinvest and the number of shares acquired with such dividend.

Participation in the Plan may be terminated at any time by contacting the Plan Agent by telephone, in writing or by visiting the Plan Agent’s Web site, and such termination will be effective immediately. However, notice of termination must be received prior to the record date of any distribution to be effective for that distribution. Upon termination, certificates will be issued representing the number of full shares of common shares held by the Plan Agent. A shareholder will receive a cash payment for any fractional share held.

The reinvestment of dividends will not relieve participants of any federal, state or local income tax, which may be due with respect to such dividend. Dividends reinvested in common shares will be treated on your federal income tax return as though you had received a dividend in cash in an amount equal to the fair market value of the shares received, as determined by the prices for common shares of the Fund on the NYSE as of the dividend payment date. Distributions from the Fund’s long-term capital gains will be processed as noted above for those electing to reinvest in common shares and will be taxable to you as long-term capital gains. The confirmation referred to above will contain all the information you will require for determining the cost basis of shares acquired and should be retained for that purpose. At year end, each account will be supplied with detailed information necessary to determine total tax liability for the calendar year. All correspondence or additional information concerning the Plan should be directed to the Plan Agent, Mellon Bank, N.A., c/o Mellon Investor Services, P.O. Box 3338, South Hackensack, New Jersey 07606-1938 (Telephone: 1-800-852-0218).

Shareholder communication and assistance

If you have any questions concerning the Fund, we will be pleased to assist you. If you hold shares in your own name and not with a brokerage firm, please address all notices, correspondence, questions or other communications regarding the Fund to the transfer agent at:

Mellon Investor Services
Newport Office Center VII
480 Washington Boulevard
Jersey City, NJ 07310
Telephone: 1-800-852-0218

If your shares are held with a brokerage firm, you should contact that firm, bank or other nominee for assistance.

44  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Shareholder meeting (unaudited)

On May 18, 2009, an adjourned session of the Annual Meeting of the Shareholders of Income Securities Trust was held at 601 Congress Street, Boston, Massachusetts for the purpose of considering and voting upon the proposals listed below:

Proposal 1: Election of eleven Trustees to serve until their respective successors have been duly elected and qualified.

PROPOSAL 1 PASSED FOR ALL TRUSTEES ON MAY 18, 2009.

    WITHHELD 
  FOR  AUTHORITY 

James R. Boyle  7,052,704  352,785 
James F. Carlin  7,143,183  262,306 
William H. Cunningham  7,128,892  276,597 
Deborah C. Jackson  7,126,368  279,121 
Charles L. Ladner  7,131,790  273,699 
Stanley Martin  7,134,723  270,766 
Patti McGill Peterson  7,133,457  272,032 
John A. Moore  7,135,268  270,221 
Steven R. Pruchansky  7,143,594  261,895 
Gregory A. Russo  7,144,372  261,117 
John G. Vrysen  7,138,169  267,320 

Proposal 2: To amend the Fund’s Declaration of Trust to divide the Board into three classes of Trustees and to provide for shareholder approval of each such class every three years.

Proposal 2 did not receive sufficient votes from the Fund’s shareholders.

For  4,535,325 
Against  1,666,253 
Withheld  177,377 
Broker Non-Votes  1,026,534 

Proposal 3: To adopt a new form of investment advisory agreement.

PROPOSAL 3 PASSED ON MAY 18, 2009.

For  5,833,486 
Against  269,097 
Withheld  255,162 

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  45 



Board Consideration of and Continuation of Investment Advisory Agreement and Subadvisory Agreement

The Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act) requires the Board of Trustees (the Board) of John Hancock Income Securities Trust (the Fund), including a majority of the Trustees who have no direct or indirect interest in the investment advisory agreement and are not “interested persons” of the Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act (the Independent Trustees), annually to meet in person to review and consider the continuation of existing advisory and subadvisory agreements. At meetings held on May 6–7 and June 8–9, 2009, the Board considered the renewal of:

(i) the investment advisory agreement (the Advisory Agreement) with John Hancock Advisers, LLC (the Adviser) and

(ii) the investment subadvisory agreement (the Subadvisory Agreement) with MFC

Global Investment Management (U.S.), LLC (the Subadviser) for the Fund.

The Advisory Agreement and the Subadvisory Agreement are collectively referred to as the Advisory Agreements. The Board considered the factors and reached the conclusions described below relating to the selection of the Adviser and Subadviser and the continuation of the Advisory Agreements. During such meetings, the Board’s Contracts/Operations Committee and the Independent Trustees also met in executive sessions with their independent legal counsel.

In evaluating the Advisory Agreements, the Board, including the Contracts/Operations Committee and its Independent Trustees, reviewed a broad range of information requested for this purpose. The Independent Trustees considered the legal advice of independent legal counsel and relied on their own business judgment in determining the factors to be considered in evaluating the materials that were presented to them and the weight to be given to each such factor. The Board’s review and conclusions were based on a comprehensive consideration of all information presented to the Board and not the result of any single controlling factor. The key factors considered by the Board and the conclusions reached are described below.

Nature, extent and quality of services

The Board considered the ability of the Adviser and the Subadviser, based on their resources, reputation and other attributes, to attract and retain qualified investment professionals, including research, advisory, and supervisory personnel. It considered the background and experience of senior management and investment professionals responsible for managing the Fund. The Board considered the investment philosophy, research and investment decision-making processes of the Adviser and the Subadviser responsible for the daily investment activities of the Fund. The Board considered the Subadviser’s history and experience with the Fund. The Board considered the Adviser’s execution of its oversight responsibilities. The Board further considered the culture of compliance, resources dedicated to compliance, compliance programs, record of compliance with applicable laws and regulation, with the Fund’s investment policies and restrictions and with the applicable Code of Ethics, and the responsibilities of the Adviser’s and Subadviser’s compliance department.

In addition, the Board took into account the administrative and other non-advisory services provided to the Fund by the Adviser and its affiliates.

Based on the above factors, together with those referenced below, the Board concluded that, within the context of its full deliberations, the nature, extent and quality of the investment advisory services provided to the Fund by the Adviser and Subadviser supported renewal of the Advisory Agreements.

Fund performance

The Board considered the performance results for the Fund over various time periods ended December 31, 2008. The Board also considered these results in comparison to the performance of a category of relevant funds (the Category), a peer group of comparable funds (the Peer Group) and a benchmark index. The funds within each Category and Peer Group were selected by Morningstar Inc. (Morningstar), an independent provider of investment company data. The Board reviewed the methodology

46  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



used by Morningstar to select the funds in the Category and the Peer Group, and noted the imperfect comparability of the Peer Group. The Board also considered updated performance information at its May and June 2009 meetings. Performance and other information may be quite different as of the date of this shareholders report.

The Board noted that the Fund’s performance for the all the time periods under review was lower than the performance of the Category and Peer Group medians, and its benchmark index, the Barclays Capital US Government/Credit Index. The Adviser provided the Board with additional information about the Fund’s recent performance. The Adviser noted that the Fund’s performance as of May 2009 was improved. The Board concluded that the Fund’s underperformance was being responsibly addressed by the Adviser and Subadviser.

Investment advisory fee and subadvisory fee rates and expenses

The Board reviewed and considered the contractual investment advisory fee rate payable by the Fund to the Adviser for investment advisory services (the Advisory Agreement Rate). The Board received and considered information comparing the Advisory Agreement Rate with the advisory fees for the Category and Peer Group. The Board noted that the Advisory Agreement Rate was inline with the Peer Group and Category medians.

The Board received and considered expense information regarding the Fund’s various components, including advisory fees, and other non-advisory fees, including transfer agent fees, custodian fees, and other miscellaneous fees (e.g., fees for accounting and legal services). The Board considered comparisons of these expenses to the Peer Group median. The Board also received and considered expense information regarding the Fund’s total operating expense ratio (Gross Expense Ratio) and total operating expense ratio after taking the fee waiver arrangement applicable to the Advisory Agreement Rate into account (Net Expense Ratio). The Board received and considered information comparing the Gross Expense Ratio and Net Expense Ratio of the Fund to that of the Peer Group and Category medians. The Board noted that the Fund’s Net Expense Ratio was higher than the Peer Group and Category medians. The Board also noted that the Gross Expense Ratio was not appreciably higher than the Peer Group median and inline with the Category median. The Board also noted the differences in the funds included in the Peer Group, including a higher percentage of leverage employed by the Fund and differences in the amount of assets under management.

The Adviser also discussed the Morningstar data and rankings, and other relevant information, for the Fund. Based on the above-referenced considerations and other factors, the Board concluded that the Fund’s overall performance and expense results supported the re-approval of the Advisory Agreements.

The Board also received information about the investment subadvisory fee rate (the Subadvisory Agreement Rate) payable by the Adviser to the Subadviser for investment sub-advisory services. The Board concluded that the Subadvisory Agreement Rate was fair and equitable, based on its consideration of the factors described here.

Profitability

The Board received and considered a detailed profitability analysis of the Adviser based on the Advisory Agreements, as well as on other relationships between the Fund and the Adviser and its affiliates, including the Subadviser. The Board also considered a comparison of the Adviser’s profitability to that of other similar investment advisers whose profitability information is publicly available. The Board concluded that, in light of the costs of providing investment management and other services to the Fund, the profits and other ancillary benefits reported by the Adviser were not unreasonable.

Economies of scale

The Board received and considered general information regarding economies of scale with respect to the management of the Fund, including the Fund’s ability to appropriately benefit from economies of scale under the Fund’s fee structure. The Board recognized the inherent limitations of any analysis of economies of scale, stemming largely from the Board’s

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  47 



understanding that most of the Adviser’s and Subadviser’s costs are not specific to individual Funds, but rather are incurred across a variety of products and services.

The Board observed that the Advisory Agreements offered breakpoints. However, the Board considered the limited relevance of economies of scale in the context of a closed-end fund that, unlike an open-end fund, does not continuously offer its shares. The Board noted that the Fund, as a closed-end investment company, was not expected to increase materially in size and that its assets would grow (if at all) through the investment performance of the Fund. Therefore, the Board did not consider potential economies of scale as a principal factor in assessing the fees payable under the Advisory Agreements, but concluded that the fees were fair and equitable based on relevant factors.

Other benefits to the Adviser

The Board received information regarding potential “fall-out” or ancillary benefits received by the Adviser and its affiliates, including the Subadviser, as a result of their relationship with the Fund. Such benefits could include, among others, benefits directly attributable to the relationship of the Adviser and Subadviser with the Fund and benefits potentially derived from an increase in business as a result of their relationship with the Fund (such as the ability to market to shareholders other financial products offered by the Adviser and its affiliates).

Other factors and broader review

As discussed above, the Board reviewed detailed materials received from the Adviser and Subadviser as part of the annual re-approval process. The Board also regularly reviews and assesses the quality of the services that the Fund receives throughout the year. In this regard, the Board reviews reports of the Adviser and Subadviser at least quarterly, which include, among other things, fund performance reports and compliance reports. In addition, the Board meets with senior investment officers at various times throughout the year.

After considering the above-described factors and based on its deliberations and its evaluation of the information described above, the Board concluded that approval of the continuation of the Advisory Agreements for the Fund was in the best interest of the Fund and its shareholders. Accordingly, the Board unanimously approved the continuation of the Advisory Agreements.

48  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Information about the portfolio managers

Management Biographies and Fund ownership

Below is an alphabetical list of the portfolio managers who share joint responsibility for the day-to-day investment management of the Fund. It provides a brief summary of their business careers over the past five years and their range of beneficial share ownership in the Fund as of October 31, 2009.

Barry H. Evans, CFA
President, Chief Fixed Income Officer and Chief Operating Officer, MFC Global Investment
Management (U.S.), LLC since 2005
Senior Vice President, John Hancock Advisers LLC (1986–2005)
Began business career in 1986
Joined fund team in 2002
Fund ownership — $10,001–$50,000

Jeffrey N. Given, CFA
Vice President, MFC Global Investment Management (U.S.), LLC since 2005
Second Vice President, John Hancock Advisers LLC (1993–2005)
Began business career in 1993
Joined fund team in 1999
Fund ownership — $1–$10,000

Howard C. Greene, CFA
Senior Vice President, MFC Global Investment Management (U.S.), LLC since 2005
Senior Vice President, John Hancock Advisers LLC (2002–2005)
Vice President at Sun Life Financial Services Company of Canada (1987–2002)
Began business career in 1979
Joined fund team in 2005
Fund ownership — None

Other Accounts the Portfolio Managers are Managing

The table below indicates for each portfolio manager information about the accounts over which the portfolio manager has day-to-day investment responsibility. All information on the number of accounts and total assets in the table is as of October 31, 2009. For purposes of the table, “Other Pooled Investment Vehicles” may include investment partnerships and group trusts, and “Other Accounts” may include separate accounts for institutions or individuals, insurance company general or separate accounts, pension funds and other similar institutional accounts.

P O R T F O L I O    M A N A G E R  O T H E R    A C C O U N T S    M A N A G E D    B Y    T H E    P O R T F O L I O    M A N A G E R S 

 
Barry H. Evans, CFA  Other Investment Companies: 5 accounts with assets of 
approximately $3.2 billion.
  Other Pooled Investment Vehicles: None 
  Other Accounts: 82 accounts with assets of 
approximately $2.3 billion.
 
Jeffrey N. Given, CFA  Other Investment Companies: 7 accounts with assets of 
approximately $7.2 billion.
  Other Pooled Investment Vehicles: 2 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $82.7 million. 
  Other Accounts: 17 accounts with assets of 
approximately $5.0 billion.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  49 



Howard C. Greene, CFA  Other Investment Companies: 3 accounts with assets of 
approximately $1.6 billion.
  Other Pooled Investment Vehicles: 2 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $82.7 million. 
  Other Accounts: 19 accounts with assets of 
approximately $6.8 billion.

Neither the Adviser or the Subadviser receives a fee based upon the investment performance of any of the accounts included under “Other Accounts Managed by the Portfolio Managers” in the table above.

When a portfolio manager is responsible for the management of more than one account, the potential arises for the portfolio manager to favor one account over another. For the reasons outlined below, the Fund does not believe that any material conflicts are likely to arise out of a portfolio manager’s responsibility for the management of the Fund as well as one or more other accounts. The Adviser and the Subadviser have adopted procedures, overseen by the Chief Compliance Officer, that are intended to monitor compliance with the policies referred to in the following paragraphs.

• The Subadviser has policies that require a portfolio manager to allocate investment opportunities in an equitable manner and generally to allocate such investments proportionately among all accounts with similar investment objectives.

• When a portfolio manager intends to trade the same security for more than one account, the policies of the Subadviser generally require that such trades for the individual accounts are aggregated so each account receives the same price. Where not possible or may not result in the best possible price, the Subadviser will place the order in a manner intended to result in as favorable a price as possible for such client.

• The investment performance on specific accounts is not a factor in determining the portfolio manager’s compensation. See “Compensation of Portfolio Managers” below. Neither the Adviser nor the Subadviser receives a performance-based fee with respect to other accounts managed by the Fund’s portfolio managers.

• The Subadviser imposes certain trading restrictions and reporting requirements for accounts in which a portfolio manager or certain family members have a personal interest in order to confirm that such accounts are not favored over other accounts.

• The Subadviser seeks to avoid portfolio manager assignments with potentially conflicting situations. However, where a portfolio manager is responsible for accounts with differing investment objectives and policies, it is possible that the portfolio manager will conclude that it is in the best interest of one account to sell a portfolio security while another account continues to hold or increase the holding in such security.

Compensation of Portfolio Managers

The Subadviser has adopted a system of compensation for portfolio managers and others involved in the investment process that is applied consistently among investment professionals. At the Subadviser, the structure of compensation of investment professionals is currently comprised of the following basic components: fixed base salary, and an annual investment bonus plan, as well as customary benefits that are offered generally to all full-time employees of the Subadviser.

A limited number of senior investment professionals, who serve as officers of both the Subadviser and its parent company, may also receive options or restricted stock grants of common shares of Manulife Financial.

50  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Only investment professionals are eligible to participate in the Investment Bonus Plan on an annual basis. While the amount of any bonus is discretionary, the following factors are generally used in determining bonuses: 1) The investment performance of all accounts managed by the investment professional over one-, three- and five-year periods are considered. The pre-tax performance of each account is measured relative to an appropriate peer group benchmark. 2) The profitability of the Subadviser and its parent company are also considered in determining bonus awards, with greater emphasis placed upon the profitability of the Adviser. 3) The more intangible contributions of an investment professional to the Subadviser’s business, including the investment professional’s support of sales activities, new fund/strategy idea generation, professional growth and development, and management, where applicable, are evaluating in determining the amount of any bonus award.

While the profitability of the Subadviser and the investment performance of the accounts that the investment professionals maintain are factors in determining an investment professional’s overall compensation, the investment professional’s compensation is not linked directly to the net asset value of any fund.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  51 



Trustees and Officers

This chart provides information about the Trustees and Officers who oversee your John Hancock fund. Officers elected by the Trustees manage the day-to-day operations of the Fund and execute policies formulated by the Trustees.

Independent Trustees     
Name, Year of Birth    Number of John 
Position(s) held with Fund  Trustee  Hancock funds 
Principal occupation(s) and other  of Fund  overseen by 
directorships during past 5 years  since1  Trustee 
 
Patti McGill Peterson, Born: 1943  1996  47 

Chairperson (since December 2008); Principal, PMP Globalinc (consulting) (since 2007); Senior 
Associate, Institute for Higher Education Policy (since 2007); Executive Director, CIES (international 
education agency) (until 2007); Vice President, Institute of International Education (until 2007); Senior 
Fellow, Cornell University Institute of Public Affairs, Cornell University (until 1998); Former President 
Wells College, St. Lawrence University and the Association of Colleges and Universities of the State 
of New York. Director of the following: Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation (until 2003); Security 
Mutual Life (insurance) (until 1997); ONBANK (until 1993). Trustee of the following: Board of Visitors, 
The University of Wisconsin, Madison (since 2007); Ford Foundation, International Fellowships Program 
(until 2007); UNCF, International Development Partnerships (until 2005); Roth Endowment (since 2002); 
Council for International Educational Exchange (since 2003).     
 
James F. Carlin, Born: 1940  2005  47 

Director and Treasurer, Alpha Analytical Laboratories, Inc. (chemical analysis) (since 1985); Part Owner 
and Treasurer, Lawrence Carlin Insurance Agency, Inc. (since 1995); Part Owner and Vice President, 
Mone Lawrence Carlin Insurance Agency, Inc. (until 2005); Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 
Carlin Consolidated, Inc. (management/investments) (since 1987); Trustee, Massachusetts Health and 
Education Tax Exempt Trust (1993–2003).     
 
 
William H. Cunningham, Born: 1944  2005  47 

Professor, University of Texas, Austin, Texas (since 1971); former Chancellor, University of Texas System 
and former President of the University of Texas, Austin, Texas; Director of the following: LIN Television 
(since 2009), Lincoln National Corporation (insurance) (since 2006), Resolute Energy Corporation (oil 
and gas) (since 2009), Southwest Airlines (since 2000), Hayes Lemmerz International, Inc. (diversified 
automotive parts supply company) (2003–2009).     
 
 
Deborah C. Jackson,2 Born: 1952  2008  47 

Chief Executive Officer, American Red Cross of Massachusetts Bay (since 2002); Board of Directors of 
Eastern Bank Corporation (since 2001); Board of Directors of Eastern Bank Charitable Foundation (since 
2001); Board of Directors of American Student Association Corp. (since 1996); Board of Directors of 
Boston Stock Exchange (2002–2008); Board of Directors of Harvard Pilgrim Healthcare (since 2007). 
 
Charles L. Ladner, Born: 1938  2004  47 

Chairman and Trustee, Dunwoody Village, Inc. (retirement services); Senior Vice President and Chief 
Financial Officer, UGI Corporation (public utility holding company) (retired 1998); Vice President and 
Director, AmeriGas, Inc. (retired 1998); Director, AmeriGas Partners, L.P. (gas distribution) (until 1997); 
Director, EnergyNorth, Inc. (until 1997); Director, Parks and History Association (until 2005). 

52  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Independent Trustees (continued)     
 
Name, Year of Birth    Number of John 
Position(s) held with Fund  Trustee  Hancock funds 
Principal occupation(s) and other  of Fund  overseen by 
directorships during past 5 years  since1  Trustee 
 
Stanley Martin,2 Born: 1947  2008  47 

Senior Vice President/Audit Executive, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (2004–2006); 
Executive Vice President/Consultant, HSBC Bank USA (2000–2003); Chief Financial Officer/Executive 
Vice President, Republic New York Corporation and Republic National Bank of New York (1998–2000); 
Partner, KPMG LLP (1971–1998).     
 
 
Dr. John A. Moore, Born: 1939  1996  47 

President and Chief Executive Officer, Institute for Evaluating Health Risks (nonprofit institution) 
(until 2001); Senior Scientist, Sciences International (health research) (until 2003); Former   
Assistant Administrator and Deputy Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency; Principal, 
Hollyhouse (consulting) (since 2000); Director, CIIT Center for Health Science Research (nonprofit 
research) (until 2007).     

 
Steven R. Pruchansky,2 Born: 1944  2005  47 

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Greenscapes of Southwest Florida, Inc. (since 2000); Director 
and President, Greenscapes of Southwest Florida, Inc. (until 2000); Member, Board of Advisors, First 
American Bank (since 2008); Managing Director, JonJames, LLC (real estate) (since 2000); Director, 
First Signature Bank & Trust Company (until 1991); Director, Mast Realty Trust (until 1994); President, 
Maxwell Building Corp. (until 1991).     
 
 
Gregory A. Russo, Born: 1949  2008  47 

Vice Chairman, Risk & Regulatory Matters, KPMG LLP (KPMG) (2002–2006); Vice Chairman, Industrial 
Markets, KPMG (1998–2002).     
 
Non-Independent Trustees3     
Name, Year of Birth    Number of John 
Position(s) held with Fund  Trustee  Hancock funds 
Principal occupation(s) and other  of Fund  overseen by 
directorships during past 5 years  since1  Trustee 
 
James R. Boyle, Born: 1959  2005  262 

Senior Executive Vice President (since 2009), Executive Vice President (1999–2009), Manulife Financial 
Corporation; Director and President, John Hancock Variable Life Insurance Company (since 2007); 
Director and Executive Vice President, John Hancock Life Insurance Company (since 2004); Chairman 
and Director, John Hancock Advisers, LLC, The Berkeley Financial Group, LLC (holding company) and 
John Hancock Funds, LLC (since 2005); Chairman and Director, John Hancock Investment Management 
Services, LLC (since 2006); Senior Vice President, The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) 
(until 2004).     

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  53 



Non-Independent Trustees3 (continued)     
 
Name, Year of Birth    Number of John 
Position(s) held with Fund  Trustee  Hancock funds 
Principal occupation(s) and other  of Fund  overseen by 
directorships during past 5 years  since1  Trustee 
 
John G. Vrysen,4 Born: 1955  2009  47 

Senior Vice President (since 2006), Vice President (until 2006), Manulife Financial Corporation; 
Director, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, John Hancock Advisers, LLC, The 
Berkeley Financial Group, LLC, John Hancock Investment Management Services, LLC (“JHIMS”), and 
John Hancock Funds, LLC (since 2007); Chief Operating Officer, JHF II and JHT (since 2007); Chief 
Operating Officer, John Hancock Funds and JHF III (2007–2009); Director, John Hancock Signature 
Services, Inc. (“Signature Services”) (since 2005); Chief Financial Officer, John Hancock Advisers, LLC, 
The Berkeley Financial Group, LLC, MFC Global Investment Management (U.S.) (“MFC Global (U.S.)”), 
JHIMS, John Hancock Funds, LLC, JHF, JHF II, JHF III and JHT (2005–2007).     
 
Principal officers who are not Trustees     
Name, Year of Birth     
Position(s) held with Fund    Officer 
Principal occupation(s) and other    of Fund 
directorships during past 5 years    since 
 
Keith F. Hartstein, Born: 1956    2005 

President and Chief Executive Officer     
Senior Vice President, Manulife Financial Corporation (since 2004); Director, President and Chief 
Executive Officer, John Hancock Advisers, LLC, The Berkeley Financial Group, LLC, John Hancock Funds, 
LLC (since 2005); Director, MFC Global (U.S.) (since 2005); Chairman and Director, Signature Services 
(since 2005); Director, President and Chief Executive Officer, John Hancock Investment Management 
Services, LLC (since 2006); President and Chief Executive Officer, John Hancock Funds (since 2005) and 
JHF III (since 2006); Executive Vice President (since 2009), President and Chief Executive Officer (until 
2009), JHT and JHF II; Director, Chairman and President, NM Capital Management, Inc. (since 2005); 
Member and former Chairman, Investment Company Institute Sales Force Marketing Committee (since 
2003); Director, President and Chief Executive Officer, MFC Global (U.S.) (2005–2006); Executive Vice 
President, John Hancock Funds, LLC (until 2005).     
 
 
Andrew G. Arnott, Born: 1971    2009 

Chief Operating Officer     
Senior Vice President, Manulife Financial Corporation (since 2009); Senior Vice President (since 2007), 
Vice President (2005–2007), John Hancock Advisers, LLC; Senior Vice President (since 2008), Vice 
President (2006–2008), John Hancock Investment Management Services, LLC; Senior Vice President 
(since 2006), Vice President (2005–2006), 2nd Vice President (2004–2005), John Hancock Funds, 
LLC; Chief Operating Officer (since 2009), Vice President (2007–2009), John Hancock Funds and JHF 
III; Vice President (since 2006), John Hancock Funds II and John Hancock Trust; Senior Vice President 
(2005–2009), Product Management and Development for John Hancock Funds, LLC; Vice President and 
Director (1998–2005), Marketing and Product Management for John Hancock Funds, LLC.   

54  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



Principal officers who are not Trustees (continued)   
 
Name, Year of Birth   
Position(s) held with Fund  Officer 
Principal occupation(s) and other  of Fund 
directorships during past 5 years  since 
 
Thomas M. Kinzler, Born: 1955  2006 

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer   
Vice President and Counsel for John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) (since 2006); Secretary 
and Chief Legal Officer, John Hancock Funds, JHF II, JHF III and JHT (since 2006); Secretary and Chief 
Legal Counsel, John Hancock Advisers, LLC and John Hancock Investment Management Services, LLC 
(since 2008); Secretary, John Hancock Funds, LLC and The Berkeley Financial Group, LLC (since 2007); 
Vice President and Associate General Counsel for Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company   
(1999–2006); Secretary and Chief Legal Counsel for MML Series Investment Fund (2000–2006);   
Secretary and Chief Legal Counsel for MassMutual Institutional Funds (2000–2004); Secretary and 
Chief Legal Counsel for MassMutual Select Funds and MassMutual Premier Funds (2004–2006).   
 
Francis V. Knox, Jr., Born: 1947  2005 

Chief Compliance Officer   
Chief Compliance Officer, John Hancock Funds, JHF II, JHF III and JHT (since 2005); Chief Compliance 
Officer, John Hancock Advisers, LLC and JHIMS (since 2007); Vice President and Chief Compliance 
Officer, John Hancock Advisers, LLC and JHIMS (until 2007); Vice President and Chief Compliance   
Officer, MFC Global (U.S.) (2005–2008); Vice President and Assistant Treasurer, Fidelity Group of   
Funds (until 2005).   
 
Charles A. Rizzo, Born: 1957  2007 

Chief Financial Officer   
Senior Vice President, John Hancock Advisers, LLC and John Hancock Investment Management Services, 
LLC (since 2007); Chief Financial Officer, John Hancock Funds, JHF II, JHF III and JHT (since 2007);   
Assistant Treasurer, Goldman Sachs Mutual Fund Complex (registered investment companies) (2005– 
2007); Vice President, Goldman Sachs (2005–2007); Managing Director and Treasurer of Scudder   
Funds, Deutsche Asset Management (2003–2005).   
 
Salvatore Schiavone, Born: 1965  2009 

Treasurer   
Treasurer, John Hancock Closed-End Funds (since 2009); Assistant Treasurer, John Hancock Funds, 
John Hancock Funds II, John Hancock Funds III, and John Hancock Trust (since 2007); Assistant   
Treasurer, Fidelity Group of Funds (2005–2007); Vice President, Fidelity Management Research   
Company (2005–2007); Assistant Treasurer, Scudder Group of Funds (2003–2005); Director, Deutsche 
Asset Management (2003–2005), Vice President and Head of Fund Reporting, Deutsche Asset   
Management, previously Scudder, Stevens & Clark (1996–2003).   

The business address for all Trustees and Officers is 601 Congress Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210-2805.

1 Each Trustee serves until resignation, retirement age or until his or her successor is elected.

2 Member of Audit Committee. Mr. Pruchansky was appointed by the Board of Trustees effective September 1, 2009.

3 Non-Independent Trustees hold positions with the Fund’s investment adviser, underwriter and certain other affiliates.

4 Mr. Vrysen was elected by the shareholders at an annual shareholders meeting on May 18, 2009.

Annual report | Income Securities Trust  55 



More information

Trustees  Investment adviser 
Patti McGill Peterson, Chairperson  John Hancock Advisers, LLC 
James R. Boyle   
James F. Carlin  Subadviser 
William H. Cunningham  MFC Global Investment 
Deborah C. Jackson*    Management (U.S.), LLC 
Charles L. Ladner   
Stanley Martin*  Custodian 
Dr. John A. Moore  State Street Bank and Trust Company 
Steven R. Pruchansky††   
Gregory A. Russo Transfer agent 
John G. Vrysen   Mellon Investor Services 
 
Officers  Legal counsel 
Keith F. Hartstein  K&L Gates LLP 
President and Chief Executive Officer   
Independent registered 
Andrew G. Arnott  public accounting firm 
Chief Operating Officer  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP 
 
Thomas M. Kinzler   Stock symbol 
Secretary and Chief Legal Officer  Listed New York Stock Exchange: JHS 
 
Francis V. Knox, Jr.  For shareholder assistance 
Chief Compliance Officer  refer to page 44 
 
Charles A. Rizzo   
Chief Financial Officer   
 
Salvatore Schiavone§   
Treasurer   

*Member of the Audit Committee
of the Audit Committee effective 9-1-09
†Non-Independent Trustee
‡Effective 9-1-09
§Effective 5-7-09

The Fund is listed for trading on the NYSE and has filed with the NYSE its chief executive officer certification regarding compliance with the NYSE’s listing standards. The Fund also files with the SEC the certification of its chief executive officer and chief financial officer required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

The Fund’s proxy voting policies and procedures, as well as the Fund’s proxy voting record for the most recent twelve-month period ended June 30, are available free of charge on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Web site at www.sec.gov or on our Web site.

The Fund’s complete list of portfolio holdings, for the first and third fiscal quarters, is filed with the SEC on Form N-Q. The Fund’s Form N-Q is available on our Web site and the SEC’s Web site, www.sec.gov, and can be reviewed and copied (for a fee) at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Call 1-800-SEC-0330 to receive information on the operation of the SEC’s Public Reference Room.

We make this information on your fund, as well as monthly portfolio holdings, and other fund details available on our Web site www.jhfunds.com or by calling 1-800-852-0218.

You can also contact us:     
  1-800-852-0218  Regular mail: 
  jhfunds.com  Mellon Investor Services 
    Newport Office Center VII 
    480 Washington Boulevard 
    Jersey City, NJ 07310 


56  Income Securities Trust | Annual report 



 

1-800-852-0218
1-800-231-5469 TDD
1-800-843-0090 EASI-Line
www.jhfunds.com

PRESORTED
STANDARD
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
MIS

P600A 10/09 
12/09 



ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS.

As of the end of the period, October 31, 2009, the registrant has adopted a code of ethics, as defined in Item 2 of Form N-CSR, that applies to its Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer (respectively, the principal executive officer, the principal financial officer and the principal accounting officer, the “Senior Financial Officers”). A copy of the code of ethics is filed as an exhibit to this Form N-CSR.

ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

Stanley Martin is the audit committee financial expert and is “independent”, pursuant to general instructions on Form N-CSR Item 3.

ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

(a) Audit Fees

The aggregate fees billed for professional services rendered by the principal accountant(s) for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements or services that are normally provided by the accountant(s) in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements amounted to $41,819 for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2009 and $44,920 for the fiscal period ended October 31, 2008. These fees were billed to the registrant and were approved by the registrant’s audit committee.

(b) Audit-Related Services

Audit-related fees amounted to $0 for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2009 and $18,645 for the fiscal period ended October 31, 2008 billed to the registrant or to the registrant's investment adviser (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser), and any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant ("control affiliates").

(c) Tax Fees

The aggregate fees billed for professional services rendered by the principal accountant(s) for the tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning (“tax fees”) amounted to $2,873 for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2009 and $3,500 for the fiscal period ended October 31, 2008. The nature of the services comprising the tax fees was the review of the registrant’s income tax returns and tax distribution requirements. These fees were billed to the registrant and were approved by the registrant’s audit committee. There were no tax fees billed to the control affiliates.

(d) All Other Fees

The all other fees billed to the registrant for products and services provided by the principal accountant were $3,555 for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2009 and $0 for the fiscal period ended October 31, 2008 billed to control affiliates for products and services provided by the principal accountant. The nature of the services comprising the all other fees was related to the principal accountant’s report on the registrant’s Eligible Asset Coverage. These fees were approved by the registrant’s audit committee.



(e)(1) Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures:

The trust’s Audit Committee must pre-approve all audit and non-audit services provided by the independent registered public accounting firm (the “Auditor”) relating to the operations or financial reporting of the funds. Prior to the commencement of any audit or non-audit services to a fund, the Audit Committee reviews the services to determine whether they are appropriate and permissible under applicable law.

The trust’s Audit Committee has adopted policies and procedures to, among other purposes, provide a framework for the Committee’s consideration of audit-related and non-audit services by the Auditor. The policies and procedures require that any audit-related and non-audit service provided by the Auditor and any non-audit service provided by the Auditor to a fund service provider that relates directly to the operations and financial reporting of a fund are subject to approval by the Audit Committee before such service is provided. Audit-related services provided by the Auditor that are expected to exceed $25,000 per instance/per fund are subject to specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee. Tax services provided by the Auditor that are expected to exceed $30,000 per instance/per fund are subject to specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee.

All audit services, as well as the audit-related and non-audit services that are expected to exceed the amounts stated above, must be approved in advance of provision of the service by formal resolution of the Audit Committee. At the regularly scheduled Audit Committee meetings, the Committee reviews a report summarizing the services, including fees, provided by the Auditor.

(e)(2) Services approved pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X:

Audit-Related Fees, Tax Fees and All Other Fees:

There were no amounts that were approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception under Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

(f) According to the registrant’s principal accountant, for the fiscal period ended October 31, 2009, the percentage of hours spent on the audit of the registrant's financial statements for the most recent fiscal year that were attributed to work performed by persons who were not full-time, permanent employees of principal accountant was less than 50%.

(g) The aggregate non-audit fees billed by the registrant's accountant(s) for services rendered to the registrant and rendered to the registrant's control affiliates for each of the last two fiscal years of the registrant were $8,200,526 for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2009 and $4,591,272 for the fiscal period ended October 31, 2008.

(h) The audit committee of the registrant has considered the non-audit services provided by the registrant’s principal accountant(s) to the control affiliates and has determined that the services that were not pre-approved are compatible with maintaining the principal accountant(s)' independence.

ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.



The registrant has a separately-designated standing audit committee comprised of independent trustees. The members of the audit committee are as follows:

Stanley Martin - Chairman
Deborah C. Jackson
Steven R. Pruchansky

ITEM 6. SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS.

(a) Not applicable.
(b) Not applicable.

ITEM 7. DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

See attached exhibit “Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures”.

ITEM 8. PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

Information about the portfolio managers

Management Biographies and Fund ownership

Below is an alphabetical list of the portfolio managers who share joint responsibility for the day-to-day investment management of the Fund. It provides a brief summary of their business careers over the past five years and their range of beneficial share ownership in the Fund as of October 31, 2009.

Barry H. Evans, CFA
President, Chief Fixed Income Officer and Chief Operating Officer, MFC Global Investment
Management (U.S.), LLC since 2005
Senior Vice President, John Hancock Advisers LLC (1986–2005)
Began business career in 1986
Joined fund team in 2002
Fund ownership — $10,001–$50,000

Jeffrey N. Given, CFA
Vice President, MFC Global Investment Management (U.S.), LLC since 2005
Second Vice President, John Hancock Advisers LLC (1993–2005)
Began business career in 1993
Joined fund team in 1999
Fund ownership — $1–$10,000

Howard C. Greene, CFA
Senior Vice President, MFC Global Investment Management (U.S.), LLC since 2005
Senior Vice President, John Hancock Advisers LLC (2002–2005)
Vice President at Sun Life Financial Services Company of Canada (1987–2002)
Began business career in 1979
Joined fund team in 2005
Fund ownership — None



Other Accounts the Portfolio Managers are Managing

The table below indicates for each portfolio manager information about the accounts over which the portfolio manager has day-to-day investment responsibility. All information on the number of accounts and total assets in the table is as of October 31, 2009. For purposes of the table, “Other Pooled Investment Vehicles” may include investment partnerships and group trusts, and “Other Accounts” may include separate accounts for institutions or individuals, insurance company general or separate accounts, pension funds and other similar institutional accounts.

PORTFOLIO MANAGER  OTHER ACCOUNTS MANAGED BY THE PORTFOLIO MANAGERS 
 
Barry H. Evans, CFA  Other Investment Companies: 5 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $3.2 billion. 
Other Pooled Investment Vehicles: None 
                                                                 Other Accounts: 82 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $2.3 billion. 
 
Jeffrey N. Given, CFA  Other Investment Companies: 7 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $7.2 billion. 
  Other Pooled Investment Vehicles: 2 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $82.7 million. 
                                                          Other Accounts: 17 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $5.0 billion. 
 
Howard C. Greene, CFA  Other Investment Companies: 3 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $1.6 billion. 
  Other Pooled Investment Vehicles: 2 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $82.7 million. 
Other Accounts: 19 accounts with assets of 
  approximately $6.8 billion. 

Neither the Adviser or the Subadviser receives a fee based upon the investment performance of any of the accounts included under “Other Accounts Managed by the Portfolio Managers” in the table above.

When a portfolio manager is responsible for the management of more than one account, the potential arises for the portfolio manager to favor one account over another. For the reasons outlined below, the Fund does not believe that any material conflicts are likely to arise out of a portfolio manager’s responsibility for the management of the Fund as well as one or more other accounts. The Adviser and the Subadviser have adopted procedures, overseen by the Chief Compliance Officer, that are intended to monitor compliance with the policies referred to in the following paragraphs.

• The Subadviser has policies that require a portfolio manager to allocate investment opportunities in an equitable manner and generally to allocate such investments proportionately among all accounts with similar investment objectives.

• When a portfolio manager intends to trade the same security for more than one account, the policies of the Subadviser generally require that such trades for the individual accounts are aggregated so each account receives the same price. Where not possible or may not result in the best possible price, the Subadviser will place the order in a manner intended to result in as favorable a price as possible for such client.



• The investment performance on specific accounts is not a factor in determining the portfolio manager’s compensation. See “Compensation of Portfolio Managers” below. Neither the Adviser nor the Subadviser receives a performance-based fee with respect to other accounts managed by the Fund’s portfolio managers.

• The Subadviser imposes certain trading restrictions and reporting requirements for accounts in which a portfolio manager or certain family members have a personal interest in order to confirm that such accounts are not favored over other accounts.

• The Subadviser seeks to avoid portfolio manager assignments with potentially conflicting situations. However, where a portfolio manager is responsible for accounts with differing investment objectives and policies, it is possible that the portfolio manager will conclude that it is in the best interest of one account to sell a portfolio security while another account continues to hold or increase the holding in such security.

Compensation of Portfolio Managers

The Subadviser has adopted a system of compensation for portfolio managers and others involved in the investment process that is applied consistently among investment professionals. At the Subadviser, the structure of compensation of investment professionals is currently comprised of the following basic components: fixed base salary, and an annual investment bonus plan, as well as customary benefits that are offered generally to all full-time employees of the Subadviser. A limited number of senior investment professionals, who serve as officers of both the Subadviser and its parent company, may also receive options or restricted stock grants of common shares of Manulife Financial.

Only investment professionals are eligible to participate in the Investment Bonus Plan on an annual basis. While the amount of any bonus is discretionary, the following factors are generally used in determining bonuses: 1) The investment performance of all accounts managed by the investment professional over one-, three- and five-year periods are considered. The pre-tax performance of each account is measured relative to an appropriate peer group benchmark. 2) The profitability of the Subadviser and its parent company are also considered in determining bonus awards, with greater emphasis placed upon the profitability of the Adviser. 3) The more intangible contributions of an investment professional to the Subadviser’s business, including the investment professional’s support of sales activities, new fund/strategy idea generation, professional growth and development, and management, where applicable, are evaluating in determining the amount of any bonus award.

While the profitability of the Subadviser and the investment performance of the accounts that the investment professionals maintain are factors in determining an investment professional’s overall compensation, the investment professional’s compensation is not linked directly to the net asset value of any fund.

ITEM 9. PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS.

Not applicable.

ITEM 10. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

There were no material changes to previously disclosed John Hancock Funds – Governance Committee Charter.



ITEM 11. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

(a) Based upon their evaluation of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures as conducted within 90 days of the filing date of this Form N-CSR, the registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded that those disclosure controls and procedures provide reasonable assurance that the material information required to be disclosed by the registrant on this report is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and forms.

(b) There were no changes in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's most recent fiscal half-year (the registrant's second fiscal half-year in the case of an annual report) that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

ITEM 12. EXHIBITS.

(a)(1) Code of Ethics for Senior Financial Officers is attached.

(a)(2) Separate certifications for the registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer, as required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, are attached.

(b)(1) Separate certifications for the registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer, as required by 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, and Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, are attached. The certifications furnished pursuant to this paragraph are not deemed to be "filed" for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or otherwise subject to the liability of that section. Such certifications are not deemed to be incorporated by reference into any filing under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, except to the extent that the Registrant specifically incorporates them by reference.

(c)(1) Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures are attached.

(c)(2) Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders is attached. See attached “John Hancock Funds – Governance Committee Charter”.

(c)(3) Contact person at the registrant.



SIGNATURES 

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

John Hancock Income Securities Trust

By: /s/ Keith F. Hartstein
-------------------------------------
Keith F. Hartstein
President and Chief Executive Officer

Date: December 18, 2009

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

By: /s/ Keith F. Hartstein
-------------------------------------
Keith F. Hartstein
President and Chief Executive Officer

Date: December 18, 2009

By: /s/ Charles A. Rizzo
-------------------------------------
Charles A. Rizzo
Chief Financial Officer

Date: December 18, 2009