N-CSRS 1 wgi_ncsrs.htm N-CSRS

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: 811-07338

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund

(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

 

333 South Hope Street, 55th Floor

Los Angeles, California 90071

(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

 

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (949) 975-5000

 

Date of fiscal year end: November 30

 

Date of reporting period: May 31, 2023

 

Gregory F. Niland

Capital World Growth and Income Fund

5300 Robin Hood Road

Norfolk, Virginia 23513

(Name and Address of Agent for Service)

 
 

 

ITEM 1 – Reports to Stockholders

 

 

Capital World Growth
and Income Fund
®

 

Semi-annual report
for the six months ended

May 31, 2023

 

Global flexibility:
Following opportunity
anywhere

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund seeks to provide you with long-term growth of capital while providing current income.

 

This fund is one of more than 40 offered by Capital Group, home of American Funds, one of the nation’s largest mutual fund families. For over 90 years, Capital Group has invested with a long-term focus based on thorough research and attention to risk.

 

Fund results shown in this report, unless otherwise indicated, are for Class F-2 shares. Class A share results are shown at net asset value unless otherwise indicated. If a sales charge (maximum 5.75%) had been deducted from Class A shares, the results would have been lower. Results are for past periods and are not predictive of results for future periods. Current and future results may be lower or higher than those shown. Prices and returns will vary, so investors may lose money. Investing for short periods makes losses more likely. For current information and month-end results, visit capitalgroup.com.

 

Here are the average annual total returns on a $1,000 investment for the periods ended June 30, 2023 (the most recent calendar quarter-end):

 

   1 year  5 years  10 years
                
Class F-2 shares   18.28%   6.88%   8.33%
Class A shares (reflecting 5.75% maximum sales charge)   11.18    5.37    7.44 

 

For other share class results, visit capitalgroup.com and americanfundsretirement.com.

 

The total annual fund operating expense ratio is 0.53% for Class F-2 shares and 0.76% for Class A shares as of the prospectus dated February 1, 2023. The expense ratios are restated to reflect current fees.

 

Investment results assume all distributions are reinvested and reflect applicable fees and expenses. When applicable, results reflect fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements, without which they would have been lower. Visit capitalgroup.com for more information.

 

The fund’s 30-day yield as of May 31, 2023, was 2.10% for Class F-2 shares and 1.77% for Class A shares, calculated in accordance with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission formula. The Class A share result reflects the 5.75% maximum sales charge.

 

Investing outside the United States may be subject to risks, such as currency fluctuations, periods of illiquidity and price volatility. These risks may be heightened in connection with investments in developing countries. Refer to the fund prospectus and the Risk Factors section of this report for more information on these and other risks associated with investing in the fund.

 

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

 

Fellow investors:

 

Results for Capital World Growth and Income Fund for the periods ended May 31, 2023, are shown in the table below, as well as results of the fund’s benchmark.

 

For additional information about the fund, its investment results, holdings and portfolio managers, visit capitalgroup.com/individual/investments/fund/WGIFX. You can also access information about Capital Group’s American Funds and read our insights about the markets, retirement, saving for college, investing fundamentals and more at capitalgroup.com.

 

Contents

 

1 Results at a glance
   
2 Investment portfolio
   
11 Financial statements
   
15 Notes to financial statements
   
25 Financial highlights

 

Results at a glance

 

For periods ended May 31, 2023, with all distributions reinvested

 

   Cumulative total returns  Average annual total returns
   6 months  1 year  5 years  10 years  Lifetime
(since Class A
inception on
3/26/93)
                
Capital World Growth and Income Fund (Class F-2 shares)*   3.10%   1.02%   5.51%   7.49%   10.01%
Capital World Growth and Income Fund (Class A shares)   2.97    0.80    5.27    7.24    9.78 
MSCI ACWI (All Country World Index)   3.44    0.85    6.77    7.82    7.37 

 

Past results are not predictive of results in future periods.

 

* Class F-2 shares were first offered on August 1, 2008. Class F-2 share results prior to the date of first sale are hypothetical based on the results of the original share class of the fund without a sales charge, adjusted for typical estimated expenses. Visit capitalgroup.com for more information on specific expense adjustments and the actual dates of first sale.
Results for the MSCI ACWI reflect dividends gross of withholding taxes through December 31, 2000, and dividends net of withholding taxes thereafter. This index is a free float-adjusted market capitalization-weighted index that is designed to measure equity market results in the global developed and emerging markets, consisting of more than 40 developed and emerging market country indexes. It is unmanaged and, therefore, has no expenses. Investors cannot invest directly in an index. Source: MSCI.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 1
 
Investment portfolio May 31, 2023 unaudited

 

Sector diversification Percent of net assets

 

 

Country diversification by domicile  Percent of
net assets
United States   46.01%
Eurozone*   14.42 
Japan   6.28 
United Kingdom   4.91 
Canada   4.29 
Taiwan   2.74 
Switzerland   2.66 
India   2.55 
Brazil   2.17 
China   2.07 
Australia   1.53 
Hong Kong   1.07 
Other countries   3.11 
Bonds, notes & other debt instruments, short-term securities & other assets less liabilities   6.19 
* Countries using the euro as a common currency; those represented in the fund’s portfolio are Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain.

 

Common stocks 93.71%  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Information technology 19.66%          
Broadcom, Inc.   4,751,966   $3,839,400 
Microsoft Corp.   11,629,600    3,819,044 
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd.   137,759,578    2,501,663 
ASML Holding NV   2,679,442    1,923,213 
Apple, Inc.   7,968,330    1,412,387 
Tokyo Electron, Ltd.   6,349,200    880,207 
EPAM Systems, Inc.1   2,348,143    602,581 
Micron Technology, Inc.   7,753,356    528,779 
Accenture PLC, Class A   1,687,946    516,376 
Capgemini SE   2,851,150    496,148 
NVIDIA Corp.   1,194,842    452,057 
Salesforce, Inc.1   1,789,257    399,684 
Oracle Corp.   2,698,000    285,826 
TE Connectivity, Ltd.   2,151,652    263,534 
Logitech International SA   3,854,324    246,981 
Applied Materials, Inc.   1,831,061    244,080 
Shopify, Inc., Class A, subordinate voting shares1   4,116,700    235,434 
Intel Corp.   7,206,911    226,585 
Delta Electronics, Inc.   19,571,320    201,589 
Keyence Corp.   392,300    190,906 
Marvell Technology, Inc.   3,066,564    179,363 
Hexagon AB, Class B   14,075,393    163,170 
Synopsys, Inc.1   358,400    163,058 
Texas Instruments, Inc.   850,311    147,852 
OBIC Co., Ltd.   899,500    145,844 
GlobalWafers Co., Ltd.   7,996,000    131,152 
Adobe, Inc.1   241,416    100,861 
Snowflake, Inc., Class A1   588,549    97,323 
Disco Corp.   656,922    95,951 
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., Class A   1,500,000    93,735 
Arista Networks, Inc.1   500,000    83,170 
MediaTek, Inc.   3,308,800    81,731 
Fujitsu, Ltd.   540,324    68,721 
Infosys, Ltd.   3,569,800    56,883 
Wolfspeed, Inc.1   769,000    36,943 
Stripe, Inc., Class B1,2,3   192,531    3,876 
         20,916,107 

 

2 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 
Common stocks (continued)  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Health care 14.65%          
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.   4,257,287   $2,074,321 
Abbott Laboratories   14,481,146    1,477,077 
Eli Lilly and Company   3,396,045    1,458,465 
AstraZeneca PLC   7,119,153    1,032,594 
Novo Nordisk AS, Class B   5,394,251    864,269 
Gilead Sciences, Inc.   10,358,148    796,956 
Takeda Pharmaceutical Company, Ltd.   22,195,500    704,298 
Daiichi Sankyo Company, Ltd.   20,329,800    662,460 
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.   1,153,427    586,471 
Pfizer, Inc.   14,468,252    550,083 
GE HealthCare Technologies, Inc.   6,792,455    540,068 
Stryker Corp.   1,691,283    466,084 
Siemens Healthineers AG   6,826,522    386,004 
Novartis AG   3,905,442    373,756 
Sanofi   3,545,000    359,524 
Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.1   1,021,112    330,401 
Centene Corp.1   5,012,617    312,837 
Bayer AG   5,354,104    298,397 
AbbVie, Inc.   1,848,873    255,071 
Olympus Corp.   12,619,700    191,798 
Medtronic PLC   2,002,461    165,724 
Amgen, Inc.   640,914    141,418 
Insulet Corp.1   508,130    139,355 
EssilorLuxottica SA   737,825    132,842 
Intuitive Surgical, Inc.1   422,594    130,091 
DexCom, Inc.1   1,057,092    123,955 
Zoetis, Inc., Class A   676,527    110,281 
Rede D’Or Sao Luiz SA   18,030,698    103,067 
Lonza Group AG   159,700    99,844 
Penumbra, Inc.1   316,212    97,185 
The Cigna Group   387,994    95,994 
Eurofins Scientific SE, non-registered shares   1,250,000    82,359 
Revvity, Inc.   630,246    72,680 
CVS Health Corp.   995,000    67,690 
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.1   82,330    60,559 
agilon health, Inc.1,4   3,036,000    60,356 
ResMed, Inc.   241,685    50,945 
Catalent, Inc.1   1,114,300    41,485 
CSL, Ltd.   207,500    41,353 
Carl Zeiss Meditec AG, non-registered shares   191,649    21,479 
Molina Healthcare, Inc.1   61,900    16,954 
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc.1   51,110    9,456 
         15,586,006 
           
Industrials 13.02%          
Airbus SE, non-registered shares   9,816,126    1,285,746 
General Electric Co.   12,003,605    1,218,726 
Carrier Global Corp.   17,523,261    716,701 
Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd.   20,163,653    620,865 
BAE Systems PLC   53,074,253    612,814 
Boeing Company1   2,728,843    561,323 
Safran SA   3,871,668    560,508 
Siemens AG   3,251,748    532,978 
Raytheon Technologies Corp.   5,759,216    530,654 
Melrose Industries PLC5   79,051,864    463,755 
Deere & Company   1,291,423    446,807 
Caterpillar, Inc.   1,872,179    385,201 
Mitsui & Co., Ltd.   12,012,800    379,719 
Bureau Veritas SA   14,350,573    364,002 
Lockheed Martin Corp.   804,046    357,004 
TransDigm Group, Inc.   452,495    350,073 
CSX Corp.   10,270,510    314,997 
LIXIL Corp.5   17,221,000    222,486 
Daikin Industries, Ltd.   1,158,100    220,773 
Deutsche Post AG   4,810,791    216,232 
Johnson Controls International PLC   3,490,628    208,390 
Compagnie de Saint-Gobain SA, non-registered shares   3,205,311    177,475 
Brenntag SE   2,242,647    175,904 

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 3
 
Common stocks (continued)  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Industrials (continued)          
Legrand SA   1,766,376   $167,019 
L3Harris Technologies, Inc.   870,828    153,196 
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc.1   2,255,527    139,504 
ASSA ABLOY AB, Class B   6,263,742    138,992 
International Consolidated Airlines Group SA (CDI)1   70,470,000    135,349 
Astra International Tbk PT   314,440,045    135,299 
Schneider Electric SE   775,816    133,794 
Canadian Pacific Kansas City, Ltd.   1,730,800    131,887 
Thales SA   884,765    123,228 
The Weir Group PLC   5,621,120    118,486 
RELX PLC   3,702,434    115,602 
MTU Aero Engines AG   489,248    112,854 
Rentokil Initial PLC   13,932,800    110,680 
ITOCHU Corp.4   3,103,900    105,175 
VINCI SA   911,317    103,567 
Northrop Grumman Corp.   225,000    97,985 
Techtronic Industries Co., Ltd.   10,263,000    95,219 
Waste Connections, Inc.   684,500    93,537 
SMC Corp.   164,400    88,593 
Bunzl PLC   2,262,722    88,495 
Rockwell Automation   307,800    85,753 
AB Volvo, Class B   3,670,887    67,739 
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc.   1,197,942    65,839 
Atlas Copco AB, Class B   5,156,016    64,903 
Larsen & Toubro, Ltd.   2,415,848    64,407 
Nidec Corp.   1,255,000    62,514 
Adecco Group AG   1,923,070    57,349 
Ryanair Holdings PLC (ADR)1   377,000    39,615 
AGC Inc.   779,700    28,485 
         13,848,198 
           
Financials 10.66%          
Zurich Insurance Group AG   1,984,532    928,258 
AIA Group, Ltd.   81,930,127    785,773 
Kotak Mahindra Bank, Ltd.   31,970,372    778,412 
HDFC Bank, Ltd.   30,696,008    597,673 
HDFC Bank, Ltd. (ADR)   848,539    54,646 
ING Groep NV   43,115,264    530,357 
B3 SA - Brasil, Bolsa, Balcao   178,529,675    468,731 
Ping An Insurance (Group) Company of China, Ltd., Class H   62,608,000    397,374 
Ping An Insurance (Group) Company of China, Ltd., Class A   1,466,988    9,705 
JPMorgan Chase & Co.   2,617,465    355,216 
Mastercard, Inc., Class A   927,803    338,667 
Morgan Stanley   3,699,044    302,434 
HDFC Life Insurance Co., Ltd.   40,382,630    289,135 
Aon PLC, Class A   924,500    285,014 
Blackstone, Inc.   3,175,925    271,986 
Chubb, Ltd.   1,363,092    253,262 
Discover Financial Services   2,424,017    249,043 
Toronto-Dominion Bank (CAD denominated)   4,226,976    239,264 
DBS Group Holdings, Ltd.   9,877,300    221,313 
DNB Bank ASA   11,976,904    200,475 
S&P Global, Inc.   499,145    183,401 
Fairfax Financial Holdings, Ltd., subordinate voting shares   239,300    171,764 
Great-West Lifeco, Inc.4   5,984,900    169,429 
AXA SA   5,933,000    167,518 
Citigroup, Inc.   3,624,738    160,648 
China Merchants Bank Co., Ltd., Class A   24,097,517    109,559 
China Merchants Bank Co., Ltd., Class H   10,304,306    47,900 
CME Group, Inc., Class A   859,901    153,707 
Ares Management Corp., Class A   1,655,413    144,170 
Israel Discount Bank, Ltd., Class A   28,985,944    139,587 
Postal Savings Bank of China Co., Ltd., Class H   198,046,000    124,436 
BNP Paribas SA   2,147,455    123,975 
Apollo Asset Management, Inc.   1,828,207    122,216 
FinecoBank SpA   9,145,763    121,319 
Banco Santander, SA   36,500,717    118,803 
National Bank of Canada   1,640,200    117,587 

 

4 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 
Common stocks (continued)  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Financials (continued)          
Wells Fargo & Company   2,826,000   $112,503 
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.   560,000    112,185 
Worldline SA, non-registered shares1   2,800,351    108,806 
Blue Owl Capital, Inc., Class A   10,337,870    105,963 
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.   315,200    102,093 
MSCI, Inc.   207,600    97,682 
Power Corporation of Canada, subordinate voting shares   3,688,606    95,483 
United Overseas Bank, Ltd.   4,600,000    95,075 
XP, Inc., Class A1   4,946,500    87,306 
Nasdaq, Inc.   1,540,993    85,294 
American International Group, Inc.   1,575,000    83,207 
KBC Groep NV   1,260,193    82,411 
Macquarie Group, Ltd.   699,835    77,722 
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.   428,372    74,185 
Axis Bank, Ltd.   6,329,326    69,990 
East Money Information Co., Ltd., Class A   34,219,269    67,529 
Bajaj Finance, Ltd.   752,949    63,615 
Aegon NV4   11,403,867    50,160 
Brookfield Asset Management, Ltd., Class A (CAD denominated)4   665,000    20,330 
ICICI Bank, Ltd.   1,101,093    12,632 
Lufax Holding, Ltd. (ADR)   2,402,292    3,075 
Sberbank of Russia PJSC2   182,070,644    6 
         11,340,003 
           
Consumer discretionary 9.46%          
LVMH Moët Hennessy-Louis Vuitton SE   2,078,079    1,807,882 
Home Depot, Inc.   4,184,852    1,186,196 
Amazon.com, Inc.1   7,449,594    898,272 
Booking Holdings, Inc.1   222,337    557,792 
Flutter Entertainment PLC1   2,683,572    523,926 
General Motors Company   11,803,565    382,554 
Cie. Financière Richemont SA, Class A   2,361,961    374,880 
Restaurant Brands International, Inc.   2,601,838    189,700 
Restaurant Brands International, Inc. (CAD denominated)   2,530,000    183,688 
Industria de Diseño Textil, SA   9,904,230    331,256 
Marriott International, Inc., Class A   1,758,617    295,078 
Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc.1   131,076    272,178 
Lennar Corp., Class A   2,313,419    247,814 
Sony Group Corp.   2,383,867    225,169 
Evolution AB   1,572,877    206,629 
Shimano, Inc.   1,146,600    180,312 
Sands China, Ltd.1   54,450,000    176,274 
Tesla, Inc.1   801,590    163,468 
YUM! Brands, Inc.   1,232,000    158,546 
InterContinental Hotels Group PLC   2,251,607    147,551 
Darden Restaurants, Inc.   822,805    130,431 
Stellantis NV   8,190,700    124,234 
MercadoLibre, Inc.1   98,760    122,364 
Trip.com Group, Ltd. (ADR)1   3,744,225    118,243 
NIKE, Inc., Class B   1,038,300    109,292 
Dowlais Group PLC1   66,583,964    108,338 
Moncler SpA   1,455,000    98,478 
Pan Pacific International Holdings Corp.   5,580,100    95,281 
Kindred Group PLC (SDR)   7,714,973    88,867 
Rivian Automotive, Inc., Class A1   5,683,298    83,715 
NEXT PLC   1,030,327    81,335 
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.1   993,000    80,403 
Midea Group Co., Ltd., Class A   10,917,707    78,882 
Aristocrat Leisure, Ltd.   2,278,300    55,053 
Li Ning Co., Ltd.   8,640,500    46,345 
Wynn Macau, Ltd.1,4   50,954,800    43,599 
JD.com, Inc., Class A   1,933,112    31,081 
Bandai Namco Holdings, Inc.   1,279,775    30,046 
Hermès International   6,125    12,451 
Entain PLC   669,820    10,990 
         10,058,593 

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 5
 
Common stocks (continued)  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Consumer staples 6.94%          
Philip Morris International, Inc.   17,882,584   $1,609,611 
Nestlé SA   6,292,278    745,470 
Kroger Co.   10,189,000    461,867 
Seven & i Holdings Co., Ltd.   10,846,103    455,019 
British American Tobacco PLC   13,372,229    424,925 
Imperial Brands PLC   18,088,656    381,399 
Ajinomoto Co., Inc.   8,653,890    336,714 
Keurig Dr Pepper, Inc.   9,999,221    311,176 
Kweichow Moutai Co., Ltd., Class A   1,346,431    308,710 
Bunge, Ltd.   3,078,649    285,206 
Dollar Tree Stores, Inc.1   1,828,300    246,601 
Ocado Group PLC1,5   52,946,303    243,033 
Danone SA   4,106,268    242,898 
Arca Continental, SAB de CV   23,172,000    234,261 
Constellation Brands, Inc., Class A   913,294    221,903 
Altria Group, Inc.   4,001,779    177,759 
ITC, Ltd.   30,783,792    165,767 
Treasury Wine Estates, Ltd.   21,360,953    161,451 
Target Corp.   742,500    97,216 
Kao Corp.   2,461,300    86,157 
Essity Aktiebolag, Class B   2,910,584    77,352 
Wilmar International, Ltd.   25,487,700    73,694 
Pernod Ricard SA   92,796    20,046 
Costco Wholesale Corp.   30,500    15,603 
         7,383,838 
           
Materials 5.96%          
Vale SA, ordinary nominative shares   85,931,347    1,080,811 
Vale SA (ADR), ordinary nominative shares   44,676,504    566,498 
Fortescue Metals Group, Ltd.   73,679,045    921,110 
Rio Tinto PLC   9,916,871    589,912 
Linde PLC   1,260,339    445,731 
Air Liquide SA, non-registered shares   1,944,003    325,489 
Air Liquide SA, bonus shares   592,600    99,221 
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.   10,829,784    371,895 
Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd.   8,383,895    258,572 
Albemarle Corp.   1,273,449    246,451 
First Quantum Minerals, Ltd.   9,030,004    189,181 
BHP Group, Ltd. (CDI)   6,878,370    189,138 
Evonik Industries AG   9,201,448    184,365 
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.   533,488    143,583 
Glencore PLC   25,773,505    131,915 
Heidelberg Materials AG, non-registered shares   1,804,700    129,014 
Barrick Gold Corp. (CAD denominated)4   7,287,750    123,154 
Akzo Nobel NV   1,601,656    120,594 
CRH PLC   2,185,798    103,035 
Dow, Inc.   1,328,172    64,788 
Corteva, Inc.   1,050,000    56,165 
         6,340,622 
           
Communication services 5.55%          
Alphabet, Inc., Class C1   9,661,819    1,191,978 
Alphabet, Inc., Class A1   5,332,554    655,211 
Netflix, Inc.1   1,792,110    708,296 
Publicis Groupe SA   6,171,400    457,277 
Comcast Corp., Class A   10,593,256    416,845 
Meta Platforms, Inc., Class A1   1,497,131    396,320 
NetEase, Inc.   20,381,375    345,136 
Sea, Ltd., Class A (ADR)1   5,083,884    291,866 
SoftBank Corp.   24,915,391    265,651 
Deutsche Telekom AG   9,276,000    205,689 
Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc.1   1,404,762    193,478 
Bharti Airtel, Ltd.   16,088,235    165,273 
Bharti Airtel, Ltd., interim shares   744,245    4,097 
Singapore Telecommunications, Ltd.   89,965,700    165,654 
Universal Music Group NV   8,343,171    164,983 
Omnicom Group, Inc.   1,300,494    114,691 

 

6 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 
Common stocks (continued)  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Communication services (continued)          
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp.   2,948,100   $83,687 
Tencent Holdings, Ltd.   1,794,500    71,180 
Yandex NV, Class A1,2   566,859    4,592 
         5,901,904 
           
Energy 5.14%          
Canadian Natural Resources, Ltd. (CAD denominated)   24,286,983    1,308,366 
EOG Resources, Inc.   4,770,878    511,867 
Cenovus Energy, Inc. (CAD denominated)   28,170,710    450,109 
TotalEnergies SE   7,485,052    424,681 
Baker Hughes Co., Class A   12,308,682    335,412 
Cameco Corp. (CAD denominated)   8,769,500    244,125 
Cameco Corp.   2,676,500    74,514 
BP PLC   55,301,775    311,837 
Tourmaline Oil Corp.   7,330,710    306,459 
Reliance Industries, Ltd.   8,496,000    253,642 
Shell PLC (GBP denominated)   8,877,600    245,216 
Shell PLC (ADR)   14,358    804 
Shell PLC (EUR denominated)   15,439    432 
ConocoPhillips   2,070,040    205,555 
Woodside Energy Group, Ltd.   7,076,091    157,871 
Woodside Energy Group, Ltd. (CDI)   1,242,929    27,490 
TC Energy Corp. (CAD denominated)4   4,501,104    175,203 
Suncor Energy, Inc.   4,731,173    132,543 
Exxon Mobil Corp.   1,116,464    114,080 
Schlumberger NV   2,542,800    108,908 
Aker BP ASA   3,442,339    74,800 
Gazprom PJSC2   129,104,684    6 
         5,463,914 
           
Utilities 2.09%          
E.ON SE   25,560,610    309,009 
DTE Energy Company   2,749,798    295,878 
PG&E Corp.1   16,318,559    276,436 
Engie SA   13,744,359    206,296 
Engie SA, bonus shares   2,222,972    33,366 
Edison International   3,051,780    206,056 
Iberdrola, SA, non-registered shares   15,068,729    183,619 
China Resources Gas Group, Ltd.   54,234,975    178,349 
NextEra Energy, Inc.   1,976,615    145,202 
Power Grid Corporation of India, Ltd.   49,906,950    141,067 
ENN Energy Holdings, Ltd.   8,253,000    95,911 
Constellation Energy Corp.   643,150    54,038 
AES Corp.   2,671,392    52,733 
Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.   838,600    50,106 
         2,228,066 
           
Real estate 0.58%          
Crown Castle, Inc. REIT   2,336,668    264,534 
American Tower Corp. REIT   610,149    112,536 
Longfor Group Holdings, Ltd.   47,228,473    90,833 
China Resources Mixc Lifestyle Services, Ltd.   17,720,435    80,676 
Sun Hung Kai Properties, Ltd.   2,963,211    37,729 
Iron Mountain, Inc. REIT   654,019    34,938 
         621,246 
           
Total common stocks (cost: $70,467,885,000)        99,688,497 
           
Preferred securities 0.10%          
Consumer discretionary 0.06%          
Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, nonvoting non-registered preferred shares   531,754    66,019 
           
Health care 0.03%          
Grifols, SA, Class B, nonvoting non-registered preferred shares1   3,843,704    31,595 

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 7
 
Preferred securities (continued)  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Financials 0.01%          
Fannie Mae, Series S, 8.25% noncumulative preferred shares1,4   3,287,077   $5,161 
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Series Z, 8.375% noncumulative preferred shares1,4   3,339,730    4,792 
         9,953 
           
Information technology 0.00%          
Stripe, Inc., Series H, 6.00% noncumulative preferred shares1,2,3   82,866    1,668 
           
Total preferred securities (cost: $163,453,000)        109,235 
           
Bonds, notes & other debt instruments 0.54%  Principal amount
(000)
      
Bonds & notes of governments & government agencies outside the U.S. 0.29%          
Brazil (Federative Republic of) 10.00% 1/1/2033  BRL1,409,000    254,514 
United Mexican States, Series M, 8.00% 12/7/2023  MXN1,013,000    56,342 
         310,856 
           
Corporate bonds, notes & loans 0.25%          
Health care 0.13%          
Teva Pharmaceutical Finance Netherlands III BV 6.00% 4/15/2024  USD85,907    85,379 
Teva Pharmaceutical Finance Netherlands III BV 3.15% 10/1/2026   59,700    53,357 
         138,736 
           
Consumer discretionary 0.07%          
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. 11.50% 6/1/20257   35,910    37,987 
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. 5.50% 4/1/20287   22,275    20,487 
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. 8.25% 1/15/20297   8,725    9,189 
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. 9.25% 1/15/20297   7,252    7,718 
         75,381 
           
Financials 0.03%          
Lloyds Banking Group PLC 3.369% 12/14/2046 (5-year UST Yield Curve Rate T Note Constant Maturity + 1.50% on 12/14/2041)8   42,024    27,745 
           
Energy 0.02%          
ONEOK, Inc. 2.20% 9/15/2025   2,141    1,987 
TransCanada Trust 5.875% 8/15/2076 (3-month USD-LIBOR + 4.64% on 8/15/2026)8   21,527    20,199 
         22,186 
           
Total corporate bonds, notes & loans        264,048 
           
Total bonds, notes & other debt instruments (cost: $573,450,000)        574,904 
           
Short-term securities 5.72%   Shares      
Money market investments 5.49%          
Capital Group Central Cash Fund 5.11%5,9   58,405,933    5,840,009 
           
Money market investments purchased with collateral from securities on loan 0.23%          
Capital Group Central Cash Fund 5.11%5,9,10   1,172,769    117,265 
Invesco Short-Term Investments Trust – Government & Agency Portfolio, Institutional Class 5.04%9,10   29,847,424    29,848 
Goldman Sachs Financial Square Government Fund, Institutional Shares 5.01%9,10   24,400,000    24,400 
BlackRock Liquidity Funds – FedFund, Institutional Shares 5.00%9,10   14,600,000    14,600 
Dreyfus Treasury Obligations Cash Management, Institutional Shares 4.98%9,10   12,200,000    12,200 
Morgan Stanley Institutional Liquidity Funds – Government Portfolio, Institutional Class 5.00%9,10   12,200,000    12,200 

 

8 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 
Short-term securities (continued)  Shares   Value
(000)
 
Money market investments purchased with collateral from securities on loan (continued)          
RBC Funds Trust – U.S. Government Money Market Fund, RBC Institutional Class 1 5.00%9,10   12,200,000   $12,200 
State Street Institutional U.S. Government Money Market Fund, Premier Class 5.02%9,10   12,200,000    12,200 
Fidelity Investments Money Market Government Portfolio, Class I 4.98%9,10   9,700,000    9,700 
         244,613 
           
Total short-term securities (cost: $6,084,846,000)        6,084,622 
Total investment securities 100.07% (cost: $77,289,634,000)        106,457,258 
Other assets less liabilities (0.07)%        (75,862)
           
Net assets 100.00%       $106,381,396 

 

Investments in affiliates5

 

   Value of
affiliates at
12/1/2022
(000)
   Additions
(000)
   Reductions
(000)
   Net
realized
loss
(000)
   Net
unrealized
appreciation
(depreciation)
(000)
   Value of
affiliates at
5/31/2023
(000)
   Dividend
income
(000)
 
Common stocks 0.87%                                   
Industrials 0.64%                                   
Melrose Industries PLC  $232,097   $179,171   $133,179   $   $185,666   $463,755   $3,419 
LIXIL Corp.   267,845                (45,359)   222,486    5,834 
                             686,241      
Consumer staples 0.23%                                   
Ocado Group PLC1   401,720                (158,687)   243,033     
Total common stocks                            929,274      
Short-term securities 5.60%                                   
Money market investments 5.49%                                   
Capital Group Central Cash Fund 5.11%9   907,402    9,670,064    4,737,052    (40)   (365)   5,840,009    90,740 
Money market investments purchased with collateral from securities on loan 0.11%                                   
Capital Group Central Cash Fund 5.11%9,10   99,481    17,78411                   117,265    12 
Total short-term securities                            5,957,274      
Total 6.47%                 $(40)  $(18,745)  $6,886,548   $99,993 

 

Restricted securities3

 

     Acquisition
date
   Cost
(000)
   Value
(000)
   Percent
of net
assets
 
Stripe, Inc., Class B1,2    5/6/2021    $7,726   $3,876    .01%
Stripe, Inc., Series H, 6.00% noncumulative preferred shares1,2    3/15/2021     3,325    1,668    .0013 
Total         $11,051   $5,544    .01%

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 9
 
1 Security did not produce income during the last 12 months.
2 Value determined using significant unobservable inputs.
3 Restricted security, other than Rule 144A securities or commercial paper issued pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933. The total value of all such restricted securities was $5,544,000, which represented .01% of the net assets of the fund.
4 All or a portion of this security was on loan. The total value of all such securities was $315,437,000, which represented .30% of the net assets of the fund. Refer to Note 5 for more information on securities lending.
5 Affiliate of the fund or part of the same “group of investment companies” as the fund, as defined under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.
6 Amount less than one thousand.
7 Acquired in a transaction exempt from registration under Rule 144A or, for commercial paper, Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933. May be resold in the U.S. in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. The total value of all such securities was $75,381,000, which represented .07% of the net assets of the fund.
8 Step bond; coupon rate may change at a later date.
9 Rate represents the seven-day yield at 5/31/2023.
10 Security purchased with cash collateral from securities on loan. Refer to Note 5 for more information on securities lending.
11 Represents net activity. Refer to Note 5 for more information on securities lending.
12 Dividend income is included with securities lending income in the fund’s statement of operations and is not shown in this table.
13 Amount less than .01%.

 

Key to abbreviations

ADR = American Depositary Receipts

BRL = Brazilian reais

CAD = Canadian dollars

CDI = CREST Depository Interest

EUR = Euros

GBP = British pounds

LIBOR = London Interbank Offered Rate

MXN = Mexican pesos

REIT = Real Estate Investment Trust

SDR = Swedish Depositary Receipts

USD = U.S. dollars

 

Refer to the notes to financial statements.

 

10 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Financial statements

 

Statement of assets and liabilities      unaudited
at May 31, 2023  (dollars in thousands)
         
Assets:          
Investment securities, at value (includes $315,437 of investment securities on loan):          
Unaffiliated issuers (cost: $70,170,293)  $99,570,710      
Affiliated issuers (cost: $7,119,341)   6,886,548   $106,457,258 
Cash        1,446 
Cash denominated in currencies other than U.S. dollars (cost: $12,335)        12,335 
Receivables for:          
Sales of investments   894,021      
Sales of fund’s shares   41,645      
Dividends and interest   364,420      
Securities lending income   32      
Other   *   1,300,118 
         107,771,157 
Liabilities:          
Collateral for securities on loan        244,613 
Payables for:          
Purchases of investments   878,157      
Repurchases of fund’s shares   70,279      
Investment advisory services   33,797      
Services provided by related parties   17,062      
Trustees’ deferred compensation   2,482      
U.S. and non-U.S. taxes   139,245      
Other   4,126    1,145,148 
Net assets at May 31, 2023       $106,381,396 
           
Net assets consist of:          
Capital paid in on shares of beneficial interest       $75,640,345 
Total distributable earnings        30,741,051 
Net assets at May 31, 2023       $106,381,396 

 

* Amount less than one thousand.

 

Refer to the notes to financial statements.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 11
 

Financial statements (continued)

 

Statement of assets and liabilities unaudited
at May 31, 2023 (continued) (dollars and shares in thousands, except per-share amounts)

 

Shares of beneficial interest issued and outstanding (no stated par value) —

unlimited shares authorized (1,946,092 total shares outstanding)

 

   Net assets   Shares
outstanding
   Net asset 
value per share
 
Class A  $49,660,678    907,914   $54.70 
Class C   712,836    13,200    54.00 
Class T   12    *   54.67 
Class F-1   1,882,527    34,512    54.55 
Class F-2   12,193,242    223,206    54.63 
Class F-3   5,568,686    101,829    54.69 
Class 529-A   3,433,107    63,034    54.46 
Class 529-C   81,983    1,510    54.30 
Class 529-E   94,415    1,736    54.37 
Class 529-T   16    *   54.67 
Class 529-F-1   11    *   54.50 
Class 529-F-2   254,159    4,646    54.70 
Class 529-F-3   12    *   54.70 
Class R-1   120,834    2,236    54.05 
Class R-2   508,108    9,435    53.85 
Class R-2E   62,612    1,150    54.43 
Class R-3   999,245    18,420    54.25 
Class R-4   979,124    17,955    54.53 
Class R-5E   139,447    2,555    54.59 
Class R-5   337,183    6,162    54.72 
Class R-6   29,353,159    536,592    54.70 

 

* Amount less than one thousand.

 

Refer to the notes to financial statements.

 

12 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Financial statements (continued)

 

Statement of operations      unaudited
for the six months ended May 31, 2023  (dollars in thousands)
         
Investment income:        
Income:        
Dividends (net of non-U.S. taxes of $56,447; also includes $99,993 from affiliates)  $1,453,000      
Interest from unaffiliated issuers   29,308      
Securities lending income (net of fees)   2,696   $1,485,004 
Fees and expenses*:          
Investment advisory services   195,580      
Distribution services   76,497      
Transfer agent services   37,063      
Administrative services   15,844      
529 plan services   1,162      
Reports to shareholders   1,276      
Registration statement and prospectus   549      
Trustees’ compensation   542      
Auditing and legal   72      
Custodian   3,742      
State and local taxes   9      
Other   110    332,446 
Net investment income        1,152,558 
           
Net realized gain and unrealized appreciation:          
Net realized gain (loss) on:          
Investments (net of non-U.S. taxes of $28,833):          
Unaffiliated issuers   990,003      
Affiliated issuers   (40)     
Currency transactions   (11,941)   978,022 
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:          
Investments (net of non-U.S. taxes of $50,797):          
Unaffiliated issuers   1,032,282      
Affiliated issuers   (18,745)     
Currency translations   619    1,014,156 
Net realized gain and unrealized appreciation        1,992,178 
           
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations       $3,144,736 

 

* Additional information related to class-specific fees and expenses is included in the notes to financial statements.

 

Refer to the notes to financial statements.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 13
 

Financial statements (continued)

 

Statements of changes in net assets

(dollars in thousands)

 

   Six months ended
May 31, 2023*
   Year ended
November 30, 2022
 
Operations:        
Net investment income  $1,152,558   $2,427,744 
Net realized gain (loss)   978,022    (690,260)
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)   1,014,156    (14,316,527)
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations   3,144,736    (12,579,043)
           
Distributions paid to shareholders   (1,109,930)   (8,448,911)
           
Net capital share transactions   (2,015,248)   4,924,105 
           
Total increase (decrease) in net assets   19,558    (16,103,849)
           
Net assets:          
Beginning of period   106,361,838    122,465,687 
End of period  $106,381,396   $106,361,838 

 

* Unaudited.

 

Refer to the notes to financial statements.

 

14 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 
Notes to financial statements unaudited

 

1. Organization

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund (the “fund”) is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), as an open-end, diversified management investment company. The fund seeks long-term growth of capital while providing current income.

 

The fund has 21 share classes consisting of six retail share classes (Classes A, C, T, F-1, F-2 and F-3), seven 529 college savings plan share classes (Classes 529-A, 529-C, 529-E, 529-T, 529-F-1, 529-F-2 and 529-F-3) and eight retirement plan share classes (Classes R-1, R-2, R-2E, R-3, R-4, R-5E, R-5 and R-6). The 529 college savings plan share classes can be used to save for college education. The retirement plan share classes are generally offered only through eligible employer-sponsored retirement plans. The fund’s share classes are described further in the following table:

 

Share class   Initial sales
charge
  Contingent deferred sales
charge upon redemption
  Conversion feature
Classes A and 529-A   Up to 5.75% for Class A; up to 3.50% for Class 529-A   None (except 1.00% for certain redemptions within 18 months of purchase without an initial sales charge)   None
Classes C and 529-C   None   1.00% for redemptions within one year of purchase   Class C converts to Class A after eight years and Class 529-C converts to Class 529-A after five years
Class 529-E   None   None   None
Classes T and 529-T*   Up to 2.50%   None   None
Classes F-1, F-2, F-3, 529-F-1, 529-F-2 and 529-F-3   None   None   None
Classes R-1, R-2, R-2E, R-3, R-4, R-5E, R-5 and R-6   None   None   None
* Class T and 529-T shares are not available for purchase.

 

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

 

2. Significant accounting policies

 

The fund is an investment company that applies the accounting and reporting guidance issued in Topic 946 by the U.S. Financial Accounting Standards Board. The fund’s financial statements have been prepared to comply with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“U.S. GAAP”). These principles require the fund’s investment adviser to make estimates and assumptions that affect reported amounts and disclosures. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Subsequent events, if any, have been evaluated through the date of issuance in the preparation of the financial statements. The fund follows the significant accounting policies described in this section, as well as the valuation policies described in the next section on valuation.

 

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

 

Class allocations — Income, fees and expenses (other than class-specific fees and expenses), realized gains and losses and unrealized appreciation and depreciation are allocated daily among the various share classes based on their relative net assets. Class-specific fees and expenses, such as distribution, transfer agent and administrative services, are charged directly to the respective share class.

 

Distributions paid to shareholders — Income dividends and capital gain distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 15
 

Currency translation — Assets and liabilities, including investment securities, denominated in currencies other than U.S. dollars are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates supplied by one or more pricing vendors on the valuation date. Purchases and sales of investment securities and income and expenses are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates on the dates of such transactions. The effects of changes in exchange rates on investment securities are included with the net realized gain or loss and net unrealized appreciation or depreciation on investments in the fund’s statement of operations. The realized gain or loss and unrealized appreciation or depreciation resulting from all other transactions denominated in currencies other than U.S. dollars are disclosed separately.

 

3. Valuation

 

Capital Research and Management Company (“CRMC”), the fund’s investment adviser, values the fund’s investments at fair value as defined by U.S. GAAP. The net asset value per share is calculated once daily as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange, normally 4 p.m. New York time, each day the New York Stock Exchange is open.

 

Methods and inputs — The fund’s investment adviser uses the following methods and inputs to establish the fair value of the fund’s assets and liabilities. Use of particular methods and inputs may vary over time based on availability and relevance as market and economic conditions evolve.

 

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

 

Fixed-income securities, including short-term securities, are generally valued at evaluated prices obtained from third-party pricing vendors. Vendors value such securities based on one or more of the inputs described in the following table. The table provides examples of inputs that are commonly relevant for valuing particular classes of fixed-income securities in which the fund is authorized to invest. However, these classifications are not exclusive, and any of the inputs may be used to value any other class of fixed-income security.

 

Fixed-income class   Examples of standard inputs
All   Benchmark yields, transactions, bids, offers, quotations from dealers and trading systems, new issues, spreads and other relationships observed in the markets among comparable securities; and proprietary pricing models such as yield measures calculated using factors such as cash flows, financial or collateral performance and other reference data (collectively referred to as “standard inputs”)
Corporate bonds, notes & loans; convertible securities   Standard inputs and underlying equity of the issuer
Bonds & notes of governments & government agencies   Standard inputs and interest rate volatilities
Mortgage-backed; asset-backed obligations   Standard inputs and cash flows, prepayment information, default rates, delinquency and loss assumptions, collateral characteristics, credit enhancements and specific deal information

 

Securities with both fixed-income and equity characteristics, or equity securities traded principally among fixed-income dealers, are generally valued in the manner described for either equity or fixed-income securities, depending on which method is deemed most appropriate by the fund’s investment adviser. The Capital Group Central Cash Fund (“CCF”), a fund within the Capital Group Central Fund Series (“Central Funds”), is valued based upon a floating net asset value, which fluctuates with changes in the value of CCF’s portfolio securities. The underlying securities are valued based on the policies and procedures in CCF’s statement of additional information.

 

16 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Securities and other assets for which representative market quotations are not readily available or are considered unreliable by the fund’s investment adviser are fair valued as determined in good faith under fair valuation guidelines adopted by the fund’s investment adviser and approved by the board of trustees as further described. The investment adviser follows fair valuation guidelines, consistent with U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rules and guidance, to consider relevant principles and factors when making fair value determinations. The investment adviser considers relevant indications of value that are reasonably and timely available to it in determining the fair value to be assigned to a particular security, such as the type and cost of the security, contractual or legal restrictions on resale of the security, relevant financial or business developments of the issuer, actively traded similar or related securities, dealer or broker quotes, conversion or exchange rights on the security, related corporate actions, significant events occurring after the close of trading in the security, and changes in overall market conditions. In addition, the closing prices of equity securities that trade in markets outside U.S. time zones may be adjusted to reflect significant events that occur after the close of local trading but before the net asset value of each share class of the fund is determined. Fair valuations of investments that are not actively trading involve judgment and may differ materially from valuations that would have been used had greater market activity occurred.

 

Processes and structure — The fund’s board of trustees has designated the fund’s investment adviser to make fair value determinations, subject to board oversight. The investment adviser has established a Joint Fair Valuation Committee (the “Committee”) to administer, implement and oversee the fair valuation process and to make fair value decisions. The Committee regularly reviews its own fair value decisions, as well as decisions made under its standing instructions to the investment adviser’s valuation team. The Committee reviews changes in fair value measurements from period to period, pricing vendor information and market data, and may, as deemed appropriate, update the fair valuation guidelines to better reflect the results of back testing and address new or evolving issues. Pricing decisions, processes and controls over security valuation are also subject to additional internal reviews facilitated by the investment adviser’s global risk management group. The Committee reports changes to the fair valuation guidelines to the board of trustees. The fund’s board and audit committee also regularly review reports that describe fair value determinations and methods.

 

Classifications — The fund’s investment adviser classifies the fund’s assets and liabilities into three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets or liabilities. Level 1 values are based on quoted prices in active markets for identical securities. Level 2 values are based on significant observable market inputs, such as quoted prices for similar securities and quoted prices in inactive markets. Certain securities trading outside the U.S. may transfer between Level 1 and Level 2 due to valuation adjustments resulting from significant market movements following the close of local trading. Level 3 values are based on significant unobservable inputs that reflect the investment adviser’s determination of assumptions that market participants might reasonably use in valuing the securities. The valuation levels are not necessarily an indication of the risk or liquidity associated with the underlying investment. For example, U.S. government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market. The following table presents the fund’s valuation levels as of May 31, 2023 (dollars in thousands):

 

   Investment securities 
   Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total 
Assets:                    
Common stocks:                    
Information technology  $20,912,231   $   $3,876   $20,916,107 
Health care   15,586,006            15,586,006 
Industrials   13,848,198            13,848,198 
Financials   11,340,003        *   11,340,003 
Consumer discretionary   10,058,593            10,058,593 
Consumer staples   7,383,838            7,383,838 
Materials   6,241,401    99,221        6,340,622 
Communication services   5,897,312        4,592    5,901,904 
Energy   5,463,914        *   5,463,914 
Utilities   2,194,700    33,366        2,228,066 
Real estate   621,246            621,246 
Preferred securities   107,567        1,668    109,235 
Bonds, notes & other debt instruments       574,904        574,904 
Short-term securities   6,084,622            6,084,622 
Total  $105,739,631   $707,491   $10,136   $106,457,258 

 

* Amount less than one thousand.

 

4. Risk factors

 

Investing in the fund may involve certain risks including, but not limited to, those described below.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 17
 

Market conditions — The prices of, and the income generated by, the common stocks and other securities held by the fund may decline — sometimes rapidly or unpredictably — due to various factors, including events or conditions affecting the general economy or particular industries or companies; overall market changes; local, regional or global political, social or economic instability; governmental, governmental agency or central bank responses to economic conditions; and currency exchange rate, interest rate and commodity price fluctuations.

 

Economies and financial markets throughout the world are highly interconnected. Economic, financial or political events, trading and tariff arrangements, wars, terrorism, cybersecurity events, natural disasters, public health emergencies (such as the spread of infectious disease) and other circumstances in one country or region, including actions taken by governmental or quasi-governmental authorities in response to any of the foregoing, could have impacts on global economies or markets. As a result, whether or not the fund invests in securities of issuers located in or with significant exposure to the countries affected, the value and liquidity of the fund’s investments may be negatively affected by developments in other countries and regions.

 

Issuer risks — The prices of, and the income generated by, securities held by the fund may decline in response to various factors directly related to the issuers of such securities, including reduced demand for an issuer’s goods or services, poor management performance, major litigation, investigations or other controversies related to the issuer, changes in financial condition or credit rating, changes in government regulations affecting the issuer or its competitive environment and strategic initiatives such as mergers, acquisitions or dispositions and the market response to any such initiatives.

 

Investing outside the U.S. — Securities of issuers domiciled outside the U.S., or with significant operations or revenues outside the U.S., may lose value because of adverse political, social, economic or market developments (including social instability, regional conflicts, terrorism and war) in the countries or regions in which the issuers operate or generate revenue. These securities may also lose value due to changes in foreign currency exchange rates against the U.S. dollar and/or currencies of other countries. Issuers of these securities may be more susceptible to actions of foreign governments, such as nationalization, currency blockage or the imposition of price controls, sanctions, or punitive taxes, each of which could adversely impact the value of these securities. Securities markets in certain countries may be more volatile and/or less liquid than those in the U.S. Investments outside the U.S. may also be subject to different regulatory, legal, accounting, auditing, financial reporting and recordkeeping requirements, and may be more difficult to value, than those in the U.S. In addition, the value of investments outside the U.S. may be reduced by foreign taxes, including foreign withholding taxes on interest and dividends. Further, there may be increased risks of delayed settlement of securities purchased or sold by the fund, which could impact the liquidity of the fund’s portfolio. The risks of investing outside the U.S. may be heightened in connection with investments in emerging markets.

 

Investing in emerging markets — Investing in emerging markets may involve risks in addition to and greater than those generally associated with investing in the securities markets of developed countries. For instance, emerging market countries tend to have less developed political, economic and legal systems than those in developed countries. Accordingly, the governments of these countries may be less stable and more likely to intervene in the market economy, for example, by imposing capital controls, nationalizing a company or industry, placing restrictions on foreign ownership and on withdrawing sale proceeds of securities from the country, and/or imposing punitive taxes that could adversely affect the prices of securities. Information regarding issuers in emerging markets may be limited, incomplete or inaccurate, and such issuers may not be subject to regulatory, accounting, auditing, and financial reporting and recordkeeping standards comparable to those to which issuers in more developed markets are subject. The fund’s rights with respect to its investments in emerging markets, if any, will generally be governed by local law, which may make it difficult or impossible for the fund to pursue legal remedies or to obtain and enforce judgments in local courts. In addition, the economies of these countries may be dependent on relatively few industries, may have limited access to capital and may be more susceptible to changes in local and global trade conditions and downturns in the world economy. Securities markets in these countries can also be relatively small and have substantially lower trading volumes. As a result, securities issued in these countries may be more volatile and less liquid, and may be more difficult to value, than securities issued in countries with more developed economies and/or markets. Less certainty with respect to security valuations may lead to additional challenges and risks in calculating the fund’s net asset value. Additionally, emerging markets are more likely to experience problems with the clearing and settling of trades and the holding of securities by banks, agents and depositories that are less established than those in developed countries.

 

Investing in growth-oriented stocks — Growth-oriented common stocks and other equity-type securities (such as preferred stocks, convertible preferred stocks and convertible bonds) may involve larger price swings and greater potential for loss than other types of investments.

 

Investing in income-oriented stocks — The value of the fund’s securities and income provided by the fund may be reduced by changes in the dividend policies of, and the capital resources available for dividend payments at, the companies in which the fund invests.

 

18 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Management — The investment adviser to the fund actively manages the fund’s investments. Consequently, the fund is subject to the risk that the methods and analyses, including models, tools and data, employed by the investment adviser in this process may be flawed or incorrect and may not produce the desired results. This could cause the fund to lose value or its investment results to lag relevant benchmarks or other funds with similar objectives.

 

5. Certain investment techniques

 

Securities lending — The fund has entered into securities lending transactions in which the fund earns income by lending investment securities to brokers, dealers or other institutions. Each transaction involves three parties: the fund, acting as the lender of the securities, a borrower, and a lending agent that acts as an intermediary.

 

Securities lending transactions are entered into by the fund under a securities lending agent agreement with the lending agent. The lending agent facilitates the exchange of securities between the fund and approved borrowers, ensures that securities loans are properly coordinated and documented, marks-to-market the value of collateral daily, secures additional collateral from a borrower if it falls below preset terms, and may reinvest cash collateral on behalf of the fund according to agreed parameters. The lending agent provides indemnification to the fund against losses resulting from a borrower default. Although risk is mitigated by the collateral and indemnification, the fund could experience a delay in recovering its securities and a potential loss of income or value if a borrower fails to return securities, collateral investments decline in value or the lending agent fails to perform.

 

The borrower is required to post highly liquid assets, such as cash or U.S. government securities, as collateral for the loan in an amount at least equal to the value of the securities loaned. Investments made with cash collateral are recognized as assets in the fund’s investment portfolio. The same amount is recorded as a liability in the fund’s statement of assets and liabilities. While securities are on loan, the fund will continue to receive the equivalent of the interest, dividends or other distributions paid by the issuer, as well as a portion of the interest on the investment of the collateral. Additionally, although the fund does not have the right to vote on securities while they are on loan, the fund has a right to consent on corporate actions and a right to recall loaned securities to vote. A borrower is obligated to return loaned securities at the conclusion of a loan or, during the pendency of a loan, on demand from the fund.

 

As of May 31, 2023, the total value of securities on loan was $315,437,000, and the total value of collateral received was $333,668,000. Collateral received includes cash of $244,613,000 and U.S. government securities of $89,055,000. Investment securities purchased from cash collateral are disclosed in the fund’s investment portfolio as short-term securities. Securities received as collateral are not recognized as fund assets. The contractual maturity of cash collateral received under the securities lending agreement is classified as overnight and continuous.

 

6. Taxation and distributions

 

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

 

As of and during the period ended May 31, 2023, the fund did not have a liability for any unrecognized tax benefits. The fund recognizes interest and penalties, if any, related to unrecognized tax benefits as income tax expense in the statement of operations. During the period, the fund did not incur any significant interest or penalties.

 

The fund’s tax returns are generally not subject to examination by federal, state and, if applicable, non-U.S. tax authorities after the expiration of each jurisdiction’s statute of limitations, which is typically three years after the date of filing but can be extended in certain jurisdictions.

 

Non-U.S. taxation — Dividend and interest income are recorded net of non-U.S. taxes paid. The fund may file withholding tax reclaims in certain jurisdictions to recover a portion of amounts previously withheld. As a result of rulings from European courts, the fund filed for additional reclaims related to prior years. These reclaims are recorded when the amount is known and there are no significant uncertainties on collectability. During the six months ended May 31, 2023, the fund recognized $2,481,000 in reclaims (net of $3,776,000 in fees and the effect of realized gain or loss from currency translations) and $652,000 in interest related to European court rulings, which is included in dividend income and interest income, respectively, in the fund’s statement of operations. Gains realized by the fund on the sale of securities in certain countries, if any, may be subject to non-U.S. taxes. The fund generally records an estimated deferred tax liability based on unrealized gains to provide for potential non-U.S. taxes payable upon the sale of these securities.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 19
 

Distributions — Distributions determined on a tax basis may differ from net investment income and net realized gains for financial reporting purposes. These differences are due primarily to different treatment for items such as currency gains and losses; short-term capital gains and losses; capital losses related to sales of certain securities within 30 days of purchase; unrealized appreciation of certain investments in securities outside the U.S.; net capital losses; non-U.S. taxes on capital gains and income on certain investments. The fiscal year in which amounts are distributed may differ from the year in which the net investment income and net realized gains are recorded by the fund for financial reporting purposes.

 

The components of distributable earnings on a tax basis are reported as of the fund’s most recent year-end. As of November 30, 2022, the components of distributable earnings on a tax basis were as follows (dollars in thousands):

 

Undistributed ordinary income  $1,378,362 
Capital loss carryforward*   (827,777)

 

* The capital loss carryforward will be used to offset any capital gains realized by the fund in the current year or in subsequent years. The fund will not make distributions from capital gains while a capital loss carryforward remains.

 

As of May 31, 2023, the tax basis unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and cost of investments were as follows (dollars in thousands):

 

Gross unrealized appreciation on investments  $33,197,122 
Gross unrealized depreciation on investments   (4,169,299)
Net unrealized appreciation on investments   29,027,823 
Cost of investments   77,429,435 

 

Distributions paid were characterized for tax purposes as follows (dollars in thousands):

 

   Six months ended May 31, 2023   Year ended November 30, 2022 
Share class  Ordinary
income
   Long-term
capital gains
   Total
distributions
paid
   Ordinary
income
   Long-term
capital gains
   Total
distributions
paid
 
Class A  $490,183   $   $490,183   $981,598   $3,100,404   $4,082,002 
Class C   4,924        4,924    10,098    58,584    68,682 
Class T                   1    1 
Class F-1   18,598        18,598    38,150    127,382    165,532 
Class F-2   132,148        132,148    257,583    698,081    955,664 
Class F-3   63,949        63,949    118,206    306,047    424,253 
Class 529-A   33,462        33,462    66,956    214,593    281,549 
Class 529-C   521        521    1,083    6,826    7,909 
Class 529-E   833        833    1,660    6,296    7,956 
Class 529-T                   1    1 
Class 529-F-1                   1    1 
Class 529-F-2   2,729        2,729    5,093    13,659    18,752 
Class 529-F-3                   1    1 
Class R-1   795        795    1,447    8,028    9,475 
Class R-2   3,329        3,329    6,208    35,400    41,608 
Class R-2E   467        467    863    3,680    4,543 
Class R-3   8,856        8,856    17,744    70,365    88,109 
Class R-4   10,358        10,358    21,827    68,386    90,213 
Class R-5E   1,510        1,510    2,711    7,177    9,888 
Class R-5   4,513        4,513    9,797    27,076    36,873 
Class R-6   332,755        332,755    608,425    1,547,474    2,155,899 
Total  $1,109,930   $   $1,109,930   $2,149,449   $6,299,462   $8,448,911 

 

Amount less than one thousand.

 

7. Fees and transactions with related parties

 

CRMC, the fund’s investment adviser, is the parent company of American Funds Distributors®, Inc. (“AFD”), the principal underwriter of the fund’s shares, and American Funds Service Company® (“AFS”), the fund’s transfer agent. CRMC, AFD and AFS are considered related parties to the fund.

 

20 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Investment advisory services — The fund has an investment advisory and service agreement with CRMC that provides for monthly fees accrued daily. These fees are based on a series of decreasing annual rates beginning with 0.600% on the first $500 million of daily net assets and decreasing to 0.350% on such assets in excess of $115 billion. For the six months ended May 31, 2023, the investment advisory services fees were $195,580,000, which were equivalent to an annualized rate of 0.370% of average daily net assets.

 

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

 

Distribution services — The fund has plans of distribution for all share classes, except Class F-2, F-3, 529-F-2, 529-F-3, R-5E, R-5 and R-6 shares. Under the plans, the board of trustees approves certain categories of expenses that are used to finance activities primarily intended to sell fund shares and service existing accounts. The plans provide for payments, based on an annualized percentage of average daily net assets, ranging from 0.30% to 1.00% as noted in this section. In some cases, the board of trustees has limited the amounts that may be paid to less than the maximum allowed by the plans. All share classes with a plan may use up to 0.25% of average daily net assets to pay service fees, or to compensate AFD for paying service fees, to firms that have entered into agreements with AFD to provide certain shareholder services. The remaining amounts available to be paid under each plan are paid to dealers to compensate them for their sales activities.

 

Share class  Currently approved limits  Plan limits
Class A   0.30%   0.30%
Class 529-A   0.30    0.50 
Classes C, 529-C and R-1   1.00    1.00 
Class R-2   0.75    1.00 
Class R-2E   0.60    0.85 
Classes 529-E and R-3   0.50    0.75 
Classes T, F-1, 529-T, 529-F-1 and R-4   0.25    0.50 

 

For Class A and 529-A shares, distribution-related expenses include the reimbursement of dealer and wholesaler commissions paid by AFD for certain shares sold without a sales charge. These share classes reimburse AFD for amounts billed within the prior 15 months but only to the extent that the overall annual expense limits are not exceeded. As of May 31, 2023, there were no unreimbursed expenses subject to reimbursement for Class A or 529-A shares.

 

Transfer agent services — The fund has a shareholder services agreement with AFS under which the fund compensates AFS for providing transfer agent services to each of the fund’s share classes. These services include recordkeeping, shareholder communications and transaction processing. In addition, the fund reimburses AFS for amounts paid to third parties for performing transfer agent services on behalf of fund shareholders.

 

Administrative services — The fund has an administrative services agreement with CRMC under which the fund compensates CRMC for providing administrative services to all share classes. Administrative services are provided by CRMC and its affiliates to help assist third parties providing non-distribution services to fund shareholders. These services include providing in-depth information on the fund and market developments that impact fund investments. Administrative services also include, but are not limited to, coordinating, monitoring and overseeing third parties that provide services to fund shareholders. The agreement provides the fund the ability to charge an administrative services fee at the annual rate of 0.05% of the average daily net assets attributable to each share class of the fund. Currently the fund pays CRMC an administrative services fee at the annual rate of 0.03% of the average daily net assets attributable to each share class of the fund for CRMC’s provision of administrative services.

 

529 plan services — Each 529 share class is subject to service fees to compensate the Virginia College Savings Plan (“Virginia529”) for its oversight and administration of the CollegeAmerica 529 college savings plan. The fees are based on the combined net assets invested in Class 529 and ABLE shares of the American Funds. Class ABLE shares are offered on other American Funds by Virginia529 through ABLEAmerica®, a tax-advantaged savings program for individuals with disabilities. Virginia529 is not considered a related party to the fund.

 

The quarterly fees are based on a series of decreasing annual rates beginning with 0.09% on the first $20 billion of the combined net assets invested in the American Funds and decreasing to 0.03% on such assets in excess of $75 billion. The fees for any given calendar quarter are accrued and calculated on the basis of the average net assets of Class 529 and ABLE shares of the American Funds for the last month of the prior calendar quarter. For the six months ended May 31, 2023, the 529 plan services fees were $1,162,000, which were equivalent to 0.060% of the average daily net assets of each 529 share class.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 21
 

For the six months ended May 31, 2023, class-specific expenses under the agreements were as follows (dollars in thousands):

 

  Share class   Distribution
services
    Transfer agent
services
    Administrative
services
   529 plan
services
 
  Class A   $59,351    $24,842    $7,427   Not applicable  
  Class C   3,726    380    113   Not applicable  
  Class T       *   *  Not applicable  
  Class F-1   2,311    1,437    285   Not applicable  
  Class F-2   Not applicable    6,141    1,795   Not applicable  
  Class F-3   Not applicable    19    829   Not applicable  
  Class 529-A   3,900    1,572    513   $1,033  
  Class 529-C   427    40    13   26  
  Class 529-E   237    25    14   28  
  Class 529-T       *   *  *
  Class 529-F-1       *   *  *
  Class 529-F-2   Not applicable    21    37   75  
  Class 529-F-3   Not applicable        *  *
  Class R-1   610    60    18   Not applicable  
  Class R-2   1,928    887    77   Not applicable  
  Class R-2E   182    60    9   Not applicable  
  Class R-3   2,546    757    153   Not applicable  
  Class R-4   1,279    516    154   Not applicable  
  Class R-5E   Not applicable    105    21   Not applicable  
  Class R-5   Not applicable    100    59   Not applicable  
  Class R-6   Not applicable    101    4,327   Not applicable  
  Total class-specific expenses   $76,497    $37,063    $15,844   $1,162  

 

  * Amount less than one thousand.

 

Trustees’ deferred compensation — Trustees who are unaffiliated with CRMC may elect to defer the cash payment of part or all of their compensation. These deferred amounts, which remain as liabilities of the fund, are treated as if invested in shares of the fund or other American Funds. These amounts represent general, unsecured liabilities of the fund and vary according to the total returns of the selected funds. Trustees’ compensation of $542,000 in the fund’s statement of operations reflects $332,000 in current fees (either paid in cash or deferred) and a net increase of $210,000 in the value of the deferred amounts.

 

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

 

Investment in CCF — The fund holds shares of CCF, an institutional prime money market fund managed by CRMC. CCF invests in high-quality, short-term money market instruments. CCF is used as the primary investment vehicle for the fund’s short-term instruments. CCF shares are only available for purchase by CRMC, its affiliates, and other funds managed by CRMC or its affiliates, and are not available to the public. CRMC does not receive an investment advisory services fee from CCF.

 

Security transactions with related funds — The fund purchased investment securities from, and sold investment securities to, other funds managed by CRMC (or funds managed by certain affiliates of CRMC) under procedures adopted by the fund’s board of trustees. The funds involved in such transactions are considered related by virtue of having a common investment adviser (or affiliated investment advisers), common trustees and/or common officers. Each transaction was executed at the current market price of the security and no brokerage commissions or fees were paid in accordance with Rule 17a-7 of the 1940 Act. During the six months ended May 31, 2023, the fund engaged in such purchase and sale transactions with related funds in the amounts of $522,464,000 and $487,542,000, respectively, which generated $10,210,000 of net realized gains from such sales.

 

Interfund lending — Pursuant to an exemptive order issued by the SEC, the fund, along with other CRMC-managed funds (or funds managed by certain affiliates of CRMC), may participate in an interfund lending program. The program provides an alternate credit facility that permits the funds to lend or borrow cash for temporary purposes directly to or from one another, subject to the conditions of the exemptive order. The fund did not lend or borrow cash through the interfund lending program at any time during the six months ended May 31, 2023.

 

22 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

8. Indemnifications

 

The fund’s organizational documents provide board members and officers with indemnification against certain liabilities or expenses in connection with the performance of their duties to the fund. In the normal course of business, the fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown since it is dependent on future claims that may be made against the fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote. Insurance policies are also available to the fund’s board members and officers.

 

9. Capital share transactions

 

Capital share transactions in the fund were as follows (dollars and shares in thousands):

 

   Sales*   Reinvestments of
distributions
   Repurchases*   Net (decrease)
increase
 
Share class  Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares 
                                         
Six months ended May 31, 2023  
                                         
Class A  $741,080    13,769   $479,009    9,091   $(2,500,073)   (46,488)  $(1,279,984)   (23,628)
Class C   29,858    561    4,899    94    (135,718)   (2,553)   (100,961)   (1,898)
Class T                                
Class F-1   18,077    337    18,370    350    (129,926)   (2,427)   (93,479)   (1,740)
Class F-2   1,047,497    19,453    127,065    2,417    (1,162,060)   (21,654)   12,502    216 
Class F-3   429,618    7,967    62,017    1,179    (566,438)   (10,501)   (74,803)   (1,355)
Class 529-A   104,116    1,945    33,449    638    (236,912)   (4,432)   (99,347)   (1,849)
Class 529-C   7,343    137    521    10    (19,779)   (371)   (11,915)   (224)
Class 529-E   2,743    51    832    16    (8,216)   (154)   (4,641)   (87)
Class 529-T                                
Class 529-F-1                                
Class 529-F-2   21,388    398    2,728    52    (19,489)   (363)   4,627    87 
Class 529-F-3                                
Class R-1   5,716    107    795    15    (14,505)   (272)   (7,994)   (150)
Class R-2   26,745    505    3,327    64    (60,567)   (1,142)   (30,495)   (573)
Class R-2E   4,904    92    467    8    (4,246)   (80)   1,125    20 
Class R-3   57,537    1,076    8,838    168    (147,138)   (2,761)   (80,763)   (1,517)
Class R-4   46,320    862    10,353    197    (180,259)   (3,368)   (123,586)   (2,309)
Class R-5E   16,145    303    1,510    29    (21,395)   (398)   (3,740)   (66)
Class R-5   30,959    576    4,489    85    (105,511)   (1,928)   (70,063)   (1,267)
Class R-6   1,145,381    21,267    332,750    6,323    (1,529,862)   (28,523)   (51,731)   (933)
Total net increase (decrease)  $3,735,427    69,406   $1,091,419    20,736   $(6,842,094)   (127,415)  $(2,015,248)   (37,273)

 

Refer to the end of the table for footnotes.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 23
 
   Sales*   Reinvestments of
distributions
   Repurchases*   Net increase
(decrease)
 
Share class  Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares 
                                         
Year ended November 30, 2022  
                                         
Class A  $1,708,430    30,830   $4,001,150    67,119   $(5,689,131)   (104,295)  $20,449    (6,346)
Class C   71,142    1,293    68,289    1,145    (286,248)   (5,258)   (146,817)   (2,820)
Class T                                
Class F-1   56,428    1,018    163,731    2,749    (332,192)   (6,109)   (112,033)   (2,342)
Class F-2   2,642,028    48,126    922,681    15,564    (2,742,670)   (51,025)   822,039    12,665 
Class F-3   1,251,155    23,417    414,488    6,993    (1,064,714)   (19,522)   600,929    10,888 
Class 529-A   222,377    4,017    281,475    4,740    (481,740)   (8,794)   22,112    (37)
Class 529-C   16,548    301    7,893    132    (46,172)   (830)   (21,731)   (397)
Class 529-E   6,046    111    7,951    133    (18,218)   (329)   (4,221)   (85)
Class 529-T           1                1     
Class 529-F-1           1                1     
Class 529-F-2   40,266    726    18,750    316    (32,343)   (590)   26,673    452 
Class 529-F-3           1                1     
Class R-1   14,589    266    9,467    159    (26,229)   (477)   (2,173)   (52)
Class R-2   64,504    1,188    41,574    699    (144,287)   (2,624)   (38,209)   (737)
Class R-2E   12,385    224    4,542    76    (15,517)   (279)   1,410    21 
Class R-3   150,177    2,729    87,981    1,479    (311,787)   (5,647)   (73,629)   (1,439)
Class R-4   244,631    4,466    90,185    1,518    (354,524)   (6,593)   (19,708)   (609)
Class R-5E   43,052    787    9,885    167    (26,954)   (497)   25,983    457 
Class R-5   53,139    976    36,704    618    (127,897)   (2,394)   (38,054)   (800)
Class R-6   3,409,415    65,351    2,155,706    36,397    (1,704,039)   (31,412)   3,861,082    70,336 
Total net increase (decrease)  $10,006,312    185,826   $8,322,455    140,004   $(13,404,662)   (246,675)  $4,924,105    79,155 

 

* Includes exchanges between share classes of the fund.
  Amount less than one thousand.

 

10. Investment transactions

 

The fund engaged in purchases and sales of investment securities, excluding short-term securities and U.S. government obligations, if any, of $13,910,344,000 and $16,297,237,000, respectively, during the six months ended May 31, 2023.

 

24 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Financial highlights

 

       Income (loss) from
investment operations1 
   Dividends and distributions                         
Year ended  Net asset
value,
beginning
of year
   Net
investment
income
   Net gains
(losses) on
securities
(both
realized and
unrealized)
   Total from
investment
operations
   Dividends
(from net
investment
income)
   Distributions
(from capital
gains)
   Total
dividends
and
distributions
   Net asset
value,
end
of year
   Total return2,3   Net assets,
end of
year
(in millions)
   Ratio of
expenses to
average net
assets before
reimburse-
ments4 
   Ratio of
expenses to
average net
assets after
reimburse-
ments3,4 
   Ratio of
net income
to average
net assets3
 
Class A:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6   $53.66   $.55   $1.02   $1.57   $(.53)  $   $(.53)  $54.70    2.97%7   $49,661    .75%8    .75%8    2.06%8 
11/30/2022   64.35    1.16    (7.51)   (6.35)   (1.03)   (3.31)   (4.34)   53.66    (10.46)   49,986    .75    .75    2.12 
11/30/2021   56.86    1.03    7.34    8.37    (.88)       (.88)   64.35    14.75    60,354    .75    .75    1.62 
11/30/2020   50.98    .91    6.10    7.01    (.73)   (.40)   (1.13)   56.86    14.17    55,068    .77    .77    1.83 
11/30/2019   47.80    .97    5.38    6.35    (1.05)   (2.12)   (3.17)   50.98    14.42    52,805    .77    .77    2.03 
11/30/2018   53.02    1.11    (2.89)   (1.78)   (.93)   (2.51)   (3.44)   47.80    (3.69)   50,382    .75    .75    2.17 
Class C:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    52.99    .34    1.01    1.35    (.34)       (.34)   54.00    2.587    713    1.508    1.508    1.288 
11/30/2022   63.56    .74    (7.40)   (6.66)   (.60)   (3.31)   (3.91)   52.99    (11.14)   800    1.50    1.50    1.37 
11/30/2021   56.18    .55    7.26    7.81    (.43)       (.43)   63.56    13.91    1,139    1.48    1.48    .88 
11/30/2020   50.35    .53    6.06    6.59    (.36)   (.40)   (.76)   56.18    13.34    1,206    1.50    1.50    1.09 
11/30/2019   47.23    .60    5.31    5.91    (.67)   (2.12)   (2.79)   50.35    13.54    1,719    1.53    1.53    1.28 
11/30/2018   52.41    .70    (2.86)   (2.16)   (.51)   (2.51)   (3.02)   47.23    (4.45)   1,988    1.54    1.54    1.38 
Class T:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.63    .63    1.01    1.64    (.60)       (.60)   54.67    3.107,9    10    .478,9    .478,9    2.358,9 
11/30/2022   64.33    1.28    (7.50)   (6.22)   (1.17)   (3.31)   (4.48)   53.63    (10.25)9    10    .519    .519    2.359 
11/30/2021   56.85    1.17    7.33    8.50    (1.02)       (1.02)   64.33    14.999    10    .529    .529    1.849 
11/30/2020   50.98    1.03    6.10    7.13    (.86)   (.40)   (1.26)   56.85    14.479    10    .529    .529    2.079 
11/30/2019   47.80    1.07    5.38    6.45    (1.15)   (2.12)   (3.27)   50.98    14.659    10    .549    .549    2.259 
11/30/2018   53.03    1.22    (2.90)   (1.68)   (1.04)   (2.51)   (3.55)   47.80    (3.48)9    10    .539    .539    2.389 
Class F-1:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.52    .54    1.01    1.55    (.52)       (.52)   54.55    2.947    1,883    .818    .818    2.008 
11/30/2022   64.19    1.13    (7.50)   (6.37)   (.99)   (3.31)   (4.30)   53.52    (10.51)   1,940    .81    .81    2.07 
11/30/2021   56.72    .99    7.32    8.31    (.84)       (.84)   64.19    14.67    2,477    .80    .80    1.57 
11/30/2020   50.86    .89    6.09    6.98    (.72)   (.40)   (1.12)   56.72    14.13    3,089    .81    .81    1.78 
11/30/2019   47.69    .94    5.37    6.31    (1.02)   (2.12)   (3.14)   50.86    14.36    3,444    .82    .82    1.98 
11/30/2018   52.90    1.08    (2.88)   (1.80)   (.90)   (2.51)   (3.41)   47.69    (3.74)   3,295    .81    .81    2.12 
Class F-2:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.59    .62    1.01    1.63    (.59)       (.59)   54.63    3.107    12,193    .518    .518    2.308 
11/30/2022   64.28    1.28    (7.50)   (6.22)   (1.16)   (3.31)   (4.47)   53.59    (10.26)   11,951    .53    .53    2.35 
11/30/2021   56.80    1.18    7.33    8.51    (1.03)       (1.03)   64.28    15.01    13,521    .52    .52    1.85 
11/30/2020   50.94    1.03    6.08    7.11    (.85)   (.40)   (1.25)   56.80    14.45    11,226    .52    .52    2.07 
11/30/2019   47.76    1.07    5.38    6.45    (1.15)   (2.12)   (3.27)   50.94    14.69    9,902    .54    .54    2.25 
11/30/2018   52.98    1.21    (2.88)   (1.67)   (1.04)   (2.51)   (3.55)   47.76    (3.49)   8,636    .54    .54    2.38 
Class F-3:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.65    .65    1.01    1.66    (.62)       (.62)   54.69    3.157    5,569    .418    .418    2.408 
11/30/2022   64.35    1.34    (7.51)   (6.17)   (1.22)   (3.31)   (4.53)   53.65    (10.17)   5,536    .42    .42    2.45 
11/30/2021   56.86    1.24    7.34    8.58    (1.09)       (1.09)   64.35    15.12    5,939    .41    .41    1.96 
11/30/2020   50.99    1.09    6.08    7.17    (.90)   (.40)   (1.30)   56.86    14.58    4,815    .42    .42    2.17 
11/30/2019   47.81    1.12    5.38    6.50    (1.20)   (2.12)   (3.32)   50.99    14.79    4,139    .44    .44    2.35 
11/30/2018   53.03    1.27    (2.89)   (1.62)   (1.09)   (2.51)   (3.60)   47.81    (3.39)   3,050    .44    .44    2.48 
Class 529-A:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.43    .54    1.01    1.55    (.52)       (.52)   54.46    2.947    3,433    .798    .798    2.028 
11/30/2022   64.10    1.14    (7.49)   (6.35)   (1.01)   (3.31)   (4.32)   53.43    (10.50)   3,467    .79    .79    2.09 
11/30/2021   56.64    1.00    7.32    8.32    (.86)       (.86)   64.10    14.71    4,161    .78    .78    1.59 
11/30/2020   50.79    .89    6.07    6.96    (.71)   (.40)   (1.11)   56.64    14.12    3,860    .81    .81    1.79 
11/30/2019   47.63    .94    5.35    6.29    (1.01)   (2.12)   (3.13)   50.79    14.34    3,494    .83    .83    1.98 
11/30/2018   52.84    1.07    (2.88)   (1.81)   (.89)   (2.51)   (3.40)   47.63    (3.77)   3,291    .83    .83    2.10 

 

Refer to the end of the table for footnotes.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 25
 

Financial highlights (continued)

 

       Income (loss) from
investment operations1 
   Dividends and distributions                         
Year ended  Net asset
value,
beginning
of year
   Net
investment
income
   Net gains
(losses) on
securities
(both
realized and
unrealized)
   Total from
investment
operations
   Dividends
(from net
investment
income)
   Distributions
(from capital
gains)
   Total
dividends
and
distributions
   Net asset
value,
end
of year
   Total return2,3    Net assets,
end of
year
(in millions)
   Ratio of
expenses to
average net
assets before
reimburse-
ments4 
   Ratio of
expenses to
average net
assets after
reimburse-
ments3,4 
   Ratio of
net income
to average
net assets3 
 
Class 529-C:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6   $53.27   $.33   $1.02   $1.35   $(.32)  $   $(.32)  $54.30    2.53%7   $82    1.57%8    1.57%8    1.22%8 
11/30/2022   63.87    .72    (7.45)   (6.73)   (.56)   (3.31)   (3.87)   53.27    (11.17)   92    1.55    1.55    1.32 
11/30/2021   56.45    .53    7.28    7.81    (.39)       (.39)   63.87    13.84    136    1.52    1.52    .84 
11/30/2020   50.56    .51    6.09    6.60    (.31)   (.40)   (.71)   56.45    13.29    156    1.55    1.55    1.03 
11/30/2019   47.41    .58    5.34    5.92    (.65)   (2.12)   (2.77)   50.56    13.50    413    1.58    1.58    1.24 
11/30/2018   52.56    .67    (2.86)   (2.19)   (.45)   (2.51)   (2.96)   47.41    (4.49)   462    1.59    1.59    1.32 
Class 529-E:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.35    .48    1.00    1.48    (.46)       (.46)   54.37    2.817    94    1.038    1.038    1.788 
11/30/2022   63.99    1.01    (7.46)   (6.45)   (.88)   (3.31)   (4.19)   53.35    (10.71)   97    1.02    1.02    1.86 
11/30/2021   56.56    .86    7.29    8.15    (.72)       (.72)   63.99    14.44    122    1.01    1.01    1.36 
11/30/2020   50.70    .78    6.09    6.87    (.61)   (.40)   (1.01)   56.56    13.92    117    1.02    1.02    1.57 
11/30/2019   47.55    .84    5.34    6.18    (.91)   (2.12)   (3.03)   50.70    14.09    119    1.04    1.04    1.76 
11/30/2018   52.76    .96    (2.89)   (1.93)   (.77)   (2.51)   (3.28)   47.55    (3.98)   123    1.05    1.05    1.88 
Class 529-T:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.63    .61    1.02    1.63    (.59)       (.59)   54.67    3.097,9    10    .538,9    .538,9    2.298,9 
11/30/2022   64.32    1.27    (7.50)   (6.23)   (1.15)   (3.31)   (4.46)   53.63    (10.28)9    10    .549    .549    2.339 
11/30/2021   56.84    1.14    7.33    8.47    (.99)       (.99)   64.32    14.949    10    .569    .569    1.809 
11/30/2020   50.98    1.01    6.08    7.09    (.83)   (.40)   (1.23)   56.84    14.409    10    .569    .569    2.029 
11/30/2019   47.80    1.05    5.38    6.43    (1.13)   (2.12)   (3.25)   50.98    14.629    10    .599    .599    2.209 
11/30/2018   53.02    1.19    (2.89)   (1.70)   (1.01)   (2.51)   (3.52)   47.80    (3.54)9    10    .599    .599    2.329 
Class 529-F-1:                                                             
5/31/20235,6    53.47    .59    1.00    1.59    (.56)       (.56)   54.50    3.057,9    10    .638,9    .638,9    2.198,9 
11/30/2022   64.15    1.21    (7.48)   (6.27)   (1.10)   (3.31)   (4.41)   53.47    (10.39)9    10    .639    .639    2.239 
11/30/2021   56.69    1.12    7.33    8.45    (.99)       (.99)   64.15    14.939    10    .609    .609    1.769 
11/30/2020   50.84    1.08    6.00    7.08    (.83)   (.40)   (1.23)   56.69    14.409    10    .579    .579    2.189 
11/30/2019   47.68    1.05    5.35    6.40    (1.12)   (2.12)   (3.24)   50.84    14.60    188    .60    .60    2.21 
11/30/2018   52.90    1.18    (2.88)   (1.70)   (1.01)   (2.51)   (3.52)   47.68    (3.55)   171    .60    .60    2.32 
Class 529-F-2:                                                            
5/31/20235,6    53.66    .63    1.01    1.64    (.60)       (.60)   54.70    3.107    254    .498    .498    2.338 
11/30/2022   64.36    1.28    (7.51)   (6.23)   (1.16)   (3.31)   (4.47)   53.66    (10.26)   245    .52    .52    2.35 
11/30/2021   56.87    1.15    7.34    8.49    (1.00)       (1.00)   64.36    14.96    264    .55    .55    1.81 
11/30/20205,11    50.74    .02    6.11    6.13                56.87    12.087    215    .057    .057    .037 
Class 529-F-3:                                                             
5/31/20235,6    53.66    .63    1.01    1.64    (.60)       (.60)   54.70    3.117    10    .488    .488    2.348 
11/30/2022   64.36    1.30    (7.50)   (6.20)   (1.19)   (3.31)   (4.50)   53.66    (10.22)   10    .48    .48    2.38 
11/30/2021   56.87    1.20    7.34    8.54    (1.05)       (1.05)   64.36    15.06    10    .50    .47    1.89 
11/30/20205,11    50.74    .02    6.11    6.13                56.87    12.087    10    .067    .047    .047 
Class R-1:                                                            
5/31/20235,6    53.03    .34    1.02    1.36    (.34)       (.34)   54.05    2.587    121    1.518    1.518    1.308 
11/30/2022   63.62    .73    (7.42)   (6.69)   (.59)   (3.31)   (3.90)   53.03    (11.16)   127    1.51    1.51    1.35 
11/30/2021   56.24    .54    7.25    7.79    (.41)       (.41)   63.62    13.88    155    1.51    1.51    .86 
11/30/2020   50.41    .53    6.06    6.59    (.36)   (.40)   (.76)   56.24    13.32    158    1.52    1.52    1.07 
11/30/2019   47.28    .60    5.33    5.93    (.68)   (2.12)   (2.80)   50.41    13.56    177    1.54    1.54    1.28 
11/30/2018   52.48    .70    (2.87)   (2.17)   (.52)   (2.51)   (3.03)   47.28    (4.46)   191    1.54    1.54    1.39 

 

Refer to the end of the table for footnotes.

 

26 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Financial highlights (continued)

 

       Income (loss) from
investment operations1 
   Dividends and distributions                         
Year ended  Net asset
value,
beginning
of year
   Net
investment
income
   Net gains
(losses) on
securities
(both
realized and
unrealized)
   Total from
investment
operations
   Dividends
(from net
investment
income)
   Distributions
(from capital
gains)
   Total
dividends
and
distributions
   Net asset
value,
end
of year
   Total return2,3    Net assets,
end of
year
(in millions)
   Ratio of
expenses to
average net
assets before
reimburse-
ments4 
   Ratio of
expenses to
average net
assets after
reimburse-
ments3,4 
   Ratio of
net income
to average
net assets3 
 
Class R-2:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6   $52.84   $.34   $1.01   $1.35   $(.34)  $   $(.34)  $53.85    2.57%7   $508    1.51%8    1.51%8    1.30%8 
11/30/2022   63.42    .72    (7.40)   (6.68)   (.59)   (3.31)   (3.90)   52.84    (11.17)   529    1.53    1.53    1.34 
11/30/2021   56.06    .54    7.24    7.78    (.42)       (.42)   63.42    13.88    682    1.51    1.51    .86 
11/30/2020   50.25    .53    6.04    6.57    (.36)   (.40)   (.76)   56.06    13.33    681    1.52    1.52    1.08 
11/30/2019   47.15    .60    5.30    5.90    (.68)   (2.12)   (2.80)   50.25    13.53    722    1.54    1.54    1.27 
11/30/2018   52.34    .70    (2.86)   (2.16)   (.52)   (2.51)   (3.03)   47.15    (4.45)   755    1.54    1.54    1.38 
Class R-2E:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.41    .43    1.00    1.43    (.41)       (.41)   54.43    2.717    63    1.218    1.218    1.618 
11/30/2022   64.05    .90    (7.47)   (6.57)   (.76)   (3.31)   (4.07)   53.41    (10.89)   60    1.23    1.23    1.65 
11/30/2021   56.61    .73    7.30    8.03    (.59)       (.59)   64.05    14.22    71    1.21    1.21    1.16 
11/30/2020   50.75    .68    6.09    6.77    (.51)   (.40)   (.91)   56.61    13.65    69    1.22    1.22    1.38 
11/30/2019   47.59    .74    5.36    6.10    (.82)   (2.12)   (2.94)   50.75    13.88    67    1.24    1.24    1.56 
11/30/2018   52.80    .86    (2.88)   (2.02)   (.68)   (2.51)   (3.19)   47.59    (4.15)   58    1.24    1.24    1.68 
Class R-3:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.22    .46    1.02    1.48    (.45)       (.45)   54.25    2.827    999    1.068    1.068    1.748 
11/30/2022   63.85    .98    (7.46)   (6.48)   (.84)   (3.31)   (4.15)   53.22    (10.76)   1,061    1.07    1.07    1.80 
11/30/2021   56.43    .82    7.28    8.10    (.68)       (.68)   63.85    14.37    1,365    1.06    1.06    1.31 
11/30/2020   50.59    .75    6.07    6.82    (.58)   (.40)   (.98)   56.43    13.84    1,440    1.07    1.07    1.52 
11/30/2019   47.45    .82    5.33    6.15    (.89)   (2.12)   (3.01)   50.59    14.05    1,568    1.09    1.09    1.73 
11/30/2018   52.65    .93    (2.87)   (1.94)   (.75)   (2.51)   (3.26)   47.45    (4.02)   1,693    1.09    1.09    1.83 
Class R-4:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.50    .54    1.02    1.56    (.53)       (.53)   54.53    2.957    979    .768    .768    2.038 
11/30/2022   64.17    1.15    (7.49)   (6.34)   (1.02)   (3.31)   (4.33)   53.50    (10.48)   1,084    .77    .77    2.11 
11/30/2021   56.71    1.02    7.31    8.33    (.87)       (.87)   64.17    14.71    1,340    .76    .76    1.61 
11/30/2020   50.84    .91    6.09    7.00    (.73)   (.40)   (1.13)   56.71    14.20    1,459    .77    .77    1.83 
11/30/2019   47.67    .96    5.36    6.32    (1.03)   (2.12)   (3.15)   50.84    14.37    1,520    .79    .79    2.02 
11/30/2018   52.89    1.09    (2.89)   (1.80)   (.91)   (2.51)   (3.42)   47.67    (3.72)   1,640    .79    .79    2.13 
Class R-5E:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.56    .60    1.01    1.61    (.58)       (.58)   54.59    3.067    139    .568    .568    2.248 
11/30/2022   64.24    1.25    (7.49)   (6.24)   (1.13)   (3.31)   (4.44)   53.56    (10.29)   140    .57    .57    2.30 
11/30/2021   56.77    1.14    7.33    8.47    (1.00)       (1.00)   64.24    14.94    139    .56    .56    1.80 
11/30/2020   50.91    1.01    6.08    7.09    (.83)   (.40)   (1.23)   56.77    14.41    110    .56    .56    2.03 
11/30/2019   47.74    1.04    5.39    6.43    (1.14)   (2.12)   (3.26)   50.91    14.64    82    .58    .58    2.19 
11/30/2018   52.96    1.20    (2.89)   (1.69)   (1.02)   (2.51)   (3.53)   47.74    (3.53)   37    .58    .58    2.37 
Class R-5:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.68    .63    1.02    1.65    (.61)       (.61)   54.72    3.117    337    .468    .468    2.348 
11/30/2022   64.38    1.32    (7.52)   (6.20)   (1.19)   (3.31)   (4.50)   53.68    (10.20)   399    .47    .47    2.41 
11/30/2021   56.89    1.21    7.34    8.55    (1.06)       (1.06)   64.38    15.05    530    .46    .46    1.91 
11/30/2020   51.02    1.06    6.09    7.15    (.88)   (.40)   (1.28)   56.89    14.51    542    .47    .47    2.13 
11/30/2019   47.83    1.11    5.37    6.48    (1.17)   (2.12)   (3.29)   51.02    14.74    745    .49    .49    2.34 
11/30/2018   53.05    1.25    (2.89)   (1.64)   (1.07)   (2.51)   (3.58)   47.83    (3.44)   1,125    .49    .49    2.44 
Class R-6:                                                                 
5/31/20235,6    53.67    .65    1.00    1.65    (.62)       (.62)   54.70    3.137     29,353    .418    .418    2.408 
11/30/2022   64.37    1.33    (7.50)   (6.17)   (1.22)   (3.31)   (4.53)   53.67    (10.17)   28,848    .42    .42    2.45 
11/30/2021   56.87    1.24    7.35    8.59    (1.09)       (1.09)   64.37    15.14    30,071    .41    .41    1.94 
11/30/2020   51.01    1.09    6.08    7.17    (.91)   (.40)   (1.31)   56.87    14.56    21,684    .42    .42    2.18 
11/30/2019   47.82    1.12    5.39    6.51    (1.20)   (2.12)   (3.32)   51.01    14.82    18,613    .43    .43    2.36 
11/30/2018   53.04    1.27    (2.89)   (1.62)   (1.09)   (2.51)   (3.60)   47.82    (3.39)   15,132    .44    .44    2.48 

 

    Six months ended   Year ended November 30,
    May 31, 20235,6,7    2022   2021   2020   2019   2018
Portfolio turnover rate for all share classes12    14%   32%   32%   36%   23%   49%

 

Refer to the end of the table for footnotes.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 27
 

Financial highlights (continued)

 

1  Based on average shares outstanding.
2  Total returns exclude any applicable sales charges, including contingent deferred sales charges.
3  This column reflects the impact, if any, of certain reimbursements from CRMC. During some of the years shown, CRMC reimbursed a portion of transfer agent services fees for Class 529-F-3 shares.
4  Ratios do not include expenses of any Central Funds. The fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any Central Funds.
5  Based on operations for a period that is less than a full year.
6  Unaudited.
7  Not annualized.
8  Annualized.
9  All or a significant portion of assets in this class consisted of seed capital invested by CRMC and/or its affiliates. Fees for distribution services are not charged or accrued on these seed capital assets. If such fees were paid by the fund on seed capital assets, fund expenses would have been higher and net income and total return would have been lower.
10  Amount less than $1 million.
11  Class 529-F-2 and 529-F-3 shares began investment operations on October 30, 2020.
12  Rates do not include the fund’s portfolio activity with respect to any Central Funds.

 

Refer to the notes to financial statements.

 

28 Capital World Growth and Income Fund

 
Expense example unaudited

 

As a fund shareholder, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, such as initial sales charges on purchase payments and contingent deferred sales charges on redemptions (loads), and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees, distribution and service (12b-1) fees, and other expenses. This example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the fund so you can compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds. The example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire six-month period (December 1, 2022, through May 31, 2023).

 

Actual expenses:

The first line of each share class in the table on the following page provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line under the heading titled “Expenses paid during period” to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period.

 

Hypothetical example for comparison purposes:

The second line of each share class in the table on the following page provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the actual expense ratio for the share class and an assumed rate of return of 5.00% per year before expenses, which is not the actual return of the share class. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5.00% hypothetical example with the 5.00% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds.

 

Notes:

Retirement plan participants may be subject to certain fees charged by the plan sponsor, and Class F-1, F-2, F-3, 529-F-1, 529-F-2 and 529-F-3 shareholders may be subject to fees charged by financial intermediaries, typically ranging from 0.75% to 1.50% of assets annually depending on services offered. You can estimate the impact of these fees by adding the amount of the fees to the total estimated expenses you paid on your account during the period as calculated above. In addition, your ending account value would be lower by the amount of these fees.

 

Note that the expenses shown in the table on the following page are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transactional costs, such as sales charges (loads). Therefore, the second line of each share class in the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs would have been higher.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund 29
 

Expense example (continued)

 

   Beginning
account value
12/1/2022
   Ending
account value
5/31/2023
   Expenses paid
during period*
   Annualized
expense ratio
 
Class A – actual return  $1,000.00   $1,029.67   $3.80    .75%
Class A – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,021.19    3.78    .75 
Class C – actual return   1,000.00    1,025.84    7.58    1.50 
Class C – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,017.45    7.54    1.50 
Class T – actual return   1,000.00    1,031.02    2.38    .47 
Class T – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.59    2.37    .47 
Class F-1 – actual return   1,000.00    1,029.36    4.10    .81 
Class F-1 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,020.89    4.08    .81 
Class F-2 – actual return   1,000.00    1,030.98    2.58    .51 
Class F-2 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.39    2.57    .51 
Class F-3 – actual return   1,000.00    1,031.45    2.08    .41 
Class F-3 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.89    2.07    .41 
Class 529-A – actual return   1,000.00    1,029.40    4.00    .79 
Class 529-A – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,020.99    3.98    .79 
Class 529-C – actual return   1,000.00    1,025.27    7.93    1.57 
Class 529-C – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,017.10    7.90    1.57 
Class 529-E – actual return   1,000.00    1,028.14    5.21    1.03 
Class 529-E – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,019.80    5.19    1.03 
Class 529-T – actual return   1,000.00    1,030.86    2.68    .53 
Class 529-T – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.29    2.67    .53 
Class 529-F-1 – actual return   1,000.00    1,030.49    3.19    .63 
Class 529-F-1 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,021.79    3.18    .63 
Class 529-F-2 – actual return   1,000.00    1,030.99    2.48    .49 
Class 529-F-2 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.49    2.47    .49 
Class 529-F-3 – actual return   1,000.00    1,031.10    2.43    .48 
Class 529-F-3 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.54    2.42    .48 
Class R-1 – actual return   1,000.00    1,025.81    7.63    1.51 
Class R-1 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,017.40    7.59    1.51 
Class R-2 – actual return   1,000.00    1,025.73    7.63    1.51 
Class R-2 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,017.40    7.59    1.51 
Class R-2E – actual return   1,000.00    1,027.15    6.12    1.21 
Class R-2E – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,018.90    6.09    1.21 
Class R-3 – actual return   1,000.00    1,028.20    5.36    1.06 
Class R-3 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,019.65    5.34    1.06 
Class R-4 – actual return   1,000.00    1,029.53    3.85    .76 
Class R-4 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,021.14    3.83    .76 
Class R-5E – actual return   1,000.00    1,030.55    2.83    .56 
Class R-5E – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.14    2.82    .56 
Class R-5 – actual return   1,000.00    1,031.14    2.33    .46 
Class R-5 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.64    2.32    .46 
Class R-6 – actual return   1,000.00    1,031.26    2.08    .41 
Class R-6 – assumed 5% return   1,000.00    1,022.89    2.07    .41 

 

* The “expenses paid during period” are equal to the “annualized expense ratio,” multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the period, and divided by 365 (to reflect the one-half year period).

 

30 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 
Liquidity Risk Management Program unaudited

 

The fund has adopted a liquidity risk management program (the “program”). The fund’s board has designated Capital Research and Management Company (“CRMC”) as the administrator of the program. Personnel of CRMC or its affiliates conduct the day-to-day operation of the program pursuant to policies and procedures administered by the Capital Group Liquidity Risk Management Committee.

 

Under the program, CRMC manages the fund’s liquidity risk, which is the risk that the fund could not meet shareholder redemption requests without significant dilution of remaining shareholders’ interests in the fund. This risk is managed by monitoring the degree of liquidity of the fund’s investments, limiting the amount of the fund’s illiquid investments, and utilizing various risk management tools and facilities available to the fund for meeting shareholder redemptions, among other means. CRMC’s process of determining the degree of liquidity of the fund’s investments is supported by one or more third-party liquidity assessment vendors.

 

The fund’s board reviewed a report prepared by CRMC regarding the operation and effectiveness of the program for the period October 1, 2021, through September 30, 2022. No significant liquidity events impacting the fund were noted in the report. In addition, CRMC provided its assessment that the program had been effective in managing the fund’s liquidity risk.

 

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32 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

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Capital World Growth and Income Fund 33
 

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34 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

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Capital World Growth and Income Fund 35
 

Office of the fund

333 South Hope Street
Los Angeles, CA 90071-1406

 

Investment adviser

Capital Research and Management Company
333 South Hope Street
Los Angeles, CA 90071-1406

 

Transfer agent for shareholder accounts

American Funds Service Company
(Write to the address nearest you.)

 

P.O. Box 6007
Indianapolis, IN 46206-6007

 

P.O. Box 2280
Norfolk, VA 23501-2280

 

Custodian of assets

JPMorgan Chase Bank
270 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10017-2070

 

Counsel

O’Melveny & Myers LLP
400 South Hope Street
Los Angeles, CA 90071-2899

 

Independent registered public accounting firm

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
601 South Figueroa Street
Los Angeles, CA 90017-3874

 

Principal underwriter

American Funds Distributors, Inc.
333 South Hope Street
Los Angeles, CA 90071-1406

 

36 Capital World Growth and Income Fund
 

Investors should carefully consider investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. This and other important information is contained in the fund prospectus and summary prospectus, which can be obtained from your financial professional and should be read carefully before investing. You may also call American Funds Service Company (AFS) at (800) 421-4225 or visit the Capital Group website at capitalgroup.com.

 

“American Funds Proxy Voting Procedures and Principles” — which describes how we vote proxies relating to portfolio securities — is available on our website or upon request by calling AFS. The fund files its proxy voting record with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for the 12 months ended June 30 by August 31. The proxy voting record is available free of charge on the SEC website at sec.gov and on our website.

 

Capital World Growth and Income Fund files a complete list of its portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form NPORT-P. The list of portfolio holdings is available free of charge on the SEC website and on our website.

 

This report is for the information of shareholders of Capital World Growth and Income Fund, but it also may be used as sales literature when preceded or accompanied by the current prospectus or summary prospectus, which gives details about charges, expenses, investment objectives and operating policies of the fund. If used as sales material after September 30, 2023, this report must be accompanied by an American Funds statistical update for the most recently completed calendar quarter.

 

MSCI has not approved, reviewed or produced this report, makes no express or implied warranties or representations and is not liable whatsoever for any data in the report. You may not redistribute the MSCI data or use it as a basis for other indices or investment products.

 

American Funds Distributors, Inc.

 

The Capital Advantage®

 

Since 1931, Capital Group, home of American Funds, has helped investors pursue long-term investment success. Our consistent approach — in combination with The Capital SystemTM — has resulted in superior outcomes.

 

  Aligned with investor success
  We base our decisions on a long-term perspective, which we believe aligns our goals with the interests of our clients. Our portfolio managers average 28 years of investment industry experience, including 22 years at our company, reflecting a career commitment to our long-term approach.1
   
  The Capital System
  The Capital System combines individual accountability with teamwork. Funds using The Capital System are divided into portions that are managed independently by investment professionals with diverse backgrounds, ages and investment approaches. An extensive global research effort is the backbone of our system.
   
  American Funds’ superior outcomes
  Equity-focused funds have beaten their Lipper peer indexes in 90% of 10-year periods and 99% of 20-year periods.2 Relative to their peers, our fixed income funds have helped investors achieve better diversification through attention to correlation between bonds and equities.3 Fund management fees have been among the lowest in the industry.4
   
  1 Investment industry experience as of December 31, 2022.
  2 Based on Class F-2 share results for rolling monthly 10- and 20-year periods starting with the first 10- or 20-year period after each mutual fund’s inception through December 31, 2022. Periods covered are the shorter of the fund’s lifetime or since the comparable Lipper index inception date (except Capital Income Builder and SMALLCAP World Fund, for which the Lipper average was used). Expenses differ for each share class, so results will vary. Past results are not predictive of results in future periods.
  3 Based on Class F-2 share results as of December 31, 2022. Sixteen of the 18 fixed income American Funds that have been in existence for the three-year period showed a three-year correlation lower than their respective Morningstar peer group averages. S&P 500 Index was used as an equity market proxy. Correlation based on monthly total returns. Correlation is a statistical measure of how two securities move in relation to each other. A correlation ranges from –1 to 1. A positive correlation close to 1 implies that as one security moves, either up or down, the other security will move in “lockstep,” in the same direction. A negative correlation close to –1 indicates that the securities have moved in the opposite direction.
  4 On average, our mutual fund management fees were in the lowest quintile 62% of the time, based on the 20-year period ended December 31, 2022, versus comparable Lipper categories, excluding funds of funds.

 

Class F-2 shares were first offered on August 1, 2008. Class F-2 share results prior to the date of first sale are hypothetical based on the results of the original share class of the fund without a sales charge, adjusted for typical estimated expenses. Results for certain funds with an inception date after August 1, 2008, also include hypothetical returns because those funds’ Class F-2 shares sold after the funds’ date of first offering. Refer to capitalgroup.com for more information on specific expense adjustments and the actual dates of first sale.

 

All Capital Group trademarks mentioned are owned by The Capital Group Companies, Inc., an affiliated company or fund. All other company and product names mentioned are the property of their respective companies.

 

 

 

ITEM 2 – Code of Ethics

 

Not applicable for filing of semi-annual reports to shareholders.

 

ITEM 3 – Audit Committee Financial Expert

 

Not applicable for filing of semi-annual reports to shareholders.

 

ITEM 4 – Principal Accountant Fees and Services

 

Not applicable for filing of semi-annual reports to shareholders.

 

ITEM 5 – Audit Committee of Listed Registrants

 

Not applicable to this Registrant, insofar as the Registrant is not a listed issuer as defined in Rule 10A-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

 

ITEM 6 – Schedule of Investments

 

Not applicable, insofar as the schedule is included as part of the report to shareholders filed under Item 1 of this Form.

 

ITEM 7 – Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End Management Investment Companies.

 

Not applicable to this Registrant, insofar as the Registrant is not a closed-end management investment company.

 

ITEM 8 – Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies

 

Not applicable to this Registrant, insofar as the Registrant is not a closed-end management investment company.

 

ITEM 9 – Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers

 

Not applicable to this Registrant, insofar as the Registrant is not a closed-end management investment company.

 

ITEM 10 – Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

 

There have been no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the Registrant’s board of trustees since the Registrant last submitted a proxy statement to its shareholders. The procedures are as follows. The Registrant has a nominating and governance committee comprised solely of persons who are not considered ‘‘interested persons’’ of the Registrant within the meaning of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended. The committee periodically reviews such issues as the board’s composition, responsibilities, committees, compensation and other relevant issues, and recommends any appropriate changes to the full board of trustees. While the committee normally is able to identify from its own resources an ample number of qualified candidates, it will consider shareholder suggestions of persons to be considered as nominees to fill future vacancies on the board. Such suggestions must be sent in writing to the nominating and governance committee of the Registrant, c/o the Registrant’s Secretary, and must be accompanied by complete biographical and occupational data on the prospective nominee, along with a written consent of the prospective nominee for consideration of his or her name by the nominating and governance committee.

 

ITEM 11 – Controls and Procedures

 

(a) The Registrant’s Principal Executive Officer and Principal Financial Officer have concluded, based on their evaluation of the Registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as such term is defined in Rule 30a-3 under the Investment Company Act of 1940), that such controls and procedures are adequate and reasonably designed to achieve the purposes described in paragraph (c) of such rule.
   
(b)

There were no changes in the Registrant’s internal controls over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) that occurred during the Registrant’s semi-annual period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

 

ITEM 12 – Exhibits

 

(a)(1) Not applicable for filing of semi-annual reports to shareholders.
   
(a)(2) The certifications required by Rule 30a-2 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and Sections 302 and 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are attached as exhibits hereto.

 

 
 

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.

 

  CAPITAL WORLD GROWTH AND INCOME FUND
   
  By __/s/ Donald H. Rolfe____________________
 

Donald H. Rolfe,

Principal Executive Officer

   
  Date: July 31, 2023

 

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/ Donald H. Rolfe_________________

Donald H. Rolfe,

Principal Executive Officer

 
Date: July 31, 2023

 

 

 

By ___/s/ Gregory F. Niland    __________

Gregory F. Niland, Treasurer and

Principal Financial Officer

 
Date: July 31, 2023