"Special Risks of Credit Default Options" (which was added in the June 2007 Supplement): SPECIAL RISKS OF BINARY OPTIONS (OTHER THAN CREDIT DEFAULT OPTIONS) 1. Risks of holders of binary options are similar to the risks described above applicable to holders of other cash-settled. European-We options. but the holder of a binary option will not receive any gain in excess of the fixed settlement amount of the option. Non-binary options, in contrast, may provide greater return to the holder as the difference between the exercise price and the exercise settlement value of the underlying interest increases. A binary option is like a capped option in the sense that its maximum return is limited. Unlike a capped option, however, the payout on a binary option is all or nothing. Accordingly, with respect to a binary option, the holder may experience a relatively greater gain than the holder of a non-binary option when the option is in the money by a small amount but a relatively smaller gain when the option is in the money by a greater amount. 2. Binary options may be more difficult to hedge or to use as hedges, than non-binary options. Because of the fixed settlement amount to be realized from a binary option, an investor who wishes to hedge the risk of an Increase in the price of a specified quantity of a stock, for example. cannot create a perfect hedge by buying a specified quantity of at-the-money binary options that return a cash settlement amount if the exercise settle- ment value of the underlying security is above the current price of the stock. If the stock price at expiration of the option has risen only slightly above the exercise price. the option payout may exceed the aggregate increase in the value of the stock. If the stock price has risen sub- stantially over the exercise price, the payout from the option may not be sufficient to cover the excess. Simi- larly, an investor who writes a binary option on an individ- ual stock an