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Integra Strategic Allocation Fund (Lifecycle 2)

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September 30, 2008

Investment Objective

The objective of this fund is to provide long-term capital appreciation and income through a constant mix of primarily stocks and bonds while also ensuring short-term preservation of capital.

Growth of $1,000

Growth of $1,000

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Asset Mix

Asset Mix

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Annual Returns to September 30 (%)

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1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

20.0

-12.3

-3.9

11.9

12.8

13.0

7.0

9.3

-11.0

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Annualized Returns to September 30, 2008 (%)

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Qtr*

6 mo*

1 yr

2 yr

3 yr

4 yr

5 yr

6 yr

7 yr

10 yr

-9.8

-8.9

-11.0

-1.4

1.3

4.1

5.8

6.8

5.2

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Top Holdings (%)

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Canadian Equity**

U.S. Equity**

International Equity**

Manulife Financial Corp.
Royal Bank of Canada
Toronto-Dominion Bank
EnCana Corp.
Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc.

1.3
1.2
1.1
1.1
1.0

Occidental Petroleum Corp.
Express Scripts Inc.
ConocoPhillips
Illinois Tool Works Inc.
Verizon Communications Inc.

0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3

Zurich Financial Services
Royal Dutch Shell PLC
France Telecom S.A.
Imperial Tobacco Group ADR
Nintendo Co. Ltd.

0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.2

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†Growth is calculated based on compounded monthly returns.
*Performance for the quarter and 6 months to September 30 represent the actual total returns of the funds for the period, and are not annualized.
**As a percentage of the total portfolio.

Canadian Equities

Highstreet Asset Management - Quantitative Core Manager
London, founded 1998, managing $4.3 billion.

Highstreet uses a multi-factor quantitative model which must meet their specific criteria for Growth, Value, Quality & Risk (GVQ+ R(tm)) when considering buy and sell decisions.

Uncertainty regarding the health of the world’s financial institutions and the negative implications for economic growth, led to a sharp sell off in the markets. The S&P/TSX composite was not immune, shedding 18.2% during the quarter, effectively erasing any of the gains captured during the last two years. The fallout led to a significant decline in the price of Energy commodities as investors expected curtailed demand. The sector accounted for almost half of the index’s decline. Led by Fertilizers and Golds, the Materials sector witnessed a reversal of fortunes from prior periods, also contributing significantly to the index’s slide. Surprisingly, Financials north of the border added a modest amount of positive return for the TSX benchmark. Overall the rationality of the market was tested, as those companies with weaker growth and valuation profiles outperformed. The portfolio benefited from not holding Cameco or Yamana and holding Royal Bank. Fertilizer stocks Agrium and Potash detracted the most relative value.

The markets remain fixated on the unfolding global credit crisis and its implications. While the ultimate impact of these events on the real economy remains uncertain, we continue to focus on companies that exhibit strong relative earnings growth and attractive valuations. In addition, we pay close attention to risk and the revision of analyst estimates. These short-term measures will help to ensure the sustainability of the earnings profile for the portfolio in a market that is in transition. Heightened volatility and a market that is driven by events, underscore the need to stay the course with a consistent and disciplined approach to stock selection.

Lincluden Management - Value Manager
Oakville, founded 1982, managing $2.8 billion.

Lincluden, using a “value-buyer” approach, favours companies that its analysis shows to be undervalued. Identifying trends that will enhance future value is important.

Equity markets around the globe were strongly negative as markets were faced with the prospects of a slowdown in global growth combined with continued uncertainty in the financial system. The first part of the quarter was marked by rapidly declining commodity prices as signs of slowing global demand took the steam out of what we had believed were speculatively high commodity prices in general. Energy and Material sectors declined in excess of 30% in the quarter. With the failure of Lehman Brothers in mid September an already precarious banking sector suffered another series of shocks culminating in the most significant financial institution failures in U.S. history. While Canadian banks appear sound many of the gains this sector had made earlier in the quarter were erased as fear sideswiped the price of virtually all Financial stocks. With this backdrop 9 out of 10 sectors of the broad market declined in the quarter with the Financial sector posting an anemic gain.

Our portfolio was well positioned for the commodity decline managing a positive result through August. However the declines in late September were broad based involving all sectors and our portfolio suffered marked declines in the period. Over the quarter we initiated a new position in West Jet Airlines and increased our holdings of Barrick Gold, CanWest Global Communications and Bombardier.

J. Zechner Associates - Top-Down Growth Manager
Toronto, founded 1993, managing $2.2 billion.

Zechner’s expertise is the identification of economic and business trends and the weighting of industry sectors. Stocks selected must have good growth characteristics and be liquid.

The S&P/TSX posted its worst quarterly drop since the Asian economic crisis and pre-LTCM bailout in Q3/98. The index fell by 18.2% in the third quarter. In terms of relative performance for the Canadian market, the cyclical sectors of the market took the largest hits in both September and the third quarter overall as worries about global economic growth and substantial redemptions by levered investment funds sent prices sharply lower. The index fell by 14.0% in September alone, even though that month included the two strongest single daily point gains in the index since its inception and the single strongest daily percentage gain ever. Copper tumbled to its worst quarterly decline on record while the overall commodities index overall fell back to 2005 levels.

We definitely see the current panic in the stock market as a long-term buying opportunity, not only from the point of view of the value of stocks relative to bonds, but also due to the valuations we are seeing in the stock market compared to historical levels for these companies. Even assuming a very negative economic outlook, stocks already seem to be discounting this weakness and pricing it in. Oil stocks have trades down to 2005 levels, when oil prices were near $60 per barrel versus the current price of $90 while copper stocks have given back most of this cycle’s gains and are trading back to where they were when copper was under $1 per pound versus the current price of $2.50. Technology stocks as well are priced for a recession which has yet to occur; and most of these companies have ample cash and are therefore not at all impacted in their operations by the credit crisis.

U.S. Equities

Atlantic Trust - Growth Manager
Boston, MA., founded 1980, managing $16.4 billion U.S.

Atlantic Trust Pell Rudman uses fundamental research to identify quality mid-cap companies with the capability to produce above-average growth in earnings, cash flow and return on shareholder equity.

Looking back over a number of market cycles, it is rare that you can buy high quality businesses like those we own at a discount to their underlying growth rate and with no premium to the mid-cap growth universe. We believe valuations are particularly compelling today.

Health Care came through with the strongest sector contribution after lagging in the first half. One of the biggest absolute contributors was Express Scripts, a leading pharmacy benefit provider which has continued to show growth of better than 20%. Cephalon, a leading biopharmaceutical manufacturer, was another big winner.

The negative returns tended to cluster in the energy sector or corporations involved in power generation. Many of these stocks had been very strong in the first half behind the surge in oil and gas prices. The biggest negative contributor by a significant amount was MEMC Electronics, a producer of silicon wafer utilized in the production of solar power cells. It is worth stressing that on a relative basis our energy stocks were much stronger than the benchmark holdings.

We sold more stocks than we bought in the quarter as the tougher economic backdrop takes its toll on the overall availability of companies that can continue to provide above average growth. We would hope that when the market starts to reverse, initial price appreciation will be strongest for companies whose fundamentals held up best in the tough times.

Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss - Value Manager
Dallas, TX., founded 1979, managing $58.6 billion U.S.

Barrow Hanley’s expertise is managing large-cap equities through a value-oriented research intensive process of identifying securities that are temporarily undervalued.

The S&P 500 fell almost 9% (CAD$) during the quarter as the financial crisis worsened and commodities sold off. The energy sector fell 27% as oil prices declined sharply and the materials sector fell 24% as a global slowdown looked more likely. Despite the large weighting of financial stocks within value indices, value stocks, as measured by the Russell 1000 Value Index, outperformed growth stocks during the third quarter.

Stock selection and relative weighting in Energy, particularly Duke Energy (DUK), added to the performance of the portfolio for the quarter. The largest detractor for the quarter was relative weighting and stock selection in the Financials sector, particularly American International Group (AIG).

The top five performing stocks for the quarter included Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Capital One Financial, J.P. Morgan Chase and UST Inc. The five worst performers for the period were American Int’l Group, Washington Mutual [sold], SLM Corporation, Office Depot [sold] and Entergy Corp.

International Equities

Acadian Asset Management - Value Manager
Boston, MA., founded 1978, managing $73.4 billion.

Acadian identifies market inefficiencies and exploits them using a structured, multi-factor process and sophisticated portfolio optimization techniques.

Equity markets saw negative results for the quarter, as the credit crisis worsened and governments around the world raced to shore up financial institutions.

Europe’s collective performance for the period was markedly negative. Germany’s manufacturing and service industries contracted as companies reduced production in response to slowing orders. France saw business confidence decline precipitously, while retail sales in Italy continued to languish. The United Kingdom’s housing slump deepened, with higher mortgage rates and tighter borrowing conditions sending home sales to a record low.

Asia performed modestly better than Europe for the quarter. Japan saw household spending drop amid rising inflation and sluggish wage growth, while business sentiment in Australia held at a seven-year low. In Singapore, industrial production fell on declining outputs from drug makers and electronics manufacturers. Hong Kong saw export growth slow due to weaker global demand for products made in China.

The U.S. saw considerably negative returns for the period as investors absorbed the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, the nationalizations of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and American International Group and the failure of a proposed government rescue plan in the House of Representatives. While exports remained a bright spot in the economy, consumer spending stalled as the effect of last quarter’s tax rebates faded and households grappled with mounting job losses, dwindling home equity values and slumping confidence.

Recent additions to the portfolio include Japanese electronics giant Panasonic, whose product lines include award wining high definition Plasma and LCD TV’s, digital cameras, security systems and home appliances. Out of the Netherlands, AEGON is a Dutch life insurance and pension group and a strong provider of investment products. Mitsui was also added to the portfolio, Mitsui is one of the largest and most successful conglomerates in Japan, and one of the largest publicly traded companies in the world.

Newton Capital Management - Global Thematic Core
London, England, founded 1978, managing $75.3 billion.

Newton’s approach recognizes that no economy, industrial sector or company should be seen in isolation when there is a global market for goods and services.

The third quarter has been a very challenging period for global equity markets, with the ramifications of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Lehmans, AIG, Merrill Lynch and Wachovia being worked through and felt around the globe. Europe has also had its fair share of problems with the Benelux countries rescuing Fortis and Dexia, and the UK Government attempting to force HBOS into the arms of Lloyds TSB. In addition, the news has continued to deteriorate from an economic standpoint, and it is clear that the world economy is going through a very difficult period. The uncertainty created has lead to a sell-off across markets, and in particular an aggressive sell-off in perceived risk assets, namely commodities and developing economies.

Stock selection has suffered across most sectors. In particular the broadly positive stance towards the commodity and developing economy areas has been a negative. We focused on those economies which we believe to be well placed, and is invested on a stock by stock basis. The same can be said for the resources sectors, where we retain an allocation to the energy, mining and agricultural sectors, where we continue to believe that the longer term fundamentals are strong.

A further disappointment has come from holdings in the more defensive sectors of the market; stock selection has been negative in healthcare and consumer staples, two of the better performing sectors, where we are overweight. However, of particular disappointment has been the very poor returns from the telecom sector, which has thus far proved not to be resilient in the market sell off. We expect there to be a reversal in this sector performance, and the outperformance of consumer staples and healthcare to continue, and within that the returns from our stocks to improve.

Fixed Income

Lincluden Management - Credit Analysis & Yield Spreads
Oakville, founded 1982, managing $2.8 billion.

Continued concerns in world financial markets were the driving force behind a steepening of the yield curve in Canada as short yields declined and longer term yields were unchanged to higher. The failure and forced nationalization or merger of eight sizeable U.S. institutions in a single quarter constitutes the largest financial system collapse in U.S. history. Adding fuel to the fires of fear was the subsequent delays of a U.S. bill to come to the aid of financial markets. In this environment apprehension drove investors to seek the safety of government T-bills. As a consequence spreads on corporate bonds increased quite rapidly driving the overall return slightly into negative territory.

State Street Global Advisors - Enhanced Core/Active Bond Manager
Montreal, founded 1978, managing $1.9 trillion.

The DEX Universe Bond Index posted a -0.37% negative total return for the third quarter of 2008 while 10 year Government of Canada yields remained virtually unchanged to close the quarter yielding 3.72%. This negative market return can be largely attributed to the underperformance of the corporate sector which lagged the Federal index by 1.81% for Q3 while aggregate corporate spreads continued to deteriorate to end the quarter at their widest levels in over 20 years. The market action over the quarter remains consistent with our view that the ramifications of the sub-prime crisis still remain to be fully understood by investors and will remain a source of volatility over the foreseeable future.

All performance is presented in Canadian dollar terms, gross of investment management fees. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

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