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BLACKROCK INCOME TRUST, INC.

Regulatory Filings Nov 3, 2016

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N-CSR 1 d215341dncsr.htm BLACKROCK INCOME TRUST, INC. BLACKROCK INCOME TRUST, INC.

Table of Contents

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 811-05542

Name of Fund: BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

Fund Address: 100 Bellevue Parkway, Wilmington, DE 19809

Name and address of agent for service: John M. Perlowski, Chief Executive Officer, BlackRock Income

Trust, Inc., 55 East 52 nd Street, New York, NY 10055

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (800) 882-0052, Option 4

Date of fiscal year end: 08/31/2016

Date of reporting period: 08/31/2016

Table of Contents

Item 1 – Report to Stockholders

Table of Contents

AUGUST 31, 2016

ANNUAL REPORT

BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

Not FDIC Insured • May Lose Value • No Bank Guarantee

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

The Markets in Review 3
Annual Report:
Trust Summaries 4
The Benefits and Risks of Leveraging 10
Derivative Financial Instruments 10
Financial Statements:
Schedules of Investments 11
Statements of Assets and Liabilities 65
Statements of Operations 67
Statements of Changes in Net Assets 68
Statements of Cash Flows 71
Financial Highlights 73
Notes to Financial Statements 76
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 92
Important Tax Information 92
Disclosure of Investment Advisory Agreements 93
Automatic Dividend Reinvestment Plans 97
Officers and Trustees 98
Additional Information 101

2 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

The Markets in Review

Dear Shareholder,

Uneven economic outlooks and the divergence of monetary policies across regions have been the overarching themes driving financial markets over the past couple of years. In the latter half of 2015, investors were focused largely on the timing of the Federal Reserve’s (the “Fed”) decision to end its near-zero interest rate policy. The Fed ultimately hiked rates in December, while, in contrast, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan increased stimulus, even introducing negative interest rates. The U.S. dollar had strengthened considerably, causing profit challenges for U.S. companies that generate revenues overseas, and pressuring emerging market currencies and commodities prices. Also during this time period, oil prices collapsed due to excess global supply. China showed signs of slowing economic growth and declining confidence in the country’s policymakers stoked worries about the potential impact on the global economy. Risk assets (such as equities and high yield bonds) struggled as volatility increased.

The elevated market volatility spilled over into 2016, but as the first quarter wore on, fears of a global recession began to fade, allowing markets to calm and risk assets to rebound. Central bank stimulus in Europe and Japan, combined with a more tempered outlook for rate hikes in the United States, helped bolster financial markets. A softening in U.S. dollar strength brought relief to U.S. exporters and emerging market economies, and oil prices rebounded as the world’s largest producers agreed to reduce supply.

Volatility spiked in late June when the United Kingdom shocked investors with its vote to leave the European Union. Uncertainty around how the British exit might affect the global economy and political landscape drove investors to high-quality assets, pushing already low global yields to even lower levels. However, risk assets recovered swiftly in July as economic data suggested that the consequences had thus far been contained to the United Kingdom.

With a number of factors holding interest rates down — central bank accommodation, an aging population in need of income, and institutions such as insurance companies and pension plans needing to meet liabilities — assets offering decent yield have become increasingly scarce. As a result, income-seeking investors have stretched into riskier assets despite high valuations in many sectors.

Market volatility touched a year-to-date low in August, which may be a signal that investors have become complacent given persistent macro risks: Geopolitical turmoil continues to loom. A surprise move from the Fed — i.e., raising rates sooner than expected — has the potential to roil markets. And perhaps most likely to stir things up — the U.S. presidential election.

At BlackRock, we believe investors need to think globally, extend their scope across a broad array of asset classes and be prepared to adjust accordingly as market conditions change over time. We encourage you to talk with your financial advisor and visit blackrock.com for further insight about investing in today’s markets.

Sincerely,

Rob Kapito

President, BlackRock Advisors, LLC

Rob Kapito

President, BlackRock Advisors, LLC

Total Returns as of August 31, 2016 — 6-month 12-month
U.S. large cap equities (S&P
500 ® Index) 13.60 % 12.55 %
U.S. small cap equities (Russell
2000 ® Index) 20.87 8.59
International equities (MSCI Europe, Australasia, Far East Index) 10.35 (0.12 )
Emerging market equities (MSCI Emerging Markets Index) 22.69 11.83
3-month Treasury bills (BofA Merrill Lynch 3-Month U.S. Treasury Bill Index) 0.17 0.23
U.S. Treasury securities (BofA Merrill Lynch 10-Year U.S. Treasury Index) 2.22 7.35
U.S. investment grade bonds (Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index) 3.68 5.97
Tax-exempt municipal bonds (S&P Municipal Bond Index) 3.35 7.03
U.S. high yield bonds (Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Corporate High Yield 2% Issuer Capped Index) 15.56 9.12
Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Index performance is shown for illustrative purposes only. You cannot invest
directly in an index.

THIS PAGE NOT PART OF YOUR FUND REPORT 3

Table of Contents

Trust Summary as of August 31, 2016 BlackRock Core Bond Trust

Trust Overview

BlackRock Core Bond Trust’s (BHK) (the “Trust”) investment objective is to provide current income and capital appreciation. The Trust seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing at least 75% of its managed assets in bonds that are investment grade quality at the time of investment. The Trust’s investments will include a broad range of bonds, including corporate bonds, U.S. government and agency securities and mortgage-related securities. The Trust may invest up to 25% of its total managed assets in bonds that at the time of investment are rated Ba/BB or below by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. (“Moody’s”), Fitch Ratings (“Fitch”) or another nationally recognized rating agency or bonds that are unrated but judged to be of comparable quality by the investment adviser. The Trust may invest directly in such securities or synthetically through the use of derivatives.

No assurance can be given that the Trust’s investment objective will be achieved.

Trust Information
Symbol on New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) BHK
Initial Offering Date November 27, 2001
Current Distribution Rate on Closing Market Price as of August 31, 2016
($14.33) 1 5.44%
Current Monthly Distribution per Common Share 2 $0.065
Current Annualized Distribution per Common Share 2 $0.780
Economic Leverage as of August 31,
2016 3 26%

1 Current distribution rate on closing market price is calculated by dividing the current annualized distribution per share by the closing market price. The current distribution rate may consist of income, net realized gains and/or a tax return of capital. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

2 The distribution rate is not constant and is subject to change.

3 Represents reverse repurchase agreements outstanding as a percentage of total managed assets, which is the total assets of the Trust (including any assets attributable to borrowings) minus the sum of liabilities (other than borrowings representing financial leverage). For a discussion of leveraging techniques utilized by the Trust, please see The Benefits and Risks of Leveraging on page 10.

Performance and Portfolio Management Commentary

Returns for the 12 months ended August 31, 2016 were as follows:

Market Price NAV
BHK 1,2 20.85 % 13.67 %
Lipper Corporate BBB-Rated Debt Funds (Leveraged) 3 15.43 % 7.69 %

1 All returns reflect reinvestment of dividends and/or distributions.

2 The Trust’s discount to NAV, which narrowed during the period, accounts for the difference between performance based on price and performance based on NAV.

3 Average return.

Performance results may include adjustments made for financial reporting purposes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

The following discussion relates to the Trust’s absolute performance based on NAV:

What factors influenced performance?

• The largest positive contributor to the Trust’s performance was its allocation to investment grade corporate securities, followed by its allocation to U.S. Treasuries. Also contributing to performance was the Trust’s positioning within high yield corporates, commercial mortgage-backed securities (“CMBS”) and global sovereign/supranational/agency issues.

• The Trust employs derivatives to manage duration and yield curve positioning. During the period, the employment of interest rate derivatives did not materially impact performance.

Describe recent portfolio activity.

• At the start of the period the Trust maintained a consistent allocation, favoring investment grade and high yield corporates, securitized products such as asset-backed securities (“ABS”) and CMBS, as well as agency mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”). Volatility increased at year end 2015 in the wake of the first Fed rate hike in nine years and the subsequent currency depreciation of the Chinese yuan in January. As a result, the Trust reduced risk by decreasing exposure to structured products, corporate credit and sovereign securities in favor of U.S. Treasuries. During the second half of the period, the Trust continued to reduce exposure to spread products and added exposure to U.S. Treasuries, as the investment adviser expected market volatility to remain elevated ahead of the U.K. referendum on leaving the European Union. Most of the reductions were within high yield corporates and CMBS. Following the U.K. referendum vote, the Trust began to add exposure to spread products as a way of increasing yield and to benefit from investors’ global search for income due to very low interest rate levels.

Describe portfolio positioning at period end.

• The Trust maintained diversified exposure within non-government spread sectors, including investment grade credit, high yield credit, CMBS and ABS, as well as smaller allocations to non-agency mortgages and U.S. municipals. The Trust also held exposure to government-related sectors such as U.S. Treasury securities, agency debt and agency MBS. The Trust closed the period with a long duration profile.

The views expressed reflect the opinions of BlackRock as of the date of this report and are subject to change based on changes in market, economic or other conditions. These views are not intended to be a forecast of future events and are no guarantee of future results.

4 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

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BlackRock Core Bond Trust

Market Price and Net Asset Value Per Share Summary

8/31/16 8/31/15 High Low
Market Price $ 14.33 $ 12.63 13.46 % $ 14.34 $ 12.34
Net Asset Value $ 15.25 $ 14.29 6.72 % $ 15.28 $ 13.74

Market Price and Net Asset Value History For the Past Five Years

Overview of the Trust’s Total Investments

Portfolio Composition — Corporate Bonds 47 % 49 %
U.S. Treasury Obligations 14 6
Preferred Securities 10 10
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities 10 12
Asset-Backed Securities 8 11
U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities 6 8
Municipal Bonds 2 2
Foreign Agency Obligations 2 2
Floating Rate Loan Interests 1 —
Short-Term Securities 1 1
Options Written (1 ) (1 )
Other 1 — —

1 Representing less than 1% of the Trust’s total investments and may include Common Stocks and Options Purchased.

Credit Quality Allocation 2,3 — AAA/Aaa 4 24 % 18 %
AA/Aa 4 7
A 14 18
BBB/Baa 22 33
BB/Ba 17 13
B 12 7
CCC/Caa 4 1
N/R 3 3

2 For financial reporting purposes, credit quality ratings shown above reflect the highest rating assigned by either S&P or Moody’s if ratings differ. These rating agencies are independent, nationally recognized statistical rating organizations and are widely used. Investment grade ratings are credit ratings of BBB/Baa or higher. Below investment grade ratings are credit ratings of BB/Ba or lower. Investments designated N/R are not rated by either rating agency. Unrated investments do not necessarily indicate low credit quality. Credit quality ratings are subject to change.

3 Excludes Short-Term Securities, Options Purchased and Options Written.

4 The investment adviser evaluates the credit quality of not-rated investments based upon certain factors including, but not limited to, credit ratings for similar investments and financial analysis of sectors and individual investments. Using this approach, the investment adviser has deemed U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities and U.S. Treasury Obligations as AAA/Aaa.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 5

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Trust Summary as of August 31, 2016 BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc.

Trust Overview

BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc.’s (HYT) (the “Trust”) primary investment objective is to provide shareholders with current income. The Trust’s secondary investment objective is to provide shareholders with capital appreciation. The Trust seeks to achieve its objectives by investing primarily in a diversified portfolio of fixed income securities which are rated below investment grade or, if unrated, are considered by the investment adviser to be of comparable quality. The Trust may invest directly in fixed income securities or synthetically through the use of derivatives.

No assurance can be given that the Trust’s investment objectives will be achieved.

Trust Information
Symbol on NYSE HYT
Initial Offering Date May 30, 2003
Current Distribution Rate on Closing Market Price as of August 31, 2016
($10.88) 1 7.72%
Current Monthly Distribution per Common Share 2 $0.07
Current Annualized Distribution per Common Share 2 $0.84
Economic Leverage as of August 31,
2016 3 29%

1 Current distribution rate on closing market price is calculated by dividing the current annualized distribution per share by the closing market price. The current distribution rate may consist of income, net realized gains and/or a tax return of capital. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

2 The distribution rate is not constant and is subject to change.

3 Represents bank borrowings as a percentage of total managed assets, which is the total assets of the Trust (including any assets attributable to borrowings) minus the sum of liabilities (other than borrowings representing financial leverage). For a discussion of leveraging techniques utilized by the Trust, please see The Benefits and Risks of Leveraging on page 10.

Performance and Portfolio Management Commentary

Returns for the 12 months ended August 31, 2016 were as follows:

Market Price NAV
HYT 1,2 20.29 % 7.76 %
Lipper High Yield Funds (Leveraged) 3 18.69 % 7.88 %

1 All returns reflect reinvestment of dividends and/or distributions.

2 The Trust’s discount to NAV, which narrowed during the period, accounts for the difference between performance based on price and performance based on NAV.

3 Average return.

Performance results may include adjustments made for financial reporting purposes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

The following discussion relates to the Trust’s absolute performance based on NAV:

What factors influenced performance?

• Credit markets performed poorly during the first half of the period, driven in large part by declines in commodity prices. However, in the second half of the period, the high-yield market rebounded sharply, led by a recovery in commodity-related assets. Holdings within the energy and metals & mining industries were the most notable contributors to the Trust’s performance during the period. Holdings within the technology and cable & satellite industries helped performance as well.

• The Trust’s exposure to equity and equity-like positions were the primary detractors to performance during the period.

Describe recent portfolio activity.

• The Trust began the period somewhat conservatively positioned but steadily increased its risk profile as volatility decreased and risk markets became more stable. By the middle of the period, the Trust had transitioned to a market-neutral risk position and then proceeded to a slightly overweight risk position. The investment adviser added risk to the portfolio at a measured pace, while remaining underweight to the more distressed areas of the high yield market, which led performance over the period. The Trust added to exposure in the metals & mining sector and moved toward a more neutral-weight position in commodity-related issuers. The Trust decreased risk in the pharmaceutical and home construction industries during the period.

Describe portfolio positioning at period end.

• The Trust held the majority of its portfolio in corporate bonds, with a modest allocation to floating rate loan interests (bank loans). Within high yield corporates, the Trust had most of its assets in single B-rated bonds, followed by BB-rated bonds. The Trust kept exposure to high conviction CCC-rated issues but favored select equity and equity-like assets over the higher-beta segment of the CCC-rated bond market.

• Leading individual positions included Ally Financial (banking), First Data Corp. (technology), and Altice NV (cable & satellite). The Trust also maintained exposure to equity futures positions to help reduce portfolio risk. Bank loans provided diversification and helped increase the stability of the Trust’s portfolio, while providing attractive levels of income.

The views expressed reflect the opinions of BlackRock as of the date of this report and are subject to change based on changes in market, economic or other conditions. These views are not intended to be a forecast of future events and are no guarantee of future results.

6 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc.

Market Price and Net Asset Value Per Share Summary

Market Price 8/31/16 — $ 10.88 8/31/15 — $ 9.97 9.13 % High — $ 10.93 Low — $ 9.13
Net Asset Value $ 11.79 $ 12.06 (2.24 )% $ 12.06 $ 10.13

Market Price and Net Asset Value History For the Past Five Years

Overview of the Trust’s Total Investments

Portfolio Composition — Corporate Bonds 79 % 79 %
Floating Rate Loan Interests 9 9
Preferred Securities 4 5
Common Stocks 4 5
Asset-Backed Securities 2 2
Investment Companies 1 —
Other 1 1 —

1 Representing less than 1% of the Trust’s total investments and may include Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities, Warrants, Other Interests, Short-Term Securities and Options Purchased.

Credit Quality Allocation 2 — A 3 % 1 %
BBB/Baa 10 6
BB/Ba 40 37
B 35 40
CCC/Caa 8 8
N/R 4 8

2 For financial reporting purposes, credit quality ratings shown above reflect the highest rating assigned by either S&P or Moody’s if ratings differ. These rating agencies are independent, nationally recognized statistical rating organizations and are widely used. Investment grade ratings are credit ratings of BBB/Baa or higher. Below investment grade ratings are credit ratings of BB/Ba or lower. Investments designated N/R are not rated by either rating agency. Unrated investments do not necessarily indicate low credit quality. Credit quality ratings are subject to change.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 7

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Trust Summary as of August 31, 2016 BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.

Trust Overview

BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.’s (BKT) (the “Trust”) investment objective is to manage a portfolio of high-quality securities to achieve both preservation of capital and high monthly income. The Trust seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing at least 65% of its assets in mortgage-backed securities. The Trust invests at least 80% of its assets in securities that are (i) issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or one of its agencies or instrumentalities or (ii) rated at the time of investment either AAA by S&P or Aaa by Moody’s. The Trust may invest directly in such securities or synthetically through the use of derivatives.

No assurance can be given that the Trust’s investment objective will be achieved.

Trust Information
Symbol on NYSE BKT
Initial Offering Date July 22, 1988
Current Distribution Rate on Closing Market Price as of August 31, 2016
($6.60) 1 4.82%
Current Monthly Distribution per Common Share 2 $0.0265
Current Annualized Distribution per Common Share 2 $0.3180
Economic Leverage as of August 31,
2016 3 26%

1 Current distribution rate on closing market price is calculated by dividing the current annualized distribution per share by the closing market price. The current distribution rate may consist of income, net realized gains and/or a tax return of capital. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

2 The distribution rate is not constant and is subject to change.

3 Represents reverse repurchase agreements outstanding as a percentage of total managed assets, which is the total assets of the Trust (including any assets attributable to borrowings) minus the sum of liabilities (other than borrowings representing financial leverage). For a discussion of leveraging techniques utilized by the Trust, please see the Benefits and Risks of Leveraging on page 10.

Performance and Portfolio Management Commentary

Returns for the 12 months ended August 31, 2016 were as follows:

Market Price NAV
BKT 1,2 10.44 % 3.64 %
Lipper US Mortgage Funds 3 13.46 % 5.27 %

1 All returns reflect reinvestment of dividends and/or distributions.

2 The Trust’s discount to NAV, which narrowed during the period, accounts for the difference between performance based on price and performance based on NAV.

3 Average return.

Performance results may include adjustments made for financial reporting purposes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

The following discussion relates to the Trust’s absolute performance based on NAV:

What factors influenced performance?

• The largest positive contributor to performance was the Trust’s allocation in well-structured agency collateralized mortgage obligations (“CMOs”) that offered call protected and seasoned collateral with favorable risk/reward characteristics and attractive income.

• Detractors from performance included the Trust’s positioning with respect to overall portfolio duration (and corresponding sensitivity to changes in

market interest rates), as well as allocation-based strategies across both 30-year and 15-year mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”).

• The Trust uses interest rate derivatives including futures, options, swaps and swaptions, mainly for the purpose of managing duration, convexity (the rate at which duration changes in response to interest rate movements) and yield curve positioning. During the period, the Trust employed Treasury futures, and also utilized mortgage derivatives to gain market exposure. The use of these derivatives had a negative impact on Trust performance for the period.

Describe recent portfolio activity.

• The Trust decreased exposure to agency pass-throughs, primarily in generic 30-year MBS, while marginally adding exposure to longer duration, stable CMO cash flows.

Describe portfolio positioning at period end.

• The Trust continued to be overweight agency CMOs. In addition, the Trust continued to maintain allocations to 30-year MBS and some 15-year MBS with higher coupons. The Trust closed the period with a long duration profile.

The views expressed reflect the opinions of BlackRock as of the date of this report and are subject to change based on changes in market, economic or other conditions. These views are not intended to be a forecast of future events and are no guarantee of future results.

8 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

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BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.

Market Price and Net Asset Value Per Share Summary

Market Price 8/31/16 — $ 6.60 8/31/15 — $ 6.30 4.76 % High — $ 6.66 Low — $ 6.26
Net Asset Value $ 6.96 $ 7.08 (1.69 )% $ 7.10 $ 6.92

Market Price and Net Asset Value History For the Past Five Years

Overview of the Trust’s Total Investments

Portfolio Composition — U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities 97 % 98 %
U.S. Treasury Obligations 2 2
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities 1 1
Short-Term Securities 1 4
Asset-Backed Securities 1 — 1
Borrowed Bonds 1 — —
TBA Sale Commitments (2 ) (5 )

1 Representing less than 0.50% of the Trust’s total investments.

Credit Quality Allocation 2,3 — AAA/Aaa 4 99 % 100 %
BBB 1 —

2 For financial reporting purposes, credit quality ratings shown above reflect the highest rating assigned by either S&P or Moody’s if ratings differ. These rating agencies are independent, nationally recognized statistical rating organizations and are widely used. Investment grade ratings are credit ratings of BBB/Baa or higher. Below investment grade ratings are credit ratings of BB/Ba or lower. Investments designated N/R are not rated by either rating agency. Unrated investments do not necessarily indicate low credit quality. Credit quality ratings are subject to change.

3 Excludes Money Market Funds.

4 The investment adviser evaluates the credit quality of not-rated investments based upon certain factors including, but not limited to, credit ratings for similar investments and financial analysis of sectors and individual investments. Using this approach, the investment adviser has deemed U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities and U.S. Treasury Obligations as AAA/Aaa.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 9

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The Benefits and Risks of Leveraging

The Trusts may utilize leverage to seek to enhance the distribution rate on, and net asset value (“NAV”) of, their common shares (“Common Shares”). However, these objectives cannot be achieved in all interest rate environments.

In general, the concept of leveraging is based on the premise that the financing cost of leverage, which is based on short-term interest rates, is normally lower than the income earned by a Trust on its longer-term portfolio investments purchased with the proceeds from leverage. To the extent that the total assets of the Trusts (including the assets obtained from leverage) are invested in higher-yielding portfolio investments, the Trusts’ shareholders benefit from the incremental net income. The interest earned on securities purchased with the proceeds from leverage is paid to shareholders in the form of dividends, and the value of these portfolio holdings is reflected in the per share NAV.

To illustrate these concepts, assume a Trust’s capitalization is $100 million and it utilizes leverage for an additional $30 million, creating a total value of $130 million available for investment in longer-term income securities. If prevailing short-term interest rates are 3% and longer-term interest rates are 6%, the yield curve has a strongly positive slope. In this case, a Trust’s financing costs on the $30 million of proceeds obtained from leverage are based on the lower short-term interest rates. At the same time, the securities purchased by a Trust with the proceeds from leverage earn income based on longer-term interest rates. In this case, a Trust’s financing cost of leverage is significantly lower than the income earned on a Trust’s longer-term investments acquired from such leverage proceeds, and therefore the holders of Common Shares (“Common Shareholders”) are the beneficiaries of the incremental net income.

However, in order to benefit shareholders, the return on assets purchased with leverage proceeds must exceed the ongoing costs associated with the leverage. If interest and other costs of leverage exceed the Trusts’ return on assets purchased with leverage proceeds, income to shareholders is lower than if the Trusts had not used leverage. Furthermore, the value of the Trusts’ portfolio investments generally varies inversely with the direction of long-term interest rates, although other factors can influence the value of portfolio investments. In contrast, the value of the Trusts’ obligations under their respective leverage arrangements generally does not fluctuate in relation to interest rates. As a result, changes in interest

rates can influence the Trusts’ NAVs positively or negatively. Changes in the future direction of interest rates are very difficult to predict accurately, and there is no assurance that the Trusts’ intended leveraging strategy will be successful.

The use of leverage also generally causes greater changes in each Trust’s NAV, market price and dividend rates than comparable portfolios without leverage. In a declining market, leverage is likely to cause a greater decline in the NAV and market price of a Trust’s shares than if the Trust were not leveraged. In addition, each Trust may be required to sell portfolio securities at inopportune times or at distressed values in order to comply with regulatory requirements applicable to the use of leverage or as required by the terms of leverage instruments, which may cause the Trusts to incur losses. The use of leverage may limit a Trust’s ability to invest in certain types of securities or use certain types of hedging strategies. Each Trust incurs expenses in connection with the use of leverage, all of which are borne by shareholders and may reduce income to the shareholders. Moreover, to the extent the calculation of the Trusts’ investment advisory fees includes assets purchased with the proceeds of leverage, the investment advisory fees payable to the Trust’s investment adviser will be higher than if the Trusts did not use leverage.

Each Trust may utilize leverage through a credit facility or reverse repurchase agreements as described in the Notes to Financial Statements.

Under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), the Trusts are permitted to issue debt up to 33 1 / 3 % of their total managed assets. A Trust may voluntarily elect to limit its leverage to less than the maximum amount permitted under the 1940 Act. In addition, a Trust may also be subject to certain asset coverage, leverage or portfolio composition requirements imposed by its credit facility, which may be more stringent than those imposed by the 1940 Act.

If a Trust segregates or designates on its books and records cash or liquid assets having values not less than the value of a Trust’s obligations under the reverse repurchase agreement (including accrued interest) then such transaction is not considered a senior security and is not subject to the foregoing limitations and requirements under the 1940 Act.

Derivative Financial Instruments

The Trusts may invest in various derivative financial instruments. These instruments are used to obtain exposure to a security, commodity, index, market, and/or other asset without owning or taking physical custody of securities, commodities and/or other referenced assets or to manage market, equity, credit, interest rate, foreign currency exchange rate, commodity and/or other risks. Derivative financial instruments may give rise to a form of economic leverage and involve risks, including the imperfect correlation between the value of a derivative financial instrument and the underlying asset, possible default of the counterparty to the

transaction or illiquidity of the instrument. The Trusts’ successful use of a derivative financial instrument depends on the investment adviser’s ability to predict pertinent market movements accurately, which cannot be assured. The use of these instruments may result in losses greater than if they had not been used, may limit the amount of appreciation a Trust can realize on an investment and/or may result in lower distributions paid to shareholders. The Trusts’ investments in these instruments, if any, are discussed in detail in the Notes to Financial Statements.

10 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

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Schedule of Investments August 31, 2016 BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK) (Percentages shown are based on Net Assets)

Common Stocks (a) Value
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 0.0%
Denbury Resources, Inc. 35,640 $ 107,729
Whiting Petroleum Corp. 10,932 79,694
187,423
Total Common Stocks — 0.0% 187,423
Asset-Backed Securities Par (000)
Asset-Backed Securities — 10.2%
ALM VI Ltd., Series 2012-6A, Class B2R, 3.48%, 7/15/26 (b)(c) USD 1,000 993,775
Apidos CDO, Series 2012-9AR, Class DR, 4.58%, 7/15/23 (b)(c) 1,400 1,373,586
Apidos CDO XI, Series 2012-11A, Class D, 4.93%, 1/17/23 (b)(c) 1,200 1,191,345
Apidos CLO XIX, Series 2014-19A, Class D, 4.43%, 10/17/26 (b)(c) 1,000 979,272
Ares CLO Ltd., Series 2014-32A, Class C, 5.02%, 11/15/25 (b)(c) 1,250 1,249,923
Ares XXIII CLO Ltd., Series 2012-1AR (b)(c):
Class CR, 3.89%, 4/19/23 4,000 4,072,370
Class DR, 4.84%, 4/19/23 3,000 3,005,383
Atrium CDO Corp., Series 9A, Class D, 4.33%, 2/28/24 (b)(c) 1,500 1,462,896
Babson CLO Ltd., Series 2012-1X, Class B, 3.18%, 4/15/22 (b) 1,000 999,808
Battalion CLO VII Ltd., Series 2014-7A, Class C, 4.58%, 10/17/26 (b)(c) 1,000 915,000
Bowman Park CLO Ltd., Series 2014-1A, Class D2, 4.77%, 11/23/25 (b)(c) 3,000 2,881,402
CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Co. LLC, Series 2012-1, Class A3, 3.03%, 10/15/25 2,210 2,348,369
CIFC Funding Ltd. (b)(c):
Series 2012-1AR, Class B1R, 4.46%, 8/14/24 1,500 1,494,066
Series 2013-IA, Class B, 3.49%, 4/16/25 1,000 998,024
Series 2014-4A, Class D, 4.08%, 10/17/26 2,000 1,859,453
Series 2015-1A, Class C, 3.70%, 1/22/27 1,000 999,801
Countrywide Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2006-13, Class 3AV2,
0.64%, 1/25/37 (b) 329 317,177
DCP Rights LLC, Series 2014-1A, Class A, 5.46%, 10/25/44 (c) 3,925 3,855,298
Dryden 34 Senior Loan Fund, Series 2014-34A, Class C, 3.48%, 10/15/26
(b)(c) 1,000 988,657
Ford Credit Floorplan Master Owner Trust, Series 2012-2:
Class B, 2.32%, 1/15/19 490 491,592
Class C, 2.86%, 1/15/19 210 211,134
Class D, 3.50%, 1/15/19 400 402,439
Galaxy XV CLO Ltd., Series 2013-15A, Class C, 3.28%, 4/15/25 (b)(c) 1,000 995,436
Asset-Backed Securities Value
Asset-Backed Securities (continued)
GoldenTree Loan Opportunities IX Ltd., Series 2014-9A, Class D,
4.25%, 10/29/26 (b)(c) USD 1,000 $ 965,571
Highbridge Loan Management Ltd., Series 5A-2015, Class C1,
3.95%, 1/29/26 (b)(c) 4,000 3,999,702
Limerock CLO III LLC, Series 2014-3A, Class C, 4.30%, 10/20/26 (b)(c) 3,750 3,508,218
Madison Park Funding IX Ltd., Series 2012-9AR, Class DR, 4.67%, 8/15/22
(b)(c) 1,200 1,188,168
Madison Park Funding XV Ltd., Series 2014-15A, Class B1, 3.98%, 1/27/26
(b)(c) 1,800 1,825,039
Nelnet Student Loan Trust, Series 2006-1, Class A5, 0.93%, 8/23/27 (b) 922 904,702
Neuberger Berman CLO XVIII Ltd., Series 2014-18A, Class C,
4.57%, 11/14/25 (b)(c) 2,250 2,175,131
Oaktree EIF II Ltd., Series 2015-B1A, Class C, 3.92%, 2/15/26 (b)(c) 1,000 1,000,293
Octagon Investment Partners XX Ltd., Series 2014-1A (b)(c):
Class C, 3.62%, 8/12/26 750 749,964
Class D, 4.47%, 8/12/26 1,000 947,972
Octagon Investment Partners XXI Ltd., Series 2014-1A, Class C, 4.47%, 11/14/26 (b)(c) 2,000 1,887,793
Octagon Investment Partners XXII Ltd., Series 2014-1A, Class C1, 3.95%, 11/25/25 (b)(c) 2,000 2,000,360
OneMain Financial Issuance Trust, Series 2015-2A, Class C, 4.32%, 7/18/25
(c) 5,000 4,974,713
OZLM Funding III Ltd., Series 2013-3A (b)(c):
Class B, 3.80%, 1/22/25 1,500 1,500,400
Class C, 4.60%, 1/22/25 500 486,836
OZLM VII Ltd., Series 2014-7A, Class C, 4.28%, 7/17/26 (b)(c) 470 442,055
OZLM VIII Ltd., Series 2014-8A, Class C, 4.18%, 10/17/26 (b)(c) 1,750 1,636,735
Regatta V Funding Ltd., Series 2014-1A, Class C, 4.16%, 10/25/26 (b)(c) 2,000 1,864,342
SLM Private Credit Student Loan Trust, Series 2004-B, Class A2, 0.85%, 6/15/21 (b) 56 55,362
SLM Private Education Loan Trust, Series 2012-A, Class A1, 1.91%, 8/15/25 (b)(c) 81 81,356
SLM Student Loan Trust (c):
Series 2012-A, Class A2, 3.83%, 1/17/45 690 714,035
Series 2014-A, Class B, 3.50%, 11/15/44 500 492,253
Small Business Administration Participation Certificates, Series 1996-20K, Class 1, 6.95%, 11/01/16 8 8,503
SMB Private Education Loan Trust, Series 2015-C, Class C, 4.50%, 9/17/46 (c) 5,900 5,824,718
Sound Point CLO Ltd., Series 2014-3A, Class D, 4.31%, 1/23/27 (b)(c) 1,250 1,184,716

Portfolio Abbreviations

ADS American Depositary Shares EUR Euro OTC Over-the-Counter
AUD Australian Dollar EURIBOR Euro Interbank Offered Rate PIK Payment-in-Kind
CAD Canadian Dollar GBP British Pound RB Revenue Bonds
CHF Swiss Franc GO General Obligation Bonds SEK Swedish Krona
CDO Collateralized Debt Obligation JPY Japanese Yen SGD Singapore Dollar
CLO Collateralized Loan Obligation LIBOR London Interbank Offered Rate SIFMA Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
CR Custodian Receipt LOC Letter of Credit TBA To Be Announced
DIP Debtor-In-Possession MXN Mexican Peso USD U.S. Dollar
ETF Exchange-Traded Fund NOK Norwegian Krone

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 11

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Asset-Backed Securities Value
Asset-Backed Securities (continued)
Steele Creek CLO Ltd., Series 2014-1A, Class C, 4.01%, 8/21/26 (b)(c) USD 2,500 $ 2,499,950
Stewart Park CLO Ltd., Series 2015-1A, Class D, 4.13%, 4/15/26 (b)(c) 1,000 897,270
Structured Asset Securities Corp., Series 2002-AL1, Class A2,
3.45%, 2/25/32 786 781,955
Symphony CLO Ltd., Series 2012-10AR, Class DR, 4.17%, 7/23/23 (b)(c) 1,000 983,973
Venture XIX CLO Ltd., Series 2014-19A, Class C, 3.98%, 1/15/27 (b)(c) 555 555,000
Voya CLO Ltd., Series 2012-2AR, Class CR, 3.63%, 10/15/22 (b)(c) 1,500 1,500,780
World Financial Network Credit Card Master Trust, Series 2012-C, Class C, 4.55%, 8/15/22 2,360 2,419,022
84,143,093
Interest Only Asset-Backed Securities — 0.1%
Sterling Bank Trust, Series 2004-2, Class Note, 2.08%, 3/30/30 (c) 3,349 237,541
Sterling Coofs Trust, Series 2004-1, Class A, 2.36%, 4/15/29 (c) 7,924 544,761
782,302
Total Asset-Backed Securities — 10.3% 84,925,395
Corporate Bonds
Aerospace & Defense — 0.7%
Accudyne Industries Borrower/Accudyne Industries LLC, 7.75%, 12/15/20 (c) 520 401,700
Bombardier, Inc. (c):
5.50%, 9/15/18 238 244,545
6.00%, 10/15/22 23 21,735
6.13%, 1/15/23 165 155,100
7.50%, 3/15/25 361 342,950
KLX, Inc., 5.88%, 12/01/22 (c) 205 215,147
Moog, Inc., 5.25%, 12/01/22 (c) 180 185,400
TransDigm, Inc.:
5.50%, 10/15/20 211 216,539
7.50%, 7/15/21 175 185,609
6.00%, 7/15/22 1,118 1,162,720
6.50%, 7/15/24 198 205,425
6.38%, 6/15/26 (c) 236 240,720
United Technologies Corp., 6.13%, 7/15/38 1,450 2,006,110
5,583,700
Air Freight & Logistics — 0.1%
XPO Logistics, Inc.:
7.88%, 9/01/19 (c) 245 254,800
5.75%, 6/15/21 EUR 100 116,307
6.50%, 6/15/22 (c) USD 535 555,731
6.13%, 9/01/23 (c) 156 160,290
1,087,128
Airlines — 2.1%
Air Canada Pass-Through Trust, Series 2015-1, Class B,
3.88%, 9/15/24 (c) 1,940 1,869,788
American Airlines Pass-Through Trust:
Series 2013-2, Class A, 4.95%, 7/15/24 (d) 3,765 4,117,560
Series 2015-2, Class A, 4.00%, 3/22/29 1,500 1,597,500
Series 2015-2, Class AA, 3.60%, 3/22/29 1,500 1,601,250
Continental Airlines Pass-Through Trust:
Series 2010-1, Class B, 6.00%, 7/12/20 498 520,223
Series 2012-3, Class C, 6.13%, 4/29/18 520 546,000
Corporate Bonds Value
Airlines (continued)
United Airlines Pass-Through Trust:
Series 2013-1, Class A, 4.30%, 2/15/27 USD 3,609 $ 3,960,466
Series 2014-2, Class B, 4.63%, 3/03/24 2,615 2,641,254
16,854,041
Auto Components — 0.3%
Adient Global Holdings, Ltd., 4.88%, 8/15/26 (c) 202 204,777
CNH Industrial Finance Europe SA, 2.88%, 5/17/23 EUR 175 201,818
Faurecia, 3.63%, 6/15/23 100 116,565
Fiat Chrysler Finance Europe:
4.75%, 3/22/21 100 124,463
4.75%, 7/15/22 100 123,609
FTE Verwaltungs GmbH, 9.00%, 7/15/20 100 117,455
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 5.00%, 5/31/26 USD 46 48,156
Icahn Enterprises LP/Icahn Enterprises Finance Corp., 4.88%, 3/15/19 652 648,740
Schaeffler Holding Finance BV (e):
(5.75% Cash or 6.50% PIK), 5.75%, 11/15/21 EUR 60 72,532
(6.75% Cash), 6.75%, 11/15/22 (c) USD 550 607,484
2,265,599
Automobiles — 0.9%
Ford Motor Co., 4.75%, 1/15/43 (d) 4,255 4,603,038
General Motors Co., 6.25%, 10/02/43 2,506 3,003,666
7,606,704
Banks — 2.1%
Allied Irish Banks PLC, 4.13%, 11/26/25 (b) EUR 100 105,968
Bankia SA, 4.00%, 5/22/24 (b) 200 222,362
Barclays Bank PLC, 3.65%, 3/16/25 USD 4,320 4,294,452
CIT Group, Inc.:
5.50%, 2/15/19 (c) 206 218,103
5.38%, 5/15/20 410 438,187
Commerzbank AG:
7.75%, 3/16/21 EUR 100 134,765
4.00%, 3/23/26 28 32,055
Cooperatieve Rabobank UA:
3.88%, 2/08/22 USD 2,780 3,038,643
3.95%, 11/09/22 1,500 1,574,884
HSBC Holdings PLC, 6.10%, 1/14/42 610 828,722
Santander Holdings USA, Inc., 4.50%, 7/17/25 2,000 2,095,152
Santander UK Group Holdings PLC, 2.88%, 8/05/21 1,250 1,246,691
Wells Fargo & Co., 3.50%, 3/08/22 2,780 2,969,457
17,199,441
Beverages — 0.2%
Anheuser-Busch InBev Finance, Inc., 4.90%, 2/01/46 1,320 1,601,061
Verallia Packaging SASU, 5.13%, 8/01/22 EUR 100 119,409
1,720,470
Biotechnology — 0.0%
Senvion Holding GmbH, 6.63%, 11/15/20 100 117,189
Building Materials — 0.0%
Dry Mix Solutions Investissements SAS, 3.99%, 6/15/21 (b) 100 111,779
Titan Global Finance PLC, 3.50%, 6/17/21 100 114,885
226,664
Building Products — 0.4%
American Builders & Contractors Supply Co., Inc., 5.75%, 12/15/23 (c) USD 413 436,747
Builders FirstSource, Inc., 5.63%, 9/01/24 (c) 149 151,607
Building Materials Corp. of America, 6.00%, 10/15/25 (c) 380 416,575

See Notes to Financial Statements.

12 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Building Products (continued)
CPG Merger Sub LLC, 8.00%, 10/01/21 (c) USD 520 $ 530,400
Masonite International Corp., 5.63%, 3/15/23 (c) 200 212,000
Ply Gem Industries, Inc., 6.50%, 2/01/22 546 563,745
Standard Industries, Inc. (c):
5.13%, 2/15/21 94 99,288
5.50%, 2/15/23 153 162,371
USG Corp.:
9.50%, 1/15/18 380 416,100
5.88%, 11/01/21 (c) 50 52,438
5.50%, 3/01/25 (c) 180 195,300
3,236,571
Capital Markets — 2.3%
BCD Acquisition, Inc., 9.63%, 9/15/23 (c) 55 57,475
CDP Financial, Inc., 5.60%, 11/25/39 (c) 5,890 8,086,693
E*Trade Financial Corp., 4.63%, 9/15/23 275 285,412
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., 3.75%, 5/22/25 (d) 8,965 9,488,117
Morgan Stanley, 4.00%, 7/23/25 905 978,112
18,895,809
Chemicals — 0.6%
Axalta Coating Systems LLC, 4.88%, 8/15/24 (c) 161 167,842
Chemours Co.:
6.63%, 5/15/23 (f) 215 206,400
7.00%, 5/15/25 100 95,688
Dow Chemical Co., 4.13%, 11/15/21 700 765,948
Huntsman International LLC, 4.88%, 11/15/20 101 104,787
Ineos Finance PLC, 4.00%, 5/01/23 EUR 100 114,334
INEOS Group Holdings SA, 5.63%, 8/01/24 (c) USD 200 199,500
Inovyn Finance PLC, 6.25%, 5/15/21 EUR 100 117,959
Methanex Corp., 3.25%, 12/15/19 USD 1,650 1,632,685
Momentive Performance Materials, Inc., 3.88%, 10/24/21 367 303,307
NOVA Chemicals Corp., 5.25%, 8/01/23 (c) 88 91,300
Platform Specialty Products Corp. (c):
10.38%, 5/01/21 37 38,850
6.50%, 2/01/22 934 884,965
PQ Corp., 6.75%, 11/15/22 (c) 214 226,840
PSPC Escrow Corp., 6.00%, 2/01/23 EUR 100 105,401
WR Grace & Co-Conn (c):
5.13%, 10/01/21 USD 97 103,305
5.63%, 10/01/24 80 86,400
5,245,511
Commercial Services & Supplies — 0.6%
ADS Waste Holdings, Inc., 8.25%, 10/01/20 166 173,678
ADT Corp.:
3.50%, 7/15/22 317 303,528
4.13%, 6/15/23 55 53,900
Aviation Capital Group Corp. (c):
4.63%, 1/31/18 1,300 1,352,000
7.13%, 10/15/20 1,800 2,112,750
Avis Budget Car Rental LLC/Avis Budget Finance, Inc., 5.50%, 4/01/23 5 5,181
Brand Energy & Infrastructure Services, Inc., 8.50%, 12/01/21 (c) 344 343,140
Iron Mountain, Inc.:
6.00%, 10/01/20 (c) 175 185,939
6.00%, 8/15/23 80 85,400
Mobile Mini, Inc., 5.88%, 7/01/24 267 277,680
Silk Bidco AS, 7.50%, 2/01/22 EUR 100 119,520
United Rentals North America, Inc.:
7.63%, 4/15/22 USD 87 92,764
5.75%, 11/15/24 140 146,300
5,251,780
Corporate Bonds Value
Communications Equipment — 0.4%
Alcatel-Lucent USA, Inc., 6.45%, 3/15/29 USD 1,000 $ 1,087,500
CommScope Technologies Finance LLC, 6.00%, 6/15/25 (c) 340 360,825
CommScope, Inc. (c):
4.38%, 6/15/20 250 258,750
5.50%, 6/15/24 115 120,750
Nokia OYJ, 6.63%, 5/15/39 135 147,150
Zayo Group LLC/Zayo Capital, Inc.:
6.00%, 4/01/23 834 867,360
6.38%, 5/15/25 278 293,348
3,135,683
Construction & Engineering — 0.6%
BlueLine Rental Finance Corp., 7.00%, 2/01/19 (c) 382 330,430
Engility Corp., 8.88%, 9/01/24 (c) 101 102,767
ITR Concession Co. LLC, 4.20%, 7/15/25 (c) 4,000 4,243,184
4,676,381
Construction Materials — 0.5%
American Tire Distributors, Inc., 10.25%, 3/01/22 (c) 164 145,448
Beacon Roofing Supply, Inc., 6.38%, 10/01/23 313 336,475
HD Supply, Inc.:
7.50%, 7/15/20 782 814,257
5.25%, 12/15/21 (c) 1,170 1,246,775
5.75%, 4/15/24 (c) 667 710,355
LKQ Italia Bondco SpA, 3.88%, 4/01/24 EUR 157 189,574
PulteGroup, Inc.:
5.50%, 3/01/26 USD 158 169,060
6.00%, 2/15/35 52 53,040
Rexel SA, 3.50%, 6/15/23 EUR 100 116,286
3,781,270
Consumer Finance — 1.9%
Ally Financial, Inc.:
6.25%, 12/01/17 USD 320 335,600
4.63%, 3/30/25 430 446,125
8.00%, 11/01/31 2,043 2,558,858
Capital One Financial Corp., 4.75%, 7/15/21 (d) 1,935 2,161,923
Corivas Campus Living USG LLC, 5.30%, 7/01/50 5,700 6,213,000
Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC:
8.13%, 1/15/20 1,530 1,812,692
4.25%, 9/20/22 1,600 1,730,667
Navient Corp.:
5.00%, 10/26/20 180 180,900
6.63%, 7/26/21 104 107,250
6.13%, 3/25/24 59 56,640
5.88%, 10/25/24 56 52,780
5.63%, 8/01/33 101 82,820
OneMain Financial Holdings LLC (c):
6.75%, 12/15/19 67 70,350
7.25%, 12/15/21 78 81,705
15,891,310
Containers & Packaging — 0.5%
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh Holdings USA, Inc.:
6.75%, 1/31/21 (c) 200 207,250
4.25%, 1/15/22 EUR 100 115,728
6.75%, 5/15/24 100 120,748
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh MP Holdings USA, Inc. (c):
4.63%, 5/15/23 USD 271 275,743
7.25%, 5/15/24 635 675,481
Ball Corp., 5.00%, 3/15/22 322 347,760

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 13

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Containers & Packaging (continued)
Crown Americas LLC/Crown Americas Capital Corp. IV, 4.50%, 1/15/23 USD 175 $ 182,875
Crown European Holdings SA, 3.38%, 5/15/25 EUR 100 118,126
JH-Holding Finance SA, 8.25%, 12/01/22 (e) 100 119,735
Reynolds Group Issuer, Inc./Reynolds Group Issuer LLC/Reynolds Group Issuer Lu (c):
4.13%, 7/15/21 (b) USD 528 535,920
5.13%, 7/15/23 258 267,675
7.00%, 7/15/24 333 356,726
Sappi Papier Holding GmbH, 4.00%, 4/01/23 EUR 100 117,122
Sealed Air Corp. (c):
4.88%, 12/01/22 USD 535 561,750
5.13%, 12/01/24 102 109,140
6.88%, 7/15/33 16 17,320
Signode Industrial Group Lux SA/Signode Industrial Group US, Inc., 6.38%, 5/01/22 (c) 16 16,320
4,145,419
Diversified Consumer Services — 0.2%
ADT Corp., 4.88%, 7/15/32 (c) 75 64,125
APX Group, Inc.:
6.38%, 12/01/19 56 57,469
8.75%, 12/01/20 75 72,094
7.88%, 12/01/22 (c) 86 90,515
Prime Security Services Borrower LLC/Prime Finance, Inc., 9.25%, 5/15/23 (c) 556 605,345
Service Corp. International:
4.50%, 11/15/20 410 421,275
5.38%, 5/15/24 110 117,975
1,428,798
Diversified Financial Services — 4.6%
Aircastle Ltd.:
6.25%, 12/01/19 353 390,506
5.00%, 4/01/23 91 96,460
Bank of America Corp.:
5.63%, 7/01/20 2,200 2,484,984
3.30%, 1/11/23 10,000 10,393,590
Deutsche Bank AG, 4.50%, 5/19/26 EUR 100 107,916
FBM Finance, Inc., 8.25%, 8/15/21 (c) USD 80 83,800
FMR LLC, 4.95%, 2/01/33 (c) 2,300 2,578,610
Garfunkelux Holdco 3 SA, 8.50%, 11/01/22 GBP 100 135,254
General Electric Capital Corp., 6.15%, 8/07/37 (d) USD 2,150 3,013,864
General Electric Co.:
6.75%, 3/15/32 (d) 2,500 3,575,585
6.88%, 1/10/39 135 205,874
General Motors Financial Co., Inc., 4.25%, 5/15/23 807 845,345
IntercontinentalExchange Group, Inc., 4.00%, 10/15/23 470 517,517
International Lease Finance Corp., 8.25%, 12/15/20 150 179,437
Jefferies Finance LLC/JFIN Co-Issuer Corp., 7.38%, 4/01/20 (c) 595 568,225
Mercury Bondco PLC, (8.25% Cash, 9.00% PIK), 8.25%, 5/30/21 (e) EUR 100 116,576
Moody’s Corp., 4.50%, 9/01/22 (d) USD 1,800 1,999,408
MSCI, Inc., 5.75%, 8/15/25 (c) 60 65,025
Northern Trust Corp., 3.95%, 10/30/25 (d) 8,000 8,928,688
Reynolds Group Issuer, Inc.:
9.88%, 8/15/19 145 149,169
5.75%, 10/15/20 194 200,062
6.88%, 2/15/21 470 487,625
8.25%, 2/15/21 300 312,000
Corporate Bonds Value
Diversified Financial Services (continued)
UniCredit SpA:
6.95%, 10/31/22 EUR 140 $ 178,371
5.75%, 10/28/25 (b) 107 125,190
WMG Acquisition Corp., 5.00%, 8/01/23 (c) USD 48 49,320
37,788,401
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 3.5%
AT&T, Inc.:
6.38%, 3/01/41 520 661,357
5.15%, 3/15/42 1,400 1,560,534
4.75%, 5/15/46 2,710 2,896,445
CenturyLink, Inc., 6.45%, 6/15/21 280 300,825
Consolidated Communications, Inc., 6.50%, 10/01/22 68 65,960
Frontier Communications Corp.:
7.13%, 3/15/19 115 123,913
7.13%, 1/15/23 50 47,125
7.63%, 4/15/24 205 192,700
6.88%, 1/15/25 885 794,287
11.00%, 9/15/25 280 302,400
Level 3 Financing, Inc.:
5.38%, 8/15/22 165 172,450
5.63%, 2/01/23 184 192,740
5.13%, 5/01/23 420 436,275
5.38%, 1/15/24 165 173,044
5.38%, 5/01/25 275 288,750
5.25%, 3/15/26 (c) 223 231,084
OTE PLC, 3.50%, 7/09/20 EUR 100 114,735
SoftBank Group Corp., 5.25%, 7/30/27 100 126,464
Telecom Italia Capital SA:
6.38%, 11/15/33 USD 70 72,363
6.00%, 9/30/34 265 266,352
7.20%, 7/18/36 105 112,481
Telecom Italia SpA:
3.25%, 1/16/23 EUR 141 170,875
3.63%, 1/19/24 200 242,900
Verizon Communications, Inc.:
3.50%, 11/01/21 USD 1,000 1,075,661
6.40%, 2/15/38 6,879 8,969,370
6.55%, 9/15/43 6,751 9,168,081
28,759,171
Electric Utilities — 6.0%
AES Corp., 4.88%, 5/15/23 210 212,625
Berkshire Hathaway Energy Co., 6.50%, 9/15/37 5,515 7,663,991
Black Hills Corp., 3.15%, 1/15/27 405 409,833
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., 5.95%, 12/15/36 434 503,518
CMS Energy Corp., 5.05%, 3/15/22 (d) 1,832 2,081,857
Duke Energy Carolinas LLC:
6.10%, 6/01/37 640 858,092
6.00%, 1/15/38 (d) 1,675 2,294,157
4.25%, 12/15/41 (d) 750 854,920
Duke Energy Florida LLC, 6.40%, 6/15/38 (d) 770 1,100,406
E.ON International Finance BV, 6.65%, 4/30/38 (c) 3,100 3,901,238
Electricite de France SA, 5.60%, 1/27/40 (c) 2,800 3,352,532
Florida Power Corp., 6.35%, 9/15/37 2,775 3,946,877
Jersey Central Power & Light Co., 7.35%, 2/01/19 490 548,398
Ohio Power Co., Series D, 6.60%, 3/01/33 (d) 3,000 3,886,560
PacifiCorp, 6.25%, 10/15/37 (d) 1,225 1,720,717
Public Service Co. of Colorado, Series 17, 6.25%, 9/01/37 2,550 3,624,863
Southern California Edison Co.:
5.63%, 2/01/36 (d) 1,300 1,694,242
Series A, 5.95%, 2/01/38 2,175 3,001,511

See Notes to Financial Statements.

14 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Electric Utilities (continued)
Southern Co., 3.25%, 7/01/26 USD 1,680 $ 1,748,569
Virginia Electric & Power Co., Series A, 6.00%, 5/15/37 3,920 5,302,474
48,707,380
Electrical Equipment — 0.0%
Anixter, Inc., 5.63%, 5/01/19 35 37,056
Trionista TopCo GmbH, 6.88%, 4/30/21 EUR 110 129,448
166,504
Electronic Equipment, Instruments & Components — 0.1%
CDW LLC/CDW Finance Corp.:
6.00%, 8/15/22 USD 370 397,287
5.00%, 9/01/23 519 537,814
5.50%, 12/01/24 228 244,348
1,179,449
Energy Equipment & Services — 0.9%
Ensco PLC:
4.70%, 3/15/21 50 43,150
4.50%, 10/01/24 139 98,951
5.20%, 3/15/25 64 46,080
Enterprise Products Operating LLC, 6.13%, 10/15/39 (d) 1,400 1,680,337
EOG Resources, Inc., 2.63%, 3/15/23 3,800 3,793,935
Gates Global LLC/Gates Global Co., 6.00%, 7/15/22 (c) 249 236,550
Genesis Energy LP/Genesis Energy Finance Corp.:
5.75%, 2/15/21 142 140,935
6.75%, 8/01/22 155 158,100
GrafTech International Ltd., 6.38%, 11/15/20 600 463,500
Noble Holding International Ltd.:
4.63%, 3/01/21 25 20,940
6.95%, 4/01/25 35 28,525
Transocean, Inc.:
6.00%, 3/15/18 120 120,150
7.38%, 4/15/18 20 20,200
8.13%, 12/15/21 309 289,688
5.05%, 10/15/22 135 107,663
Weatherford International, Ltd., 7.75%, 6/15/21 70 69,300
7,318,004
Environmental, Maintenance, & Security Service — 0.0%
Befesa Zinc SAU Via Zinc Capital SA, 8.88%, 5/15/18 EUR 100 113,776
Food & Staples Retailing — 0.5%
Albertsons Cos. LLC/Safeway, Inc./New Albertson’s, Inc./Albertson’s LLC (c):
6.63%, 6/15/24 USD 151 162,114
5.75%, 3/15/25 295 305,325
Casino Guichard Perrachon SA:
5.98%, 5/26/21 EUR 100 130,635
3.31%, 1/25/23 100 121,797
Dollar Tree, Inc., 5.75%, 3/01/23 USD 1,560 1,678,950
Rite Aid Corp.:
6.75%, 6/15/21 258 271,867
6.13%, 4/01/23 (c) 905 977,020
7.70%, 2/15/27 215 273,050
3,920,758
Food Products — 0.4%
Acosta, Inc., 7.75%, 10/01/22 (c) 463 427,696
Aramark Services, Inc.:
5.13%, 1/15/24 311 322,468
5.13%, 1/15/24 (c) 92 95,393
4.75%, 6/01/26 (c) 151 151,770
Darling Global Finance BV, 4.75%, 5/30/22 EUR 100 116,899
Corporate Bonds Value
Food Products (continued)
FAGE International SA/FAGE USA Dairy Industry, Inc., 5.63%, 8/15/26 (c) USD 200 $ 206,750
JBS USA LLC/JBS USA Finance, Inc. (c):
7.25%, 6/01/21 30 31,050
5.75%, 6/15/25 303 307,545
Pinnacle Foods Finance Corp., 5.88%, 1/15/24 (c) 42 45,255
Post Holdings, Inc. (c):
6.75%, 12/01/21 68 73,015
7.75%, 3/15/24 468 520,065
8.00%, 7/15/25 277 316,472
5.00%, 8/15/26 257 256,357
Smithfield Foods, Inc., 5.88%, 8/01/21 (c) 338 353,210
TreeHouse Foods, Inc., 6.00%, 2/15/24 (c) 89 96,788
WhiteWave Foods Co., 5.38%, 10/01/22 119 134,173
3,454,906
Forest Products — 0.0%
Tereos Finance Groupe I SA, 4.13%, 6/16/23 EUR 100 116,559
Health Care Equipment & Supplies — 0.3%
Crimson Merger Sub, Inc., 6.63%, 5/15/22 (c) USD 405 362,475
DJO Finco, Inc./DJO Finance LLC/DJO Finance Corp., 8.13%, 6/15/21 (c) 785 690,800
Fresenius Medical Care US Finance II, Inc., 4.75%, 10/15/24 (c) 165 176,550
Fresenius US Finance II, Inc., 4.50%, 1/15/23 (c) 170 179,775
Mallinckrodt International Finance SA/Mallinckrodt CB LLC, 5.63%, 10/15/23 (c) 241 241,904
Teleflex, Inc.:
3.88%, 8/01/17 (h) 100 297,812
5.25%, 6/15/24 170 178,075
4.88%, 6/01/26 64 66,720
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc., 3.00%, 4/15/23 390 399,769
2,593,880
Health Care Providers & Services — 1.6%
Acadia Healthcare Co., Inc.:
5.63%, 2/15/23 411 418,192
6.50%, 3/01/24 41 43,101
Aetna, Inc., 3.20%, 6/15/26 1,005 1,021,723
Alere, Inc., 6.38%, 7/01/23 (c)(f) 109 111,453
Amsurg Corp., 5.63%, 7/15/22 553 570,972
Centene Corp.:
5.63%, 2/15/21 401 426,564
4.75%, 5/15/22 10 10,388
6.13%, 2/15/24 308 335,720
CHS/Community Health Systems, Inc.:
5.13%, 8/15/18 101 102,263
8.00%, 11/15/19 48 45,420
DaVita HealthCare Partners, Inc.:
5.13%, 7/15/24 576 594,720
5.00%, 5/01/25 56 56,756
Envision Healthcare Corp., 5.13%, 7/01/22 (c) 365 368,650
HCA, Inc.:
3.75%, 3/15/19 264 272,250
6.50%, 2/15/20 652 720,460
4.75%, 5/01/23 562 587,992
5.38%, 2/01/25 977 1,006,310
5.25%, 4/15/25 66 70,703
5.88%, 2/15/26 284 300,330
5.25%, 6/15/26 361 385,819
4.50%, 2/15/27 (f) 408 411,570
HealthSouth Corp.:
5.75%, 11/01/24 486 503,982
5.75%, 9/15/25 286 299,227
2.00%, 12/01/43 (h) 225 265,078

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 15

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Health Care Providers & Services (continued)
Hologic, Inc., 5.25%, 7/15/22 (c) USD 580 $ 616,975
MEDNAX, Inc., 5.25%, 12/01/23 (c) 134 141,035
MPH Acquisition Holdings LLC, 7.13%, 6/01/24 (c) 204 219,300
RegionalCare Hospital Partners Holdings, Inc., 8.25%, 5/01/23 (c) 237 241,444
Surgery Center Holdings, Inc., 8.88%, 4/15/21 (c) 48 51,240
Tenet Healthcare Corp.:
6.25%, 11/01/18 159 169,732
6.00%, 10/01/20 324 342,225
4.50%, 4/01/21 21 21,200
4.38%, 10/01/21 112 112,385
8.13%, 4/01/22 472 477,900
6.75%, 6/15/23 501 476,576
UnitedHealth Group, Inc., 3.75%, 7/15/25 1,375 1,524,178
13,323,833
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 2.5%
Boyd Gaming Corp., 6.88%, 5/15/23 172 185,760
Caesars Entertainment Resort Properties LLC/Caesars Entertainment Resort Property, 8.00%, 10/01/20 1,247 1,265,705
CPUK Finance, Ltd., 7.00%, 2/28/42 GBP 100 140,323
ESH Hospitality, Inc., 5.25%, 5/01/25 (c) USD 525 524,837
International Game Technology PLC, 4.75%, 2/15/23 EUR 100 122,510
KFC Holding Co/Pizza Hut Holdings LLC/Taco Bell of America LLC (c):
5.00%, 6/01/24 USD 29 30,413
5.25%, 6/01/26 148 157,250
McDonald’s Corp., 3.70%, 1/30/26 510 550,499
MGM Resorts International:
8.63%, 2/01/19 96 108,600
5.25%, 3/31/20 320 342,400
6.75%, 10/01/20 113 126,278
6.63%, 12/15/21 710 796,975
4.63%, 9/01/26 154 152,460
MGP Escrow Issuer LLC/MGP Escrow Co-Issuer, Inc., 5.63%, 5/01/24 (c) 1,105 1,198,925
New Red Finance, Inc., 6.00%, 4/01/22 (c) 640 669,600
PortAventura Entertainment Barcelona BV, 7.25%, 12/01/20 EUR 100 116,329
RHP Hotel Properties LP/RHP Finance Corp., 5.00%, 4/15/21 USD 230 237,475
Sabre GLBL, Inc. (c):
5.38%, 4/15/23 82 84,768
5.25%, 11/15/23 185 190,087
Scientific Games International, Inc.:
7.00%, 1/01/22 (c) 210 223,125
10.00%, 12/01/22 202 186,850
Six Flags Entertainment Corp., 5.25%, 1/15/21 (c) 434 449,190
Station Casinos LLC, 7.50%, 3/01/21 570 606,135
Unique Pub Finance Co. PLC:
Series A3, 6.54%, 3/30/21 GBP 2,613 3,655,087
Series A4, 5.66%, 6/30/27 1,120 1,524,267
Series M, 7.40%, 3/28/24 3,000 3,861,088
Series N, 6.46%, 3/30/32 2,390 2,578,513
Vue International Bidco PLC, 7.88%, 7/15/20 100 137,224
Yum! Brands, Inc.:
3.75%, 11/01/21 USD 46 46,575
3.88%, 11/01/23 20 19,800
20,289,048
Corporate Bonds Value
Household Durables — 0.3%
Beazer Homes USA, Inc., 6.63%, 4/15/18 USD 80 $ 81,500
CalAtlantic Group, Inc.:
8.38%, 1/15/21 55 65,588
5.25%, 6/01/26 15 15,225
Century Communities, Inc., 6.88%, 5/15/22 460 465,750
DR Horton, Inc., 4.00%, 2/15/20 220 230,450
Lennar Corp.:
4.75%, 11/15/22 320 336,800
4.88%, 12/15/23 85 89,038
4.75%, 5/30/25 180 186,750
PulteGroup, Inc., 6.38%, 5/15/33 330 347,325
Riverbed Technology, Inc., 8.88%, 3/01/23 (c) 155 166,237
Standard Pacific Corp., 5.88%, 11/15/24 20 21,600
TRI Pointe Group, Inc.:
4.38%, 6/15/19 10 10,275
4.88%, 7/01/21 125 128,750
5.88%, 6/15/24 250 261,250
2,406,538
Household Products — 0.1%
Prestige Brands, Inc., 6.38%, 3/01/24 (c) 109 116,357
Spectrum Brands, Inc.:
6.38%, 11/15/20 310 322,012
6.63%, 11/15/22 355 379,850
6.13%, 12/15/24 112 120,820
5.75%, 7/15/25 10 10,838
Tempur Sealy International, Inc., 5.50%, 6/15/26 (c) 91 95,050
1,044,927
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers — 0.3%
Calpine Corp.:
6.00%, 1/15/22 (c) 99 103,826
5.88%, 1/15/24 (c) 194 205,155
5.50%, 2/01/24 5 4,988
5.75%, 1/15/25 50 49,813
Dynegy, Inc.:
6.75%, 11/01/19 470 481,750
7.38%, 11/01/22 151 149,112
7.63%, 11/01/24 25 24,500
NRG Energy, Inc.:
8.25%, 9/01/20 20 20,550
7.88%, 5/15/21 61 63,593
6.63%, 3/15/23 25 25,500
6.25%, 5/01/24 25 24,813
7.25%, 5/15/26 (c) 138 143,313
6.63%, 1/15/27 (c) 475 475,888
NRG Yield Operating LLC, 5.38%, 8/15/24 75 78,187
QEP Resources, Inc., 5.38%, 10/01/22 459 454,410
2,305,398
Industrial Conglomerates — 0.0%
Smiths Group PLC, 3.63%, 10/12/22 (c) 360 369,317
Insurance — 2.4%
Allied World Assurance Co. Holdings Ltd., 4.35%, 10/29/25 1,495 1,548,941
American International Group, Inc., 3.75%, 7/10/25 3,380 3,568,137
Aon PLC, 3.88%, 12/15/25 1,445 1,555,896
Assicurazioni Generali SpA, 5.00%, 6/08/48 (b) EUR 100 115,031
AXA SA, 5.25%, 4/16/40 (b) 500 625,590
Five Corners Funding Trust, 4.42%, 11/15/23 (c)(d) USD 2,050 2,214,303
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc., 5.13%, 4/15/22 1,860 2,108,805

See Notes to Financial Statements.

16 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Insurance (continued)
HUB International Ltd. (c):
9.25%, 2/15/21 USD 117 $ 123,435
7.88%, 10/01/21 418 427,405
Liberty Mutual Group, Inc., 6.50%, 5/01/42 (c)(d) 2,000 2,516,020
Lincoln National Corp., 3.35%, 3/09/25 (d) 1,045 1,063,459
Muenchener Rueckversicherungs AG, 6.00%, 5/26/41 (b) EUR 400 531,993
Prudential Financial, Inc. (d):
5.90%, 3/17/36 USD 500 617,875
5.70%, 12/14/36 1,625 1,978,831
TMF Group Holding BV, 9.88%, 12/01/19 EUR 100 119,253
Trader Corp., 9.88%, 8/15/18 (c) USD 75 76,875
Wayne Merger Sub LLC, 8.25%, 8/01/23 (c) 286 295,617
19,487,466
Internet Software & Services — 0.1%
Equinix, Inc.:
4.88%, 4/01/20 173 179,920
5.88%, 1/15/26 350 381,280
Netflix, Inc.:
5.50%, 2/15/22 8 8,600
5.75%, 3/01/24 251 271,080
840,880
IT Services — 0.4%
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc., 11.00%, 3/15/21 (c) 155 160,425
First Data Corp. (c):
5.38%, 8/15/23 321 333,038
7.00%, 12/01/23 1,223 1,281,092
5.75%, 1/15/24 1,524 1,560,195
Western Digital Corp., 10.50%, 4/01/24 (c) 72 81,360
3,416,110
Life Sciences Tools & Services — 0.1%
Agilent Technologies, Inc., 3.20%, 10/01/22 500 513,863
Machinery — 0.1%
Gardner Denver, Inc., 6.88%, 8/15/21 (c) 90 83,025
SPX FLOW, Inc. (c):
5.63%, 8/15/24 195 200,362
5.88%, 8/15/26 105 108,413
Trinseo Materials Operating SCA/Trinseo Materials Finance, Inc., 6.38%, 5/01/22 EUR 100 118,294
510,094
Marine — 0.3%
Nakilat, Inc., Series A, 6.07%, 12/31/33 (c) USD 2,150 2,596,985
Media — 6.4%
21st Century Fox America, Inc., 7.63%, 11/30/28 385 536,892
Altice Financing SA:
6.50%, 1/15/22 (c) 200 210,500
5.25%, 2/15/23 EUR 100 117,686
7.50%, 5/15/26 (c) USD 200 210,500
Altice Luxembourg SA (c):
7.75%, 5/15/22 200 212,875
7.63%, 2/15/25 289 296,947
Altice US Finance I Corp. (c):
5.38%, 7/15/23 770 805,612
5.50%, 5/15/26 293 309,115
AMC Networks, Inc.:
4.75%, 12/15/22 111 114,330
5.00%, 4/01/24 191 195,775
Cablevision Systems Corp.:
8.63%, 9/15/17 76 80,769
7.75%, 4/15/18 311 331,992
8.00%, 4/15/20 85 90,525
Corporate Bonds Value
Media (continued)
CCO Holdings LLC/CCO Holdings Capital Corp.:
5.25%, 9/30/22 USD 600 $ 630,000
5.13%, 5/01/23 (c) 359 377,736
5.88%, 4/01/24 (c) 383 412,682
5.75%, 2/15/26 (c) 197 210,790
5.50%, 5/01/26 (c) 278 294,332
5.88%, 5/01/27 (c) 770 823,900
Cellnex Telecom SA, 2.38%, 1/16/24 EUR 100 115,070
Cequel Communications Holdings I LLC/Cequel Capital Corp. (c):
6.38%, 9/15/20 USD 100 103,375
5.13%, 12/15/21 409 412,701
7.75%, 7/15/25 960 1,048,800
Charter Communications Operating LLC/Charter Communications Operating Capital, 4.91%, 7/23/25 (c) 4,000 4,413,680
Clear Channel International BV, 8.75%, 12/15/20 (c) 284 301,040
Clear Channel Worldwide Holdings, Inc., 6.50%, 11/15/22 2,307 2,370,472
Comcast Cable Communications Holdings, Inc., 9.46%, 11/15/22 2,600 3,656,234
Comcast Corp.:
3.38%, 8/15/25 (d) 4,500 4,854,541
6.45%, 3/15/37 790 1,109,088
Cox Communications, Inc. (c):
6.95%, 6/01/38 1,000 1,141,073
8.38%, 3/01/39 (d) 3,475 4,459,287
CSC Holdings LLC:
10.13%, 1/15/23 (c) 790 902,081
5.25%, 6/01/24 615 598,469
Discovery Communications LLC:
3.25%, 4/01/23 1,850 1,852,662
3.45%, 3/15/25 210 206,607
DISH DBS Corp.:
5.13%, 5/01/20 90 93,150
6.75%, 6/01/21 314 337,354
5.88%, 7/15/22 73 74,460
5.88%, 11/15/24 99 97,639
7.75%, 7/01/26 (c) 530 565,505
DISH Network Corp., 3.38%, 8/15/26 (c)(h) 175 182,547
eircom Finance DAC, 4.50%, 5/31/22 EUR 100 114,029
Gray Television, Inc., 5.88%, 7/15/26 (c) USD 54 56,295
Hughes Satellite Systems Corp. (c):
5.25%, 8/01/26 144 142,847
6.63%, 8/01/26 109 108,183
iHeartCommunications, Inc.:
9.00%, 12/15/19 185 149,619
9.00%, 3/01/21 9 6,750
10.63%, 3/15/23 961 708,737
Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA:
7.25%, 10/15/20 267 207,593
5.50%, 8/01/23 272 185,640
Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc., 3.75%, 2/15/23 2,000 2,104,122
Lamar Media Corp., 5.75%, 2/01/26 210 227,063
LGE HoldCo VI BV, 7.13%, 5/15/24 EUR 100 126,325
McGraw-Hill Global Education Holdings LLC/McGraw-Hill Global Education Finance, 7.88%, 5/15/24 (c) USD 61 65,270
MDC Partners, Inc., 6.50%, 5/01/24 (c) 336 319,200
Midcontinent Communications & Midcontinent Finance Corp., 6.25%, 8/01/21 (c) 340 356,150
NAI Entertainment Holdings/NAI Entertainment Holdings Finance Corp., 5.00%, 8/01/18 (c) 117 118,755
National CineMedia LLC, 5.75%, 8/15/26 (c) 59 60,549
Nexstar Escrow Corp., 5.63%, 8/01/24 (c) 173 176,460

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 17

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Media (continued)
Nielsen Finance LLC/Nielsen Finance Co., 5.00%, 4/15/22 (c) USD 515 $ 529,096
Numericable Group SA, 5.38%, 5/15/22 EUR 106 124,079
Outfront Media Capital LLC/Outfront Media Capital Corp.:
5.25%, 2/15/22 USD 55 57,613
5.63%, 2/15/24 160 170,200
SFR Group SA (c):
6.00%, 5/15/22 345 352,590
7.38%, 5/01/26 1,701 1,756,282
Sirius XM Radio, Inc. (c):
4.25%, 5/15/20 463 472,260
5.38%, 4/15/25 90 94,275
TCI Communications, Inc., 7.88%, 2/15/26 (d) 610 869,806
TEGNA, Inc. (c):
4.88%, 9/15/21 50 51,875
5.50%, 9/15/24 165 174,075
Time Warner, Inc.:
3.60%, 7/15/25 (d) 750 804,786
6.10%, 7/15/40 830 1,067,825
Tribune Media Co., 5.88%, 7/15/22 514 525,565
United Group BV, 7.88%, 11/15/20 EUR 100 117,167
Unitymedia Hessen GmbH & Co. KG/Unitymedia NRW GmbH:
5.50%, 1/15/23 (c) USD 445 468,362
4.00%, 1/15/25 EUR 100 118,528
3.50%, 1/15/27 100 115,728
Univision Communications, Inc. (c):
5.13%, 5/15/23 USD 1,131 1,176,240
5.13%, 2/15/25 390 407,550
UPCB Finance IV Ltd., 4.00%, 1/15/27 EUR 100 114,306
Virgin Media Finance PLC, 5.75%, 1/15/25 (c) USD 515 524,012
Virgin Media Secured Finance PLC:
5.50%, 8/15/26 (c) 200 209,000
4.88%, 1/15/27 GBP 100 137,552
6.25%, 3/28/29 100 145,169
WaveDivision Escrow LLC/WaveDivision Escrow Corp., 8.13%, 9/01/20 (c) USD 520 542,750
Wind Acquisition Finance SA:
7.00%, 4/23/21 EUR 120 139,208
7.38%, 4/23/21 (c) USD 200 206,000
Ziggo Bond Finance BV, 5.88%, 1/15/25 (c) 260 261,300
Ziggo Secured Finance BV, 3.75%, 1/15/25 EUR 100 114,049
52,239,628
Metals & Mining — 1.3%
Alcoa, Inc.:
5.40%, 4/15/21 USD 340 360,720
5.13%, 10/01/24 445 469,475
Anglo American Capital PLC:
4.45%, 9/27/20 (c) 100 101,000
4.13%, 4/15/21 (c) 200 198,000
4.13%, 9/27/22 (c) 200 195,500
3.25%, 4/03/23 EUR 100 110,214
ArcelorMittal:
6.13%, 6/01/18 USD 251 265,432
10.85%, 6/01/19 97 115,673
7.25%, 2/25/22 14 15,750
8.00%, 10/15/39 64 68,800
7.75%, 3/01/41 191 198,640
Constellium NV (c):
8.00%, 1/15/23 650 663,000
5.75%, 5/15/24 250 231,250
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.:
2.30%, 11/14/17 189 185,693
2.38%, 3/15/18 1,169 1,150,004
Corporate Bonds Value
Metals & Mining (continued)
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. (continued):
3.10%, 3/15/20 USD 105 $ 96,600
4.00%, 11/14/21 126 115,290
3.55%, 3/01/22 370 322,825
3.88%, 3/15/23 725 621,687
5.40%, 11/14/34 278 216,840
5.45%, 3/15/43 364 278,460
Glencore Finance Europe SA, 3.38%, 9/30/20 EUR 100 120,747
Joseph T Ryerson & Son, Inc., 11.00%, 5/15/22 (c) USD 115 126,500
Kaiser Aluminum Corp., 5.88%, 5/15/24 (c) 74 78,440
Novelis Corp., 6.25%, 8/15/24 (c) 743 774,577
Novelis, Inc., 8.75%, 12/15/20 683 715,442
Steel Dynamics, Inc.:
5.13%, 10/01/21 550 572,000
5.25%, 4/15/23 345 358,800
5.50%, 10/01/24 48 50,640
Teck Resources Ltd.:
3.00%, 3/01/19 140 135,800
8.00%, 6/01/21 (c) 86 92,826
3.75%, 2/01/23 235 201,513
8.50%, 6/01/24 (c) 295 331,875
6.00%, 8/15/40 236 191,160
6.25%, 7/15/41 200 165,375
5.20%, 3/01/42 95 69,588
United States Steel Corp., 8.38%, 7/01/21 (c) 215 233,812
Wise Metals Group LLC/Wise Alloys Finance Corp., 8.75%, 12/15/18 (c) 266 273,980
10,473,928
Multi-Utilities — 0.2%
Brooklyn Union Gas Co., 3.41%, 3/10/26 (c) 1,880 1,998,239
Multiline Retail — 0.0%
Neiman Marcus Group Ltd., 8.00%, 10/15/21 (c) 430 367,951
Offshore Drilling & Other Services — 0.1%
Lam Research Corp., 3.90%, 6/15/26 460 480,684
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 4.1%
Antero Resources Corp., 5.63%, 6/01/23 26 26,065
California Resources Corp., 8.00%, 12/15/22 (c) 352 237,600
Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc., 6.25%, 4/15/23 525 518,437
Cenovus Energy, Inc.:
5.70%, 10/15/19 30 32,241
5.20%, 9/15/43 15 13,189
Cheniere Corpus Christi Holdings LLC, 7.00%, 6/30/24 (c) 278 297,460
Chesapeake Energy Corp.:
6.50%, 8/15/17 30 30,225
3.93%, 4/15/19 (b) 603 545,715
6.63%, 8/15/20 95 84,550
6.88%, 11/15/20 110 96,525
ConocoPhillips Canada Funding Co., 5.95%, 10/15/36 685 828,112
CONSOL Energy, Inc.:
5.88%, 4/15/22 1,339 1,211,795
8.00%, 4/01/23 48 46,800
Continental Resources, Inc.:
5.00%, 9/15/22 89 86,108
4.50%, 4/15/23 133 125,352
3.80%, 6/01/24 417 376,342
4.90%, 6/01/44 65 54,275
Crestwood Midstream Partners LP/Crestwood Midstream Finance Corp.:
6.00%, 12/15/20 25 24,625
6.13%, 3/01/22 115 111,837
6.25%, 4/01/23 20 19,500

See Notes to Financial Statements.

18 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (continued)
CrownRock LP/CrownRock Finance, Inc., 7.13%, 4/15/21 (c) USD 610 $ 634,400
DCP Midstream LLC (c):
6.45%, 11/03/36 95 91,913
6.75%, 9/15/37 149 144,530
Denbury Resources, Inc., 9.00%, 5/15/21 (c) 501 514,777
Diamondback Energy, Inc., 7.63%, 10/01/21 328 347,885
Encana Corp.:
3.90%, 11/15/21 99 97,882
6.50%, 8/15/34 129 130,231
6.63%, 8/15/37 108 109,474
6.50%, 2/01/38 319 319,265
5.15%, 11/15/41 131 114,955
Energy Transfer Equity LP:
5.88%, 1/15/24 579 593,475
5.50%, 6/01/27 251 251,627
Extraction Oil & Gas Holdings LLC/Extraction Finance Corp., 7.88%, 7/15/21 (c) 178 179,780
Freeport-McMoran Oil & Gas LLC / FCX Oil & Gas, Inc., 6.88%, 2/15/23 180 175,050
Genesis Energy LP/Genesis Energy Finance Corp., 5.63%, 6/15/24 55 52,938
Gulfport Energy Corp.:
7.75%, 11/01/20 146 151,840
6.63%, 5/01/23 15 15,413
Halcon Resources Corp., 8.63%, 2/01/20 (a)(c)(i) 100 95,000
Hilcorp Energy I LP/Hilcorp Finance Co., 7.63%, 4/15/21 (c) 30 30,825
KeySpan Gas East Corp., 5.82%, 4/01/41 (c)(d) 1,010 1,312,796
Marathon Petroleum Corp., 6.50%, 3/01/41 (d) 2,049 2,301,943
Matador Resources Co., 6.88%, 4/15/23 270 278,775
MEG Energy Corp. (c):
6.50%, 3/15/21 560 459,200
7.00%, 3/31/24 735 591,675
Memorial Resource Development Corp., 5.88%, 7/01/22 324 327,240
MidAmerican Energy Co., 5.80%, 10/15/36 (d) 1,500 2,013,390
MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co., 5.95%, 5/15/37 1,750 2,307,056
Murphy Oil Corp., 6.88%, 8/15/24 112 117,124
NGPL PipeCo LLC (c):
7.12%, 12/15/17 1,719 1,794,206
7.77%, 12/15/37 87 93,416
Noble Energy, Inc., 5.63%, 5/01/21 309 322,338
Oasis Petroleum, Inc.:
7.25%, 2/01/19 25 24,625
6.50%, 11/01/21 272 250,920
6.88%, 3/15/22 (d) 307 285,510
6.88%, 1/15/23 120 110,700
ONEOK, Inc.:
4.25%, 2/01/22 45 43,538
7.50%, 9/01/23 135 149,512
Parsley Energy LLC/Parsley Finance Corp. (c):
7.50%, 2/15/22 345 363,975
6.25%, 6/01/24 74 76,405
PBF Holding Co. LLC/PBF Finance Corp., 8.25%, 2/15/20 94 96,938
PDC Energy, Inc., 7.75%, 10/15/22 165 173,250
QEP Resources, Inc.:
6.88%, 3/01/21 105 109,777
5.25%, 5/01/23 73 71,540
Range Resources Corp.:
5.75%, 6/01/21 213 216,195
5.00%, 8/15/22 53 52,470
5.00%, 3/15/23 185 182,687
Corporate Bonds Value
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (continued)
Rockies Express Pipeline LLC, 5.63%, 4/15/20 (c) USD 565 $ 591,131
RSP Permian, Inc., 6.63%, 10/01/22 179 186,160
Sabine Pass Liquefaction LLC:
5.63%, 2/01/21 848 890,400
6.25%, 3/15/22 896 958,720
5.63%, 4/15/23 1,037 1,091,442
5.88%, 6/30/26 (c) 236 252,520
Sanchez Energy Corp.:
7.75%, 6/15/21 322 280,140
6.13%, 1/15/23 603 476,370
SBA Communications Corp., 4.88%, 9/01/24 (c) 388 393,335
Seven Generations Energy Ltd. (c):
8.25%, 5/15/20 705 749,944
6.75%, 5/01/23 15 15,338
SM Energy Co.:
6.13%, 11/15/22 9 8,753
5.00%, 1/15/24 10 9,138
Southwestern Energy Co.:
7.50%, 2/01/18 25 26,281
5.80%, 1/23/20 140 140,000
4.10%, 3/15/22 129 117,390
6.70%, 1/23/25 40 41,100
Sunoco Logistics Partners Operations LP, 3.90%, 7/15/26 310 312,576
Tallgrass Energy Partners LP/Tallgrass Energy Finance Corp., 5.50%, 9/15/24 (c)(f) 115 117,875
Targa Resources Partners LP/Targa Resources Partners Finance Corp.:
6.88%, 2/01/21 49 50,715
6.38%, 8/01/22 60 61,950
5.25%, 5/01/23 10 10,150
6.75%, 3/15/24 (c) 50 53,125
Tesoro Logistics LP/Tesoro Logistics Finance Corp.:
6.13%, 10/15/21 26 27,235
6.38%, 5/01/24 74 78,995
Transcanada Trust, 5.88%, 8/15/76 (b) 135 143,859
Weatherford International LLC, 6.80%, 6/15/37 15 11,175
Weatherford International Ltd.:
4.50%, 4/15/22 65 53,950
6.50%, 8/01/36 50 37,000
7.00%, 3/15/38 55 41,388
5.95%, 4/15/42 52 36,530
Western Gas Partners LP, 5.38%, 6/01/21 1,425 1,548,696
Whiting Petroleum Corp.:
5.75%, 3/15/21 3 2,689
1.25%, 6/05/20 (h) 458 393,734
5.75%, 3/15/21 (h) 270 252,450
6.25%, 4/01/23 (h) 118 109,372
Williams Cos., Inc.:
3.70%, 1/15/23 38 36,860
4.55%, 6/24/24 81 82,823
5.75%, 6/24/44 189 194,197
WPX Energy, Inc.:
5.25%, 1/15/17 30 30,150
7.50%, 8/01/20 50 51,344
6.00%, 1/15/22 278 270,355
8.25%, 8/01/23 125 130,000
5.25%, 9/15/24 145 133,762
33,446,331
Paper & Forest Products — 0.2%
International Paper Co., 6.00%, 11/15/41 870 1,046,724
Pfleiderer GmbH, 7.88%, 8/01/19 EUR 100 116,163
Unifrax I LLC/Unifrax Holding Co., 7.50%, 2/15/19 (c) USD 180 162,000
1,324,887

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 19

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Pharmaceuticals — 1.7%
AbbVie, Inc., 3.60%, 5/14/25 USD 870 $ 920,704
Actavis Funding SCS, 4.55%, 3/15/35 2,140 2,304,744
Actavis, Inc., 3.25%, 10/01/22 4,000 4,154,224
DPx Holdings BV, 7.50%, 2/01/22 (c) 75 79,701
Endo Finance LLC, 5.75%, 1/15/22 (c) 95 88,528
Endo Finance LLC/Endo Finco, Inc. (c):
5.38%, 1/15/23 235 212,675
6.00%, 7/15/23 315 285,862
Forest Laboratories, Inc., 5.00%, 12/15/21 (c) 758 851,322
Grifols Worldwide Operations Ltd., 5.25%, 4/01/22 200 209,000
Jaguar Holding Co. II/Pharmaceutical Product Development LLC, 6.38%, 8/01/23 (c) 795 832,762
NBTY, Inc., 7.63%, 5/15/21 (c) 397 405,932
Synlab Bondco PLC, 6.25%, 7/01/22 EUR 100 121,026
Teva Pharmaceutical Finance Netherlands III BV, 2.80%, 7/21/23 USD 1,040 1,045,607
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. (c):
6.75%, 8/15/18 1,133 1,136,286
5.38%, 3/15/20 44 41,470
6.38%, 10/15/20 710 678,050
5.63%, 12/01/21 404 364,610
5.88%, 5/15/23 40 35,200
6.13%, 4/15/25 220 193,325
13,961,028
Real Estate — 0.2%
AvalonBay Communities, Inc., 3.45%, 6/01/25 (d) 1,535 1,616,266
Prologis LP, 3.75%, 11/01/25 315 340,518
1,956,784
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) — 1.4%
ERP Operating LP:
3.38%, 6/01/25 1,245 1,306,850
4.50%, 6/01/45 1,155 1,305,266
FelCor Lodging LP, 5.63%, 3/01/23 34 34,935
HCP, Inc. (d):
3.88%, 8/15/24 3,000 3,071,841
4.00%, 6/01/25 2,000 2,059,608
Hilton Escrow Issuer LLC/Hilton Escrow Issuer Corp., 4.25%, 9/01/24 (c) 207 211,011
MGM Growth Properties Operating Partnership LP/MGP Finance Co-Issuer, Inc., 4.50%, 9/01/26 (c) 175 174,891
Simon Property Group LP, 4.75%, 3/15/42 1,670 2,029,113
Ventas Realty LP, 4.13%, 1/15/26 870 942,496
Ventas Realty LP/Ventas Capital Corp., 4.75%, 6/01/21 550 612,320
11,748,331
Real Estate Management & Development — 0.7%
Northwest Florida Timber Finance LLC, 4.75%, 3/04/29 (c)(d) 4,600 4,026,559
Punch Taverns Finance B, Ltd., Series A7, 5.27%, 3/30/24 GBP 63 75,864
Realogy Group LLC/Realogy Co-Issuer Corp. (c):
4.50%, 4/15/19 USD 120 124,500
5.25%, 12/01/21 600 628,500
4.88%, 6/01/23 951 962,888
5,818,311
Road & Rail — 1.2%
Avis Budget Car Rental LLC/Avis Budget Finance, Inc. (c):
5.13%, 6/01/22 495 503,663
6.38%, 4/01/24 20 21,110
5.25%, 3/15/25 425 420,750
Corporate Bonds Value
Road & Rail (continued)
Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC, 5.75%, 5/01/40 (d) USD 1,890 $ 2,535,178
Herc Rentals, Inc. (c):
7.50%, 6/01/22 118 122,720
7.75%, 6/01/24 8 8,360
Hertz Corp., 5.88%, 10/15/20 460 476,675
Lima Metro Line 2 Finance Ltd., 5.88%, 7/05/34 (c) 5,000 5,556,250
United Rentals North America, Inc., 5.50%, 7/15/25 125 128,906
9,773,612
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment — 0.7%
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 7.50%, 8/15/22 80 77,600
Analog Devices, Inc., 3.90%, 12/15/25 470 501,786
Applied Materials, Inc., 3.90%, 10/01/25 1,155 1,282,404
Micron Technology, Inc. (c):
5.25%, 8/01/23 206 199,305
5.63%, 1/15/26 79 75,445
Microsemi Corp., 9.13%, 4/15/23 (c) 26 29,770
NXP BV/NXP Funding LLC (c):
4.13%, 6/15/20 420 434,700
4.13%, 6/01/21 278 290,788
3.88%, 9/01/22 200 203,250
5.75%, 3/15/23 260 276,767
ON Semiconductor Corp., Series B, 2.63%, 12/15/26 (h) 250 272,969
QUALCOMM, Inc., 3.45%, 5/20/25 1,950 2,105,852
Sensata Technologies BV, 5.00%, 10/01/25 (c) 350 362,250
6,112,886
Software — 0.6%
ACI Worldwide, Inc., 6.38%, 8/15/20 (c) 320 330,400
BMC Software Finance, Inc., 8.13%, 7/15/21 (c) 107 94,160
Ensemble S Merger Sub, Inc., 9.00%, 9/30/23 (c) 210 217,087
Infinity Acquisition LLC/Infinity Acquisition Finance Corp., 7.25%, 8/01/22 (c) 31 27,125
Infor US, Inc., 6.50%, 5/15/22 741 751,189
Informatica LLC, 7.13%, 7/15/23 (c) 183 172,935
Nuance Communications, Inc. (c):
5.38%, 8/15/20 90 92,138
6.00%, 7/01/24 170 176,800
Oracle Corp., 5.38%, 7/15/40 (d) 1,575 1,974,428
PTC, Inc., 6.00%, 5/15/24 71 76,769
Solera LLC/Solera Finance, Inc., 10.50%, 3/01/24 (c) 557 616,877
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc., 5.88%, 7/15/23 145 152,612
Veritas US, Inc./Veritas Bermuda, Ltd., 7.50%, 2/01/23 EUR 100 107,641
4,790,161
Specialty Retail — 0.6%
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc., 6.00%, 12/15/24 USD 440 457,600
Group 1 Automotive, Inc., 5.00%, 6/01/22 430 432,150
Home Depot, Inc., 5.88%, 12/16/36 1,660 2,288,388
JC Penney Corp., Inc.:
6.38%, 10/15/36 33 27,720
7.40%, 4/01/37 27 24,300
L Brands, Inc., 6.88%, 11/01/35 347 379,097
Penske Automotive Group, Inc.:
5.38%, 12/01/24 371 377,493
5.50%, 5/15/26 127 127,079
Sally Holdings LLC/Sally Capital, Inc., 5.50%, 11/01/23 320 340,800

See Notes to Financial Statements.

20 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Corporate Bonds Value
Specialty Retail (continued)
THOM Europe SAS, 7.38%, 7/15/19 EUR 100 $ 117,680
4,572,307
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals — 0.3%
Diamond 1 Finance Corp./Diamond 2 Finance Corp. (c):
4.42%, 6/15/21 USD 90 94,107
5.88%, 6/15/21 139 146,971
7.13%, 6/15/24 169 183,087
6.02%, 6/15/26 110 117,692
8.35%, 7/15/46 95 110,709
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co., 4.90%, 10/15/25 (c) 1,500 1,603,434
Western Digital Corp., 7.38%, 4/01/23 (c) 384 416,640
2,672,640
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods — 0.0%
BiSoho SAS, 5.88%, 5/01/23 EUR 100 118,863
Hanesbrands, Inc. (c):
4.63%, 5/15/24 USD 36 37,665
4.88%, 5/15/26 (f) 85 88,825
Springs Industries, Inc., 6.25%, 6/01/21 36 37,485
Wolverine World Wide, Inc., 5.00%, 9/01/26 (c) 44 44,055
326,893
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance — 0.0%
Radian Group, Inc., 5.25%, 6/15/20 185 195,730
Tobacco — 1.5%
Altria Group, Inc.:
9.95%, 11/10/38 516 939,104
10.20%, 2/06/39 894 1,665,759
5.38%, 1/31/44 4,030 5,224,976
BAT International Finance PLC, 3.95%, 6/15/25 (c) 2,000 2,228,648
Reynolds American, Inc.:
4.45%, 6/12/25 635 712,739
7.00%, 8/04/41 1,000 1,301,242
12,072,468
Transportation Infrastructure — 0.3%
CEVA Group PLC, 7.00%, 3/01/21 (c) 310 252,650
I 595 Express LLC, 3.31%, 12/31/31 1,593 1,620,603
Onorato Armatori SpA, 7.75%, 2/15/23 EUR 100 114,635
Transurban Finance Co., 4.13%, 2/02/26 (c) USD 580 619,121
2,607,009
Utilities — 0.0%
ContourGlobal Power Holdings SA, 5.13%, 6/15/21 EUR 100 118,795
Wireless Telecommunication Services — 2.0%
America Movil SAB de CV, 2.38%, 9/08/16 (d) USD 1,595 1,595,072
Communications Sales & Leasing, Inc./CSL Capital LLC:
6.00%, 4/15/23 (c) 46 47,840
8.25%, 10/15/23 652 679,710
Crown Castle Towers LLC, 6.11%, 1/15/40 (c) 3,155 3,502,306
Digicel Ltd., 6.00%, 4/15/21 (c) 1,550 1,416,312
GEO Group, Inc.:
5.13%, 4/01/23 265 236,512
6.00%, 4/15/26 42 37,643
Rogers Communications, Inc., 7.50%, 8/15/38 2,325 3,310,133
SBA Communications Corp., 5.63%, 10/01/19 138 142,140
Sprint Capital Corp.:
6.90%, 5/01/19 140 141,400
6.88%, 11/15/28 759 683,100
8.75%, 3/15/32 110 109,175
Corporate Bonds Value
Wireless Telecommunication Services (continued)
Sprint Communications, Inc.:
9.00%, 11/15/18 (c) USD 1,360 $ 1,497,700
7.00%, 8/15/20 380 374,300
Sprint Corp.:
7.25%, 9/15/21 240 237,300
7.88%, 9/15/23 356 346,028
7.13%, 6/15/24 541 504,482
7.63%, 2/15/25 95 90,191
T-Mobile USA, Inc.:
6.63%, 4/28/21 490 513,275
6.73%, 4/28/22 130 136,663
6.00%, 3/01/23 250 265,010
6.84%, 4/28/23 40 42,900
6.50%, 1/15/24 240 258,000
6.38%, 3/01/25 220 236,500
6.50%, 1/15/26 309 338,162
16,741,854
Total Corporate Bonds — 62.4% 513,373,172
Floating Rate Loan Interests (b)
Aerospace & Defense — 0.0%
Engility Corp.:
Term Loan B1, 4.88%, 8/12/20 57 57,321
Term Loan B2, 5.75%, 8/12/23 110 110,431
167,752
Air Freight & Logistics — 0.0%
CEVA Group PLC, Synthetic LOC, 6.50%, 3/19/21 20 15,683
CEVA Intercompany BV, Dutch Term Loan, 6.50%, 3/19/21 20 16,167
CEVA Logistics Canada ULC, Canadian Term Loan, 6.50%, 3/19/21 3 2,763
CEVA Logistics US Holdings, Inc., Term Loan, 6.50%, 3/19/21 28 22,313
XPO Logistics, Inc., Term Loan B2, 4.25%, 10/30/21 52 52,228
109,154
Auto Components — 0.1%
Gates Global, Inc., Term Loan B, 4.25%, 7/06/21 371 364,889
Chemicals — 0.0%
Chemours Co., Term Loan B, 3.75%, 5/12/22 17 16,749
MacDermid, Inc., Term Loan B3, 5.50%, 6/07/20 103 103,168
119,917
Commercial Services & Supplies — 0.0%
Brand Energy & Infrastructure Services, Inc., Term Loan B,
4.75%, 11/26/20 119 117,566
Containers & Packaging — 0.0%
BWAY Holding Co., Inc., Term Loan B, 5.50%, 8/14/20 112 112,351
Diversified Consumer Services — 0.0%
Laureate Education, Inc., Term Loan B, 8.16%, 3/17/21 96 95,468
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 0.0%
Telenet International Finance Sarl, Term Loan AD, 4.25%, 6/30/24 128 128,366
Electrical Equipment — 0.1%
Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Co. LLC:
2016 DIP Term Loan B, 5.00%, 10/31/17 355 355,554
2016 DIP Term Loan C, 5.00%, 10/31/17 78 78,241
433,795

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 21

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Floating Rate Loan Interests (b) Value
Energy Equipment & Services — 0.0%
Weatherford International Ltd., Term Loan, 1.95%, 7/13/20 USD 265 $ 248,752
Food Products — 0.0%
Reynolds Group Holdings, Inc., 2016 Term Loan, 4.25%, 2/05/23 88 88,099
Health Care Equipment & Supplies — 0.1%
Alere, Inc., 2015 Term Loan B, 4.25%, 6/18/22 194 191,753
Immucor, Inc., Refinancing Term Loan B2, 5.00%, 8/17/18 159 154,301
346,054
Health Care Providers & Services — 0.0%
Vizient, Inc., 1st Lien Term Loan, 6.25%, 2/13/23 77 78,024
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 0.2%
Amaya Holdings BV, 1st Lien Term Loan, 5.00%, 8/01/21 189 186,503
Caesars Entertainment Resort Properties LLC, Term Loan B, 7.00%, 10/11/20 1,185 1,157,740
MPH Acquisition Holdings LLC, 2016 Term Loan B, 5.00%, 6/07/23 215 217,240
Scientific Games International, Inc., 2014 Term Loan B1, 6.00%, 10/18/20 152 151,806
1,713,289
Insurance — 0.0%
Alliant Holdings I, Inc., Incremental Term Loan B2, 5.00%, 8/12/22 167 167,000
IT Services — 0.0%
First Data Corp., 2021 Extended Term Loan, 4.52%, 3/24/21 122 122,179
WEX, Inc., Term Loan B, 4.25%, 7/01/23 95 95,661
217,840
Machinery — 0.0%
Silver II US Holdings LLC, Term Loan, 4.00%, 12/13/19 55 48,923
Media — 0.1%
iHeartCommunications, Inc., Term Loan D, 7.27%, 1/30/19 211 161,987
Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA, Term Loan B2, 3.75%, 6/30/19 648 614,552
776,539
Metals & Mining — 0.1%
FMG Resources August 2006 Property Ltd., Term Loan B, 3.75%, 6/30/19 320 318,405
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 0.1%
California Resources Corp., Term Loan A, 3.70%, 10/01/19 182 172,809
Chesapeake Energy Corp., Term Loan, 8.50%, 8/15/21 767 791,169
MEG Energy Corp., Refinancing Term Loan, 3.75%, 3/31/20 58 52,885
1,016,863
Pharmaceuticals — 0.1%
DPx Holdings BV, 2014 Incremental Term Loan, 4.25%, 3/11/21 190 189,658
Jaguar Holding Co. II, 2015 Term Loan B, 4.25%, 8/18/22 139 139,830
NBTY, Inc., Term Loan B, 5.00%, 5/05/23 105 105,033
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc.:
Series A3 Tranche A, 4.28%, 10/20/18 60 60,395
Series D2 Term Loan B, 5.00%, 2/13/19 15 14,975
Series E Term Loan B, 5.25%, 8/05/20 62 61,986
Floating Rate Loan Interests (b) Value
Pharmaceuticals (continued)
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. (continued):
Series F1 Term Loan B, 5.50%, 4/01/22 USD 24 $ 23,990
595,867
Professional Services — 0.0%
Advantage Sales & Marketing, Inc.:
2014 1st Lien Term Loan, 4.25%, 7/23/21 180 178,062
2014 2nd Lien Term Loan, 7.50%, 7/25/22 94 88,939
267,001
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment — 0.1%
Avago Technologies Cayman Ltd., Term Loan B3, 3.51%, 2/01/23 308 310,307
Microsemi Corp., 2015 Term Loan B, 3.75%, 1/15/23 28 28,457
338,764
Software — 0.2%
BMC Software Finance, Inc., Term Loan, 5.00%, 9/10/20 403 384,663
Infor US, Inc., Term Loan B5, 3.75%, 6/03/20 264 260,981
Informatica Corp., Term Loan, 4.50%, 8/05/22 172 166,092
Solera LLC, Term Loan B, 5.75%, 3/03/23 357 359,019
Tibco Software Inc., Term Loan B, 6.50%, 12/04/20 138 134,951
1,305,706
Specialty Retail — 0.0%
Leslie’s Poolmart, Inc., 2016 Term Loan,
5.25%, 7/27/23 101 101,631
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods — 0.0%
Ascend Performance Materials Operations LLC, Term Loan B, 6.75%, 8/12/22 179 176,543
J. Crew Group, Inc., Term Loan B, 4.00%, 3/05/21 80 62,719
239,262
Total Floating Rate Loan Interests — 1.2% 9,517,277
Foreign Agency Obligations
Argentine Republic Government International Bond (c):
7.50%, 4/22/26 3,875 4,320,625
7.63%, 4/22/46 3,121 3,526,730
Cyprus Government International Bond, 4.63%, 2/03/20 (c) EUR 1,210 1,445,928
Iceland Government International Bond, 5.88%, 5/11/22 USD 3,555 4,151,643
Italian Government International Bond, 5.38%, 6/15/33 2,925 3,602,167
Portugal Government International Bond, 5.13%, 10/15/24 (c) 5,870 5,891,918
Slovenia Government International Bond, 5.85%, 5/10/23 (c) 864 1,023,140
Total Foreign Agency Obligations — 2.9% 23,962,151
Municipal Bonds
City of New York New York Municipal Water Finance Authority, Refunding RB, 2nd General Resolution:
Series EE, 5.50%, 6/15/43 930 1,101,585
Series GG, Build America Bonds, 5.72%, 6/15/42 1,390 1,997,736

See Notes to Financial Statements.

22 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Municipal Bonds Value
City of New York New York Municipal Water Finance Authority, Refunding RB, 2nd General Resolution (continued):
Water & Sewer System, Series EE, 5.38%, 6/15/43 USD 770 $ 907,337
East Bay Municipal Utility District, RB, Build America Bonds, 5.87%, 6/01/40 1,900 2,687,873
Indianapolis Local Public Improvement Bond Bank, RB, Build America Bonds, 6.12%, 1/15/40 2,535 3,605,911
Metropolitan Transportation Authority, RB, Build America Bonds, Series C, 7.34%, 11/15/39 1,295 2,098,923
Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia Plant Vogtle Units 3 & 4, Refunding RB, Build America Bonds,
Series A, 7.06%, 4/01/57 2,000 2,496,680
New York State Dormitory Authority, RB, Build America Bonds:
5.63%, 3/15/39 1,100 1,480,743
5.60%, 3/15/40 1,900 2,612,063
Port Authority of New York & New Jersey, RB, 159th Series, 6.04%, 12/01/29 780 1,052,945
State of California, GO, Build America Bonds, Various Purposes:
7.55%, 4/01/39 280 454,171
7.63%, 3/01/40 1,720 2,779,417
State of Illinois, GO, Pension, 5.10%, 6/01/33 2,000 1,949,700
University of California, RB, Build America Bonds, 5.95%, 5/15/45 885 1,208,990
Total Municipal Bonds — 3.2% 26,434,074
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.7%
Banc of America Funding Corp., Series 2007-2, Class 1A2, 6.00%, 3/25/37 861 760,981
Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust:
Series 2005-64CB, Class 1A15, 5.50%, 12/25/35 1,521 1,414,775
Series 2006-OA21, Class A1, 0.70%, 3/20/47 (b) 1,011 701,308
Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates, Series 2011-2R, Class 2A1,
3.01%, 7/27/36 (b)(c) 885 880,465
GMAC Mortgage Corp. Loan Trust, Series 2005-AR3, Class 5A1,
3.59%, 6/19/35 (b) 619 612,792
GSR Mortgage Loan Trust:
Series 2006-4F, Class 1A1, 5.00%, 5/25/36 121 112,912
Series 2007-4F, Class 3A1, 6.00%, 7/25/37 279 251,597
JPMorgan Mortgage Trust, Series 2006-S3, Class 1A12, 6.50%, 8/25/36 101 81,522
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors, Inc., Series 2006-A3, Class 3A1, 2.99%, 5/25/36 (b) 778 637,453
WaMu Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2007-OA4, Class 1A,
1.26%, 5/25/47 (b) 255 212,462
5,666,267
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities — 11.9%
Banc of America Merrill Lynch Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust, Series 2015-200P, Class C,
3.72%, 4/14/33 (b)(c) 4,170 4,322,294
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities Value
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (continued)
Banc of America Merrill Lynch Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2007-2, Class A4, 5.79%, 4/10/49 (b) USD 1,158 $ 1,166,679
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2013-GC15, Class B, 5.27%, 9/10/46 (b) 7,183 8,350,513
Citigroup/Deutsche Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2006-CD3, Class AM, 5.65%, 10/15/48 2,193 2,210,818
Commercial Mortgage Trust:
Series 2008-LS1, Class A4B, 6.30%, 12/10/49 (b) 997 1,028,562
Series 2013-CR11, Class B, 5.33%, 10/10/46 (b) 7,000 8,125,505
Series 2013-LC6, Class B, 3.74%, 1/10/46 1,390 1,485,052
Series 2015-3BP, Class A, 3.18%, 2/10/35 (c) 7,570 8,040,304
Series 2015-CR22, Class C, 4.26%, 3/10/48 (b) 5,000 5,186,846
Series 2015-LC19, Class C, 4.40%, 2/10/48 (b) 3,500 3,705,213
Core Industrial Trust, Series 2015-TEXW, Class D, 3.98%, 2/10/34 (b)(c) 4,585 4,677,870
Credit Suisse Commercial Mortgage Trust:
Series 2006-C5, Class AM, 5.34%, 12/15/39 3,500 3,512,794
Series 2010-RR2, Class 2A, 6.14%, 9/15/39 (b)(c) 1,031 1,043,948
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2005-C3, Class AJ, 4.77%, 7/15/37 8 8,102
CSAIL Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2015-C1 (b):
Class B, 4.04%, 4/15/50 1,110 1,215,005
Class C, 4.44%, 4/15/50 1,000 1,057,927
Class D, 3.94%, 4/15/50 (c) 480 403,103
DBRR Trust, Series 2011-C32, Class A3A, 5.89%, 6/17/49 (b)(c) 730 739,627
GAHR Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2015-NRF, Class DFX,
3.49%, 12/15/34 (b)(c) 6,170 6,209,258
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II, Series 2013-GC10, Class B,
3.68%, 2/10/46 (c) 2,505 2,669,470
Hilton USA Trust, Series 2013- HLT, 4.41%, 11/05/30 5,900 5,919,017
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2004-LN2, Class A2, 5.12%, 7/15/41 34 34,453
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust (b):
Series 2007-C6, Class A4, 5.86%, 7/15/40 7,835 7,963,309
Series 2007-C7, Class A3, 5.87%, 9/15/45 2,107 2,186,113
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust (b):
Series 2007-HQ11, Class A4, 5.45%, 2/12/44 6,574 6,604,577
Series 2014-CPT, Class G, 3.56%, 7/13/29 (c) 3,200 3,081,242
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2007-C33, Class A4, 6.16%, 2/15/51 (b) 3,815 3,876,965
WF-RBS Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2012-C8:
Class B, 4.31%, 8/15/45 1,395 1,527,358
Class C, 5.04%, 8/15/45 (b) 1,795 1,940,646
98,292,570

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 23

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities Value
Interest Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.0%
GSMPS Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 1998-5, 0.00%, 6/19/27 (b)(c) USD 1,059 $ 11
Interest Only Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities — 0.2%
Commercial Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2015-LC21, Class XA,
1.02%, 7/10/48 (b) 19,482 938,065
WF-RBS Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2012-C8, Class XA,
2.30%, 8/15/45 (b)(c) 11,222 808,949
1,747,014
Total Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities — 12.8% 105,705,862
Preferred Securities
Capital Trusts
Banks — 2.3%
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, 7.00% (b)(g) 200 210,820
Banco Santander SA, 6.25% (b)(g) 100 101,227
BNP Paribas SA, 7.20% (b)(c)(g) 2,000 2,250,000
Capital One Financial Corp., Series E, 5.55% (b)(g) 3,500 3,581,025
Citigroup, Inc. (b)(g):
Series D, 5.95% 2,100 2,169,562
Series Q, 5.95% 100 101,813
Series R, 6.13% 605 631,257
Credit Agricole SA (b)(c)(g):
6.63% 1,400 1,358,868
7.88% 1,000 1,023,750
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, 7.00% (b)(g) 200 218,628
Nordea Bank AB, 6.13% (b)(c)(g) 2,960 2,945,200
Wells Fargo & Co. (b)(g):
Series S, 5.90% 3,390 3,606,112
Series U, 5.88% 750 828,338
19,026,600
Capital Markets — 0.7%
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (b)(g):
5.30% 100 102,250
Series L, 5.70% 792 809,028
Morgan Stanley, Series H, 5.45% (b)(g) 2,627 2,633,568
State Street Capital Trust IV, 1.65%, 6/15/37 (b) 140 120,050
State Street Corp., Series F, 5.25% (b)(g) 2,000 2,085,200
5,750,096
Diversified Financial Services — 5.3%
Bank of America Corp. (b)(g):
Series V, 5.13% 385 379,417
Series X, 6.25% 4,620 4,851,000
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. (b)(g):
Series D, 4.50% (e) 8,400 8,274,000
Series E, 4.95% 2,000 2,042,500
Barclays PLC, 7.88% (b)(g) 200 200,450
Citigroup, Inc., Series M, 6.30% (b)(g) 4,000 4,140,000
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (b)(g):
Series 1, 7.90% 7,000 7,262,500
Series Q, 5.15% 3,000 3,006,750
Series U, 6.13% 500 535,313
Series V, 5.00% 6,710 6,693,225
Macquarie Bank Ltd., 10.25%, 6/20/57 (b) 1,800 1,894,860
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, 8.63% (b)(g) 200 203,750
Societe Generale SA (b)(c)(g):
6.00% 3,000 2,775,240
7.88% 1,000 994,000
43,253,005
Preferred Securities Value
Capital Trusts (continued)
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 0.0%
Telefonica Europe BV, 4.20% (b)(g) USD 200 $ 231,186
Electric Utilities — 0.6%
ComEd Financing III, 6.35%, 3/15/33 300 319,168
Electricite de France SA, 5.25% (b)(c)(g) 4,200 4,181,100
Enel SpA (b):
5.00%, 1/15/75 EUR 100 120,584
7.75%, 9/10/75 GBP 100 148,162
Gas Natural Fenosa Finance BV, 4.13% (b)(g) USD 100 116,319
4,885,333
Industrial Conglomerates — 0.3%
General Electric Co., Series D, 5.00% (b)(g) 2,131 2,285,498
Insurance — 1.7%
Allstate Corp (b):
5.75%, 8/15/53 2,000 2,160,000
6.50%, 5/15/57 4,100 4,735,500
MetLife, Inc., 6.40%, 12/15/36 2,554 2,868,142
Voya Financial, Inc., 5.65%, 5/15/53 (b) 4,500 4,500,000
14,263,642
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 0.0%
DCP Midstream LLC, 5.85%, 5/21/43 (c) 30 22,950
Total Capital Trusts — 10.9% 89,718,310
Preferred Stocks Shares
Banks — 1.2%
US Bancorp, Series G, 6.00% (b)(g) 300,000 7,818,000
Wells Fargo & Co., 5.85% (b)(g) 75,000 2,098,500
9,916,500
Capital Markets — 0.4%
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Series J, 5.50% (b)(g) 92,000 2,488,600
SCE Trust III, 5.75% (b)(g) 25,314 789,544
3,278,144
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance — 0.0%
Fannie Mae, Series S, 8.25% (b)(g) 10,000 38,500
Total Preferred Stocks — 1.6% 13,233,144
Trust Preferred — 0.1%
Diversified Financial Services — 0.1%
Citigroup Capital XIII, 7.88%, 10/30/40 29,583 762,190
Total Preferred Securities — 12.6% 103,713,644
U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Par (000)
Agency Obligations — 1.5%
Fannie Mae, 5.63%, 7/15/37 (d) USD 1,600 2,399,982
Federal Home Loan Bank (d):
5.25%, 12/09/22 1,375 1,676,297
5.37%, 9/09/24 2,175 2,754,716
Resolution Funding Corp., 0.00%, 4/15/30 - 10/15/18 (k) 7,105 5,379,492
12,210,487

See Notes to Financial Statements.

24 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.0%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series 2005-5, Class PK, 5.00%, 12/25/34 USD 210 $ 220,018
Series 1991-87, Class S, 25.29%, 8/25/21 (b) 5 6,753
Series G-49, Class S, 980.26%, 12/25/21 (b) — (j) 51
Series G-07, Class S, 1,085.42%, 3/25/21 (b) — (j) 299
Series 1991-46, Class S, 2,398.91%, 5/25/21 (b) — (j) 1
Freddie Mac Mortgage-Backed Securities, Series 0173, Class RS, 10.25%, 11/15/21 (b) — (j) 2
227,124
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities — 0.3%
Freddie Mac, Series K013, Class A2, 3.97%, 1/25/21 1,870 2,048,149
Interest Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.9%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series 1997-50, Class SI, 1.20%, 4/25/23 (b) 48 1,334
Series 2012-96, Class DI, 4.00%, 2/25/27 6,986 514,926
Series 2012-M9, Class X1, 4.20%, 12/25/17 (b) 15,724 496,391
Series 2012-47, Class NI, 4.50%, 4/25/42 6,612 1,196,609
Series 089, Class 2, 8.00%, 10/25/18 — (j) 4
Series 007, Class 2, 8.50%, 4/25/17 — (j) 2
Series G92-05, Class H, 9.00%, 1/25/22 1 40
Series 094, Class 2, 9.50%, 8/25/21 — (j) 45
Series 1990-136, Class S, 19.55%, 11/25/20 (b) 2 2
Series 1991-139, Class PT, 648.35%, 10/25/21 — (j) 1
Series G-10, Class S, 1,050.07%, 5/25/21 (b) — (j) 1
Series G-12, Class S, 1,114.50%, 5/25/21 (b) — (j) 1
Freddie Mac Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series K707, Class X1, 1.67%, 12/25/18 (b) 4,776 140,497
Series 2611, Class QI, 5.50%, 9/15/32 706 40,661
Series 1254, Class Z, 8.50%, 4/15/22 22 4,225
Series 1043, Class H, 42.72%, 2/15/21 (b) 2 2
Ginnie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities (b):
Series 2009-78, Class SD, 5.69%, 9/20/32 6,638 1,251,149
Series 2009-116, Class KS, 5.96%, 12/16/39 2,634 399,937
Series 2011-52, Class NS, 6.16%, 4/16/41 18,166 3,642,459
7,688,286
U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities
Mortgage-Backed Securities — 5.0%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
3.00%, 8/01/43 USD 11,425 $ 11,929,848
4.00%, 12/01/41 - 12/01/43 (d) 6,738 7,263,710
4.50%, 7/01/41 - 4/01/42 14,861 16,258,436
5.00%, 8/01/34 2,498 2,799,331
5.50%, 6/01/38 1,292 1,464,266
6.00%, 12/01/38 (d) 1,090 1,250,196
Freddie Mac Mortgage-Backed Securities, 6.00%, 4/1/17 - 12/1/18 49 49,736
Ginnie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
5.50%, 8/15/33 59 66,298
8.00%, 7/15/24 — (j) 237
41,082,058
Principal Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.0%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities, 0.00%, 2/25/23 - 6/25/23 (k) 16 15,393
Total U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities — 7.7% 63,271,497
U.S. Treasury Obligations
U.S. Treasury Bonds (d):
3.00%, 11/15/44 70,500 82,066,371
2.50%, 2/15/46 55,000 58,113,110
U.S. Treasury Notes, 1.63%, 2/15/26 (d) 15,000 15,060,930
Total U.S. Treasury Obligations — 18.9% 155,240,411
Total Long-Term Investments (Cost — $1,011,466,051) — 132.0% 1,086,330,906
Short-Term Securities — 1.6% Shares
BlackRock Liquidity Funds, TempFund, Institutional Class, 0.33% (l)(m) 12,926,909 12,926,909
Total Short-Term Securities (Cost — $12,926,909) — 1.6% 12,926,909
Options Purchased (Cost — $3,589,893) — 0.4% 3,225,087
Total Investments Before Options Written (Cost — $1,027,982,853) — 134.0% 1,102,482,902
Options Written (Premiums Received — $8,969,163) — (0.7)% (5,414,078 )
Total Investments, Net of Options Written (Cost — $1,019,013,690) — 133.3% 1,097,068,824
Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets — (33.3)% (274,519,911 )
Net Assets — 100.0% $ 822,548,913

Notes to Schedule of Investments

(a) Non-income producing security.

(b) Variable rate security. Rate as of period end.

(c) Security exempt from registration pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration to qualified institutional investors.

(d) All or a portion of security has been pledged as collateral in connection with outstanding reverse repurchase agreements.

(e) Payment-in-kind security which may pay interest/dividends in additional par/shares and/or in cash. Rates shown are the current rate and possible payment rates.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 25

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

(f) When-issued security.

(g) Perpetual security with no stated maturity date.

(h) Convertible security.

(i) Issuer filed for bankruptcy and/or is in default

(j) Amount is less than $500.

(k) Zero-coupon bond.

(l) During the year ended August 31, 2016, investments in issuers considered to be affiliates of the Trust for purposes of Section 2(a)(3) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, were as follows:

Affiliate — BlackRock Liquidity Funds, TempFund, Institutional Class 9,920,365 3,006,544 12,926,909 Value at August 31, 2016 — $ 12,926,909 Income — $ 43,746

(m) Current yield as of period end.

• For Trust compliance purposes, the Trust’s industry classifications refer to any one or more of the industry sub-classifications used by one or more widely recognized market indexes or ratings group indexes, and/or as defined by the investment adviser. These definitions may not apply for purposes of this report, which may combine such industry sub-classifications for reporting ease.

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

Counterparty Face Value Face Value Including Accrued Interest Type of Underlying Collateral Remaining Contractual Maturity of the Agreements
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. 0.22 % 6/02/15 Open $ 1,323,000 $ 1,326,687 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Open/Demand 1
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. 0.22 % 6/02/15 Open 830,000 832,313 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 546,875 549,031 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 518,150 520,192 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 994,500 998,420 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 355,781 357,184 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 1,014,125 1,018,122 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 971,438 975,267 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 4,831,250 4,850,293 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 718,875 721,709 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Barclays Capital, Inc. 0.55 % 12/17/15 Open 2,973,750 2,985,471 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC 0.65 % 12/17/15 Open 950,950 955,380 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC 0.65 % 12/17/15 Open 1,454,375 1,461,150 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC 0.65 % 12/17/15 Open 1,104,687 1,109,833 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,713,750 1,721,610 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 3,131,250 3,145,612 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,228,500 1,234,135 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 2,028,510 2,037,814 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,693,125 1,700,891 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 4,342,500 4,362,418 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,822,500 1,830,859 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 2,036,475 2,045,816 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,909,860 1,918,620 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,835,000 1,843,416 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,435,225 1,441,808 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 2,019,250 2,028,512 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 2,175,000 2,184,976 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 2,002,725 2,011,911 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 1,448,563 1,455,207 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 12/17/15 Open 4,725,000 4,746,672 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.65 % 12/18/15 Open 4,884,000 4,906,487 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.65 % 12/18/15 Open 3,995,000 4,013,394 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.65 % 12/18/15 Open 2,857,000 2,870,154 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.65 % 12/18/15 Open 3,930,000 3,948,094 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.65 % 12/18/15 Open 3,529,000 3,545,248 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.65 % 12/18/15 Open 7,342,000 7,375,804 Capital Trusts Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.65 % 12/18/15 Open 3,698,000 3,715,026 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 2/11/16 Open 687,375 689,843 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Deutsche Bank AG 0.36 % 4/22/16 Open 24,156,250 24,179,782 U.S. Treasury Obligations Open/Demand 1

See Notes to Financial Statements.

26 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Reverse Repurchase Agreements (concluded)

Counterparty — BNP Paribas Securites Corp. 0.46 % 5/03/16 Open Face Value — $ 1,397,975 Face Value Including Accrued Interest — $ 1,400,119 Type of Underlying Collateral — U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Remaining Contractual Maturity of the Agreements — Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securites Corp. 0.46 % 5/03/16 Open 850,025 851,328 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securites Corp. 0.46 % 5/03/16 Open 1,398,375 1,400,519 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securites Corp. 0.46 % 5/03/16 Open 871,500 872,836 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securites Corp. 0.52 % 5/06/16 Open 14,850,000 14,871,491 U.S. Treasury Obligations Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securites Corp. 0.75 % 5/18/16 Open 837,000 838,831 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC 0.75 % 6/27/16 Open 1,503,288 1,505,292 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Nomura Securities International, Inc. 0.35 % 6/28/16 Open 31,762,500 31,779,484 U.S. Treasury Obligations Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securites Corp. 0.53 % 6/29/16 Open 82,044,375 82,126,397 U.S. Treasury Obligations Open/Demand 1
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 0.64 % 6/30/16 Open 2,859,500 2,862,703 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
Deutsche Bank AG (3.00 )% 7/29/16 Open 278,602 277,882 Corporate Bonds Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.60 % 8/10/16 9/14/16 24,013,000 24,021,405 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Up to 30 Days
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. 0.59 % 8/10/16 9/14/16 15,810,000 15,815,441 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Up to 30 Days
Total $ 287,689,754 $ 288,238,889
1 Certain agreements
have no stated maturity and can be terminated by either party at any time.

Derivative Financial Instruments Outstanding as of Period End

Futures Contracts

Contracts Long (Short) — (117) Issue — 90 Day Euro Future September 2016 USD 28,991,137 Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ 2,575
322 2-Year U.S. Treasury Note December 2016 USD 70,296,625 (362 )
1,134 5-Year U.S. Treasury Note December 2016 USD 137,497,500 (145,903 )
(457) 10-Year U.S. Treasury Note December 2016 USD 59,831,297 129,307
21 10-Year U.S. Ultra Long Treasury Note December 2016 USD 3,031,875 (8,325 )
(39) Long U.S. Treasury Bond December 2016 USD 6,644,625 (9,750 )
139 Ultra Long U.S. Treasury Bond December 2016 USD 26,058,156 23,375
303 90 Day Euro Future December 2017 USD 74,901,600 (69,313 )
(303) 90 Day Euro Future December 2018 USD 74,806,913 40,279
Total $ (38,117 )

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts

Currency Purchased — EUR 165,000 Currency Sold — USD 186,378 Counterparty — BNP Paribas S.A. 9/06/16 Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ (2,303 )
EUR 300,000 USD 338,108 Standard Chartered Bank 9/06/16 (3,427 )
USD 739,364 EUR 664,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 9/06/16 (1,397 )
USD 9,264,320 EUR 8,320,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 9/06/16 (17,509 )
USD 154,314 GBP 117,000 Bank of America N.A. 9/06/16 666
USD 11,590,621 GBP 8,796,000 HSBC Bank PLC 9/06/16 39,456
USD 865,739 GBP 657,000 HSBC Bank PLC 9/06/16 2,947
AUD 1,600,000 CAD 1,570,350 Citibank N.A. 9/14/16 4,581
AUD 2,650,000 CAD 2,626,283 HSBC Bank PLC 9/14/16 (11,774 )
AUD 2,680,000 CAD 2,632,698 JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. 9/14/16 5,873
CAD 2,706,941 AUD 2,745,000 BNP Paribas S.A. 9/14/16 1,908
CAD 2,139,891 AUD 2,135,000 Citibank N.A. 9/14/16 27,788
CAD 2,072,546 AUD 2,115,000 Deutsche Bank AG 9/14/16 (8,543 )
CAD 2,641,936 AUD 2,680,000 Deutsche Bank AG 9/14/16 1,172
AUD 2,120,000 USD 1,625,555 HSBC Bank PLC 9/22/16 (33,051 )

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 27

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts (concluded)

Currency Purchased — EUR 730,000 SEK 6,901,043 Counterparty — Citibank N.A. 9/22/16 Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ 8,055
SEK 13,855,422 EUR 1,460,000 Citibank N.A. 9/22/16 (9,874 )
USD 1,633,195 AUD 2,120,000 Citibank N.A. 9/22/16 40,691
JPY 100,812,258 EUR 890,000 UBS AG 9/26/16 (18,384 )
USD 740,716 EUR 664,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 10/05/16 (1,008 )
USD 8,762,535 EUR 7,855,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 10/05/16 (11,919 )
USD 11,535,083 GBP 8,796,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 10/05/16 (24,772 )
USD 1,011,090 GBP 771,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 10/05/16 (2,171 )
NOK 33,703,812 USD 4,000,000 Citibank N.A. 10/07/16 45,031
USD 4,000,000 NOK 33,715,840 Goldman Sachs International 10/07/16 (46,475 )
CHF 799,328 USD 830,000 Goldman Sachs International 10/25/16 (14,748 )
CHF 794,742 USD 820,000 JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. 10/25/16 (9,426 )
SEK 17,213,055 USD 2,050,000 Citibank N.A. 10/25/16 (34,040 )
USD 2,050,000 SEK 17,128,958 Goldman Sachs International 10/25/16 43,889
MXN 14,685,693 USD 780,000 Citibank N.A. 2/03/17 (10,617 )
USD 1,250,000 MXN 22,971,800 HSBC Bank PLC 2/03/17 46,508
USD 4,800,000 MXN 92,410,464 JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. 2/03/17 (41,382 )
Total $ (34,255 )

Exchange-Traded Options Purchased

Description — 30-Year U.S. Treasury Bond Future Put/ Call — Put 9/23/16 Strike Price — USD 166.00 27 Value — $ 12,234
90-Day Euro Future Put 10/14/16 USD 99.00 160 12,000
Total $ 24,234

OTC Interest Rate Swaptions Purchased

Description — 10-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 2.25 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 2/17/17 USD 3,000 Value — $ 224,938
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Citibank N.A. Call 1.55 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 1/25/18 USD 40,000 403,397
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 1.60 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 8/16/18 USD 3,500 143,363
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Call 1.60 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 8/16/18 USD 3,500 144,195
30-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Call 3.12 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 9/17/20 USD 800 280,939
30-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 3.12 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 9/17/20 USD 800 280,939
30-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 2.42 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 2/08/21 USD 670 151,816
30-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 2.50 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/27/21 USD 500 120,427
10-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 3.03 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 12/10/25 USD 2,000 269,938
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 2.83 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 1/13/26 USD 2,000 246,269
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.75 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 9/20/16 GBP 5,000 1
30-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 3.30 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 9/21/16 USD 4,020 —
30-Year Interest Rate Swap Citibank N.A. Put 2.85 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 10/14/16 USD 6,000 14
30-Year Interest Rate Swap UBS AG Put 2.85 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 10/14/16 USD 6,000 14
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.85 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 1/13/17 USD 6,000 29,970
30-Year Interest Rate Swap Bank of America N.A. Put 2.85 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 1/13/17 USD 6,000 3,391
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.80 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 1/23/17 USD 2,300 14,880
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Put 1.75 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 2/17/17 USD 8,000 72,414
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.70 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 2/23/17 USD 5,000 54,112
30-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 2.40 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/13/17 USD 2,650 23,280
30-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 2.55 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/04/19 USD 3,600 156,405
30-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 3.12 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 9/17/20 USD 800 28,178
30-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 3.12 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 9/17/20 USD 800 28,178
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Bank of America N.A. Put 3.50 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 2/01/21 USD 4,000 54,589
30-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 2.42 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 2/08/21 USD 670 53,293
30-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 2.50 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/27/21 USD 500 37,937
10-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 3.03 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 12/10/25 USD 2,000 76,558
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 2.83 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 1/13/26 USD 2,000 86,548
Total $ 2,985,983

See Notes to Financial Statements.

28 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

OTC Options Purchased

Description — AUD Currency Call Deutsche Bank AG 09/12/16 CAD 1.01 AUD 10,845 Value — $ 3,383
AUD Currency Call UBS AG 09/22/16 NZD 1.07 AUD 16,105 5,289
AUD Currency Call Barclays Bank PLC 10/20/16 CAD 1.00 AUD 16,190 73,772
EUR Currency Put Deutsche Bank AG 09/20/16 SEK 9.35 EUR 10,980 4,973
EUR Currency Put Deutsche Bank AG 09/22/16 JPY 113.00 EUR 7,035 32,723
USD Currency Put UBS AG 10/21/16 SEK 8.25 USD 12,320 32,956
USD Currency Put JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. 02/01/17 MXN 17.06 USD 18,990 61,774
Total $ 214,870

OTC Interest Rate Swaptions Written

Description Counterparty Put/ Call Pay/Receive Exercise Rate Floating Rate Index Notional Amount (000) Value
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Call 2.10 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 12/05/16 USD 6,700 $ (284,495 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 0.01 % Pay 6-Month EURIBOR 2/10/17 EUR 39,800 (354,954 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 1.50 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 2/17/17 USD 4,500 (89,986 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 0.01 % Pay 6-Month EURIBOR 2/17/17 EUR 4,500 (40,353 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap UBS AG Call 0.01 % Pay 6-Month EURIBOR 3/10/17 EUR 10,000 (90,964 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 1.51 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 6/28/17 USD 2,000 (51,965 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 1.57 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 8/03/17 USD 3,300 (99,167 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Call 0.15 % Pay 6-Month EURIBOR 12/04/17 EUR 5,700 (88,984 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 1.05 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 12/15/17 USD 39,800 (177,400 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 0.88 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 1/08/18 USD 8,200 (27,519 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Citibank N.A. Call 1.05 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 1/25/18 USD 60,000 (281,356 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Call 0.70 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 2/09/18 USD 11,000 (27,484 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 0.90 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 2/12/18 USD 17,600 (64,833 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 1.00 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 3/16/18 USD 6,500 (29,664 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Call 1.00 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 3/19/18 USD 38,200 (175,518 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Call 0.85 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/06/18 USD 25,000 (92,491 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Call 0.75 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/12/18 USD 38,200 (117,471 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Call 0.90 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/16/18 USD 38,800 (156,305 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Call 0.85 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/27/18 USD 15,000 (56,203 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Call 0.90 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 4/30/18 USD 17,100 (70,446 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Call 1.56 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 7/06/18 USD 690 (26,495 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Royal Bank of Canada Call 1.65 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 8/01/18 USD 4,750 (207,102 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Call 1.35 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 8/16/18 USD 4,800 (148,348 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Call 1.35 % Pay 3-Month LIBOR 8/16/18 USD 4,800 (148,348 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 0.75 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 9/02/16 EUR 10,400 (1 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.55 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 9/20/16 GBP 10,000 (1 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 2.45 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 9/21/16 USD 16,900 (2 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 2.00 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 10/03/16 USD 1,000 (7 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 2.10 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 12/05/16 USD 6,700 (1,342 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 2.20 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 1/09/17 USD 3,600 (1,094 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 0.50 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 2/10/17 EUR 49,800 (9,653 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 3.50 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 2/17/17 USD 3,000 (146 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 0.51 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 2/17/17 EUR 6,000 (1,260 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 0.45 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 2/23/17 EUR 12,100 (3,694 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.60 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/13/17 USD 12,900 (65,981 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.51 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 6/28/17 USD 2,000 (51,857 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.57 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 8/03/17 USD 3,300 (83,567 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Royal Bank of Canada Put 1.75 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 8/11/17 USD 8,000 (147,959 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.15 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 9/11/17 EUR 10,800 (2,454 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Royal Bank of Scotland PLC Put 1.10 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 9/25/17 EUR 10,000 (2,973 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 2.20 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 10/02/17 USD 1,200 (3,385 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Citibank N.A. Put 0.50 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 10/23/17 EUR 3,340 (6,474 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Citibank N.A. Put 1.00 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 10/23/17 EUR 6,670 (3,277 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap UBS AG Put 0.50 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 10/26/17 EUR 6,200 (12,266 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap UBS AG Put 1.00 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 10/26/17 EUR 12,300 (6,208 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 0.50 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 10/30/17 EUR 7,000 (14,122 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.00 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 10/30/17 EUR 14,000 (7,271 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 0.65 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 12/04/17 EUR 10,000 (16,264 )

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 29

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

OTC Interest Rate Swaptions Written (concluded)

Description — 2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.95 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 12/15/17 USD 39,800 Value — $ (54,505 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.88 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 1/08/18 USD 8,200 (14,142 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap UBS AG Put 1.00 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 1/08/18 EUR 7,200 (6,068 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Citibank N.A. Put 2.30 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 1/25/18 USD 20,000 (16,215 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 1.70 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 2/09/18 USD 11,000 (29,782 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 1.90 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 2/12/18 USD 17,600 (33,005 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 0.75 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 3/05/18 EUR 15,000 (30,420 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 0.35 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 3/09/18 EUR 22,310 (118,334 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 0.65 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 3/12/18 EUR 3,450 (9,086 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 2.00 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 3/16/18 USD 6,500 (11,281 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 2.00 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 3/19/18 USD 38,200 (67,080 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA. Put 1.85 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 3/29/18 USD 5,000 (11,882 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.85 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/06/18 USD 25,000 (60,158 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.75 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/12/18 USD 38,200 (111,771 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 1.70 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/16/18 USD 38,800 (125,148 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 1.75 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/27/18 USD 15,000 (45,555 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 1.90 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/30/18 USD 17,100 (40,541 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC Put 1.60 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 6/18/18 USD 10,000 (43,416 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.45 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 6/27/18 USD 10,000 (54,995 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Citibank N.A. Put 1.40 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 7/05/18 USD 10,000 (59,983 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 1.56 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 7/06/18 USD 690 (28,612 )
5-Year Interest Rate Swap Deutsche Bank AG Put 0.50 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 7/16/18 EUR 10,730 (61,026 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Royal Bank of Canada Put 1.65 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 8/01/18 USD 4,750 (179,830 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Put 1.90 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 8/17/18 USD 8,000 (227,966 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.70 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 8/20/18 USD 5,500 (23,146 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Goldman Sachs Bank USA Put 1.75 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 4/04/19 USD 40,000 (221,157 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 0.40 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 7/08/19 EUR 21,060 (63,230 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap Barclays Bank PLC Put 0.40 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 7/08/19 EUR 1,975 (5,930 )
2-Year Interest Rate Swap JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Put 0.40 % Receive 6-Month EURIBOR 7/08/19 EUR 1,965 (5,900 )
10-Year Interest Rate Swap Bank of America N.A. Put 5.50 % Receive 3-Month LIBOR 2/01/21 USD 10,000 (36,151 )
Total $ (5,145,424 )

OTC Options Written

Description — AUD Currency Call Barclays Bank PLC 10/20/16 CAD 1.01 AUD 16,190 Value — $ (43,110 )
USD Currency Call JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. 2/01/17 MXN 21.22 USD 18,990 (201,237 )
USD Currency Put UBS AG 10/21/16 CHF 0.94 USD 12,320 (24,307 )
Total $ (268,654 )

Centrally Cleared Credit Default Swaps — Buy Protection

Issuer/Index — Markit iTraxx XO, Series 25, Version 1 5.00 % 6/20/21 EUR 350 Unrealized Depreciation — $ (12,404 )

Centrally Cleared Interest Rate Swaps

Fixed Rate — 0.77% 1 Floating Rate — 3-Month LIBOR Effective Date — N/A 2/05/18 USD 107,000 Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ 345,118
1.13% 2 3-Month LIBOR 8/07/18 3 8/07/20 USD 7,000 (17,647 )
1.18% 2 3-Month LIBOR 8/13/18 3 8/12/20 USD 6,400 (10,691 )
1.19% 2 3-Month LIBOR 8/14/18 3 8/14/20 USD 5,000 (7,085 )
1.24% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 8/20/20 USD 5,000 2,555
1.26% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 8/21/20 USD 3,000 290

See Notes to Financial Statements.

30 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Centrally Cleared Interest Rate Swaps (concluded)

Fixed Rate — 1.26% 2 3-Month LIBOR 8/21/18 3 8/21/20 USD 20,500 Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ (1,219 )
1.26% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 8/23/20 USD 4,860 203
1.31% 1 3-Month LIBOR 8/31/18 3 8/31/20 USD 3,500 (2,846 )
1.31% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 8/31/20 USD 1,500 (1,425 )
1.33% 1 3-Month LIBOR 8/31/18 3 8/31/20 USD 3,240 (3,933 )
1.33% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 8/31/20 USD 3,240 (4,123 )
0.78% 1 Fed Funds Effective Rate plus 0.25% N/A 2/28/21 USD 26,550 41,963
1.18% 1 3-Month LIBOR 1/05/17 3 2/28/21 USD 32,890 28,550
0.00% 2 6-Month EURIBOR N/A 6/28/21 EUR 3,500 1,270
1.00% 2 3-Month LIBOR N/A 6/28/21 USD 1,000 (9,058 )
0.00% 1 6-Month EURIBOR N/A 7/14/21 EUR 2,350 3,076
1.05% 2 3-Month LIBOR N/A 7/14/21 USD 3,900 (26,655 )
0.00% 1 6-Month EURIBOR 10/19/16 3 10/19/21 EUR 2,100 (60 )
0.08% 2 6-Month EURIBOR 8/14/18 3 8/14/23 EUR 2,450 (3,265 )
1.33% 1 3-Month LIBOR 12/30/16 3 8/15/23 USD 9,700 (2,151 )
1.40% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 8/16/26 USD 200 611
1.41% 2 3-Month LIBOR N/A 8/25/26 USD 1,640 (3,626 )
2.41% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 1/19/46 USD 300 (52,916 )
2.33% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 1/25/46 USD 300 (47,258 )
2.25% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 2/05/46 USD 400 (55,582 )
2.16% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 2/12/46 USD 500 (58,339 )
2.11% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 4/07/46 USD 300 (30,843 )
1.96% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 6/21/46 USD 300 (19,920 )
1.76% 1 3-Month LIBOR N/A 7/15/46 USD 100 (1,745 )
1.72% 1 3-Month LIBOR 8/25/16 3 8/25/46 USD 250 (1,523 )
Total $ 61,726
1 Trust pays the
fixed rate and receives the floating rate.
2 Trust pays the
floating rate and receives the fixed rate.
3 Forward
swap.

OTC Credit Default Swaps — Buy Protection

Issuer/Index — Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. Pay Fixed Rate — 1.00% Deutsche Bank AG 9/20/17 USD 1 Value — $ (5 ) Premiums Paid — $ 4 Unrealized Depreciation — $ (9 )
Westpac Banking Corp. 1.00% Deutsche Bank AG 9/20/17 USD 1 (4 ) 3 (7 )
Total $ (9 ) $ 7 $ (16 )

OTC Credit Default Swaps — Sell Protection

Issuer/Index — MetLife, Inc. 1.00 % Credit Suisse International 9/20/16 A- USD 1,080 Value — $ 2,694 Premiums (Received) — $ (1,126 ) Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ 3,820
MetLife, Inc. 1.00 % Deutsche Bank AG 9/20/16 A- USD 1,460 3,642 (1,379 ) 5,021
MetLife, Inc. 1.00 % Goldman Sachs Bank USA 9/20/16 A- USD 1,000 2,495 (912 ) 3,407
MetLife, Inc. 1.00 % Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC 9/20/16 A- USD 1,810 4,515 (1,677 ) 6,192
MetLife, Inc. 1.00 % Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC 9/20/16 A- USD 550 1,372 (452 ) 1,824
MetLife, Inc. 1.00 % Citibank N.A. 12/20/16 A- USD 595 2,743 (2,691 ) 5,434
MetLife, Inc. 1.00 % Citibank N.A. 12/20/16 A- USD 575 2,663 (2,819 ) 5,482
Markit CMBX North America, Series 8 3.00 % Barclays Bank PLC 10/17/57 NR USD 5,000 (820,502 ) (528,977 ) (291,525 )
Markit CMBX North America, Series 8 3.00 % Credit Suisse International 10/17/57 NR USD 2,500 (410,251 ) (261,322 ) (148,929 )
Total $ (1,210,629 ) $ (801,355 ) $ (409,274 )
1 Using Standard
& Poor’s (“S&P’s”) rating of the issuer or the underlying securities of the indes, as applicable.
2 The maximum
potential amount the Trust may pay should a negative credit event take place as defined under the terms of the agreement.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 31

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

OTC Interest Rate Swaps

Fixed Rate — SIFMA Rate 1
1 Trust pays the
fixed rate and receives the floating rate.
2 Forward
swap.

Transactions in Options Written for the Year Ended August 31, 2016

Notional (000)
Contracts AUD CAD EUR GBP NZD USD Premiums Received
Outstanding options, beginning of year 449 — — 16,350 — — $ 173,900 $ 2,666,359
Options written 186 41,615 — 121,550 — 28,040 534,520 6,975,375
Options exercised — — — — — (28,040 ) (24,000 ) (670,405 )
Options expired — (25,425 ) — (14,160 ) — — (35,380 ) (702,766 )
Options closed (635 ) — — (63,740 ) — — (283,110 ) (5,206,884 )
Outstanding options, end of year — 16,190 — 60,000 — — $ 365,930 $ 3,061,679
Puts
Notional (000)
Contracts AUD CAD EUR GBP NZD USD Premiums Received
Outstanding options, beginning of year — — — 56,000 — — $ 208,200 $ 4,126,898
Options written 110 14,960 15,285 312,605 34,000 106,570 711,290 10,554,058
Options exercised — — — (3,630 ) — — — (8,166 )
Options expired — — (15,285 ) (54,390 ) (24,000 ) (78,525 ) (57,380 ) (1,768,049 )
Options closed (110 ) (14,960 ) — (68,285 ) — (28,045 ) (411,850 ) (6,997,257 )
Outstanding options, end of year — — — 242,300 10,000 — $ 450,260 $ 5,907,484

Derivative Financial Instruments Categorized by Risk Exposure

As of period end, the fair values of derivative financial instruments located in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities were as follows:

Credit Contracts Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts Interest Rate Contracts Total
Assets — Derivative Financial Instruments
Futures contracts Net unrealized appreciation 1 — — — — $ 195,536 — $ 195,536
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts Unrealized appreciation on forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ 268,565 — — 268,565
Options purchased Investments at value — unaffiliated 2 — — — 214,870 3,010,217 — 3,225,087
Swaps — centrally cleared Net unrealized appreciation 1 — — — — 423,636 — 423,636
Swaps — OTC Unrealized appreciation on OTC derivatives; Swap premiums paid — $ 31,187 — — 26,297 — 57,484
Total — $ 31,187 — $ 483,435 $ 3,655,686 — $ 4,170,308

See Notes to Financial Statements.

32 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Liabilities — Derivative Financial Instruments Commodity Contracts Credit Contracts Equity Contracts Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts Interest Rate Contracts Total
Futures contracts Net unrealized depreciation 1 — — — — $ 233,653 — $ 233,653
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts Unrealized depreciation on forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ 302,820 — — 302,820
Options written Options written at value — — — 268,654 5,145,424 — 5,414,078
Swaps — centrally cleared Net unrealized depreciation 1 — $ 12,404 — — 361,910 — 374,314
Swaps — OTC Unrealized depreciation on OTC derivatives; Swap premiums received — 1,241,825 — — — — 1,241,825
Total — $ 1,254,229 — $ 571,474 $ 5,740,987 — $ 7,566,690
1 Includes cumulative
appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts and centrally cleared swaps, if any, as reported in the Schedules of Investments. Only current day’s variation margin is reported within the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.
2 Includes options
purchased at value as reported in the Schedule of Investments.

For the year ended August 31, 2016, the effect of derivative financial instruments in the Statements of Operations was as follows:

Credit Contracts Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts Interest Rate Contracts Total
Net Realized Gain (Loss) from:
Futures contracts — — — — $ 2,738,560 — $ 2,738,560
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ 2,418,791 — — 2,418,791
Options purchased 1 — — — (1,864,389 ) (21,275 ) — (1,885,664 )
Options written — — — 1,516,897 2,370,997 — 3,887,894
Swaps — $ 241,648 — — (4,507,611 ) — (4,265,963 )
Total — $ 241,648 — $ 2,071,299 $ 580,671 — $ 2,893,618
Commodity Contracts Credit Contracts Equity Contracts Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts Interest Rate Contracts Other Contracts Total
Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on:
Futures contracts — — — — $ 1,159,137 — $ 1,159,137
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ (230,637 ) — — (230,637 )
Options purchased 2 — — — (309,409 ) (1,005 ) — (310,414 )
Options written — — — 144,893 2,290,324 — 2,435,217
Swaps — $ (509,296 ) — — 214,861 — (294,435 )
Total — $ (509,296 ) — $ (395,153 ) $ 3,663,317 — $ 2,758,868
1 Options purchased
are included in net realized gain (loss) from investments.
2 Options purchased
are included in net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments.

Average Quarterly Balances of Outstanding Derivative Financial Instruments

Futures contracts:
Average notional value of contracts — long $ 299,103,926
Average notional value of contracts — short $ 180,387,482
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts:
Average amounts purchased — in USD $ 64,786,917
Average amounts sold — in USD $ 28,779,249
Options:
Average value of option contracts purchased $ 337,444
Average value of option contracts written $ 232,344
Average notional value of swaption contracts purchased $ 95,586,437
Average notional value of swaption contracts written $ 875,476,254
Credit default swaps:
Average notional value — buy protection $ 1,898,602
Average notional value — sell protection $ 12,695,000
Interest rate swaps:
Average notional value — pays fixed rate $ 163,197,384
Average notional amount — receives fixed rate $ 52,841,004

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 33

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

For more information about the Trust’s investment risks regarding derivative financial instruments, refer to the Notes to Financial Statements.

Derivative Financial Instruments — Offsetting as of Period End

The Trust’s derivative assets and liabilities (by type) were as follows:

Assets
Derivative Financial Instruments:
Futures contracts $ 75,335 $ 3,169
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts 268,565 302,820
Options 3,225,087 1 5,414,078
Swaps — centrally cleared 5,906 —
Swaps — OTC 2 57,484 1,241,825
Total derivative assets and liabilities in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities $ 3,632,377 $ 6,961,892
Derivatives not subject to a master netting agreement or similar agreement (“MNA”) (105,475 ) (3,169 )
Total derivative assets and liabilities subject to an MNA $ 3,526,902 $ 6,958,723
1 Includes options
purchased at value which is included in Investments at value — unaffiliated in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities and reported in the Schedule of Investments. 2 Includes
unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on OTC swaps and swap premiums paid/received in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

The following table presents the Trust’s derivative assets and liabilities by counterparty net of amounts available for offset under an Master Netting Agreement (“MNA”) and net of the related collateral received and pledged by the Trust:

| Counterparty | Derivative Assets Subject to an MNA by
Counterparty | Derivatives Available for Offset 1 | | | Cash Collateral Received 2 | | Net Amount of Derivative Assets 3 |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Bank of America N.A. | $ 58,646 | $ (36,151 | ) | — | — | | $ 22,495 |
| Barclays Bank PLC | 642,224 | (642,224 | ) | — | — | | — |
| BNP Paribas S.A. | 1,908 | (1,908 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Citibank N.A. | 566,770 | (427,346 | ) | — | — | | 139,424 |
| Credit Suisse International | 3,820 | (3,820 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Deutsche Bank AG | 356,396 | (356,396 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Goldman Sachs Bank USA | 189,783 | (189,783 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Goldman Sachs International | 43,889 | (43,889 | ) | — | — | | — |
| HSBC Bank PLC | 88,911 | (44,825 | ) | — | — | | 44,086 |
| JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. | 1,311,671 | (491,876 | ) | — | $ (520,000 | ) | 299,795 |
| Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC | 8,016 | (8,016 | ) | — | — | | — |
| UBS AG | 38,259 | (38,259 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Wells Fargo Bank N.A. | 216,609 | (216,609 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Total | $ 3,526,902 | $ (2,501,102 | ) | — | $ (520,000 | ) | $ 505,800 |

| Counterparty | Derivative Liabilities Subject to an MNA by
Counterparty | Derivatives Available for Offset 1 | | | Cash Collateral Pledged 4 | | Net Amount of Derivative Liabilities 5 |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Bank of America N.A. | $ 36,151 | $ (36,151 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Barclays Bank PLC | 2,254,481 | (642,224 | ) | — | $ (1,612,257 | ) | — |
| BNP Paribas S.A. | 2,303 | (1,908 | ) | — | — | | $ 395 |
| Citibank N.A. | 427,346 | (427,346 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Credit Suisse International | 411,377 | (3,820 | ) | — | (407,557 | ) | — |
| Deutsche Bank AG | 979,949 | (356,396 | ) | — | (623,553 | ) | — |
| Goldman Sachs Bank USA | 1,069,069 | (189,783 | ) | — | (879,286 | ) | — |
| Goldman Sachs International | 61,223 | (43,889 | ) | — | — | | 17,334 |
| HSBC Bank PLC | 44,825 | (44,825 | ) | — | — | | — |
| JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. | 491,876 | (491,876 | ) | — | — | | — |
| Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC | 45,545 | (8,016 | ) | — | — | | 37,529 |
| Royal Bank of Canada | 534,891 | — | | — | — | | 534,891 |
| Royal Bank of Scotland PLC | 61,749 | — | | — | — | | 61,749 |
| Standard Chartered Bank | 3,427 | — | | — | — | | 3,427 |
| UBS AG | 158,197 | (38,259 | ) | — | — | | 119,938 |
| Wells Fargo Bank N.A. | 376,314 | (216,609 | ) | — | — | | 159,705 |
| Total | $ 6,958,723 | $ (2,501,102 | ) | — | $ (3,522,653 | ) | $ 934,968 |
| 1 The amount of
derivatives available for offset is limited to the amount of derivative assets and/or liabilities that are subject to an MNA. | | | | | | | |
| 2 Excess of
collateral received from the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes. | | | | | | | |

See Notes to Financial Statements.

34 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

| 3 Net amount
represents the net amount receivable from the counterparty in the event of default. |
| --- |
| 4 Excess of
collateral pledged from the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes. |
| 5 Net amount
represents the net amount payable due to the counterparty in the event of default. |

Fair Value Hierarchy as of Period End

Various inputs are used in determining the fair value of investments and derivative financial instruments. For information about the Trust’s policy regarding valuation of investments and derivative financial instruments, refer to the Notes to Financial Statements.

The following tables summarize the Trust’s investments and derivative financial instruments categorized in the disclosure hierarchy:

Level 1 Level 2 Total
Assets:
Investments:
Long-Term Investments:
Asset-Backed Securities — $ 78,690,093 $ 6,235,302 $ 84,925,395
Common Stocks $ 79,694 107,729 — 187,423
Corporate Bonds — 505,539,569 7,833,603 513,373,172
Floating Rate Loan Interests — 9,091,982 425,295 9,517,277
Foreign Agency Obligations — 23,962,151 — 23,962,151
Municipal Bonds — 26,434,074 — 26,434,074
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities — 105,705,862 — 105,705,862
Preferred Securities 13,995,334 89,718,310 — 103,713,644
U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities — 63,271,495 2 63,271,497
U.S. Treasury Obligations — 155,240,411 — 155,240,411
Short-Term Securities:
Money Market Funds 12,926,909 — — 12,926,909
Options Purchased:
Interest rate contracts 24,234 2,985,983 — 3,010,217
Foreign currency exchange contracts — 214,870 — 214,870
Total $ 27,026,171 $ 1,060,962,529 $ 14,494,202 $ 1,102,482,902
Derivative Financial Instruments 1
Assets:
Credit contracts — $ 31,180 — $ 31,180
Foreign currency exchange contracts — 268,565 — 268,565
Interest rate contracts $ 195,536 449,933 — 645,469
Liabilities:
Credit contracts — (452,874 ) — (452,874 )
Foreign currency exchange contracts — (571,474 ) — (571,474 )
Interest rate contracts (233,653 ) (5,507,334 ) — (5,740,987 )
Total $ (38,117 ) $ (5,782,004 ) — $ (5,820,121 )
1 Derivative
financial instruments are swaps, futures contracts, forward foreign currency exchange contracts and options written. Swaps, futures contracts and forward foreign currency exchange contracts are valued at the unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on
the instrument and options written are shown at value.

The Trust may hold assets and/or liabilities in which the fair value approximates the carrying amount, or face value, including accrued interest, for financial statement purposes. As of period end, such assets and/or liabilities are categorized within the disclosure hierarchy as follows:

Level 1 Level 2 Total
Assets:
Cash $ 44,891 — — $ 44,891
Foreign currency at value 437,584 — — 437,584
Cash pledged:
Centrally cleared swaps 1,239,940 — — 1,239,940
Collateral — OTC derivatives 4,020,000 — — 4,020,000
Futures contracts 1,349,970 — — 1,349,970
Liabilities:
Cash received:
Collateral — OTC derivatives — $ (520,000 ) — (520,000 )
Collateral — reverse repurchase agreements — (1,204,000 ) — (1,204,000 )
Reverse repurchase agreements — (288,238,889 ) — (288,238,889 )
Total $ 7,092,385 $ (289,962,889 ) — $ (282,870,504 )

During the year ended August 31, 2016, there were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 35

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (concluded) BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

A reconciliation of Level 3 investments is presented when the Trust had a significant amount of Level 3 investments at the beginning and/or end of the period in relation to net assets. The following table is a reconciliation of Level 3 investments for which significant unobservable inputs were used in determining fair value:

Asset- Backed Securities Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Total
Assets:
Opening Balance, as of August 31, 2015 $ 22,613,310 $ 5,716,325 — $ 8 $ 357 $ 28,330,000
Transfers into Level 3 — — — — — —
Transfers out of Level 3 1 (11,329,317 ) — — — — (11,329,317 )
Accrued discounts/premiums (194,024 ) — $ 511 — — (193,513 )
Net realized gain (425,159 ) — — 8 4 (425,147 )
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 2,3 256,242 524,704 3,459 (8 ) (355 ) 784,042
Purchases — 1,621,622 421,325 — — 2,042,947
Sales (4,685,750 ) (29,048 ) — (8 ) (4 ) (4,714,810 )
Closing Balance, as of August 31, 2016 $ 6,235,302 $ 7,833,603 $ 425,295 — $ 2 $ 14,494,202
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments still held at August 31, 2016 2 $ 329,847 $ 524,704 $ 3,459 $ (8 ) $ (355 ) $ 857,647
1 As of August 31, 2015, the Trust used significant unobservable inputs in determining the value of certain investments. As of August 31, 2016, the Trust
used observable inputs in determining the value of the same investments. As a result, investments at beginning of period value were transferred from Level 3 to Level 2 in the disclosure hierarchy
2 Included in the related net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Operations.
3 Any difference between net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments held
as of August 31, 2016 is generally due to investments no longer held or categorized as Level 3 at period end.

Certain of the Trust’s investments that are categorized as Level 3 were valued utilizing third party pricing information without adjustment. Such valuations are based on unobservable inputs. A significant change in third party information inputs could result in a significantly lower or higher value of such Level 3 investments.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

36 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments August 31, 2016 BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT) (Percentages shown are based on Net Assets)

Common Stocks Shares Value
Banks — 0.2%
Bank of America Corp. 66,105 $ 1,066,935
Citigroup, Inc. 21,622 1,032,234
JPMorgan Chase & Co. 15,066 1,016,955
Wells Fargo & Co. 20,755 1,054,354
4,170,478
Capital Markets — 1.9%
American Capital Ltd. (a) 1,522,327 25,712,103
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. 5,851 991,510
Morgan Stanley 33,459 1,072,696
Uranium Participation Corp. (a) 176,860 528,665
28,304,974
Chemicals — 0.1%
Advanced Emissions Solutions, Inc. (a) 168,580 1,250,864
Consumer Finance — 1.5%
Ally Financial, Inc. 1,126,277 22,570,591
Diversified Financial Services — 0.1%
Concrete Investments II S.C.A. (a) 4,997 —
Kcad Holdings I Ltd. (a) 2,223,465,984 755,978
755,978
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 0.0%
Broadview Networks Holdings, Inc. (a) 192,400 250,119
Energy Equipment & Services (b) — 0.1%
Laricina Energy Ltd. (a) 211,764 2
Osum Oil Sands Corp. (a) 400,000 957,755
957,757
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 0.4%
Amaya, Inc. (a) 377,280 5,664,666
Media — 0.0%
Emmis Communications Corp., Class A (a) 7,210 28,984
Metals & Mining — 0.1%
Peninsula Energy Ltd. (a) 2,051,920 925,273
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 0.3%
Denbury Resources, Inc. (a) 138,760 419,427
Gener8 Maritime Corp. (a) 965,338 4,836,343
Whiting Petroleum Corp. (a) 16,886 123,099
5,378,869
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) — 0.0%
Ovation Acquisition I LLC, (Acquired 12/29/15, cost $187,463) (c) 12,175 12,175
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment — 0.0%
SunPower Corp. (a) 1,025 10,209
Wireless Telecommunication Services — 0.2%
T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (a) 59,550 2,759,547
Total Common Stocks — 4.9% 73,040,484
Asset-Backed Securities Par (000)
Asset-Backed Securities — 3.1%
ALM Loan Funding, Series 2013-7RA (d)(e):
Class C, 4.16%, 4/24/24 USD 2,340 2,278,658
Class D, 5.71%, 4/24/24 2,360 2,209,253
ALM VII R-2, Ltd., Series 2013-7R2A, Class C, 4.16%, 4/24/24 (d)(e) 500 486,116
ALM XII Ltd., Series 2015-12A (d)(e):
Class C1, 4.43%, 4/16/27 1,500 1,439,400
Class D, 6.18%, 4/16/27 250 227,188
Asset-Backed Securities Value
Asset-Backed Securities (continued)
ALM XIV Ltd., Series 2014-14A, Class C, 4.19%, 7/28/26 (d)(e) USD 500 $ 484,710
AMMC CLO 18, Ltd., Series 2016-18A, Class D, 5.67%, 5/26/28 (d)(e) 500 498,750
AMMC CLO IX, Ltd., Series 2011-9A (d)(e):
Class DR, 6.33%, 1/15/22 1,000 1,009,176
Class ER, 8.33%, 1/15/22 1,000 995,560
AMMC CLO Ltd., Series 2014-15A, Class C1, 4.12%, 12/09/26 (d)(e) 1,000 1,000,000
Anchorage Capital CLO 3, Ltd., Series 2014-3A, Class C, 4.24%, 4/28/26 (d)(e) 500 478,739
Anchorage Capital CLO 8, Ltd., Series 2016-8A, Class D, 4.92%, 7/28/28 (d)(e) 1,000 952,500
Apidos CLO XVIII, Series 2014-18A, Class C, 4.35%, 7/22/26 (d)(e) 550 536,037
Ares XXXIX CLO, Ltd., Series 2016-39A, Class E, 7.94%, 7/18/28 (d)(e) 1,000 927,700
Ares XXXVII CLO, Ltd., Series 2015-4A, Class D1, 7.48%, 10/15/26 (d)(e) 500 483,750
Atlas Senior Loan Fund V Ltd., Series 2014-1A, Class C, 3.63%, 7/16/26 (d)(e) 250 249,285
Atlas Senior Loan Fund, Ltd., Series 2012-1A (d)(e):
Class A3LR, 3.26%, 8/15/24 500 500,000
Class B1LR, 4.66%, 8/15/24 500 500,000
Atrium CDO Corp., Series 9A, Class D, 4.33%, 2/28/24 (d)(e) 750 731,448
Ballyrock CLO, Ltd., Series 2016-1A, Class C, 1.00%, 10/15/28 (d)(e)(f) 1,000 996,500
Benefit Street Partners CLO, Ltd., Series 2014-IVA, Class C,
4.20%, 7/20/26 (d)(e) 500 465,626
BlueMountain CLO Ltd., Series 2015-1A, Class D, 6.12%, 4/13/27 (d)(e) 750 717,053
Carlyle Global Market Strategies CLO Ltd. (d)(e):
Series 2013-3A, Class B, 3.33%, 7/15/25 500 498,819
Series 2014-5A, Class C, 4.83%, 10/16/25 1,000 999,958
Series 2016-3A, Class D, 1.00%, 10/20/29 (f) 500 483,085
Cedar Funding, Ltd., Series 2014-3A, Class D, 4.36%, 5/20/26 (d)(e) 535 518,612
CIFC Funding Ltd. (d)(e):
Series 2014-2A, Class A3L, 3.68%, 5/24/26 500 496,043
Series 2014-3A, Class C1, 3.50%, 7/22/26 1,250 1,248,772
Dryden Senior Loan Fund, Series 2014-36A, Class D, 4.54%, 11/09/25 (d)(e) 1,000 967,726
HPS Loan Management 9-2016, Ltd., Series 9A-2016, Class D2,
7.08%, 7/19/27 (d)(e) 800 731,772
LCM X LP, Series 10AR, Class ER, 6.13%, 4/15/22 (d)(e) 1,000 981,855
LCM XIII LP, Series 13A, Class D, 4.49%, 1/19/23 (d)(e) 500 497,533
LCM XV LP, Series 15A, Class C, 3.93%, 8/25/24 (d)(e) 500 500,016
Madison Park Funding Ltd. (d)(e):
Series 2012-8AR, Class CR, 3.44%, 4/22/22 500 500,102
Series 2012-8AR, Class DR, 4.49%, 4/22/22 250 248,124
Series 2014-14A,Class D, 4.30%, 7/20/26 500 486,198

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 37

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Asset-Backed Securities Value
Asset-Backed Securities (continued)
Mill Creek II CLO, Ltd., Series 2016-1A, Class E, 8.37%, 4/20/28 (d)(e) USD 500 $ 497,500
Neuberger Berman CLO XIII, Ltd., Series 2012-13A, Class C,
3.56%, 1/23/24 (d)(e) 1,000 1,000,500
Neuberger Berman CLO XVII Ltd., Series 2014-17A, Class D,
4.32%, 8/04/25 (d)(e) 500 469,088
Neuberger Berman CLO XVIII Ltd., Series 2014-18A (d)(e):
Class B, 3.97%, 11/14/25 500 500,023
Class C, 4.57%, 11/14/25 1,500 1,450,088
Neuberger Berman CLO XX, Ltd., Series 2015-20A, Class E, 7.12%, 1/15/28
(d)(e) 500 467,525
OCP CLO, Series 2014-7A, Class A1A, 2.30%, 10/20/26 (d)(e) 500 500,763
Octagon Investment Partners 26 Ltd., Series 2016-1A, Class D, 5.63%, 4/15/27 (d)(e) 500 500,659
Octagon Investment Partners 27, Ltd., Series 2016-1A, Class E, 7.76%, 7/15/27 (d)(e) 1,000 978,750
Octagon Investment Partners XII Ltd., Series 2012-1AR, Class ER, 6.13%, 5/05/23 (d)(e) 1,200 1,169,370
Octagon Investment Partners XVII, Ltd., Series 2013-1A, Class A2R, 2.44%, 10/25/25 (d)(e)(f) 1,500 1,500,000
Octagon Investment Partners XXII Ltd., Series 2014-1A (d)(e):
Class C1, 3.95%, 11/25/25 1,000 1,000,180
Class D1, 4.60%, 11/25/25 1,000 956,427
OneMain Financial Issuance Trust, Series 2015-2A, Class C, 4.32%, 7/18/25
(e) 200 198,989
OZLM IX Ltd., Series 2014-9A, Class C, 4.30%, 1/20/27 (d)(e) 1,000 945,458
OZLM XII Ltd., Series 2015-12A, Class D, 6.16%, 4/30/27 (d)(e) 250 210,517
Race Point IX CLO, Ltd., Series 2015-9A, Class A1, 2.19%, 4/15/27 (d)(e) 500 499,000
Sound Point CLO XII, Ltd., Series 2016-2A, Class E, 6.88%, 10/20/28 (d)(e) 500 451,694
Symphony CLO Ltd., Series 2016-17A, Class D, 5.50%, 4/15/28 (d)(e) 250 250,347
Symphony CLO XI, Ltd., Series 2013-11A, Class B1, 2.88%, 1/17/25 (d)(e) 500 499,963
Venture XIII CLO Ltd., Series 2013-13A, Class D, 4.21%, 6/10/25 (d)(e) 1,000 962,496
Venture XIX CLO Ltd., Series 2014-19A, Class C, 3.98%, 1/15/27 (d)(e) 700 700,000
Venture XVII CLO, Ltd., Series 2014-17A, Class B1, 2.78%, 7/15/26 (d)(e) 500 499,887
Voya CLO Ltd., Series 2014-4A, Class C, 4.67%, 10/14/26 (d)(e) 1,750 1,719,765
Westcott Park Clo, Ltd., Series 2016-1A (d)(e):
Class D, 5.01%, 7/20/28 500 494,500
Class E, 7.86%, 7/20/28 500 475,000
Total Asset-Backed Securities — 3.1% 46,224,553
Corporate Bonds
Aerospace & Defense — 2.0%
Accudyne Industries Borrower/Accudyne Industries LLC, 7.75%, 12/15/20 (e) 3,118 2,408,655
Corporate Bonds Value
Aerospace & Defense (continued)
Bombardier, Inc. (e):
5.50%, 9/15/18 USD 1,217 $ 1,250,468
6.00%, 10/15/22 1,212 1,145,340
6.13%, 1/15/23 1,451 1,363,940
7.50%, 3/15/25 3,811 3,620,450
KLX, Inc., 5.88%, 12/01/22 (e) 2,025 2,125,237
Meccanica Holdings USA, Inc., 6.25%, 1/15/40 (e) 100 100,000
TransDigm, Inc.:
5.50%, 10/15/20 1,563 1,604,029
6.00%, 7/15/22 7,850 8,164,000
6.50%, 7/15/24 4,160 4,316,000
6.38%, 6/15/26 (e) 2,912 2,970,240
29,068,359
Air Freight & Logistics — 0.8%
Air Medical Merger Sub Corp., 6.38%, 5/15/23 (e) 1,321 1,291,278
National Air Cargo Group, Inc.:
11.88%, 5/02/18 536 536,258
11.88%, 5/08/18 555 554,866
XPO Logistics, Inc.:
7.88%, 9/01/19 (e) 2,958 3,076,320
5.75%, 6/15/21 EUR 383 445,454
6.50%, 6/15/22 (e) USD 4,105 4,264,069
6.13%, 9/01/23 (e) 1,617 1,661,468
11,829,713
Airlines — 1.8%
American Airlines Pass-Through Trust, Series 2013-2, Class C, 6.00%, 1/15/17 (e) 6,255 6,333,541
Continental Airlines Pass-Through Trust, Series 1997-4, Class B, 6.90%, 7/02/18 106 108,368
Delta Air Lines Pass-Through Trust, Series 2009-1, Class B, 9.75%,
6/17/18 701 721,597
Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA Pass-Through Trust, Series 2016-1, Class B, 7.50%, 5/10/25 (e) 1,895 1,868,982
US Airways Pass-Through Trust:
Series 2012-2, Class C, 5.45%, 6/03/18 5,720 5,927,350
Series 2013-1, Class B, 5.38%, 5/15/23 4,764 4,931,247
Virgin Australia Trust, Series 2013-1 (e):
Class C, 7.13%, 10/23/18 4,625 4,682,618
Class D, 8.50%, 10/23/16 2,743 2,754,119
27,327,822
Auto Components — 1.7%
Adient Global Holdings Ltd.:
3.50%, 8/15/24 250 290,407
4.88%, 8/15/26 (e) 2,105 2,133,944
CNH Industrial Finance Europe SA, 2.88%, 5/17/23 725 836,102
Faurecia, 3.63%, 6/15/23 300 349,694
Fiat Chrysler Finance Europe:
4.75%, 3/22/21 EUR 400 497,852
4.75%, 7/15/22 1,217 1,504,317
FTE Verwaltungs GmbH, 9.00%, 7/15/20 100 117,455
Goodyear Dunlop Tires Europe BV, 3.75%, 12/15/23 100 117,986
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 5.00%, 5/31/26 USD 471 493,076
Icahn Enterprises LP/Icahn Enterprises Finance Corp., 4.88%, 3/15/19 7,711 7,672,445
Schaeffler Finance BV, 4.75%, 5/15/23 (e) 1,440 1,497,600
Schaeffler Holding Finance BV (g):
(5.75% Cash or 6.50% PIK), 5.75%, 11/15/21 EUR 360 435,193
(6.25% Cash), 6.25%, 11/15/19 (e) USD 2,130 2,209,875
(6.75% Cash), 6.75%, 11/15/22 (e) 3,951 4,366,169

See Notes to Financial Statements.

38 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Auto Components (continued)
Schaeffler Holding Finance BV (g) (continued):
(6.88% Cash or 7.63% PIK), 6.88%, 8/15/18 (e) USD 1,000 $ 1,025,000
(6.88% Cash), 6.88%, 8/15/18 EUR 510 583,102
UCI International, Inc., 8.63%, 2/15/19 (a)(h) USD 7,080 1,522,200
ZF North America Capital, Inc., 4.50%, 4/29/22 (e) 321 339,457
25,991,874
Banks — 1.5%
Allied Irish Banks PLC, 4.13%, 11/26/25 (d) EUR 820 868,936
Banco Espirito Santo SA (a)(h):
4.75%, 1/15/18 1,900 487,452
4.00%, 1/21/19 1,100 282,209
Bankia SA, 4.00%, 5/22/24 (d) 1,000 1,111,810
CIT Group, Inc.:
5.25%, 3/15/18 USD 4,320 4,503,600
6.63%, 4/01/18 (e) 1,400 1,491,700
5.50%, 2/15/19 (e) 6,919 7,325,491
5.00%, 8/01/23 560 593,600
6.00%, 4/01/36 2,800 2,716,000
Commerzbank AG, 7.75%, 3/16/21 EUR 400 539,061
HSH Nordbank AG, 0.50%, 2/14/17 (d) 810 868,187
Ibercaja Banco SA, 5.00%, 7/28/25 (d) 600 621,909
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, 3.93%, 9/15/26 200 233,541
21,643,496
Beverages — 0.1%
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh Holdings USA, Inc., 4.13%, 5/15/23 275 322,455
Verallia Packaging SASU, 5.13%, 8/01/22 775 925,419
1,247,874
Biotechnology — 0.1%
Senvion Holding GmbH, 6.63%, 11/15/20 700 820,324
Building Materials — 0.1%
Cemex Finance LLC, 4.63%, 6/15/24 400 464,696
Dry Mix Solutions Investissements SAS, 5.50%, 3/15/23 (d) 200 227,552
Titan Global Finance PLC, 3.50%, 6/17/21 100 114,885
807,133
Building Products — 2.1%
American Builders & Contractors Supply Co., Inc. (e):
5.63%, 4/15/21 USD 1,315 1,364,313
5.75%, 12/15/23 982 1,038,465
BMBG Bond Finance SCA, 3.00%, 6/15/21 EUR 225 257,541
Builders FirstSource, Inc., 5.63%, 9/01/24 (e) USD 1,583 1,610,702
Building Materials Corp. of America, 6.00%, 10/15/25 (e) 4,118 4,514,357
CPG Merger Sub LLC, 8.00%, 10/01/21 (e) 4,330 4,416,600
HeidelbergCement AG, 2.25%, 3/30/23 EUR 425 508,678
Masonite International Corp., 5.63%, 3/15/23 (e) USD 2,950 3,127,000
Ply Gem Industries, Inc., 6.50%, 2/01/22 4,730 4,883,725
Standard Industries, Inc. (e):
5.13%, 2/15/21 949 1,002,381
5.50%, 2/15/23 1,576 1,672,530
USG Corp.:
9.50%, 1/15/18 4,320 4,730,400
5.88%, 11/01/21 (e) 385 403,769
5.50%, 3/01/25 (e) 1,314 1,425,690
30,956,151
Capital Markets — 2.0%
American Capital Ltd., 6.50%, 9/15/18 (e) 3,840 3,908,736
Corporate Bonds Value
Capital Markets (continued)
BCD Acquisition, Inc., 9.63%, 9/15/23 (e) USD 745 $ 778,525
Blackstone CQP Holdco LP, 9.30%, 3/19/19 20,290 20,492,983
E*Trade Financial Corp.:
5.38%, 11/15/22 1,232 1,322,860
4.63%, 9/15/23 2,784 2,889,402
Series A, 0.00%, 8/31/19 (i)(j) 373 947,166
30,339,672
Chemicals — 1.6%
Axalta Coating Systems LLC, 4.88%, 8/15/24 (e) 1,686 1,757,655
Chemours Co.:
6.63%, 5/15/23 1,115 1,070,400
7.00%, 5/15/25 1,826 1,747,254
Huntsman International LLC:
4.88%, 11/15/20 286 296,725
5.13%, 4/15/21 EUR 679 814,195
5.13%, 11/15/22 USD 1,254 1,294,755
Ineos Finance PLC, 4.00%, 5/01/23 EUR 548 626,548
Inovyn Finance PLC, 6.25%, 5/15/21 200 235,918
Momentive Performance Materials, Inc., 3.88%, 10/24/21 USD 4,488 3,709,108
Montichem Holdco 3 SA, 5.25%, 6/15/21 EUR 211 239,361
NOVA Chemicals Corp. (e):
5.25%, 8/01/23 USD 349 362,088
5.00%, 5/01/25 415 428,487
Platform Specialty Products Corp. (e):
10.38%, 5/01/21 468 491,400
6.50%, 2/01/22 7,764 7,356,390
PQ Corp., 6.75%, 11/15/22 (e) 2,197 2,328,820
PSPC Escrow Corp., 6.00%, 2/01/23 EUR 394 415,280
WR Grace & Co-Conn, 5.13%, 10/01/21 (e) USD 232 247,080
23,421,464
Commercial Services & Supplies — 1.5%
AA Bond Co., Ltd., 5.50%, 7/31/43 GBP 400 538,391
ADS Waste Holdings, Inc., 8.25%, 10/01/20 USD 1,341 1,403,021
ADT Corp.:
3.50%, 7/15/22 2,787 2,668,552
4.13%, 6/15/23 537 526,260
Avis Budget Car Rental LLC/Avis Budget Finance, Inc., 5.50%, 4/01/23 45 46,631
Bilbao Luxembourg SA, (10.50% Cash or 11.25% PIK), 11.06%, 12/01/18 (g) EUR 428 473,126
Brand Energy & Infrastructure Services, Inc., 8.50%, 12/01/21 (e) USD 1,875 1,870,313
Iron Mountain Europe PLC, 6.13%, 9/15/22 GBP 100 139,589
Mobile Mini, Inc., 5.88%, 7/01/24 USD 2,683 2,790,320
Mustang Merger Corp., 8.50%, 8/15/21 (e) 2,688 2,808,960
Silk Bidco AS, 7.50%, 2/01/22 EUR 247 295,216
United Rentals North America, Inc.:
7.63%, 4/15/22 USD 5,555 5,923,019
5.75%, 11/15/24 1,354 1,414,930
Verisure Holding AB, 6.00%, 11/01/22 EUR 775 946,599
21,844,927
Communications Equipment — 2.0%
Alcatel-Lucent USA, Inc., 6.45%, 3/15/29 USD 6,533 7,104,638
CommScope Technologies Finance LLC, 6.00%, 6/15/25 (e) 2,125 2,255,156
CommScope, Inc. (e):
4.38%, 6/15/20 2,278 2,357,730
5.50%, 6/15/24 2,169 2,277,450
Nokia OYJ, 6.63%, 5/15/39 3,596 3,919,640
Zayo Group LLC/Zayo Capital, Inc.:
6.00%, 4/01/23 4,466 4,644,640
6.38%, 5/15/25 6,837 7,214,471
29,773,725

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 39

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Construction & Engineering — 0.5%
AECOM Co.:
5.75%, 10/15/22 USD 716 $ 758,960
5.88%, 10/15/24 2,124 2,323,125
BlueLine Rental Finance Corp., 7.00%, 2/01/19 (e) 2,187 1,891,755
Engility Corp., 8.88%, 9/01/24 (e) 1,064 1,082,620
Novafives SAS, 4.50%, 6/30/21 EUR 320 331,994
Swissport Investments SA, 6.75%, 12/15/21 827 963,994
Weekley Homes LLC/Weekley Finance Corp., 6.00%, 2/01/23 USD 862 793,040
8,145,488
Construction Materials — 2.2%
American Tire Distributors, Inc., 10.25%, 3/01/22 (e) 1,839 1,630,972
Beacon Roofing Supply, Inc., 6.38%, 10/01/23 566 608,450
HD Supply, Inc.:
7.50%, 7/15/20 10,167 10,586,389
5.25%, 12/15/21 (e) 10,967 11,686,655
5.75%, 4/15/24 (e) 3,888 4,140,720
LKQ Italia Bondco SpA, 3.88%, 4/01/24 EUR 500 603,737
Officine MaccaFerri SpA, 5.75%, 6/01/21 300 271,653
PulteGroup, Inc., 5.50%, 3/01/26 USD 1,571 1,680,970
Rexel SA, 3.50%, 6/15/23 EUR 972 1,130,297
32,339,843
Consumer Finance — 2.2%
Alliance Data Systems Corp. (e):
5.25%, 12/01/17 USD 150 153,375
5.38%, 8/01/22 503 495,455
Ally Financial, Inc.:
5.13%, 9/30/24 1,230 1,332,244
4.63%, 3/30/25 2,029 2,105,087
8.00%, 11/01/31 18,930 23,709,825
Navient Corp.:
6.63%, 7/26/21 1,074 1,107,562
5.50%, 1/25/23 165 156,750
6.13%, 3/25/24 642 616,320
5.88%, 10/25/24 723 681,428
5.63%, 8/01/33 1,821 1,493,220
OneMain Financial Holdings LLC (e):
6.75%, 12/15/19 915 960,750
7.25%, 12/15/21 275 288,063
33,100,079
Containers & Packaging — 2.3%
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh Holdings USA, Inc.:
6.75%, 1/31/21 (e) 1,458 1,510,852
4.07%, 5/15/21 (d)(e) 693 705,128
6.00%, 6/30/21 (e) 1,752 1,804,560
4.25%, 1/15/22 EUR 791 915,408
6.75%, 5/15/24 650 784,859
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh MP Holdings USA, Inc. (e):
6.25%, 1/31/19 USD 3,868 3,955,030
4.63%, 5/15/23 1,738 1,768,415
7.25%, 5/15/24 3,608 3,838,010
Ball Corp.:
5.00%, 3/15/22 843 910,440
4.00%, 11/15/23 1,374 1,398,045
Beverage Packaging Holdings Luxembourg II SA, 5.63%, 12/15/16 (e) 978 980,445
Crown European Holdings SA:
4.00%, 7/15/22 EUR 558 697,174
3.38%, 5/15/25 503 594,175
Corporate Bonds Value
Containers & Packaging (continued)
JH-Holding Finance SA, (8.25% Cash), 8.25%, 12/01/22 (g) EUR 300 $ 359,204
Lecta SA, 6.50%, 8/01/23 125 142,220
Norske Skog, 11.75%, 12/15/19 228 200,279
Reynolds Group Issuer, Inc./Reynolds Group Issuer LLC/Reynolds Group Issuer (e):
4.13%, 7/15/21 (d) USD 3,894 3,952,410
5.13%, 7/15/23 899 932,713
7.00%, 7/15/24 3,584 3,839,360
Sappi Papier Holding GmbH, 4.00%, 4/01/23 EUR 150 175,683
Sealed Air Corp.:
4.88%, 12/01/22 (e) USD 709 744,450
4.50%, 9/15/23 EUR 560 696,112
5.13%, 12/01/24 (e) USD 1,976 2,114,320
SGD Group SAS, 5.63%, 5/15/19 EUR 205 235,404
Signode Industrial Group Lux SA/Signode Industrial Group US, Inc., 6.38%, 5/01/22 (e) USD 177 180,540
Smurfit Kappa Acquisitions, 2.75%, 2/01/25 EUR 376 444,063
Stora Enso OYJ, 2.13%, 6/16/23 175 199,658
34,078,957
Diversified Consumer Services — 0.6%
ADT Corp., 4.88%, 7/15/32 (e) USD 798 682,290
APX Group, Inc.:
6.38%, 12/01/19 578 593,167
8.75%, 12/01/20 627 602,704
7.88%, 12/01/22 (e) 975 1,026,187
Cognita Financing PLC, 7.75%, 8/15/21 GBP 225 310,255
Prime Security Services Borrower LLC/Prime Finance, Inc., 9.25%, 5/15/23 (e) USD 3,359 3,657,111
Service Corp. International, 5.38%, 5/15/24 1,690 1,812,525
8,684,239
Diversified Financial Services — 2.5%
Aircastle Ltd.:
7.63%, 4/15/20 128 147,840
5.13%, 3/15/21 643 697,655
5.50%, 2/15/22 2,119 2,301,764
5.00%, 4/01/23 1,404 1,488,240
Deutsche Bank AG, 4.50%, 5/19/26 EUR 600 647,494
DFC Finance Corp., 12.00%, 6/16/20 (e)(g) USD 2,083 1,281,151
FBM Finance, Inc., 8.25%, 8/15/21 (e) 625 654,688
Gala Group Finance PLC, 8.88%, 9/01/18 GBP 681 919,885
Garfunkelux Holdco 3 SA, 8.50%, 11/01/22 225 304,322
HRG Group, Inc., 7.88%, 7/15/19 2,745 2,902,837
International Lease Finance Corp.:
5.88%, 4/01/19 160 172,600
8.25%, 12/15/20 150 179,438
4.63%, 4/15/21 687 728,564
Jefferies Finance LLC/JFIN Co-Issuer Corp. (e):
7.38%, 4/01/20 USD 2,695 2,573,725
6.88%, 4/15/22 2,552 2,315,940
Lehman Brother Holding Escrow, 1.00%, 9/22/18 (a)(h) 430 31,175
Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. (a)(h):
5.38%, 10/17/16 EUR 350 34,005
4.75%, 1/16/17 1,890 183,624
1.00%, 2/05/17 3,950 385,968
1.00%, 12/31/49 USD 1,535 111,288
Mercury Bondco PLC, (8.25% Cash, 9.00% PIK), 8.25%, 5/30/21 (g) EUR 564 657,227
MSCI, Inc., 5.75%, 8/15/25 (e) USD 807 874,586
Pershing Square Holdings, Ltd., 5.50%, 7/15/22 (e) 2,100 2,094,750
ProGroup AG, 5.13%, 5/01/22 EUR 206 246,729

See Notes to Financial Statements.

40 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Diversified Financial Services (continued)
Reynolds Group Issuer, Inc.:
5.75%, 10/15/20 USD 6,454 $ 6,655,687
8.25%, 2/15/21 6,366 6,620,640
UniCredit SpA:
6.95%, 10/31/22 EUR 475 605,186
5.75%, 10/28/25 (d) 700 819,000
4.38%, 1/03/27 (d) 675 749,923
WMG Acquisition Corp., 5.00%, 8/01/23 (e) USD 495 508,613
37,894,544
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 3.0%
CenturyLink, Inc., 6.45%, 6/15/21 6,545 7,031,784
Consolidated Communications, Inc., 6.50%, 10/01/22 1,020 989,400
Frontier Communications Corp.:
8.50%, 4/15/20 2,275 2,454,156
6.25%, 9/15/21 3,005 2,930,837
7.13%, 1/15/23 1,330 1,253,525
7.63%, 4/15/24 1,897 1,783,180
6.88%, 1/15/25 4,331 3,887,073
11.00%, 9/15/25 845 912,600
Level 3 Financing, Inc.:
5.38%, 8/15/22 315 329,222
5.63%, 2/01/23 2,186 2,289,835
5.13%, 5/01/23 3,232 3,357,240
5.38%, 1/15/24 1,771 1,857,336
5.38%, 5/01/25 4,442 4,664,100
5.25%, 3/15/26 (e) 1,973 2,044,521
OTE PLC, 3.50%, 7/09/20 EUR 300 344,206
SoftBank Group Corp.:
4.75%, 7/30/25 110 138,804
5.25%, 7/30/27 100 126,464
Telecom Italia Capital SA:
6.00%, 9/30/34 USD 2,890 2,904,739
7.20%, 7/18/36 690 739,163
Telecom Italia Finance SA, 7.75%, 1/24/33 EUR 380 580,001
Telecom Italia SpA:
6.38%, 6/24/19 GBP 900 1,323,418
3.25%, 1/16/23 EUR 300 363,564
5.88%, 5/19/23 GBP 400 624,124
Telenet Finance V Luxembourg SCA, 6.75%, 8/15/24 EUR 1,982 2,476,121
45,405,413
Electric Utilities — 0.1%
Viridian Group FundCo II Ltd., 7.50%, 3/01/20 454 539,635
Electrical Equipment — 0.2%
Areva SA, 4.88%, 9/23/24 50 54,072
Belden, Inc., 5.50%, 4/15/23 672 798,380
Trionista Holdco GmbH, 5.00%, 4/30/20 1,405 1,611,544
Trionista TopCo GmbH, 6.88%, 4/30/21 418 491,902
2,955,898
Electronic Equipment, Instruments & Components — 0.7%
CDW LLC/CDW Finance Corp.:
5.00%, 9/01/23 USD 4,354 4,511,832
5.50%, 12/01/24 5,917 6,341,249
10,853,081
Energy Equipment & Services — 0.9%
Ensco PLC:
4.70%, 3/15/21 515 444,445
4.50%, 10/01/24 1,189 846,425
5.20%, 3/15/25 932 671,040
Gates Global LLC/Gates Global Co.:
5.75%, 7/15/22 EUR 110 113,016
6.00%, 7/15/22 (e) USD 1,247 1,184,650
Corporate Bonds Value
Energy Equipment & Services (continued)
Genesis Energy LP/Genesis Energy Finance Corp.:
5.75%, 2/15/21 USD 283 $ 280,878
6.75%, 8/01/22 1,526 1,556,520
Noble Holding International Ltd.:
4.63%, 3/01/21 195 163,332
6.95%, 4/01/25 305 248,575
Transocean, Inc.:
3.75%, 10/15/17 1,339 1,335,652
6.00%, 3/15/18 3,455 3,459,319
7.38%, 4/15/18 175 176,750
8.13%, 12/15/21 553 518,438
5.05%, 10/15/22 1,522 1,213,795
Weatherford International Ltd., 7.75%, 6/15/21 933 923,670
13,136,505
Environmental, Maintenance, & Security Service — 0.0%
Befesa Zinc SAU Via Zinc Capital SA, 8.88%, 5/15/18 EUR 380 432,349
Food & Staples Retailing — 2.5%
Albertsons Cos. LLC/Safeway, Inc./New Albertson’s, Inc./Albertson’s LLC (e):
6.63%, 6/15/24 USD 1,082 1,161,635
5.75%, 3/15/25 2,651 2,743,785
Bakkavor Finance 2 PLC, 8.25%, 2/15/18 GBP 326 436,430
Casino Guichard Perrachon SA:
5.98%, 5/26/21 EUR 200 261,270
3.31%, 1/25/23 600 730,783
3.25%, 3/07/24 600 719,105
2.33%, 2/07/25 300 337,742
4.05%, 8/05/26 200 233,701
Dollar Tree, Inc.:
5.25%, 3/01/20 USD 262 272,807
5.75%, 3/01/23 13,049 14,043,986
Family Dollar Stores, Inc., 5.00%, 2/01/21 1,434 1,559,475
R&R Ice Cream PLC, (9.25% Cash or 10.00% PIK), 9.25%, 5/15/18 (g) EUR 823 922,045
Rite Aid Corp.:
9.25%, 3/15/20 USD 2,080 2,194,400
6.75%, 6/15/21 1,091 1,149,641
6.13%, 4/01/23 (e) 9,022 9,739,971
Tesco Corporate Treasury Services PLC, 2.50%, 7/01/24 EUR 130 149,494
Tesco PLC:
5.00%, 3/24/23 GBP 100 145,451
6.00%, 12/14/29 200 308,167
37,109,888
Food Products — 1.7%
Acosta, Inc., 7.75%, 10/01/22 (e) USD 3,347 3,091,791
Aramark Services, Inc.:
5.75%, 3/15/20 321 330,630
5.13%, 1/15/24 1,712 1,775,130
5.13%, 1/15/24 (e) 934 968,441
Darling Global Finance BV, 4.75%, 5/30/22 EUR 100 116,899
FAGE International SA/FAGE USA Dairy Industry, Inc., 5.63%, 8/15/26 (e) USD 1,544 1,596,110
JBS USA LLC/JBS USA Finance, Inc. (e):
7.25%, 6/01/21 340 351,900
5.75%, 6/15/25 1,860 1,887,900
Pinnacle Foods Finance Corp., 5.88%, 1/15/24 (e) 445 479,488
Post Holdings, Inc. (e):
7.75%, 3/15/24 4,599 5,110,639
8.00%, 7/15/25 1,826 2,086,205
5.00%, 8/15/26 2,709 2,702,227

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 41

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Food Products (continued)
Smithfield Foods, Inc.:
5.88%, 8/01/21 (e) USD 891 $ 931,095
6.63%, 8/15/22 1,516 1,606,960
TreeHouse Foods, Inc., 6.00%, 2/15/24 (e) 976 1,061,400
WhiteWave Foods Co., 5.38%, 10/01/22 1,255 1,415,013
25,511,828
Forest Products — 0.0%
Tereos Finance Groupe I SA, 4.13%, 6/16/23 EUR 400 466,236
Health Care Equipment & Supplies — 0.9%
Crimson Merger Sub, Inc., 6.63%, 5/15/22 (e) USD 3,373 3,018,835
DJO Finco, Inc./DJO Finance LLC/DJO Finance Corp., 8.13%, 6/15/21 (e) 6,387 5,620,560
Fresenius Medical Care US Finance, Inc., 5.75%, 2/15/21 (e) 1,580 1,793,300
IDH Finance PLC, 6.25%, 8/15/22 GBP 225 294,099
Mallinckrodt International Finance SA/Mallinckrodt CB LLC (e):
4.88%, 4/15/20 USD 980 1,002,050
5.75%, 8/01/22 1,250 1,254,688
Teleflex, Inc., 4.88%, 6/01/26 684 713,070
13,696,602
Health Care Providers & Services — 6.8%
Acadia Healthcare Co., Inc.:
5.13%, 7/01/22 502 500,745
5.63%, 2/15/23 1,378 1,402,115
6.50%, 3/01/24 434 456,243
Alere, Inc., 6.38%, 7/01/23 (e) 2,503 2,559,317
Amsurg Corp., 5.63%, 7/15/22 5,476 5,653,970
Centene Corp.:
5.63%, 2/15/21 2,516 2,676,395
4.75%, 5/15/22 2,852 2,962,515
6.13%, 2/15/24 1,484 1,617,560
CHS/Community Health Systems, Inc.:
5.13%, 8/15/18 427 432,338
6.88%, 2/01/22 3,208 2,662,640
DaVita HealthCare Partners, Inc.:
5.13%, 7/15/24 1,398 1,443,435
5.00%, 5/01/25 3,899 3,951,636
Envision Healthcare Corp., 5.13%, 7/01/22 (e) 835 843,350
HCA Holdings, Inc., 6.25%, 2/15/21 5 5,413
HCA, Inc.:
3.75%, 3/15/19 2,911 3,001,969
6.50%, 2/15/20 4,735 5,232,175
7.50%, 2/15/22 1,059 1,207,260
5.88%, 3/15/22 1,840 2,024,000
4.75%, 5/01/23 512 535,680
5.88%, 5/01/23 4,096 4,352,000
5.00%, 3/15/24 1,955 2,072,300
5.38%, 2/01/25 6,160 6,344,800
5.25%, 4/15/25 813 870,926
5.88%, 2/15/26 3,125 3,304,687
5.25%, 6/15/26 4,406 4,708,912
4.50%, 2/15/27 2,772 2,796,255
HealthSouth Corp.:
5.13%, 3/15/23 2,840 2,875,500
5.75%, 11/01/24 2,360 2,447,320
5.75%, 9/15/25 1,670 1,747,238
Hologic, Inc., 5.25%, 7/15/22 (e) 2,620 2,787,025
MEDNAX, Inc., 5.25%, 12/01/23 (e) 1,134 1,193,535
MPH Acquisition Holdings LLC, 7.13%, 6/01/24 (e) 2,051 2,204,825
RegionalCare Hospital Partners Holdings, Inc., 8.25%, 5/01/23 (e) 2,444 2,489,825
Corporate Bonds Value
Health Care Providers & Services (continued)
Sterigenics-Nordion Holdings LLC, 6.50%, 5/15/23 (e) USD 424 $ 443,114
Surgery Center Holdings, Inc., 8.88%, 4/15/21 (e) 388 414,190
Surgical Care Affiliates, Inc., 6.00%, 4/01/23 (e) 2,641 2,773,050
Tenet Healthcare Corp.:
6.25%, 11/01/18 1,308 1,396,290
4.75%, 6/01/20 1,805 1,850,125
4.15%, 6/15/20 (d) 1,432 1,433,790
6.00%, 10/01/20 3,835 4,050,719
4.50%, 4/01/21 74 74,703
4.38%, 10/01/21 525 526,806
8.13%, 4/01/22 1,933 1,957,162
6.75%, 6/15/23 6,195 5,892,994
Voyage Care Bondco PLC, 6.50%, 8/01/18 GBP 586 765,273
WellCare Health Plans, Inc., 5.75%, 11/15/20 USD 1,066 1,101,978
102,044,098
Health Care Technology — 0.1%
IMS Health, Inc., 6.00%, 11/01/20 (e) 795 809,906
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 4.0%
Boyd Gaming Corp., 6.88%, 5/15/23 1,096 1,183,680
Caesars Entertainment Resort Properties LLC/Caesars Entertainment Resort Property, 8.00%, 10/01/20 3,693 3,748,395
Carlson Travel Holdings, Inc., (7.50% Cash or 8.25% PIK), 7.50%, 8/15/19 (e)(g) 654 650,730
Cedar Fair LP/Canada’s Wonderland Co., 5.38%, 6/01/24 1,070 1,131,525
Cirsa Funding Luxembourg SA:
5.75%, 5/15/21 EUR 225 266,035
5.88%, 5/15/23 206 241,352
Codere Finance 2 Luxembourg SA (5.50% Cash or 3.50% PIK) (g):
9.00%, 6/30/21 (e) USD 154 158,620
9.00%, 6/30/21 85 87,866
CPUK Finance Ltd., 7.00%, 2/28/42 GBP 275 385,889
Enterprise Funding Ltd., Series ETI, 3.50%, 9/10/20 (j) 400 413,905
ESH Hospitality, Inc., 5.25%, 5/01/25 (e) USD 4,185 4,183,703
Gala Electric Casinos Ltd., 11.50%, 6/01/19 GBP 426 576,676
International Game Technology PLC:
6.25%, 2/15/22 (e) USD 400 431,000
4.75%, 2/15/23 EUR 310 379,781
KFC Holding Co/Pizza Hut Holdings LLC/Taco Bell of America LLC (e):
5.00%, 6/01/24 USD 255 267,424
5.25%, 6/01/26 1,551 1,647,937
MGM Resorts International:
8.63%, 2/01/19 790 893,687
6.75%, 10/01/20 3,912 4,371,660
6.63%, 12/15/21 1,130 1,268,425
4.63%, 9/01/26 1,414 1,399,860
MGP Escrow Issuer LLC/MGP Escrow Co-Issuer, Inc., 5.63%, 5/01/24 (e) 8,737 9,479,645
New Red Finance, Inc., 6.00%, 4/01/22 (e) 4,455 4,661,044
Pizzaexpress Financing 2 PLC, 6.63%, 8/01/21 GBP 300 391,992
PortAventura Entertainment Barcelona BV, 7.25%, 12/01/20 EUR 439 510,683
Regal Entertainment Group, 5.75%, 2/01/25 USD 489 497,558
Sabre GLBL, Inc. (e):
5.38%, 4/15/23 1,516 1,567,165
5.25%, 11/15/23 807 829,193
Schumann SpA, 7.00%, 7/31/23 EUR 175 201,051
Scientific Games International, Inc.:
7.00%, 1/01/22 (e) USD 1,521 1,616,062
10.00%, 12/01/22 1,908 1,764,900

See Notes to Financial Statements.

42 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure (continued)
Six Flags Entertainment Corp., 5.25%, 1/15/21 (e) USD 3,247 $ 3,360,645
Station Casinos LLC, 7.50%, 3/01/21 5,785 6,151,734
Tropicana Entertainment LLC/Tropicana Finance Corp., 9.63%, 12/15/16 (a)(h) 1,850 —
Unique Pub Finance Co. PLC:
Series A3, 6.54%, 3/30/21 GBP 756 1,058,052
Series A4, 5.66%, 6/30/27 774 1,053,402
Series N, 6.46%, 3/30/32 1,000 1,078,876
Vue International Bidco PLC, 7.88%, 7/15/20 520 713,565
Yum! Brands, Inc.:
3.75%, 11/01/21 USD 526 532,575
3.88%, 11/01/23 195 193,050
59,349,342
Household Durables — 2.0%
Beazer Homes USA, Inc., 6.63%, 4/15/18 215 219,031
Brookfield Residential Properties, Inc./Brookfield Residential US Corp., 6.13%, 7/01/22 (e) 1,604 1,612,020
CalAtlantic Group, Inc.:
8.38%, 1/15/21 2,680 3,195,900
5.25%, 6/01/26 710 720,650
DR Horton, Inc., 4.00%, 2/15/20 2,408 2,522,380
Lennar Corp.:
4.50%, 11/15/19 2,482 2,621,613
4.75%, 4/01/21 1,909 2,048,357
4.75%, 11/15/22 158 166,295
4.88%, 12/15/23 968 1,013,980
PulteGroup, Inc., 6.38%, 5/15/33 2,805 2,952,262
Riverbed Technology, Inc., 8.88%, 3/01/23 (e) 1,502 1,610,895
Ryland Group, Inc., 6.63%, 5/01/20 1,160 1,302,100
Standard Pacific Corp.:
10.75%, 9/15/16 3,420 3,424,275
5.88%, 11/15/24 2,360 2,548,800
TRI Pointe Group, Inc.:
4.38%, 6/15/19 1,060 1,089,150
4.88%, 7/01/21 1,275 1,313,250
5.88%, 6/15/24 1,540 1,609,300
29,970,258
Household Products — 0.6%
Prestige Brands, Inc., 6.38%, 3/01/24 (e) 1,026 1,095,255
Spectrum Brands, Inc.:
6.38%, 11/15/20 1,635 1,698,356
6.63%, 11/15/22 1,385 1,481,950
6.13%, 12/15/24 1,832 1,976,270
5.75%, 7/15/25 1,721 1,865,134
Tempur Sealy International, Inc., 5.50%, 6/15/26 (e) 944 986,008
9,102,973
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers — 1.5%
Calpine Corp.:
6.00%, 1/15/22 (e) 356 373,355
5.38%, 1/15/23 514 514,319
5.88%, 1/15/24 (e) 1,999 2,113,942
5.75%, 1/15/25 1,856 1,849,040
Dynegy, Inc.:
6.75%, 11/01/19 4,240 4,346,000
7.38%, 11/01/22 1,735 1,713,312
7.63%, 11/01/24 190 186,200
MPM Escrow LLC, 8.88%, 10/15/20 3,738 —
NRG Energy, Inc.:
8.25%, 9/01/20 155 159,263
7.88%, 5/15/21 826 861,105
6.63%, 3/15/23 210 214,200
6.25%, 5/01/24 185 183,613
Corporate Bonds Value
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers (continued)
NRG Energy, Inc. (continued):
7.25%, 5/15/26 (e) USD 1,452 $ 1,507,902
6.63%, 1/15/27 (e) 4,973 4,982,300
NRG Yield Operating LLC, 5.38%, 8/15/24 645 672,412
QEP Resources, Inc., 5.38%, 10/01/22 2,563 2,537,370
22,214,333
Insurance — 0.9%
Assicurazioni Generali SpA, 5.00%, 6/08/48 (d) EUR 400 460,123
BNP Paribas Cardif SA, 4.03% (d)(k) 100 112,833
Credit Agricole Assurances SA, 4.50% (d)(k) 200 228,389
HUB International Ltd. (e):
9.25%, 2/15/21 USD 874 922,070
7.88%, 10/01/21 5,484 5,607,390
Old Mutual PLC, 8.00%, 6/03/21 GBP 100 150,745
Pension Insurance Corp. PLC, 6.50%, 7/03/24 275 362,844
Radian Group, Inc., 7.00%, 3/15/21 USD 366 411,750
TMF Group Holding BV, 9.88%, 12/01/19 EUR 570 679,741
Trader Corp., 9.88%, 8/15/18 (e) USD 913 935,825
Wayne Merger Sub LLC, 8.25%, 8/01/23 (e) 2,687 2,777,350
12,649,060
Internet Software & Services — 0.4%
Equinix, Inc.:
5.38%, 1/01/22 1,110 1,185,613
5.88%, 1/15/26 2,567 2,796,413
Netflix, Inc.:
5.50%, 2/15/22 2,087 2,243,525
5.75%, 3/01/24 235 253,800
5.88%, 2/15/25 2 2,170
6,481,521
IT Services — 2.9%
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc., 11.00%, 3/15/21 (e) 1,349 1,396,215
First Data Corp. (e):
5.38%, 8/15/23 5,725 5,939,687
7.00%, 12/01/23 13,314 13,946,415
5.75%, 1/15/24 16,685 17,081,269
Western Digital Corp., 10.50%, 4/01/24 (e) 751 848,630
WEX, Inc., 4.75%, 2/01/23 (e) 4,804 4,731,940
43,944,156
Machinery — 0.2%
Gardner Denver, Inc., 6.88%, 8/15/21 (e) 730 673,425
SPX FLOW, Inc. (e):
5.63%, 8/15/24 993 1,020,308
5.88%, 8/15/26 993 1,025,272
Trinseo Materials Operating SCA/Trinseo Materials Finance, Inc., 6.38%, 5/01/22 EUR 490 579,638
3,298,643
Media — 15.6%
Altice Financing SA:
6.50%, 1/15/22 (e) USD 1,945 2,047,112
5.25%, 2/15/23 EUR 485 570,775
7.50%, 5/15/26 (e) USD 1,259 1,325,098
Altice Luxembourg SA:
7.75%, 5/15/22 (e) 2,649 2,819,529
6.25%, 2/15/25 EUR 342 376,715
7.63%, 2/15/25 (e) USD 653 670,958
Altice US Finance I Corp. (e):
5.38%, 7/15/23 6,270 6,559,987
5.50%, 5/15/26 2,435 2,568,925
AMC Networks, Inc.:
4.75%, 12/15/22 1,613 1,661,390
5.00%, 4/01/24 756 774,900

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 43

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Media (continued)
Cablevision Systems Corp.:
8.63%, 9/15/17 USD 783 $ 832,133
7.75%, 4/15/18 1,393 1,487,028
8.00%, 4/15/20 810 862,650
CCO Holdings LLC/CCO Holdings Capital Corp.:
5.25%, 9/30/22 1,235 1,296,750
5.13%, 5/01/23 (e) 678 713,385
5.88%, 4/01/24 (e) 3,589 3,867,147
5.75%, 2/15/26 (e) 1,227 1,312,890
5.50%, 5/01/26 (e) 3,108 3,290,595
5.88%, 5/01/27 (e) 6,267 6,705,690
Cellnex Telecom SA, 2.38%, 1/16/24 EUR 200 230,140
Cequel Communications Holdings I LLC/Cequel Capital Corp. (e):
5.13%, 12/15/21 USD 4,672 4,716,215
7.75%, 7/15/25 6,029 6,586,682
Clear Channel International BV, 8.75%, 12/15/20 (e) 3,146 3,334,760
Clear Channel Worldwide Holdings, Inc.:
6.50%, 11/15/22 15,207 15,810,976
Series B, 7.63%, 3/15/20 5,090 5,128,175
Columbus Cable Barbados Ltd., 7.38%, 3/30/21 (e) 2,647 2,832,290
CSC Holdings LLC:
10.13%, 1/15/23 (e) 4,025 4,596,047
5.25%, 6/01/24 5,315 5,172,133
6.63%, 10/15/25 (e) 2,461 2,673,261
10.88%, 10/15/25 (e) 4,008 4,699,380
DISH DBS Corp.:
4.25%, 4/01/18 3,209 3,299,430
6.75%, 6/01/21 134 143,966
5.88%, 7/15/22 145 147,900
5.00%, 3/15/23 5,022 4,834,177
5.88%, 11/15/24 1,001 987,236
7.75%, 7/01/26 (e) 3,927 4,190,070
DISH Network Corp., 3.38%, 8/15/26 (e)(j) 1,894 1,975,679
eircom Finance DAC, 4.50%, 5/31/22 EUR 300 342,087
Gray Television, Inc.:
7.50%, 10/01/20 USD 1,318 1,370,720
5.88%, 7/15/26 (e) 554 577,545
Hughes Satellite Systems Corp. (e):
5.25%, 8/01/26 1,503 1,490,961
6.63%, 8/01/26 856 849,580
iHeartCommunications, Inc.:
9.00%, 12/15/19 1,292 1,044,905
9.00%, 3/01/21 241 180,750
9.00%, 9/15/22 3,845 2,816,462
10.63%, 3/15/23 770 567,875
Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA:
7.25%, 10/15/20 2,929 2,277,297
5.50%, 8/01/23 2,761 1,884,383
Lamar Media Corp., 5.75%, 2/01/26 526 568,738
LGE HoldCo VI BV, 7.13%, 5/15/24 EUR 300 378,974
McGraw-Hill Global Education Holdings LLC/McGraw-Hill Global Education Finance, 7.88%, 5/15/24 (e) USD 639 683,730
MDC Partners, Inc., 6.50%, 5/01/24 (e) 2,992 2,842,400
Midcontinent Communications & Midcontinent Finance Corp., 6.25%, 8/01/21 (e) 3,901 4,086,297
NAI Entertainment Holdings/NAI Entertainment Holdings Finance Corp., 5.00%, 8/01/18 (e) 2,039 2,069,585
National CineMedia LLC, 5.75%, 8/15/26 (e) 605 620,881
Nexstar Escrow Corp., 5.63%, 8/01/24 (e) 1,669 1,702,380
Nielsen Finance LLC/Nielsen Finance Co., 5.00%, 4/15/22 (e) 5,232 5,375,200
Numericable Group SA, 5.38%, 5/15/22 EUR 280 327,755
Corporate Bonds Value
Media (continued)
Outfront Media Capital LLC/Outfront Media Capital Corp.:
5.25%, 2/15/22 USD 650 $ 680,875
5.63%, 2/15/24 1,064 1,131,830
Play Finance 2 SA, 5.25%, 2/01/19 EUR 1,070 1,224,862
Radio One, Inc., 7.38%, 4/15/22 (e) USD 805 815,063
RCN Telecom Services LLC/RCN Capital Corp., 8.50%, 8/15/20 (e) 1,130 1,204,863
SFR Group SA:
6.00%, 5/15/22 (e) 4,689 4,792,158
5.63%, 5/15/24 EUR 1,460 1,726,271
7.38%, 5/01/26 (e) USD 10,344 10,680,180
Sirius XM Radio, Inc. (e):
4.25%, 5/15/20 2,204 2,248,080
5.75%, 8/01/21 1,811 1,892,495
4.63%, 5/15/23 345 348,881
Sterling Entertainment Corp., 9.75%, 12/15/19 4,810 4,761,900
TEGNA, Inc.:
5.13%, 10/15/19 857 881,639
4.88%, 9/15/21 (e) 1,827 1,895,513
5.50%, 9/15/24 (e) 1,308 1,379,940
Townsquare Media, Inc., 6.50%, 4/01/23 (e) 517 520,878
Tribune Media Co., 5.88%, 7/15/22 4,670 4,775,075
United Group BV, 7.88%, 11/15/20 EUR 350 410,084
Unitymedia Hessen GmbH & Co. KG/Unitymedia NRW GmbH:
5.50%, 1/15/23 (e) USD 4,302 4,527,855
5.63%, 4/15/23 EUR 166 199,903
4.00%, 1/15/25 1,411 1,672,426
5.00%, 1/15/25 (e) USD 1,354 1,411,545
4.63%, 2/15/26 EUR 100 121,584
3.50%, 1/15/27 400 462,912
Univision Communications, Inc. (e):
8.50%, 5/15/21 USD 784 815,360
5.13%, 5/15/23 10,883 11,318,320
5.13%, 2/15/25 7,930 8,286,850
UPCB Finance IV Ltd., 4.00%, 1/15/27 EUR 400 457,223
Virgin Media Finance PLC:
4.50%, 1/15/25 183 211,272
5.75%, 1/15/25 (e) USD 2,405 2,447,087
Virgin Media Secured Finance PLC:
6.00%, 4/15/21 GBP 2,432 3,347,873
5.25%, 1/15/26 (e) USD 486 496,935
5.50%, 8/15/26 (e) 1,144 1,195,480
4.88%, 1/15/27 GBP 200 275,105
6.25%, 3/28/29 829 1,203,448
WaveDivision Escrow LLC/WaveDivision Escrow Corp., 8.13%, 9/01/20 (e) USD 4,428 4,621,725
Wind Acquisition Finance SA:
4.75%, 7/15/20 (e) 250 253,125
7.00%, 4/23/21 EUR 400 464,027
7.38%, 4/23/21 (e) USD 1,265 1,302,950
Ziggo Bond Finance BV:
4.63%, 1/15/25 EUR 159 179,574
5.88%, 1/15/25 (e) USD 2,643 2,656,215
232,460,060
Metals & Mining — 7.0%
Alcoa, Inc.:
6.15%, 8/15/20 1,330 1,452,613
5.13%, 10/01/24 3,854 4,065,970
5.90%, 2/01/27 215 230,588
6.75%, 1/15/28 477 530,663
5.95%, 2/01/37 264 266,558

See Notes to Financial Statements.

44 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Metals & Mining (continued)
Anglo American Capital PLC:
6.88%, 5/01/18 GBP 100 $ 140,704
2.50%, 9/18/18 EUR 100 113,645
2.75%, 6/07/19 210 240,702
1.50%, 4/01/20 800 869,957
3.63%, 5/14/20 (e) USD 1,116 1,104,840
4.45%, 9/27/20 (e) 412 416,120
2.88%, 11/20/20 EUR 300 337,893
3.50%, 3/28/22 100 112,726
4.13%, 9/27/22 (e) USD 1,656 1,618,740
3.25%, 4/03/23 EUR 100 110,214
ArcelorMittal:
6.13%, 6/01/18 USD 2,342 2,476,665
7.25%, 2/25/22 115 129,375
8.00%, 10/15/39 400 430,000
7.75%, 3/01/41 1,305 1,357,200
Constellium NV:
7.88%, 4/01/21 (e) 357 386,453
4.63%, 5/15/21 EUR 100 104,283
8.00%, 1/15/23 (e) USD 6,525 6,655,500
5.75%, 5/15/24 (e) 4,689 4,337,325
First Quantum Minerals Ltd. (e):
7.00%, 2/15/21 392 340,060
7.25%, 5/15/22 1,883 1,614,672
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.:
2.30%, 11/14/17 1,337 1,313,602
2.38%, 3/15/18 13,439 13,220,616
3.10%, 3/15/20 820 754,400
4.00%, 11/14/21 3,313 3,031,395
3.55%, 3/01/22 4,396 3,835,510
3.88%, 3/15/23 6,919 5,933,042
5.40%, 11/14/34 689 537,420
5.45%, 3/15/43 2,457 1,879,605
Glencore Finance Europe SA, 3.38%, 9/30/20 EUR 200 241,495
Joseph T Ryerson & Son, Inc., 11.00%, 5/15/22 (e) USD 1,378 1,515,800
Kaiser Aluminum Corp., 5.88%, 5/15/24 (e) 773 819,380
Novelis Corp., 6.25%, 8/15/24 (e) 7,660 7,985,550
Novelis, Inc., 8.75%, 12/15/20 9,952 10,424,720
Outokumpu OYJ, 7.25%, 6/16/21 EUR 175 203,815
Steel Dynamics, Inc.:
5.13%, 10/01/21 USD 3,085 3,208,400
6.38%, 8/15/22 1,345 1,418,975
5.25%, 4/15/23 949 986,960
5.50%, 10/01/24 1,540 1,624,700
Teck Resources Ltd.:
3.00%, 3/01/19 1,460 1,416,200
8.00%, 6/01/21 (e) 762 822,484
3.75%, 2/01/23 1,265 1,084,738
8.50%, 6/01/24 (e) 3,290 3,701,250
6.00%, 8/15/40 2,074 1,679,940
6.25%, 7/15/41 2,085 1,724,034
5.20%, 3/01/42 760 556,700
United States Steel Corp., 8.38%, 7/01/21 (e) 2,224 2,418,600
Wise Metals Group LLC/Wise Alloys Finance Corp., 8.75%, 12/15/18 (e) 2,990 3,079,700
104,862,497
Multiline Retail — 0.4%
CST Brands, Inc., 5.00%, 5/01/23 653 690,548
Dufry Finance SCA, 5.50%, 10/15/20 (e) 1,927 1,979,992
Neiman Marcus Group Ltd., 8.00%, 10/15/21 (e) 4,467 3,822,412
6,492,952
Offshore Drilling & Other Services — 0.1%
Sensata Technologies BV, 5.63%, 11/01/24 (e) 903 957,180
Corporate Bonds Value
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 13.5%
Antero Resources Corp., 5.63%, 6/01/23 USD 269 $ 269,673
California Resources Corp., 8.00%, 12/15/22 (e) 3,808 2,570,400
Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc.:
7.50%, 9/15/20 672 690,480
6.25%, 4/15/23 2,334 2,304,825
Cenovus Energy, Inc.:
5.70%, 10/15/19 312 335,308
5.20%, 9/15/43 110 96,720
Cheniere Corpus Christi Holdings LLC, 7.00%, 6/30/24 (e) 3,678 3,935,460
Chesapeake Energy Corp.:
6.50%, 8/15/17 225 226,688
3.93%, 4/15/19 (d) 6,292 5,694,260
6.63%, 8/15/20 910 809,900
6.88%, 11/15/20 970 851,175
Concho Resources, Inc., 6.50%, 1/15/22 222 230,880
CONSOL Energy, Inc.:
5.88%, 4/15/22 11,942 10,807,510
8.00%, 4/01/23 116 113,100
Continental Resources, Inc.:
5.00%, 9/15/22 1,650 1,596,375
4.50%, 4/15/23 1,069 1,007,532
3.80%, 6/01/24 3,964 3,577,510
4.90%, 6/01/44 512 427,520
Crestwood Midstream Partners LP/Crestwood Midstream Finance Corp.:
6.00%, 12/15/20 230 226,550
6.25%, 4/01/23 175 170,625
CrownRock LP/CrownRock Finance, Inc. (e):
7.13%, 4/15/21 3,208 3,336,320
7.75%, 2/15/23 1,064 1,130,500
DCP Midstream LLC (e):
6.45%, 11/03/36 840 812,700
6.75%, 9/15/37 1,400 1,358,000
Denbury Resources, Inc., 9.00%, 5/15/21 (e) 2,046 2,102,265
Diamondback Energy, Inc., 7.63%, 10/01/21 1,770 1,877,306
Encana Corp.:
3.90%, 11/15/21 1,015 1,003,541
6.50%, 8/15/34 1,270 1,282,116
6.63%, 8/15/37 1,042 1,056,223
6.50%, 2/01/38 3,034 3,036,518
5.15%, 11/15/41 1,203 1,055,657
Energy Transfer Equity LP:
7.50%, 10/15/20 405 443,475
5.88%, 1/15/24 4,667 4,783,675
5.50%, 6/01/27 1,965 1,969,912
Extraction Oil & Gas Holdings LLC/Extraction Finance Corp., 7.88%, 7/15/21 (e) 1,468 1,482,680
Freeport-McMoran Oil & Gas LLC/FCX Oil & Gas, Inc., 6.88%, 2/15/23 1,612 1,567,670
Genesis Energy LP/Genesis Energy Finance Corp.:
6.00%, 5/15/23 428 425,860
5.63%, 6/15/24 445 428,313
Gulfport Energy Corp.:
7.75%, 11/01/20 2,137 2,222,480
6.63%, 5/01/23 114 117,135
Halcon Resources Corp., 8.63%, 2/01/20 (g) 1,185 1,125,750
Hilcorp Energy I LP/Hilcorp Finance Co. (e):
7.63%, 4/15/21 240 246,600
5.00%, 12/01/24 1,758 1,705,260
MEG Energy Corp. (e):
6.50%, 3/15/21 4,781 3,920,420
6.38%, 1/30/23 575 448,500
7.00%, 3/31/24 4,923 3,963,015

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 45

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (continued)
Memorial Production Partners LP/Memorial Production Finance Corp.:
7.63%, 5/01/21 USD 995 $ 507,450
6.88%, 8/01/22 852 421,740
Memorial Resource Development Corp., 5.88%, 7/01/22 4,621 4,667,210
Murphy Oil Corp., 6.88%, 8/15/24 1,356 1,418,036
NGPL PipeCo LLC (e):
7.12%, 12/15/17 14,746 15,391,137
9.63%, 6/01/19 3,476 3,649,800
7.77%, 12/15/37 1,463 1,570,896
Noble Holding US Corp/Noble Drilling Services 6 LLC/Noble Drilling Holding LLC, 7.50%, 3/15/19 720 727,200
Oasis Petroleum, Inc.:
7.25%, 2/01/19 205 201,925
6.50%, 11/01/21 3,886 3,584,835
6.88%, 3/15/22 1,064 989,520
6.88%, 1/15/23 480 442,800
OHL Investments SA, Series OHL, 4.00%, 4/25/18 (j) EUR 300 301,841
ONEOK, Inc.:
4.25%, 2/01/22 USD 450 435,375
7.50%, 9/01/23 1,400 1,550,500
Parsley Energy LLC/Parsley Finance Corp. (e):
7.50%, 2/15/22 3,361 3,545,855
6.25%, 6/01/24 748 772,310
PDC Energy, Inc., 7.75%, 10/15/22 1,625 1,706,250
QEP Resources, Inc.:
6.88%, 3/01/21 240 250,920
5.25%, 5/01/23 2,190 2,146,200
Range Resources Corp.:
5.75%, 6/01/21 568 576,520
5.00%, 8/15/22 530 524,700
5.00%, 3/15/23 1,960 1,935,500
Rockies Express Pipeline LLC (e):
6.00%, 1/15/19 574 604,135
5.63%, 4/15/20 265 277,256
6.88%, 4/15/40 3,820 3,858,200
RSP Permian, Inc., 6.63%, 10/01/22 2,065 2,147,600
Sabine Pass Liquefaction LLC:
5.63%, 2/01/21 2,043 2,145,150
6.25%, 3/15/22 406 434,420
5.63%, 4/15/23 3,087 3,249,067
5.75%, 5/15/24 5,824 6,188,000
5.63%, 3/01/25 567 599,603
5.88%, 6/30/26 (e) 3,524 3,770,680
Sanchez Energy Corp.:
7.75%, 6/15/21 138 120,060
6.13%, 1/15/23 6,650 5,253,500
SBA Communications Corp., 4.88%, 9/01/24 (e) 4,119 4,175,636
Seven Generations Energy Ltd. (e):
8.25%, 5/15/20 6,771 7,202,651
6.75%, 5/01/23 675 690,188
SM Energy Co.:
6.13%, 11/15/22 1,746 1,697,985
6.50%, 1/01/23 523 512,540
5.00%, 1/15/24 88 80,410
Southwestern Energy Co.:
7.50%, 2/01/18 144 151,380
5.80%, 1/23/20 1,679 1,679,000
4.10%, 3/15/22 1,670 1,519,700
6.70%, 1/23/25 460 472,650
Tallgrass Energy Partners LP/Tallgrass Energy Finance Corp., 5.50%, 9/15/24 (e)(f) 1,206 1,236,150
Corporate Bonds Value
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (continued)
Targa Resources Partners LP/Targa Resources Partners Finance Corp.:
6.88%, 2/01/21 USD 393 $ 406,755
6.38%, 8/01/22 4,053 4,184,722
5.25%, 5/01/23 78 79,170
6.75%, 3/15/24 (e) 394 418,625
Tesoro Logistics LP/Tesoro Logistics Finance Corp.:
6.13%, 10/15/21 321 336,248
6.25%, 10/15/22 3,154 3,338,509
6.38%, 5/01/24 849 906,308
Transcanada Trust, Series 16-A, 5.88%, 8/15/76 (d) 1,340 1,427,937
Tullow Oil Jersey, Ltd., Series TLW, 6.63%, 7/12/21 (j) 200 230,860
Tullow Oil PLC, 6.00%, 11/01/20 (e) 200 174,500
Weatherford International LLC, 6.80%, 6/15/37 167 124,415
Weatherford International Ltd.:
4.50%, 4/15/22 655 543,650
6.50%, 8/01/36 520 384,800
7.00%, 3/15/38 541 407,103
5.95%, 4/15/42 476 334,390
Whiting Petroleum Corp.:
1.25%, 6/05/20 (j) 4,885 4,196,709
5.75%, 3/15/21 12 10,755
5.75%, 3/15/21 (j) 1,537 1,437,282
6.25%, 4/01/23 (j) 244 226,079
Williams Cos., Inc.:
3.70%, 1/15/23 300 291,000
4.55%, 6/24/24 2,459 2,514,327
5.75%, 6/24/44 1,119 1,149,772
WPX Energy, Inc.:
5.25%, 1/15/17 300 301,500
7.50%, 8/01/20 385 395,347
6.00%, 1/15/22 2,577 2,506,132
8.25%, 8/01/23 1,375 1,430,000
201,985,758
Paper & Forest Products — 0.3%
Norbord, Inc., 6.25%, 4/15/23 (e) 1,605 1,705,312
Pfleiderer GmbH, 7.88%, 8/01/19 EUR 430 499,501
Unifrax I LLC/Unifrax Holding Co., 7.50%, 2/15/19 (e) USD 2,865 2,578,500
4,783,313
Personal Products — 0.0%
Avon International Operations, Inc., 7.88%, 8/15/22 (e) 569 587,538
Pharmaceuticals — 3.0%
Concordia Healthcare Corp., 7.00%, 4/15/23 (e) 399 309,225
DPx Holdings BV, 7.50%, 2/01/22 (e) 2,670 2,837,356
Endo Finance LLC/Endo Finco, Inc. (e):
7.25%, 1/15/22 696 675,120
6.00%, 7/15/23 1,609 1,460,168
6.50%, 2/01/25 2,591 2,299,512
Ephios Bondco PLC, 6.25%, 7/01/22 EUR 675 816,928
Ephios Holdco II PLC, 8.25%, 7/01/23 259 316,419
Grifols Worldwide Operations Ltd., 5.25%, 4/01/22 USD 4,047 4,229,115
Jaguar Holding Co. II/Pharmaceutical Product Development LLC, 6.38%, 8/01/23 (e) 7,115 7,452,962
NBTY, Inc., 7.63%, 5/15/21 (e) 3,353 3,428,442
Synlab Bondco PLC, 6.25%, 7/01/22 EUR 210 254,155
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc.:
6.75%, 8/15/18 (e) USD 813 815,358
5.38%, 3/15/20 (e) 890 838,825
7.00%, 10/01/20 (e) 4,173 4,068,675

See Notes to Financial Statements.

46 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Pharmaceuticals (continued)
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. (continued):
6.38%, 10/15/20 (e) USD 5,468 $ 5,221,940
7.50%, 7/15/21 (e) 3,060 3,007,399
6.75%, 8/15/21 (e) 2,793 2,656,841
5.50%, 3/01/23 (e) 77 67,183
4.50%, 5/15/23 EUR 226 209,236
5.88%, 5/15/23 (e) USD 1,392 1,224,960
6.13%, 4/15/25 (e) 2,444 2,147,665
44,337,484
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) — 0.4%
Hilton Escrow Issuer LLC/Hilton Escrow Issuer Corp., 4.25%, 9/01/24 (e) 2,209 2,251,799
iStar, Inc.:
4.00%, 11/01/17 685 685,856
5.00%, 7/01/19 480 480,600
MGM Growth Properties Operating Partnership LP/MGP Finance Co-Issuer, Inc., 4.50%, 9/01/26 (e) 1,855 1,853,841
5,272,096
Real Estate Management & Development — 1.2%
Annington Finance No 5 PLC, 13.00%, 1/15/23 (g) GBP 367 552,320
Aroundtown Property Holdings PLC, 3.00%, 5/05/20 (j) EUR 100 157,133
Crescent Resources LLC/Crescent Ventures, Inc., 10.25%, 8/15/17 (e) USD 1,731 1,731,000
Punch Taverns Finance B Ltd., Series A6, 5.94%, 9/30/22 GBP 532 649,694
Punch Taverns Finance PLC, Series M3, 6.03%, 10/15/27 (d)(e) 1,202 1,339,384
Realogy Group LLC/Realogy Co-Issuer Corp. (e):
4.50%, 4/15/19 USD 806 836,225
5.25%, 12/01/21 3,396 3,557,310
4.88%, 6/01/23 6,276 6,354,450
Rialto Holdings LLC/Rialto Corp., 7.00%, 12/01/18 (e) 1,065 1,080,975
Woodside Homes Co. LLC/Woodside Homes Finance, Inc., 6.75%, 12/15/21 (e) 1,195 1,114,338
17,372,829
Road & Rail — 1.0%
Avis Budget Car Rental LLC/Avis Budget Finance, Inc. (e):
5.13%, 6/01/22 1,055 1,073,463
6.38%, 4/01/24 1,105 1,166,327
5.25%, 3/15/25 1,810 1,791,900
EC Finance PLC, 5.13%, 7/15/21 EUR 675 790,575
Florida East Coast Holdings Corp., 6.75%, 5/01/19 (e) USD 2,037 2,098,110
Herc Rentals, Inc. (e):
7.50%, 6/01/22 853 887,120
7.75%, 6/01/24 83 86,735
Hertz Corp.:
5.88%, 10/15/20 370 383,413
7.38%, 1/15/21 2,360 2,457,350
6.25%, 10/15/22 1,490 1,566,884
Loxam SAS, 3.50%, 5/03/23 EUR 150 174,847
United Rentals North America, Inc., 4.63%, 7/15/23 USD 1,055 1,079,318
Watco Cos. LLC/Watco Finance Corp., 6.38%, 4/01/23 (e) 1,093 1,095,732
14,651,774
Corporate Bonds Value
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment — 1.2%
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.:
7.50%, 8/15/22 USD 665 $ 645,050
7.00%, 7/01/24 440 404,800
Micron Technology, Inc. (e):
5.25%, 8/01/23 1,989 1,924,357
5.63%, 1/15/26 851 812,705
Microsemi Corp., 9.13%, 4/15/23 (e) 257 294,265
NXP BV/NXP Funding LLC (e):
4.13%, 6/15/20 2,685 2,778,975
4.13%, 6/01/21 1,448 1,514,608
4.63%, 6/15/22 1,319 1,389,065
3.88%, 9/01/22 1,422 1,445,108
5.75%, 3/15/23 2,180 2,320,588
4.63%, 6/01/23 417 439,935
Sensata Technologies BV, 5.00%, 10/01/25 (e) 3,923 4,060,305
18,029,761
Software — 1.5%
BMC Software Finance, Inc., 8.13%, 7/15/21 (e) 947 833,360
Ensemble S Merger Sub, Inc., 9.00%, 9/30/23 (e) 1,553 1,605,414
Infinity Acquisition LLC/Infinity Acquisition Finance Corp., 7.25%, 8/01/22 (e) 244 213,500
Infor Software Parent LLC/Infor Software Parent, Inc., (7.13% Cash or 7.88% PIK), 7.13%, 5/01/21 (e)(g) 2,061 1,932,187
Infor US, Inc., 6.50%, 5/15/22 5,376 5,449,920
Informatica LLC, 7.13%, 7/15/23 (e) 946 893,970
Nuance Communications, Inc. (e):
5.38%, 8/15/20 830 849,713
6.00%, 7/01/24 1,600 1,664,000
PTC, Inc., 6.00%, 5/15/24 722 780,663
Solera LLC/Solera Finance, Inc., 10.50%, 3/01/24 (e) 5,797 6,420,177
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc., 5.88%, 7/15/23 2,204 2,319,710
22,962,614
Specialty Retail — 1.2%
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc., 6.00%, 12/15/24 2,413 2,509,520
JC Penney Corp., Inc.:
6.38%, 10/15/36 434 364,560
7.40%, 4/01/37 346 311,400
L Brands, Inc.:
8.50%, 6/15/19 3,925 4,597,156
6.88%, 11/01/35 2,574 2,812,095
Penske Automotive Group, Inc.:
5.75%, 10/01/22 2,545 2,640,438
5.38%, 12/01/24 1,447 1,472,323
5.50%, 5/15/26 1,358 1,358,842
Sally Holdings LLC/Sally Capital, Inc., 5.75%, 6/01/22 1,599 1,668,956
THOM Europe SAS, 7.38%, 7/15/19 EUR 503 591,930
18,327,220
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals — 0.7%
Diamond 1 Finance Corp./Diamond 2 Finance Corp. (e):
4.42%, 6/15/21 USD 1,565 1,636,422
5.88%, 6/15/21 1,447 1,529,974
7.13%, 6/15/24 1,755 1,901,288
6.02%, 6/15/26 2,940 3,145,582
8.35%, 7/15/46 945 1,101,266
Western Digital Corp., 7.38%, 4/01/23 (e) 1,339 1,452,815
10,767,347

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 47

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Corporate Bonds Value
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods — 0.2%
BiSoho SAS, 5.88%, 5/01/23 EUR 400 $ 475,452
Hanesbrands, Inc., 4.88%, 5/15/26 (e) USD 1,263 1,319,835
Springs Industries, Inc., 6.25%, 6/01/21 274 285,302
Wolverine World Wide, Inc., 5.00%, 9/01/26 (e) 496 496,620
2,577,209
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance — 0.1%
MGIC Investment Corp., 5.75%, 8/15/23 1,117 1,170,058
Radian Group, Inc., 5.25%, 6/15/20 706 746,948
1,917,006
Trading Companies & Distributors — 0.0%
Ashtead Capital, Inc., 5.63%, 10/01/24 (e) 553 581,341
Transportation Infrastructure — 0.1%
Jack Cooper Enterprises, Inc.,
(10.50% Cash or 11.25% PIK),
10.50%, 3/15/19 (e)(g) 2,813 759,581
Onorato Armatori SpA, 7.75%, 2/15/23 EUR 698 800,151
WFS Global Holding SAS, 9.50%, 7/15/22 365 392,890
1,952,622
Utilities — 0.0%
ContourGlobal Power Holdings SA, 5.13%, 6/15/21 175 207,892
Wireless Telecommunication Services — 5.4%
Communications Sales & Leasing, Inc./CSL Capital LLC:
6.00%, 4/15/23 (e) USD 477 496,080
8.25%, 10/15/23 4,660 4,858,050
Digicel Group Ltd., 7.13%, 4/01/22 (e) 2,085 1,688,850
Digicel Ltd., 6.00%, 4/15/21 (e) 8,447 7,718,446
GEO Group, Inc.:
5.88%, 1/15/22 350 330,750
5.88%, 10/15/24 2,030 1,827,000
6.00%, 4/15/26 530 475,013
Matterhorn Telecom SA, 3.88%, 5/01/22 EUR 635 708,226
SBA Communications Corp., 5.63%, 10/01/19 USD 1,111 1,144,330
Sprint Capital Corp.:
6.90%, 5/01/19 640 646,400
6.88%, 11/15/28 6,017 5,415,300
8.75%, 3/15/32 408 404,940
Sprint Communications, Inc.:
9.00%, 11/15/18 (e) 17,517 19,290,596
7.00%, 8/15/20 1,270 1,250,950
Sprint Corp.:
7.25%, 9/15/21 922 911,628
7.88%, 9/15/23 761 739,684
7.13%, 6/15/24 10,595 9,879,837
7.63%, 2/15/25 2,985 2,833,884
T-Mobile USA, Inc.:
6.63%, 4/28/21 2,180 2,283,550
6.13%, 1/15/22 367 387,185
6.73%, 4/28/22 1,227 1,289,884
6.00%, 3/01/23 2,599 2,755,044
6.50%, 1/15/24 2,638 2,835,850
6.38%, 3/01/25 3,490 3,751,750
6.50%, 1/15/26 4,881 5,341,644
Wind Acquisition Finance SA, 4.00%, 7/15/20 EUR 724 819,700
80,084,571
Total Corporate Bonds — 109.9% 1,640,458,473
Floating Rate Loan Interests (d) Value
Aerospace & Defense — 0.1%
Engility Corp.:
Term Loan B1, 5.50%, 8/12/20 USD 590 $ 593,322
Term Loan B2, 6.50%, 8/12/23 1,145 1,153,173
1,746,495
Air Freight & Logistics — 0.3%
CEVA Group PLC, Synthetic LOC, 4.75%, 3/19/21 1,156 921,289
CEVA Intercompany BV, Dutch Term Loan, 4.75%, 3/19/21 1,192 949,729
CEVA Logistics Canada ULC, Canadian Term Loan, 5.00%, 3/19/21 205 163,609
CEVA Logistics US Holdings, Inc., Term Loan, 5.50%, 3/19/21 1,645 1,310,905
XPO Logistics, Inc., Term Loan B2, 5.25%, 10/30/21 600 602,628
3,948,160
Airlines — 0.5%
Delta Air Lines, Inc., 2018 Term Loan B1, 7.00%, 10/18/18 2,307 2,311,754
Northwest Airlines, Inc.:
4.00%, 3/10/17 1,772 1,758,490
3.75%, 9/10/18 1,353 1,318,687
4.00%, 9/10/18 1,364 1,329,656
4.50%, 9/10/18 1,343 1,309,344
8,027,931
Auto Components — 0.3%
Gates Global, Inc., Term Loan B, 6.50%, 7/06/21 4,984 4,902,965
Chemicals — 0.1%
Axalta Coating Systems US Holdings, Inc., Term Loan, 6.75%, 2/01/20 211 211,977
Chemours Co., Term Loan B, 5.50%, 5/12/22 127 125,122
MacDermid, Inc., Term Loan B3, 5.25%, 6/07/20 1,148 1,147,748
1,484,847
Commercial Services & Supplies — 0.3%
Brand Energy & Infrastructure Services, Inc., Term Loan B, 3.51%,
11/26/20 3,750 3,702,082
Containers & Packaging — 0.1%
BWAY Holding Co., Inc., Term Loan B, 6.00%, 8/14/20 1,158 1,161,624
Diversified Consumer Services — 0.4%
AssuredPartners, Inc., 2015 1st Lien Term Loan, 5.00%, 10/21/22 1,226 1,229,930
Gol LuxCo S.A., 1st Lien Term Loan, 3.75%, 8/31/20 3,885 3,875,288
Laureate Education, Inc., Term Loan B, 4.52%, 3/17/21 1,410 1,401,033
6,506,251
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 0.3%
Hawaiian Telcom Communications, Inc., Term Loan B, 9.50%, 6/06/19 1,407 1,410,023
Level 3 Financing, Inc., 2019 Term Loan, 4.25%, 8/01/19 1,785 1,792,443
Telenet International Finance Sarl, Term Loan AD, 13.50%, 6/30/24 1,285 1,288,675
4,491,141
Electrical Equipment — 0.3%
Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Co. LLC:
2016 DIP Term Loan B, 5.50%, 10/31/17 3,759 3,767,357
2016 DIP Term Loan C, 3.75%, 10/31/17 840 842,249
4,609,606

See Notes to Financial Statements.

48 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Floating Rate Loan Interests (d) Value
Energy Equipment & Services — 0.2%
Dynegy Holdings, Inc., Term Loan B2, 4.00%, 4/23/20 USD 915 $ 914,179
Weatherford International Ltd., Term Loan, 2.75%, 7/13/20 2,646 2,487,517
3,401,696
Food Products — 0.1%
Reynolds Group Holdings, Inc., 2016 Term Loan, 8.16%, 2/05/23 920 920,775
Health Care Equipment & Supplies — 0.3%
Alere, Inc., 2015 Term Loan B, 4.25%, 6/18/22 1,486 1,466,990
DJO Finance LLC, 2015 Term Loan, 4.00%, 6/08/20 1,306 1,258,517
Immucor, Inc., Refinancing Term Loan B2, 4.25%, 8/17/18 1,288 1,248,876
3,974,383
Health Care Providers & Services — 0.2%
Air Medical Group Holdings, Inc., Term Loan B, 4.25%, 4/28/22 1,653 1,627,988
Surgery Center Holdings, Inc., 1st Lien Term Loan, 5.25%, 11/03/20 952 951,642
Vizient, Inc., 1st Lien Term Loan, 2.75%, 2/13/23 758 765,713
3,345,343
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 1.6%
Amaya Holdings BV:
1st Lien Term Loan, 4.25%, 8/01/21 4,734 4,682,094
2nd Lien Term Loan, 4.25%, 8/01/22 248 245,989
Bronco Midstream Funding LLC, Term Loan B, 3.75%, 8/15/20 5,405 4,837,163
Caesars Entertainment Resort Properties LLC, Term Loan B, 5.00%, 10/11/20 11,337 11,078,618
MPH Acquisition Holdings LLC, 2016 Term Loan B, 5.00%, 6/07/23 2,255 2,278,497
Scientific Games International, Inc., 2014 Term Loan B1, 5.00%, 10/18/20 1,091 1,090,603
24,212,964
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers — 0.1%
Energy Future Intermediate Holding Co. LLC, DIP Term Loan, 4.25%, 12/19/16 1,443 1,448,411
Insurance — 0.1%
Alliant Holdings I, Inc., Incremental Term Loan B2, 7.50%, 8/12/22 1,440 1,440,000
IT Services — 0.2%
First Data Corp., 2021 Extended Term Loan, 6.50%, 3/24/21 2,090 2,100,177
WEX, Inc., Term Loan B, 4.00%, 7/01/23 973 979,772
3,079,949
Machinery — 0.4%
Rexnord LLC, 1st Lien Term Loan B, 9.75%, 8/21/20 2,693 2,692,423
Silver II US Holdings LLC, Term Loan, 5.25%, 12/13/19 2,863 2,546,680
5,239,103
Media — 0.7%
iHeartCommunications, Inc., Term Loan D, 3.25%, 1/30/19 6,888 5,279,951
Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA, Term Loan B2, 4.00%, 6/30/19 5,557 5,270,969
10,550,920
Floating Rate Loan Interests (d) Value
Metals & Mining — 0.3%
FMG Resources August 2006 Property Ltd., Term Loan B, 6.50%, 6/30/19 USD 3,317 $ 3,297,648
Novelis, Inc., 2015 Term Loan B, 4.25%, 6/02/22 1,563 1,566,110
4,863,758
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 1.1%
California Resources Corp., Term Loan A, 4.75%, 10/01/19 1,615 1,534,447
Chesapeake Energy Corp., Term Loan, 5.50%, 8/15/21 7,945 8,193,718
CITGO Holding, Inc., 2015 Term Loan B, 7.00%, 5/12/18 2,516 2,530,503
MEG Energy Corp., Refinancing Term Loan, 5.25%, 3/31/20 464 426,095
Ultra Resources, Inc., Revolver, 3.75%, 10/06/16 4,600 4,255,000
16,939,763
Pharmaceuticals — 0.8%
DPx Holdings BV, 2014 Incremental Term Loan, 5.25%, 3/11/21 1,681 1,673,315
Jaguar Holding Co. II, 2015 Term Loan B, 4.88%, 8/18/22 5,277 5,291,170
NBTY, Inc., Term Loan B, 3.75%, 5/05/23 1,145 1,145,355
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc.:
Series A3 Tranche A, 5.00%, 10/20/18 468 468,062
Series C2 Term Loan B, 5.00%, 12/11/19 682 682,353
Series D2 Term Loan B, 2.13%, 2/13/19 125 124,791
Series E Term Loan B, 2.13%, 8/05/20 1,524 1,521,029
Series F1 Term Loan B, 2.13%, 4/01/22 911 912,325
11,818,400
Professional Services — 0.3%
Advantage Sales & Marketing, Inc.:
2014 1st Lien Term Loan, 4.25%, 7/23/21 1,670 1,656,470
2014 2nd Lien Term Loan, 4.25%, 7/25/22 3,248 3,088,282
4,744,752
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment — 0.3%
Avago Technologies Cayman Ltd., Term Loan B3, 8.00%, 2/01/23 3,495 3,525,404
Microsemi Corp., 2015 Term Loan B, 7.27%, 1/15/23 326 327,904
3,853,308
Software — 1.1%
BMC Software Finance, Inc., Term Loan, 5.00%, 9/10/20 4,096 3,905,517
Infor US, Inc., Term Loan B5, 4.25%, 6/03/20 2,619 2,589,006
Informatica Corp., Term Loan, 4.25%, 8/05/22 1,940 1,872,193
Kronos, Inc., 2nd Lien Term Loan, 5.75%, 4/30/20 2,856 2,914,329
Solera LLC, Term Loan B, 4.00%, 3/03/23 2,729 2,743,788
Tibco Software Inc., Term Loan B, 4.00%, 12/04/20 1,422 1,386,252
Veritas US, Inc./Veritas Bermuda Ltd.,7.50%, 2/01/23 EUR 500 538,205
15,949,290
Specialty Retail — 0.1%
Leslie’s Poolmart, Inc., 2016 Term Loan, 3.75%, 7/27/23 USD 1,034 1,040,462
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods — 0.4%
Ascend Performance Materials Operations LLC, Term Loan B, 5.00%, 8/12/22 5,348 5,268,002
J. Crew Group, Inc., Term Loan B, 4.25%, 3/05/21 890 701,671
5,969,673

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 49

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Floating Rate Loan Interests (d) Par (000) Value
Wireless Telecommunication Services — 1.6%
Ligado Networks LLC, 2015 2nd Lien Term Loan,
6.50%, 12/07/20 (a)(h) USD 34,627 $ 24,239,205
Total Floating Rate Loan Interests — 12.6% 187,613,257
Investment Companies Shares
United States — 2.5%
Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund 280,066 6,878,421
iShares iBoxx USD High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (l) 152,000 13,179,920
SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF 431,279 15,758,935
SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production ETF 25,675 944,583
Total Investment Companies — 2.5% 36,761,859
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities Par (000)
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.2%
Hilton USA Trust, Series 2013-HLT, Class EFX,
5.61%, 11/05/30 (d)(e) USD 2,882 2,889,233
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities — 0.1%
GAHR Commercial Mortgage Trust 2015-NRF, Series 2015-NRF, Class FFX,
3.49%, 12/15/34 (d)(e) 1,925 1,822,410
Total Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities — 0.3% 4,711,643
Other Interests — 0.0% (m) Beneficial Interest (000)
Auto Components — 0.0%
Lear Corp. Escrow 1,250 13
Preferred Securities Par (000)
Capital Trusts
Banks — 1.4%
ABN AMRO Bank NV, 5.75% (d)(k) USD 300 332,125
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA (d)(k):
6.75% 400 419,409
7.00% 1,200 1,264,921
8.88% 200 235,973
Banco Popular Espanol SA, 8.25% (d)(k) 600 612,215
Banco Santander SA, 6.25% (d)(k) 1,100 1,113,498
Bank of Ireland, 7.38% (d)(k) 250 269,664
BNP Paribas SA, 7.20% (d)(k) 100 112,500
Citigroup, Inc. (d)(k):
5.95% 2,675 2,782,000
Series D, 5.95% 2,592 2,677,860
Series O, 5.88% 2,405 2,441,075
Series Q, 5.95% 1,165 1,186,116
Series R, 6.13% 615 641,691
Cooperatieve Rabobank UA (d)(k):
5.50% 200 225,321
6.63% 200 238,088
Preferred Securities Value
Capital Trusts (continued)
Banks (continued)
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA (d)(k):
7.00% USD 375 $ 409,928
7.70% 200 185,502
Wells Fargo & Co. (d)(k):
Series S, 5.90% 3,310 3,521,013
Series U, 5.88% 2,545 2,810,825
21,479,724
Capital Markets — 0.8%
Credit Suisse Group AG, 6.25% (d)(e)(k) 200 195,748
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (d)(k):
5.30% 1,040 1,063,400
Series L, 5.70% 5,218 5,330,187
Morgan Stanley (d)(k):
Series H, 5.45% 3,309 3,317,273
Series J, 5.55% 440 451,000
UBS Group AG (d)(k):
5.75% 800 930,285
7.00% 425 453,156
11,741,049
Chemicals — 0.0%
Solvay Finance SA, 5.12% (d)(k) 110 132,482
Diversified Financial Services — 2.1%
Bank of America Corp. (d)(k):
Series AA, 6.10% 5,121 5,383,451
Series V, 5.13% 2,205 2,173,028
Series X, 6.25% 2,874 3,017,700
Series Z, 6.50% 2,791 3,042,469
Barclays PLC, 7.88% (d)(k) 325 325,731
Credit Agricole SA, 6.50% (d)(k) 600 669,270
HBOS Capital Funding LP, 6.85% (k) 300 304,137
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (d)(k):
6.75% 5,324 6,003,928
Series Q, 5.15% 850 851,913
Series U, 6.13% 4,228 4,526,602
Series V, 5.00% 3,075 3,067,313
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, 8.63% (d)(k) 1,525 1,553,594
30,919,136
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 0.3%
Koninklijke KPN NV, 6.13% (d)(k) 566 681,852
Orange SA (d)(k):
4.00% 600 720,448
5.75% 100 144,118
Telefonica Europe BV (d)(k):
4.20% 1,500 1,733,898
6.50 600 724,939
6.75% 100 141,919
4,147,174
Electric Utilities — 0.0%
Enel SpA (d):
6.50%, 1/10/74 689 842,489
7.75%, 9/10/75 GBP 105 155,570
Origin Energy Finance, Ltd. (d):
7.88%, 6/16/71 USD 100 116,667
4.00%, 9/16/74 110 115,794
1,230,520
Media — 0.0%
NBCUniversal Enterprise, Inc., 5.25% (e)(k) 400 424,000
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 0.2%
DCP Midstream LLC, 5.85%, 5/21/43 (d) 225 172,125
Gas Natural Fenosa Finance BV, 3.38% (d)(k) 1,200 1,301,731

See Notes to Financial Statements.

50 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

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Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Preferred Securities Par (000) Value
Capital Trusts (continued)
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (continued)
Repsol International Finance BV, 4.50%, 3/25/75 (d) USD 369 $ 381,760
TOTAL SA, 3.88% (d)(k) 625 748,760
2,604,376
Total Capital Trusts — 4.8% 72,678,461
Preferred Stocks Shares
Diversified Financial Services — 0.1%
Concrete Investments II 4,997 652,147
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 1.1%
Amaya, Inc. 19,851 16,549,564
Wireless Telecommunication Services — 0.0%
CF-B L2 (D) LLC, (Aquired 4/08/15, cost $629,122) (c) 633,461 523,176
Total Preferred Stocks — 1.2% 17,724,887
Trust Preferred — 0.4%
Diversified Financial Services — 0.4%
GMAC Capital Trust I, Series 2, 6.41%, 2/15/40 (d) 256,246 6,454,520
Total Preferred Securities — 6.4% 96,857,868
Warrants Value
Metals & Mining — 0.0%
Peninsula Energy Ltd. (Expires 12/31/17) 288,820 $ 130
Peninsula Energy Ltd. (Expires 12/31/18) 515,378 30,987
31,117
Software — 0.0%
HMH Holdings/EduMedia (Issued/exercisable 3/09/10, 19 Shares for 1 Warrant,
Expires 6/22/19, Strike Price $42.27) 6,494 13,231
Total Warrants — 0.0% 44,348
Total Long-Term Investments (Cost — $2,114,819,403) — 139.7% 2,085,712,498
Options Purchased (Cost — $98,133) — 0.0% 67,870
Total Investments Before Options Written (Cost — $2,114,917,536) — 139.7% 2,085,780,368
Options Written (Premiums Received — $19,000) — (0.0)% (22,041 )
Total Investments, Net of Options Written (Cost — $2,114,898,536) — 139.7% 2,085,758,327
Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets — (39.7)% (592,809,866 )
Net Assets — 100.0% $ 1,492,948,461

Notes to Schedule of Investments

(a) Non-income producing security.

(b) All or a portion of security is held by a wholly owned subsidiary.

(c) Restricted security as to resale, excluding 144A securities. As of period end, the Trust held restricted securities with a current value of $535,351 and an original cost of $816,585, which was 0.04% of its net assets.

(d) Variable rate security. Rate as of period end.

(e) Security exempt from registration pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration to qualified institutional investors.

(f) When-issued security.

(g) Payment-in-kind security which may pay interest/dividends in additional par/shares and/or in cash. Rates shown are the current rate and possible payment rates.

(h) Issuer filed for bankruptcy and/or is in default.

(i) Zero-coupon bond.

(j) Convertible security.

(k) Perpetual security with no stated maturity date.

(l) During the year ended August 31, 2016, investments in issuers considered to be affiliates of the Trust for purposes of Section 2(a)(3) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, were as follows:

| Affiliate — BlackRock Liquidity Funds, TempFund, Institutional
Class 1 | — | — | — | | — | Value at August 31, 2016 — — | Income — $ 4,410 | Realized Gain (Loss) — — | |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| iShares iBoxx USD High Yield Corporate Bond ETF | — | 1,256,443 | (1,104,443 | ) | 152,000 | $ 13,179,920 | 817,027 | $ (2,263,123 | ) |
| Total | | | | | | $ 13,179,920 | $ 821,437 | $ (2,263,123 | ) |
| 1 No longer held by the
Trust as of report date. | | | | | | | | | |

(m) Other interests represent beneficial interests in liquidation trusts and other reorganization or private entities.

• For Trust compliance purposes, the Trust’s industry classifications refer to any one or more of the industry sub-classifications used by one or more widely recognized market indexes or rating group indexes, and/or as defined by the investment adviser. These definitions may not apply for purposes of this report, which may combine such industry subclassifications for reporting ease.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 51

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Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Derivative Financial Instruments Outstanding as of Period End

Futures Contracts

Contracts Short — (80 ) Issue — Russell 2000 Mini Index September 2016 USD 9,910,400 Unrealized Depreciation — $ (757,024 )
(267 ) S&P 500 E-Mini Index September 2016 USD 28,962,825 (595,638 )
Total $ (1,352,662 )

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts

Currency Purchased — EUR 1,034,000 USD 1,154,132 Counterparty — Barclays Bank PLC 9/06/16 Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ (597 )
EUR 60,000 USD 66,956 Barclays Bank PLC 9/06/16 (20 )
EUR 230,000 USD 260,644 Citibank N.A. 9/06/16 (4,055 )
EUR 481,500 USD 537,919 Deutsche Bank AG 9/06/16 (755 )
EUR 100,000 USD 111,669 Deutsche Bank AG 9/06/16 (109 )
EUR 380,000 USD 430,442 Goldman Sachs International 9/06/16 (6,513 )
EUR 700,000 USD 782,109 Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC 9/06/16 (1,186 )
EUR 460,000 USD 514,857 Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC 9/06/16 (1,679 )
EUR 500,000 USD 559,651 Royal Bank of Canada 9/06/16 (1,848 )
GBP 145,000 USD 187,943 Australia And New Zealand Bank Group 9/06/16 2,475
GBP 300,000 USD 393,636 Citibank N.A. 9/06/16 333
GBP 700,000 USD 917,018 Deutsche Bank AG 9/06/16 2,242
GBP 1,450,000 USD 1,897,501 Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC 9/06/16 6,682
GBP 920,000 USD 1,208,503 Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC 9/06/16 (332 )
USD 1,203,007 AUD 1,605,000 Westpac Group 9/06/16 (3,112 )
USD 21,538,235 CAD 28,080,000 Westpac Group 9/06/16 125,421
USD 134,308 EUR 119,000 Australia And New Zealand Bank Group 9/06/16 1,551
USD 11,168 EUR 10,000 Barclays Bank PLC 9/06/16 12
USD 1,493,971 EUR 1,335,000 BNP Paribas S.A. 9/06/16 4,639
USD 141,202 EUR 127,000 Citibank N.A. 9/06/16 (479 )
USD 277,544 EUR 250,000 Citibank N.A. 9/06/16 (1,357 )
USD 282,162 EUR 250,000 Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC 9/06/16 3,260
USD 81,140,745 EUR 72,870,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 9/06/16 (153,354 )
USD 36,106 EUR 32,000 State Street Bank And Trust Co. 9/06/16 406
USD 23,962,647 GBP 18,185,000 HSBC Bank USA N.A. 9/06/16 81,572
USD 145,620 GBP 110,000 Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC 9/06/16 1,165
USD 122,575 GBP 94,000 Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC 9/06/16 (869 )
USD 1,205,435 AUD 1,605,000 Commonwealth Bank of Australia 10/05/16 174
USD 21,405,425 CAD 28,080,000 Westpac Group 10/05/16 (10,602 )
USD 5,582 EUR 5,000 Bank of America N.A. 10/05/16 (4 )
USD 79,149,510 EUR 70,952,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 10/05/16 (107,665 )
USD 19,385,130 GBP 14,782,000 Royal Bank of Scotland PLC 10/05/16 (41,631 )
Total $ (106,235 )

OTC Credit Default Swaptions Purchased

Description Counterparty Put/ Call Exercise Rate Pay/ Receive Exercise Rate Floating Rate Index Value
Bought Protection on 5-Year Credit Default Swap Goldman Sachs International Put 103.00% Pay Markit CDX North America High Yield Index,
Series 26 10/19/16 USD 10,000 $ 67,870

OTC Options Purchased

Description Put/ Call Counterparty Expiration Date Strike Price
Marsico Parent Superholdco LLC Call Goldman Sachs & Co. 12/14/19 USD 942.86 39 —

See Notes to Financial Statements.

52 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

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Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

OTC Credit Default Swaptions Written

Description Counterparty Put/ Call Pay/Receive Exercise Rate Floating Rate Index Notional Amount (000) Value
Sold Protection on 5-Year Credit Default Swap Goldman Sachs International Put 100.00 % Receive Markit CDX North America High Yield Index, Series
26 10/19/16 USD 10,000 $ (22,041 )

Centrally Cleared Credit Default Swaps — Buy Protection

Issuer / Index — Markit iTraxx XO, Series 25, Version 1 Pay Fixed Rate — 5.00% 6/20/21 EUR 3,730 Unrealized Depreciation — $ (134,079 )

Centrally Cleared Credit Default Swaps — Sold Protection

Issuer / Index — Dow Jones CDX North America High Yield Index, Series 26, Version 2 Receive Fixed Rate — 5.00% 6/20/21 B+ 50,055 Unrealized Appreciation — $ 40,399

OTC Credit Default Swaps — Sell Protection

Issuer/Index — CCO Holdings LLC 8.00 % Deutsche Bank AG 9/20/17 NR USD 8,180 Value — $ 794,712 Premiums Paid — — Unrealized Appreciation — $ 794,712
CNH Industrial NV 5.00 % Goldman Sachs International 6/20/21 BB+ EUR 554 81,631 $ 53,238 28,393
Total $ 876,343 $ 53,238 $ 823,105
1 Using Standard
& Poors (“S&P’s”) rating of the issuer or the underlying securities of the index, as applicable.
2 The maximum potential
amount the Trust may pay should a negative credit event take place as defined under the terms of the agreement.

OTC Total Return Swaps

Reference Entity — iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index Fixed Rate/ Floating Rate — 3-Month LIBOR Counterparty — JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. N/A 9/20/16 USD 6,000 $ 426,416 — $ 426,416
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Goldman Sachs International N/A 9/20/16 USD 1,500 94,548 — 94,548
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Goldman Sachs International N/A 12/20/16 USD 2,000 127,775 — 127,775
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC N/A 12/20/16 USD 2,700 170,187 — 170,187
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. N/A 12/20/16 USD 1,000 63,009 — 63,009
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. N/A 12/20/16 USD 2,700 121,045 — 121,045
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Citibank N.A. N/A 12/20/16 USD 1,400 23,029 $ (629 ) 23,658
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Goldman Sachs International N/A 12/20/16 USD 3,725 37,170 (3,144 ) 40,314
Markit iBoxx Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Goldman Sachs International N/A 12/20/16 USD 1,900 10,825 (1,809 ) 12,634
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Goldman Sachs International N/A 3/20/17 USD 5,800 274,424 (104 ) 274,528
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Goldman Sachs International N/A 3/20/17 USD 13,000 169,964 (7,705 ) 177,669
Morgan Stanley Energy Long Basket Index Fed Funds Effective Rate plus 0.25% Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC N/A 3/30/17 USD 1 1,073 — 1,073
Morgan Stanley Energy Long Basket Index Fed Funds Effective Rate plus 0.25% Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC N/A 3/30/17 USD — 1 (32 ) — (32 )

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 53

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Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

OTC Total Return Swaps (concluded)

Reference Entity — Morgan Stanley Energy Long Basket Index Fixed Rate/ Floating Rate — Fed Funds Effective Rate plus 0.25% Counterparty — Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC N/A 3/30/17 USD 1 Value — $ (1,845 ) — Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ (1,845
Morgan Stanley Energy Long Basket Index Fed Funds Effective Rate plus 0.25% Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC N/A 3/30/17 USD 30 216,515 — 216,515
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Goldman Sachs International N/A 6/20/17 USD 1,800 11,503 $ (1,681 ) 13,184
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC N/A 6/20/17 USD 1,400 45,252 (453 ) 45,705
iBoxx USD Liquid High Yield Index 3-Month LIBOR Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC N/A 6/20/17 USD 2,700 6,267 (2,813 ) 9,080
Total $ 1,797,125 $ (18,338 ) $ 1,815,463
1 Amount is less than
$500.

Transactions in Options Written for the Year Ended August 31, 2016

Contracts Notional (000) Premiums Received
Outstanding options, beginning of year — — —
Options written 4,734 $ 10,000 $ 331,605
Options expired (3,934 ) — (231,039 )
Options closed (800 ) — (81,566 )
Outstanding options, end of year — $ 10,000 $ 19,000

Derivative Financial Instruments Categorized by Risk Exposure

As of period end, the fair values of derivative financial instruments located in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities were as follows:

Credit Contracts Equity Contracts Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts Interest Rate Contracts Total
Assets — Derivative Financial Instruments
Futures contracts Net unrealized appreciation 1 — — — — — — —
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts Unrealized appreciation on forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ 229,932 — — $ 229,932
Options purchased Investments at value — unaffiliated 2 $ 67,870 67,870
Swaps — centrally cleared Net unrealized appreciation 1 — 40,399 — — — — 40,399
Swaps — OTC Unrealized appreciation on OTC swaps, Swap premiums paid — 876,343 $ 217,588 — $ 1,599,752 — 2,693,683
Total — $ 984,612 $ 217,588 $ 229,932 $ 1,599,752 — $ 3,031,884
Liabilities — Derivative Financial Instruments
Futures contracts Net unrealized depreciation 1 — — $ 1,352,662 — — — $ 1,352,662
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts Unrealized depreciation on forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ 336,167 — — 336,167
Options written Options written at value $ 22,041 22,041
Swaps — centrally cleared Net unrealized depreciation 1 — 134,079 — — — — 134,079
Swaps — OTC Unrealized depreciation on OTC swaps, Swap premiums received — — 1,877 — $ 18,338 — 20,215
Total — $ 156,120 $ 1,354,539 $ 336,167 $ 18,338 — $ 1,865,164
1 Includes cumulative
appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts and centrally cleared swaps, as reported in the Consolidated Schedule of Investments. Only current day’s variation margin is reported within the Consolidated Statement of Asset and
Liabilities.
2 Includes options
purchased at value as reported in the Consolidated Schedule of Investments.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

54 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

For the year ended August 31, 2016, the effect of derivative financial instruments in the Consolidated Statement of Operations was as follows:

Credit Contracts Equity Contracts Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts Interest Rate Contracts Total
Net Realized Gain (Loss) from:
Futures contracts — — $ (3,489,133 ) — $ (829,018 ) — $ (4,318,151 )
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ 3,781,389 — — 3,781,389
Options purchased 1 — — (1,288,782 ) — — — (1,288,782 )
Options written — — 259,773 — — — 259,773
Swaps — $ 4,051,821 1,251,588 — 780,396 — 6,083,805
Total — $ 4,051,821 $ (3,266,554 ) $ 3,781,389 $ (48,622 ) — $ 4,518,034
Credit Contracts Equity Contracts Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts Interest Rate Contracts Total
Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on:
Futures contracts — — $ (7,567,960 ) $ (95,646 ) — $ (7,663,606 )
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts — — — $ 23,421 — — 23,421
Options purchased 2 — $ 7,870 — — — — 7,870
Options written — (3,041 ) — — — — (3,041 )
Swaps — (298,660 ) 489,959 — 1,817,452 — 2,008,751
Total — $ (293,831 ) $ (7,078,001 ) $ 23,421 $ 1,721,806 — $ (5,626,605 )
1 Options purchased
are included in net realized gain (loss) from investments.
2 Options purchased are
included in net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments.

Average Quarterly Balances of Outstanding Derivative Financial Instruments

Futures contracts: — Average notional value of contracts — short $ 99,135,415
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts:
Average amounts purchased — in USD $ 280,657,112
Average amounts sold — in USD $ 6,538,790
Options:
Average value of options contracts written $ 299,768 1
Average value of options swaption contracts purchased $ 2,500,000
Average value of options swaption contract written $ 2,500,000
Credit default swaps:
Average notional value — buy protection $ 1,717,657
Average notional value — sell protection $ 36,529,846
Total return rate swaps:
Average notional value $ 25,894,870
1 Actual amounts for
the period are shown due to limited outstanding derivative financial instruments as of each quarter.

For more information about the Trust’s investment risks regarding derivative financial instruments, refer to the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

The Trust’s derivative assets and liabilities (by type) were as follows:

Assets
Derivative Financial Instruments:
Futures contracts $ 132,895 —
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts 229,932 $ 336,167
Options 67,870 1 22,041
Swaps — centrally cleared — 99,311
Swaps — OTC 2 2,693,683 20,215
Total derivative assets and liabilities in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities $ 3,124,380 $ 477,734
Derivatives not subject to a master netting agreement or similar agreement (“MNA”) (132,895 ) (99,311 )
Total derivative assets and liabilities subject to an MNA $ 2,991,485 $ 378,423
1 Includes options
purchased at value which is included in Investments at value — unaffiliated in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities and reported in the Consolidated Schedule of Investments.
2 Includes unrealized
appreciation (depreciation) on OTC swaps and swap premiums paid/received in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 55

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Consolidated Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

The following table presents the Trust’s derivative assets and liabilities by counterparty net of amounts available for offset under an Master Netting Agreement (“MNA”) and net of the related collateral received by the Trust:

| Counterparty | Derivative
Assets Subject to an MNA by Counterparty | Derivatives Available for Offset 1 | | | Cash Collateral Received 2 | | Net Amount of Derivative Assets 3 |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Australia And New Zealand Bank Group | $ 4,026 | — | | — | — | | $ 4,026 |
| Barclays Bank PLC | 12 | $ (12 | ) | — | — | | — |
| BNP Paribas S.A. | 4,639 | — | | — | — | | 4,639 |
| Citibank N.A. | 23,991 | (6,520 | ) | — | — | | 17,471 |
| Commonwealth Bank of Australia | 174 | — | | — | — | | 174 |
| Deutsche Bank AG | 796,954 | (864 | ) | — | $ (796,090 | ) | — |
| Goldman Sachs International | 890,153 | (42,997 | ) | — | (800,000 | ) | 47,156 |
| HSBC Bank USA N.A. | 81,572 | — | | — | — | | 81,572 |
| JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. | 610,470 | — | | — | (530,000 | ) | 80,470 |
| Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC | 228,695 | (5,943 | ) | — | — | | 222,752 |
| Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC | 224,972 | (3,266 | ) | — | — | | 221,706 |
| State Street Bank and Trust Company | 406 | — | | — | — | | 406 |
| Westpac Group | 125,421 | (13,714 | ) | — | — | | 111,707 |
| Total | $ 2,991,485 | $ (73,316 | ) | — | $ (2,126,090 | ) | $ 792,079 |

| Counterparty — Bank of America, N.A. | Derivative Liabilities Subject to an MNA by
Counterparty — $ 4 | Derivatives Available for Offset 1 — — | | — | — | Net Amount of Derivative Liabilities 4 — $ 4 |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Barclays Bank PLC | 617 | $ (12 | ) | — | — | 605 |
| Citibank N.A. | 6,520 | (6,520 | ) | — | — | — |
| Deutsche Bank AG | 864 | (864 | ) | — | — | — |
| Goldman Sachs International | 42,997 | (42,997 | ) | — | — | — |
| Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC | 5,943 | (5,943 | ) | — | — | — |
| Morgan Stanley Capital Services LLC | 3,266 | (3,266 | ) | — | — | — |
| Royal Bank of Canada | 1,848 | — | | — | — | 1,848 |
| Royal Bank of Scotland PLC | 302,650 | — | | — | — | 302,650 |
| Westpac Group | 13,714 | (13,714 | ) | — | — | — |
| Total | $ 378,423 | $ (73,316 | ) | — | — | $ 305,107 |
| 1 The amount of
derivatives available for offset is limited to the amount of derivative assets and/or liabilities that are subject to an MNA. | | | | | | |
| 2 Excess of
collateral received from the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes. | | | | | | |
| 3 Net amount
represents the net amount receivable from the counterparty in the event of default. | | | | | | |
| 4 Net amount
represents the net amount payable due to the counterparty in the event of default. | | | | | | |

Fair Value Hierarchy as of Period End

Various inputs are used in determining the fair value of investments and derivative financial instruments. For information about the Trust’s policy regarding valuation of investments and derivative financial instruments, refer to the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

The following tables summarize the Trust’s investments and derivative financial instruments categorized in the disclosure hierarchy:

Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Assets:
Investments:
Long-Term Investments:
Asset-Backed Securities — $ 33,032,621 $ 13,191,932 $ 46,224,553
Common Stocks $ 41,964,842 29,349,732 1,725,910 73,040,484
Corporate Bonds — 1,634,605,449 5,853,024 1,640,458,473
Floating Rate Loan Interests — 165,429,110 22,184,147 187,613,257
Investment Companies 36,761,859 — — 36,761,859
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities — 4,711,643 — 4,711,643
Other Interests — — 13 13
Preferred Securities 6,454,520 72,678,461 17,201,711 96,334,692
Warrants — 30,987 13,361 44,348
Options Purchased:
Credit contracts — 67,870 — 67,870
Subtotal $ 85,181,221 $ 1,939,905,873 $ 60,170,098 $ 2,085,257,192
Investments Valued at NAV 1 523,176
Total $ 2,085,780,368
1 As of August 31,
2016, certain of the Trust’s investments were fair valued using net asset value (“NAV”) per share as no quoted market value is available and have been excluded from the fair value hierarchy.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

56 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Schedule of Investments (concluded) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

The following tables summarize the Trust’s investments and derivative financial instruments categorized in the disclosure hierarchy (concluded):

Level 1 Level 2 Total
Derivative Financial Instruments 1
Assets:
Credit contracts — $ 863,504 — $ 863,504
Equity contracts — 217,588 — 217,588
Foreign currency exchange contracts — 229,932 — 229,932
Interest rate contracts — 1,599,752 — 1,599,752
Liabilities:
Credit contracts — (156,120 ) — (156,120 )
Equity contracts $ (1,352,662 ) (1,877 ) — (1,354,539 )
Foreign currency exchange contracts — (336,167 ) — (336,167 )
Total $ (1,352,662 ) $ 2,416,612 — $ 1,063,950
1 Derivative
financial instruments are swaps, futures contracts and forward foreign currency exchange contracts and options written. Swaps, futures contracts and forward foreign currency exchange contracts are valued at the unrealized appreciation
(depreciation) on the instrument and options written are shown at value.

The Trust may hold assets and/or liabilities in which the fair value approximates the carrying amount for financial statement purposes. As of period end, such assets and/or liabilities are categorized within the disclosure hierarchy as follows:

Level 1 Level 2 Total
Assets:
Foreign currency at value $ 631,458 — — $ 631,458
Cash pledged:
Centrally cleared swaps 2,857,000 — — 2,857,000
Futures contracts 1,568,150 — — 1,568,150
Liabilities:
Bank overdraft — $ (2,604 ) — (2,604 )
Bank borrowings payable — (604,000,000 ) — (604,000,000 )
Cash received as collateral for OTC derivatives — (2,330,000 ) — (2,330,000 )
Total $ 5,056,608 $ (606,332,604 ) — $ (601,275,996 )

During the year ended August 31, 2016, there were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2.

A reconciliation of Level 3 investments is presented when the Trust had a significant amount of Level 3 investments at the beginning and/or end of the period in relation to net assets. The following table is a reconciliation of Level 3 investments for which significant unobservable inputs were used in determining fair value:

Common Stocks Asset-Backed Securities Floating Rate Loan Interests Preferred Securities Warrants Total
Assets:
Opening Balance, as of
August 31, 2015 1 $ 3,739,028 $ 5,936,098 $ 25,160,883 $ 25,557,215 $ 10,978 $ 20,459,861 $ 74,732 $ 80,938,795
Transfers into Level 3 2 — — — 5,372,890 — — — 5,372,890
Transfers out of Level 3 3 — (1,499,223 ) (18,524,109 ) — — — — (20,023,332 )
Accrued discounts/premiums — 14,387 11,411 148,129 — — — 173,927
Net realized gain (loss) (1,991,849 ) (6,361 ) 2,553 213,080 (400 ) — — (1,782,977 )
Net change in unrealized appreciation
(depreciation) 4,5 (208,733 ) 95,351 (156,996 ) 190,237 (10,565 ) (3,258,150 ) (61,371 ) (3,410,227 )
Purchases 187,464 9,897,780 1,359 2,447,823 — — — 12,534,426
Sales — (1,246,100 ) (642,077 ) (11,745,227 ) — — — (13,633,404 )
Closing Balance, as of August 31, 2016 $ 1,725,910 $ 13,191,932 $ 5,853,024 $ 22,184,147 $ 13 $ 17,201,711 $ 13,361 $ 60,170,098
Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on investments still held at August 31, 2016 3 $ (2,200,578 ) $ 130,810 $ (156,996 ) $ 237,746 $ (10,925 ) $ (3,258,150 ) $ (61,371 ) $ (5,319,464 )
1 The opening balance
of preferred securities has been adjusted to exclude certain investments amounting to $555,106 that were valued using NAV per share as no quoted market value is available. The fair value of those investments have been excluded from the fair value
hierarchy due to the adoption of the Accounting Standard Update related to Fair Value Measurement: Disclosures for Investments in Certain Entities That Calculate Net Asset Value per Share (or Its Equivalent).
2 As of August 31,
2015, the Trust used observable inputs in determining the value of certain investments. As of August 31, 2016, the Trust used significant unobservable inputs in determining the value of the same investments. As a result, investments at beginning of
period value were transferred from Level 2 to Level 3 in the disclosure hierarchy.
3 As of August 31,
2015, the Trust used significant unobservable inputs in determining the value of certain investments. As of August 31, 2016, the Trust used observable inputs in determining the value of the same investments. As a result, investments at beginning of
period value were transferred from Level 3 to Level 2 in the disclosure hierarchy.
4 Included in the
related net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Consolidated Statement of Operations.
5 Any difference
between net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments still held at August 31, 2016 is generally due to investments no longer held or categorized as Level 3 at period end.

Certain of the Trust’s investments that are categorized as Level 3 were valued utilizing third party pricing information without adjustment. Such valuations are based on unobservable inputs. A significant change in third party information inputs could result in a significantly lower or higher value of such Level 3 investments.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 57

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments August 31, 2016 BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT) (Percentages shown are based on Net Assets)

Asset-Backed Securities Par (000)
Asset-Backed Securities — 0.4%
Securitized Asset Backed Receivables LLC Trust, Series 2005-OP2, Class M1, 0.95%, 10/25/35 (a) $ 1,875 $ 1,697,659
Small Business Administration Participation Certificates, Class 1:
Series 1996-20K, 6.95%, 11/01/16 16 16,099
Series 1997-20C, 7.15%, 3/01/17 16 15,924
1,729,682
Interest Only Asset-Backed Securities — 0.1%
Small Business Administration Participation Certificates, Series 2000-1, 1.00%, 3/15/21 392 3,434
Sterling Bank Trust, Series 2004-2, Class Note, 2.08%, 3/30/30 (b) 1,783 126,492
Sterling Coofs Trust, Series 2004-1, Class A, 2.36%, 4/15/29 4,930 338,962
468,888
Total Asset-Backed Securities — 0.5% 2,198,570
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.6%
Deutsche Securities, Inc. Mortgage Alternate Loan Trust, Series 2006-AR5, Class 22A, 5.50%, 10/25/21 226 219,879
Homebanc Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-4, Class A1, 0.79%, 10/25/35 (a) 1,636 1,504,527
Kidder Peabody Acceptance Corp., Series 1993-1, Class A6, 15.65%, 8/25/23 (a) 36 40,911
Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2004-11, Class A, 3.00%, 8/25/34 (a) 810 803,514
2,568,831
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities — 0.5%
Credit Suisse Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2007-C2, Class A3, 5.54%, 1/15/49
(a) 2,146 2,157,090
Interest Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.4%
CitiMortgage Alternative Loan Trust, Series 2007-A5, Class 1A7, 6.00%, 5/25/37 467 125,018
GSMPS Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 1998-5, 0.00%, 6/19/27 (a)(b) 2,106 21
IndyMac INDX Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2006-AR33, Class 4AX, 0.17%,
1/25/37 48,947 12,150
MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust, Series 2004-3, Class 3AX, 0.48%, 4/25/34
(c) 5,552 111,047
MASTR Alternative Loans Trust, Series 2003-9, Class 15X2, 6.00%, 1/25/19 113 6,075
Morgan Stanley Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2004-3, Class 1AX, 5.00%, 5/25/19 77 1,743
Sequoia Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-2, Class XA, 0.90%, 3/20/35 (a) 25,086 689,878
Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2006-7, Class 3AS, 2.28%, 8/25/36 (a) 10,878 788,658
Vendee Mortgage Trust, Series 1999-2, Class 1, 0.00%, 5/15/29 (a) 27,397 27
1,734,617
Principal Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.1%
Countrywide Home Loan Mortgage Pass-Through Trust:
Series 2003-J5, 0.00%, 7/25/33 48 43,821
Series 2003-J8, 0.00%, 9/25/23 36 34,798
Drexel Burnham Lambert CMO Trust, Series K, Class 1, 0.00%, 9/23/17 — (d) 32
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities Par (000)
Principal Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (continued)
Residential Asset Securitization Trust, Series 2005-A15, Class 1A8, 0.00%,
2/25/36 $ 352 $ 245,918
Structured Mortgage Asset Residential Trust, Series 1993-3C, Class CX, 0.00%, 4/25/24 5 4,414
Washington Mutual Alternative Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-9, Class CP, 0.00%, 11/25/35 137 100,371
429,354
Total Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities — 1.6% 6,889,892
U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities
Agency Obligations — 2.7%
Federal Housing Administration:
USGI Projects, Series 99, 7.43%, 6/01/21 - 10/01/23 2,667 2,547,650
Reilly Projects, Series 41, 8.28%, 3/01/20 33 32,415
Resolution Funding Corp., 0.00%, 4/15/30 (e) 13,000 9,334,962
11,915,027
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 66.3%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series 2011-142, Class PE, 3.50%, 1/25/42 15,567 17,338,637
Series 2014-28, Class BD, 3.50%, 8/25/43 6,560 6,986,233
Series 2010-136, Class CY, 4.00%, 12/25/40 3,060 3,480,266
Series 2011-117, Class CP, 4.00%, 11/25/41 14,350 16,499,734
Series 2011-99, Class CB, 4.50%, 10/25/41 43,000 50,389,309
Series 2010-47, Class JB, 5.00%, 5/25/30 10,000 11,120,972
Series 2003-135, Class PB, 6.00%, 1/25/34 10,109 10,822,168
Series 2004-31, Class ZG, 7.50%, 5/25/34 4,609 5,694,484
Series 1993-247, Class SN, 10.00%, 12/25/23 (a) 116 143,519
Series 2005-73, Class DS, 16.19%, 8/25/35 (a) 687 849,296
Series 1991-87, Class S, 25.29%, 8/25/21 (a) 12 14,755
Series G-49, Class S, 980.26%, 12/25/21 (a) — (d) 110
Series G-07, Class S, 1,085.42%, 3/25/21 (a) — (d) 641
Series 1991-46, Class S, 2,398.91%, 5/25/21 (a) — (d) 1
Freddie Mac Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series T-11, Class A9, 3.08%, 1/25/28 (a) 884 928,434
Series K048, Class A2, 3.28%, 6/25/25 (a) 1,600 1,756,045
Series 4242, Class PA, 3.50%, 5/15/41 6,716 7,061,778
Series 3762, Class LN, 4.00%, 11/15/40 2,000 2,294,383
Series 4269, Class PM, 4.00%, 8/15/41 8,884 10,087,017
Series 4016, Class BX, 4.00%, 9/15/41 15,408 17,803,602
Series 3668, Class PB, 4.50%, 8/15/32 10,000 10,721,913
Series 4316, Class VB, 4.50%, 3/15/34 10,787 12,142,392
Series 3856, Class PB, 5.00%, 5/15/41 10,000 11,882,404
Series 2758, Class KV, 5.50%, 5/15/23 4,364 4,424,596
Series 2927, Class BZ, 5.50%, 2/15/35 3,900 4,477,425
Series 2542, Class UC, 6.00%, 12/15/22 1,892 2,046,332
Series 0040, Class K, 6.50%, 8/17/24 114 130,104
Series 0019, Class F, 8.50%, 3/15/20 11 11,578
Series 2218, Class Z, 8.50%, 3/15/30 2,108 2,443,509
Series 0173, Class RS, 10.04%, 11/15/21 (a) — (d) 3
Series 1160, Class F, 38.00%, 10/15/21 (a) 5 8,754
Ginnie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series 2010-099, Class JM, 3.75%, 12/20/38 19,300 20,163,924
Series 2015-96, Class ZM, 4.00%, 1/20/39 - 7/20/45 58,402 63,205,965
Series 2004-89, Class PE, 6.00%, 10/20/34 129 134,740
295,065,023

See Notes to Financial Statements.

58 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Par (000)
Interest Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 2.1%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series 1997-50, Class SI, 1.20%, 4/25/23 (a) $ 96 $ 2,668
Series G92-60, Class SB, 1.60%, 10/25/22 (a) 54 1,861
Series 2012-96, Class DI, 4.00%, 2/25/27 4,435 326,839
Series 2013-45, Class EI, 4.00%, 4/25/43 9,050 1,105,974
Series 2010-74, Class DI, 5.00%, 12/25/39 5,335 253,774
Series 1997-90, Class M, 6.00%, 1/25/28 1,558 196,178
Series 2011-124, Class GS, 6.18%, 3/25/37 (a) 9,527 874,168
Series 1999-W4, 6.50%, 12/25/28 131 12,808
Series 1993-199, Class SB, 6.98%, 10/25/23 (a) 27 347
Series 089, Class 2, 8.00%, 10/25/18 — (d) 9
Series 007, Class 2, 8.50%, 4/25/17 — (d) 4
Series G92-05, Class H, 9.00%, 1/25/22 2 103
Series 094, Class 2, 9.50%, 8/25/21 1 95
Series 1990-136, Class S, 19.55%, 11/25/20 (a) 4 4
Series 1991-139, Class PT, 648.35%, 10/25/21 — (d) 1
Series G-10, Class S, 1,050.07%, 5/25/21 (a) — (d) 4
Series G-12, Class S, 1,114.50%, 5/25/21 (a) — (d) 1
Freddie Mac Mortgage-Backed Securities:
Series 2559, 0.50%, 8/15/30 (a) 43 264
Series 3745, Class IN, 4.00%, 1/15/35 14,714 576,698
Series 3744, Class PI, 4.00%, 6/15/39 10,013 896,678
Series 4026, 4.50%, 4/15/32 3,303 383,165
Series 2611, Class QI, 5.50%, 9/15/32 644 37,106
Series 1043, Class H, 42.72%, 2/15/21 (a) 3 5
Ginnie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities (a):
Series 2009-116, Class KS, 5.96%, 12/16/39 1,526 231,766
Series 2011-52, Class MJ, 6.14%, 4/20/41 10,531 2,028,809
Series 2011-52, Class NS, 6.16%, 4/16/41 11,980 2,402,008
9,331,337
Mortgage-Backed Securities — 55.5%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
3.00%, 1/01/43 22,860 23,778,688
3.50%, 10/01/42 - 10/01/45 27,712 29,372,665
4.00%, 1/01/41 - 9/01/42 (f) 23,273 25,015,051
4.50%, 8/01/25 - 9/01/41 (f) 60,908 67,128,143
5.00%, 1/01/23 - 10/01/41 40,031 44,772,998
5.50%, 11/01/16 - 10/01/39 18,301 20,537,947
6.50%, 12/01/37 - 10/01/39 5,728 6,611,853
7.50%, 2/01/22 — (d) 20
9.50%, 1/01/19 - 9/01/19 1 1,104
Freddie Mac Mortgage-Backed Securities:
2.80%, 10/01/34 (a) 102 104,356
2.86%, 1/01/35 (a) 170 173,902
3.14%, 11/01/17 (a) — (d) 414
5.00%, 2/01/22 - 4/01/22 174 184,674
5.50%, 1/01/39 20,372 23,105,660
9.00%, 9/01/20 6 5,821
Ginnie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities:
5.00%, 10/15/39 5,444 6,081,986
7.50%, 8/15/21 - 12/15/23 86 90,061
8.00%, 10/15/22 - 8/15/27 40 42,824
9.00%, 4/15/20 - 9/15/21 2 2,213
247,010,380
Principal Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations — 0.2%
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities (e):
Series 1991-7, Class J, 0.00%, 2/25/21 2 2,219
Series G93-2, Class KB, 0.00%, 1/25/23 59 56,790
Series 1993-51, Class E, 0.00%, 2/25/23 21 19,651
Series 203, Class 1, 0.00%, 2/25/23 6 5,845
U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Par (000) Value
Principal Only Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (continued)
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities (e) (continued):
Series 1993-70, Class A, 0.00%, 5/25/23 $ 3 $ 3,054
Series 0228, Class 1, 0.00%, 6/25/23 5 4,499
Series 1999-W4, 0.00%, 2/25/29 54 51,490
Series 2002-13, Class PR, 0.00%, 3/25/32 121 114,439
Freddie Mac Mortgage-Backed Securities (e):
Series 1418, Class M, 0.00%, 11/15/22 21 19,862
Series 1571, Class G, 0.00%, 8/15/23 153 143,953
Series 1691, Class B, 0.00%, 3/15/24 301 282,817
Series T-8, Class A10, 0.00%, 11/15/28 36 35,171
739,790
Total U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities — 126.8% 564,061,557
U.S. Treasury Obligations
U.S. Treasury Bonds, 2.50%, 2/15/46 2,500 2,641,505
U.S. Treasury Notes:
1.00%, 11/30/19 (f) 2,965 2,967,781
1.38%, 8/31/20 (f) 4,045 4,086,874
1.63%, 11/15/22 780 791,883
2.00%, 8/15/25 2,860 2,964,793
Total U.S. Treasury Obligations — 3.0% 13,452,836
Total Long-Term Investments (Cost — $579,171,867) — 131.9% 586,602,855
Short-Term Securities Shares
Money Market Funds — 1.6%
BlackRock Liquidity Funds, TempFund, Institutional Class, 0.33% (i)(j) 7,183,580 7,183,580
Par (000)
Borrowed Bond Agreement (g)(h) — 0.2%
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, 0.44%, Open (Purchased on 3/15/16 to be repurchased at
$937,283. Collateralized by U.S. Treasury Bonds, 2.75%, 11/15/42, par and fair values of $917,000 and $1,018,658, respectively) $ 935 935,340
Total Short-Term Securities (Cost — $8,118,920) — 1.8% 8,118,920
Total Investments Before Borrowed Bonds and TBA Sale Commitments (Cost — $587,290,787) — 133.7% 594,721,775
Borrowed Bonds
U.S. Treasury Bonds, 2.75%, 11/15/42 917 (1,018,658 )
Total Borrowed Bonds (Proceeds — $842,347) — (0.3)% (1,018,658 )

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 59

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

TBA Sale Commitments Par (000) Value
Fannie Mae Mortgage-Backed Securities, 5.00%, 9/01/46 (k) $ 12,900 $ (14,296,827 )
Total TBA Sale Commitments (Proceeds — $14,255,743) — (3.2)% (14,296,827 )
Total Investments, Net of Borrowed Bonds and TBA Sale Commitments (Cost — $572,192,697) — 130.2% 579,406,290
Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets — (30.2)% (134,524,169 )
Net Assets — 100.0% $ 444,882,121

Notes to Schedule of Investments

(a) Variable rate security. Rate as of period end.

(b) Security exempt from registration pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration to qualified institutional investors.

(c) Step-up bond that pays an initial coupon rate for the first period and then a higher coupon rate for the following periods. Rate as of period end.

(d) Amount is less than $500.

(e) Zero-coupon bond.

(f) All or a portion of security has been pledged as collateral in connection with outstanding reverse repurchase agreements.

(g) The amount to be repurchased assumes the maturity will be the day after period end.

(h) Certain agreements have no stated maturity and can be terminated by either party at any time.

(i) During the year ended August 31, 2016, investments in issuers considered to be affiliates of the Trust for purposes of Section 2(a)(3) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, were as follows:

Affiliate — BlackRock Liquidity Funds, TempFund, Institutional Class 24,634,500 (17,450,920 ) 7,183,580 Value at August 31, 2016 — $ 7,183,580 Income — $ 36,838

(j) Current yield as of period end.

(k) Represents or includes a TBA transaction. As of period end, unsettled TBA transactions were as follows:

Counterparty — Barclays Bank PLC Value — $ (1,474,014 ) Unrealized Depreciation — $ (4,572 )
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC $ (7,946,376 ) $ (25,512 )
Goldman Sachs & Co. $ (4,876,437 ) $ (11,000 )

• For Trust compliance purposes, the Trust’s industry classifications refer to any one or more of the industry sub-classifications used by one or more widely recognized market indexes or rating group indexes, and/or as defined by the investment adviser. These definitions may not apply for purposes of this report, which may combine such industry subclassifications for reporting ease.

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

Counterparty Face Value Face Value Including Accrued Interest Type of Underlying Collateral Remaining Contractual Maturity of the Agreements
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC 0.51 % 3/15/16 Open $ 12,505,774 $ 12,535,715 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securities Corp. 0.52 % 6/13/16 Open 2,972,413 2,976,060 U.S. Treasury Obligations Open/Demand 1
BNP Paribas Securities Corp. 0.57 % 6/13/16 Open 4,110,731 4,116,423 U.S. Treasury Obligations Open/Demand 1
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 0.60 % 8/10/16 9/14/16 80,143,000 80,171,050 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Up to 30 Days
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. 0.59 % 8/10/16 9/14/16 53,041,000 53,059,255 U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Up to 30 Days
Total $ 152,772,918 $ 152,858,503
1 Certain agreements
have no stated maturity and can be terminated by either party at any time.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

60 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

Derivative Financial Instruments Outstanding as of Period End

Futures Contracts

Contracts Long (Short) — 118 Issue — 2-Year U.S. Treasury Note December 2016 USD 25,760,875 Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ (22 )
(100) 5-Year U.S. Treasury Note December 2016 USD 12,125,000 (3,720 )
(123) 10-Year U.S. Treasury Note December 2016 USD 16,103,391 (10,852 )
(108) 10-Year U.S. Ultra Long Treasury Note December 2016 USD 15,592,500 (1,223 )
(814) Long U.S. Treasury Bond December 2016 USD 138,685,250 8,470
285 Ultra Long U.S. Treasury Bond December 2016 USD 53,428,594 94,205
Total $ 86,858

OTC Interest Rate Swaps

Fixed Rate — 4.31% 1 3-Month LIBOR Deutsche Bank AG N/A 10/01/18 $ 60,000 Value — $ (5,064,509 ) Premiums Received — — Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) — $ (5,064,509 )
3.43% 2 3-Month LIBOR JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. N/A 3/28/21 $ 6,000 685,358 $ (128,872 ) 814,230
5.41% 2 3-Month LIBOR JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. N/A 8/15/22 $ 9,565 2,328,637 — 2,328,637
Total $ (2,050,514 ) $ (128,872 ) $ (1,921,642 )
1 Fund pays a fixed
rate and receives the floating rate.
2 Fund pays a
floating rate and receives the fixed rate.

Derivative Financial Instruments Categorized by Risk Exposure

As of period end, the fair values of derivative financial instruments located in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities were as follows:

Interest Rate Contracts Total
Assets — Derivative Financial Instruments
Futures contracts Net unrealized appreciation 1 — — — — $ 102,675 — $ 102,675
Swaps — OTC Unrealized appreciation on OTC swaps — — — — 3,142,867 3,142,867
Total — — — — $ 3,245,542 — $ 3,245,542
Liabilities — Derivative Financial Instruments
Futures contracts Net unrealized depreciation 1 — — — — $ 15,817 — $ 15,817
Swaps — OTC Unrealized depreciation on OTC swaps: Swap premiums received — — — — 5,193,381 — 5,193,381
Total — — — — $ 5,209,198 — $ 5,209,198
1 Includes cumulative
appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts, if any, as reported in the Schedule of Investments. Only current day’s variation margin is reported within the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 61

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

For the year ended August 31, 2016, the effect of derivative financial instruments in the Statements of Operations was as follows:

Interest Rate Contracts Total
Net Realized Gain (Loss) From:
Futures contracts — — — — $ (7,752,347 ) — $ (7,752,347 )
Swaps — — — — (112,714 ) — (112,714 )
Total — — — — $ (7,865,061 ) — $ (7,865,061 )
Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on:
Futures contracts — — — — $ (2,102,198 ) — $ (2,102,198 )
Swaps — — — — 289,644 — 289,644
Total — — — — $ (1,812,554 ) — $ (1,812,554 )

Average Quarterly Balances of Outstanding Derivative Financial Instruments

Futures contracts:
Average notional value of contracts — long $ 70,241,758
Average notional value of contracts — short $ 170,537,795
Interest rate swaps:
Average notional value — pays fixed rate $ 60,000,000
Average notional value — receives fixed rate $ 25,990,000

For more information about the Trust’s investment risks regarding derivative financial instruments, refer to the Notes to Financial Statements.

Derivative Financial Instruments — Offsetting as of Period End

The Trust’s derivative assets and liabilities (by type) were as follows:

Assets
Derivative Financial Instruments:
Futures contracts $ 92,750 $ 54,125
Swaps — OTC 1 3,142,867 5,193,381
Total derivative assets and liabilities in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities $ 3,235,617 $ 5,247,506
Derivatives not subject to a master netting agreement or similar agreement (“MNA”) (92,750 ) (54,125 )
Total derivative assets and liabilities subject to an MNA $ 3,142,867 $ 5,193,381
1 Includes unrealized
appreciation(depreciation) on OTC swaps and swap premiums paid/received in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

The following table presents the Trust’s derivative assets and liabilities by counterparty net of amounts available for offset under an Master Netting Agreement (“MNA”) and net of the related collateral received and pledged by the Trust:

Counterparty Derivative Assets Subject to an MNA by Counterparty Derivatives Available for Offset 1 Cash Collateral Received 2 Net Amount of Derivative Assets 3
JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. $ 3,142,867 $ (128,872 ) — $(3,013,995) —
Counterparty Derivative Liabilities Subject to an MNA by Counterparty Derivatives Available for Offset1 Non-cash Collateral Pledged Cash Collateral Pledged 4 Net Amount of Derivative Liabilities 5
Deutsche Bank AG $ 5,064,509 — — $ (5,040,000 ) $24,509
JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. 128,872 $ (128,872 ) — — —
Total $ 5,193,381 $ (128,872 ) — $ (5,040,000 ) $ 24,509
1 The amount of
derivatives available for offset is limited to the amount of derivative assets and/or liabilities that are subject to an MNA.
2 Excess of
collateral received from the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes
3 Net amount
represents the net amount receivable from the counterparty in the event of default.
4 Excess of
collateral pledged from the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes.
5 Net amount
represents the net amount payable due to the counterparty in the event of default.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

62 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (continued) BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

Fair Value Hierarchy as of Period End

Various inputs are used in determining the fair value of investments and derivative financial instruments. For information about the Trust’s policy regarding valuation of investments and derivative financial instruments, refer to the Notes to Financial Statements.

The following tables summarize the Trust’s investments and derivative financial instruments categorized in the disclosure hierarchy:

Level 1 Total
Assets:
Investments:
Long-Term Investments:
Asset-Backed Securities — $ 1,729,682 $ 468,888 $ 2,198,570
Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities — 5,300,309 1,589,583 6,889,892
U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities — 561,481,489 2,580,068 564,061,557
U.S. Treasury Obligations — 13,452,836 — 13,452,836
Short-Term Securities:
Money Market Funds $ 7,183,580 — — 7,183,580
Borrowed Bond Agreement — 935,340 — 935,340
Liabilities:
Investments:
Borrowed Bonds — (1,018,658 ) — (1,018,658 )
TBA Sale Commitments — (14,296,827 ) — (14,296,827 )
Total $ 7,183,580 $ 567,584,171 $ 4,638,539 $ 579,406,290
Derivative Financial Instruments 1
Assets:
Interest rate contracts $ 102,675 $ 3,142,867 — $ 3,245,542
Liabilities:
Interest rate contracts (15,817 ) (5,064,509 ) — (5,080,326 )
Total $ 86,858 $ (1,921,642 ) — $ (1,834,784 )
1 Derivative
financial instruments are swaps and futures contracts. Swaps and futures contracts are valued at the unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on the instrument.
The Trust may hold assets and/or liabilities in which the fair value approximates the carrying amount, or face value,
including accrued interest, for financial statement purposes. As of period end, such assets and/or liabilities are categorized within the disclosure hierarchy as follows:
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Assets:
Cash pledged:
Futures contracts $ 2,523,260 — — $ 2,523,260
Collateral — OTC derivatives 5,040,000 — — 5,040,000
Collateral — reverse repurchase agreements 682,769 — — 682,769
Liabilities:
Cash received as collateral for OTC derivatives — $ (3,330,000 ) — (3,330,000 )
Reverse repurchase agreements — (152,858,503 ) — (152,858,503 )
Total $ 8,246,029 $ (156,188,503 ) — $ (147,942,474 )

During the year ended August 31, 2016, there were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 63

Table of Contents

Schedule of Investments (concluded) BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

A reconciliation of Level 3 investments is presented when the Trust had a significant amount of Level 3 investments at the beginning and/or end of the period in relation to net assets. The following table is a reconciliation of Level 3 investments for which significant unobservable inputs were used in determining fair value:

U.S. Government Sponsored Agency Securities Total
Assets:
Opening Balance, as of August 31, 2015 $ 522,965 $ 2,114,419 $ 3,072,791 $ 5,710,175
Transfers into Level 3 — — — —
Transfers out of Level 3 — — — —
Accrued discounts/premiums (135,173 ) — (11,442 ) (146,615 )
Net realized gain (loss) (185,161 ) 7 (11,113 ) (196,267 )
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 1,2 266,257 (524,836 ) (669 ) (259,248 )
Purchases — — — —
Sales — (7 ) (469,499 ) (469,506 )
Closing Balance, as of August 31, 2016 $ 468,888 $ 1,589,583 $ 2,580,068 $ 4,638,539
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments held as of August 31, 2016 2 $ 266,257 $ (524,836 ) $ (669 ) $ (259,248 )
1 Included in the
related net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statements of Operations.
2 Any difference
between net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments held as of August 31, 2016 is generally due to investments no longer held or categorized as Level 3 at period
end.

Certain of the Trust’s investments that are categorized as Level 3 were valued utilizing third party pricing information without adjustment. Such valuations are based on unobservable inputs. A significant change in third party information inputs could result in a significantly lower or higher value of such Level 3 investments.

See Notes to Financial Statements.

64 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Statements of Assets and Liabilities

August 31, 2016 BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK) BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT) 1
Assets
Investments at value — unaffiliated 2 $ 1,089,555,993 $ 2,072,600,448 $ 587,538,195
Investments at value — affiliated 3 12,926,909 13,179,920 7,183,580
Cash 44,891 — —
Cash pledged:
Collateral — OTC derivatives 4,020,000 — 5,040,000
Collateral — reverse repurchase agreements — — 682,769
Futures contracts 1,349,970 1,568,150 2,523,260
Centrally cleared swaps 1,239,940 2,857,000 —
Foreign currency at value 4 437,584 631,458 —
Receivables:
Investments sold 2,367,639 6,225,127 34,621
Options written 162,906 — —
TBA sale commitments — — 14,255,743
Dividends — unaffiliated 27,422 8,761 —
Dividends — affiliated 3,137 566 6,576
Interest 11,124,669 29,724,353 2,129,649
Principal paydowns — — 5,744
Variation margin on futures contracts 75,335 132,895 92,750
Variation margin on centrally cleared swaps 5,906 — —
Swap premiums paid 7 53,238 —
Unrealized appreciation on:
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts 268,565 229,932 —
OTC swaps 57,477 2,640,445 3,142,867
Prepaid expenses 13,608 29,663 11,647
Other assets 5,942 — 768
Total assets 1,123,687,900 2,129,881,956 622,648,169
Liabilities
Bank overdraft — 2,604 —
Cash received:
Collateral — OTC derivatives 520,000 2,330,000 3,330,000
Collateral — reverse repurchase agreements 1,204,000 — —
Borrowed bonds at value 5 — — 1,018,658
Options written at value 6 5,414,078 22,041 —
TBA sale commitments at value 7 — — 14,296,827
Reverse repurchase agreements 288,238,889 — 152,858,503
Payables:
Investments purchased 2,145,291 25,568,515 —
Administration fees — — 113,243
Bank borrowings — 604,000,000 —
Income dividends 82,854 454,688 47,756
Interest expense — 758,592 7,469
Investment advisory fees 933,797 2,061,804 489,753
Officer’s and Trustees’ fees 196,948 506,722 182,154
Options written 315,214 — —
Other accrued expenses 299,342 772,836 174,179
Variation margin on futures contracts 3,169 — 54,125
Variation margin on centrally cleared swaps — 99,311 —
Swap premiums received 801,355 18,338 128,872
Unrealized depreciation on:
Forward foreign currency exchange contracts 302,820 336,167 —
OTC swaps 440,470 1,877 5,064,509
Other liabilities 240,760 — —
Contingencies — — 8 —
Total liabilities 301,138,987 636,933,495 177,766,048
Net Assets $ 822,548,913 $ 1,492,948,461 $ 444,882,121
See Notes to Financial Statements. — ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 65

Table of Contents

Statements of Assets and Liabilities (concluded)

August 31, 2016 BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)
Net Assets Consist of
Paid-in capital 9,10,11 $ 761,161,052 $ 1,778,771,251 $ 478,262,054
Undistributed (distributions in excess of) net investment income (234,993 ) 6,355,015 4,211,880
Accumulated net realized loss (16,074,607 ) (264,241,991 ) (42,971,317 )
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 77,697,461 (27,935,814 ) 5,379,504
Net Assets $ 822,548,913 $ 1,492,948,461 $ 444,882,121
Net asset value, offering and redemption price per share $ 15.25 $ 11.79 $ 6.96
1 Consolidated Statement of Assets
and Liabilities
2 Investments at cost —
unaffiliated $ 1,015,055,944 $ 2,101,867,196 $ 580,107,207
3 Investments at cost —
affiliated $ 12,926,909 $ 13,050,340 $ 7,183,580
4 Foreign currency at
cost $ 434,549 $ 630,843 —
5 Proceeds received from borrowed
bonds — — $ 842,347
6 Premiums received $ 8,969,163 $ 19,000 —
7 Proceeds from TBA sale
commitments — — $ 14,255,743
8 See Note 12 of the Notes to Financial
Statements for details of contingencies.
9 Par value $ 0.001 $ 0.100 $ 0.010
10 Shares outstanding 53,935,126 126,599,668 63,942,535
11 Shares authorized Unlimited 200 million 200 million
See Notes to Financial Statements. — 66 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Statements of Operations

Year Ended August 31, 2016 BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)
Investment Income
Interest $ 48,713,009 $ 122,323,419 $ 22,470,081
Dividends — unaffiliated 722,567 805,002 —
Dividends — affiliated 43,746 821,437 36,838
Other income 487,964 — 263,157
Foreign taxes withheld — (16 ) —
Total income 49,967,286 123,949,842 22,770,076
Expenses
Investment advisory 5,338,516 11,975,292 2,910,565
Professional 135,071 313,246 97,388
Miscellaneous 125,385 208,159 45,407
Transfer agent 109,693 146,109 73,485
Officer and Trustees 101,665 187,462 63,238
Accounting services 99,724 204,867 64,703
Custodian 94,698 201,859 35,662
Registration 17,970 41,873 21,791
Printing 17,127 31,636 15,018
Administration — — 671,669
Total expenses excluding interest expense and income tax 6,039,849 13,310,503 3,998,926
Interest expense 1,494,097 6,431,659 824,201
Income tax — 29,880 —
Total expenses 7,533,946 19,772,042 4,823,127
Less fees waived by the Manager (9,230 ) (997 ) (7,301 )
Less fees paid indirectly (195 ) — (302 )
Total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly 7,524,521 19,771,045 4,815,524
Net investment income 42,442,765 104,178,797 17,954,552
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)
Net realized gain (loss) from:
Investments (14,009,882 ) (88,802,531 ) 632,667
Investments — affiliated — (2,263,123 ) —
Futures contracts 2,738,560 (4,318,151 ) (7,752,347 )
Foreign currency transactions 2,545,608 7,230,510 —
Options written 3,887,894 259,773 —
Swaps (4,265,963 ) 6,083,805 (112,714 )
(9,103,783 ) (81,809,717 ) (7,232,394 )
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:
Investments 60,815,086 74,000,645 5,553,116
Investments — affiliated — 129,580 —
Futures contracts 1,159,137 (7,663,606 ) (2,102,198 )
Foreign currency translations (178,895 ) 144,189 —
Options written 2,435,217 (3,041 ) —
Swaps (294,435 ) 2,008,751 289,644
Borrowed bonds — — (136,440 )
63,936,110 68,616,518 3,604,122
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) 54,832,327 (13,193,199 ) (3,628,272 )
Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations $ 97,275,092 $ 90,985,598 $ 14,326,280
1 Consolidated Statement of
Operations.
See Notes to Financial Statements. — ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 67

Table of Contents

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)
Year Ended August 31,
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets: 2016 2015
Operations
Net investment income $ 42,442,765 $ 42,093,223
Net realized gain (loss) (9,103,783 ) 19,284,069
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 63,936,110 (53,137,205 )
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations 97,275,092 8,240,087
Distributions to Shareholders 1
From net investment income (45,548,216 ) (47,657,688 )
In excess of net investment income — (1,743,768 )
Decrease in net assets resulting from distributions to shareholders (45,548,216 ) (49,401,456 )
Capital Share Transactions
Net proceeds from the issuance of shares due to reorganization — 399,906,769
Cost of shares redeemed — (1,775 )
Net increase in net assets derived from capital transactions — 399,904,994
Net Assets
Total increase in net assets 51,726,876 358,743,625
Beginning of year 770,822,037 412,078,412
End of year $ 822,548,913 $ 770,822,037
Distributions in excess of net investment income, end of year $ (234,993 ) $ (17,798 )
1 Distributions for annual
periods determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations.
See Notes to Financial Statements. — 68 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Consolidated Statements of Changes in Net Assets

Year Ended August 31,
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets: 2016 2015
Operations
Net investment income $ 104,178,797 $ 110,710,853
Net realized gain (loss) (81,809,717 ) 3,532,873
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 68,616,518 (169,304,412 )
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations 90,985,598 (55,060,686 )
Distributions to Shareholders 1
From net investment income (125,343,672 ) (123,054,879 )
Net Assets
Total decrease in net assets (34,358,074 ) (178,115,565 )
Beginning of year 1,527,306,535 1,705,422,100
End of year $ 1,492,948,461 $ 1,527,306,535
Undistributed net investment income, end of year $ 6,355,015 $ 22,469,916

1 Distributions for annual periods determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations.

See Notes to Financial Statements. — ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 69

Table of Contents

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)
Year Ended August 31,
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets: 2016 2015
Operations
Net investment income $ 17,954,552 $ 20,490,679
Net realized loss (7,232,394 ) (6,803,051 )
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 3,604,122 (682,875 )
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations 14,326,280 13,004,753
Distributions to Shareholders 1
From net investment income (22,060,177 ) (25,321,248 )
Net Assets
Total decrease in net assets (7,733,897 ) (12,316,495 )
Beginning of year 452,616,018 464,932,513
End of year $ 444,882,121 $ 452,616,018
Undistributed net investment income, end of year $ 4,211,880 $ 7,048,258

1 Distributions for annual periods determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations.

See Notes to Financial Statements. — 70 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Statements of Cash Flows

Year Ended August 31, 2016 BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)
Cash Provided by (Used for) Operating Activities
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations $ 97,275,092 $ 90,985,598 $ 14,326,280
Adjustments to reconcile net increase in net assets resulting from operations to net cash provided by operating activities:
Proceeds from sales of long term investments and principal paydowns 386,810,823 1,334,108,590 907,319,977
Purchases of long term investments (376,278,777 ) (1,296,727,395 ) (895,903,574 )
Net proceeds from sales of short-term securities — — 17,362,580
Net purchases of short-term securities (3,006,544 ) — —
Amortization of premium and accretion of discount on investments 4,482,327 (1,428,429 ) 4,989,570
Premiums paid on closing options written (10,489,307 ) (52,832 ) —
Premiums received from options written 17,366,527 331,605 —
Net realized (gain) loss on investments and options written 9,485,896 90,278,943 204,031
Net unrealized loss on investments, options written, swaps, borrowed bonds and foreign currency translations (62,457,584 ) (76,225,662 ) (5,708,711 )
(Increase) Decrease in Assets:
Cash Pledged:
Collateral — OTC derivatives 1,640,000 80,000 1,460,000
Collateral — reverse repurchase agreements 2,140,000 — 483,231
Futures contracts 85,080 3,986,240 (531,950 )
Centrally cleared swaps (1,130,790 ) (2,334,250 ) —
Receivables:
Dividends — unaffiliated — (3,674 ) —
Income — affiliated (3,137 ) (566 ) (6,576 )
Interest 462,018 3,747,970 168,585
Swaps 15,098 224,244 248,798
Variation margin on futures contracts 15,953 1,060,225 312,182
Variation margin on centrally cleared swaps 30,155 — —
Swap premiums paid 65,721 47,171 —
Prepaid expenses (2,951 ) (4,751 ) (1,771 )
Other assets 18,507 — 2,466
Increase (Decrease) in Liabilities:
Cash received:
Collateral — reverse repurchase agreements 1,204,000 — —
Collateral — OTC derivatives 520,000 730,000 (640,000 )
Payables:
Swaps (7,510 ) — (1,111,408 )
Administration fees — — (2,242 )
Interest expense 198,235 239,863 44,205
Investment advisory fees (1,394 ) (193,022 ) (9,181 )
Officer’s and Trustees’ fees 12,951 85,853 27,346
Other accrued expenses 3,269 65,265 (8,421 )
Variation margin on futures contracts (258,593 ) (73 ) (46,344 )
Variation margin on centrally cleared swaps (19,444 ) 74,968 —
Swap premiums received 674,064 (33,046 ) (27,312 )
Net cash provided by operating activities 68,849,685 149,042,835 42,951,761
1 Consolidated Statement of Cash
Flows.
See Notes to Financial Statements. — ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 71

Table of Contents

Statements of Cash Flows (concluded)

| Year Ended August 31, 2016 | BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK) | | BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund,
Inc. (HYT) 1 | | BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT) | |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Cash Used for Financing Activities | | | | | | |
| Cash dividends paid to Common Shareholders | $ (45,546,171 | ) | $ (125,391,326 | ) | $ (22,068,187 | ) |
| Payments on bank borrowings | — | | (676,000,000 | ) | — | |
| Proceeds from bank borrowings | — | | 649,000,000 | | — | |
| Increase (decrease) in bank overdraft | — | | 2,604 | | (2,492 | ) |
| Net borrowing of reverse repurchase agreements | (23,202,872 | ) | — | | (20,881,082 | ) |
| Net cash used for financing activities | (68,749,043 | ) | (152,388,722 | ) | (42,951,761 | ) |
| Cash Impact from Foreign Exchange Fluctuations | | | | | | |
| Cash impact from foreign exchange fluctuations | $ 10,387 | | $ 727 | | — | |
| Cash and Foreign Currency | | | | | | |
| Net increase (decrease) in cash and foreign currency at value | 111,029 | | (3,345,160 | ) | — | |
| Cash and foreign currency at value at beginning of year | 371,446 | | 3,976,618 | | — | |
| Cash and foreign currency at value at end of year | $ 482,475 | | $ 631,458 | | — | |
| Supplemental Disclosure of Cash Flow Information | | | | | | |
| Cash paid during the year for interest expense | $ 1,295,862 | | $ 6,191,796 | | $ 779,996 | |
| 1 Consolidated
Statement of Cash Flows. | | | | | | |

See Notes to Financial Statements. — 72 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Financial Highlights BlackRock Core Bond Trust (BHK)

Year Ended August 31, — 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012
Per Share Operating Performance
Net asset value, beginning of year $ 14.29 $ 15.24 $ 14.05 $ 15.21 $ 13.78
Net investment income 1 0.79 0.86 0.87 0.89 0.88
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) 1.01 (0.73 ) 1.23 (1.11 ) 1.37
Net increase (decrease) from investment operations 1.80 0.13 2.10 (0.22 ) 2.25
Distributions: 2
From net investment income (0.84 ) (1.04 ) (0.91 ) (0.94 ) (0.82 )
In excess of net investment income 3 — (0.04 ) — — —
Total distributions (0.84 ) (1.08 ) (0.91 ) (0.94 ) (0.82 )
Net asset value, end of year $ 15.25 $ 14.29 $ 15.24 $ 14.05 $ 15.21
Market price, end of year $ 14.33 $ 12.63 $ 13.64 $ 12.50 $ 15.41
Total Return 4
Based on net asset value 13.67% 1.62% 16.09% 5 (1.42)% 17.06%
Based on market price 20.85% 0.35% 16.78% (13.43)% 28.78%
Ratios to Average Net Assets
Total expenses 0.97% 0.95% 6 1.06% 6 1.03% 0.95%
Total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly 0.97% 0.95% 6 1.02% 6 0.98% 0.94%
Total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense 0.78% 0.82% 6 0.91% 6 0.86% 0.86%
Net investment income 5.48% 5.83% 5.94% 5.92% 6.13%
Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of year (000) $ 822,549 $ 770,822 $ 412,078 $ 379,913 $ 411,136
Borrowings outstanding, end of year (000) $ 288,239 $ 303,651 $ 168,301 $ 172,537 $ 182,679
Portfolio turnover rate 7 35% 55% 82% 100% 290%

1 Based on average shares outstanding.

2 Distributions for annual periods determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations.

3 Taxable distribution.

4 Total returns based on market price, which can be significantly greater or less than the net asset value, may result in substantially different returns. Where applicable, excludes the effects of any sales charges and assumes the reinvestment of distributions.

5 Includes proceeds received from a settlement of litigation, which impacted the Trust’s total return. Excluding these proceeds, the total return would have been 16.01%.

6 Includes reorganization costs associated with the Trust’s merger. Without these costs, total expenses, total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly, and total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense would have been 0.94%, 0.94% and 0.82% for the year ended August 31, 2015 and 1.00%, 0.96% and 0.85% for the year ended August 31, 2014, respectively.

7 Includes mortgage dollar roll transactions (“MDRs”). Additional information regarding portfolio turnover rate is as follows:

2016 2015 2014 2013 2012
Portfolio turnover (excluding MDRs) 35% 51% 48% 63% 237%
See Notes to Financial Statements. — ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016 73

Table of Contents

Consolidated Financial Highlights BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (HYT)

Year Ended August 31, — 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012
Per Share Operating Performance
Net asset value, beginning of year $ 12.06 $ 13.47 $ 12.62 $ 12.32 $ 11.49
Net investment income 1 0.82 0.87 0.98 1.00 1.04
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) (0.10 ) (1.31 ) 0.91 0.41 0.83
Net increase (decrease) from investment operations 0.72 (0.44 ) 1.89 1.41 1.87
Distributions from net investment income 2 (0.99 ) (0.97 ) (1.04 ) (1.11 ) (1.04 )
Net asset value, end of year $ 11.79 $ 12.06 3 $ 13.47 $ 12.62 $ 12.32
Market price, end of year $ 10.88 $ 9.97 $ 12.07 $ 11.37 $ 12.96
Total Return 4
Based on net asset value 7.76% (2.40)% 3 16.21% 11.90% 17.14%
Based on market price 20.29% (9.96)% 15.58% (4.16)% 26.30%
Ratios to Average Net Assets
Total expenses 1.39% 5 1.37% 1.35% 6 1.54% 7 1.51%
Total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly 1.39% 5 1.37% 1.35% 6 1.54% 7 1.51%
Total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense and income tax 0.93% 5 0.96% 0.98% 6 1.16% 7,8 1.19% 9
Net investment income 7.30% 5 6.88% 7.40% 7.83% 8.84%
Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of year (000) $ 1,492,948 $ 1,527,307 $ 1,705,422 $ 446,847 $ 435,955
Borrowings outstanding, end of year (000) $ 604,000 $ 631,000 $ 723,000 $ 191,000 $ 181,000
Asset coverage, end of year $1,000 of bank borrowing $ 3,472 $ 3,419 $ 3,359 $ 3,340 $ 3,409
Portfolio turnover rate 66% 57% 64% 77% 61%

1 Based on average shares outstanding.

2 Distributions for annual periods determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations.

3 For financial reporting purposes, the market value of certain total return swaps were adjusted as of report date. Accordingly, the net asset value (“NAV”) per share and total return performance based on net asset value presented herein are different than the information previously published on August 31, 2015.

4 Total returns based on market price, which can be significantly greater or less than the net asset value, may result in substantially different returns. Where applicable, excludes the effects of any sales charges and assumes the reinvestment of distributions.

5 Does not include expenses incurred indirectly as a result of investments in underlying funds of approximately 0.11%.

6 Includes reorganization costs. Without these costs, total expenses, total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly, and total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense would have been 1.34%, 1.34% and 0.97%, respectively.

7 Includes reorganization costs. Without these costs, total expenses, total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly, and total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense would have been 1.50%, 1.50% and 1.12%, respectively.

8 For the year ended August 31, 2013, the total expense ratio after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense, borrowing costs and income tax was 1.15%.

9 For the year ended August 31, 2012, the total expense ratio after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense and borrowing costs was 1.09%.

See Notes to Financial Statements. — 74 ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 31, 2016

Table of Contents

Financial Highlights BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (BKT)

Year Ended August 31, — 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012
Per Share Operating Performance
Net asset value, beginning of year $ 7.08 $ 7.27 $ 7.32 $ 7.94 $ 7.96
Net investment income 1 0.28 0.32 0.35 0.32 0.39
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) (0.05 ) (0.11 ) 0.03 (0.46 ) 0.06
Net increase (decrease) from investment operations 0.23 0.21 0.38 (0.14 ) 0.45
Distributions: 2
From net investment income (0.35 ) (0.40 ) (0.43 ) (0.48 ) (0.27 )
From net realized gain — — — — (0.20 )
Total distributions (0.35 ) (0.40 ) (0.43 ) (0.48 ) (0.47 )
Net asset value, end of year $ 6.96 $ 7.08 $ 7.27 $ 7.32 $ 7.94
Market price, end of year $ 6.60 $ 6.30 $ 6.42 $ 6.40 $ 7.63
Total Return 3
Based on net asset value 3.64% 3.56% 6.05% (1.45)% 6.24%
Based on market price 10.44% 4.35% 7.12% (10.34)% 13.19%
Ratios to Average Net Assets
Total expenses 1.08% 0.99% 4 1.02% 4 1.00% 0.97%
Total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly 1.08% 0.99% 4 1.02% 4 1.00% 0.97%
Total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense 0.89% 0.90% 4 0.96% 4 0.90% 0.90%
Net investment income 4.01% 4.48% 4.74% 4.18% 4.86%
Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of year (000) $ 444,882 $ 452,616 $ 464,933 $ 467,948 $ 507,852
Borrowings outstanding, end of year (000) $ 152,859 $ 173,695 $ 205,415 $ 148,344 $ 119,706
Portfolio turnover rate 5 141% 191% 256% 358% 487%

1 Based on average shares outstanding.

2 Distributions for annual periods determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations.

3 Total returns based on market price, which can be significantly greater or less than the net asset value, may result in substantially different returns. Where applicable, excludes the effects of any sales charges and assumes the reinvestment of distributions.

4 Includes reorganization costs. Without these costs, total expenses, total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly, and total expenses after fees waived and paid indirectly and excluding interest expense would have been 0.99%, 0.99% and 0.89% for the year ended August 31, 2015 and 0.97%, 0.97% and 0.90% for the year ended August 31, 2014, respectively.

5 Includes MDRs. Additional information regarding portfolio turnover rate is as follows:

2016 2015 2014 2013 2012
Portfolio turnover (excluding MDRs) 63% 78% 125% 196% 230%

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Notes to Financial Statements

1. Organization:

The following are registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), as closed-end management investment companies and are referred to herein collectively as the “Trusts”, or individually, a “Trust”:

Trust Name — BlackRock Core Bond Trust BHK Delaware Diversified
BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. HYT Maryland Diversified
BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. BKT Maryland Diversified

The Boards of Directors and Boards of Trustees of the Trusts are collectively referred to throughout this report as the “Board of Trustees” or the “Board,” and the directors/trustees thereof are collectively referred to throughout this report as “Trustees.” The Trusts determine and make available for publication the NAVs of their Common Shares on a daily basis.

The Trusts, together with certain other registered investment companies advised by BlackRock Advisors, LLC (the “Manager”) or its affiliates, are included in a complex of closed-end funds referred to as the Closed-End Complex.

Reorganization: The Board and shareholders of BHK and the Board and shareholders of BlackRock Income Opportunity Trust, Inc. (“BNA” or the “Target Fund”) approved the reorganization of the Target Fund into BHK pursuant to which BHK acquired substantially all of the assets and substantially all of the liabilities of the Target Fund in exchange for an equal aggregate value of newly-issued Common Shares of BHK. The purpose of the transaction was to combine two funds managed by BlackRock Advisors, LLC (the “Manager”) with the same or substantially similar (but not identical) investment objectives, investment policies, strategies, risks and restrictions. The reorganization was a tax-free event and was effective on November 10, 2014.

Each Common Shareholder of the Target Fund received Common Shares of BHK in an amount equal to the aggregate net asset value of such Common Shareholder’s Target Fund Common Shares, as determined at the close of business on November 7, 2014, less the costs of the Target Fund’s reorganization. Cash was distributed for any fractional shares.

The reorganization was accomplished by a tax-free exchange of shares of BHK in the following amount and at the following conversion ratio:

Target Fund — BNA 34,456,370 0.78050585 26,893,279

BNA’s net assets and composition of net assets on November 7, 2014, the valuation date of the reorganization, was as follows:

Net assets BNA — $ 399,906,040
Paid-in capital $ 384,183,492
Distributions in excess of net investment income $ (65,119 )
Accumulated net realized loss $ (14,090,276 )
Net unrealized appreciation/ depreciation $ 29,877,943

For financial reporting purposes, assets received and shares issued by BHK were recorded at fair value. However, the cost basis of the investments received from the Target Fund were carried forward to maintain ongoing reporting of BHK’s realized and unrealized gains and losses distributable to shareholders for tax purposes.

The net assets of BHK before the acquisition were $402,115,685. The aggregate net assets of BHK immediately after the acquisition amounted to $802,021,725. The Target Fund’s fair value and cost of investments and derivative financial investments prior to the reorganization were as follows:

| Target Fund | Fair Value of Investments and Derivative Financial Instruments | Cost
of Investments |
| --- | --- | --- |
| BNA | $ 587,550,335 | $ 557,681,213 |

In connection with the reorganization, BHK investment advisory fee was reduced by 5 basis points, from 0.55% of BHK’s average weekly net assets to 0.50% of BHK’s average weekly net assets as defined in Note 6. In addition to this reduction, BHK’s contractual investment advisory fee waiver of 0.03%, as a percentage of average weekly net assets, was discontinued in connection with the reorganization.

Assuming the acquisition had been completed on September 1, 2014, the beginning of the fiscal reporting period of BHK, the pro forma results of operations for the year ended August 31, 2015, are as follows:

• Net investment income/loss: $46,563,761

• Net realized and change in unrealized gain/loss on investments: $(39,413,545)

• Net increase/decrease in net assets resulting from operations: $7,150,216

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Because the combined investment portfolios have been managed as a single integrated portfolio since the acquisition was completed, it is not practicable to separate the amounts of revenue and earnings of the BHK Target Fund that have been included in BHK’s Statement of Operations since November 10, 2014.

Reorganization costs incurred in connection with the reorganization were expensed by BHK.

Basis of Consolidation: The accompanying consolidated financial statements of HYT include the accounts of BLK HYT (Luxembourg) Investments, S.a.r.l., BLK HYV (Luxembourg) Investments, S.a.r.l., BLK COY (Luxembourg) Investments, S.a.r.l. and BLK CYE (Luxembourg) Investments, S.a.r.l. (the “Taxable Subsidiaries”), which are wholly owned taxable subsidiaries of HYT which hold shares of private Canadian companies, Laricina Energy Ltd. and Osum Oil Sands Corp. Such shares are held in the Taxable Subsidiaries in order to realize benefits under the Double Tax Avoidance Convention between Canada and Luxembourg, the result of which is gains on the sale of such shares will generally not be subject to capital gains taxes in Canada. Income earned on the investment held by the Taxable Subsidiary may be taxable to such subsidiary in Luxembourg. A tax provision, if any, is included in expenses in the Consolidated Statement of Operations for HYT. The net assets of the Taxable Subsidiaries as of period end were $699,084, which is less than 0.1% of HYT’s consolidated net assets. Intercompany accounts and transactions, if any, have been eliminated. The Taxable Subsidiaries are subject to the same investment policies and restrictions that apply to HYT.

2. Significant Accounting Policies:

The financial statements are prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“U.S. GAAP”), which may require management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial statements, disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Each Trust is considered an investment company under U.S. GAAP and follows the accounting and reporting guidance applicable to investment companies. Below is a summary of significant accounting policies:

Foreign Currency: Each Trust’s books and records are maintained in U.S. dollars. Purchases and sales of investments are recorded at the rates of exchange prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions. Generally, when the U.S. dollar rises in value against a foreign currency, the investments denominated in that currency will lose value; the opposite effect occurs if the U.S. dollar falls in relative value.

Each Trust does not isolate the portion of the results of operations arising as a result of changes in the exchange rates from the changes in the market prices of investments held or sold for financial reporting purposes. Accordingly, the effects of changes in exchange rates on investments are not segregated in the Statements of Operations from the effects of changes in market prices of those investments, but are included as a component of net realized and unrealized gain (loss) from investments. Each Trust reports realized currency gains (losses) on foreign currency related transactions as components of net realized gain (loss) for financial reporting purposes, whereas such components are generally treated as ordinary income for federal income tax purposes.

Segregation and Collateralization: In cases where a Trust enters into certain investments (e.g., dollar rolls, TBA sale commitments, futures contracts, forward foreign currency exchange contracts, options written, swaps and short sales) or certain borrowings (e.g., reverse repurchase transactions) that would be treated as “senior securities” for 1940 Act purposes, a Trust may segregate or designate on its books and records cash or liquid assets having a market value at least equal to the amount of its future obligations under such investments or borrowings. Doing so allows the investment or borrowing to be excluded from treatment as a “senior security.” Furthermore, if required by an exchange or counterparty agreement, the Trust may be required to deliver/deposit cash and/or securities to/with an exchange, or broker-dealer or custodian as collateral for certain investments or obligations.

Investment Transactions and Investment Income: For financial reporting purposes, investment transactions are recorded on the dates the transactions are entered into (the trade dates). Realized gains and losses on investment transactions are determined on the identified cost basis. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed are subsequently recorded when the Trusts are informed of the ex-dividend date. Under the applicable foreign tax laws, a withholding tax at various rates may be imposed on capital gains, dividends and interest. Upon notification from issuers, some of the dividend income received from a real estate investment trust may be redesignated as a reduction of cost of the related investment and/or realized gain. Interest income, including amortization and accretion of premiums and discounts on debt securities, is recognized on the accrual basis.

Distributions: Distributions from net investment income are declared and paid monthly. Distributions of capital gains are recorded on the ex-dividend date and made at least annually. Portions of return of capital distributions under U.S. GAAP may be taxed at ordinary income rates. The character of distributions is determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations, which may differ from U.S. GAAP. The portion of distributions that exceeds a Trust’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, as measured on a tax basis, constitute a non-taxable return of capital. Realized net capital gains can be offset by capital losses carried forward from prior years. However, certain Trusts have capital loss carryforwards from pre-2012 tax years that offset realized net capital gains but do not offset current earnings and profits. Consequently, if distributions in any tax year are less than the Trust’s current earnings and profits but greater than net investment income and net realized capital gains (taxable income), distributions in excess of taxable income are not treated as non-taxable return of capital, but rather may be taxable to shareholders at ordinary income rates. Under certain circumstances, taxable excess distributions could be significant. See Note 8, Income Tax Information, for the tax character of each Trust’s distributions paid during the year.

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Deferred Compensation Plan: Under the Deferred Compensation Plan (the “Plan”) approved by each Trust’s Board, the independent Trustees (“Independent Trustees”) may defer a portion of their annual complex-wide compensation. Deferred amounts earn an approximate return as though equivalent dollar amounts had been invested in common shares of certain other BlackRock Closed-End Funds selected by the Independent Trustees. This has the same economic effect for the Independent Trustees as if the Independent Trustees had invested the deferred amounts directly in certain other BlackRock Closed-End Funds.

The Plan is not funded and obligations thereunder represent general unsecured claims against the general assets of each Trust, if applicable. Deferred compensation liabilities are included in officer’s and trustees’ fees payable in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities and will remain as a liability of the Trusts until such amounts are distributed in accordance with the Plan.

Recent Accounting Standard: In April 2015, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued “Disclosures for Investments in Certain Entities that Calculate Net Asset Value (“NAV”) per Share” which eliminates the requirement to categorize investments within the fair value hierarchy when fair value is based on the NAV per share and no quoted market value is available. As of August 31, 2016, certain investments of HYT were valued using NAV per share as no quoted market value is available and have been excluded from the fair value hierarchy.

Indemnifications: In the normal course of business, each Trust enters into contracts that contain a variety of representations that provide general indemnification. A Trust’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown because it involves future potential claims against a Trust, which cannot be predicted with any certainty.

Other: Expenses directly related to a Trust are charged to that Trust. Other operating expenses shared by several funds, including other funds managed by the Manager, are prorated among those funds on the basis of relative net assets or other appropriate methods.

Through May 31, 2016, the Trusts had an arrangement with their custodian whereby credits were earned on uninvested cash balances, which could be used to reduce custody fees and/or overdraft charges. Credits previously earned may be utilized until December 31, 2016. Under current arrangements effective June 1, 2016, the Trusts no longer earn credits on uninvested cash, and may incur charges on uninvested cash balances and overdrafts, subject to certain conditions.

3. Investment Valuation and Fair Value Measurements:

Investment Valuation Policies: The Trusts’ investments are valued at fair value (also referred to as “market value” within the financial statements) as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) (generally 4:00 p.m., Eastern time). U.S. GAAP defines fair value as the price the Trusts would receive to sell an asset or pay to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. The Trusts determine the fair values of their financial instruments using various independent dealers or pricing services under policies approved by the Board of Trustees. The BlackRock Global Valuation Methodologies Committee (the “Global Valuation Committee”) is the committee formed by management to develop global pricing policies and procedures and to oversee the pricing function for all financial instruments.

Fair Value Inputs and Methodologies: The following methods (or “techniques”) and inputs are used to establish the fair value of each Trust’s assets and liabilities:

• Equity investments traded on a recognized securities exchange are valued at the official closing price each day, if available. For equity investments traded on more than one exchange, the official closing price on the exchange where the stock is primarily traded is used. Equity investments traded on a recognized exchange for which there were no sales on that day may be valued at the last available bid (long positions) or ask (short positions) price.

• Generally, trading in foreign instruments is substantially completed each day at various times prior to the close of business on the NYSE. Occasionally, events affecting the values of such instruments may occur between the foreign market close and the close of business on the NYSE that may not be reflected in the computation of the Trusts’ net assets. Each business day, the Trusts use a pricing service to assist with the valuation of certain foreign exchange-traded equity securities and foreign exchange-traded and over-the-counter (“OTC”) options (the “Systematic Fair Value Price”). Using current market factors, the Systematic Fair Value Price is designed to value such foreign securities and foreign options at fair value as of the close of business on the NYSE, which follows the close of the local markets.

• Bond investments are valued on the basis of last available bid prices or current market quotations provided by dealers or pricing services. Floating rate loan interests are valued at the mean of the bid prices from one or more brokers or dealers as obtained from a pricing service. In determining the value of a particular investment, pricing services may use certain information with respect to transactions in such investments, quotations from dealers, pricing matrixes, market transactions in comparable investments, various relationships observed in the market between investments and calculated yield measures. Asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities are valued by independent pricing services using models that consider estimated cash flows of each tranche of the security, establish a benchmark yield and develop an estimated tranche-specific spread to the benchmark yield based on the unique attributes of the tranche.

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• Municipal investments (including commitments to purchase such investments on a “when-issued” basis) are valued on the basis of prices provided by dealers or pricing services. In determining the value of a particular investment, pricing services may use certain information with respect to transactions in such investments, quotations from dealers, pricing matrixes, market transactions in comparable investments and information with respect to various relationships between investments.

• To-be-announced (“TBA”) commitments are valued on the basis of last available bid prices or current market quotations provided by pricing services.

• Investments in open-end U.S. mutual funds are valued at NAV each business day.

• Futures contracts traded on exchanges are valued at their last sale price.

• Securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars using exchange rates determined as of the close of business on the NYSE. Forward foreign currency exchange contracts are valued at the mean between the bid and ask prices and are determined as of the close of business on the NYSE. Interpolated values are derived when the settlement date of the contract is an interim date for which quotations are not available.

• Exchange-traded options are valued at the mean between the last bid and ask prices at the close of the options market in which the options trade. An exchange-traded option for which there is no mean price is valued at the last bid (long positions) or ask (short positions) price. If no bid or ask price is available, the prior day’s price will be used, unless it is determined that the prior day’s price no longer reflects the fair value of the option. OTC options and options on swaps (“swaptions”) are valued by an independent pricing service using a mathematical model, which incorporates a number of market data factors, such as the trades and prices of the underlying instruments.

• Swap agreements are valued utilizing quotes received daily by the Trusts’ pricing service or through brokers, which are derived using daily swap curves and models that incorporate a number of market data factors, such as discounted cash flows, trades and values of the underlying reference instruments.

If events (e.g., a company announcement, market volatility or a natural disaster) occur that are expected to materially affect the value of such instruments, or in the event that the application of these methods of valuation results in a price for an investment that is deemed not to be representative of the market value of such investment, or if a price is not available, the investment will be valued by the Global Valuation Committee, or its delegate, in accordance with a policy approved by the Board as reflecting fair value (“Fair Valued Investments”). When determining the price for Fair Valued Investments, the Global Valuation Committee, or its delegate, seeks to determine the price that each Trust might reasonably expect to receive or pay from the current sale or purchase of that asset or liability in an arm’s-length transaction. Fair value determinations shall be based upon all available factors that the Global Valuation Committee, or its delegate, deems relevant and consistent with the principles of fair value measurement, which include the market approach, income approach and/or in the case of recent investments, the cost approach, as appropriate. The market approach generally consists of using comparable market transactions. The income approach generally is used to discount future cash flows to present value and is adjusted for liquidity as appropriate. These factors include but are not limited to: (i) attributes specific to the investment or asset; (ii) the principal market for the investment or asset; (iii) the customary participants in the principal market for the investment or asset; (iv) data assumptions by market participants for the investment or asset, if reasonably available; (v) quoted prices for similar investments or assets in active markets; and (vi) other factors, such as future cash flows, interest rates, yield curves, volatilities, prepayment speeds, loss severities, credit risks, recovery rates, liquidation amounts and/or default rates. Due to the inherent uncertainty of valuations of such investments, the fair values may differ from the values that would have been used had an active market existed. The Global Valuation Committee, or its delegate, employs various methods for calibrating valuation approaches for investments where an active market does not exist, including regular due diligence of the Trusts’ pricing vendors, regular reviews of key inputs and assumptions, transactional back-testing or disposition analysis to compare unrealized gains and losses to realized gains and losses, reviews of missing or stale prices and large movements in market values and reviews of any market related activity. The pricing of all Fair Valued Investments is subsequently reported to the Board or a committee thereof on a quarterly basis.

Fair Value Hierarchy: Various inputs are used in determining the fair value of investments and derivative financial instruments. These inputs to valuation techniques are categorized into a fair value hierarchy consisting of three broad levels for financial statement purposes as follows:

• Level 1 — unadjusted price quotations in active markets/exchanges for identical assets or liabilities that each Trust has the ability to access

• Level 2 — other observable inputs (including, but not limited to, quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in markets that are active, quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active, inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the assets or liabilities (such as interest rates, yield curves, volatilities, prepayment speeds, loss severities, credit risks and default rates) or other market–corroborated inputs)

• Level 3 — unobservable inputs based on the best information available in the circumstances, to the extent observable inputs are not available (including each Trust’s own assumptions used in determining the fair value of investments and derivative financial instruments)

The hierarchy gives the highest priority to unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1 measurements) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3 measurements). Accordingly, the degree of judgment exercised in determining fair value is greatest for

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instruments categorized in Level 3. The inputs used to measure fair value may fall into different levels of the fair value hierarchy. In such cases, for disclosure purposes, the fair value hierarchy classification is determined based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety. The significant unobservable inputs used by the Global Valuation Committee in determining the price for Fair Valued Investments are typically categorized as Level 3. The fair value hierarchy for each Trust’s investments and derivative financial instruments has been included in the Schedules of Investments.

Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers into or out of an assigned level within the hierarchy. In accordance with each Trust’s policy, transfers between different levels of the fair value hierarchy are deemed to have occurred as of the beginning of the reporting period. The categorization of a value determined for investments and derivative financial instruments is based on the pricing transparency of the investments and derivative financial instruments and is not necessarily an indication of the risks associated with investing in those securities.

4. Securities and Other Investments:

Asset-Backed and Mortgage-Backed Securities: Asset-backed securities are generally issued as pass-through certificates or as debt instruments. Asset-backed securities issued as pass-through certificates represent undivided fractional ownership interests in an underlying pool of assets. Asset-backed securities issued as debt instruments, which are also known as collateralized obligations are typically issued as the debt of a special purpose entity organized solely for the purpose of owning such assets and issuing such debt. Asset-backed securities are often backed by a pool of assets representing the obligations of a number of different parties. The yield characteristics of certain asset-backed securities may differ from traditional debt securities. One such major difference is that all or a principal part of the obligations may be prepaid at any time because the underlying assets (i.e., loans) may be prepaid at any time. As a result, a decrease in interest rates in the market may result in increases in the level of prepayments as borrowers, particularly mortgagors, refinance and repay their loans. An increased prepayment rate with respect to an asset-backed security will have the effect of shortening the maturity of the security. In addition, the Trusts may subsequently have to reinvest the proceeds at lower interest rates. If a Trust has purchased such an asset-backed security at a premium, a faster than anticipated prepayment rate could result in a loss of principal to the extent of the premium paid.

For mortgage pass-through securities (the “Mortgage Assets”), there are a number of important differences among the agencies and instrumentalities of the U.S. Government that issue mortgage-related securities and among the securities that they issue. For example, mortgage-related securities guaranteed by Ginnie Mae are guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by Ginnie Mae and such guarantee is backed by the full faith and credit of the United States. However, mortgage-related securities issued by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, including Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae guaranteed mortgage pass-through certificates, which are solely the obligations of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, are not backed by or entitled to the full faith and credit of the United States, but are supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Treasury.

Non-agency mortgage-backed securities are securities issued by non-governmental issuers and have no direct or indirect government guarantees of payment and are subject to various risks. Non-agency mortgage loans are obligations of the borrowers thereunder only and are not typically insured or guaranteed by any other person or entity. The ability of a borrower to repay a loan is dependent upon the income or assets of the borrower. A number of factors, including a general economic downturn, acts of God, terrorism, social unrest and civil disturbances, may impair a borrower’s ability to repay its loans.

Collateralized Debt Obligations: Collateralized debt obligations (“CDOs”), including collateralized bond obligations (“CBOs”) and collateralized loan obligations (“CLOs”), are types of asset-backed securities. A CDO is an entity that is backed by a diversified pool of debt securities (CBOs) or syndicated bank loans (CLOs). The cash flows of the CDO can be split into multiple segments, called “tranches,” which will vary in risk profile and yield. The riskiest segment is the subordinated or “equity” tranche. This tranche bears the greatest risk of defaults from the underlying assets in the CDO and serves to protect the other, more senior, tranches from default in all but the most severe circumstances. Since it is shielded from defaults by the more junior tranches, a “senior” tranche will typically have higher credit ratings and lower yields than their underlying securities, and often receive investment grade ratings from one or more of the nationally recognized rating agencies. Despite the protection from the more junior tranches, senior tranches can experience substantial losses due to actual defaults, increased sensitivity to future defaults and the disappearance of one or more protecting tranches as a result of changes in the credit profile of the underlying pool of assets.

Multiple Class Pass-Through Securities: Multiple class pass-through securities, including collateralized mortgage obligations (“CMOs”) and commercial mortgage-backed securities, may be issued by Ginnie Mae, U.S. Government agencies or instrumentalities or by trusts formed by private originators of, or investors in, mortgage loans. In general, CMOs are debt obligations of a legal entity that are collateralized by a pool of residential or commercial mortgage loans or mortgage pass-through securities (the “Mortgage Assets”). The payments on these are used to make payments on the CMOs or multiple pass-through securities. Multiple class pass-through securities represent direct ownership interests in the Mortgage Assets. Classes of CMOs include interest only (“IOs”), principal only (“POs”), planned amortization classes and targeted amortization classes. IOs and POs are stripped mortgage-backed securities representing interests in a pool of mortgages, the cash flow from which has been separated into interest and principal components. IOs receive the interest portion of the cash flow while POs receive the principal portion. IOs and POs can be extremely volatile in response to changes in interest rates. As interest rates rise and fall, the value of IOs tends to move in the same direction as interest rates. POs perform best when prepayments on the underlying mortgages rise since this increases the rate at which the principal is returned and the yield to maturity on the PO. When payments on mortgages underlying a PO are slower than anticipated, the life of the PO is lengthened and the yield to maturity is reduced. If the underlying Mortgage Assets experience greater than anticipated prepayments of principal, the Trust’s initial investment in the IOs may not fully recoup.

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Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities: Stripped mortgage-backed securities are typically issued by the U.S. Government, its agencies and instrumentalities. Stripped mortgage-backed securities are usually structured with two classes that receive different proportions of the interest (IOs) and principal (POs) distributions on a pool of Mortgage Assets. Stripped mortgage-backed securities may be privately issued.

Zero-Coupon Bonds: Zero-coupon bonds are normally issued at a significant discount from face value and do not provide for periodic interest payments. These bonds may experience greater volatility in market value than other debt obligations of similar maturity which provide for regular interest payments.

Capital Securities and Trust Preferred Securities: Capital securities, including trust preferred securities, are typically issued by corporations, generally in the form of interest-bearing notes with preferred securities characteristics. In the case of trust preferred securities, an affiliated business trust of a corporation issues these securities, generally in the form of beneficial interests in subordinated debentures or similarly structured securities. The securities can be structured with either a fixed or adjustable coupon that can have either a perpetual or stated maturity date. For trust preferred securities, the issuing bank or corporation pays interest to the trust, which is then distributed to holders of these securities as a dividend. Dividends can be deferred without creating an event of default or acceleration, although maturity cannot take place unless all cumulative payment obligations have been met. The deferral of payments does not affect the purchase or sale of these securities in the open market. Payments on these securities are treated as interest rather than dividends for federal income tax purposes. These securities generally are rated below that of the issuing company’s senior debt securities and are freely callable at the issuer’s option.

Preferred Stock: Preferred stock has a preference over common stock in liquidation (and generally in receiving dividends as well) but is subordinated to the liabilities of the issuer in all respects. As a general rule, the market value of preferred stock with a fixed dividend rate and no conversion element varies inversely with interest rates and perceived credit risk, while the market price of convertible preferred stock generally also reflects some element of conversion value. Because preferred stock is junior to debt securities and other obligations of the issuer, deterioration in the credit quality of the issuer will cause greater changes in the value of a preferred stock than in a more senior debt security with similar stated yield characteristics. Unlike interest payments on debt securities, preferred stock dividends are payable only if declared by the issuer’s board of directors. Preferred stock also may be subject to optional or mandatory redemption provisions.

Warrants: Warrants entitle a Trust to purchase a specified number of shares of common stock and are non-income producing. The purchase price and number of shares are subject to adjustment under certain conditions until the expiration date of the warrants, if any. If the price of the underlying stock does not rise above the strike price before the warrant expires, the warrant generally expires without any value and a Trust will lose any amount it paid for the warrant. Thus, investments in warrants may involve more risk than investments in common stock. Warrants may trade in the same markets as their underlying stock; however, the price of the warrant does not necessarily move with the price of the underlying stock.

Floating Rate Loan Interests: Floating rate loan interests are typically issued to companies (the “borrower”) by banks, other financial institutions, or privately and publicly offered corporations (the “lender”). Floating rate loan interests are generally non-investment grade, often involve borrowers whose financial condition is troubled or uncertain and companies that are highly leveraged or in bankruptcy proceedings. In addition, transactions in floating rate loan interests may settle on a delayed basis, which may result in proceeds from the sale to not be readily available for a Trust to make additional investments or meet its redemption obligations. Floating rate loan interests may include fully funded term loans or revolving lines of credit. Floating rate loan interests are typically senior in the corporate capital structure of the borrower. Floating rate loan interests generally pay interest at rates that are periodically determined by reference to a base lending rate plus a premium. Since the rates reset only periodically, changes in prevailing interest rates (and particularly sudden and significant changes) can be expected to cause some fluctuations in the net asset value of a Trust to the extent that it invests in floating rate debt securities. The base lending rates are generally the lending rate offered by one or more European banks, such as the London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”), the prime rate offered by one or more U.S. banks or the certificate of deposit rate. Floating rate loan interests may involve foreign borrowers, and investments may be denominated in foreign currencies. These investments are treated as investments in debt securities for purposes of a Trust’s investment policies.

When a Trust purchases a floating rate loan interest, it may receive a facility fee and when it sells a floating rate loan interest, it may pay a facility fee. On an ongoing basis, a Trust may receive a commitment fee based on the undrawn portion of the underlying line of credit amount of a floating rate loan interest. Facility and commitment fees are typically amortized to income over the term of the loan or term of the commitment, respectively. Consent and amendment fees are recorded to income as earned. Prepayment penalty fees, which may be received by the Trusts upon the prepayment of a floating rate loan interest by a borrower, are recorded as realized gains. A Trust may invest in multiple series or tranches of a loan. A different series or tranche may have varying terms and carry different associated risks.

Floating rate loan interests are usually freely callable at the borrower’s option. A Trust may invest in such loans in the form of participations in loans (“Participations”) or assignments (“Assignments”) of all or a portion of loans from third parties. Participations typically will result in a Trust having a contractual relationship only with the lender, not with the borrower. A Trust has the right to receive payments of principal, interest and any fees to which it is entitled only from the lender selling the Participation and only upon receipt by the lender of the payments from the borrower. In connection with purchasing Participations, a Trust generally will have no right to enforce compliance by the borrower with the terms of the loan agreement, nor any rights of offset against the borrower. A Trust may not benefit directly from any collateral supporting the loan in which it has purchased the Participation. As a result, a Trust

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assumes the credit risk of both the borrower and the lender that is selling the Participation. A Trust’s investment in loan participation interests involves the risk of insolvency of the financial intermediaries who are parties to the transactions. In the event of the insolvency of the lender selling the Participation, a Trust may be treated as a general creditor of the lender and may not benefit from any offset between the lender and the borrower. Assignments typically result in a Trust having a direct contractual relationship with the borrower, and a Trust may enforce compliance by the borrower with the terms of the loan agreement.

Forward Commitments and When-Issued Delayed Delivery Securities: Certain Trusts may purchase securities on a when-issued basis and may purchase or sell securities on a forward commitment basis. Settlement of such transactions normally occurs within a month or more after the purchase or sale commitment is made. A Trust may purchase securities under such conditions with the intention of actually acquiring them, but may enter into a separate agreement to sell the securities before the settlement date. Since the value of securities purchased may fluctuate prior to settlement, a Trust may be required to pay more at settlement than the security is worth. In addition, a Trust is not entitled to any of the interest earned prior to settlement. When purchasing a security on a delayed delivery basis, a Trust assumes the rights and risks of ownership of the security, including the risk of price and yield fluctuations. In the event of default by the counterparty, a Trust’s maximum amount of loss is the unrealized appreciation of unsettled when-issued transactions.

TBA Commitments: TBA commitments are forward agreements for the purchase or sale of mortgage-backed securities for a fixed price, with payment and delivery on an agreed upon future settlement date. The specific securities to be delivered are not identified at the trade date. However, delivered securities must meet specified terms, including issuer, rate and mortgage terms. When entering into TBA commitments, a Trust may take possession of or deliver the underlying mortgage-backed securities but can extend the settlement or roll the transaction. TBA commitments involve a risk of loss if the value of the security to be purchased or sold declines or increases, respectively, prior to settlement date.

In order to better define contractual rights and to secure rights that will help a Trust mitigate its counterparty risk, TBA commitments may be entered into by a Trust under Master Securities Forward Transaction Agreements (each, an “MSFTA”). An MSFTA typically contains, among other things, collateral posting terms and netting provisions in the event of default and/or termination event. The collateral requirements are typically calculated by netting the mark-to-market amount for each transaction under such agreement and comparing that amount to the value of the collateral currently pledged by a Trust and the counterparty. Cash collateral that has been pledged to cover the obligations of a Trust and cash collateral received from the counterparty, if any, is reported separately on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities as cash pledged as collateral for TBA commitments or cash received as collateral for TBA commitments, respectively. Non-cash collateral pledged by a Trust, if any, is noted in the Schedules of Investments. Typically, a Trust is permitted to sell, repledge or use the collateral it receives; however, the counterparty is not permitted to do so. To the extent amounts due to a Trust are not fully collateralized, contractually or otherwise, a Trust bears the risk of loss from counterparty non-performance.

Mortgage Dollar Roll Transactions: Certain Trusts may sell TBA mortgage-backed securities and simultaneously contract to repurchase substantially similar (i.e., same type, coupon and maturity) securities on a specific future date at an agreed upon price. During the period between the sale and repurchase, a Trust is not entitled to receive interest and principal payments on the securities sold. Mortgage dollar roll transactions are treated as purchases and sales and realize gains and losses on these transactions. Mortgage dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the securities that a Trust is required to purchase may decline below the agreed upon repurchase price of those securities.

Borrowed Bond Agreements: Repurchase agreements may be referred to as borrowed bond agreements when entered into in connection with short sales of bonds. In a borrowed bond agreement, a Trust borrows a bond from a counterparty in exchange for cash collateral. The agreement contains a commitment that the security and the cash will be returned to the counterparty and a Trust at a mutually agreed upon date. Certain agreements have no stated maturity and can be terminated by either party at any time. Earnings on cash collateral and compensation to the lender of the bond are based on agreed upon rates between a Trust and the counterparty. The value of the underlying cash collateral approximates the market value and accrued interest of the borrowed bond. To the extent that a borrowed bond transaction exceeds one business day, the value of the cash collateral in the possession of the counterparty is monitored on a daily basis to ensure the adequacy of the collateral. As the market value of the borrowed bond changes, the cash collateral is periodically increased or decreased with a frequency and in amounts prescribed in the borrowed bond agreement. A Trust may also experience delays in gaining access to the collateral.

Reverse Repurchase Agreements: Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements with qualified third party broker dealers in which a Trust sells securities to a bank or broker-dealer and agrees to repurchase the same securities at a mutually agreed upon date and price. A Trust receives cash from the sale to use for other investment purposes. During the term of the reverse repurchase agreement, a Trust continues to receive the principal and interest payments on the securities sold. Certain agreements have no stated maturity and can be terminated by either party at any time. Interest on the value of the reverse repurchase agreements issued and outstanding is based upon competitive market rates determined at the time of issuance. A Trust may utilize reverse repurchase agreements when it is anticipated that the interest income to be earned from the investment of the proceeds of the transaction is greater than the interest expense of the transaction. Reverse repurchase agreements involve leverage risk. If a Trust suffers a loss on its investment of the transaction proceeds from a reverse repurchase agreement, a Trust would still be required to pay the full repurchase price. Further, a Trust remains subject to the risk that the market value of the securities repurchased declines below the repurchase price. In such cases, a Trust would be required to return a portion of the cash received from the transaction or provide additional securities to the counterparty.

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Cash received in exchange for securities delivered plus accrued interest due to the counterparty is recorded as a liability in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities at face value including accrued interest. Due to the short- term nature of the reverse repurchase agreements, face value approximates fair value. Interest payments made by a Trust to the counterparties are recorded as a component of interest expense in the Statements of Operations. In periods of increased demand for the security, a Trust may receive a fee for use of the security by the counterparty, which may result in interest income to a Trust.

For the year ended August 31, 2016, the average amount of reverse repurchase agreements outstanding and the daily weighted average interest rates were as follows:

BHK Average Amount Outstanding — $ 293,360,951 0.51 %
BKT $ 160,153,322 0.51 %

Borrowed bond agreements and reverse repurchase transactions are entered into by a Trust under Master Repurchase Agreements (each, an “MRA”), which permit a Trust, under certain circumstances, including an event of default (such as bankruptcy or insolvency), to offset payables and/or receivables under the MRA with collateral held and/or posted to the counterparty and create one single net payment due to or from a Trust. With borrowed bond agreements and reverse repurchase transactions, typically a Trust and the counterparty under an MRA are permitted to sell, re-pledge, or use the collateral associated with the transaction. Bankruptcy or insolvency laws of a particular jurisdiction may impose restrictions on or prohibitions against such a right of offset in the event of the MRA counterparty’s bankruptcy or insolvency. Pursuant to the terms of the MRA, a Trust receives or posts securities as collateral with a market value in excess of the repurchase price to be paid or received by a Trust upon the maturity of the transaction. Upon a bankruptcy or insolvency of the MRA counterparty, a Trust is considered an unsecured creditor with respect to excess collateral and, as such, the return of excess collateral may be delayed.

As of period end, the following table is a summary of the Trusts’ open borrowed bond agreements and reverse repurchase agreements by counterparty which are subject to offset under an MRA on a net basis:

BHK — Counterparty Reverse Repurchase Agreements Fair Value of Non-cash Collateral Pledged Including Accrued Interest 1 Cash Collateral Pledged Net Amount 2
Barclays Capital, Inc. $ 12,975,689 $ (12,975,689 ) — —
BNP Paribas Securities Corp. 102,361,521 (102,361,521 ) — —
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC 5,031,655 (5,031,655 ) — —
Deutsche Bank AG 24,457,665 (24,457,665 ) — —
HSBC Securities (USA), Inc. 54,395,612 (54,395,612 ) — —
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc 17,974,441 (17,974,441 ) — —
Nomura Securities International, Inc 31,779,484 (31,732,707 ) — $ 46,777
RBC Capital Markets, LLC 39,262,822 (39,262,822 ) — —
Total $ 288,238,889 $ (288,192,112 ) — $ 46,777

1 Net collateral with a value of $296,141,939 has been pledged in connection with open reverse repurchase agreements. Excess of collateral pledged to the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes.

2 Net amount represents the net amount payable due to counterparty in the event of default.

BKT — Counterparty Borrowed Bonds Agreements 1 Reverse Repurchase Agreements Borrowed Bonds at Value including Accrued Interest 2 Net Amount before Collateral Non-cash Collateral Received Cash Collateral Received Non-cash Collateral Pledged Cash Collateral Pledged Net Collateral (Received)/ Pledged 3 Net Exposure Due (to)/from Counterparty 4
BNP Paribas Securities Corp — $ (7,092,483 ) — $ (7,092,483 ) — — $ 7,062,347 — $ 7,062,347 $ (30,136 )
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC $ 935,340 (12,535,715 ) $ (1,026,127 ) (12,626,502 ) — — 12,245,942 $ 380,560 12,626,502 —
HSBC Securities (USA) LLC — (80,171,050 ) — (80,171,050 ) — — 80,171,050 — 80,171,050 —
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. — (53,059,255 ) — (53,059,255 ) — — 53,059,255 — 53,059,255 —
Total $ 935,340 $ (152,858,503 ) $ (1,026,127 ) $ (152,949,290 ) — — $ 152,538,594 $ 380,560 $ 152,919,154 $ (30,136 )

1 Included in investments at value-unaffiliated in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

2 Includes accrued interest on borrowed bonds in the amount of $7,469 which is included in interest expense payable in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

3 Net collateral with a value of $158,123,036 has been pledged in connection with open reverse repurchase agreements. Excess of net collateral pledged to the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes.

4 Net exposure represents the net receivable (payable) that would be due from/to the counterparty in the event of default.

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In the event the counterparty of securities under an MRA files for bankruptcy or becomes insolvent, a Trust’s use of the proceeds from the agreement may be restricted while the counterparty, or its trustee or receiver, determines whether or not to enforce a Trust’s obligation to repurchase the securities.

Short Sale Transactions: In short sale transactions, a Trust sells a security it does not hold in anticipation of a decline in the market price of that security. When a Trust makes a short sale, it will borrow the security sold short (borrowed bond) and deliver the security to the counterparty to which it sold the security short. An amount equal to the proceeds received by a Trust is reflected as an asset and an equivalent liability. The amount of the liability is subsequently marked-to-market to reflect the market value of the short sale. A Trust is required to repay the counterparty interest on the security sold short, which, if applicable, is shown as interest expense in the Statements of Operations. A Trust is exposed to market risk based on the amount, if any, that the market value of the security increases beyond the market value at which the position was sold. Thus, a short sale of a security involves the risk that instead of declining, the price of the security sold short will rise. The short sale of securities involves the possibility of an unlimited loss since there is an unlimited potential for the market price of the security sold short to increase. A gain is limited to the price at which a Trust sold the security short. A realized gain or loss is recognized upon the termination of a short sale if the market price is either less than or greater than the proceeds originally received. There is no assurance that a Trust will be able to close out a short position at a particular time or at an acceptable price.

5. Derivative Financial Instruments:

The Trusts engage in various portfolio investment strategies using derivative contracts both to increase the returns of the Trusts and/or to manage their exposure to certain risks such as credit risk, equity risk, interest rate risk, foreign currency exchange rate risk, commodity price risk or other risks (e.g., inflation risk). Derivative financial instruments categorized by risk exposure are included in the Schedules of Investments. These contracts may be transacted on an exchange or OTC.

Futures Contracts: Certain Trusts invest in long and/or short positions in futures and options on futures contracts to gain exposure to, or manage exposure to changes in interest rates (interest rate risk), changes in the value of equity securities (equity risk) or foreign currencies (foreign currency exchange rate risk).

Futures contracts are agreements between the Trusts and a counterparty to buy or sell a specific quantity of an underlying instrument at a specified price and on a specified date. Depending on the terms of a contract, it is settled either through physical delivery of the underlying instrument on the settlement date or by payment of a cash amount on the settlement date. Upon entering into a futures contract, the Trusts are required to deposit initial margin with the broker in the form of cash or securities in an amount that varies depending on a contract’s size and risk profile. The initial margin deposit must then be maintained at an established level over the life of the contract.

Securities deposited as initial margin are designated in the Schedules of Investments and cash deposited, if any, is shown as cash pledged for futures contracts in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. Pursuant to the contract, the Trusts agree to receive from or pay to the broker an amount of cash equal to the daily fluctuation in market value of the contract (“variation margin”). Variation margin is recorded as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and, if any, shown as variation margin receivable (or payable) on futures contracts in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. When the contract is closed, a realized gain or loss is recorded in the Statements of Operations equal to the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed. The use of futures contracts involves the risk of an imperfect correlation in the movements in the price of futures contracts and interest, foreign currency exchange rates or underlying assets.

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts: Certain Trusts enter into forward foreign currency exchange contracts to gain or reduce exposure to foreign currencies (foreign currency exchange rate risk). A forward foreign currency exchange contract is an agreement between two parties to buy and sell a currency at a set exchange rate on a specified date. These contracts help to manage the overall exposure to the currencies in which some of the investments held by the Trusts are denominated and in some cases, may be used to obtain exposure to a particular market. The contract is marked to market daily and the change in market value is recorded as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. When a contract is closed, a realized gain or loss is recorded in the Statements of Operations equal to the difference between the value at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed. Non-deliverable forward foreign currency exchange contracts are settled with the counterparty in cash without the delivery of foreign currency. The use of forward foreign currency exchange contracts involves the risk that the value of a forward foreign currency exchange contract changes unfavorably due to movements in the value of the referenced foreign currencies.

Options: Certain Trusts purchase and write call and put options to increase or decrease their exposure to the risks of underlying instruments, including equity risk, interest rate risk and/or commodity price risk and/or, in the case of options written, to generate gains from options premiums.

A call option gives the purchaser (holder) of the option the right (but not the obligation) to buy, and obligates the seller (writer) to sell (when the option is exercised) the underlying instrument at the exercise or strike price at any time or at a specified time during the option period. A put option gives the holder the right to sell and obligates the writer to buy the underlying instrument at the exercise or strike price at any time or at a specified time during the option period.

Premiums paid on options purchased and premiums received on options written, as well as the daily fluctuation in market value, are included in investments at value — unaffiliated and options written at value, respectively, in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. When an instrument is purchased or

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sold through the exercise of an option, the premium is offset against the cost or proceeds of the underlying instrument. When an option expires, a realized gain or loss is recorded in the Statements of Operations to the extent of the premiums received or paid. When an option is closed or sold, a gain or loss is recorded in the Statements of Operations to the extent the cost of the closing transaction exceeds the premiums received or paid. When the Trusts write a call option, such option is typically “covered,” meaning that they hold the underlying instrument subject to being called by the option counterparty. When the Trusts write a put option, such option is covered by cash in an amount sufficient to cover the obligation.

• Swaptions — Certain Trusts purchase and write options on swaps (“swaptions”) primarily to preserve a return or spread on a particular investment or portion of the Trusts’ holdings, as a duration management technique or to protect against an increase in the price of securities it anticipates purchasing at a later date. The purchaser and writer of a swaption is buying or granting the right to enter into a previously agreed upon interest rate or credit default swap agreement (interest rate risk and/or credit risk) at any time before the expiration of the option.

• Foreign currency options — Certain Trusts purchase and write foreign currency options, foreign currency futures and options on foreign currency futures to gain or reduce exposure to foreign currencies (foreign currency exchange rate risk). Foreign currency options give the purchaser the right to buy from or sell to the writer a foreign currency at any time before the expiration of the option.

In purchasing and writing options, the Trusts bear the risk of an unfavorable change in the value of the underlying instrument or the risk that they may not be able to enter into a closing transaction due to an illiquid market. Exercise of a written option could result in the Trusts purchasing or selling a security when it otherwise would not, or at a price different from the current market value.

Swaps: Certain Trusts enter into swap contracts to manage exposure to issuers, markets and securities. Such contracts are agreements between the Trusts and a counterparty to make periodic net payments on a specified notional amount or a net payment upon termination. Swap agreements are privately negotiated in the OTC market and may be entered into as a bilateral contract (“OTC swaps”) or centrally cleared (“centrally cleared swaps”).

For OTC swaps, any upfront premiums paid and any upfront fees received are shown as swap premiums paid and swap premiums received, respectively, in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities and amortized over the term of the contract. The daily fluctuation in market value is recorded as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on OTC Swaps in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. Payments received or paid are recorded in the Statements of Operations as realized gains or losses, respectively. When an OTC swap is terminated, a realized gain or loss is recorded in the Statements of Operations equal to the difference between the proceeds from (or cost of) the closing transaction and the Trusts’ basis in the contract, if any. Generally, the basis of the contract is the premium received or paid.

In a centrally cleared swap, immediately following execution of the swap contract, the swap contract is novated to a central counterparty (the “CCP”) and the Trusts’ counterparty on the swap agreement becomes the CCP. The Trusts are required to interface with the CCP through the broker. Upon entering into a centrally cleared swap, the Trusts are required to deposit initial margin with the broker in the form of cash or securities in an amount that varies depending on the size and risk profile of the particular swap. Securities deposited as initial margin are designated in the Schedules of Investments and cash deposited is shown as cash pledged for centrally cleared swaps in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. Pursuant to the contract, the Trusts agree to receive from or pay to the broker an amount of cash equal to the daily fluctuation in market value of the contract (“variation margin”). Variation margin is recorded as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and shown as variation margin receivable (or payable) on centrally cleared swaps in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. Payments received from (paid to) the counterparty, including at termination, are recorded as realized gains (losses) in the Statements of Operations.

• Credit default swaps — Certain Trusts enter into credit default swaps to manage their exposure to the market or certain sectors of the market, to reduce their risk exposure to defaults of corporate and/or sovereign issuers or to create exposure to corporate and/or sovereign issuers to which they are not otherwise exposed (credit risk).

The Trusts may either buy or sell (write) credit default swaps on single-name issuers (corporate or sovereign), a combination or basket of single-name issuers or traded indexes. Credit default swaps are agreements in which the protection buyer pays fixed periodic payments to the seller in consideration for a promise from the protection seller to make a specific payment should a negative credit event take place with respect to the referenced entity (e.g., bankruptcy, failure to pay, obligation acceleration, repudiation, moratorium or restructuring). As a buyer, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Trusts will either (i) receive from the seller an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and deliver the referenced security or underlying securities comprising the index, or (ii) receive a net settlement of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the security or underlying securities comprising the index. As a seller (writer), if an underlying credit event occurs, the Trusts will either pay the buyer an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and take delivery of the referenced security or underlying securities comprising the index or pay a net settlement of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the security or underlying securities comprising the index.

• Total return swaps — Certain Trusts enter into total return swaps to obtain exposure to a security or market without owning such security or investing directly in that market or to transfer the risk/return of one market (e.g., fixed income) to another market (e.g., equity or commodity prices) (equity risk, commodity price risk and/or interest rate risk).

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Total return swaps are agreements in which there is an exchange of cash flows whereby one party commits to make payments based on the total return (coupons plus capital gains/losses) of an underlying instrument in exchange for fixed or floating rate interest payments. To the extent the total return of the instrument or index underlying the transaction exceeds or falls short of the offsetting interest rate obligation, the Trusts will receive a payment from or make a payment to the counterparty.

• Forward swaps — Certain Trusts enter into forward interest rate swaps and forward total return swaps. In a forward swap, the Trust and the counterparty agree to make periodic net payments beginning on a specified date or a net payment at termination.

• Interest rate swaps — Certain Trusts enter into interest rate swaps to gain or reduce exposure to interest rates or to manage duration, the yield curve or interest rate (interest rate risk).

Interest rate swaps are agreements in which one party pays a stream of interest payments, either fixed or floating, in exchange for another party’s stream of interest payments, either fixed or floating, on the same notional amount for a specified period of time. In more complex interest rate swaps, the notional principal amount may decline (or amortize) over time.

Swap transactions involve, to varying degrees, elements of interest rate, credit and market risk in excess of the amounts recognized in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. Such risks involve the possibility that there will be no liquid market for these agreements, that the counterparty to the agreements may default on its obligation to perform or disagree as to the meaning of the contractual terms in the agreements, and that there may be unfavorable changes in interest rates and/or market values associated with these transactions.

Master Netting Arrangements: In order to define their contractual rights and to secure rights that will help them mitigate their counterparty risk, the Trusts may enter into an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreement (“ISDA Master Agreement”) or similar agreement with their counterparties. An ISDA Master Agreement is a bilateral agreement between each Trust and a counterparty that governs certain OTC derivatives and typically contains, among other things, collateral posting terms and netting provisions in the event of a default and/or termination event. Under an ISDA Master Agreement, each Trust may, under certain circumstances, offset with the counterparty certain derivative financial instruments’ payables and/or receivables with collateral held and/or posted and create one single net payment. The provisions of the ISDA Master Agreement typically permit a single net payment in the event of default including the bankruptcy or insolvency of the counterparty. Bankruptcy or insolvency laws of a particular jurisdiction may restrict or prohibit the right of offset in bankruptcy, insolvency or other events. In addition, certain ISDA Master Agreements allow counterparties to terminate derivative contracts prior to maturity in the event the Trusts’ net assets decline by a stated percentage or the Trusts fail to meet the terms of their ISDA Master Agreements. The result would cause the Trusts to accelerate payment of any net liability owed to the counterparty.

Collateral Requirements: For derivatives traded under an ISDA Master Agreement, the collateral requirements are typically calculated by netting the mark-to-market amount for each transaction under such agreement and comparing that amount to the value of any collateral currently pledged by the Trust and the counterparty.

Cash collateral that has been pledged to cover obligations of the Trusts and cash collateral received from the counterparty, if any, is reported separately on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities as cash pledged as collateral and cash received as collateral, respectively. Non-cash collateral pledged by the Trusts, if any, is noted in the Schedules of Investments. Generally, the amount of collateral due from or to a counterparty is subject to a certain minimum transfer amount threshold before a transfer is required, which is determined at the close of business of the Trusts. Any additional required collateral is delivered to/pledged by the Trusts on the next business day. Typically, the counterparty is not permitted to sell, re-pledge or use cash and non-cash collateral it receives. The Trusts generally agree not to use non-cash collateral that it receives but may, absent default or certain other circumstances defined in the underlying ISDA Master Agreement, be permitted to use cash collateral received. In such cases, interest may be paid pursuant to the collateral arrangement with the counterparty. To the extent amounts due to the Trusts from their counterparties are not fully collateralized, they bear the risk of loss from counterparty non-performance. Likewise, to the extent the Trusts have delivered collateral to a counterparty and stand ready to perform under the terms of their agreement with such counterparty, they bear the risk of loss from a counterparty in the amount of the value of the collateral in the event the counterparty fails to return such collateral. Based on the terms of agreements, collateral may not be required for all derivative contracts.

For financial reporting purposes, the Trusts do not offset derivative assets and derivative liabilities that are subject to netting arrangements, if any, in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

6. Investment Advisory Agreement and Other Transactions with Affiliates:

The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. is the largest stockholder and an affiliate of BlackRock, Inc. (“BlackRock”) for 1940 Act purposes.

Investment Advisory: Each Trust entered into an Investment Advisory Agreement with the Manager, the Trusts’ investment adviser, an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of BlackRock, to provide investment advisory and administration services. The Manager is responsible for the management of each Trust’s portfolio and provides the personnel, facilities, equipment and certain other services necessary to the operations of each Trust.

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For such services, BHK pays the Manager a monthly fee based on an annual rate of 0.50% of the average weekly value of the Trust’s managed assets. For purposes of calculating this fee, “managed assets” means the total assets of the Trust minus the sum of the accrued liabilities (other than the aggregate indebtedness constituting financial leverage).

For such services, HYT pays the Manager a monthly fee based on an annual rate of 0.60% of the average daily value of the Trust’s net assets, plus the proceeds of any outstanding debt securities or borrowings used for leverage. For purposes of calculating these fees, “net assets” means the total assets of the Trust minus the sum of the accrued liabilities.

For such services, BKT pays the Manager a monthly fee based on an annual rate of 0.65% of the average weekly value of the Trust’s net assets. For purposes of calculating these fees, “net assets” means the total assets of the Trust minus the sum of the accrued liabilities (including the aggregate indebtedness constituting financial leverage).

Distribution Fees: HYT has entered into a Distribution Agreement with BlackRock Investments, LLC (“BRIL”), an affiliate of the Manager, to provide for distribution of HYT’s Common Shares on a reasonable best efforts basis through an equity shelf offering (a “Shelf Offering”) (the “Distribution Agreement”). Pursuant to the Distribution Agreement, HYT will compensate BRIL with respect to sales of Common Shares at a commission rate of 1.00% of the gross proceeds of the sale of HYT’s Common Shares and a portion of such commission is re-allowed to broker-dealers engaged by BRIL.

Administration: BKT has an Administration Agreement with the Manager. The administration fee paid to the Manager is computed at an annual rate of 0.15% of BKT’s average weekly net assets.

Expense Waivers: The Manager voluntarily agreed to waive its investment advisory fees by the amount of investment advisory fees each Trust pays to the Manager indirectly through its investment in affiliated money market funds. These amounts are shown as fees waived by the Manager in the Statements of Operations. However, the Manager does not waive its investment advisory fees by the amount of investment advisory fees paid in connection with each Trust’s investments in other affiliated investment companies, if any. For the year ended August 31, 2016, the amounts waived were as follows:

BHK HYT BKT
Amounts waived $ 9,230 $ 997 $ 7,301

The Manager provides investment management and other services to the Taxable Subsidiaries. The Manager does not receive separate compensation from the Taxable Subsidiaries for providing investment management or administrative services. However, HYT pays the Manager based on HYT’s net assets, plus the proceeds of any debt securities or outstanding borrowings used for leverage, which includes the assets of the Taxable Subsidiaries.

Officers and Trustees Fees: Certain officers and/or Trustees of the Trusts are officers and/or directors of BlackRock or its affiliates. The Trusts reimburse the Manager for a portion of the compensation paid to the Trusts’ Chief Compliance Officer, which is included in Officer and Trustees in the Statements of Operations.

Other Transactions: The Trusts may purchase securities from, or sell securities to, an affiliated fund provided the affiliation is due solely to having a common investment adviser, common officers, or common trustees. For the year ended August 31, 2016, the purchase and sale transactions which resulted in net realized gains (losses) with an affiliated fund in compliance with Rule 17a-7 under the 1940 Act for HYT were as follow:

HYT Purchases — $ 2,004,265 Sales — $ 1,004,787 Net Realized Loss — $ (34,538 )

7. Purchases and Sales:

For the year ended August 31, 2016, purchases and sales of investments including paydowns, mortgage dollar rolls and TBA transactions and excluding short-term securities were as follows:

Purchases BHK HYT BKT
Non-U.S. Government Securities $ 260,415,862 $ 1,316,661,413 $ 828,498,409
U.S. Government Securities 108,397,735 — 13,392,722
Total Purchases $ 368,813,597 $ 1,316,661,413 $ 841,891,131
Sales
BHK HYT BKT
Non-U.S. Government Securities $ 348,713,421 $ 1,332,807,230 $ 877,456,351
U.S. Government Securities 35,702,275 — 11,407,693
Total Sales $ 384,415,696 $ 1,332,807,230 $ 888,864,044

For the year ended August 31, 2016, purchases and sales related to mortgage dollar rolls for BKT were $462,681,717 and $462,783,644, respectively.

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8. Income Tax Information:

It is the Trusts’ policy to comply with the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, applicable to regulated investment companies, and to distribute substantially all of their taxable income to their shareholders. Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required, except with respect to any taxes related to the Taxable Subsidiaries.

The Trusts file U.S. federal and various state and local tax returns. No income tax returns are currently under examination. The statute of limitations on the Trusts’ U.S. federal tax returns generally remains open for each of the four years ended August 31, 2016. The statutes of limitations on the Trusts’ state and local tax returns may remain open for an additional year depending upon the jurisdiction.

Management has analyzed tax laws and regulations and their application to the Trusts as of August 31, 2016, inclusive of the open tax return years, and does not believe there are any uncertain tax positions that require recognition of a tax liability in the Trusts’ financial statements.

US GAAP require that certain components of net assets be adjusted to reflect permanent differences between financial and tax reporting. These reclassifications have no effect on net assets or net asset values per share. As of August 31, 2016 the following permanent differences attributable to the accounting for swap agreements, the classification of investments, foreign currency transactions, the expiration of capital loss carryforwards, income recognized from investments in partnerships, net paydowns gains, and dividends recognized for tax purposes were reclassified to the following accounts:

Paid-in capital BHK — — HYT — $ (4,056,597 ) BKT — —
Undistributed net investment income $ 2,888,256 $ 5,049,974 $ 1,269,247
Accumulated net realized loss $ (2,888,256 ) $ (993,377 ) $ (1,269,247 )

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

Ordinary income 8/31/2016 BHK — $ 45,548,216 HYT — $ 125,343,672 BKT — $ 22,060,177
8/31/2015 $ 49,401,456 $ 123,054,879 $ 25,321,248
Total 8/31/2016 $ 45,548,216 $ 125,343,672 $ 22,060,177
8/31/2015 $ 49,401,456 $ 123,054,879 $ 25,321,248

As of August 31, 2016 the tax components of accumulated net earnings (losses) were as follows:

Undistributed ordinary income BHK — $ 405,350 $ 11,543,563 BKT — $ 4,387,342
Capital loss carryforwards (16,990,715 ) (265,114,804 ) (43,751,932 )
Net unrealized gains 1 77,973,226 (32,251,549 ) 5,984,657
Total $ 61,387,861 $ (285,822,790 ) $ (33,379,933 )

1 The differences between book-basis and tax-basis net unrealized gains were attributable primarily to the tax deferral of losses on wash sales and straddles, amortization methods for premiums and discounts on fixed income securities, the accrual of income on securities in default, the realization for tax purposes of unrealized gains/losses on certain futures and foreign currency contracts, the realization for tax purposes of unrealized gains on investments in passive foreign investment companies, the accounting for swap agreements, the investment in a wholly owned subsidiary, dividends recognized for tar purposes, the classification of investments and the deferral of compensation to trustees.

As of August 31, 2016, the Trusts had capital loss carryforwards available to offset future realized capital gains through the indicated expiration dates as follows:

Expires BHK HYT BKT
No expiration date 2 $ 11,373,636 $ 114,202,809 $ 43,751,932
2017 5,617,079 95,246,388 —
2018 — 55,665,607 —
Total $ 16,990,715 $ 265,114,804 $ 43,751,932

2 Must be utilized prior to losses subject to expiration.

As of August 31, 2016, gross unrealized appreciation and depreciation based on cost for federal income tax purposes were as follows:

Tax cost BHK — $ 1,027,813,449 $ 2,118,135,188 BKT — $ 587,334,727
Gross unrealized appreciation $ 86,739,765 $ 78,880,786 $ 29,842,960
Gross unrealized depreciation (12,070,312 ) (111,235,606 ) (22,455,912 )
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) $ 74,669,453 $ (32,354,820 ) $ 7,387,048

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Notes to Financial Statements (continued)

9. Bank Borrowings:

HYT is party to a senior committed secured, 360-day rolling line of credit facility and a separate security agreement (the “SSB Agreement”) with State Street Bank and Trust Company (“SSB”). SSB may elect to terminate its commitment upon 360-days written notice to HYT. As of period end, the HYT has not received any notice to terminate. HYT has granted a security interest in substantially all of their assets to SSB.

The SSB Agreement allows for a maximum commitment of $732,000,000 for HYT. Prior to August 31, 2016, the maximum commitment amount for HYT was $798,000,000.

Advances will be made by SSB to HYT, at HYT’s option of (a) the higher of (i) 0.80% above the Fed Funds rate and (ii) 0.80% above the Overnight LIBOR or (b) 0.80% above 7-day, 30-day, 60-day or 90-day LIBOR.

In addition, HYT paid a facility fee and may pay a commitment fee (based on the daily unused portion of the commitments). The commitment fees are waived if HYT meets certain conditions. The fees associated with each of the agreements are included in the Statements of Operations as borrowing costs, if any. Advances to HYT as of period end are shown in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities as bank borrowings payable. Based on the short-term nature of the borrowings under the line of credit and the variable interest rate, the carrying amount of the borrowings approximates fair value.

HYT may not declare dividends or make other distributions on shares or purchase any such shares if, at the time of the declaration, distribution or purchase, asset coverage with respect to the outstanding short-term borrowings is less than 300%.

For the year ended August 31, 2016, the average amount of bank borrowings and the daily weighted average interest rates for HYT with loans under the revolving credit agreement were $568,838,798 and 1.13%.

10. Principal Risks:

Many municipalities insure repayment of their bonds, which may reduce the potential for loss due to credit risk. The market value of these bonds may fluctuate for other reasons, including market perception of the value of such insurance, and there is no guarantee that the insurer will meet its obligation.

Inventories of municipal bonds held by brokers and dealers may decrease, which would lessen their ability to make a market in these securities. Such a reduction in market making capacity could potentially decrease a Trust’s ability to buy or sell bonds. As a result, a Trust may sell a security at a lower price, sell other securities to raise cash, or give up an investment opportunity, any of which could have a negative impact on performance. If a Trust needed to sell large blocks of bonds, those sales could further reduce the bonds’ prices and impact performance.

In the normal course of business, the Trusts invest in securities and enter into transactions where risks exist due to fluctuations in the market (market risk) or failure of the issuer to meet all its obligations, including the ability to pay principal and interest when due (issuer credit risk). The value of securities held by the Trusts may decline in response to certain events, including those directly involving the issuers of securities owned by the Trusts. Changes arising from the general economy, the overall market and local, regional or global political and/or social instability, as well as currency, interest rate and price fluctuations, may also affect the securities’ value.

Each Trust may be exposed to prepayment risk, which is the risk that borrowers may exercise their option to prepay principal earlier than scheduled during periods of declining interest rates, which would force each Trust to reinvest in lower yielding securities. Each Trust may also be exposed to reinvestment risk, which is the risk that income from each Trust’s portfolio will decline if each Trust invests the proceeds from matured, traded or called fixed income securities at market interest rates that are below each Fund portfolio’s current earnings rate.

Counterparty Credit Risk: Similar to issuer credit risk, the Trusts may be exposed to counterparty credit risk, or the risk that an entity may fail to or be unable to perform on its commitments related to unsettled or open transactions. The Trusts manage counterparty credit risk by entering into transactions only with counterparties that the Manager believes have the financial resources to honor their obligations and by monitoring the financial stability of those counterparties. Financial assets, which potentially expose the Trusts to market, issuer and counterparty credit risks, consist principally of financial instruments and receivables due from counterparties. The extent of the Trusts’ exposure to market, issuer and counterparty credit risks with respect to these financial assets is approximately their value recorded in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities, less any collateral held by the Trusts.

A derivative contract may suffer a mark-to-market loss if the value of the contract decreases due to an unfavorable change in the market rates or values of the underlying instrument. Losses can also occur if the counterparty does not perform under the contract.

A Trust’s risk of loss from counterparty credit risk on OTC derivatives is generally limited to the aggregate unrealized gain less the value of any collateral held by such Trust.

For OTC options purchased, each Trust bears the risk of loss in the amount of the premiums paid plus the positive change in market values net of any collateral held by the Trusts should the counterparty fail to perform under the contracts. Options written by the Trusts do not typically give rise to counterparty credit risk, as options written generally obligate the Trusts, and not the counterparty, to perform. The Trusts may be exposed to counterparty credit risk with respect to options written to the extent the Trusts deposit collateral with their counterparty to a written option.

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Notes to Financial Statements (continued)

With exchange-traded options purchased and futures and centrally cleared swaps, there is less counterparty credit risk to the Trusts since the exchange or clearinghouse, as counterparty to such instruments, guarantees against a possible default. The clearinghouse stands between the buyer and the seller of the contract; therefore, credit risk is limited to failure of the clearinghouse. While offset rights may exist under applicable law, the Trusts do not have a contractual right of offset against a clearing broker or clearinghouse in the event of a default (including the bankruptcy or insolvency). Additionally, credit risk exists in exchange-traded futures and centrally cleared swaps with respect to initial and variation margin that is held in a clearing broker’s customer accounts. While clearing brokers are required to segregate customer margin from their own assets, in the event that a clearing broker becomes insolvent or goes into bankruptcy and at that time there is a shortfall in the aggregate amount of margin held by the clearing broker for all its clients, typically the shortfall would be allocated on a pro rata basis across all the clearing broker’s customers, potentially resulting in losses to the Trusts.

Concentration Risk: Certain Trusts may invest in securities that are rated below investment grade quality (sometimes called “junk bonds”), which are predominantly speculative, have greater credit risk and generally are less liquid and have more volatile prices than higher quality securities.

Certain Trusts invest a significant portion of their assets in fixed-income securities and/or use derivatives tied to the fixed-income markets. Changes in market interest rates or economic conditions may affect the value and/or liquidity of such investments. Interest rate risk is the risk that prices of bonds and other fixed-income securities will increase as interest rates fall and decrease as interest rates rise. The Trusts may be subject to a greater risk of rising interest rates due to the current period of historically low rates.

Certain Trusts invest a significant portion of their assets in securities backed by commercial or residential mortgage loans or in issuers that hold mortgage and other asset-backed securities. Investment percentages in these securities are presented in the Schedules of Investments. Changes in economic conditions, including delinquencies and/or defaults on assets underlying these securities, can affect the value, income and/or liquidity of such positions.

11. Capital Share Transactions

BHK is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares, par value $0.001, all of which were initially classified as Common Shares. HYT is authorized to issue 200 million shares, par value $0.10, all of which were initially classified as Common Shares. BKT is authorized to issue 200 million shares, par value $0.01, all of which were initially classified as Common Shares. The Board is authorized, however, to reclassify any unissued shares to Preferred Shares without approval of Common Shareholders.

Common Shares: HYT filed a final prospectus with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) allowing it is issue an additional 10,425,000 Common Shares through an equity shelf program (a “Shelf Offering”). Under the Shelf Offering, HYT, subject to market conditions, may raise additional equity capital from time to time in varying amounts and utilizing various offering methods at a net price at or above HYT’s net asset value (“NAV”) per Common Share (calculated within 48 hours of pricing). HYT has not issued any Common Shares through the Shelf Offering. See Additional Information — Shelf Offering Program for additional information about the Shelf Offering.

Costs incurred by the HYT in connection with the Shelf Offering are recorded as a deferred charge and amortized over 12 months.

For the year ended August 31, 2016, shares issued and outstanding remained constant for BHK, HYT and BKT. For the year ended August 31, 2015, shares issued and outstanding increased by 26,893,279 for BHK due to the reorganization for BHK and remained constant for HYT and BKT.

12. Contingencies:

In May 2015, the Motors Liquidation Company Avoidance Action Trust, as the Trust Administrator and Trustee of the General Motors bankruptcy estate, began serving amended complaints on defendants, which include former holders of certain General Motors debt (the “Debt”), in an adversary proceeding in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. In addition to HYT, the lawsuit also names over five hundred other institutional investors as defendants, some of which are also managed by BlackRock Advisors, LLC or its affiliates. The plaintiffs are seeking an order that HYT and other defendants return proceeds received in 2009 in full payment of the principal and interest on the Debt. The holders received a full repayment of a term loan pursuant to a court order in the General Motors bankruptcy proceeding with the understanding that the Debt was fully secured at the time of repayment. The plaintiffs contend that the Fund and other defendants were not secured creditors at the time of the 2009 payments and therefore not entitled to the payments in full. HYT cannot predict the outcome of the lawsuit, or the effect, if any, on HYT’s net asset value. As such, no liability for litigation related to this matter is reflected in the financial statements. Management cannot determine the amount of loss that will be realized by HYT but does not expect the loss to exceed the payment received in 2009. The amount of the proceeds received in 2009 is $3,528,671.

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Notes to Financial Statements (concluded)

13. Subsequent Events:

Management’s evaluation of the impact of all subsequent events on the Trusts’ financial statements was completed through the date the financial statements were issued and the following items were noted:

Common Dividend Per Share — Paid 1 Declared 2
BHK $ 0.0650 $ 0.0650
HYT $ 0.0700 $ 0.0700
BKT $ 0.0265 $ 0.0265

1 Net investment income dividend paid on September 30, 2016 to Common Shareholders of record on September 15, 2016.

2 Net investment income dividend declared on October 3, 2016, payable to Common Shareholders of record on October 14, 2016.

On October 26, 2016, the Board approved an open market share repurchase program that allows each Trust to purchase up to 5% of its outstanding common shares from time to time in open market transactions through November 30, 2017, subject to certain conditions. There is no assurance that the Trusts will purchase shares in any particular amounts.

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Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Shareholders and Board of Trustees/Directors of BlackRock Core Bond Trust, BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc., BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.:

We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities, including the schedules of investments, of BlackRock Core Bond Trust and BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (collectively the “Funds”) as of August 31, 2016, and the related statements of operations and cash flows for the year then ended, and the statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended. We have also audited the consolidated statement of assets and liabilities, including the consolidated schedule of investments of BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc., (collectively with the Funds mentioned above, the “Trusts”) as of August 31, 2016, and the related consolidated statements of operations and consolidated cash flows for the year then ended, the consolidated statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the consolidated financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended. These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Trusts’ management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement. The Trusts are not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of their internal control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Trusts’ internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of August 31, 2016, by correspondence with the custodian, brokers, and agent banks; where replies were not received from brokers or agent banks, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial positions of BlackRock Core Bond Trust and BlackRock Income Trust, Inc., as of August 31, 2016, the results of their operations and their cash flows for the year then ended, the changes in their net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and their financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, and the consolidated financial position of BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc., as of August 31, 2016, the consolidated results of its operations and its consolidated cash flows for the year then ended, the consolidated changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and its consolidated financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

Deloitte & Touche LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

October 28, 2016

Important Tax Information (Unaudited)

The following information is provided with respect to the ordinary income distributions paid by the Trusts during the fiscal year ended August 31, 2016

| Interest-Related Dividends for Non-U.S.
Residents 1 | Payable Dates — September 2015 - January 2016 | 73.53% | 57.11% | 98.32% |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| | February 2016 - August 2016 | 61.74% | 78.90% | 100.00% |
| Qualified Dividend Income For
individuals 2 | September 2015 - January 2016 | 9.04% | 4.46% | — |
| | February 2016 - August 2016 | 11.42% | 2.80% | — |
| Dividends Qualifying for Dividends Received deduction for corporations 2 | September 2015 - January 2016 | 7.33% | 3.14% | — |
| | February 2016 - August 2016 | 9.00% | 3.60% | — |
| Federal Obligation Interest 3 | September 2015 - January 2016 | 4.39% | — | 0.51% |
| | February 2016 - August 2016 | 5.59% | — | 1.11% |

1 Represents the portion of the taxable ordinary income dividends eligible for exemption from U.S. withholding tax for nonresident aliens and foreign corporations.

2 The Trust hereby designates the percentage indicated above or the maximum amount allowable by law.

3 The law varies in each state as to whether and what percentage of dividend income attributable to federal obligations is exempt from state income tax. We recommend that you consult your tax advisor to determine if any portion of the dividends you received is exempt from state income taxes.

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Disclosure of Investment Advisory Agreements

The Board of Trustees or the Board of Directors, as applicable (the “Board,” the members of which are referred to as “Board Members”), of BlackRock Core Bond Trust (“BHK”), BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (“HYT”) and BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. (“BKT” and together with BHK and HYT, each a “Trust,” and, collectively, the “Trusts”) met in person on April 28, 2016 (the “April Meeting”) and June 9-10, 2016 (the “June Meeting”) to consider the approval of each Trust’s investment advisory agreement (each an “Agreement,” and, collectively, the “Agreements”) with BlackRock Advisors, LLC (the “Manager”), each Trust’s investment advisor. The Manager is also referred to herein as “BlackRock”.

Activities and Composition of the Board

On the date of the June Meeting, the Board of each Trust consisted of eleven individuals, nine of whom were not “interested persons” of the Trust as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”) (the “Independent Board Members”). The Board Members are responsible for the oversight of the operations of its Trust and perform the various duties imposed on the directors of investment companies by the 1940 Act. The Independent Board Members have retained independent legal counsel to assist them in connection with their duties. The Chair of each Board is an Independent Board Member. Each Board has established five standing committees: an Audit Committee, a Governance and Nominating Committee, a Compliance Committee, a Performance Oversight Committee, and an Executive Committee, each of which is chaired by an Independent Board Member and composed of Independent Board Members (except for the Executive Committee, which also has one interested Board Member).

The Agreements

Pursuant to the 1940 Act, each Board is required to consider the continuation of the Agreement for its Trust on an annual basis. Each Board has four quarterly meetings per year, each extending over two days, a fifth one-day meeting to consider specific information surrounding the consideration of renewing the Agreement for its Trust and additional in-person and telephonic meetings as needed. In connection with this year-long deliberative process, each Board assessed, among other things, the nature, extent and quality of the services provided to its Trust by BlackRock, BlackRock’s personnel and affiliates, including, as applicable; investment management, administrative, and shareholder services; the oversight of fund service providers; marketing; risk oversight; compliance; and ability to meet applicable legal and regulatory requirements.

Each Board, acting directly and through its committees, considers at each of its meetings, and from time to time as appropriate, factors that are relevant to its annual consideration of the renewal of the Agreement for its Trust, including the services and support provided by BlackRock to the Trust and its shareholders. BlackRock also furnished additional information to each Board in response to specific questions from the Board. This additional information is discussed further below in the section titled “Board Considerations in Approving the Agreements.” Among the matters each Board considered were: (a) investment performance for one-year, three-year, five-year, ten-year, and/or since inception periods, as applicable, against peer funds, applicable benchmarks, and performance metrics, as applicable, as well as senior management’s and portfolio managers’ analysis of the reasons for any over-performance or underperformance relative to its peers, benchmarks, and other performance metrics, as applicable; (b) fees, including advisory, administration, if applicable, paid to BlackRock and its affiliates by the Trust for services; (c) Trust operating expenses and how BlackRock allocates expenses to the Trust; (d) the resources devoted to, risk oversight of, and compliance reports relating to, implementation of the Trust’s investment objective(s), policies and restrictions, and meeting regulatory requirements; (e) the Trust’s compliance with its compliance policies and procedures; (f) the nature, cost and character of non-investment management services provided by BlackRock and its affiliates; (g) BlackRock’s and other service providers’ internal controls and risk and compliance oversight mechanisms; (h) BlackRock’s implementation of the proxy voting policies approved by the Board; (i) execution quality of portfolio transactions; (j) BlackRock’s implementation of the Trust’s valuation and liquidity procedures; (k) an analysis of management fees for products with similar investment mandates across the open-end fund, closed-end fund and institutional account product channels, as applicable, and the similarities and differences between these products and the services provided as compared to the Trust; (l) BlackRock’s compensation methodology for its investment professionals and the incentives and accountability it creates, along with investment professionals’ investments in the fund(s) they manage; and (m) periodic updates on BlackRock’s business.

Board Considerations in Approving the Agreements

The Approval Process: Prior to the April Meeting, each Board requested and received materials specifically relating to the Agreement for its Trust. Each Board is continuously engaged in a process with its independent legal counsel and BlackRock to review the nature and scope of the information provided to better assist its deliberations. The materials provided to the Board of each Trust in connection with the April Meeting included (a) information independently compiled and prepared by Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”) on Trust fees and expenses as compared with a peer group of funds as determined by Broadridge (“Expense Peers”) and the investment performance of the Trust as compared with a peer group of funds as determined by Broadridge, 1 as well as the performance of BHK and BKT as compared with its custom benchmark; (b) information on the profits realized by BlackRock and its affiliates pursuant to the Trust’s Agreement and a discussion of fall-out benefits to BlackRock and its affiliates; (c) a general analysis provided by BlackRock concerning investment management fees charged to other clients, such as institutional clients, sub-advised mutual funds, and open-end funds, under similar investment mandates, as applicable; (d) review of non-management fees; (e) the existence, impact and sharing of potential economies of scale; and (f) a summary of aggregate amounts paid by the Trust to BlackRock.

1 Trusts are ranked by Broadridge in quartiles, ranging from first to fourth, where first is the most desirable quartile position and fourth is the least desirable.

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Disclosure of Investment Advisory Agreements (continued)

At the April Meeting, each Board reviewed materials relating to its consideration of the Agreement for its Trust. As a result of the discussions that occurred during the April Meeting, and as a culmination of each Board’s year-long deliberative process, each Board presented BlackRock with questions and requests for additional information. BlackRock responded to these requests with additional written information in advance of the June Meeting.

At the June Meeting, each Board, including the Independent Board Members, unanimously approved the continuation of the Agreement between the Manager and its Trust for a one-year term ending June 30, 2017. In approving the continuation of the Agreement for its Trust, each Board considered: (a) the nature, extent and quality of the services provided by BlackRock; (b) the investment performance of the Trust; (c) the advisory fee and the cost of the services and profits to be realized by BlackRock and its affiliates from their relationship with the Trust; (d) the Trust’s costs to investors compared to the costs of Expense Peers and performance compared to the relevant performance metrics as previously discussed; (e) the sharing of potential economies of scale; (f) fall-out benefits to BlackRock and its affiliates as a result of its relationship with the Trust; and (g) other factors deemed relevant by the Board Members.

Each Board also considered other matters it deemed important to the approval process, such as other payments made to BlackRock or its affiliates relating to securities lending and cash management, services related to the valuation and pricing of Trust portfolio holdings, and advice from independent legal counsel with respect to the review process and materials submitted for the Board’s review. Each Board noted the willingness of BlackRock personnel to engage in open, candid discussions with the Board. Each Board did not identify any particular information as determinative, and each Board Member may have attributed different weights to the various items considered.

A. Nature, Extent and Quality of the Services Provided by BlackRock: Each Board, including the Independent Board Members, reviewed the nature, extent and quality of services provided by BlackRock, including the investment advisory services and the resulting performance of its Trust. Throughout the year, each Board compared its Trust’s performance to the performance of a comparable group of closed-end funds, relevant benchmark, and performance metrics, as applicable. Each Board met with BlackRock’s senior management personnel responsible for investment activities, including the senior investment officers. Each Board also reviewed the materials provided by its Trust’s portfolio management team discussing the Trust’s performance and the Trust’s investment objective(s), strategies and outlook.

Each Board considered, among other factors, with respect to BlackRock: the number, education and experience of investment personnel generally and its Trust’s portfolio management team; BlackRock’s research capabilities; investments by portfolio managers in the funds they manage; portfolio trading capabilities; use of technology; commitment to compliance; credit analysis capabilities; risk analysis and oversight capabilities; and the approach to training and retaining portfolio managers and other research, advisory and management personnel. Each Board engaged in a review of BlackRock’s compensation structure with respect to the Trust’s portfolio management team and BlackRock’s ability to attract and retain high-quality talent and create performance incentives.

In addition to investment advisory services, each Board considered the quality of the administrative and other non-investment advisory services provided to its Trust. BlackRock and its affiliates provide each Trust with certain administrative, shareholder, and other services (in addition to any such services provided to the Trust by third parties) and officers and other personnel as are necessary for the operations of the Trust. In particular, BlackRock and its affiliates provide each Trust with administrative services including, among others: (i) preparing disclosure documents, such as the prospectus and the statement of additional information in connection with the initial public offering, registration statements in connection with HYT’s equity shelf program and periodic shareholder reports; (ii) preparing communications with analysts to support secondary market trading of the Trust; (iii) oversight of daily accounting and pricing; (iv) preparing periodic filings with regulators and stock exchanges; (v) overseeing and coordinating the activities of other service providers; (vi) organizing Board meetings and preparing the materials for such Board meetings; (vii) providing legal and compliance support; (viii) furnishing analytical and other support to assist the Board in its consideration of strategic issues such as the merger, consolidation or repurposing of certain closed-end funds; and (ix) performing other administrative functions necessary for the operation of the Trust, such as tax reporting, fulfilling regulatory filing requirements and call center services. Each Board reviewed the structure and duties of BlackRock’s fund administration, shareholder services, and legal & compliance departments and considered BlackRock’s policies and procedures for assuring compliance with applicable laws and regulations.

B. The Investment Performance of the Trusts and BlackRock: Each Board, including the Independent Board Members, also reviewed and considered the performance history of its Trust. In preparation for the April Meeting, the Board of each Trust was provided with reports independently prepared by Broadridge, which included a comprehensive analysis of the Trust’s performance. Each Board also reviewed a narrative and statistical analysis of the Broadridge data that was prepared by BlackRock. In connection with its review, the Board of each Trust received and reviewed information regarding the investment performance, based on net asset value (NAV), of the Trust as compared to other funds in its applicable Broadridge category and the performance of BHK and BKT as compared with its custom benchmark. Each Board was provided with a description of the methodology used by Broadridge to select peer funds and periodically meets with Broadridge representatives to review its methodology. Each Board was provided with information on the composition of the Broadridge performance universes and expense universes. Each Board and its Performance Oversight Committee regularly review, and meet with Trust management to discuss, the performance of its Trust throughout the year.

In evaluating performance, each Board recognized that the performance data reflects a snapshot of a period as of a particular date and that selecting a different performance period could produce significantly different results. Further, each Board recognized that it is possible that long-term performance can

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Disclosure of Investment Advisory Agreements (continued)

be adversely affected by even one period of significant underperformance so that a single investment decision or theme has the ability to affect long-term performance disproportionately.

The Board of each of BHK and BKT noted that for each of the one-, three- and five-year periods reported, each of BHK and BKT exceeded its customized benchmark. BlackRock believes that performance relative to the customized benchmark is an appropriate performance metric for the Trust.

The Board of HYT noted that for the one-, three- and five-year periods reported, the Trust ranked in the second, first and first quartiles, respectively, against its Broadridge Performance Universe.

C. Consideration of the Advisory/Management Fees and the Cost of the Services and Profits to be Realized by BlackRock and its Affiliates from their Relationship with the Trusts: Each Board, including the Independent Board Members, reviewed its Trust’s contractual management fee rate compared with the other funds in its Broadridge category. The contractual management fee rate represents a combination of the advisory fee and any administrative fees, before taking into account any reimbursements or fee waivers. Each Board also compared its Trust’s total expense ratio, as well as its actual management fee rate as a percentage of total assets, to those of other funds in its Broadridge category. The total expense ratio represents a fund’s total net operating expenses, excluding any investment related expenses. The total expense ratio gives effect to any expense reimbursements or fee waivers that benefit a fund, and the actual management fee rate gives effect to any management fee reimbursements or waivers that benefit a fund. Each Board considered the services provided and the fees charged by BlackRock and its affiliates to other types of clients with similar investment mandates, as applicable, including institutional accounts and sub-advised mutual funds (including mutual funds sponsored by third parties).

Each Board received and reviewed statements relating to BlackRock’s financial condition. Each Board reviewed BlackRock’s profitability methodology and was also provided with a profitability analysis that detailed the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by BlackRock for services provided to its Trust. Each Board reviewed BlackRock’s profitability with respect to its Trust and other funds the Board currently oversees for the year ended December 31, 2015 compared to available aggregate profitability data provided for the prior two years. Each Board reviewed BlackRock’s profitability with respect to certain other U.S. fund complexes managed by the Manager and/or its affiliates. Each Board reviewed BlackRock’s assumptions and methodology of allocating expenses in the profitability analysis, noting the inherent limitations in allocating costs among various advisory products. Each Board recognized that profitability may be affected by numerous factors including, among other things, fee waivers and expense reimbursements by the Manager, the types of funds managed, precision of expense allocations and business mix. As a result, calculating and comparing profitability at individual fund level is difficult.

Each Board noted that, in general, individual fund or product line profitability of other advisors is not publicly available. Each Board reviewed BlackRock’s overall operating margin, in general, compared to that of certain other publicly-traded asset management firms. Each Board considered the differences between BlackRock and these other firms, including the contribution of technology at BlackRock, BlackRock’s expense management, and the relative product mix.

In addition, each Board considered the cost of the services provided to its Trust by BlackRock, and BlackRock’s and its affiliates’ profits relating to the management of its Trust and the other funds advised by BlackRock and its affiliates. As part of its analysis, each Board reviewed BlackRock’s methodology in allocating its costs of managing its Trust, to the Trust. Each Board may receive and review information from independent third parties as part of its annual evaluation. Each Board considered whether BlackRock has the financial resources necessary to attract and retain high quality investment management personnel to perform its obligations under the Trust’s Agreement and to continue to provide the high quality of services that is expected by the Board. Each Board further considered factors including but not limited to BlackRock’s commitment of time, assumption of risk, and liability profile in servicing its Trust in contrast to what is required of BlackRock with respect to other products with similar investment mandates across the open-end fund, ETF, closed-end fund, sub-advised mutual fund and institutional account product channels, as applicable.

The Board of each Trust noted that its Trust’s contractual management fee rate ranked in the first quartile, and that the actual management fee rate and total expense ratio each ranked in the first quartile, relative to the Expense Peers.

D. Economies of Scale: Each Board, including the Independent Board Members, considered the extent to which economies of scale might be realized as the assets of its Trust increase. Each Board also considered the extent to which its Trust benefits from such economies in a variety of ways, and whether there should be changes in the advisory fee rate or breakpoint structure in order to enable the Trust to more fully participate in these economies of scale. The Board considered the Trust’s asset levels and whether the current fee was appropriate.

Based on each Board’s review and consideration of the issue, each Board concluded that most closed-end funds do not have fund level breakpoints because closed-end funds generally do not experience substantial growth after the initial public offering. They are typically priced at scale at a fund’s inception. The Board of HYT noted that although HYT may from time to time make additional share offerings pursuant to its equity shelf program, the growth of HYT’s assets will occur primarily through the appreciation of its investment portfolio.

E. Other Factors Deemed Relevant by the Board Members: Each Board, including the Independent Board Members, also took into account other ancillary or “fall-out” benefits that BlackRock or its affiliates may derive from their respective relationships with its Trust, both tangible and intangible, such as BlackRock’s ability to leverage its investment professionals who manage other portfolios and risk management personnel, an increase in BlackRock’s profile in the investment advisory community, and the engagement of BlackRock’s affiliates as service providers to the Trust, including for administrative,

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Disclosure of Investment Advisory Agreements (concluded)

securities lending and cash management services. Each Board also considered BlackRock’s overall operations and its efforts to expand the scale of, and improve the quality of, its operations. Each Board also noted that BlackRock may use and benefit from third party research obtained by soft dollars generated by certain registered fund transactions to assist in managing all or a number of its other client accounts. Each Board further noted that it had considered the investment by BlackRock’s funds in affiliated exchange traded funds (i.e., ETFs) without any offset against the management fees payable by the funds to BlackRock.

In connection with its consideration of the Agreement for its Trust, each Board also received information regarding BlackRock’s brokerage and soft dollar practices. Each Board received reports from BlackRock which included information on brokerage commissions and trade execution practices throughout the year.

Each Board noted the competitive nature of the closed-end fund marketplace, and that shareholders are able to sell their Trust shares in the secondary market if they believe that the Trust’s fees and expenses are too high or if they are dissatisfied with the performance of the Trust.

Each Board also considered the various notable initiatives and projects BlackRock performed in connection with its closed-end fund product line. These initiatives included the redemption of auction rate preferred shares (“AMPS”) for the BlackRock closed-end funds with AMPS outstanding; developing equity shelf programs; efforts to eliminate product overlap with fund mergers; ongoing services to manage leverage that has become increasingly complex; periodic evaluation of share repurchases and other support initiatives for certain BlackRock funds; and continued communications efforts with shareholders, fund analysts and financial advisers. With respect to the latter, the Independent Board Members noted BlackRock’s continued commitment to supporting the secondary market for the common shares of its closed-end funds through a comprehensive secondary market communication program designed to raise investor and analyst awareness and understanding of closed-end funds. BlackRock’s support services included, among other things: continuing communications concerning the redemption efforts related to AMPS; sponsoring and participating in conferences; communicating with closed-end fund analysts covering the BlackRock funds throughout the year; providing marketing and product updates for the closed-end funds; and maintaining and enhancing its closed-end fund website.

Conclusion

Each Board, including the Independent Board Members, unanimously approved the continuation of the Agreement between the Manager and its Trust for a one-year term ending June 30, 2017. Based upon its evaluation of all of the aforementioned factors in their totality, as well as other information, each Board, including the Independent Board Members, was satisfied that the terms of Agreement for its Trust were fair and reasonable and in the best interest of the Trust and its shareholders. In arriving at its decision to approve the Agreement for its Trust, each Board did not identify any single factor or group of factors as, all-important or controlling, but considered all factors together, and different Board Members may have attributed different weights to the various factors considered. The Independent Board Members were also assisted by the advice of independent legal counsel in making this determination. The contractual fee arrangements for each Trust reflect the results of several years of review by the Trust’s Board Members and predecessor Board Members, and discussions between such Board Members (and predecessor Board Members) and BlackRock. As a result, the Board Members’ conclusions may be based in part on their consideration of these arrangements in prior years.

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Automatic Dividend Reinvestment Plans

Pursuant to each Trust’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the “Reinvestment Plan”), Common Shareholders are automatically enrolled to have all distributions of dividends and capital gains reinvested by Computershare Trust Company, N.A. (the “Reinvestment Plan Agent”) in the respective Trust’s shares pursuant to the Reinvestment Plan. Shareholders who do not participate in the Reinvestment Plan will receive all distributions in cash paid by check and mailed directly to the shareholders of record (or if the shares are held in street name or other nominee name, then to the nominee) by the Reinvestment Plan Agent, which serves as agent for the shareholders in administering the Reinvestment Plan.

After the Trusts declare a dividend or determine to make a capital gain or other distribution, the Reinvestment Plan Agent will acquire shares for the participants’ accounts, depending upon the following circumstances, either (i) through receipt of unissued but authorized shares from the Trusts (“newly issued shares”) or (ii) by purchase of outstanding shares on the open market or on the Trust’s primary exchange (“open-market purchases”). If, on the dividend payment date, the net asset value per share (“NAV”) is equal to or less than the market price per share plus estimated brokerage commissions (such condition often referred to as a “market premium”), the Reinvestment Plan Agent will invest the dividend amount in newly issued shares acquired on behalf of the participants. The number of newly issued shares to be credited to each participant’s account will be determined by dividing the dollar amount of the dividend by the NAV on the date the shares are issued. However, if the NAV is less than 95% of the market price on the dividend payment date, the dollar amount of the dividend will be divided by 95% of the market price on the dividend payment date. If, on the dividend payment date, the NAV is greater than the market price per share plus estimated brokerage commissions (such condition often referred to as a “market discount”), the Reinvestment Plan Agent will invest the dividend amount in shares acquired on behalf of the participants in open-market purchases. If the Reinvestment Plan Agent is unable to invest the full dividend amount in open-market purchases, or if the market discount shifts to a market premium during the purchase period, the Reinvestment Plan Agent will invest any un-invested portion in newly issued shares. Investments in newly issued shares made in this manner would be made pursuant to the same process described above and the date of issue for such newly issued shares will substitute for the dividend payment date.

You may elect not to participate in the Reinvestment Plan and to receive all dividends in cash by contacting the Reinvestment Plan Agent, at the address set forth below.

Participation in the Reinvestment Plan is completely voluntary and may be terminated or resumed at any time without penalty by notice if received and processed by the Reinvestment Plan Agent prior to the dividend record date. Additionally, the Reinvestment Plan Agent seeks to process notices received after the record date but prior to the payable date and such notices often will become effective by the payable date. Where late notices are not processed by the applicable payable date, such termination or resumption will be effective with respect to any subsequently declared dividend or other distribution.

The Reinvestment Plan Agent’s fees for the handling of the reinvestment of distributions will be paid by each Trust. However, each participant will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred with respect to the Reinvestment Plan Agent’s open market purchases in connection with the reinvestment of all distributions. The automatic reinvestment of all distributions will not relieve participants of any federal, state or local income tax that may be payable on such dividends or distributions.

Each Trust reserves the right to amend or terminate the Reinvestment Plan. There is no direct service charge to participants in the Reinvestment Plan; however, each Trust reserves the right to amend the Reinvestment Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants. Participants that request a sale of shares are subject to a $2.50 sales fee and a $0.15 per share fee. Per share fees include any applicable brokerage commissions the Reinvestment Plan Agent is required to pay. All correspondence concerning the Reinvestment Plan should be directed to Computershare Trust Company, N.A. through the internet at http://www.computershare.com/blackrock, or in writing to Computershare, P.O. Box 30170, College Station, TX 77842-3170, Telephone: (800) 699-1236. Overnight correspondence should be directed to the Reinvestment Plan Agent at Computershare, 211 Quality Circle, Suite 210, College Station, TX 77845.

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Officers and Trustees

Name, Address 1 and Year of Birth Position(s) Held with the Trusts Length of Time Served 3 Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years Number of BlackRock- Advised Registered Investment Companies (“RICs”) Consisting of Investment Portfolios (“Portfolios”) Overseen 4 Public Company and Other Investment Company Directorships During Past Five Years
Independent Trustees 2
Richard E. Cavanagh 1946 Chair of the Board and Trustee Since 2007 Director, The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America since 1998; Director, Arch Chemical (chemical and allied products) from 1999 to 2011;
Trustee, Educational Testing Service from 1997 to 2009 and Chairman thereof from 2005 to 2009; Senior Advisor, The Fremont Group since 2008 and Director thereof since 1996; Faculty Member/Adjunct Lecturer, Harvard University since 2007; President
and Chief Executive Officer, The Conference Board, Inc. (global business research organization) from 1995 to 2007. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios None
Karen P. Robards 1950 Vice Chair of the Board and Trustee Since 2007 Principal of Robards & Company, LLC (consulting and private investing) since 1987; Co-founder and Director of the Cooke Center for Learning
and Development (a not-for-profit organization) since 1987; Investment Banker at Morgan Stanley from 1976 to 1987. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios AtriCure, Inc. (medical devices); Greenhill & Co., Inc.
Michael J. Castellano 1946 Trustee Since 2011 Chief Financial Officer of Lazard Group LLC from 2001 to 2011; Chief Financial Officer of Lazard Ltd from 2004 to 2011; Director, Support Our
Aging Religious (non-profit) from 2009 to June 2015; Director, National Advisory Board of Church Management at Villanova University since 2010; Trustee, Domestic Church Media Foundation since 2012; Director, CircleBlack Inc. (financial technology
company) since 2015. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios None
Cynthia L. Egan 1955 Trustee Since 2016 Advisor, U.S. Department of the Treasury from 2014 to 2015; a President at T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. from 2007 to 2012. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios Unum (insurance); The Hanover Insurance Group (insurance); Envestnet (investment platform) from 2013 until 2016
Frank J. Fabozzi 1948 Trustee Since 2007 Editor of and Consultant for The Journal of Portfolio Management since 2006; Professor of Finance, EDHEC Business School since 2011; Visiting
Professor, Princeton University from 2013 to 2014; Professor in the Practice of Finance and Becton Fellow, Yale University School of Management from 2006 to 2011. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios None
Jerrold B Harris 1942 Trustee Since 2007 Trustee, Ursinus College from 2000 to 2012; Director, Ducks Unlimited — Canada (conservation) since 2015; Director, Waterfowl Chesapeake
(conservation) since 2014; Director, Ducks Unlimited, Inc. since 2013; Director, Troemner LLC (scientific equipment) since 2000; Director of Delta Waterfowl Foundation from 2010 to 2012; President and Chief Executive Officer, VWR Scientific Products
Corporation from 1990 to 1999. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios BlackRock Capital Investment Corp. (business development company)
R. Glenn Hubbard 1958 Trustee Since 2007 Dean, Columbia Business School since 2004; Faculty member, Columbia Business School since 1988. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios ADP (data and information services); Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (insurance)
W. Carl Kester 1951 Trustee Since 2007 George Fisher Baker Jr. Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School since 2008, Deputy Dean for Academic Affairs from 2006 to
2010, Chairman of the Finance Unit, from 2005 to 2006, Senior Associate Dean and Chairman of the MBA Program from 1999 to 2005; Member of the faculty of Harvard Business School since 1981. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios None
Catherine A. Lynch 1961 Trustee Since 2016 Chief Executive Officer, Chief Investment Officer and various other positions, National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust from 2003 to 2016;
Associate Vice President for Treasury Management, The George Washington University from 1999 to 2003; Assistant Treasurer, Episcopal Church of America from 1995 to 1999. 74 RICs consisting of 74 Portfolios None

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Officers and Trustees (continued)

Name, Address 1 and Year of Birth Position(s) Held with the Trusts Length of Time Served 3 Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years Number of BlackRock- Advised Registered Investment Companies (“RICs”) Consisting of Investment Portfolios (“Portfolios”) Overseen 4 Public Company and Other Investment Company Directorships During Past Five Years
Interested Trustees 5
Barbara G. Novick 1960 Trustee Since 2014 Vice Chairman of BlackRock, Inc. since 2006; Chair of Blackrock’s Government Relations Steering Committee since 2009; Head of the Global
Client Group of BlackRock, Inc. from 1988 to 2008. 100 RICs consisting of 218 Portfolios None
John M. Perlowski 1964 Trustee, President and Chief Executive Officer Since 2014 (Trustee); Since 2011 (President and Chief Executive Officer) Managing Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2009; Head of BlackRock Global Fund & Accounting Services since 2009; Managing Director and Chief
Operating Officer of the Global Product Group at Goldman Sachs Asset Management, L.P. from 2003 to 2009; Treasurer of Goldman Sachs Mutual Funds from 2003 to 2009 and Senior Vice President thereof from 2007 to 2009; Director of Goldman Sachs
Offshore Funds from 2002 to 2009; Director of Family Resource Network (charitable foundation) since 2009. 128 RICs consisting of 316 Portfolios None
1 The address of
each Trustee is c/o BlackRock, Inc., 55 East 52nd Street, New York, NY 10055.
2 Each Independent
Trustees serve until his or her successor is elected and qualifies, or until his or her earlier death, resignation, retirement or removal, or until December 31 of the year in which he or she turns 75. The maximum age limitation may be waived as
to any Trustee by action of a majority of the Trustees upon finding of good cause therefor.
3 Following the
combination of Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, L.P. (“MLIM”) and BlackRock, Inc. (“BlackRock”) in September 2006, the various legacy MLIM and legacy BlackRock fund boards were realigned and consolidated into three new fund
boards in 2007. As a result, although the chart shows certain Independent Trustees as joining the Board in 2007, each Trustee first became a member of the boards of other legacy MLIM or legacy BlackRock funds as follows: Richard E. Cavanagh, 1994;
Frank J. Fabozzi, 1988; Jerrold B. Harris, 1999; R. Glenn Hubbard, 2004; W. Carl Kester, 1995 and Karen P. Robards, 1998.
4 For purposes of
this chart, “RICs” refers to investment companies registered under the 1940 Act and “Portfolios” refers to the investment programs of the BlackRock-advised funds. The Closed-End Complex is comprised of 74 RICs. Mr. Perlowski
and Ms. Novick are also board members of certain complexes of BlackRock registered open-end funds. Mr. Perlowski is also a board member of the BlackRock Equity-Bond Complex and the BlackRock Equity-Liquidity Complex, and Ms. Novick is also
a board member of the BlackRock Equity-Liquidity Complex.
5 Mr. Perlowski and Ms. Novick are both
“interested persons,” as defined in the 1940 Act, of the Trust based on their positions with BlackRock and its affiliates. Mr. Perlowski and Ms. Novick are also board members of certain complexes of BlackRock registered open-end
funds. Mr. Perlowski is also a board member of the BlackRock Equity-Bond Complex and the BlackRock Equity-Liquidity Complex, and Ms. Novick is also a board member of the BlackRock Equity-Liquidity Complex. Interested Trustees serve until
their resignation, removal or death, or until December 31 of the year in which they turn 72. The maximum age limitation may be waived as to any Trustee by action of a majority of the Trustees upon a finding of good cause
therefor.

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Officers and Trustees (concluded)

Name, Address 1 and Year of Birth Position(s) Held with the Trusts Length of Time Served as an Officer Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years
Officers Who Are Not Trustees 2
Jonathan Diorio 1980 Vice President Since 2015 Managing Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2015; Director of BlackRock, Inc. from 2011 to 2015; Director of Deutsche Asset & Wealth
Management from 2009 to 2011.
Neal J. Andrews 1966 Chief Financial Officer Since 2007 Managing Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2006; Senior Vice President and Line of Business Head of Fund Accounting and Administration at PNC
Global Investment Servicing (U.S.) Inc. from 1992 to 2006.
Jay M. Fife 1970 Treasurer Since 2007 Managing Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2007; Director of BlackRock, Inc. in 2006; Assistant Treasurer of the MLIM and Fund Asset Management,
L.P. advised funds from 2005 to 2006; Director of MLIM Fund Services Group from 2001 to 2006.
Charles Park 1967 Chief Compliance Officer Since 2014 Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer for the BlackRock-advised Funds in the Equity-Bond Complex, the Equity-Liquidity Complex and the
Closed-End Complex from 2014 to 2015; Chief Compliance Officer of BlackRock Advisors, LLC and the BlackRock-advised Funds in the Equity-Bond Complex, the Equity-Liquidity Complex and the Closed-End Complex since 2014; Principal of and Chief
Compliance Officer for iShares ® Delaware Trust Sponsor LLC since 2012 and BlackRock Fund Advisors (“BFA”) since 2006; Chief Compliance Officer for the
BFA-advised iShares ® exchange traded funds since 2006; Chief Compliance Officer for BlackRock Asset Management International Inc. since 2012.
Janey Ahn 1975 Secretary Since 2012 Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2009; Assistant Secretary of the funds in the Closed-End Complex from 2008 to 2012.
1 The address of
each Officer is c/o BlackRock, Inc., 55 East 52nd Street, New York, NY 10055.
2 Officers of the Trust serve at the pleasure of the
Board.

Effective September 30, 2016, the Portfolio Managers for BKT are Ron Sion and Matt Kraeger.

| Investment Advisor BlackRock Advisors, LLC Wilmington, DE 19809 | Accounting Agent and Custodian State Street Bank and Trust Company Boston, MA 02110 | Distributor BlackRock Investments,
LLC 1 New York, NY, 10022 |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Transfer Agent Computershare Trust Company, N.A. Canton, MA 02021 | Legal Counsel Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom LLP Boston, MA 02116 | Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm Deloitte & Touche LLP Boston, MA 02116 |

1 For HYT.

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Additional Information

Proxy Results

The Annual Meeting of Shareholders was held on July 26, 2016 for shareholders of record on May 31, 2016, to elect trustee nominees for each Trust. There were no broker non-votes with regard to any of the Trusts. Approved the Trustees as follows:

Catherine A. Lynch 1 — Votes For Votes Withheld Abstain Richard E. Cavanagh 2 — Votes For Votes Withheld Abstain Cynthia L. Egan 2 — Votes For Votes Withheld Abstain
BHK 44,966,706 2,727,798 0 44,905,433 2,789,070 0 44,946,194 2,748,310 0
BKT 46,338,795 11,167,857 0 46,433,755 11,072,896 0 46,348,678 11,157,973 0
Jerrold B. Harris 2 Barbara G. Novick 2
Votes For Votes Withheld Abstain Votes For Votes Withheld Abstain
BHK 44,863,568 2,830,935 0 44,960,080 2,734,424 0
BKT 46,377,066 11,129,585 0 46,401,962 11,104,690 0

For the Trusts listed above, Trustees whose term of office continued after the Annual Meeting of Shareholders because they were not up for election are Michael J. Castellano,

Frank J. Fabozzi, R. Glenn Hubbard, W. Carl Kester, John M. Perlowski, and Karen P. Robards.

1 Class II

2 Class III

Approved the Trustees as follows:

| | Michael J.
Castellano — Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | Richard E.
Cavanagh — Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | Cynthia L.
Egan — Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| HYT | 105,565,164 | 2,378,529 | 0 | 105,569,992 | 2,373,701 | 0 | 105,617,062 | 2,326,631 | 0 |
| | Frank J. Fabozzi | | | Jerrold B. Harris | | | R. Glenn Hubbard | | |
| | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain |
| HYT | 105,802,206 | 2,141,487 | 0 | 105,556,714 | 2,386,979 | 0 | 105,656,239 | 2,287,453 | 0 |
| | W. Carl Kester | | | Catherine A. Lynch | | | Barbara G. Novick | | |
| | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain |
| HYT | 105,656,522 | 2,287,171 | 0 | 105,632,194 | 2,311,499 | 0 | 105,547,258 | 2,396,435 | 0 |
| | John M. Perlowski | | | Karen P. Robards | | | | | |
| | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | Votes For | Votes Withheld | Abstain | | | |
| HYT | 105,704,555 | 2,239,138 | 0 | 105,538,490 | 2,405,203 | 0 | | | |

Trust Certification

The Trusts are listed for trading on the NYSE and have filed with the NYSE their annual chief executive officer certification regarding compliance with the NYSE’s listing standards. The Trusts filed with the SEC the certification of its chief executive officer and chief financial officer required by section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

Dividend Policy

Each Trust’s dividend policy is to distribute all or a portion of its net investment income to its shareholders on a monthly basis. In order to provide shareholders with a more stable level of dividend distributions, the distributions paid by the Trusts for any particular month may be more or less than the amount of net investment income earned by the Trusts during such month. The portion of distributions that exceeds a Trust’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, which are measured on a tax basis, will constitute a nontaxable return of capital. Distributions in excess of a Trust’s taxable income and net capital gains, but not in excess of a Trust’s earnings and profits, will be taxable to shareholders as ordinary income and will not constitute a nontaxable return of capital. The Trusts’ current accumulated but undistributed net investment income, if any, is disclosed in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities, which comprises part of the financial information included in this report.

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Additional Information (continued)

General Information

BHK and BKT do not make available copies of their respective Statements of Additional Information because each of BHK and BKT’s shares are not continuously offered, which means that BHK and BKT’s respective Statements of Additional Information have not been updated after the completion of BHK and BKT’s respective offerings and the information contained in BHK and BKT’s Statements of Additional Information may have become outdated.

In accordance with Section 23(c) of the 1940 Act, notice is hereby given that each Trust may from time to time purchase its Common Shares in open market transactions.

HYT’s Statement of Additional Information includes additional information about its Board and is available, without charge upon request by calling (800) 882-0052.

During the period, there were no material changes in the Trusts’ investment objectives or policies or to the Trusts’ charter or by-laws that would delay or prevent a change of control of the Trusts that were not approved by the shareholders or in the principal risk factors associated with investment in the Trusts. There have been no changes in the persons who are primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Trusts’ portfolios.

Quarterly performance, semi-annual and annual reports, current net asset value and other information regarding the Trusts may be found on BlackRock’s website, which can be accessed at http://www.blackrock.com. This reference to BlackRock’s website is intended to allow investors public access to information regarding the Trusts and does not, and is not intended to, incorporate BlackRock’s website in this report.

Electronic Delivery

Shareholders can sign up for e-mail notifications of quarterly statements, annual and semi-annual shareholder reports by enrolling in the Trusts’ electronic delivery program. Electronic copies of shareholder reports are available on BlackRock’s website.

Shareholders Who Hold Accounts with Investment Advisors, Banks or Brokerages:

Please contact your financial advisor. Please note that not all investment advisors, banks or brokerages may offer this service.

Householding

The Trusts will mail only one copy of shareholder documents, including annual and semi-annual reports and proxy statements, to shareholders with multiple accounts at the same address. This practice is commonly called “householding” and is intended to reduce expenses and eliminate duplicate mailings of shareholder documents. Mailings of your shareholder documents may be householded indefinitely unless you instruct us otherwise. If you do not want the mailing of these documents to be combined with those for other members of your household, please call the Trusts at (800) 882-0052.

Availability of Quarterly Schedule of Investments

The Trusts file their complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The Trusts’ Forms N-Q are available on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov and may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. Information on how to access documents on the SEC’s website without charge may be obtained by calling (800) SEC-0330. The Trusts’ Forms N-Q may also be obtained upon request and without charge by calling (800) 882-0052.

Availability of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures

A description of the policies and procedures that the Trusts use to determine how to vote proxies relating to portfolio securities is available upon request and without charge (1) by calling (800) 882-0052; (2) at http://www.blackrock.com; and (3) on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov.

Availability of Proxy Voting Record

Information about how the Trusts voted proxies relating to securities held in the Trusts’ portfolios during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available upon request and without charge (1) at http://www.blackrock.com or by calling (800) 882-0052; and (2) on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov.

Availability of Trust Updates

BlackRock will update performance and certain other data for the Trusts on a monthly basis on its website in the “Closed-end Funds” section of http://www.blackrock.com as well as certain other material information as necessary from time to time. Investors and others are advised to check the website for updated performance information and the release of other material information about the Trusts. This reference to BlackRock’s website is intended to allow investors public access to information regarding the Trusts and does not, and is not intended to, incorporate BlackRock’s website in this report.

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Additional Information (concluded)

Section 19(a) Notices

BHK’s amounts and sources of distributions reported are estimates and are being provided to you pursuant to regulatory requirements and are not being provided for tax reporting purposes. The actual amounts and sources for tax reporting purposes will depend upon the Trust’s investment experience during the remainder of the fiscal year and may be subject to changes based on tax regulations. The Trust will provide a Form 1099-DIV each calendar year that will tell you how to report these distributions for federal income tax purposes.

Total Fiscal Year-to-Date Cumulative Distributions by Character — Net Investment Income Net Realized Capital Gains Short Term Net Realized Capital Gains Long Term Return of Capital Total Per Common Share Percentage of Fiscal Year-to-Date Cumulative Distributions by Character — Net Investment Income Net Realized Capital Gains Short Term Net Realized Capital Gains Long Term Return of Capital Total Per Common Share
BHK $ 0.784983111 — — $ 0.059517 $ 0.8445 93 % 0 % 0 % 7 % 100 %

The Trust estimates that it has distributed more than the amount of earned income and net realized gains; therefore, a portion of the distribution may be a return of capital. A return of capital may occur, for example, when some or all of the shareholder's investment in the Trust is returned to the shareholder. A return of capital does not necessarily reflect the Trust's investment performance and should not be confused with "yield" or "income". When distributions exceed total return performance, the difference will incrementally reduce the Trust's net asset value per share.

Section 19(a) notices for the Trusts, as applicable, are available on the BlackRock website http://www.blackrock.com.

Shelf Offering Program

From time-to-time, each Trust may seek to raise additional equity capital through an equity shelf program (a “Shelf Offering”). In a Shelf Offering, a Trust may, subject to market conditions, raise additional equity capital by issuing new Common Shares from time to time in varying amounts at a net price at or above the Trust’s net asset value (“NAV”) per Common Share (calculated within 48 hours of pricing). While any such Shelf Offering may allow a Trust to pursue additional investment opportunities without the need to sell existing portfolio investments, it could also entail risks — including that the issuance of additional Common Shares may limit the extent to which the Common Shares are able to trade at a premium to NAV in the secondary market. Each Trust, other than HYT, has not filed a registration statement with respect to any Shelf Offerings. This report is not an offer to sell Trust Common Shares and is not a solicitation of an offer to buy Trust Common Shares. If a Trust files a registration statement with respect to any Shelf Offering, the prospectus contained therein will contain more complete information about the Trust and should be read carefully before investing.

On December 23, 2015, HYT filed a final prospectus with the SEC in connection with its Shelf Offering. This report and the prospectus are not offers to sell HYT Common Shares or solicitations of an offer to buy HYT Common Shares in any jurisdiction where such offers or sales are not permitted. The prospectus contains important information about HYT, including its investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. Investors are urged to read the prospectus of HYT carefully and in its entirety before investing. A copy of the final prospectus for HYT can be obtained from BlackRock at http://www.blackrock.com.

BlackRock Privacy Principles

BlackRock is committed to maintaining the privacy of its current and former fund investors and individual clients (collectively, “Clients”) and to safeguarding their non-public personal information. The following information is provided to help you understand what personal information BlackRock collects, how we protect that information and why in certain cases we share such information with select parties.

If you are located in a jurisdiction where specific laws, rules or regulations require BlackRock to provide you with additional or different privacy-related rights beyond what is set forth below, then BlackRock will comply with those specific laws, rules or regulations.

BlackRock obtains or verifies personal non-public information from and about you from different sources, including the following: (i) information we receive from you or, if applicable, your financial intermediary, on applications, forms or other documents; (ii) information about your transactions with us, our affiliates, or others; (iii) information we receive from a consumer reporting agency; and (iv) from visits to our websites.

BlackRock does not sell or disclose to non-affiliated third parties any non-public personal information about its Clients, except as permitted by law or as is necessary to respond to regulatory requests or to service Client accounts. These non-affiliated third parties are required to protect the confidentiality and security of this information and to use it only for its intended purpose.

We may share information with our affiliates to service your account or to provide you with information about other BlackRock products or services that may be of interest to you. In addition, BlackRock restricts access to non-public personal information about its Clients to those BlackRock employees with a legitimate business need for the information. BlackRock maintains physical, electronic and procedural safeguards that are designed to protect the non-public personal information of its Clients, including procedures relating to the proper storage and disposal of such information.

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This report is intended for current holders. It is not a prospectus. Past performance results shown in this report should not be considered a representation of future performance. The Trusts have leveraged their Common Shares, which creates risks for Common Shareholders, including the likelihood of greater volatility of net asset value and market price of the Common Shares, and the risk that fluctuations in short-term interest rates may reduce the Common Shares’ yield. Statements and other information herein are as dated and are subject to change.

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Item 2 – Code of Ethics – The registrant (or the “Fund”) has adopted a code of ethics, as of the end of the period covered by this report, applicable to the registrant’s principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions. During the period covered by this report, the code of ethics was amended to update certain information and to make other non-material changes. During the period covered by this report, there have been no waivers granted under the code of ethics. The registrant undertakes to provide a copy of the code of ethics to any person upon request, without charge, by calling 1-800-882-0052, option 4.

Item 3 – Audit Committee Financial Expert – The registrant’s board of directors (the “board of directors”), has determined that (i) the registrant has the following audit committee financial experts serving on its audit committee and (ii) each audit committee financial expert is independent:

Michael Castellano

Frank J. Fabozzi

James T. Flynn

W. Carl Kester

Karen P. Robards

The registrant’s board of directors has determined that W. Carl Kester and Karen P. Robards qualify as financial experts pursuant to Item 3(c)(4) of Form N-CSR.

Prof. Kester has a thorough understanding of generally accepted accounting principles, financial statements and internal control over financial reporting as well as audit committee functions. Prof. Kester has been involved in providing valuation and other financial consulting services to corporate clients since 1978. Prof. Kester’s financial consulting services present a breadth and level of complexity of accounting issues that are generally comparable to the breadth and complexity of issues that can reasonably be expected to be raised by the registrant’s financial statements.

Ms. Robards has a thorough understanding of generally accepted accounting principles, financial statements and internal control over financial reporting as well as audit committee functions. Ms. Robards has been President of Robards & Company, a financial advisory firm, since 1987. Ms. Robards was formerly an investment banker for more than 10 years where she was responsible for evaluating and assessing the performance of companies based on their financial results. Ms. Robards has over 30 years of experience analyzing financial statements. She also is a member of the audit committee of one publicly held company and a non-profit organization.

Under applicable securities laws, a person determined to be an audit committee financial expert will not be deemed an “expert” for any purpose, including without limitation for the purposes of Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, as a result of being designated or identified as an audit committee financial expert. The designation or identification as an audit committee financial expert does not impose on such person any duties, obligations, or liabilities greater than the duties, obligations, and liabilities imposed on such person as a member of the audit committee and board of directors in the absence of such designation or identification. The designation or identification of a person as an audit committee financial expert does not affect the duties, obligations, or liability of any other member of the audit committee or board of directors.

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Item 4 – Principal Accountant Fees and Services

The following table presents fees billed by Deloitte & Touche LLP (“D&T”) in each of the last two fiscal years for the services rendered to the Fund:

| Entity Name | (a) Audit Fees — Current Fiscal Year End | Previous Fiscal Year End | (b) Audit-Related Fees 1 — Current Fiscal Year End | Previous Fiscal Year End | (c) Tax Fees 2 — Current Fiscal Year End | Previous Fiscal Year End | (d) All Other
Fees 3 — Current Fiscal Year End | Previous Fiscal Year End |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. | $65,713 | $65,713 | $0 | $0 | $6,732 | $6,732 | $0 | $0 |

The following table presents fees billed by D&T that were required to be approved by the registrant’s audit committee (the “Committee”) for services that relate directly to the operations or financial reporting of the Fund and that are rendered on behalf of BlackRock Advisors, LLC (“Investment Adviser” or “BlackRock”) and entities controlling, controlled by, or under common control with BlackRock (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser) that provide ongoing services to the Fund (“Fund Service Providers”):

Current Fiscal Year End Previous Fiscal Year End
(b) Audit-Related Fees 1 $0 $0
(c) Tax Fees 2 $0 $0
(d) All Other Fees 3 $2,129,000 $2,391,000

1 The nature of the services includes assurance and related services reasonably related to the performance of the audit of financial statements not included in Audit Fees.

2 The nature of the services includes tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning.

3 Aggregate fees borne by BlackRock in connection with the review of compliance procedures and attestation thereto performed by D&T with respect to all of the registered closed-end funds and some of the registered open-end funds advised by BlackRock.

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

The Committee has adopted policies and procedures with regard to the pre-approval of services. Audit, audit-related and tax compliance services provided to the registrant on an annual basis require specific pre-approval by the Committee. The Committee also must approve other non-audit services provided to the registrant and those non-audit services provided to the Investment Adviser and Fund Service Providers that relate directly to the operations and the financial reporting of the registrant. Certain of these non-audit services that the Committee believes are (a) consistent with the SEC’s auditor independence rules and (b) routine and recurring services that will not impair the independence of the independent accountants may be approved by the Committee without consideration on a specific case-by-case basis (“general pre-approval”). The term of any general pre-approval is 12 months from the date of the pre-approval, unless the Committee provides for a different period. Tax or other non-audit services provided to the registrant which have a direct impact on the operations or financial reporting of the registrant will only be deemed pre-approved provided that any individual project does not exceed $10,000 attributable to the registrant or $50,000 per project. For this purpose, multiple projects will be aggregated to determine if they exceed the previously mentioned cost levels.

Any proposed services exceeding the pre-approved cost levels will require specific pre-approval by the Committee, as will any other services not subject to general pre-approval (e.g., unanticipated but permissible services). The Committee is informed of each service approved

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subject to general pre-approval at the next regularly scheduled in-person board meeting. At this meeting, an analysis of such services is presented to the Committee for ratification. The Committee may delegate to the Committee Chairman the authority to approve the provision of and fees for any specific engagement of permitted non-audit services, including services exceeding pre-approved cost levels.

(e)(2) None of the services described in each of Items 4(b) through (d) were approved by the Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception in paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

(f) Not Applicable

(g) The aggregate non-audit fees paid to the accountant for services rendered by the accountant to the registrant, the Investment Adviser and the Fund Service Providers were:

Entity Name Current Fiscal Year End Previous Fiscal Year End
BlackRock Income Trust, Inc. $6,732 $6,732

Additionally, SSAE 16 Review (Formerly, SAS No. 70) fees for the current and previous fiscal years of $2,129,000 and $2,391,000, respectively, were billed by D&T to the Investment Adviser.

(h) The Committee has considered and determined that the provision of non-audit services that were rendered to the Investment Adviser, and the Fund Service Providers that were not pre-approved pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(ii) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X is compatible with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.

Item 5 – Audit Committee of Listed Registrants

(a) The following individuals are members of the registrant’s separately-designated standing audit committee established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(58)(A)):

Michael Castellano

Frank J. Fabozzi

James T. Flynn

W. Carl Kester

Karen P. Robards

(b) Not Applicable

Item 6 – Investments

(a) The registrant’s Schedule of Investments is included as part of the Report to Stockholders filed under Item 1 of this Form.

(b) Not Applicable due to no such divestments during the semi-annual period covered since the previous Form N-CSR filing.

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Item 7 – Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End Management Investment Companies – The board of directors has delegated the voting of proxies for the Fund’s portfolio securities to the Investment Adviser pursuant to the Investment Adviser’s proxy voting guidelines. Under these guidelines, the Investment Adviser will vote proxies related to Fund securities in the best interests of the Fund and its stockholders. From time to time, a vote may present a conflict between the interests of the Fund’s stockholders, on the one hand, and those of the Investment Adviser, or any affiliated person of the Fund or the Investment Adviser, on the other. In such event, provided that the Investment Adviser’s Equity Investment Policy Oversight Committee, or a sub-committee thereof (the “Oversight Committee”) is aware of the real or potential conflict or material non-routine matter and if the Oversight Committee does not reasonably believe it is able to follow its general voting guidelines (or if the particular proxy matter is not addressed in the guidelines) and vote impartially, the Oversight Committee may retain an independent fiduciary to advise the Oversight Committee on how to vote or to cast votes on behalf of the Investment Adviser’s clients. If the Investment Adviser determines not to retain an independent fiduciary, or does not desire to follow the advice of such independent fiduciary, the Oversight Committee shall determine how to vote the proxy after consulting with the Investment Adviser’s Portfolio Management Group and/or the Investment Adviser’s Legal and Compliance Department and concluding that the vote cast is in its client’s best interest notwithstanding the conflict. A copy of the Fund’s Proxy Voting Policy and Procedures are attached as Exhibit 99.PROXYPOL. Information on how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available without charge, (i) at www.blackrock.com and (ii) on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov .

Item 8 – Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies – as of August 31, 2016.

(a)(1) The registrant is managed by a team of investment professionals comprised of Akiva Dickstein, Managing Director at BlackRock, Thomas Musmanno, Managing Director at BlackRock, Matthew Kraeger, Managing Director at BlackRock and Ron Sion, Managing Director at BlackRock. Messrs. Dickstein, Musmanno, Kraeger and Sion are the Fund’s co-portfolio managers and are responsible for the day-to-day management of the Fund’s portfolio , which includes setting the Fund’s overall investment strategy, overseeing the management of the Fund and/or selection of its investments. Messrs. Dickstein, Musmanno, Kraeger and Sion have been members of the Fund’s portfolio management team since 2009, 2012, 2016 and 2016 respectively.

Portfolio Manager Biography
Akiva Dickstein Managing Director of BlackRock since 2009; Managing Director of Merrill Lynch Investment
Managers, L.P. from 2003 to 2009 and Head of the U.S. Rates & Structured Credit Research Group.
Thomas Musmanno Managing Director of BlackRock since 2010; Director of BlackRock from 2006 to 2009.
Matthew Kraeger Managing Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2015; Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2015;
Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2009.
Ron Sion Managing Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2011; Director of BlackRock, Inc. since 2007.

(a)(2) As of August 31, 2016:

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| (i) Name of Portfolio Manager | (ii)
Number of Other Accounts Managed and Assets by Account Type — Other Registered Investment Companies | Other Pooled Investment Vehicles | Other Accounts | (iii) Number of Other Accounts and Assets for Which Advisory Fee is Performance-Based — Other Registered Investment Companies | Other Pooled Investment Vehicles | Other Accounts |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Akiva Dickstein | 9 | 17 | 102 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| | $7.11 Billion | $6.06 Billion | $45.09 Billion | $0 | $293.8 Million | $1.41 Billion |
| Thomas Musmanno | 11 | 12 | 139 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| | $11.50 Billion | $5.00 Billion | $54.45 Billion | $0 | $1.58 Billion | $0 |
| Matthew Kraeger | 6 | 10 | 21 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| | $2.68 Billion | $1.90 Billion | $11.00 Billion | $0 | $293.8 Million | $252.8 Million |
| Ron Sion | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |

(iv) Portfolio Manager Potential Material Conflicts of Interest

BlackRock has built a professional working environment, firm-wide compliance culture and compliance procedures and systems designed to protect against potential incentives that may favor one account over another. BlackRock has adopted policies and procedures that address the allocation of investment opportunities, execution of portfolio transactions, personal trading by employees and other potential conflicts of interest that are designed to ensure that all client accounts are treated equitably over time. Nevertheless, BlackRock furnishes investment management and advisory services to numerous clients in addition to the Fund, and BlackRock may, consistent with applicable law, make investment recommendations to other clients or accounts (including accounts which are hedge funds or have performance or higher fees paid to BlackRock, or in which portfolio managers have a personal interest in the receipt of such fees), which may be the same as or different from those made to the Fund. In addition, BlackRock, Inc., its affiliates and significant shareholders and any officer, director, shareholder or employee may or may not have an interest in the securities whose purchase and sale BlackRock recommends to the Fund. BlackRock, Inc., or any of its affiliates or significant shareholders, or any officer, director, shareholder, employee or any member of their families may take different actions than those recommended to the Fund by BlackRock with respect to the same securities. Moreover, BlackRock may refrain from rendering any advice or services concerning securities of companies of which any of BlackRock, Inc.’s (or its affiliates’ or significant shareholders’) officers, directors or employees are directors or officers, or companies as to which BlackRock, Inc. or any of its affiliates or significant shareholders or the officers, directors and employees of any of them has any substantial economic interest or possesses material non-public information. Certain portfolio managers also may manage accounts whose investment strategies may at times be opposed to the strategy utilized for a fund. It should also be noted that Messrs. Dickstein, Musmanno, Kraeger and Sion may be managing hedge fund and/or long only accounts, or may be part of a team managing hedge fund and/or long only accounts, subject to incentive fees. Messrs. Dickstein, Musmanno, Kraeger and Sion may therefore be entitled to receive a portion of any incentive fees earned on such accounts.

As a fiduciary, BlackRock owes a duty of loyalty to its clients and must treat each client fairly. When BlackRock purchases or sells securities for more than one account, the trades must

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be allocated in a manner consistent with its fiduciary duties. BlackRock attempts to allocate investments in a fair and equitable manner among client accounts, with no account receiving preferential treatment. To this end, BlackRock, Inc. has adopted policies that are intended to ensure reasonable efficiency in client transactions and provide BlackRock with sufficient flexibility to allocate investments in a manner that is consistent with the particular investment discipline and client base, as appropriate.

(a)(3) As of August 31, 2016:

Portfolio Manager Compensation Overview

The discussion below describes the portfolio managers’ compensation as of August 31, 2016.

BlackRock’s financial arrangements with its portfolio managers, its competitive compensation and its career path emphasis at all levels reflect the value senior management places on key resources. Compensation may include a variety of components and may vary from year to year based on a number of factors. The principal components of compensation include a base salary, a performance-based discretionary bonus, participation in various benefits programs and one or more of the incentive compensation programs established by BlackRock.

Base compensation. Generally, portfolio managers receive base compensation based on their position with the firm.

Discretionary Incentive Compensation. Discretionary incentive compensation is a function of several components: the performance of BlackRock, Inc., the performance of the portfolio manager’s group within BlackRock, the investment performance, including risk-adjusted returns, of the firm’s assets under management or supervision by that portfolio manager relative to predetermined benchmarks, and the individual’s performance and contribution to the overall performance of these portfolios and BlackRock. In most cases, these benchmarks are the same as the benchmark or benchmarks against which the performance of the Funds or other accounts managed by the portfolio managers are measured. Among other things, BlackRock’s Chief Investment Officers make a subjective determination with respect to each portfolio manager’s compensation based on the performance of the Funds and other accounts managed by each portfolio manager relative to the various benchmarks. Performance of fixed income funds is measured on a pre-tax and/or after-tax basis over various time periods including 1-, 3- and 5- year periods, as applicable. With respect to these portfolio managers, such benchmarks for the Fund and other accounts are:

Portfolio Manager Benchmark
Akiva Dickstein Matthew Kraeger A combination of
market-based indices (e.g. Citigroup Mortgage Index, Barclays GNMA MBS Index), certain cusThomasized indices and certain fund industry peer groups.
Thomas Musmanno A combination of
market-based indices (e.g., Bank of America Merrill Lynch U.S. Corporate & Government Index, 1-3 Years), certain cusThomasized indices and certain fund industry peer groups.
Ron Sion Citigroup
Mortgage Index

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Distribution of Discretionary Incentive Compensation. Discretionary incentive compensation is distributed to portfolio managers in a combination of cash and BlackRock, Inc. restricted stock units which vest ratably over a number of years. For some portfolio managers, discretionary incentive compensation is also distributed in deferred cash awards that notionally track the returns of select BlackRock investment products they manage and that vest ratably over a number of years. The BlackRock, Inc. restricted stock units, upon vesting, will be settled in BlackRock, Inc. common stock. Typically, the cash portion of the discretionary incentive compensation, when combined with base salary, represents more than 60% of total compensation for the portfolio managers. Paying a portion of discretionary incentive compensation in BlackRock, Inc. stock puts compensation earned by a portfolio manager for a given year “at risk” based on BlackRock’s ability to sustain and improve its performance over future periods. Providing a portion of discretionary incentive compensation in deferred cash awards that notionally track the BlackRock investment products they manage provides direct alignment with investment product results.

Long-Term Incentive Plan Awards — From time to time long-term incentive equity awards are granted to certain key employees to aid in retention, align their interests with long-term shareholder interests and motivate performance. Equity awards are generally granted in the form of BlackRock, Inc. restricted stock units that, once vested, settle in BlackRock, Inc. common stock. The portfolio managers of this Fund have unvested long-term incentive awards.

Deferred Compensation Program — A portion of the compensation paid to eligible United States-based BlackRock employees may be voluntarily deferred at their election for defined periods of time into an account that tracks the performance of certain of the firm’s investment products. Any portfolio manager who is either a managing director or director at BlackRock with compensation above a specified threshold is eligible to participate in the deferred compensation program.

Other Compensation Benefits. In addition to base salary and discretionary incentive compensation, portfolio managers may be eligible to receive or participate in one or more of the following:

Incentive Savings Plans — BlackRock, Inc. has created a variety of incentive savings plans in which BlackRock, Inc. employees are eligible to participate, including a 401(k) plan, the BlackRock Retirement Savings Plan (RSP), and the BlackRock Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP). The employer contribution components of the RSP include a company match equal to 50% of the first 8% of eligible pay contributed to the plan capped at $5,000 per year, and a company retirement contribution equal to 3-5% of eligible compensation up to the Internal Revenue Service limit ($265,000 for 2016). The RSP offers a range of investment options, including registered investment companies and collective investment funds managed by the firm. BlackRock, Inc. contributions follow the investment direction set by participants for their own contributions or, absent participant investment direction, are invested into a target date fund that corresponds to, or is closest to, the year in which the participant attains age 65. The ESPP allows for investment in

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BlackRock, Inc. common stock at a 5% discount on the fair market value of the stock on the purchase date. Annual participation in the ESPP is limited to the purchase of 1,000 shares of common stock or a dollar value of $25,000 based on its fair market value on the purchase date. All of the eligible portfolio managers are eligible to participate in these plans.

(a)(4) Beneficial Ownership of Securities – As of August 31, 2016.

Portfolio Manager Dollar Range of Equity Securities of the Fund Beneficially Owned
Akiva Dickstein None
Thomas Musmanno None
Matthew Kraeger $10,001 - $50,000
Ron Sion $100,001 - $500,000

(b) Not Applicable

Item 9 – Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers – Not Applicable due to no such purchases during the period covered by this report.

Item 10 – Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders – There have been no material changes to these procedures.

Item 11 – Controls and Procedures

(a) – The registrant’s principal executive and principal financial officers, or persons performing similar functions, have concluded that the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”)) are effective as of a date within 90 days of the filing of this report based on the evaluation of these controls and procedures required by Rule 30a-3(b) under the 1940 Act and Rule 13a-15(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

(b) – There were no changes in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the 1940 Act) that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

Item 12 – Exhibits attached hereto

(a)(1) – Code of Ethics – See Item 2

(a)(2) – Certifications – Attached hereto

(a)(3) – Not Applicable

(b) – Certifications – Attached hereto

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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.

BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.

By:
John M. Perlowski
Chief Executive Officer (principal executive officer) of
BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.
Date: November 3, 2016

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/ John M. Perlowski
John M. Perlowski
Chief Executive Officer (principal executive officer) of
BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.
Date: November 3, 2016
By: /s/ Neal J. Andrews
Neal J. Andrews
Chief Financial Officer (principal financial officer) of
BlackRock Income Trust, Inc.
Date: November 3, 2016

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