SUPPLEMENT DATED JUNE 29, 2026 TO THE CURRENT
SUMMARY AND STATUTORY PROSPECTUSES AND STATEMENTS OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR:
Invesco Global Strategic Income Fund
Invesco International Bond Fund
Invesco V.I. Global Strategic Income Fund
(each a "Fund" and collectively the "Funds")
This supplement amends the Summary Prospectuses, Statutory Prospectuses and Statements of Additional Information of the above referenced Funds and is in addition to any other supplement(s). You should read this supplement in conjunction with the Summary Prospectuses, Statutory Prospectuses and Statements of Additional Information and retain it for future reference.
Effective June 29, 2026:
1. The following information replaces the seventh paragraph appearing under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies of the Fund" in the prospectuses:
The Fund may invest up to 25% of its total assets in a Cayman Islands exempted company that is wholly-owned and controlled by the Fund (the Subsidiary). The Subsidiary invests in commodity-linked derivatives (including commodity futures, financial futures, options and swap contracts), commodity-linked notes and in Regulation S securities. Regulation S securities are securities of U.S. and non-U.S. issuers that are issued through private offerings without registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. The Subsidiary may also invest in certain fixed-income securities and other investments that may serve as margin or collateral for its derivatives positions. The Fund applies its investment restrictions and compliance policies and procedures, on a look-through basis, to the Subsidiary. Since the Fund may invest a substantial portion of its assets in the Subsidiary, which may hold certain of the investments described in this prospectus, the Fund may be considered to be investing indirectly in those investments through its Subsidiary. Therefore, references in this prospectus to investments by the Fund also may be deemed to include the Fund's indirect investments through the Subsidiary.
2. The following information is added under the heading "Principal Risks of Investing in the Fund" in the Summary Prospectuses:
Commodity Risk. The Fund may have investment exposure to the commodities markets, which may subject the Fund to greater volatility than investments in traditional securities, such as stocks and bonds. Volatility in the commodities markets may be caused by changes in overall market movements, domestic and foreign political and economic events and policies, war, acts of terrorism, changes in domestic or foreign interest rates and/or investor expectations concerning interest rates, domestic and foreign inflation rates, investment and trading activities of mutual funds, hedge funds and commodities funds, and factors such as drought, floods, weather, livestock disease, embargoes, tariffs and other regulatory developments or supply and demand disruptions. Because the Fund's performance may be linked to the performance of volatile commodities, investors should be willing to assume the risks of potentially significant fluctuations in the value of the Fund's shares.
Commodities Tax Risk. The tax treatment of commodity-linked derivative instruments may be adversely affected by changes in legislation, regulations or other legally binding authority. If, as a result of any such adverse action, the income of the Fund from certain commodity-linked derivatives was treated as non-qualifying income, the Fund might fail to qualify as a regulated investment company and be subject to federal income tax at the Fund level. As a result of an announcement by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the Fund intends to invest in commodity-linked notes: (a) directly, generally only to the extent that it obtains an opinion of counsel confirming that income from such investments should be qualifying income because such commodity-linked notes constitute securities under section 2(a)(36) of the 1940 Act or (b) indirectly through the Subsidiary. Should the IRS issue further guidance, or Congress enact legislation, that adversely affects the tax treatment of the Fund's use of commodity-linked notes or the Subsidiary, it could, among other consequences, limit the Fund's ability to pursue its investment strategy.
Commodity-Linked Notes Risk. Commodity-linked notes have characteristics of both a debt security and a derivative; typically, they are issued by a bank at a specified face value and pay a fixed or floating rate linked to the performance of an underlying asset, such as commodity indices, particular commodities or commodity futures contracts. The value of the commodity-linked notes the Fund buys may fluctuate significantly because the values of the underlying assets to which they are linked are themselves volatile. Investments in commodity-linked notes may also be subject to additional risks, such as non-payment of interest and loss of principal, counterparty risk, lack of a secondary market and risk of greater volatility than traditional equity and debt securities. Additionally, certain commodity-linked notes employ "economic" leverage by requiring payment by the issuer of an amount that is a multiple of the price increase or decrease of the underlying commodity, commodity