savingsplan.htm

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549


Form 11-K

\X\
ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 [NO FEE REQUIRED] FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2008, OR
\  \
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 [NO FEE REQUIRED] for the transition period from _________ to _______________


Commission file number 001-00434

A.
Full title of the plan and the address of the plan, if different from that of the issuer named below:  The Procter & Gamble Savings Plan, c/o The Procter & Gamble Company, Two Procter & Gamble Plaza, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202.

B.
Name of issuer of the securities held pursuant to the plan and the address of its principal executive office:  The Procter & Gamble Company, One Procter & Gamble Plaza, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202


REQUIRED INFORMATION

Item 4.
Plan Financial Statements and Schedules Prepared in Accordance with the Financial Reporting Requirements of ERISA.


 
EXHIBITS:

23.1
Consent of Deloitte & Touche LLP


 
SIGNATURE

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Trustees (or other persons who administer the Employee Benefit Plan) have duly caused this annual report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.


THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SAVINGS PLAN

Date:  December 12, 2008
By:            /s/Thomas J. Mess                                                   
Thomas J. Mess
Secretary, Trustees of
The Procter & Gamble Savings Plan

 
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
The Procter & Gamble
Savings Plan (formerly The
Procter & Gamble
Subsidiaries Savings Plan)
 
Financial Statements as of June 30, 2008 and 2007,and for
the Year Ended June 30, 2008, and the Six Month Period
Ended June 30, 2007, and Supplemental Schedule as of
June 30, 2008, and Report of Independent Registered
Public Accounting Firm
 

 
 
 
 


THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SAVINGS PLAN (FORMERLY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SUBSIDIARIES SAVINGS PLAN)
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS

 
    Page
     
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM 1
     
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  
     
   Statements of Net Assets Available for Benefits as June 30, 2008 and 2007 2
     
 
 Statements of Changes in Net assets Available for Benefits for the Year Ended
 June 30, 2008 and the Six Month Period Ended June 30, 2007
 
3
     
   Notes to Financial Statments 4-10
     
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE -  
     
   Form 5500, Schedule H, Part IV, Line 4i - Schedule of Assets (Held at End of Year) as of June 30, 2008 12
     
NOTE: All other schedules required by Section 2520.103-10 of the Department of Labor's Rules
     and Regulations for Reporting and Disclosure under the Employee Retirement Income
    Security Act of 1974 have been omitted because they are not applicable. 
 
     
     
     
     
     
 


 
 
 




 
 
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
 
To The Procter & Gamble Master Savings Plan Committee:
 
We have audited the accompanying statements of net assets available for benefits of The Procter & Gamble Savings Plan (formerly The Procter & Gamble Subsidiaries Savings Plan) (the “Plan”) as of June 30, 2008 and 2007, and the related statements of changes in net assets available for benefits for the year ended June 30, 2008 and the six month period ended June 30, 2007. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Plan’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.
 
We conducted our audits in accordance with standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. The Plan is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its 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 Plan’s 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. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, such financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the net assets available for benefits of the Plan as of June 30, 2008 and 2007, and the changes in net assets available for benefits for the year ended June 30, 2008 and the six month period ended June 30, 2007, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
 
Our audits were conducted for the purpose of forming an opinion on the basic financial statements taken as a whole. The supplemental schedule of assets (held at end of year) as of June 30, 2008 is presented for the purpose of additional analysis and is not a required part of the basic financial statements, but is supplementary information required by the Department of Labor’s Rules and Regulations for Reporting and Disclosure under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974. The supplemental schedule is the responsibility of the Plan’s management. Such supplemental schedule has been subjected to the auditing procedures applied in our audits of the basic financial statements and, in our opinion, is fairly stated in all material respects when considered in relation to the basic financial statements taken as a whole.
 
 

 
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Cincinnati, Ohio
December 12, 2008
 

 
-1-
 



THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SAVINGS PLAN
   
(FORMERLY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SUBSIDIARIES SAVINGS PLAN)
     
STATEMENTS OF NET ASSETS AVAILABLE FOR BENEFITS
   
AS JUNE 30, 2008 AND 2007
   
     
     
 
                             2008
                     2007
     
PARTICIPANT-DIRECTED INVESTMENTS
   
  At fair value:
   
    Cash and cash equivalents
  $           248,493
$                          
    The Procter & Gamble Company common stock —
   
      8,615,265 shares (cost, $381,275,034) at June 30, 2008;
   
      8,751,419 shares (cost, $369,656,373) at June 30, 2007
        523,894,244
        535,499,329
    The J.M. Smucker Company common stock —
   
      44,140 shares (cost, $1,263,171) at June 30, 2008;
   
      50,806 shares (cost, $1,425,023) at June 30, 2007
            1,793,830
            3,234,279
    Mutual funds
        375,549,449
        351,145,818
    Common collective trust funds
        234,743,032
        260,015,743
    Loans to participants
            8,231,570
            1,838,901
    J.P. Morgan Stable Value Fund
          67,649,736
 
          70,669,585
     
           Total participant-directed investments — at fair value
      1,212,110,354
 
      1,222,403,655
     
     
NET ASSETS AVAILABLE FOR BENEFITS
   
  AT FAIR VALUE
      1,212,110,354
      1,222,403,655
     
  Adjustment from fair value to contract value for fully benefit-
   
    responsive investment contracts
            5,210,600
 
            1,073,100
     
NET ASSETS AVAILABLE FOR BENEFITS
  $  1,217,320,954
 
  $  1,223,476,755
     
     
See notes to financial statements.
   

 
-2-
 




THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SAVINGS PLAN
   
(FORMERLY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SUBSIDIARIES SAVINGS PLAN)
     
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS AVAILABLE FOR BENEFITS
 
FOR THE YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2008 AND FOR THE
 
SIX MONTH PERIOD ENDED JUNE 30, 2007
   
     
     
   
                             Six Month
   
                            Period Ended
   
                              June 30,
 
                                       2008
                              2007
     
  Investment (loss) income:
   
    Net (depreciation) appreciation in fair value of investments
  $     (81,352,467)
  $        6,718,647
    Net appreciation in contract value of investments
            3,218,196
              709,322
    Interest
          34,453,699
                70,404
    Dividends
          12,529,966
 
            1,112,075
     
           Total investment (loss) income — net
         (31,150,606)
 
            8,610,448
     
  Contributions:
   
    Employer contributions
                  7,586
 
    Employee contributions
          93,245,138
 
    Employee rollovers
            1,490,895
   
     
           Total contributions
          94,743,619
   
     
DEDUCTIONS:
   
  Benefits paid to participants
          68,735,536
            7,485,032
  Administrative expenses
            1,014,024
 
                81,445
     
           Total deductions
          69,749,560
 
            7,566,477
     
TRANSFER IN — From the Procter & Gamble Profit
   
  Sharing Trust and Employee Stock Ownership Plan
                    746
 
        988,478,147
     
NET (DECREASE) INCREASE IN NET ASSETS
          (6,155,801)
        989,522,118
     
NET ASSETS AVAILABLE FOR BENEFITS:
   
  Beginning of year
      1,223,476,755
 
        233,954,637
     
  End of year
  $  1,217,320,954
 
  $  1,223,476,755
     
     
See notes to financial statements.
   
     
     

 
-3-
 



THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SAVINGS PLAN
(FORMERLY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SUBSIDIARIES SAVINGS PLAN)
 
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
AS OF JUNE 30, 2008 AND 2007 AND FOR THE YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2008
AND THE SIX MONTH PERIOD ENDED JUNE 30, 2007

 

1.  
DESCRIPTION OF THE PLAN
 
The following brief description of The Procter & Gamble Savings Plan (formerly The Procter & Gamble Subsidiaries Savings Plan) (the “Plan”) is provided for general information only. Participants should refer to the Plan agreement for more complete information.
 
General — The Plan was originally established effective March 2, 1990 upon the acquisition of the Hawaiian Punch Division of DelMonte by The Procter & Gamble Company (the “Company”). During the period from March 1996 through June 2002, the following plans were merged into the Plan: the Sundor Brands Savings Plan, Max Factor Savings Plan, the Speas Savings Plan, the Tambrands, Inc. Savings Plan (“Tambrands”), the Iams Company Savings Plan (“Iams”), Recovery Engineering, Inc. Salary Savings Plan (“Pur”), the Richardson-Vicks Savings Plan (“Richardson-Vicks”), The Procter & Gamble Subsidiaries Savings and Investment Plan (“Subsidiaries Savings and Investment”), the Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals Savings Plan (“Pharmaceuticals”), and the Millstone Coffee, Inc. 401(k) Savings and Profit Sharing Plan (“Millstone”).
 
On May 3, 2007, the Company approved a resolution stating that the 401(k) feature of The Procter & Gamble Profit Sharing Trust and Employee Stock Ownership Plan, another plan sponsored by the Company, (“PST Plan Employee Accounts”) would merge into the Plan and the Plan’s year end would change to June 30. All assets of the PST Plan Employee Accounts were transferred into the Plan effective June 29, 2007 totaling $988,478,147. Furthermore, effective July 1, 2007, the Plan was renamed The Procter & Gamble Savings Plan (the “Savings Plan”). The Savings Plan is now the Company’s active 401(k) plan with ongoing contributions funded by employee contributions.
 
The Plan is a voluntary defined contribution plan covering all eligible employees of Sundor Group, Inc., including the Sundor Brands and Hawaiian Punch divisions, Max Factor & Company, Speas Company, Tambrands Company, Iams Company, Pur Company, Richardson-Vicks Company, Maryland Club Foods, Inc., Shulton, Inc., Dover Baby Wipes Company, Giorgio Beverly Hills, Inc., Millstone Coffee, Inc., Norwich Eaton, and former employees of Fisher Nut Company who were members of the Twin Cities Bakery and Confectionery Workers Union Local No. 22, all subsidiaries of the Company. Effective June 29, 2007, the Plan also covers active, eligible U.S. employees not covered by another Company sponsored retirement plan. The Plan is subject to the provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
 
The Plan is administered by the Master Savings Plan Committee consisting of three members appointed by the Board of Directors of the Company, except for duties specifically vested in the trustee of the Plan, J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, and the Plan recordkeeper, J.P. Morgan Retirement Plan Services LLC, who are also appointed by the Board of Directors of the Company.
 
ContributionsEffective April 1996, all contributions to the Plan were suspended. Tambrands, Iams, Pur, Richardson-Vicks, Subsidiaries Savings and Investment, Pharmaceuticals, and Millstone Savings Plans were frozen prior to conversion into the Plan. Effective July 1, 2007, the Savings Plan allows contributions by eligible employees. Participants can elect to contribute a portion of their pre-tax compensation, as defined by the Plan, up to Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) limits. Participants can rollover balances from conduit individual retirement accounts and qualified plans of former employers. In accordance with new IRS regulations, participants age 50 or older are eligible to contribute for the calendar years ended December 31, 2008 and 2007, an additional $5,000 as a “catch-up” contribution in excess of the maximum 401(k) contributions of $15,500 in 2008 and 2007.

 
-4-
 



 
Qualified Nonelective Contributions (QNEC)The Plan recorded a QNEC in 2008 to provide for certain participants who were not given the opportunity to contribute their elected amounts due to certain administrative errors.  The contribution is immediately 100% vested to the employees who receive it.  The contributions were made in accordance with IRS regulations and do not affect the status of the Plan.
 
Participant Accounts — Individual accounts are maintained for each Plan participant. Each participant’s account is credited with the participant’s contribution (effective July 1, 2007), an allocation of the Plan’s earnings or losses and participant withdrawals. The benefit to which a participant is entitled is limited to the benefit that can be provided from their account. Participants can allocate their account to one or all of the investment options offered by the Plan.
 
Investments — Participants direct the investment of their accounts into various investment options offered by the Plan. The Plan currently offers common stock, mutual funds, a common collective trust fund and an insurance investment contract as investment options for participants.
 
Vesting Upon suspension of contributions, all participants were vested immediately in their accounts plus actual earnings thereon. Effective July 1, 2007, participants are immediately 100% vested in any new employee contributions.
 
Participant Loans — The Plan has a loan feature under which active participants may borrow up to 50% of the current value of their vested account balances exclusive of amounts attributable to Company contributions (up to a maximum of $50,000). Loans are repaid via payroll deduction over a period of up to five years, except for loans used to purchase a primary residence, which are repaid via payroll deduction over a period of up to 10 years. Principal and interest paid is credited to applicable funds in the borrower’s account. Former Company participants may not borrow against their account balances. Upon participant termination or retirement, the outstanding loan balance is treated as a distribution to the participant if repayment is not made by the participant within 90 days of separation, or if an on-going repayment arrangement has not been made with the Plan.
 
Payment of BenefitsThe Plan provides for benefits to be paid upon retirement, disability, death, or separation other than retirement as defined by the Plan document. Plan benefits may be made in a lump sum of cash or shares of Company common stock, in installments over not more than 120 months, or variable amounts paid monthly. Retired or terminated employees shall commence benefit payments upon attainment of age 70½.
 
A participant may withdraw any portion of after-tax contributions once in any three-month period. Participants who have attained age 59 ½ or have demonstrated financial hardship may withdraw all or any portion of their before-tax contributions once in any six month period.
 
Account balances attributable to terminated employees are approximately $289,696,128 for the year ended June 30, 2008 and $303,704,961 for the six month period ended June 30, 2007, respectively.
 

 
-5-
 



2.  
SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
Basis of Accounting — The accompanying financial statements have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
 
Use of Estimates — The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities and changes therein and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
Risks and Uncertainties — The Plan utilizes various investment instruments, including Company common stock, J.M. Smucker Company common stock, a common collective trust fund and various mutual funds that include investments in U.S. Government securities, corporate debt instruments, corporate stocks, and investment contracts. Investment securities, in general, are exposed to various risks, such as interest rate, credit, and overall market volatility. Due to the level of risk associated with certain investment securities, it is reasonably possible that changes in the values of investment securities will occur in the near term and that such changes could materially affect the amounts reported in the financial statements.
 
Investment Valuation and Income Recognition The Plan’s investments are stated at fair value. Shares of mutual funds are valued at quoted market prices, which represent the net assets value of shares held by the Plan at year end. Common stock is valued at quoted market prices. The common collective trust fund is stated at fair value as determined by the issuer of the common collective trust fund based on the fair market value of the underlying investments. The fully benefit-responsive investment contract is stated at fair value and then adjusted to contract value. Fair value of the contract is calculated by the difference between replacement cost and actual cost, projected for the duration of the associated portfolio, discounted back to measurement date using bank-finance yield curve. Loans to participants are valued at the outstanding loan balances.
 
In accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board Staff Position, FSP AAG INV-1 and SOP 94-4-1, Reporting of Fully Benefit-Responsive Contracts Held by Certain Investment Companies Subject to the AICPA Investment Company Guide and Defined-Contribution Health and Welfare and Pension Plans (the “FSP”), the statements of net assets available for benefits present an investment contract at fair value, as well as an additional line item showing an adjustment of the fully benefit-responsive contract from fair value to contract value. The statement of changes in net assets available for benefit is presented on a contract value basis and is not affected by the FSP.  Fair value of the contract is calculated by discounting the related cash flows based on current yields of similar instruments with comparable durations.
 
Purchases and sales of securities are recorded on a trade-date basis. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis. Dividends are recorded on the ex-dividend date.
 
Management fees and operating expenses charged to the Plan for investments in the mutual funds are deducted from income earned on a daily basis and are not separately reflected. Consequently, management fees and operating expenses are reflected as a reduction of investment return for such investments.
 
New Accounting Pronouncements —In September 2006, the FASB issued Statement on Financial Accounting Standards No. 157 (SFAS No. 157), Fair Value Measurements. SFAS No. 157 establishes a single authoritative definition of fair value, sets a framework for measuring fair value and requires additional disclosures about fair value measurement. SFAS No. 157 is effective for financial statements issued for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. Plan management has not completed the process of evaluating the impact that will result from adopting SFAS No. 157. Plan management is therefore unable to disclose the impact that adopting SFAS No. 157 will have on its net assets available for benefits and changes in net assets available for benefits when such statement is adopted.

 
-6-
 



 
Administrative Expenses — Investment management expenses are paid by the Plan and are netted against investment income. Loan processing fees are paid by the participants through reduction in their investment balances. In addition, recordkeeping fees of the Plan are paid by participants through a reduction in their investment balances.
 
Payment of BenefitsBenefit payments to participants are recorded upon distribution. There were no amounts allocated to accounts of persons who have elected to withdraw from the Plan but have not yet been paid for the year ended June 30, 2008, and for the six month period ended June 30, 2007.
 
3.  
INVESTMENTS
 
The Plan’s investments that represented five percent or more of the Plan’s net assets available for benefits as of June 30, 2008 and 2007, are as follows:
 
Description
2008
2007
     
Barclays Global Investors Equity Index Fund T
  $  234,743,032
  $  260,015,743
*The Procter & Gamble Company common stock
      523,894,244
      535,499,329
Royce Low Priced Stock Fund
      125,204,668
      132,535,539
PIMCO Total Return Fund
      100,015,034
        84,027,710
Fidelity Diversified International Fund
      131,322,175
      119,879,654
*J.P. Morgan Chase Bank Intermediate Bond Fund
        65,910,908
        68,016,923
     
*Indicates party-in-interest
   

During the year ended June 30, 2008, and the six-month period ended June 30, 2007, the Plan’s investments (including gains and losses on investments bought and sold, as well as held during the year) appreciated (depreciated) in value as follows:
 
 
2008
2007
     
Net (depreciation) appreciation in fair value of:
   
  Mutual funds
  $   (44,095,706)
  $    4,253,390
  Common collective trust fund
      (34,220,358)
        5,160,255
  The Procter & Gamble Company common stock
        (1,943,245)
      (2,800,995)
  The J.M. Smucker Company common stock
        (1,093,158)
 
          105,997
     
 
  $   (81,352,467)
 
  $    6,718,647
     
Net appreciation in contract value of
   
  J.P. Morgan Stable Value Fund
  $      3,218,196
 
  $      709,322
     

 
 
 
 
-7-
 
 
 
     4.
INVESTMENT CONTRACT WITH INSURANCE COMPANY

The Plan has a fully benefit-responsive investment contract with Monumental Life Insurance Co., Bank of America N.A, and State Street Bank & Trust Company (collectively, the “issuers”). The issuers maintain the contributions in a general account, which is credited with earnings on the underlying investments and charged for participant withdrawals and administrative expenses. The contract is included in the financial statements at fair value and then adjusted to contract value as reported to the Plan by the issuers. Contract value represents contributions made under the contract, plus earnings, less participant withdrawals and administrative expenses. Participants may ordinarily direct the withdrawal or transfer of all or a portion of their investment at contract value. Plan management believes that the occurrence of events that would cause the Plan to transact at less than contract value is not probable. The issuers may not terminate the contract at any amount less than contract value.
 
The issuers are contractually obligated to pay the principal and specified interest rate that is guaranteed to the Plan. The crediting interest rate is based on a formula agreed upon with the issuer, but may not be less than 0%. Such interest rates are reviewed on a quarterly basis for resetting. The crediting rate of the contract is expected to track current market yields on a trailing basis.
 
Average yields:
2008
2007
  Based on annualized earnings (1)
    4.83 %
 4.79 %
  Based on interest rate credited to participants (2)
    4.93 %
 4.92 %
 

(1)  
Computed by dividing the annualized one-day actual earnings of the contract on the last day of the Plan year by the fair value of the investments on the same date.
 
(2)  
Computed by dividing the annualized one-day earnings credited to participants on the last day of the Plan year by the fair value of the investments on the same date.
 
5.  
EXEMPT PARTY-IN-INTEREST TRANSACTIONS
 
Certain Plan investments are shares of mutual funds managed by J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, the trustee of the Plan as defined by the Plan. J.P. Morgan Retirement Plan Services LLC, the recordkeeper, is affiliated with the trustee. Therefore, these transactions qualify as party-in-interest transactions. Fees paid by the Plan for investment management services were included as a reduction of the return earned on each fund.
 
At June 30, 2008 and 2007, the Plan held 8,615,265 and 8,751,419 shares, respectively, of common stock of the Company, the sponsoring employer, with a cost basis of $381,275,034 and $369,656,373, respectively. During the year ended June 30, 2008 and the six month period ended June 30, 2007, the Plan recorded dividend income on Company common stock of $12,471,932 and $605,434, respectively.
 
During the year ended June 30, 2008 and the six month period ended June 30, 2007, the Plan’s investment in Company common stock, including gains and losses on investments bought and sold as well as held during the year, depreciated in value by $(1,943,245) and $(2,800,995), respectively.
 
6.  
PLAN TERMINATION
 
Although it has not expressed any intention to do so, the Company has the right under the Plan to terminate the Plan subject to the provisions set forth in ERISA.
 
7.  
FEDERAL INCOME TAX STATUS
 
The Internal Revenue Service has determined and informed the Company by a letter dated March 7, 2002, that the Plan and related trust were designed in accordance with the applicable regulations of the Internal Revenue Code. The Plan has been amended since receiving the determination letter; however, the Company and the plan administrator believe that the Plan is currently designed and operated in compliance with the applicable requirements of the Internal Revenue Code and the Plan and related trust continue to be tax-exempt. Therefore, no provision for income taxes has been included in the Plan’s financial statements.

 




 
-8-
 


 
8.  
RECONCILIATION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS TO FORM 5500
 
Upon an event of default in a participant loan, to the extent a distribution to the participant is not permissible under the Plan, the amount due to the Plan on account of the loan will be treated as a deemed distribution. A loan that is a deemed distribution is treated as a distribution on Form 5500 and removed from Plan assets on Form 5500. However, in the Plan financial statements, and in accordance with the Plan, such deemed distributions remain part of the participant’s account balance until a distributable event occurs for the participant.
 
The following is a reconciliation of net assets available for benefits per the financial statements as of June 30, 2008 and 2007 to Form 5500:

 
2008
2007
     
Net assets available for benefits per the financial
   
  statements
  $   1,217,320,954
  $  1,223,476,755
  Less: Adjustment from contract value to fair value for
   
    fully benefit responsive investment contracts
           (5,210,600)
          (1,073,100)
  Less: Certain deemed distributions of participant loans
              (277,160)
 
               (85,339)
     
Net assets available for benefits per the Form 5500
  $   1,211,833,194
 
  $  1,222,318,316


The following is a reconciliation of the decrease in net assets per the financial statements for the year ended June 30, 2008, to Form 5500 net loss:
 
 
2008
   
Net decrease in assets available for benefits per the financial
 
  statements prior to transfer in
  $    (6,156,547)
Less: Adjustment from contract value to fair value for fully
 
  benefit responsive investment contracts as of June 30, 2008
        (5,210,600)
Plus: Adjustment from contract value to fair value for fully
 
  benefit responsive investment contracts as of June 30, 2007
          1,073,100
Less: Certain deemed distributions of participant loans and
 
  related interest
           (253,593)
   
Net loss per the Form 5500
  $   (10,547,640)





 
-9-
 



The following is a reconciliation of net investment loss per the financial statements for the year ended June 30, 2008, to Form 5500:
 
 
2008
   
Net investment loss per the financial statements
  $   (31,150,606)
Less: Adjustment from contract value to fair value for fully
 
  benefit responsive investment contracts as of June 30, 2008
        (5,210,600)
Plus: Adjustment from contract value to fair value for fully
 
  benefit responsive investment contracts as of June 30, 2007
          1,073,100
  Less: Interest on deemed distribution
            (15,280)
   
Net investment loss per the Form 5500
  $   (35,303,386)

The following is a reconciliation of benefits paid to participants per the financial statements for the year ended June 30, 2008, to Form 5500:
 
 
2008
   
Benefits paid to participants per the financial statements
  $   (68,735,536)
  Plus: Current year deemed loans distributions
           (177,718)
  Less: Prior year deemed loans distributions
                1,177
   
Benefits paid to participants per the Form 5500
  $   (68,912,077)
 
 
9.  
SUBSEQUENT EVENT
 
Subsequent to June 30, 2008, conditions in the worldwide debt and equity markets have deteriorated significantly. These conditions may have had a negative effect on the fair value of the Plan’s investments since June 30, 2008.
 

 

 
 
******
 





 
-10-
 



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE

 
-11-
 




THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SAVINGS PLAN
   
(FORMERLY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE SUBSIDIARIES SAVINGS PLAN)
       
FORM 5500, SCHEDULE H, PART IV, LINE 4i —
   
SCHEDULE OF ASSETS (HELD AT END OF YEAR)
   
JUNE 30, 2008
   
       
       
 
Identity of Issuer
Description of Investment
Fair Value
       
 
Investments at fair value —
   
 
  Interest bearing cash
 
  $             248,493
*
  The Procter & Gamble Company
Common stock
          523,894,244
 
  The J.M. Smucker Company
Common stock
              1,793,830
 
  Mutual Funds:
   
 
    The Royce Funds
Low Price Fund
          125,204,668
 
    Fidelity Investments
Diversified International Fund
          131,322,175
 
    PIMCO
Total Return Fund
          100,015,034
*
    J.P. Morgan Funds
Prime Money Market Fund
            19,007,572
 
  Common Collective Trust Fund-
   
 
    Barclays Global Investors
Equity Index Fund T
          234,743,032
*
  J.P. Morgan Stable Value Fund:
Stable Value Fund:
 
 
    US Treasury
  Note, 4.500%, due April 30, 2009
                   96,685
 
    US Treasury
  Note, 4.875%, due June 30, 2009
                   46,100
 
    US Treasury
  Note, 2.625%, due May 31, 2010
                   20,012
*
    J.P. Morgan Chase Bank
  Liquidity Fund
              1,576,031
*
    J.P. Morgan Chase Bank
  Intermediate Bond Fund
            65,910,908
 
    Monumental Life Insurance Company,
   
 
    Bank of America, N.A., State
   
 
    Street Bank and Trust Company
Wrapper Contract
                       -
*
  Loans to participants
1,154 loans with maturities ranging from
 
   
  July 2008 to December 2017 and
 
   
  interest rates ranging from 5% to 10.5%
              7,954,410
       
       
 
TOTAL INVESTMENTS
 
  $   1,211,833,194
       
       
 *  Denotes Party-in-interest    
 
 
 
 

 
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