Fund of Funds Investments, 36640-36660 [06-5650]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 123 / Tuesday, June 27, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 239, 270, and 274
[Release Nos. 33–8713; IC–27399; File No.
S7–18–03]
RIN 3235–AI30
Fund of Funds Investments
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) is
adopting three new rules under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 that
address the ability of an investment
company (‘‘fund’’) to acquire shares of
another fund. Section 12(d)(1) of the Act
prohibits, subject to certain exceptions,
so-called ‘‘fund of funds’’ arrangements,
in which one fund invests in the shares
of another. The rules broaden the ability
of a fund to invest in shares of another
fund in a manner consistent with the
public interest and the protection of
investors. The Commission also is
adopting amendments to forms used by
funds to register under the Investment
Company Act and offer their shares
under the Securities Act of 1933. The
amendments improve the transparency
of the expenses of funds of funds by
requiring that the expenses of the
acquired funds be aggregated and shown
as an additional expense in the fee table
of the fund of funds.
DATES: Effective Date: July 31, 2006.
Compliance Dates: All new
registration statements on Forms N–1A,
N–2, N–3, N–4, or N–6, and all posteffective amendments that are annual
updates to effective registration
statements on Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3,
N–4, or N–6 filed on or after January 2,
2007, must include the disclosure
required by the amendments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dalia Osman Blass, Attorney, or
Penelope W. Saltzman, Branch Chief,
Office of Regulatory Policy, (202) 551–
6792, Division of Investment
Management, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission today is adopting new
rules 12d1–1, 12d1–2 and 12d1–3 under
the Investment Company Act of 1940
(the ‘‘Investment Company Act’’ or the
‘‘Act’’) that address the ability of an
investment company (‘‘fund’’ or
‘‘acquiring fund’’) registered under the
Act to invest in shares of another
investment company (‘‘fund’’ or
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‘‘acquired fund’’).1 We also are adopting
amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3,
N–4, and N–6 to require that
prospectuses of funds of funds disclose
the expenses investors in the acquiring
fund will bear, including those of any
acquired funds.2 Forms N–1A and N–2
are the registration forms used by openend management funds and closed-end
management funds, respectively, to
register under the Act and to offer their
shares under the Securities Act of 1933
(‘‘Securities Act’’).3 Forms N–3, N–4
and N–6 are the forms used by
insurance company separate accounts to
register under the Act and to offer their
variable annuity and variable life
insurance contracts under the Securities
Act.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Discussion
A. Rule 12d1–1: Investments in Money
Market Funds
1. Scope of Exemption
2. Conditions
B. Rule 12d1–2: Affiliated Funds of Funds
1. Investments in Unaffiliated Funds
2. Investments in Other Types of Issuers
3. Investments in Money Market Funds
C. Rule 12d1–3: Unaffiliated Funds of
Funds
D. Amendments to Disclosure Forms:
Transparency of Fund of Funds
Expenses
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
IV. Cost-Benefit Analysis
V. Consideration of Promotion of Efficiency,
Competition, and Capital Formation
VI. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
VII. Statutory Authority
Text of Rules and Form Amendments
I. Background
The Federal securities laws restrict
substantially the ability of a fund to
invest in shares of other funds. These
restrictions are designed to prevent fund
of funds arrangements that have been
used in the past to enable investors in
an acquiring fund to control the assets
of an acquired fund and use those assets
1 The Investment Company Act is codified at 15
U.S.C. 80a. The new rules will be found in the Code
of Federal Regulations at 17 CFR 270.12d1–1, 17
CFR 270.12d1–2, and 17 CFR 270.12d1–3,
respectively. For convenience, any reference we
make in this release to rules 12d1–1, 12d1–2 or
12d1–3, or any paragraph of the rules, will be to
those sections of the Code of Federal Regulations.
2 Rules requiring use of these forms under both
the Investment Company Act and the Securities Act
of 1933 may be found in the Code of Federal
Regulations at: 17 CFR 239.15A, 17 CFR 274.11A
(Form N–1A); 17 CFR 239.14, 17 CFR 274.11a–1
(Form N–2); 17 CFR 239.17a, 17 CFR 274.11b (Form
N–3); 17 CFR 239.17b, 17 CFR 274.11c (Form N–
4); and 17 CFR 239.17c, 17 CFR 274.11d (Form N–
6).
3 The Securities Act is codified at 15 U.S.C. 77a.
The terms ‘‘open-end management funds’’ and
‘‘closed-end management funds’’ are defined in 15
U.S.C. 80a–5(a)(1) and (2), respectively.
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to enrich themselves at the expense of
acquired fund shareholders.4 Under
section 12(d)(1) of the Act, funds are
subject to certain prohibitions relating
to fund of funds investments. Section
12(d)(1)(A) prohibits a registered fund
(and companies or funds it controls)
from—
• Acquiring more than three percent
of a fund’s outstanding voting securities;
• Investing more than five percent of
its total assets in any one acquired fund;
or
• Investing more than ten percent of
its total assets in all acquired funds.5
Section 12(d)(1)(B) prohibits a
registered open-end fund from selling
securities to any fund (including
unregistered funds) if, after the sale, the
acquiring fund would—
• Together with companies and funds
it controls, own more than three percent
of the acquired fund’s voting securities;
or
• Together with other funds (and
companies they control) own more than
ten percent of the acquired fund’s voting
securities.6
Although these two provisions of
section 12(d)(1) have proven quite
effective in putting a stop to the abusive
practices that characterized previous
fund of funds arrangements, Congress
has recognized that they also had the
effect of preventing legitimate fund of
funds arrangements. To prevent this,
Congress created three statutory
exceptions.7 Our rulemaking today
relates to two of those exceptions:
Unaffiliated Fund of Funds
Arrangements. Section 12(d)(1)(F)
permits a registered fund to take small
positions in an unlimited number of
other funds (an ‘‘unaffiliated fund of
4 For a discussion of these ‘‘pyramiding’’ schemes
and the additional problems fund of funds
arrangements can create for shareholders, see Fund
of Funds Investments, Investment Company Act
Release No. 26198 (Oct. 1, 2003) [68 FR 58226 (Oct.
8, 2003)] (‘‘Proposing Release’’). See also U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, Investment
Trusts and Investment Companies, H.R. Doc No.
279, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 3, at 2721–95 (1939).
5 See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(A). If the acquiring
fund is not registered under the Act, the
prohibitions apply only with respect to its
acquisition of securities in funds that are registered
under the Act. Funds (together with companies or
funds they control and funds that have the same
adviser) also are limited to acquiring no more than
10 percent of the outstanding voting stock of a
closed-end fund. 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(C).
6 See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(B). By limiting the
sale of registered fund shares to other funds, section
12(d)(1)(B) prevents the creation of a fund of
registered funds regardless of the limitations of U.S.
law to regulate the activities of foreign funds. For
a discussion of the events that led to the adoption
of sections 12(d)(1)(A) and 12(d)(1)(B) of the Act,
see Proposing Release, supra note 4, at nn. 7–13 and
accompanying text.
7 See sections 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(E), 15 U.S.C.
80a–12(d)(1)(F), and 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(G).
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 123 / Tuesday, June 27, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
funds’’). A fund taking advantage of the
exception provided in section
12(d)(1)(F) of the Act (and its affiliated
persons) may acquire no more than
three percent of another fund’s
outstanding stock; 8 cannot charge a
sales load greater than 11⁄2 percent; 9 and
is restricted in its ability to redeem
shares of the acquired fund.10 In
addition, the fund’s adviser would not
be able to influence the outcome of
shareholder votes in the acquired
fund.11
Affiliated Fund of Funds
Arrangements. Section 12(d)(1)(G)
permits a registered open-end fund or
unit investment trust (‘‘UIT’’)12 to
acquire an unlimited amount of shares
of other registered open-end funds and
UITs that are part of the same ‘‘group of
investment companies,’’ (typically
known as a fund complex).13 A fund
taking advantage of this exception (an
‘‘affiliated fund of funds’’) is restricted
in the types of other securities it can
hold in addition to shares of registered
funds in the same group of investment
companies.14 The acquired funds must
have a policy against investing in shares
of other funds in reliance on section
12(d)(1)(F) or 12(d)(1)(G) (to prevent
multi-tiered structures),15 and overall
distribution expenses are limited (to
prevent excessive sales loads).16 Relying
8 See
15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(F)(i).
15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(F)(ii).
10 A fund whose shares are acquired pursuant to
section 12(d)(1)(F) is not obligated to redeem more
than 1 percent of its total outstanding securities
during any period of less than 30 days. 15 U.S.C.
80a–12(d)(1)(F).
11 Section 12(d)(1)(F), by reference to section
12(d)(1)(E) of the Act, requires the acquiring fund
to vote shares of an acquired fund either by seeking
instructions from the acquiring fund’s shareholders,
or to vote the shares in the same proportion as the
vote of all other shareholders of the acquired fund.
See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(E)(iii)(aa).
12 The Act defines ‘‘unit investment trust’’ as a
fund that: (i) Is organized under a trust indenture,
contract of custodianship or agency, or similar
instrument; (ii) does not have a board of directors;
and (iii) issues only redeemable securities, each of
which represents an undivided interest in a unit of
specified securities, but does not include a voting
trust. 15 U.S.C. 80a–4(2).
13 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(G). For purposes of the
exception, the term ‘‘group of investment
companies’’ means ‘‘any 2 or more registered
investment companies that hold themselves out to
investors as related companies for purposes of
investment and investor services.’’ 15 U.S.C. 80a–
12(d)(1)(G)(ii).
14 In addition to investing in securities of
registered funds in the same group of investment
companies, the Act permits these funds to invest
only in government securities and short-term paper.
See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(G)(i)(II).
15 See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(G)(i)(IV).
16 See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(G)(i)(III). The
provision permits a fund to invest in shares of
another fund only if either (i) the acquiring fund
does not charge a sales load or distribution-related
fee or does not pay (and is not assessed) sales loads
or distribution-related fees on securities of the
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9 See
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on this provision, several large fund
complexes include a fund of funds,
which allocates and periodically
reallocates its assets among funds in the
complex.17
II. Discussion
Since 1940 we have provided limited
relief for funds to acquire shares of other
funds when the proposed arrangements
did not present the risk of abuses that
section 12(d)(1) was designed to
prevent. We issued those orders under
our general exemptive authority in
section 6(c) of the Act.18 In 1996, when
Congress added section 12(d)(1)(G), it
also gave us specific authority to exempt
any person, security or transaction, or
any class or classes of transactions, from
section 12(d)(1) of the Act if the
exemption is consistent with the public
interest and the protection of
investors.19
In October 2003, we proposed three
new rules to address the ability of a
registered fund to invest in shares of
another fund without first having to
seek Commission approval.20 The rules
were proposed to codify and expand
upon a number of exemptive orders we
acquired fund, or (ii) the aggregate sales loads or
distribution-related fees charged by the acquiring
fund on its securities and paid by the acquiring
fund on acquired fund securities are not excessive
under rules adopted under section 22(b) [15 U.S.C.
80a–22(b)] or 22(c) [15 U.S.C. 80a–22(c)] by a
securities association registered under section 15A
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Exchange Act’’) [15 U.S.C. 78o–3] or the
Commission. The NASD has adopted limits on sales
loads and distribution-related fees applicable to
funds as well as to funds of funds. See NASD Rule
2830(d)(3) (‘‘NASD Sales Charge Rule’’).
Under the NASD Sales Charge Rule for funds of
funds, if neither the acquiring nor acquired fund
has an asset-based sales charge (12b–1 fee), the
maximum aggregate sales load that can be charged
on sales of acquiring fund and acquired fund shares
cannot exceed 8.5 percent. See NASD Sales Charge
Rule 2830(d)(3)(A). Any acquiring or acquired fund
that has an asset-based sales charge must
individually comply with the sales charge
limitations on funds with an asset-based sales
charge, provided, among other conditions, that if
both funds have an asset-based sales charge, the
maximum aggregate asset-based sales charge cannot
exceed .75 of 1 percent per year of the average
annual net assets of both funds; and the maximum
aggregate sales load may not exceed 7.25 percent of
the amount invested, or 6.25 percent if either fund
pays a service fee. See NASD Sales Charge Rule
2830(d)(3)(B). The rule is designed so that
cumulative charges for sales-related expenses, no
matter how they are imposed, are subject to
equivalent limitations. See Order Approving
Proposed Rule Change Relating to the Limitation of
Asset-Based Sales Charges as Imposed by
Investment Companies, Exchange Act Release No.
30897 (July 7, 1992) [57 FR 30985 (July 13, 1992)],
at text accompanying n. 9.
17 See, e.g., T. Rowe Price Retirement Funds,
Prospectus 1–10 (Oct. 1, 2005).
18 15 U.S.C. 80a–6(c).
19 National Securities Markets Improvement Act
of 1996, Pub. L. 104–290, § 202, 110 Stat. 3416,
3427 (1996) (codified at 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(J)).
20 Proposing Release, supra note 4.
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have issued that permit funds to invest
in other funds.21 We also proposed
amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3,
N–4, and N–6 to require funds of funds
to disclose acquired fund expenses in
their prospectuses. We received five
comments on the proposal.22
Commenters supported the proposed
rules and amendments, but suggested
changes. Today, we are adopting rules
12d1–1, 12d1–2 and 12d1–3, and
amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3,
N–4, and N–6 substantially as proposed,
with changes that respond to issues
raised by commenters.
A. Rule 12d1–1: Investments in Money
Market Funds
Rule 12d1–1 allows funds to invest in
shares of money market funds in excess
of the limits of section 12(d)(1). The rule
is designed to permit ‘‘cash sweep’’
arrangements in which a fund invests
all or a portion of its available cash in
a money market fund rather than
directly in short-term instruments.
Commenters agreed with our assessment
that fund investments in money market
funds, which did not exist in 1940, do
not raise the concerns that underlie
section 12(d)(1).23 Some, however,
persuaded us to make some
modifications to the rule, which we
describe below.24
21 See
id, at nn. 36, 72 and 87.
Comment Letter of Fidelity Management &
Research Company (‘‘FMR’’) (Dec. 19, 2003);
Comment Letter of the Investment Company
Institute (‘‘ICI’’) (Dec. 3, 2003); Comment Letter of
IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003); Comment Letter of
Man Investments, Inc. (Dec. 1, 2003); Comment
Letter of Joel Torrance (June 17, 2004). The
comment letters are available for public inspection
and copying in the Commission’s Public Reference
Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549
(File No. S7–18–03). The comment letters are also
available on the Commission’s Internet Web site
(https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s71803.shtml).
23 See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18,
2003); Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). For a
more extensive discussion of this analysis, see
Proposing Release, supra note 4, at nn. 38–39 and
accompanying text.
24 One commenter recommended amending rule
17d–1 to permit joint transactions that would allow
funds to take advantage of other cash management
tools, such as joint repurchase agreements where
the fund participates on terms not different from
those applicable to its affiliated participant. See
Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). The broader
relief suggested is outside the scope of our
proposals. We are, however, adopting a technical
amendment to rule 12d1–1 in response to this
commenter’s assertion that the proposed defined
term ‘‘Administrative Fees’’ could create confusion
because the term is used elsewhere in our rules.
See, e.g., 17 CFR 270.11a–3 and Instruction 3 to
Item 3 of Form N–1A. We have eliminated the term
and defined the fees subject to the rule in the
applicable provision without any substantive
changes to the provision. See rule 12d1–1(b)(1).
22 See
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1. Scope of Exemption
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(a) Registered Money Market Funds
Rule 12d1–1 permits a fund to invest
an unlimited amount of its uninvested
cash in a money market fund rather than
directly in short-term instruments.25
Any investment would, of course, have
to be consistent with the fund’s
investment objectives and policies.26
The acquired fund may be a fund in the
same fund complex or in a different
fund complex. Thus, a fund in a small
complex that does not have a money
market fund may invest available cash
in an unaffiliated money market fund.
In addition to providing an exemption
from section 12(d)(1) of the Act, the rule
provides exemptions from section 17(a)
and rule 17d–1, which restrict a fund’s
ability to enter into transactions and
joint arrangements with affiliated
persons.27 These provisions would
otherwise prohibit an acquiring fund
from investing in a money market fund
in the same fund complex,28 or prohibit
25 Rule 12d1–1(a). Our exemptive orders had
limited cash sweep investments to 25 percent of the
acquiring fund’s total assets. See, e.g., Vanguard
Group, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release
Nos. 26406 (Mar. 29, 2004) [69 FR 17460 (Apr. 2,
2004)] (notice) and 26436 (Apr. 23, 2004) (order);
Putnam American Government Income Fund, et al.,
Investment Company Act Release Nos. 26200 (Oct.
1, 2003) [68 FR 57937 (Oct. 7, 2003)] (notice) and
26414 (Apr. 9, 2004) (order) (‘‘Putnam Order’’);
Credit Suisse Asset Management, LLC, et al.,
Investment Company Act Release Nos. 25789 (Oct.
29, 2002) [67 FR 67220 (Nov. 4, 2002)] (notice) and
25832 (Nov. 22, 2002) (order).
26 See infra note 49.
27 Section 17(a) generally prohibits affiliated
persons of a registered fund (‘‘first-tier affiliates’’)
or affiliated persons of the fund’s affiliated persons
(‘‘second-tier affiliates’’) from selling securities or
other property to the fund (or any company the
fund controls). 15 U.S.C. 80a–17(a). Section 17(d)
of the Act makes it unlawful for first- and secondtier affiliates, the fund’s principal underwriters, and
affiliated persons of the fund’s principal
underwriters, acting as principal, to effect any
transaction in which the fund, or a company it
controls, is a joint or a joint and several participant
in contravention of Commission rules. 15 U.S.C.
80a–17(d). Rule 17d–1(a) prohibits first- and
second-tier affiliates of a registered fund, the fund’s
principal underwriters, and affiliated persons of the
fund’s principal underwriter, acting as principal,
from participating in or effecting any transaction in
connection with any joint enterprise or other joint
arrangement or profit-sharing plan in which the
fund (or any company it controls) is a participant
unless an application regarding the enterprise,
arrangement or plan has been filed with the
Commission and has been granted. 17 CFR
270.17d–1.
28 An affiliated person of a fund includes any
person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with such other
person. See 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(a)(3)(C) (definition of
‘‘affiliated person’’). Most funds today are organized
by an investment adviser that advises or provides
administrative services to other funds in the same
complex. Funds in a fund complex are generally
under common control of an investment adviser or
other person exercising a controlling influence over
the management or policies of the funds. See 15
U.S.C. 80a–2(a)(9). Not all advisers control funds
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a fund that acquires five percent or more
of the securities of a money market fund
in another fund complex from making
any additional investments in the
money market fund.29
Commenters agreed with us that an
acquiring fund’s purchase and
redemption of money market fund
shares at net asset value would provide
little opportunity for the insider selfdealing or overreaching that section 17
was designed to prevent.30 They agreed
that these exemptions would benefit
funds and their shareholders,
supporting our conclusion that these
provisions are appropriate and in the
public interest.31
One commenter expressed concern,
however, that without additional relief
from section 17, acquiring funds might
not be able to take full advantage of the
proposed exemption.32 If a fund in one
fund complex acquired more than five
percent of the assets of a money market
fund in another fund complex, any
broker-dealer affiliated with that money
market fund would become a (secondtier) affiliated person of the acquiring
fund.33 As a result of the affiliation, the
broker-dealer’s fee for effecting the sale
of securities to the acquiring fund
would be subject to the conditions set
forth in rule 17e–1, including the
quarterly board review and
recordkeeping requirements with
respect to certain securities transactions
they advise. The determination of whether a fund
is under the control of its adviser, officers, or
directors depends on all the relevant facts and
circumstances. See Investment Company Mergers,
Investment Company Act Release No. 25259 (Nov.
8, 2001) [66 FR 57602 (Nov. 15, 2001)], at n. 11. For
purposes of this release, we presume that funds in
a fund complex are under common control because
funds that are not affiliated persons would not
require, and thus not rely on, the exemptions from
section 17(a) and rule 17d–1.
29 An affiliated person of a fund also includes: (i)
Any person directly or indirectly owning,
controlling, or holding with power to vote, five
percent or more of the outstanding voting securities
of the fund; and (ii) any person five percent or more
of whose outstanding voting securities are directly
or indirectly owned, controlled, or held with power
to vote by the fund. See 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(a)(3)(A),
(B). Thus, a fund that acquires five percent of the
securities of another fund would be affiliated with
that fund and any transactions with the fund would
be subject to the limitations of section 17. See supra
note 27.
30 See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18,
2003).
31 See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003);
Comment Letter of FMR (Dec. 19, 2003).
32 See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18,
2003). Although the commenter requested
additional relief from section 17 of the Act, the
commenter did not specify any sections or rules
other than section 17(e) and rule 17e–1 thereunder.
The additional section 17 relief we are providing is
limited to certain provisions of rule 17e–1 under
the Act.
33 See supra note 29.
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involving the affiliated broker-dealer.34
We believe that it is unlikely that a
broker-dealer would be in a position to
take advantage of a fund merely because
that fund owned a position in a money
market fund affiliated with the brokerdealer.35 Accordingly, the final rule
permits an acquiring fund to pay
commissions, fees, or other
remuneration to a (second-tier) affiliated
broker-dealer without complying with
the quarterly board review and
recordkeeping requirements set forth in
rules 17e–1(b)(3) and 17e–1(d)(2).36
This relief is available only if the
broker-dealer and the acquiring fund
become affiliated solely because of the
acquiring fund’s investment in the
money market fund. We believe this
additional relief will enable more funds
to take advantage of the exemption
provided by the rule.
(b) Unregistered Money Market Funds
Rule 12d1–1 also permits funds to
invest in money market funds that are
not registered investment companies
34 Section 17(e)(2) of the Act prohibits an
affiliated person (or second–tier affiliate) of a fund
from receiving compensation for acting as a broker,
in connection with the sale of securities to or by
the fund if the compensation exceeds limits
prescribed by the section unless permitted by rule
17e–1 under the Act. 15 U.S.C. 80a–17(e)(2). Rule
17e–1 sets forth the conditions under which a
commission, fee or other remuneration shall be
deemed as not exceeding the ‘‘usual and customary
broker’s commission’’ for purposes of section
17(e)(2)(A) of the Act. Rule 17e–1(b)(3) requires the
fund’s board of directors, including a majority of
the directors who are not interested persons under
section 2(a)(19) of the Act, to determine at least
quarterly that all transactions effected in reliance on
the rule have complied with procedures which are
reasonably designed to provide that the brokerage
compensation is consistent with the rule’s
standards. Rule 17e–1(d)(2) specifies the records
that must be maintained by each fund with respect
to any transaction effected pursuant to rule 17e–1.
35 The money market fund’s adviser would have
no influence over the decisions made by the
acquiring fund’s adviser. In addition, because the
interests of the adviser to the money market fund
and the adviser to the acquiring fund are directly
aligned with their respective funds, transactions
between the acquiring fund and a broker-dealer
affiliate of the money market fund are likely to be
at arm’s length.
36 Rule 12d1–1(c). This exemption also is
available for payments to broker-dealer affiliates of
unregistered money market funds. See infra notes
37–42 and accompanying text. The relief provided
by this exemption is similar to relief provided in
a number of exemptive orders issued by the
Commission. See, e.g., SunAmerica Series Trust, et
al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 21203
(July 14, 1995) [60 FR 37485 (July 20, 1995)]
(notice) and 21276 (Aug. 9. 1995) (order);
Prudential Investments LLC, et al., Investment
Company Act Release Nos. 25736 (Sept. 18, 2002)
[67 FR 59869 (Sept. 24, 2002)] (notice) and 25771
(Oct. 16, 2002) (order). An acquiring fund relying
on this exemption is required to comply with all of
the provisions of rule 17e–1, except 17e–1(b)(3) and
(d)(2). We do not believe that having to comply
with the other provisions contained in rule 17e–1
would deter acquiring funds from taking full
advantage of the exemption provided by the rule.
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(‘‘unregistered money market funds’’).
Unregistered money market funds are
typically organized by a fund adviser for
the purpose of managing the cash of
other funds in a fund complex and
operate in almost all respects as a
registered money market fund, except
that their securities are privately offered
and thus not registered under the
Securities Act.37 Although a fund’s
investments in unregistered money
market funds are not restricted by
section 12(d)(1), these investments are
subject to the affiliate transaction
restrictions in the Act and rules
thereunder and thus require exemptions
from section 17(a) and rule 17d–1.38
Commenters had no specific
comments on this provision of the
proposal, and we have adopted it
substantially as proposed.39 The
exemption is available only for
investments in an unregistered money
market fund that operates like a money
market fund registered under the Act.
To be eligible, an unregistered money
market fund is required to (i) limit its
investments to those in which a money
market fund may invest under rule 2a–
7 under the Act,40 and (ii) undertake to
comply with all the other provisions of
rule 2a–7.41 In addition, the
unregistered money market fund’s
adviser must be registered as an
investment adviser with the
Commission.42 Finally, the acquiring
fund is required to reasonably believe
that the unregistered money market
fund operates like a registered money
market fund and that it complies with
certain provisions of the Act.43 A fund
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37 See
15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(1) (excepting from the
definition of ‘‘investment company’’ an issuer
whose securities are owned by no more than 100
persons and which is not making and does not
presently propose to make a public offering of its
securities); 15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(7) (excepting from
the definition of ‘‘investment company’’ an issuer
whose securities are owned exclusively by
‘‘qualified purchasers’’ and which is not making
and does not presently propose to make a public
offering of its securities).
38 See supra notes 27–29 and accompanying text.
39 We have made a technical change to conform
the wording in paragraphs 12d1–1(b)(2)(i)(A)
through (E) by adding to paragraph 12d1–1(b)(2)(i)
the words ‘‘satisfies the following conditions as if
it were a registered open-end investment
company.’’
40 See 17 CFR 270.2a–7.
41 Rule 12d1–1(d)(2)(ii).
42 Rule 12d1–1(b)(2)(ii). In order for a registered
fund to invest in reliance on rule 12d1–1 in an
unregistered money market fund that does not have
a board of directors (because, for example, it is
organized as a limited partnership), the
unregistered money market fund’s investment
adviser must perform the duties required of a
money market fund’s board of directors under rule
2a–7. Rule 12d1–1(d)(2)(ii)(B).
43 Rule 12d1–1(b)(2)(i). To rely on the rule, an
acquiring fund must reasonably believe that the
unregistered money market fund complies, as if it
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would reasonably believe that an
acquired fund was in compliance with
these provisions if, for example, it
received a representation from the
acquired fund (or the adviser to the
acquired fund) that the fund would
comply with the relevant provisions in
all material respects and if the acquiring
fund had no reason to believe that the
acquired fund was not, in fact,
complying with the relevant provisions
in all material respects. Thus, an
acquired fund’s failure to comply will
not automatically result in the loss of
the acquiring fund’s exemption.
(c) Closed-End Funds of Funds
The exemptions we are adopting are
also available for closed-end funds,
including business development
companies,44 which are closed-end
funds that are exempted from
registration under the Act.45 In response
to comments, the final rule provides an
additional exemption from section 57 of
the Act, which restricts certain
transactions between business
development companies and certain of
their affiliates.46 This relief is consistent
with the relief we are granting from
section 17(a) and rule 17d–1 with
respect to affiliated money market
funds. We agree with the commenter
that the possibility of self-dealing or
overreaching in the case of business
development companies that invest in
were a registered open-end fund, with provisions of
the Act that limit affiliate transactions (sections
17(a), (d), and (e)), issuance of senior securities
(section 18), and suspension of redemption rights
(section 22(e)). Rule 12d1–1(b)(2)(i)(B). The fund
also must reasonably believe that the unregistered
money market fund (i) has adopted and periodically
reviews procedures designed to ensure compliance
with these requirements, and maintains books and
records describing the procedures, and (ii)
maintains and preserves the books and records
required under rules 31a–1(b)(1) [17 CFR 270.31a–
1(b)(1)], 31a–1(b)(2)(ii) [17 CFR 270.31a–1(b)(2)(ii)],
31a–1(b)(2)(iv) [17 CFR 270.31a–1(b)(2)(iv)], and
31a–1(b)(9) [17 CFR 270.31a–1(b)(9)]. Rule 12d1–
1(b)(2)(i)(C), (D).
44 A business development company is any
closed-end fund that: (i) Is organized under the laws
of, and has its principal place of business in, any
state or states; (ii) is operated for the purpose of
investing in securities described in section 55(a)(1)–
(3) of the Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–54(a)(1)–(3)] and
makes available ‘‘significant managerial assistance’’
to the issuers of those securities, subject to certain
conditions; and (iii) has elected under section 54(a)
of the Act to be subject to the sections addressing
activities of business development companies
under the Act. See 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(a)(48). Section
60 of the Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–59] extends the limits
of section 12(d) to a business development
company to the same extent as if it were a registered
closed-end fund.
45 Section 6(f) of the Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–6(f)]
exempts from registration and other provisions of
the Act companies that have elected to be regulated
as business development companies under section
54 [15 U.S.C. 80a–53].
46 15 U.S.C. 80a–56. See Comment Letter of IMRC
Group (Nov. 18, 2003).
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36643
money market funds does not appear to
be any greater than investments in
money market funds by registered
closed–end funds.
(d) Unregistered Funds of Funds
Unregistered funds also are subject to
the section 12(d)(1) restrictions on the
acquisition of shares of registered
funds.47 As proposed, the final rule
permits unregistered funds to invest
their cash in shares of a registered
money market fund. This allows a hedge
fund, for example, to sweep its cash into
a registered money market fund pending
investment or distribution of the cash to
investors. In the Proposing Release, we
asked whether any special concerns
arise with respect to unregistered funds’
use of money market funds in cash
sweep arrangements, and we received
no comment on the question.
2. Conditions
As proposed, we are eliminating most
of the conditions that have been
included in our exemptive orders.48
One condition we have retained
precludes the acquiring fund from
paying a sales load, distribution fee, or
service fee on acquired fund shares, or
if it does, the acquiring fund’s
investment adviser must waive a
sufficient amount of its advisory fee to
offset the cost of the loads or
distribution fees.49 Rarely do
institutional investors (such as an
acquiring fund) pay sales loads or bear
distribution expenses on an investment
in a money market fund. Thus, a money
market fund that charges a sales load or
47 See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(A); 15 U.S.C. 80a–
12(d)(1)(B). In the case of unregistered investment
companies (such as most foreign funds) the full
restrictions of sections 12(d)(1)(A) and (B) apply.
Companies that are unregistered because they are
excepted from the definition of investment
company by sections 3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the Act
are prohibited from acquiring more than three
percent of the outstanding voting securities of a
registered fund. Both section 3(c)(1) and section
3(c)(7) deem issuers that rely on these sections to
be investment companies for the purposes of
sections 12(d)(1)(A)(i) and 12(d)(1)(B)(i) with
respect to their acquisition of registered funds. See
15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(1); 15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(7)(D).
48 See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 36.
49 See Rule 12d1–1(b)(1). As discussed in the
Proposing Release, we did not propose to limit the
amount an acquiring fund could invest in a money
market fund because a fund’s own investment
restrictions should provide appropriate investment
limitations. See Proposing Release, supra note 25,
at text following n. 64. With respect to cash sweeps
into unregistered money market funds, we have also
retained the requirement in our prior exemptive
orders that the money market funds operate as if
they were money market funds registered under the
Act. As proposed (unlike our exemptive orders), the
final rule requires the acquiring fund to ‘‘reasonably
believe,’’ rather than ‘‘determine,’’ that the
unregistered money market funds operate in this
manner. See supra notes 40–43 and accompanying
text; see, e.g., Putnam Order, supra note 25.
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distribution fees to the acquiring fund
may not be an appropriate investment
for that fund. Commenters who
addressed the issue generally supported
this condition.50
Unlike our prior exemptive orders,
the rule does not limit advisory fees or
require directors to make any special
findings that investors are not paying
multiple advisory fees for the same
service.51 A fund could pay duplicative
fees if an adviser invests a fund’s cash
in a money market fund (which itself
pays an advisory fee) without reducing
its advisory fee by an amount it was
compensated to manage the cash. As we
noted in the Proposing Release, fund
directors have fiduciary duties,52 which
obligate them to protect funds from
being overcharged for services provided
to the fund, regardless of any special
findings we might require. Moreover,
and as we describe in more detail
below, we have adopted amendments to
the disclosure rules that require a
registered fund of funds to disclose to
shareholders expenses paid by both the
acquiring and acquired funds so that
shareholders may better evaluate the
costs of investing in a fund with a cash
sweep arrangement.53
1. Investments in Unaffiliated Funds
Rule 12d1–2 permits an affiliated
fund of funds to acquire securities of
funds that are not part of the same group
of investment companies, subject to the
limits in section 12(d)(1)(A) or
12(d)(1)(F).56 This exemption, in effect,
50 See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18,
2003). One commenter recommended we impose
another condition to allow a money market fund to
limit the percentage of fund assets that another fund
complex can redeem during a business day as long
as the limits are disclosed in the money market
fund’s registration statement. Id. We do not believe
this is necessary in the context of money market
funds, which are designed to easily accommodate
large redemptions. Money market funds with large
investors, such as a fund of funds, may need to pay
particularly close attention to their obligations
under rule 2a–7, however, because a large
redemption may result in a growth in any deviation
between the fund’s net asset value per share, as
computed using available market quotations, and
the money market fund’s amortized cost per share.
51 See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 65
and accompanying text.
52 See id, at n. 66 and accompanying text; see also
15 U.S.C. 80a–35(a). See generally 2 T. Frankel, The
Regulation of Money Managers, § 9.05 (2001).
Section 15(c) of the Act requires the board of
directors to evaluate the terms (which would
include fees, or the elimination of fees, for services
provided by an acquired fund’s adviser) of any
advisory contract. See 15 U.S.C. 80a–15(c). Section
36(b) of the Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–35(b)] imposes on
fund advisers a fiduciary duty with respect to their
compensation. We believe that to the extent
advisory services are being performed by another
person, such as the adviser to an acquired money
market fund, this fiduciary duty would require an
acquiring fund’s adviser to reduce its fee by the
amount that represents compensation for the
services performed by the other person. See
Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n.66.
53 Of course, disclosure of the cumulative amount
of fees does not absolve the directors of their
obligations to evaluate fund expenses. See supra
note 52; Investment Company Governance,
Investment Company Act Release No. 26520 (July
27, 2004) [69 FR 46378 (Aug. 2, 2004)], at text
accompanying n.17. Nevertheless, we believe that
the disclosure requirements are essential because
they provide investors with the relevant
information to compare directly the costs of
investing in alternative funds of funds, or the costs
of investing in a fund of funds to a more traditional
fund.
54 See supra notes 12–17 and accompanying text.
55 See, e.g., Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov.
18, 2003); Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003);
Comment Letter of Man Investments, Inc. (Dec. 1,
2003). The other limitations in section 12(d)(1)(G)
will continue to apply to a fund of funds relying
on that provision. One commenter requested
expanding relief under rule 12d1–2 to permit funds
to obtain shares of an acquired fund using in-kind
transfers and exempt such transactions from the
‘‘for cash’’ requirement of rule 17a–7 under the Act.
See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). That relief
is outside the scope of our proposal.
56 Rule 12d1–2(a)(1). A fund relying on section
12(d)(1)(A) (together with any companies or funds
it controls) could not acquire more than 3 percent
of the outstanding voting securities of any other
fund in a different fund group. In addition, the
acquiring fund would be limited to investing no
more than 5 percent of its own assets (together with
assets of any companies it controls) in the securities
of any one fund in a different fund group, and no
more than 10 percent of its assets (together with
assets of any companies it controls) in securities of
other funds in one or more different fund groups,
in the aggregate. See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(A)(i)–
(iii). A fund relying on section 12(d)(1)(F) (together
with its affiliates) could not acquire more than 3
percent of the outstanding stock of any other fund
in a different fund group. The acquiring fund also
would be required either to seek instructions from
its shareholders as to how to vote shares of those
acquired funds, or to vote the shares in the same
proportion as the vote of all other shareholders of
the acquired fund. See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(F)
(referencing 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(E)). In addition,
the acquiring fund would be limited to charging a
sales load of 11⁄2 percent on its shares and could
be prevented from redeeming more than 1 percent
of the shares of any acquired fund during any
period of less than 30 days. Id.
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B. Rule 12d1–2: Affiliated Funds of
Funds
As discussed above, section
12(d)(1)(G) permits a registered openend fund to acquire an unlimited
amount of shares of registered open-end
funds and UITs that are part of the same
‘‘group of investment companies’’ as the
acquiring fund.54 We proposed to
codify, and in some cases expand, three
types of relief we have provided for
these fund of funds arrangements that
we concluded were consistent with the
public interest and the protection of
investors, but that did not conform to
section 12(d)(1)(G) limits. We proposed
to permit an affiliated fund of funds to
make investments in addition to shares
of funds in the same group of
investment companies. Commenters
supported the proposal, and we are
adopting rule 12d1–2 substantially as
proposed.55
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permits funds to combine the relief
provided by the statutory exceptions.
There do not appear to be any greater
risks to an acquired fund or its
shareholders if three percent of its
shares are acquired by an affiliated fund
of funds as opposed to being acquired
by other types of funds specifically
permitted to purchase shares by section
12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F).57
2. Investments in Other Types of Issuers
Rule 12d1–2 also provides an
exemption from section 12(d)(1)(G) of
the Act to permit an affiliated fund of
funds to invest directly in stocks, bonds,
and other types of securities (i.e.,
securities not issued by a fund).58 Those
investments would, of course, have to
be consistent with the fund’s investment
policies.59 A significant consequence of
the rule is that an equity or bond fund
can invest any portion of its assets in an
affiliated fund if the acquisition is
consistent with the investment policies
of the fund and the restrictions of the
rule.60 Commenters agreed that these
investments would allow an acquiring
fund greater flexibility in meeting
investment objectives that may not be
met as well by investments in other
funds in the same fund group, while not
presenting any additional concerns that
section 12(d)(1)(G) was intended to
address.61
3. Investments in Money Market Funds
Rule 12d1–2 permits an affiliated
fund of funds to invest in affiliated or
unaffiliated money market funds in
reliance on rule 12d1–1, which, as
discussed above, is designed to permit
cash sweep arrangements involving
money market funds.62 This provision
57 A commenter also suggested that we clarify the
scope of rule 12d1–2(a)(1) because it could be read
to subject investments in registered funds in the
same complex as the acquiring fund to the limits
of sections 12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F). See Comment
Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). We agree, and the final
rule clarifies that the limits apply only to
investments in securities of unaffiliated funds
rather than registered funds in the same complex.
See rule 12d1–2(a)(1).
58 Rule 12d1–2(a)(2). Under this exemption, a
fund may invest in any security as that term is
defined under the Act. See 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(a)(36).
59 See Item 4 of Form N–1A (requiring disclosure
of fund’s investment objectives and principal
investment strategies).
60 See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at nn. 81–
82 and accompanying text. To the extent that a fund
that normally invests directly in securities begins to
make investments in affiliated funds in reliance on
the rule, we would expect the fund’s directors to
be aware of the investments, particularly in the
context of their consideration of potentially
duplicative fees. See supra notes 52–53 and
accompanying text.
61 See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003);
Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003).
62 Rule 12d1–2(a)(3). See supra notes 23–50 and
accompanying text. A collateral effect of our rule is
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allows the affiliated fund of funds the
same opportunities as any other fund to
invest in a cash sweep arrangement that
will provide the greatest benefit to the
acquiring fund. As proposed, we are
conditioning the investment on
compliance with rule 12d1–1 in order to
ensure that the same limitations on sales
loads and distribution expenses apply to
any fund’s investment in a money
market fund. Thus, any fund that
invests in a money market fund in
reliance on rule 12d1–2 must comply
with the conditions in rule 12d1–1.
intended to provide funds greater
flexibility in structuring sales loads,
consistent with the approach Congress
took in section 12(d)(1)(G) to prevent
excessive sales loads in affiliated funds
of funds, while providing shareholders
greater protection by requiring that
funds relying on the rule limit overall
distribution fees (rather than only sales
loads).65 We are adopting this rule
substantially as proposed.66
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C. Rule 12d1–3: Unaffiliated Funds of
Funds
Section 12(d)(1)(F) of the Act provides
an exemption from section 12(d)(1) that
allows a registered fund to invest all its
assets in other registered funds if: (i)
The acquiring fund (together with its
affiliates) acquires no more than 3
percent of the outstanding stock of any
acquired fund; and (ii) the sales load
charged on the acquiring fund’s shares
is no greater than 11⁄2 percent.63
Rule 12d1–3 allows funds relying on
section 12(d)(1)(F) to charge sales loads
greater than 11⁄2 percent provided that
the aggregate sales load any investor
pays (i.e., the combined distribution
expenses of both the acquiring and
acquired funds) does not exceed the
limits on sales loads established by the
NASD for funds of funds.64 The rule is
D. Amendments to Disclosure Forms:
Transparency of Fund of Funds
Expenses
We are also adopting amendments to
our disclosure requirements to require
each fund that invests in shares of other
funds to disclose in its prospectus fee
table the expenses of funds in which it
invests. The amendments are designed
to provide investors with a better
understanding of the actual costs of
investing in a fund that invests in other
funds, which have their own expenses
that may be as high or higher than the
acquiring fund’s expenses.67 Investors
may not be aware of these potentially
higher expenses. Most commenters
supported these amendments, which we
are adopting substantially as
proposed.68
Open-End Funds. Form N–1A is used
by open-end management funds to
register under the Act and to offer their
securities under the Securities Act.
to permit an affiliated fund of funds to invest in an
acquired fund that itself has a cash sweep
arrangement. As discussed above, section
12(d)(1)(G) prohibits a fund from acquiring shares
of another fund that does not have an investment
policy prohibiting it from investing in shares of
funds in reliance on section 12(d)(1)(F) or (G). An
acquired fund investing in a money market fund
under a cash sweep arrangement permitted under
rule 12d1–1 would not be relying on either of those
sections. The fees and expenses of acquired funds
would be aggregated and shown in the fee table in
the acquiring fund’s prospectus. See discussion
below at Section II.D of this release.
We are not, as one commenter suggested,
providing expanded section 17 relief under rule
12d1–2. See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov.
18, 2003). Affiliated funds of funds’ investments in
money market funds will be made in reliance upon
rule 12d1–1, and we are including additional relief
from certain provisions of rule 17e–1 in rule 12d1–
1. We do not believe it is necessary to provide a
duplicative exemption under rule 12d1–2. See
supra notes 32–35 and accompanying text.
63 See 15 U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(F)(i)–(ii). Section
12(d)(1)(F) also provides that the acquired fund is
not obligated to redeem more than 1 percent of its
outstanding securities held by the acquiring fund in
any period of less than 30 days, and requires the
acquiring fund to vote shares of an acquired fund
either by seeking instructions from the acquiring
fund’s shareholders or by voting in the same
proportion as the other shareholders of the acquired
fund.
64 See NASD Sales Charge Rule 2830(d)(3), supra
note 16. We note that any fund relying on the
exemption provided in rule 12d1–3 must comply
with the limitations set forth in NASD Sales Charge
Rule 2830(d)(3), regardless of whether sales of the
fund’s shares by broker-dealers are otherwise
subject to the rule according to its terms. See NASD
Sales Charge Rule 2830(d) (NASD Sales Charge Rule
limits apply to sales of open-end funds, any closed–
end funds that make periodic repurchase offers
under rule 23c–3(b) under the Act and offer their
shares on a continuous basis, or single payment
plans issued by UITs). Unlike the proposal, the final
rule text limits sales charges and service fees
charged with respect to the acquiring fund, but the
rule does not specifically limit those fees when
aggregated with sales charges and service fees
charged with respect to acquired funds. The
additional language on aggregation is not necessary
in the rule because limits in NASD Sales Charge
Rule 2830(d)(3) specifically apply to fees imposed
by the acquiring fund, the acquired fund and those
funds in combination.
65 See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 88
and accompanying text. An affiliated fund of funds
may rely on rule 12d1–2 to invest in funds in a
different fund complex subject to the limits of
section 12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F). If the acquiring
fund’s investment is subject to the limits of section
12(d)(1)(F), the acquiring fund may also rely on the
exemption provided under rule 12d1–3 to charge
sales loads greater than 11⁄2 percent provided it
complies with the conditions of rule 12d1–3.
66 Commenters generally supported this
provision. See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003);
Comment Letter of FMR (Dec. 19, 2003).
67 A fund of funds may have higher fees and
expenses than a fund that invests directly in debt
and equity securities.
68 See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003);
Comment Letter of FMR (Dec. 19, 2003) (supporting
position taken in the ICI comment letter); Comment
Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003); Comment
Letter of Joel Torrance (June 17, 2004).
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17:53 Jun 26, 2006
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Form N–1A sets forth the disclosure
requirements for fund prospectuses. Our
amendments to Form N–1A require any
registered open-end fund investing in
shares of another fund to include in its
prospectus fee table an additional line
item titled ‘‘Acquired Fund Fees and
Expenses’’ under the section that
discloses total annual fund operating
expenses.69 The line item will set forth
the acquiring fund’s pro rata portion of
the cumulative expenses charged by
funds in which the acquiring fund
invests. Those costs will be included in
the acquiring funds’ total annual fund
operating expenses, which will be
reflected in the ‘‘Example’’ portion of
the fee table.70 One commenter
suggested that we add an instruction to
permit a fund to omit the new separate
line item if the aggregate expenses
attributable to acquired funds do not
exceed 0.01 percent (one basis point) of
average net assets of the acquiring fund.
We agree with the commenter that the
disclosure of this de minimis amount in
a separate line item would not be
important to investors. Therefore, the
instructions to the amended fee table
allow these expenses to be included in
‘‘Other Expenses.’’ 71
We also are adopting instructions to
assist an acquiring fund in determining
the amount of acquired funds’ fees and
expenses that must be reflected in its fee
69 The item will appear directly above the line
item titled ‘‘Total Annual Fund Operating
Expenses.’’ The proposed instructions to Form N–
1A would have permitted funds to use terms in the
fee table other than the term ‘‘Acquired Fund.’’ We
received no comment in response to our question
whether the proposed instructions were consistent
with the current fee table. We have decided not to
permit funds to use other terms, however, because
no variation is permitted for other line items in the
fee table (except for the subcaptions that may be
used under ‘‘Other Expenses’’ in order to identify
the largest expenses comprising ‘‘Other Expenses’’).
Accordingly, the instruction, as adopted, is
consistent with the other line items in the expense
table, and allows investors to more easily compare
disclosure among funds. In the event a fund uses
another defined term to describe acquired funds in
its prospectus, it may include this term in a
parenthetical following the title of the new line
item. See Instruction 3(f)(i) to Item 3 of Form N–
1A. We are adopting conforming amendments to
Forms N–2 and N–3. See Instruction 10.a to Item
3.1 of Form N–2; Instruction 19(a) to Item 3(a) of
Form N–3.
70 The fee table example requires the fund to
disclose the cumulative amount of fund expenses
of 1, 3, 5, and 10 years based on a hypothetical
investment of $10,000 and an annual 5 percent
return. See Item 3 of Form N–1A.
71 See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). See
Instruction 3(f)(i) to Item 3 of Form N–1A. Inclusion
of the de minimis amount under ‘‘Other Expenses,’’
however, ensures that the acquired funds’ expenses
will be included in the acquiring fund’s total
annual operating expense ratio. Form N–2 and
Form N–3 filers may also rely on this exception and
we have amended the relevant instructions
accordingly. See Instruction 10.a to Item 3.1 of
Form N–2; Instruction 19(a) to Item 3(a) of Form N–
3.
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table. The acquiring fund must aggregate
the amount of total annual fund
operating expenses of acquired funds
(which are indirectly paid by the
acquiring fund) and transaction fees
(which are directly paid by the
acquiring fund over the past year) and
express the total amount as a percentage
of average net assets of the acquiring
fund. Under this approach, the
acquiring fund must determine the
average invested balance and number of
actual days invested in each acquired
fund.72 We also are adopting the
proposed instruction that requires the
acquiring fund to include in the expense
calculation any transaction fee the
acquiring fund paid to acquire or
dispose of shares of a fund during the
past fiscal year (even if it no longer
holds shares of that fund).73
72 See Instruction 3(f)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N–1A
(to calculate the pro rata share of total annual fund
operating expenses for each acquired fund, an
acquiring fund will divide the acquired fund’s
expense ratio by the number of days in the relevant
calendar year, and multiply the result by the
average invested balance and the number of days
invested in the acquired fund). We have revised the
divisor in the calculation for the daily expense ratio
from the proposed 365 days to the number of days
in the fiscal year to reflect that some fiscal years
will have 366 days. One commenter asserted that
our proposed formula in Instruction 3(f)(ii) to Item
3 of Form N–1A would not correspond to the
expense ratio (i.e., the Ratio of Expenses to Average
Net Assets) currently in Item 8 of Form N–1A,
‘‘Financial Highlights Information.’’ The commenter
stated that, as a result, the total annual fund
operating expenses disclosed in response to Item 3
would be generally higher than those reflected in
response to Item 8 because the expense ratio in Item
8 would only reflect expenses paid directly by the
acquiring fund. See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3,
2003). We agree that this potential discrepancy may
be confusing to investors, and have revised the
instruction to permit funds to address this
discrepancy in a clarifying footnote to the fee table.
See Instruction 3(f)(vii) to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
Because Form N–2 and Form N–3 filers would face
the same issue, the adopted instructions permit
those funds also to include a clarifying footnote.
See Instruction 10.i to Item 3.1 of Form N–2;
Instruction 19(g) to Item 3(a) of Form N–3. We also
have directed the staff to continue monitoring funds
of funds’ disclosure to determine whether
additional disclosure of acquired funds’ fees is
needed, such as in the financial highlights section
or shareholder reports.
We are also revising Instruction 3(f)(v) to Item 3
of Form N–1A. The proposed instructions would
have required the acquiring fund to calculate an
‘‘average invested balance’’ based on month-end
balances. One commenter recommended that funds
be permitted to calculate ‘‘average invested
balances’’ based on the value of investment
measured no less frequently than monthly to allow
funds the flexibility of using daily balances. See
Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). We believe
that the recommendation will allow the most
accurate disclosure for funds that use the more
frequent measure and have revised the instruction
to allow the acquiring fund to calculate ‘‘average
invested balance’’ based on the value of investment
measured no less frequently than monthly. See
Instruction 10.e to Item 3.1 of Form N–2;
Instruction 19(e) to Item 3 of Form N–3.
73 See Instruction 3(f)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N–1A
(‘‘transaction fees’’ included in the calculation for
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Our proposed instructions would
have required an acquiring fund in the
same fund complex as the acquired fund
to calculate the acquired fund’s actual
total annual expense ratio for the period
covering the acquiring fund’s fiscal
year.74 For funds in a different fund
complex, our proposal would have
required the acquiring funds to use the
gross expense ratio disclosed in an
acquired fund’s most recent semiannual report filed with the
Commission, or if the fund does not file
reports with the Commission or the
gross expense ratio is not provided, to
use the expense ratio provided in a
recent communication from the
acquired fund.75
One commenter questioned whether
funds in the same fund complex should
have to calculate this special purpose
expense ratio and recommended that an
acquiring fund use the acquired fund’s
annual expense ratio as disclosed in its
most recent semi-annual report filed
with the Commission.76 We agree with
the commenter that it is unnecessary to
calculate a special purpose expense
ratio for funds in the same fund
complex because expense ratios
typically do not fluctuate much from
year to year. Therefore, acquired fund
expense disclosure based on a special
purpose expense ratio would in most
cases be identical to or negligibly
different from the disclosure based on
the expense ratio as disclosed in the
most recent shareholder report.
Accordingly, the instructions as adopted
require an acquiring fund to calculate
the acquired funds’ expenses using the
net expense ratios reported in the
acquired funds’ most recent shareholder
reports.77 We also believe that allowing
acquired funds’ fees and expenses include the total
amount of sales loads, redemption fees, or other
transaction fees paid by the acquiring fund in
connection with acquiring or disposing of shares in
acquired funds during the year). We clarified this
instruction to indicate that ‘‘transaction fees’’
include fees paid in connection with acquiring and
disposing of shares. If an acquired fund charges a
performance fee, the fee would be included in the
disclosure of acquired funds’ fees and expenses.
The amended instructions to Form N–1A would
require an acquiring fund to include a performance
fee that is accounted for as an incentive allocation,
in conformance with the amended instructions to
Form N–2. See infra notes 83, 84.
74 See Proposing Release, supra note 4.
75 Id.
76 See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003).
77 See Instruction 3(f)(iv) to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
The proposal would have required acquiring funds
to use a gross expense ratio, which would have
excluded the effect of waivers or reimbursements.
Amended instruction 3(f)(iv) requires use of the net
operating expense ratio, which includes the effect
of waivers or reimbursements by the acquired
fund’s investment adviser or sponsor. We believe
that permitting funds to use the net operating
expense ratio that is disclosed in shareholder
reports instead of the gross expense ratio (which
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acquiring funds to use the net expense
ratio disclosed in shareholder reports
(which may or may not be filed with the
Commission depending on whether the
fund is registered with the
Commission), instead of reports filed
with the Commission, will permit more
acquiring funds to rely on a readily
available expense ratio and will
eliminate the need for any special
communication between the funds.78 If
an acquired fund does not provide a net
expense ratio in its most recent
shareholder report or is a newly formed
fund that has not prepared a report, the
acquiring fund must use the acquired
fund’s total annual fund operating
expenses over average annual net assets
as reported in its most recent
communication to the acquiring fund.79
The new disclosure requirements we
are adopting today also will apply with
respect to investments in any
unregistered fund that would be an
investment company under section 3(a)
of the Act but for the exceptions
provided in sections 3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7)
of the Act.80 Thus, a fund with a cash
sweep arrangement will be required to
report the expenses of the unregistered
money market fund in which the
acquiring fund invests.
Closed-End Funds. Form N–2 is used
by closed-end management funds to
register under the Act and to offer their
securities under the Securities Act.
Closed-end funds sometimes invest in
other funds and unregistered pools of
investments, such as hedge funds.81 The
may not be available in shareholder reports because
it is not required disclosure) will significantly
reduce the need for special calculations or
communications between the acquiring and
acquired fund because the acquiring fund will not
have to adjust the net expense ratio disclosed in the
shareholder report to exclude the effect of waivers
and reimbursements. We have made conforming
amendments to Forms N–2 and N–3. See
Instruction 10.d to Item 3.1 of Form N–2;
Instruction 19(d) to Item 3(a) of Form N–3.
78 Funds may use the most recent shareholder
report, whether it is an annual or semi-annual
report. If the acquiring fund relies on a semi-annual
report, however, it must use an annualized expense
ratio. See Instruction 3(f)(iv) to Item 3 of Form N–
1A; Instruction 10.d to Item 3.1 of Form N–2;
Instruction 19(d) to Item 3(a) of Form N–3.
79 See Instruction 3(f)(iv) to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
We also are conforming the instruction with respect
to the expense ratio used for funds in a different
fund complex in order to establish a uniform
instruction. We believe that this revision will
provide greater consistency among funds of funds’
expense disclosures. Id. We have made conforming
changes to Forms N–2 and N–3. See Instruction
10.d to Item 3.1 of Form N–2; Instruction 19(d) to
Item 3 of Form N–3.
80 See Instruction 3(f)(i) to Item 3 of Form N–1A,
Instruction 10.a to Item 3.1 of Form N–2,
Instruction 19(a) to Item 3 of Form N–3. See also
15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(1), 80a–3(c)(7), and supra note
37.
81 Hedge funds are often ‘‘private funds’’ as
defined in rule 203(b)(3)-1(d) of the Investment
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amendments to Form N–2 require a
registered closed-end fund of funds
(including a closed-end fund of hedge
funds) to include its pro rata portion of
the cumulative expenses charged by the
acquired funds, including management
fees and expenses, transaction fees and
performance fees (including incentive
allocations), as a line item in its fee
table.82 As adopted, the instructions
provide generally that any incentive
allocations (fees based on a share of
income, capital gains and/or
appreciation) must be reflected in the
acquired fund’s fees and expenses.83
Advisers Act of 1940. 17 CFR 275.203(b)(3)-1(d) (a
‘‘private fund’’ is a fund (i) that would be an
investment company under section 3(a) of the
Investment Company Act but for the exceptions to
that definition in sections 3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the
Act, (ii) that permits its owners to redeem any
portion of their ownership interests within two
years of the purchase of such interests, and (iii)
interests in which are or have been offered based
on the investment advisory skills, ability or
expertise of the investment adviser). See also
Registration Under the Advisers Act of Certain
Hedge Fund Advisers, Investment Advisers Act
Release No. 2333 (Dec. 2, 2004) [69 FR 72054 (Dec.
10, 2004)], at Section II.E. Closed-end funds also
may invest in private equity funds, venture capital
funds, or other funds that generally require capital
contributions over the life of the fund and the longterm commitment of capital. See id. at nn. 224–225.
82 See Instruction 10 to Item 3.1 of Form N–2.
Consistent with the required disclosure of masterfeeder funds’ expenses under Form N–1A, the
instructions to Form N–2 clarify that in the event
a closed-end fund of funds is a master-feeder fund,
the feeder fund must disclose in its fee table the
aggregate expenses of the feeder fund and master
fund. The aggregate expenses of the master fund
must also include fees and expenses incurred
indirectly by the feeder fund as a result of the
master fund’s investment in shares of one or more
acquired funds. See Instruction 10.h to Item 3.1 of
Form N–2. See also Proposing Release, supra note
4, at n. 90.
As with a fund of registered funds, investors may
not be aware that a fund of hedge funds may have
higher fees and expenses than an alternate fund of
funds or a fund that invests directly in debt and
equity securities. See NASD Investor Alert, Funds
of Hedge Funds—Higher Costs and Risks for Higher
Potential Returns (Aug. 23, 2002) (available at:
https://www.nasd.com/Investor/alerts/
alert_hedgefunds.htm); Stephen J. Brown, William
N. Goetzmann, and Bing Liang, Fees on Fees in
Funds of Funds, 3 (Yale International Center for
Finance Working Paper No. 02–33, June 14, 2004).
See also supra note 67.
83 See Instruction 10.b to Item 3.1 of Form N–2.
The adviser of an acquired fund may charge its
shareholders a fee based on a share of income,
capital gains and/or appreciation of the assets of the
shareholder in the acquired fund. This fee, which
is paid to the adviser or an affiliate, is called either
a performance fee or an incentive allocation
depending on the way the acquired fund accounts
for it in its financial statements. Performance fees
are reflected in the acquired fund’s statement of
operations, but incentive allocations are reported in
the statement of changes of capital. The effect of
this accounting treatment is that performance fees
are included in the acquired fund’s expense ratio
reported in the shareholder report but incentive
allocations are not.
Therefore, in order to provide complete
disclosure of fees incurred when funds invest in
hedge funds, we are requiring acquiring funds to
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Each acquiring closed-end fund must
determine expenses attributable to its
investments in acquired funds during
the most recent fiscal year together with,
if applicable, any investments it intends
to make with the proceeds of its present
offering. The instructions require a fund
to reflect the amount of expenses
attributed to the intended investments
assuming those investments had been
held by the acquiring fund during its
most recent fiscal year.84 Given the
extensive due diligence that we
understand fund of hedge fund
managers undertake in order to create
an investment strategy for the fund, we
believe that each acquiring fund should
be able to provide these estimates of
expenses based on written fee
arrangements with acquired funds in
which it invests or intends to invest.85
One commenter opposed our
proposed disclosure requirement for a
fund of hedge funds for several
include these incentive allocations in the formula
for calculating acquired funds’ fees and expenses.
We have made conforming amendments to Form N–
1A. See Instruction 3(f)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
84 See Instruction 10.f to Item 3.1 of Form N–2.
The instructions to Item 3.1 clarify that an acquiring
fund must use the expenses (of assumed
investments) for the previous fiscal year rather than
predict expenses of the acquired funds in which the
acquiring fund assumes it will invest. The
instructions further clarify that acquiring funds
must include anticipated net proceeds from the
offering in the average invested balance in each
acquired fund and the average net assets of the
acquiring fund. See Instructions 10.c and 10.f to
Item 3.1 of Form N–2. This treatment is consistent
with the treatment for funds offering shares under
Form N–1A. See Instruction 3(f)(vi) to Item 3 of
Form N–1A. The instructions also clarify that a
fund that intends to invest in a fund that has no
operating history should include fees to be paid to
the adviser to that fund (or its affiliate) as disclosed
in the registration statement, offering memorandum
or similar document without giving effect to any
performance component. See Instruction 10.d to
Item 3.1 of Form N–2. We have made conforming
amendments to Form N–1A. See Instruction 3(f)(iv)
to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
85 Typically, funds of hedge funds invest in 15 to
25 hedge funds. See Rory B. O’Halloran, An
Overview and Analysis of Recent Interest in
Increased Hedge Fund Regulation, 79 Tul. L. Rev.
461, 480 (2004). Most hedge fund investors perform
extensive due diligence prior to making initial and
subsequent investments. According to a survey of
institutional investors, 60 percent of institutional
investors take between two to six months to
complete due diligence on a single hedge fund.
Deutsche Bank, Equity Prime Services Alternative
Investment Survey Results Part 2: Inside the Mind
of the Hedge Fund Investor, Mar. 2003, at 1, 7. One
manager of a fund of hedge funds estimates that
initial due diligence on a single hedge fund
manager takes 3 to 4 weeks. See George Van, The
Smartest Way to Invest in Hedge Funds, available
at https://www.hedgefund.com/smartest/
Smartest_Way_professional.pdf. In light of our
understanding that fund of hedge funds managers
engage in this time consuming initial diligence, we
believe that a fund is likely to have an investment
allocation strategy prior to filing its registration
statement and, therefore, would be able to make the
necessary assumptions in order to provide the
required disclosure.
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36647
reasons.86 The commenter questioned
whether disclosure based on historical
hedge fund expenses may be misleading
because future expenses could differ
materially due to the impact on
performance fees of fund performance
and portfolio changes. The commenter
also expressed concern that investors
may conclude that the acquired funds’
expenses are fixed costs and not subject
to change over time.87 The commenter
expressed concern that the potential
fluctuation in acquired fund fees and
expenses might require a fund of hedge
funds to continually monitor its
disclosure to guard against material
misstatements or omissions in its
registration statement.88
The Commission understands that the
presentation of acquired hedge fund fees
and expenses poses particular
challenges for funds of hedge funds
because their fees may be more variable
than other types of pooled investment
vehicles, such as mutual funds. The
commenter’s suggestion to disclose the
estimated ranges of fees that hedge
funds could charge in a footnote or in
text somewhere other than in the fee
table would not improve transparency
of expenses. While the amount of
acquired fund expenses may vary, they
are expenses that we believe should be
included in the total annual fund
operating expenses disclosed to
investors in order to provide them a
more complete presentation of the
aggregate direct and indirect costs of
investing in a fund of funds.
We believe that we can address the
commenter’s concerns and still provide
investors in funds of hedge funds with
a better understanding of the multiple
86 See Comment Letter of Man Investments, Inc.
(Dec. 1, 2003).
87 The commenter also asserted that the
instructions could inaccurately portray expenses of
acquired hedge funds because fees may vary widely
among investors in a hedge fund as a result of
individual rates negotiated through side letters. Id.
We share the commenter’s concern. Accordingly,
the final instructions require the acquiring fund to
rely on the expense ratio in the shareholder report
or, if applicable, any written fee agreements with
acquired hedge funds to determine acquired fund
fees and expenses. See Instruction 10.d to Item 3.1
of Form N–2.
88 See Comment Letter of Man Investments, Inc.
(Dec. 1, 2003). The commenter also stated its belief
that actual returns over time are the most important
factor in comparing funds of hedge funds. We do
not disagree that actual returns over time are a
relevant factor for investors to consider. We believe,
however, that the required disclosure will assist a
fund of hedge funds investor in making an informed
investment decision as to whether the benefit of
diversification provided by investing in a fund of
hedge funds outweighs any layering of costs. We
also continue to believe that the disclosure will
provide investors with the relevant information to
compare directly the costs of investing in
alternative funds of funds, or the costs of investing
in a fund of funds to a more traditional fund. See
supra note 53.
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layers of fees that are charged in a fund
of hedge funds investment. To
accomplish this, first we have revised
the instructions to require a fund of
hedge funds to include in a footnote to
the new line item the typical
performance fee charged by acquired
hedge funds in which it invests. The
footnote also would alert investors that
acquired hedge fund fees are based on
historical expenses and could be
substantially higher or lower due to
potential fluctuations in acquired hedge
fund performance.89 Second, we have
provided an exception that allows funds
to exclude from the expense ratio
disclosed in the fee table acquired fund
performance fees that are calculated
solely on the realization and/or
distribution of gains or the sum of the
realization and/or distribution of gains
and unrealized appreciation of assets
distributed in-kind.90 This type of
performance fee is typically paid by a
private equity fund upon liquidation of
the fund or when a fund has terminated
an investment and distributed the
proceeds or the appreciated assets to
investors.91 We agree that in these
circumstances, the performance fees
associated with a particular period may
be unrelated to the costs of investing in
a fund of funds.92
Insurance Company Separate
Accounts. We received no specific
comments on our proposed
amendments to Forms N–3, N–4 and N–
6, and we are adopting them
substantially as proposed.93 These
forms will require separate accounts to
include disclosures regarding the
89 See Instruction 10.g to Item 3.1 of Form N–2.
The footnote could, for example, state:
[Some/All] Acquired Funds in which the
Registrant invests charge a performance fee based
on the Acquired Funds’ earnings. The ‘‘Acquired
Fund Fees and Expenses’’ disclosed above are based
on historic earnings of the Acquired Funds, which
may change substantially over time and, therefore,
significantly affect Acquired Fund Fees and
Expenses. The typical performance fee charged by
Acquired Funds in which the Registrant invests is
[INSERT PERCENTAGE].
90 See Instruction 10.d to Item 3.1 of Form N–2.
We have made a conforming change to the
instructions for Form N–1A. See Instruction 3(f)(iv)
to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
91 See James M. Schell, Private Equity Funds,
Business Structure and Operations §§ 1.03[3][a],
1.04[3][a] (2006).
92 In contrast, hedge funds generally charge
performance fees that are calculated as a percentage
of the hedge fund’s net investment income, realized
capital gains and unrealized capital appreciation.
See Staff of U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, Report to the Commission on
Implications of the Growth of Hedge Funds (2003)
at text preceding n. 212.
93 As with the instructions to Forms N–1A and N–
2, the instructions to Form N–3 require that the line
item expense disclosure be titled: ‘‘Acquired Fund
Fees and Expenses.’’ See supra note 69 and
accompanying text.
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expenses of acquired funds in their
prospectuses.94
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
Rule 12d1–1 will impose a new
‘‘collection of information’’ requirement
within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (‘‘PRA’’).95 The
title of the new collection is ‘‘Rule
12d1–1.’’ Rule 12d1–1 permits a fund to
invest in unregistered money market
funds notwithstanding the limitations of
section 17 and rule 17d–1, if the
unregistered money market funds meet
certain conditions under rule 2a–7 of
the Act and preserve records under rule
31 of the Act. Both rules 2a–7 and 31
contain collection of information
requirements. Compliance with the
collection of information requirements
of rule 12d1–1 is necessary to obtain a
benefit for unregistered money market
funds that seek investments by
registered funds that may be made only
in reliance on rule 12d1–1. Responses to
the collection of information
requirements of rule 12d1–1 will not be
kept confidential.
In the Proposing Release, Commission
staff estimated that the annual hour
burden of the proposed rule’s collection
of information requirements for
unregistered money market fund
compliance with rule 2a–7 would be
21,175 hours.96 The staff also estimated
that the requirements under rules 31a–
1(b)(1), 31a–1(b)(2)(ii), 31a–1(b)(2)(iv),
and 31a–1(b)(9) would not impose any
additional burden because the costs of
maintaining records would be incurred
by unregistered money market funds in
any case to keep books and records that
are necessary to prepare financial
statements for shareholders, to prepare
the fund’s annual income tax returns,
and as a normal business practice.97 We
submitted the collection for rule 12d1–
94 The amended instructions to Form N–3 require
the same disclosure and calculation as required in
the amended instructions to Forms N–1A and N–
2. The amended instructions for Forms N–4 and N–
6 are different from the instructions in Forms N–
1A, N–2, and N–3, however, because Forms N–4
and N–6 already require registrants (i.e., separate
accounts) to disclose expenses of funds (‘‘portfolio
companies’’) in which the separate account invests.
See Item 3 of Form N–4; Item 3 of Form N–6.
Accordingly, the amended instructions to Forms N–
4 and N–6 require that if a portfolio company
invests in other (acquired) funds, the separate
account must include in the item disclosing the
portfolio company’s ‘‘other expenses,’’ the acquired
funds’ fees and expenses calculated according to
the instructions to Form N–1A. Unlike the proposal,
the instructions refer specifically to portfolio
companies instead of using the term ‘‘Acquiring
Fund’’ in describing the disclosure of acquired
funds’ fees and expenses incurred by the portfolio
company.
95 44 U.S.C. 3501.
96 See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 138
and accompanying text.
97 Id. at text following n. 138.
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1 to the Office of Management and
Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for review in
accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and
5 CFR 1320.11. No commenters
addressed these burden estimates for the
collection of information requirements,
and we continue to believe that they are
appropriate. An agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a
currently valid control number. OMB
approved the collection of information
under control number 3235–0212
(expiring on May 31, 2007).98
In addition, the Commission is
adopting amendments to certain forms
that currently contain mandatory
‘‘collection of information’’
requirements. The titles for the existing
collections are: (i) ‘‘Form N–1A under
the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940,
Registration Statement of Open-End
Management Investment Companies;’’
(ii) ‘‘Form N–2 under the Securities Act
of 1933 and the Investment Company
Act of 1940, Registration Statement of
Closed-End Management Investment
Companies;’’ (iii) ‘‘Form N–3 under the
Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940,
Registration Statement of Separate
Accounts Organized as Management
Investment Companies;’’ (iv) ‘‘Form N–
4 under the Securities Act of 1933 and
the Investment Company Act of 1940,
Registration Statement of Separate
Accounts Organized as Unit Investment
Trusts;’’ and (v) ‘‘Form N–6 under the
Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940,
Registration Statement of Separate
Accounts Organized as Unit Investment
Trusts that Offer Variable Life Insurance
Policies.’’ The amendments require that
investors in a registered fund of funds
receive more transparent disclosure of
the costs of investing in these
arrangements. The disclosure is
designed to provide investors with a
more complete presentation of the
actual costs of investing in a fund that
invests in other funds, which have their
own expenses that may be as high or
higher than the acquiring fund’s
expenses. Compliance with the
disclosure requirements of Forms N–1A,
N–2, N–3, N–4 and N–6 is mandatory.
Responses to the disclosure
requirements will not be kept
confidential.
In the Proposing Release, Commission
staff estimated that the amendment to
98 We are adopting rule 12d1–1 with some
modifications, which are described in Section II of
this release. None of the modifications affects the
PRA analysis or collection of information burden
approved by OMB.
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the disclosure requirement will add up
to 7 hours per portfolio to the existing
hour burden associated with completing
Forms N–1A, N–2 and N–3, and 0.5
hours to the existing hour burden
associated with completing Forms N–4
and N–6.99 No commenters addressed
the burden estimates for the collection
of information requirements associated
with Forms N–1A, N–3, N–4 and N–6,
and we continue to believe that they are
appropriate.100
One commenter, a fund of hedge
funds, disagreed with our Form N–2
estimate. The commenter asserted that
calculating the costs would entail vast
amounts of time by numerous personnel
reviewing a large number of hedge
funds that provide information in
varying formats. The commenter added
that it believes a fund of hedge funds
would be required to monitor and
recalculate actual performance fees paid
on an ongoing basis to guard against a
material misstatement in the fee
table.101 The commenter provided cost
estimates but did not provide any
specific estimates of burden hours.
Funds offering their shares on a
continuous or delayed basis in reliance
on Rule 415 under the Securities Act
must update their registration
statements under certain
circumstances.102 We have revised the
99 See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at nn.139–
161 and accompanying text.
100 We have revised the final instructions for
calculating acquired funds’ expenses as described
above. See supra notes 77–79 and accompanying
text. Although the staff believes that these
modifications may provide funds with some time
and cost savings, we are not changing our hour
burden estimates. We will review the estimates
when the collection of information requirements
must be resubmitted for review, and at that time we
will be able to consider funds’ actual experience in
complying with them.
101 See Comment Letter of Man Investments, Inc.
(Dec. 1, 2003).
102 See 17 CFR 230.415. Section 10(a)(3) of the
Securities Act provides that ‘‘when a prospectus is
used more than nine months after the effective date
of the registration statement, the information
contained therein shall be as of a date not more
than sixteen months prior to such use so far as such
information is known to the user of such prospectus
or can be furnished by such user without
unreasonable effort or expense.’’ 15 U.S.C. 77j(a)(3).
In general, funds that are offering their securities on
a continuous or delayed basis in reliance on Rule
415 file annual post-effective amendments to
update the prospectus in the registration statement
pursuant to section 10(a)(3). In addition to the
statutory provisions of section 10(a)(3), Rule 415
and Form N–2 require that the registrant undertake
to file a post-effective amendment to reflect: (i) any
prospectus required by section 10(a)(3) of the
Securities Act; (ii) facts or events arising after the
effective date that ‘‘represent a fundamental change
in the information set forth in the registration
statement;’’ and (iii) material information with
respect to the plan of distribution not disclosed
previously in the registration statement or any
material change to such information in the
registration statement. See 17 CFR 230.415(a)(3);
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PRA estimate to reflect staff estimates
that funds offering their shares on a
continuous basis file updated
registration statements on at least an
annual basis. The revised estimated
annual burden per fund of hedge fund
is 213 hours.103
Based on recent Commission filings,
23 registered funds of hedge funds offer
their shares on a continuous basis under
rule 415 of the Securities Act. Therefore,
the staff estimates the additional annual
burden for funds of hedge funds to
update the acquired fund expenses in
their prospectuses pursuant to the
requirements of section 10(a)(3) of the
Securities Act is 2450 hours.104
Item 34.4.a of Form N–2. In the release adopting
Rule 415, the Commission noted that ‘‘the term
‘fundamental’ is intended to reflect current staff
practice under which post-effective amendments
are filed when major and substantial changes are
made to information contained in the registration
statement. Material changes that can be stated
accurately and succinctly in a short sticker will
continue to be permitted. While many variations in
matters such as operating results, properties,
business, product development, backlog,
management and litigation ordinarily would not be
fundamental, major changes in the issuer’s
operations, such as significant acquisitions or
dispositions, would require the filing of a posteffective amendment. Also, any change in the
business or operations of the registrant that would
necessitate a restatement of the financial statements
always would be reflected in a post-effective
amendment.’’ See Adoption of Integrated Disclosure
System, Securities Act Release No. 6383 (Mar. 3,
1982) [47 FR 11380 (Mar. 16, 1982)] at text
accompanying nn.79–81. See also Guide 8 to Form
N–2. In addition, purchasers of an issuer’s
securities in a registered offering have private rights
of action for materially deficient disclosure in
prospectuses and oral communications under
section 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act. See 15 U.S.C.
77l(a)(2); see also Securities Offering Reform,
Securities Act Release No. 8591 (July 19, 2005) [70
FR 44722 (Aug. 3, 2005)] at Section IV.A
(discussing information conveyed by the time of
sale for purposes of liability under section 12(a)(2)).
103 The increase in annual hour burden was
estimated using an average of the range of costs the
commenter estimated a fund of hedge funds would
incur to prepare the disclosure ($16,500) and
dividing that cost by the estimated hourly cost to
prepare the disclosure: $16,500 ÷ $77.42 = 213.12.
Therefore, the estimated total annual burden per
fund of hedge funds to prepare the disclosure is 213
hours. The estimated hourly cost is the weighted
average of the cost to prepare the disclosure for
other closed-end funds ($404 (cost of 6 hours of an
accountant’s time) + $138 (cost of 1 hour of an
attorney’s time) ÷ 7 = $77.42). See infra note 120.
This estimate also includes the costs of including
the footnote to the line item that discloses the
typical performance fee charged by the hedge funds
in which the acquiring fund invests or intends to
invest.
104 Any post-effective amendment to a registration
statement filed to update the information in the
prospectus for purposes of section 10(a)(3) of the
Securities Act or to reflect fundamental changes in
the information in the prospectus contained in the
registration statement would also revise the
information regarding the acquired funds’ fees and
expenses. Because only a portion of acquired funds’
fees and expenses may be updated in the annual
post-effective amendment to reflect additional or
revised fees and expenses, since the date of the last
updating, resulting from existing, newly acquired or
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36649
Based on recent filings, Commission
staff estimates that, on an annual basis,
registrants file 234 initial registration
statements (of which 11 are funds of
hedge funds) and 38 post-effective
amendments (including 23 posteffective amendments for funds of hedge
funds in continuous registration). The
current estimated total annual burden
for the preparation and filing of Form
N–2 is 120,673 hours.105 Accordingly,
we estimate the total annual burden for
all funds for the preparation and filing
of initial registrations statements and
post-effective amendments to Form N–
2 would be 125,389 hours.106
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid
control number. We submitted the
collections of information associated
with Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3, N–4 and
N–6 to OMB to review in accordance
with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR
1320.11. OMB approved the collections
of information under control numbers
3235–0307 (Form N–1A, expiring on
December 31, 2007), 3235–0026 (Form
N–2, expiring on January 31, 2008,
revised submission currently under
review by OMB), 3235–0316 (Form N–
3, expiring on July 31, 2007), 3235–0318
(Form N–4, expiring on March 31,
2007), and 3235–0503 (Form N–6,
expiring on March 31, 2007).
IV. Cost-Benefit Analysis
We are sensitive to the costs and
benefits imposed by our rules. As
discussed above in sections II.A—II.C,
the new rules provide relief to funds by
providing additional exemptions from
to be acquired funds, the Commission estimates that
a fund of hedge funds in continuous offering would
spend approximately 50% of the time it takes to
determine the initial acquired hedge funds
disclosure (213 hours) to review and update its
calculation of acquired funds’ fees and expenses
prior to filing a post-effective amendment.
Therefore, the annual burden for funds of hedge
funds in continuous registration is an additional
2450 hours ((213 hours ÷ 2 = 106.5 hours) (106.5
hours × 23 funds = 2449.5 hours)).
105 The Commission made this estimate in
connection with its submission for approval of
recent proposed amendments to Form N–2. See
Executive Compensation and Related Party
Disclosure, Investment Company Act Release No.
27218 (Jan. 27, 2006) [71 FR 6542 (Feb. 8, 2006)].
106 This estimate is based on the following
calculation: 120,673 + 2450 + (11 × 206) = 125,389.
The current estimated total annual hour burden
already incorporates the time estimated in the
proposing release to prepare the disclosure required
by the amendments (7 hours for each closed-end
fund that invests in other funds). The revised
estimate includes the additional 206 hours (213
minus 7 hours included in the approved total
annual hour burden) the staff estimates it may take
a closed-end fund of hedge funds to complete the
required disclosure, based on the commenter’s cost
estimates.
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the limitations on fund of funds
arrangements without requiring the
funds or their advisers to obtain an
exemptive order. As discussed in
section II.D, the amendments to Forms
N–1A, N–2, N–3, N–4, and N–6 provide
additional information to shareholders
regarding the costs of acquired funds in
a fund of funds arrangement.
A. Rules 12d1–1, 12d1–2 and 12d1–3
We have issued a number of
exemptive orders that have broadened
the ability of funds to invest in other
funds and provided certain funds of
funds greater flexibility in structuring
their sales charges. These orders have
provided exemptions from statutory
limitations. A fund that has obtained the
benefit of an exemption has incurred
costs of applying for an exemptive order
as well as costs of satisfying any
conditions imposed in the order.
Application costs are primarily legal
and include costs of drafting the
application and analyzing the ways in
which the conditions fit the fund’s
business model. The costs of satisfying
conditions include ongoing compliance
costs of meeting those conditions. We
assume that a fund only seeks an
exemptive order if the benefits of the
additional flexibility provided by the
exemption outweigh the costs of
obtaining and satisfying the conditions
of an order. We solicited but did not
receive comments with respect to the
cost-benefit analysis for rules 12d1–1,
12d1–2 and 12d1–3.
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1. Benefits
Rule 12d1–1 codifies our prior
exemptive orders that permit a fund to
invest all or a portion of its available
cash in money market funds rather than
directly in short-term instruments. The
rule retains one condition included in
our orders that the acquiring fund pays
no sales load or distribution or service
fee on the acquired money market fund
shares unless the acquiring fund’s
investment adviser waives a sufficient
amount of its advisory fee to offset the
cost of those fees.107 We believe that any
further restrictions on an acquiring
fund’s investments in money market
funds should be governed by the fund’s
investment policies and limitations and
the fiduciary obligations of its board of
107 With respect to investments in unregistered
money market funds, we also have retained the
requirement in our prior exemptive orders that the
money market funds operate as if they were money
market funds registered under the Act. Unlike our
exemptive orders, however, and as we proposed, we
are requiring the acquiring fund to reasonably
believe, rather than to determine, that the
unregistered money market funds operate in this
manner. See supra notes 40–43 and accompanying
text; see, e.g., Putnam Order, supra note 25.
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directors. Consequently, we believe that
the rule will provide greater flexibility
for certain funds than exemptive orders
we have issued.
Under the rule, funds also may invest
in money market funds advised by a
different adviser. We believe that this
will allow all funds, particularly small
funds without a money market fund in
their fund group, the opportunity
currently available to large funds to
engage in cash sweep arrangements. In
addition, we have provided additional
relief under section 17 of the Act. If a
fund in one fund complex acquired
more than five percent of the assets of
a money market fund in another
complex, any broker-dealer affiliated
with the money market fund would
become a (second-tier) affiliated person
of the acquiring fund. As a result of the
affiliation, the broker-dealer’s fee for
effecting the sale of securities to the
acquiring fund would be subject to the
conditions set forth in rule 17e–1,
including the quarterly board review
and recordkeeping requirements with
respect to certain securities transactions
involving the affiliated broker-dealer.108
The final rule permits an acquiring fund
to pay commissions, fees, or other
remuneration to an affiliated brokerdealer without complying with the
quarterly board review and
recordkeeping requirements set forth in
rules 17e–1(b)(3) and 17e–1(d)(2).109
This relief is available only if the
broker-dealer and the acquiring fund
become affiliated solely because of the
acquiring fund’s investment in the
money market fund. We believe this
additional relief will enable more funds
to take advantage of the exemption
provided by the rule.
Rule 12d1–1 also codifies our orders
permitting funds to invest in
unregistered money market funds that
operate like a money market fund
registered under the Act. The acquiring
fund is required to ‘‘reasonably believe’’
that the unregistered money market
fund operates in compliance with rule
2a–7 and complies with certain
provisions of the Act, as well as other
requirements.110 This standard is
slightly different than the condition in
our exemptive orders, which requires
the acquiring fund to determine that the
acquired fund is in compliance with
rule 2a–7 and certain provisions of the
Act. A fund would reasonably believe
that an acquired fund was in
compliance with these provisions if, for
example, it received a representation
from the acquired fund (or the adviser
to the acquired fund) that the fund
would comply with the relevant
provisions in all material respects and if
the acquiring fund had no reason to
believe that the acquired fund was not,
in fact, complying with the relevant
provisions in all material respects.
Thus, an acquired fund’s failure to
comply will not automatically result in
the loss of the acquiring fund’s
exemption. Rule 12d1–1 does not
include certain conditions imposed in
the exemptive orders that we believe are
already adequately addressed by other
provisions of the Act or rules
thereunder.111
Rule 12d1–2 codifies, and in some
cases expands upon, three types of relief
that we provided to affiliated funds of
funds. The rule permits affiliated funds
of funds to acquire up to three percent
of the securities of funds that are not
part of the same group of investment
companies, subject to the limits in
section 12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F) of the
Act. The rule also permits an affiliated
fund of funds to acquire securities not
issued by a fund. These investments
would have to be consistent with the
fund’s investment policies. Finally, the
rule permits affiliated funds of funds to
invest in affiliated or unaffiliated money
market funds in reliance on rule 12d1–
1.
Rule 12d1–3 codifies the exemptive
orders we have issued permitting funds
relying on section 12(d)(1)(F) to charge
a sales load greater than 11⁄2 percent
provided that the aggregate sales load
any investor pays (i.e., the combined
distribution expenses of both the
acquiring and acquired funds) does not
exceed the limits on sales loads
established by the NASD for funds of
funds. This exemption also would be
available to an affiliated fund of funds
relying on rule 12d1–2 to invest in
funds in a different fund group.
We anticipate that funds and their
shareholders will benefit from the rules.
Funds increasingly have sought
exemptive orders (which the
Commission has granted) to engage in
most of the activities the rules permit.
The application process involved in
obtaining exemptive orders imposes
direct costs on funds, including
preparation and revision of an
application, as well as consultations
with the staff. The rules will benefit
funds and their shareholders by
eliminating the direct costs of applying
to the Commission to engage in
activities permitted under the rules.112
111 See
108 See
supra note 34.
109 See supra notes 32–36 and accompanying text.
110 See supra notes 40–43 and accompanying text.
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Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 49.
example, in calendar years 2003 and 2004,
11 funds sought exemptive relief to invest
uninvested cash and/or cash collateral from
112 For
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because the rules contain the same or
fewer conditions than existing orders.114
In addition, a fund that currently relies
on an exemptive order can satisfy all the
conditions of any of the rules that
provide similar exemptive relief without
changing its operation. For example, in
the case of rule 12d1–1, the fund will
simply be satisfying conditions that are
no longer required.115 Finally, a fund
that has not relied on an exemptive
order and that intends to rely on one of
the rules will bear the same continuing
costs of complying with conditions that
it would have borne had it obtained an
exemptive order. In that case, its total
costs would have been the same as or
greater than the costs associated with
the rules.
2. Costs
We do not believe that the rules will
impose mandatory costs on any fund.
As discussed above, the rules are
exemptive, and we believe that a fund
would not rely on any of them if the
anticipated benefits did not justify the
costs. We believe the costs of relying on
the rules will be the same as or less than
the costs to a fund that relies on an
existing exemptive order because each
of the rules includes the same or fewer
conditions than existing orders that
provide equivalent exemptive relief.113
The rules will affect different types of
funds in different ways. A fund that has
not sought and would not seek
exemptive relief from section 12(d)(1) of
the Act will not be affected by the rules.
The cost for a fund that currently relies
on exemptive relief covered by our rules
will be the same as or less than the costs
of relying on its exemptive order
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
The rules will further benefit funds by
eliminating the uncertainty that a
particular applicant might not obtain
relief to engage in the activities
permitted under the rules.
The exemptive application process
also involves other indirect costs. Funds
that apply for an order to permit
additional investments forgo potentially
beneficial investments until they receive
the order, while other funds forgo the
investment entirely rather than seek an
exemptive order because they have
concluded that the cost of seeking an
exemptive order would exceed the
anticipated benefit of the investment.
Eliminating direct and indirect costs of
the proposed activities also eliminates
factors that discriminate against smaller
funds, for which the cost of an
exemptive application can often exceed
the potential benefit.
Forms N–1A, N–2 and N–3 currently
do not require registered funds to
disclose information regarding the
expenses associated with acquired
funds. The amendment to Form N–1A
requires a registered open-end fund that
invests in other funds to include a line
item in its fee table, under the total
annual fund operating expenses, that
lists the aggregate fees and costs of
acquired funds. The amendment to
Form N–2 requires registered closed-end
funds that invest in other funds to
provide the same disclosure.116 The
amendment to Form N–3 requires the
same disclosure for separate accounts
organized as management investment
companies that offer variable annuity
contracts. The new disclosure
requirements include instructions on
calculating the fees and operating costs
of acquired funds. The calculation will
aggregate the annual fund operating
expenses of acquired funds, transaction
costs and, as applicable, incentive
allocations incurred by the acquiring
fund, and express the aggregate fees as
a percentage of average net assets of the
acquiring fund.
securities lending activities in money market funds,
and 3 of those funds also sought exemptive relief
to invest cash collateral in unregistered money
market funds. In the past 5 years, 9 funds investing
in other funds in the same fund group in reliance
on section 12(d)(1)(G) have sought exemptive relief
to invest in securities other than government
securities or short-term paper. During that time, 9
funds investing in other funds in reliance on
section 12(d)(1)(F) have sought exemptive relief to
charge a sales load greater than 11⁄2 percent, subject
to the NASD Sales Charge Rule. In the Proposing
Release, we estimated that the cost to a fund for
submitting one of these applications ranges from
$7,000 to $67,000. See Proposing Release, supra
note 4, at n. 125. We did not receive any comments
on these estimates and continue to believe that they
are appropriate.
113 Our analysis compares the costs a fund would
bear to comply with the rules with the costs a fund
would bear under the current system of obtaining
equivalent exemptive relief. Because the conditions
in the rules are the same or less onerous than the
conditions in the exemptive orders, the costs
discussed in this section primarily are costs that a
fund would bear to obtain an exemptive order and
comply with its conditions.
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B. Amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2,
N–3, N–4, and N–6
114 Such a fund may face a one-time ‘‘learning
cost’’ to determine the difference between the
fund’s exemptive order and the rule. We do not
believe this cost would be significant given the
similarity of conditions in our rules and existing
exemptive orders.
115 We note that a fund may choose to rely on an
existing exemptive order and comply with the
conditions of that order. A fund might conclude
that continued reliance on an existing order is
appropriate, for example, because the existing order
was tailored to circumstances specific to a fund
complex and may provide additional exemptive
relief that is not covered under the rules we are
adopting today.
116 In addition, closed-end funds of hedge funds
must add a footnote to the line item that discloses
the typical performance fee charged by acquired
hedge funds in which the acquiring fund invests.
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36651
Forms N–4 and N–6 currently require
separate accounts organized as UITs that
offer variable annuity and variable life
contracts, respectively, to disclose the
range of minimum and maximum
operating expenses of the portfolio
companies in which they invest. The
amendment to each of these forms
requires a separate account organized as
a UIT that invests in a portfolio
company that itself invests in other
funds, to include the portfolio
company’s costs of investing in other
funds in the portfolio company’s
operating expenses disclosed in the
Form N–4 or Form N–6 fee table.
1. Benefits
Under current disclosure
requirements, a fund’s shareholders may
not understand the fees and operating
costs of a fund’s investment in acquired
funds, costs that investors bear
indirectly. We believe that the
amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3,
N–4, and N–6 will enable shareholders
to better understand the expenses that
relate to acquired funds, and provide
investors the means to compare directly
the costs of investing in alternative
funds of funds, or the costs of investing
in a fund of funds to a more traditional
fund. The increased transparency may
provide further benefits by allowing
investors to choose funds that more
closely reflect their preferences for fees
and performance.117
2. Costs
The amendments to Forms N–1A, N–
2, N–3, N–4, and N–6 will result in costs
to registered open-end and closed-end
funds, and to separate accounts that
offer variable annuity and variable life
contracts, which may be passed on to
those funds’ shareholders. The
amendments will require a new
disclosure to the annual operating
expense item in the fee table for funds
that invest in other funds. It also will
require separate accounts organized as
UITs that offer variable annuity and
variable life contracts to include an
additional expense in their calculations
of annual portfolio company operating
expenses. The costs of the disclosures
will include both internal costs (for
attorneys and accountants) to prepare
and review the disclosure, and external
costs (for printing and typesetting the
disclosure).
First, with respect to Forms N–1A, N–
2 and N–3, the disclosures will add a
single line item to the fee table for funds
117 We requested comments as well as any
quantifying data in the Proposing Release, but did
not receive any.
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jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
that invest in other funds.118 In the
context of the prospectus for Forms N–
1A, N–2 and N–3, we believe that the
external costs of including this
additional line of disclosure per
registered fund will be minimal.119 With
respect to Forms N–4 and N–6, the
disclosure will require registrants to
include in the item for annual portfolio
company operating expenses, any fees
and expenses of acquired companies, as
disclosed in the portfolio company’s
most recent prospectus. Accordingly,
we believe there will be no additional
external costs for Forms N–4 and N–6 as
a result of the amendments.
Second, for purposes of the PRA,
Commission staff estimated in the
proposal that the disclosure requirement
for calculating the line item according to
the instructions will add up to 7 hours
per portfolio to the burden of
completing Forms N–1A, N–2 and N–3.
Commission staff further estimated that
the additional annual cost of including
the line item per portfolio would equal
$542.120
118 We are permitting acquiring funds to omit a
separate line item if the amount of expenses
attributable to acquired funds does not exceed 0.01
percent (one basis point) of average net assets, and
to include these expenses in ‘‘Other Expenses.’’ See
Instruction 3(f)(i) to Item 3 of Form N–1A;
Instruction 10.a to Item 3.1 of Form N–2;
Instruction 19(a) to Item 3(a) of Form N–3.
119 We also believe the costs to the acquiring fund
of preparing the footnote to the line item that
discloses the typical performance fee charged by
hedge funds in which the acquiring fund invests
will be minimal.
120 In the Proposing Release, Commission staff
estimated the additional burden would equal 6
hours for an intermediate level accountant and 1
hour for a deputy general counsel to review the
calculation per portfolio. See Proposing Release,
supra note 4, at n.127. We did not receive any
comments on these hourly estimates and continue
to believe that they are appropriate. We have,
however, updated our wage estimates based on
current wage data for professionals in the financial
services industry available at https://
www.careerjournal.com/salaryhiring (last visited
July 28, 2005).
In order to determine who would be an
intermediate level accountant in the new source, we
looked at years of experience. We believe that
accountants with 6 to 15 years of experience would
fall within that category. The national average
salary for these accountants is $89,749 (($85,483 (6–
10 years of experience) + $94,015 (11–15 years of
experience)) ÷ 2 = $89,749). Adjusting this salary
upwards by 35% to reflect possible overhead costs
and employee benefits, the staff estimates that the
annual adjusted salary would be $121,161, and the
cost for 6 hours of an intermediate level
accountant’s time would be $404 ($121,161 ÷ 1,800
hours × 6 = $403.87). The staff estimates the
national average salary for a deputy general counsel
is $183,675. Adjusting this salary upwards by 35%
to reflect possible overhead costs and employee
benefits, the staff estimates that the annual adjusted
salary would be $247,961, and the cost for 1 hour
of a deputy general counsel’s time would be $138
($247,961 ÷ 1,800 hours = $137.76). Accordingly,
the staff estimates the total cost for each portfolio
to calculate the amended disclosure would equal
$542 ($404 + $138 = $542). We have revised the
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One commenter, a fund of hedge
funds, disagreed with our estimates and
asserted that the cost to a single fund of
hedge funds to make an initial
calculation each year would be between
$8,000 and $25,000 depending on the
number of personnel involved and the
need for auditor review.121 The
commenter did not specify the number
or functions of the personnel involved.
We agree with the commenter that a
fund of hedge funds may have
additional costs. We estimate that the
cost of adding the new line item for a
fund of hedge funds is $16,500.122
Based on recent Commission filings,
approximately 11 funds of hedge funds
file initial registration statements on
Form N–2 each year and their aggregate
assets under management are $958.2
million. The estimated aggregate costs
for these funds of hedge funds to
calculate the new line item is
$181,500.123 We do not believe that the
additional cost is significant given the
funds of hedge funds’ aggregate assets
under management.124
On the assumption that funds of
hedge funds would have to monitor
current fees in order to guard against
material misrepresentations in the fee
table, the commenter estimated that
these funds of hedge funds would face
an additional monitoring cost of $15,000
or more annually. As discussed in
Section III above, staff estimates that the
23 funds of hedge funds registered
under Form N–2 and offering their
shares on a continuous basis file
updated registration statements on at
least an annual basis. We estimate the
additional cost to review the disclosure
will be $8245 per fund of hedge funds
and the total annual costs for funds of
funds to update the acquired fund
expenses in their prospectuses pursuant
final instructions for calculating acquired funds’
expenses as described above. See supra notes 77–
79 and accompanying text. Although the staff
believes that these modifications may provide funds
with some cost savings, we have not adjusted the
hour burden estimates but will review them when
the collection of information requirements must be
resubmitted for review and funds will have had
actual experience in complying with them.
121 See Comment Letter of Man Investments, Inc.
(Dec. 1, 2003).
122 Because the commenter did not explain the
underlying calculations for its range of costs, the
estimate is based on the average of the $8,000 to
$25,000 range provided by the commenter. The cost
to each fund of hedge funds may be higher or lower
depending on a variety of factors, including the
number of hedge funds in which the fund of hedge
funds invests.
123 This calculation is based on the following: (11
× $16,500) = $181,500).
124 The estimated cost of preparing the line item
is 0.0189% of assets under management for funds
of hedge funds in the aggregate ($181,500 ÷ $958.2
million).
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to the requirements of section 10(a)(3) of
the Securities Act will be $189,635.125
Despite this additional cost, we
continue to believe that the costs of the
required disclosure are justified because
the disclosure will assist a fund of
hedge funds investor in making an
informed investment decision as to
whether the benefit of diversification
provided by investing in a fund of hedge
funds outweighs any layering of costs.
We do not believe that other alternatives
suggested by the commenter, such as
simply disclosing a range of fees, would
be a meaningful substitute. These
alternatives would not meet our
objective of improving transparency of
expenses. Nor would they meet our
objective to include acquired fund
expenses in the total annual fund
operating expenses disclosed to
investors in order to provide them a
more complete presentation of the
aggregate direct and indirect costs of
investing in a fund of funds. We
continue to believe that our estimate is
appropriate for Form N–2 registrants
that are not funds of hedge funds.
In the Proposing Release, we also
estimated that including the additional
item in the disclosure of portfolio
company expenses on Forms N–4 and
N–6 would add approximately 0.5 hours
per portfolio, which based on the
updated wage estimates would be an
annual cost per portfolio of $34.126 We
did not receive any comments on this
estimate and continue to believe that it
is appropriate.
Based on Commission filings, the staff
estimates that half the funds registered
under Forms N–1A and N–2 (excluding
funds of hedge funds) invest in other
funds, all funds of hedge funds
registered on Form N–2 invest in other
funds, and 5 separate accounts (with 7
portfolios) registered under Form N–3
invest in other funds and will be
required to make the proposed
disclosure on an annual basis. For
purposes of the PRA analysis,
Commission staff has estimated that on
an annual basis, registrants file (i) initial
registration statements covering 483
portfolios and post effective
amendments covering 6542 portfolios
on Form N–1A, (ii) 234 initial
125 See supra notes 102–104 and accompanying
text. These estimates are based on the following
calculations: 106.5 (hours per fund) × $77.42
(estimated hourly cost to prepare the disclosure) =
$8245; $8245 × 23 (funds) = $189,635.
126 Commission staff estimates the cost would
equal 0.5 hours for an intermediate level accountant
to include the expense item in the calculation. The
estimated cost is based on the following calculation:
0.5 × $67.3 = $33.7. The estimated hourly cost for
an intermediate level accountant is $67
($121,161.15 (annual cost) ÷ 1,800 hours = $67.31/
hour). See supra note 120.
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registration statements (of which 11 are
funds of hedge funds) and 38 posteffective amendments on Form N–2, and
(iii) initial registration statements
covering 3 portfolios and post-effective
amendments covering 35 portfolios on
Form N–3. In addition, Commission
staff also estimates that each year, 157
separate accounts file initial
registrations and 1242 separate accounts
file post-effective amendments on Form
N–4, and 50 separate accounts file
initial registrations and 500 separate
accounts file post-effective amendments
on Form N–6.127 Of the filings on Forms
N–4 and N–6, Commission staff
estimates that half the separate accounts
invest in portfolio companies that
themselves invest in other funds. Thus,
Commission staff estimates that the cost
of the amendments to Forms N–1A, N–
2, N–3, N–4, and N–6 to funds
registering under these forms will be
$2.4 million.128
V. Consideration of Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
Section 2(c) of the Investment
Company Act requires the Commission,
when engaging in rulemaking that
requires it to consider or determine
whether an action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, to
consider whether the action will
promote efficiency, competition, and
capital formation.129 We sought, but did
not receive any comment with respect to
this section.
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A. Rules 12d1–1, 12d1–2 and 12d1–3
Rules 12d1–1, 12d1–2 and 12d1–3
will expand the circumstances in which
funds can invest in other funds without
first obtaining an exemptive order from
the Commission, which can be costly
and time-consuming. We anticipate that
the rules will promote efficiency and
competition. Rule 12d1–1 permits funds
to acquire shares of money market funds
in the same or in a different fund group
in excess of the limitations in section
127 Changes in estimates from the Proposing
Release are due to updated PRA analyses for the
relevant forms. Of the Form N–6 post-effective
amendments, 150 are annual updates and 350 are
additional post-effective amendments. As we said
in the Proposing Release, we assume that registered
funds would include the disclosure only in a posteffective amendment to the annual update. See
Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n.132.
128 The estimate is based on the following
calculation: (((483 + 6542)) ÷ 2) × $542) + (((223 +
38) ÷ 2) × $542 + (11 × $16,500) + (23 × $8,245)
+ (7 separate account portfolios × $542) + (((157 +
1,242) ÷ 2) × $34) + (((50 + 150) ÷ 2) × $34) =
$2,376,618. The increase in costs from the
Proposing Release is due to adjustments for salary
and overhead costs during the intervening period
and the additional cost for funds of hedge funds to
comply with the disclosure requirement.
129 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(c).
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12(d)(1) of the Act. This exemption
allows funds, particularly small funds
without a money market fund in their
complex, to allocate their uninvested
cash more efficiently and thereby
increase competition among funds. In
addition, the final rule provides
additional section 17 relief for funds
that execute transactions with brokerdealers affiliated with money market
funds in which the acquiring funds
invest. This additional relief, we
believe, will allow more funds to take
full advantage of the exemption
provided by the rule.130 Rule 12d1–2
permits an affiliated fund of funds to
acquire limited amounts of securities
issued by funds outside the same fund
group and securities not issued by a
fund. The rule also permits a traditional
equity or bond fund to invest in funds
within the same fund complex. We
believe that this expansion of
investment opportunities will permit
funds to allocate their investments more
efficiently. Rule 12d1–3 allows funds
relying on section 12(d)(1)(F) of the Act
to charge sales loads greater than 11⁄2
percent provided that the aggregate sales
load any investor pays does not exceed
the limits established by the NASD for
funds of funds. We believe this will
increase competition among funds as it
will provide funds with greater
flexibility in structuring their sales
charges. We do not believe that these
exemptive rules, which provide funds
with greater flexibility in their
investments and provide certain funds
of funds greater flexibility in structuring
their sales charges, will have an adverse
impact on capital formation.
B. Amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2,
N–3, N–4, and N–6
The form amendments are designed to
provide better transparency for fund
shareholders with respect to the costs of
investing in funds of funds. The
enhanced disclosure requirements will
provide shareholders with greater access
to information regarding the indirect
costs they bear when a fund in which
they invest purchases shares of other
funds. This information should promote
more efficient allocation of investments
by investors and more efficient
allocation of assets among competing
funds because investors may compare
and choose funds based on their
preferences for cost more easily. The
amendments may also improve
competition, as enhanced disclosure
may prompt funds to provide improved
products and services that may have a
greater appeal to investors. Enhanced
disclosure also may prompt acquiring
130 See
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funds to invest in acquired funds with
lower costs. Finally, we do not believe
that the amendments will have an
adverse impact on capital formation. As
discussed above, we believe that the
amendments will benefit investors.
VI. Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
We have prepared this Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(‘‘FRFA’’) in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
604. It relates to new rules 12d1–1,
12d1–2 and 12d1–3 under the
Investment Company Act, and
amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3,
N–4, and N–6. The Commission
prepared an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (‘‘IRFA’’) in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 603, a
summary of which was published in the
Proposing Release.131
A. Need for the New Rules and Form
Amendments
As described more fully in Section II
of this release, we are adopting rules
12d1–1, 12d1–2 and 12d1–3 to address
the ability of a registered fund to invest
in shares of another fund without first
having to seek Commission approval.
The rules codify and expand upon a
number of exemptive orders we have
issued that permit funds to invest in
other funds. The form amendments are
a critical element of the relief we are
adopting today and are designed to
improve the transparency of the
expenses of funds of funds by requiring
that the expenses of the acquired funds
be aggregated and shown as an
additional expense in the fee table of the
fund of funds.
B. Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comment
In the IRFA for the proposed rules
and form amendments, we requested
comment on any aspect of the IRFA,
including the number of small entities
that are likely to rely on the proposed
rules and amendments and the likely
impact of the proposal on small entities.
We received no comments on the IRFA.
C. Small Entities Subject to the New
Rules and Form Amendments
For purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, a fund is a small entity
if the fund, together with other funds in
the same group of related funds, has net
assets of $50 million or less as of the
end of its most recent fiscal year.132 The
staff estimates, based upon recent
Commission filings, that there are
131 See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at
Section VII.
132 17 CFR 270.0–10.
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approximately 4083 active registered
funds and 88 business development
companies, of which approximately 175
and 65 are small entities,
respectively.133 The staff estimates that
no separate account is a small entity. A
fund that is a small entity, like other
funds, may rely on any of the exemptive
rules if the fund satisfies the rule’s
conditions.
The Commission expects the new
rules to have little impact on small
entities. Like other funds, small entities
will be affected by new rules 12d1–1,
12d1–2 and 12d1–3 only if they
determine to use any of the exemptions
provided by the rules. Few small
entities have applied for relief to engage
in the activities that will be permitted
under the rules. The staff anticipates
that the number of funds, including
small funds, that will engage in the
activities permitted under the rules, will
increase. Nevertheless, the staff believes
that the proportion of small entities
compared to the total number of funds
that engage in these activities will
remain small.
The Commission expects that the
amendments to Forms N–1A and N–2
will have a greater impact on small
entities. The amendments require each
registered fund, including each fund
that is a small entity, that invests in any
other fund to disclose the aggregate
costs of investing in acquired funds. The
staff estimates, based upon Commission
filings, that 140 funds that file on Form
N–1A, and 32 funds (of which 4 are
funds of hedge funds)134 that file on
Form N–2 are small entities.135
Commission staff also estimates that
half of the funds registered under Forms
N–1A and N–2 (excluding funds of
hedge funds) invest in other funds, and
all funds of hedge funds would be
required to make the new disclosure.136
Accordingly, we estimate that 70 funds
that are small entities file on Form N–
1A and 18 funds (including the 4 funds
of hedge funds) that are small entities
file on Form N–2 and would be required
to make the new disclosure.
133 Some or all of the funds may contain multiple
series or portfolios. If a registered investment
company is a small entity, the portfolios or series
it contains are also small entities. The estimated
number of small entities in the IRFA was based on
filings with the Commission current at that time.
134 The 4 funds of hedge funds that are small
entities do not offer their shares continuously in
reliance on rule 415 of the Securities Act.
135 Amendments to Forms N–3, N–4, and N–6 are
not expected to impact small entities because the
staff estimates that no registered separate account
is a small entity.
136 This estimate is based on information in the
Commission’s database of Form N–SAR filings.
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D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping,
and Other Compliance Requirements
The new rules will not impose any
mandatory reporting or recordkeeping
requirements on any person and will
not materially increase other
compliance requirements. Rule 12d1–1
allows funds to invest in money market
funds in excess of section 12(d)(1)(A)
limits. The rule requires that either (i)
the acquiring fund does not pay any
sales charge, distribution fee or service
fee (as defined by NASD Sales Charge
Rule 2830(d)) on the purchase of money
market fund shares, or (ii) the fund’s
adviser waives its fee in an amount
necessary to offset any administrative
fees of the money market fund.137 This
condition may reduce the cost of cash
management (by reducing advisory or
custodial fees relating to money market
instruments) for large and small funds.
In addition, under the rule, a fund that
invests in an unregistered money market
fund will have to ‘‘reasonably believe’’
that the unregistered fund (i) operates in
compliance with rule 2a–7, and (ii)
complies with certain provisions of the
Act. With respect to these conditions,
we believe that if the cost of investing
in a money market fund (registered or
unregistered) exceeds the costs of other
forms of cash management, acquiring
funds, including funds that are small
entities, will not take advantage of the
exemption. Finally, we believe the
additional section 17 relief for acquiring
funds that execute transactions with
broker-dealers that are affiliated solely
as a result of the acquiring fund’s
investment in a money market fund,
will allow more funds to take full
advantage of the exemption provided by
the rule. We believe this additional
relief will be important if a small fund
without a money market fund in its
complex invests, in reliance upon rule
12d1–1, in a money market fund in
another complex and thereby becomes
affiliated with a broker-dealer affiliated
with the money market fund. Without
the relief from certain recordkeeping
and monitoring requirements, small
funds may find it potentially costly or
onerous to monitor transactions with
affiliated broker-dealers.138
Rule 12d1–2 also has no mandatory
reporting, recordkeeping or other
compliance requirements.139 Rule
12d1–3 requires an unaffiliated fund of
funds relying on the rule to limit
aggregate distribution-related costs
137 Rule
12d1–1(b)(1).
supra notes 32–36 and accompanying text.
139 Funds that invest in a money market fund in
reliance on rule 12d1–2, however, must comply
with the conditions of rule 12d1–1. See supra note
62 and accompanying text.
138 See
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under the NASD Sales Charge Rule.140
The rule provides funds greater
flexibility in structuring sales loads,
consistent with the approach Congress
took in section 12(d)(1)(G) to prevent
excessive sales loads in affiliated funds
of funds, while providing shareholders
greater protection by requiring that
funds relying on the rule limit overall
distribution fees (rather than only sales
loads).
Funds that intend to rely on the rules
will no longer incur the expense
associated with filing applications for
comparable exemptive relief from
sections 12(d)(1)(A), (B), (F), and (G),
17(a), 17(e)(2)(A), and 57, and rules
17d–1, 17e–1(b)(3) and 17e–1(d)(2) in
connection with the fund of funds
arrangement permitted by the rules. The
exemptive rules may be of greater
benefit to small funds for which the
benefits of obtaining an order for the
relief described above may not
sufficiently offset the costs of filing an
exemptive application.
The amendments to Forms N–1A and
N–2 require registered funds to include
a line item in the fee table disclosing the
acquiring fund’s pro rata portion of the
cumulative expenses charged by funds
in which the acquiring fund invests.
The amendments include instructions
for calculating the line item’’Acquired
Fund Fees and Expenses.’’ For purposes
of the PRA, Commission staff estimated
that the disclosure requirement for
calculating the line item according to
the instructions will add up to 7 hours
per portfolio to the burden of
completing Forms N–1A and N–2.141
Commission staff also estimated that the
additional cost of including the line
item per portfolio would equal $542 for
Forms N–1A and Form N–2 (excluding
funds of hedge funds).142 The
Commission staff has further estimated,
based on comments received, that a
fund of hedge funds would incur
$16,500 to calculate the new line
item.143 Assuming that half of all small
funds and all small funds of hedge
funds invest in other funds and will be
required to include the additional
disclosure, the Commission staff
estimates that the maximum total
annual cost for small entities to comply
with the form amendments will be
$176,026.144
140 See rule 12d1–3(a); See also supra note 64 and
accompanying text.
141 See supra notes 99–100 and accompanying
text.
142 See supra note 120 and accompanying text.
143 See supra note 103 and accompanying text.
144 Based on recent Commission filings, the staff
estimates that 140 funds that are small entities are
registered under Form N–1A, with an average of 2.7
portfolios per registrant. Commission staff further
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E. Commission Action To Minimize
Effect on Small Entities
The Regulatory Flexibility Act directs
the Commission to consider significant
alternatives that would accomplish the
stated objective, while minimizing any
significant adverse impact on small
entities. In connection with the new
rules, the Commission considered the
following alternatives: (i) The
establishment of differing compliance or
reporting requirements or timetables
that take into account the resources
available to small entities; (ii) the
clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements under the rule
for small entities; (iii) the use of
performance rather than design
standards; and (iv) an exemption from
coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,
for small entities.
The new rules are exemptive, and
compliance with them is voluntary. We
therefore do not believe that special
compliance, timetable, or reporting
requirements or an exemption from
coverage of the rules for small entities
would be appropriate.
The rules do not require any reporting
requirements that could be further
clarified, consolidated, or simplified.
Rule 12d1–1 uses performance rather
than design standards to the extent it
requires that acquiring funds
‘‘reasonably believe’’ that underlying
funds are operating in compliance with
rule 2a–7 and certain provisions of the
Act. This standard is designed to ensure
that a violation on the part of the
acquired fund would not cause the
acquiring fund to lose its exemption
under the rule if it can demonstrate that
it reasonably believed that the acquired
fund was in compliance. In addition,
rule 12d1–3 does not specify the sales
load and distribution-related charges an
acquiring or acquired fund must
impose, but permits funds to determine
the combined charges within the overall
limit set by the NASD Sales Charge
Rule.
With respect to the form amendments,
we believe that any further clarification,
estimates that 28 funds registered with an average
of 1.0 portfolio per registrant and 4 funds of hedge
funds registered under Form N–2 are small entities.
The staff’s estimate assumes that all funds of hedge
funds and half of all other portfolios would include
the proposed disclosure. The maximum cost
estimate is based on the following calculation: ((140
x 2.7) + (28 x 1.00)) 2 portfolios x $542 = $110,026)
+ (4 x $16,500 = $66,000) = $176,026. The increase
from the Proposing Release is due to adjustments
for salary and overhead costs during the intervening
period and the additional cost for funds of hedge
funds to comply with the disclosure requirement.
Amendments to Forms N–3, N–4 and N–6 are not
expected to impact small entities because the staff
estimates that no registered separate account is a
small entity.
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consolidation, or simplification of the
requirements to report expenses of
acquired funds for small funds would
not be consistent with the protection of
investors. A different requirement,
including differing compliance or
reporting requirements or timetables,
could compromise the intent to provide
investors with cost information that will
allow them to make direct comparisons
to the costs of alternative fund of funds
arrangements and to the costs of a more
traditional fund. Performance standards
also would not provide this important
benefit to investors. An exemption for
small entities would defeat the purposes
of the amendments for the same reasons.
VII. Statutory Authority
The Commission is adopting rules
12d1–1, 12d1–2 and 12d1–3 under the
authority set forth in sections 6(c),
12(d)(1)(J), and 38(a) of the Act (15
U.S.C. 80a–6(c), 80a–12(d)(1)(J), 80a–
37(a)). The Commission is also adopting
amendments to Forms N–1A, N–2, N–3,
N–4, and N–6 under the authority set
forth in sections 6, 7(a), 10 and 19(a) of
the Securities Act (15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g(a),
77j, 77s(a)), and sections 8(b), 24(a), 30,
and 38(a) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–8(b),
80a–24(a), 80a–29, and 80a–37(a)).
List of Subjects
17 CFR Part 239
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
17 CFR Parts 270 and 274
Investment companies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
Text of Rules and Form Amendments
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Commission is amending
Title 17, Chapter II of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
I
PART 239—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
1. The authority citation for part 239
continues to read, in part, as follows:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s,
77z–2, 77x–3, 77sss, 78c, 78l, 78m, 78n,
78o(d), 78u–5, 78w(a), 78ll(d), 79e, 79f, 79g,
79j, 79l, 79m, 79n, 79q, 79t, 80a–9, 80a–10,
10a–13, 80a–8, 80a–24, 80a–26, 80a–29, 80a–
30, and 80a–37, unless otherwise noted.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 270—RULES AND
REGULATIONS, INVESTMENT
COMPANY ACT OF 1940
2. The authority citation for part 270
is amended by revising the subauthority
for § 270.12d1–1 to read as follows:
I
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Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80a–1 et seq., 80a–
34(d), 80a–37, and 80a–39, unless otherwise
noted;
*
*
*
*
*
Sections 270.12d1–1, 270.12d1–2, and
270.12d1–3 are also issued under 15 U.S.C.
80a–6(c), 80a–12(d)(1)(J), and 80a–37(a).
*
*
*
*
*
3. Sections 270.12d1–1, 270.12d1–2,
and 270.12d1–3 are added to read as
follows:
I
§ 270.12d1–1 Exemptions for investments
in money market funds.
(a) Exemptions for acquisition of
money market fund shares. If the
conditions of paragraph (b) of this
section are satisfied, notwithstanding
sections 12(d)(1)(A), 12(d)(1)(B), 17(a),
and 57 of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–
12(d)(1)(A), 80a–12(d)(1)(B), 80a–17(a),
and 80a–56), and § 270.17d–1:
(1) An investment company
(‘‘acquiring fund’’) may purchase and
redeem shares issued by a money
market fund; and
(2) A money market fund, any
principal underwriter thereof, and a
broker or a dealer may sell or otherwise
dispose of shares issued by the money
market fund to an acquiring fund.
(b) Conditions—(1) Fees. The
acquiring fund pays no sales charge, as
defined in rule 2830(b)(8) of the
Conduct Rules of the NASD (‘‘sales
charge’’), or service fee, as defined in
rule 2830(b)(9) of the Conduct Rules of
the NASD, charged in connection with
the purchase, sale, or redemption of
securities issued by a money market
fund (‘‘service fee’’); or the acquiring
fund’s investment adviser waives its
advisory fee in an amount necessary to
offset any sales charge or service fee.
(2) Unregistered money market funds.
If the money market fund is not an
investment company registered under
the Act:
(i) The acquiring fund reasonably
believes that the money market fund
satisfies the following conditions as if it
were a registered open-end investment
company:
(A) Operates in compliance with
§ 270.2a–7;
(B) Complies with sections 17(a), (d),
(e), 18, and 22(e) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–17(a), (d), (e), 80a–18, and 80a–
22(e));
(C) Has adopted procedures designed
to ensure that it complies with sections
17(a), (d), (e), 18, and 22(e) of the Act
(15 U.S.C. 80a–17(a), (d), (e), 80a–18,
and 80a–22(e)), periodically reviews
and updates those procedures, and
maintains books and records describing
those procedures;
(D) Maintains the records required by
§§ 270.31a–1(b)(1), 270.31a–1(b)(2)(ii),
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270.31a–1(b)(2)(iv), and 270.31a–1(b)(9);
and
(E) Preserves permanently, the first
two years in an easily accessible place,
all books and records required to be
made under paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(C) and
(D) of this section, and makes those
records available for examination on
request by the Commission or its staff;
and
(ii) The adviser to the money market
fund is registered with the Commission
as an investment adviser under section
203 of the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b–3).
(c) Exemption from certain
monitoring and recordkeeping
requirements under § 270.17e–1.
Notwithstanding the requirements of
§§ 270.17e–1(b)(3) and 270.17e–1(d)(2),
the payment of a commission, fee, or
other remuneration to a broker shall be
deemed as not exceeding the usual and
customary broker’s commission for
purposes of section 17(e)(2)(A) of the
Act if:
(1) The commission, fee, or other
remuneration is paid in connection with
the sale of securities to or by an
acquiring fund;
(2) The broker and the acquiring fund
are affiliated persons because each is an
affiliated person of the same money
market fund; and
(3) The acquiring fund is an affiliated
person of the money market fund solely
because the acquiring fund owns,
controls, or holds with power to vote
five percent or more of the outstanding
securities of the money market fund.
(d) Definitions. (1) Investment
company includes a company that
would be an investment company under
section 3(a) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–
3(a)) but for the exceptions to that
definition provided for in sections
3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–3(c)(1) and 80a–3(c)(7)).
(2) Money market fund means:
(i) An open-end management
investment company registered under
the Act that is regulated as a money
market fund under § 270.2a–7; or
(ii) A company that would be an
investment company under section 3(a)
of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–3(a)) but for
the exceptions to that definition
provided for in sections 3(c)(1) and
3(c)(7) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(1)
and 80a–3(c)(7)) and that:
(A) Is limited to investing in the types
of securities and other investments in
which a money market fund may invest
under § 270.2a–7; and
(B) Undertakes to comply with all the
other requirements of § 270.2a–7, except
that, if the company has no board of
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directors, the company’s investment
adviser performs the duties of the board
of directors.
§ 270.12d1–2 Exemptions for investment
companies relying on section 12(d)(1)(G) of
the Act.
(a) Exemption to acquire other
securities. Notwithstanding section
12(d)(1)(G)(i)(II) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–12(d)(1)(G)(i)(II)), a registered openend investment company or a registered
unit investment trust that relies on
section 12(d)(1)(G) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–12(d)(1)(G)) to acquire securities
issued by another registered investment
company that is in the same group of
investment companies may acquire, in
addition to Government securities and
short-term paper:
(1) Securities issued by an investment
company, other than securities issued
by another registered investment
company that is in the same group of
investment companies, when the
acquisition is in reliance on section
12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F) of the Act (15
U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(A) or 80a–
12(d)(1)(F));
(2) Securities (other than securities
issued by an investment company); and
(3) Securities issued by a money
market fund, when the acquisition is in
reliance on § 270.12d1–1.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, money market fund has the
same meaning as in § 270.12d1–1(d)(2).
§ 270.12d1–3 Exemptions for investment
companies relying on section 12(d)(1)(F) of
the Act.
(a) Exemption from sales charge
limits. A registered investment company
(‘‘acquiring fund’’) that relies on section
12(d)(1)(F) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–
12(d)(1)(F)) to acquire securities issued
by an investment company (‘‘acquired
fund’’) may offer or sell any security it
issues through a principal underwriter
or otherwise at a public offering price
that includes a sales load of more than
11⁄2 percent if any sales charges and
service fees charged with respect to the
acquiring fund’s securities do not
exceed the limits set forth in rule 2830
of the Conduct Rules of the NASD
applicable to a fund of funds.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the terms fund of funds, sales
charge, and service fee have the same
meanings as in rule 2830(b) of the
Conduct Rules of the NASD.
PART 274—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
ACT OF 1940
4. The authority citation for part 274
continues to read in part as follows:
I
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Fmt 4701
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Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s,
78c(b), 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o(d), 80a–8, 80a–24,
80a–26, and 80a–29, unless otherwise noted.
*
*
*
*
*
5. Form N–1A (referenced in
§§ 239.15A and 274.11A), Item 3, is
amended by adding paragraph (f) to
Instruction 3 to read as follows:
Note: The text of Form N–1A does not, and
this amendment will not, appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
Form N–1A
*
*
*
*
*
Item 3. Risk/Return Summary: Fee Table
*
*
*
*
*
Instructions
*
*
*
*
*
3. Annual Fund Operating Expenses.
*
*
*
*
*
(f)(i) If the Fund (unless it is a Feeder
Fund) invests in shares of one or more
Acquired Funds, add a subcaption to
the ‘‘Annual Fund Operating Expenses’’
portion of the table directly above the
subcaption titled ‘‘Total Annual Fund
Operating Expenses.’’ Title the
additional subcaption: ‘‘Acquired Fund
Fees and Expenses.’’ Disclose in the
subcaption fees and expenses incurred
indirectly by the Fund as a result of
investment in shares of one or more
Acquired Funds. For purposes of this
item, an ‘‘Acquired Fund’’ means any
company in which the Fund invests or
has invested during the relevant fiscal
period that (A) is an investment
company or (B) would be an investment
company under section 3(a) of the
Investment Company Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–3(a)) but for the exceptions to that
definition provided for in sections
3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the Investment
Company Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(1) and
80a–3(c)(7)). If a Fund uses another term
in response to other requirements of this
Form to refer to Acquired Funds, it may
include that term in parentheses
following the subcaption title. In the
event the fees and expenses incurred
indirectly by the Fund as a result of
investment in shares of one or more
Acquired Funds do not exceed 0.01
percent (one basis point) of average net
assets of the Fund, the Fund may
include these fees and expenses under
the subcaption ‘‘Other Expenses’’ in lieu
of this disclosure requirement.
(ii) Determine the ‘‘Acquired Fund
Fees and Expenses’’ according to the
following formula:
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 123 / Tuesday, June 27, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
36657
( F1 /FY ) * AI1 * D1 + ( F2 /FY ) * AI 2 * D 2 + ( F3 /FY ) * AI3 * D3 + Transaction Fees + Incentive Allocations
AFFE =
Average Net Assets of the Fund
s
a. Redesignating Instruction 10 titled
‘‘Example’’ as Instruction 11; and
b. Adding new Instruction 10. The
addition reads as follows:
Note: The text of Form N–2 does not, and
this amendment will not, appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
FORM N–2
*
*
*
*
*
Item 3. Fee Table and Synopsis
1. * * *
Instructions:
*
*
*
*
*
10. a. If the Registrant invests, or
intends to invest based upon the
anticipated net proceeds of the present
offering, in shares of one or more
‘‘Acquired Funds,’’ add a subcaption to
the ‘‘Annual Expenses’’ portion of the
table directly above the subcaption
titled ‘‘Total Annual Expenses.’’ Title
the additional subcaption: ‘‘Acquired
Fund Fees and Expenses.’’ Disclose in
the subcaption fees and expenses
incurred indirectly by the Registrant as
a result of investment in shares of one
or more Acquired Funds. For purposes
of this item, an ‘‘Acquired Fund’’ means
any company in which the Registrant
invests or intends to invest (A) that is
an investment company or (B) that
would be an investment company under
section 3(a) of the 1940 Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–3(a)) but for the exceptions to that
definition provided for in sections
3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the 1940 Act (15
U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(1) and 80a–3(c)(7)). If a
Registrant uses another term in response
to other requirements of this Form to
refer to Acquired Funds, it may include
that term in parentheses following the
subcaption title. In the event the fees
and expenses incurred indirectly by the
Registrant as a result of investment in
shares of one or more Acquired Funds
do not exceed 0.01 percent (one basis
point) of average net assets of the
Registrant, the Registrant may include
these fees and expenses under the
subcaption ‘‘Other Expenses’’ in lieu of
this disclosure requirement.
b. Determine the ‘‘Acquired Fund
Fees and Expenses’’ according to the
following formula:
( F1 /FY ) * AI1 * D1 + ( F2 /FY ) * AI 2 * D 2 + ( F3 /FY ) * AI3 * D3 + Transaction Fees + Incentive Allocations
AFFE =
Average Net Assets of the Registrant
s
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18:33 Jun 26, 2006
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E:\FR\FM\27JNR3.SGM
27JNR3
ER27JN06.001
from fee waivers or reimbursements by
the Acquired Funds’ investment
advisers or sponsors; and (ii) Acquired
Fund expenses do not include expenses
(i.e., performance fees) that are incurred
solely upon the realization and/or
distribution of a gain. If an Acquired
Fund has no operating history, include
in the Acquired Funds’ expenses any
fees payable to the Acquired Fund’s
investment adviser or its affiliates stated
in the Acquired Fund’s registration
statement, offering memorandum or
other similar communication without
giving effect to any performance.
(v) To determine the average invested
balance (AI1), the numerator is the sum
of the amount initially invested in an
Acquired Fund during the most recent
fiscal year (if the investment was held
at the end of the previous fiscal year,
use the amount invested as of the end
of the previous fiscal year) and the
amounts invested in the Acquired Fund
no less frequently than monthly during
the period the investment is held by the
Fund (if the investment was held
through the end of the fiscal year, use
each month-end through and including
the fiscal year-end). Divide the
numerator by the number of
measurement points included in the
calculation of the numerator (i.e., if an
investment is made during the fiscal
year and held for 3 succeeding months,
the denominator would be 4).
(vi) A New Fund should base the
Acquired Fund fees and expenses on
assumptions as to the specific Acquired
Funds in which the New Fund expects
to invest. Disclose in a footnote to the
table that Acquired Fund fees and
expenses are based on estimated
amounts for the current fiscal year.
(vii) The Fund may clarify in a
footnote to the fee table that the total
annual fund operating expenses under
Item 3 do not correlate to the ratio of
expenses to average net assets given in
response to Item 8, which reflects the
operating expenses of the Fund and
does not include Acquired Fund fees
and expenses.
*
*
*
*
*
6. Form N–2 (referenced in §§ 239.14
and 274.11a–1), Item 3, paragraph 1, is
amended by:
ER27JN06.000
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
Where:
AFFE = Acquired Fund fees and
expenses;
F1, F2, F3, . . . = Total annual operating
expense ratio for each Acquired
Fund;
FY = Number of days in the relevant
fiscal year.
AI1, AI2, AI3, . . = Average invested
balance in each Acquired Fund;
D1, D2, D3, . . . = Number of days
invested in each Acquired Fund;
and
‘‘Transaction Fees’’ = The total amount
of sales loads, redemption fees, or
other transaction fees paid by the
Fund in connection with acquiring
or disposing of shares in any
Acquired Funds during the most
recent fiscal year.
‘‘Incentive Allocations’’ = Any
allocation of capital from the
Acquiring Fund to the adviser of
the Acquired Fund (or its affiliate)
based on a percentage of the
Acquiring Fund’s income, capital
gains and/or appreciation in the
Acquired Fund.
(iii) Calculate the average net assets of
the Fund for the most recent fiscal year,
as provided in Item 8(a) (see Instruction
4 to Item 8(a)).
(iv) The total annual operating
expense ratio used for purposes of this
calculation (F1) is the annualized ratio
of operating expenses to average net
assets for the Acquired Fund’s most
recent fiscal period as disclosed in the
Acquired Fund’s most recent
shareholder report. If the ratio of
expenses to average net assets is not
included in the most recent shareholder
report or the Acquired Fund is a newly
formed fund that has not provided a
shareholder report, then the ratio of
expenses to average net assets of the
Acquired Fund is the ratio of total
annual operating expenses to average
annual net assets of the Acquired Fund
for its most recent fiscal period as
disclosed in the most recent
communication from the Acquired Fund
to the Fund. For purposes of this
instruction: (i) Acquired Fund expenses
include increases resulting from
brokerage service and expense offset
arrangements and reductions resulting
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
36658
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 123 / Tuesday, June 27, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Where:
AFFE = Acquired Fund fees and
expenses;
F1, F2, F3, . . . = Total annual
operating expense ratio for each
Acquired Fund;
FY = Number of days in the relevant
fiscal year.
AI1, AI2, AI3, . . . =Average invested
balance in each Acquired Fund;
D1, D2, D3, . . . = Number of days
invested in each Acquired Fund;
‘‘Transaction Fees’’= The total amount
of sales loads, redemption fees, or
other transaction fees paid by the
Registrant in connection with
acquiring or disposing of shares in
any Acquired Funds during the
most recent fiscal year; and
‘‘Incentive Allocations’’= Any allocation
of capital from the Acquiring Fund
to the adviser of the Acquired Fund
(or its affiliate) based on a
percentage of the Acquiring Fund’s
income, capital gains and/or
appreciation in the Acquired Fund.
c. Calculate the average net assets of
the Registrant for the most recent fiscal
year, as provided in Item 4.1 (see
Instruction 15 to Item 4.1) and include
the anticipated net proceeds of the
present offering.
d. The total annual operating expense
ratio used for purposes of this
calculation (F1) is the annualized ratio
of operating expenses to average net
assets for the Acquired Fund’s most
recent fiscal period as disclosed in the
Acquired Fund’s most recent
shareholder report. If the ratio of
expenses to average net assets is not
included in the most recent shareholder
report or the Acquired Fund is a newly
formed fund that has not provided a
shareholder report, then the ratio of
expenses to average net assets of the
Acquired Fund is the ratio of total
annual operating expenses to average
annual net assets of the Acquired Fund
for its most recent fiscal period as
disclosed in the most recent
communication from the Acquired Fund
to the Registrant. If the Registrant has a
written fee agreement with the Acquired
Fund that would affect the ratio of
expenses to average net assets as
disclosed in the Acquired Fund’s most
recent shareholder report, the Registrant
should determine the ratio of expenses
to average net assets for the Acquired
Fund’s most recent fiscal period using
the written fee agreement. For purposes
of this instruction: (i) Acquired Fund
expenses include increases resulting
from brokerage service and expense
offset arrangements and reductions
resulting from fee waivers or
reimbursements by the Acquired Funds’
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17:53 Jun 26, 2006
Jkt 208001
investment advisers or sponsors; and (ii)
Acquired Fund expenses do not include
any expenses (i.e., performance fees)
that are calculated solely upon the
realization and/or distribution of gains,
or the sum of the realization and/or
distribution of gains and unrealized
appreciation of assets distributed inkind. If an Acquired Fund has no
operating history, include in the
Acquired Funds’ expenses any fees
payable to the Acquired Fund’s
investment adviser or its affiliates stated
in the Acquired Fund’s registration
statement, offering memorandum or
other similar communication without
giving effect to any performance.
e. If a Registrant has made
investments in the most recent fiscal
year, to determine the average invested
balance (AI1), the numerator is the sum
of the amount initially invested in an
Acquired Fund during the most recent
fiscal year (if the investment was held
at the end of the previous fiscal year,
use the amount invested as of the end
of the previous fiscal year) and the
amounts invested in the Acquired Fund
no less frequently than monthly during
the period the investment is held by the
Registrant (if the investment was held
through the end of the fiscal year, use
each month-end through and including
the fiscal year-end). Divide the
numerator by the number of
measurement points included in the
calculation of the numerator (i.e., if an
investment is made during the fiscal
year and held for 3 succeeding months,
the denominator would be 4).
f. For investments based upon the
anticipated net proceeds from the
present offering, base the ‘‘Acquired
Fund Fees and Expenses’’ on: (i)
Assumptions about specific funds in
which the Registrant expects to invest,
(ii) estimates of the amount of assets the
Registrant expects to invest in each of
those Acquired Funds, and (iii) an
assumption that the investment was
held for all of the Registrant’s most
recent fiscal year and was subject to the
Acquired Funds’ fees and expenses for
that year. Disclose in a footnote to the
table that Acquired Fund fees and
expenses are based on estimated
amounts for the current fiscal year.
g. If an Acquired Fund charges an
Incentive Allocation or any other fee
based on income, capital gains and/or
appreciation (i.e., performance fee), the
Registrant must include a footnote to the
‘‘Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses’’
subcaption that: (i) Discloses the typical
Incentive Allocation or such other fee
(expressed as a percentage) to be paid to
the investment advisers of the Acquired
Funds (or an affiliate); (ii) discloses that
Acquired Funds’ fees and expenses are
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Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
based on historic fees and expenses; and
(iii) states that future Acquired Funds’
fees and expenses may be substantially
higher or lower because certain fees are
based on the performance of the
Acquired Funds, which may fluctuate
over time.
h. If the Registrant is a Feeder Fund,
reflect the aggregate expenses of the
Feeder Fund and the Master Fund in the
‘‘Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses.’’
The aggregate expenses of the MasterFeeder Fund must include the fees and
expenses incurred indirectly by the
Feeder Fund as a result of the Master
Fund’s investment in shares of one or
more companies (A) that are investment
companies or (B) that would be
investment companies under section
3(a) of the 1940 Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–3(a))
but for the exceptions to that definition
provided for in sections 3(c)(1) and
3(c)(7) of the 1940 Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–
3(c)(1) and 80a–3(c)(7)). For purposes of
this instruction, a ‘‘Master-Feeder
Fund’’ means a two-tiered arrangement
in which one or more investment
companies registered under the 1940
Act (each a ‘‘Feeder Fund’’) holds shares
of a single management investment
company registered under the 1940 Act
(the ‘‘Master Fund’’) in accordance with
section 12(d)(1)(E) of the 1940 Act [15
U.S.C. 80a–12(d)(1)(E)].
i. The Registrant may clarify in a
footnote to the fee table that the total
annual expenses item under Item 3.1 is
different from the ratio of expenses to
average net assets given in response to
Item 4.1, which reflects the operating
expenses of the Registrant and does not
include Acquired Fund fees and
expenses.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Form N–3 (referenced in §§ 239.17a
and 274.11b), Item 3(a), is amended by:
a. In Instruction 16(a), revising the
phrase in the third sentence
‘‘Instructions 18(b), 19(e) and 19(f)’’ to
read ‘‘Instructions 18(b), 19(f), 20(e),
and 20(f)’’’;
b. Redesignating Instruction 19 titled
‘‘Example’’ as Instruction 20; and
c. Adding new Instruction 19.
The addition reads as follows:
Note: The text of Form N–3 does not, and
this amendment will not, appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
FORM N–3
*
*
*
*
*
Item 3. Synopsis or Highlights
(a) * * *
Instructions:
*
*
*
*
*
19. (a) If the Registrant invests in
shares of one or more Acquired Funds,
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 123 / Tuesday, June 27, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
add a subcaption to the ‘‘Annual
Expenses’’ portion of the table directly
above the subcaption titled ‘‘Total
Annual Expenses.’’ Title the additional
subcaption: ‘‘Acquired Fund Fees and
Expenses.’’ Disclose in the subcaption
fees and expenses incurred indirectly by
the Registrant as a result of investment
in shares of one or more Acquired
Funds. For purposes of this Item, an
‘‘Acquired Fund’’ means any company
in which the Fund invests that (i) is an
investment company or (ii) would be an
investment company under section 3(a)
of the 1940 Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–3(a)) but
for the exceptions to that definition
provided for in sections 3(c)(1) and
3(c)(7) of the 1940 Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–
3(c)(1) and 80a–3(c)(7)). If a Registrant
uses another term in response to other
requirements of this Form to refer to
Acquired Funds, it may include that
term in parentheses following the
subcaption title. In the event the fees
36659
and expenses incurred indirectly by the
Registrant as a result of investment in
shares of one or more Acquired Funds
do not exceed 0.01 percent (one basis
point) of average net assets of the
Registrant, the Registrant may include
these fees and expenses under the
subcaption ‘‘Other Expenses’’ in lieu of
this disclosure requirement.
(b) Determine the ‘‘Acquired Fund
Fees and Expenses’’ according to the
following formula:
Where:
AFFE = Acquired Fund fees and
expenses;
F1, F2, F3, ... = Total annual operating
expense ratio for each Acquired
Fund;
FY = Number of days in the relevant
fiscal year.
AI1, AI2, AI3, ... = Average invested
balance in each Acquired Fund;
D1, D2, D3, ... = Number of days invested
in each Acquired Fund; and
‘‘Transaction Fees’’ = The total amount
of sales loads, redemption fees, or
other transaction fees paid by the
Registrant in connection with
acquiring or disposing of shares in
any Acquired Funds during the
most recent fiscal year.
(c) Calculate the average net assets of
the Registrant for the most recent fiscal
year, as provided in Item 4(a) (see
Instruction 10 to Item 4(a)).
(d) The total annual operating
expense ratio used for purposes of this
calculation (F1) is the annualized ratio
of operating expenses to average net
assets for the Acquired Fund’s most
recent fiscal period as disclosed in the
Acquired Fund’s most recent
shareholder report. If the ratio of
expenses to average net assets is not
included in the most recent shareholder
report or the Acquired Fund is a newly
formed fund that has not provided a
shareholder report, then the ratio of
expenses to average net assets of the
Acquired Fund is the ratio of total
annual operating expenses to average
annual net assets of the Acquired Fund
for its most recent fiscal period as
disclosed in the most recent
communication from the Acquired Fund
to the Registrant. For purposes of this
instruction, Acquired Fund expenses
include increases resulting from
brokerage service and expense offset
arrangements and reductions resulting
from fee waivers or reimbursements by
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Jkt 208001
the Acquired Funds’ investment
advisers or sponsors.
(e) To determine the average invested
balance (AI1), the numerator is the sum
of the amount initially invested in an
Acquired Fund during the most recent
fiscal year (if the investment was held
at the end of the previous fiscal year,
use the amount invested as of the end
of the previous fiscal year) and the
amounts invested in the Acquired Fund
no less frequently than monthly during
the period the investment is held by the
Registrant (if the investment was held
through the end of the fiscal year, use
each month-end through and including
the fiscal year-end). Divide the
numerator by the number of
measurement points included in the
calculation of the numerator (i.e., if an
investment is made during the fiscal
year and held for 3 succeeding months,
the denominator would be 4).
(f) A New Registrant should base the
‘‘Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses’’ on
assumptions as to the specific Acquired
Funds in which the New Registrant
expects to invest. Disclose in a footnote
to the table that Acquired Fund fees and
expenses are based on estimated
amounts for the current fiscal year.
(g) The Registrant may clarify in a
footnote to the fee table that the total
annual expenses under Item 3 are
different from the ratio of expenses to
average net assets given in response to
Item 4, which reflects the operating
expenses of the Registrant and does not
include Acquired Fund fees and
expenses.
*
*
*
*
*
8. Form N–4 (referenced in §§ 239.17b
and 274.11c), Item 3, is amended by
adding a sentence at the end of
Instruction 17(a) to read as follows:
Note: The text of Form N–4 does not, and
this amendment will not, appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
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Form N–4
*
*
*
*
*
Item 3. Synopsis
*
*
*
*
*
Instructions:
*
*
*
*
*
17. (a) * * * If any Portfolio
Company invests in shares of one or
more Acquired Funds, ‘‘Total Annual
[Portfolio Company] Operating
Expenses’’ for the Portfolio Company
must also include fees and expenses
incurred indirectly by the Portfolio
Company as a result of investment in
shares of one or more Acquired Funds,
calculated in accordance with
Instruction 3(f) to Item 3 of Form N–1A
(17 CFR 239.15A; 17 CFR 274.11A). For
purposes of this paragraph, an Acquired
Fund means any company in which the
Portfolio Company invests that (i) is an
investment company or (ii) would be an
investment company under section 3(a)
of the 1940 Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–3(a)) but
for the exceptions to that definition
provided for in sections 3(c)(1) and
3(c)(7) of the 1940 Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–
3(c)(1) and 80a–3(c)(7)).
*
*
*
*
*
9. Form N–6 (referenced in §§ 239.17c
and 274.11d), Item 3, is amended by
adding a sentence at the end of
Instruction 4(b) to read as follows:
Note: The text of Form N–6 does not, and
this amendment will not, appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
Form N–6
*
*
*
*
*
Item 3. Risk/Benefit Summary: Fee
Table
*
*
*
*
Instructions:
*
*
*
*
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( F1 /FY ) * AI1 * D1 + ( F2 /FY ) * AI 2 * D 2 + ( F3 /FY ) * AI3 * D3 + Transaction Fees
AFFE =
Average Net Assets of the Fund
36660
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4. Total Annual [Portfolio Company]
Operating Expenses.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * * If any Portfolio Company
invests in shares of one or more
Acquired Funds, ‘‘Total Annual
[Portfolio Company] Operating
Expenses’’ for the Portfolio Company
must also include fees and expenses
incurred indirectly by the Portfolio
Company as a result of investment in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
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shares of one or more Acquired Funds,
calculated in accordance with
Instruction 3(f) to Item 3 of Form N–1A
(17 CFR 239.15A; 17 CFR 274.11A). For
purposes of this paragraph, an Acquired
Fund means any company in which the
Portfolio Company invests that (i) is an
investment company or (ii) would be an
investment company under section 3(a)
of the Investment Company Act (15
U.S.C. 80a–3(a)) but for the exceptions
to that definition provided for in
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
sections 3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the
Investment Company Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–3(c)(1) and 80a–3(c)(7)).
*
*
*
*
*
By the Commission.
Dated: June 20, 2006.
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 06–5650 Filed 6–26–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 123 (Tuesday, June 27, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36640-36660]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-5650]
[[Page 36639]]
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Part III
Securities and Exchange Commission
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17 CFR Parts 239, 270, and 274
Fund of Funds Investments; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 123 / Tuesday, June 27, 2006 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 36640]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 239, 270, and 274
[Release Nos. 33-8713; IC-27399; File No. S7-18-03]
RIN 3235-AI30
Fund of Funds Investments
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is
adopting three new rules under the Investment Company Act of 1940 that
address the ability of an investment company (``fund'') to acquire
shares of another fund. Section 12(d)(1) of the Act prohibits, subject
to certain exceptions, so-called ``fund of funds'' arrangements, in
which one fund invests in the shares of another. The rules broaden the
ability of a fund to invest in shares of another fund in a manner
consistent with the public interest and the protection of investors.
The Commission also is adopting amendments to forms used by funds to
register under the Investment Company Act and offer their shares under
the Securities Act of 1933. The amendments improve the transparency of
the expenses of funds of funds by requiring that the expenses of the
acquired funds be aggregated and shown as an additional expense in the
fee table of the fund of funds.
DATES: Effective Date: July 31, 2006.
Compliance Dates: All new registration statements on Forms N-1A, N-
2, N-3, N-4, or N-6, and all post-effective amendments that are annual
updates to effective registration statements on Forms N-1A, N-2, N-3,
N-4, or N-6 filed on or after January 2, 2007, must include the
disclosure required by the amendments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dalia Osman Blass, Attorney, or
Penelope W. Saltzman, Branch Chief, Office of Regulatory Policy, (202)
551-6792, Division of Investment Management, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission today is adopting new rules
12d1-1, 12d1-2 and 12d1-3 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the
``Investment Company Act'' or the ``Act'') that address the ability of
an investment company (``fund'' or ``acquiring fund'') registered under
the Act to invest in shares of another investment company (``fund'' or
``acquired fund'').\1\ We also are adopting amendments to Forms N-1A,
N-2, N-3, N-4, and N-6 to require that prospectuses of funds of funds
disclose the expenses investors in the acquiring fund will bear,
including those of any acquired funds.\2\ Forms N-1A and N-2 are the
registration forms used by open-end management funds and closed-end
management funds, respectively, to register under the Act and to offer
their shares under the Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act'').\3\
Forms N-3, N-4 and N-6 are the forms used by insurance company separate
accounts to register under the Act and to offer their variable annuity
and variable life insurance contracts under the Securities Act.
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\1\ The Investment Company Act is codified at 15 U.S.C. 80a. The
new rules will be found in the Code of Federal Regulations at 17 CFR
270.12d1-1, 17 CFR 270.12d1-2, and 17 CFR 270.12d1-3, respectively.
For convenience, any reference we make in this release to rules
12d1-1, 12d1-2 or 12d1-3, or any paragraph of the rules, will be to
those sections of the Code of Federal Regulations.
\2\ Rules requiring use of these forms under both the Investment
Company Act and the Securities Act of 1933 may be found in the Code
of Federal Regulations at: 17 CFR 239.15A, 17 CFR 274.11A (Form N-
1A); 17 CFR 239.14, 17 CFR 274.11a-1 (Form N-2); 17 CFR 239.17a, 17
CFR 274.11b (Form N-3); 17 CFR 239.17b, 17 CFR 274.11c (Form N-4);
and 17 CFR 239.17c, 17 CFR 274.11d (Form N-6).
\3\ The Securities Act is codified at 15 U.S.C. 77a. The terms
``open-end management funds'' and ``closed-end management funds''
are defined in 15 U.S.C. 80a-5(a)(1) and (2), respectively.
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Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Discussion
A. Rule 12d1-1: Investments in Money Market Funds
1. Scope of Exemption
2. Conditions
B. Rule 12d1-2: Affiliated Funds of Funds
1. Investments in Unaffiliated Funds
2. Investments in Other Types of Issuers
3. Investments in Money Market Funds
C. Rule 12d1-3: Unaffiliated Funds of Funds
D. Amendments to Disclosure Forms: Transparency of Fund of Funds
Expenses
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
IV. Cost-Benefit Analysis
V. Consideration of Promotion of Efficiency, Competition, and
Capital Formation
VI. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
VII. Statutory Authority
Text of Rules and Form Amendments
I. Background
The Federal securities laws restrict substantially the ability of a
fund to invest in shares of other funds. These restrictions are
designed to prevent fund of funds arrangements that have been used in
the past to enable investors in an acquiring fund to control the assets
of an acquired fund and use those assets to enrich themselves at the
expense of acquired fund shareholders.\4\ Under section 12(d)(1) of the
Act, funds are subject to certain prohibitions relating to fund of
funds investments. Section 12(d)(1)(A) prohibits a registered fund (and
companies or funds it controls) from--
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\4\ For a discussion of these ``pyramiding'' schemes and the
additional problems fund of funds arrangements can create for
shareholders, see Fund of Funds Investments, Investment Company Act
Release No. 26198 (Oct. 1, 2003) [68 FR 58226 (Oct. 8, 2003)]
(``Proposing Release''). See also U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, Investment Trusts and Investment Companies, H.R. Doc No.
279, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 3, at 2721-95 (1939).
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Acquiring more than three percent of a fund's outstanding
voting securities;
Investing more than five percent of its total assets in
any one acquired fund; or
Investing more than ten percent of its total assets in all
acquired funds.\5\
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\5\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(A). If the acquiring fund is not
registered under the Act, the prohibitions apply only with respect
to its acquisition of securities in funds that are registered under
the Act. Funds (together with companies or funds they control and
funds that have the same adviser) also are limited to acquiring no
more than 10 percent of the outstanding voting stock of a closed-end
fund. 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(C).
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Section 12(d)(1)(B) prohibits a registered open-end fund from
selling securities to any fund (including unregistered funds) if, after
the sale, the acquiring fund would--
Together with companies and funds it controls, own more
than three percent of the acquired fund's voting securities; or
Together with other funds (and companies they control) own
more than ten percent of the acquired fund's voting securities.\6\
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\6\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(B). By limiting the sale of
registered fund shares to other funds, section 12(d)(1)(B) prevents
the creation of a fund of registered funds regardless of the
limitations of U.S. law to regulate the activities of foreign funds.
For a discussion of the events that led to the adoption of sections
12(d)(1)(A) and 12(d)(1)(B) of the Act, see Proposing Release, supra
note 4, at nn. 7-13 and accompanying text.
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Although these two provisions of section 12(d)(1) have proven quite
effective in putting a stop to the abusive practices that characterized
previous fund of funds arrangements, Congress has recognized that they
also had the effect of preventing legitimate fund of funds
arrangements. To prevent this, Congress created three statutory
exceptions.\7\ Our rulemaking today relates to two of those exceptions:
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\7\ See sections 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(E), 15 U.S.C. 80a-
12(d)(1)(F), and 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(G).
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Unaffiliated Fund of Funds Arrangements. Section 12(d)(1)(F)
permits a registered fund to take small positions in an unlimited
number of other funds (an ``unaffiliated fund of
[[Page 36641]]
funds''). A fund taking advantage of the exception provided in section
12(d)(1)(F) of the Act (and its affiliated persons) may acquire no more
than three percent of another fund's outstanding stock; \8\ cannot
charge a sales load greater than 1\1/2\ percent; \9\ and is restricted
in its ability to redeem shares of the acquired fund.\10\ In addition,
the fund's adviser would not be able to influence the outcome of
shareholder votes in the acquired fund.\11\
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\8\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(F)(i).
\9\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(F)(ii).
\10\ A fund whose shares are acquired pursuant to section
12(d)(1)(F) is not obligated to redeem more than 1 percent of its
total outstanding securities during any period of less than 30 days.
15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(F).
\11\ Section 12(d)(1)(F), by reference to section 12(d)(1)(E) of
the Act, requires the acquiring fund to vote shares of an acquired
fund either by seeking instructions from the acquiring fund's
shareholders, or to vote the shares in the same proportion as the
vote of all other shareholders of the acquired fund. See 15 U.S.C.
80a-12(d)(1)(E)(iii)(aa).
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Affiliated Fund of Funds Arrangements. Section 12(d)(1)(G) permits
a registered open-end fund or unit investment trust (``UIT'')\12\ to
acquire an unlimited amount of shares of other registered open-end
funds and UITs that are part of the same ``group of investment
companies,'' (typically known as a fund complex).\13\ A fund taking
advantage of this exception (an ``affiliated fund of funds'') is
restricted in the types of other securities it can hold in addition to
shares of registered funds in the same group of investment
companies.\14\ The acquired funds must have a policy against investing
in shares of other funds in reliance on section 12(d)(1)(F) or
12(d)(1)(G) (to prevent multi-tiered structures),\15\ and overall
distribution expenses are limited (to prevent excessive sales
loads).\16\ Relying on this provision, several large fund complexes
include a fund of funds, which allocates and periodically reallocates
its assets among funds in the complex.\17\
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\12\ The Act defines ``unit investment trust'' as a fund that:
(i) Is organized under a trust indenture, contract of custodianship
or agency, or similar instrument; (ii) does not have a board of
directors; and (iii) issues only redeemable securities, each of
which represents an undivided interest in a unit of specified
securities, but does not include a voting trust. 15 U.S.C. 80a-4(2).
\13\ 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(G). For purposes of the exception,
the term ``group of investment companies'' means ``any 2 or more
registered investment companies that hold themselves out to
investors as related companies for purposes of investment and
investor services.'' 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(G)(ii).
\14\ In addition to investing in securities of registered funds
in the same group of investment companies, the Act permits these
funds to invest only in government securities and short-term paper.
See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(G)(i)(II).
\15\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(G)(i)(IV).
\16\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(G)(i)(III). The provision
permits a fund to invest in shares of another fund only if either
(i) the acquiring fund does not charge a sales load or distribution-
related fee or does not pay (and is not assessed) sales loads or
distribution-related fees on securities of the acquired fund, or
(ii) the aggregate sales loads or distribution-related fees charged
by the acquiring fund on its securities and paid by the acquiring
fund on acquired fund securities are not excessive under rules
adopted under section 22(b) [15 U.S.C. 80a-22(b)] or 22(c) [15
U.S.C. 80a-22(c)] by a securities association registered under
section 15A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Exchange
Act'') [15 U.S.C. 78o-3] or the Commission. The NASD has adopted
limits on sales loads and distribution-related fees applicable to
funds as well as to funds of funds. See NASD Rule 2830(d)(3) (``NASD
Sales Charge Rule'').
Under the NASD Sales Charge Rule for funds of funds, if neither
the acquiring nor acquired fund has an asset-based sales charge
(12b-1 fee), the maximum aggregate sales load that can be charged on
sales of acquiring fund and acquired fund shares cannot exceed 8.5
percent. See NASD Sales Charge Rule 2830(d)(3)(A). Any acquiring or
acquired fund that has an asset-based sales charge must individually
comply with the sales charge limitations on funds with an asset-
based sales charge, provided, among other conditions, that if both
funds have an asset-based sales charge, the maximum aggregate asset-
based sales charge cannot exceed .75 of 1 percent per year of the
average annual net assets of both funds; and the maximum aggregate
sales load may not exceed 7.25 percent of the amount invested, or
6.25 percent if either fund pays a service fee. See NASD Sales
Charge Rule 2830(d)(3)(B). The rule is designed so that cumulative
charges for sales-related expenses, no matter how they are imposed,
are subject to equivalent limitations. See Order Approving Proposed
Rule Change Relating to the Limitation of Asset-Based Sales Charges
as Imposed by Investment Companies, Exchange Act Release No. 30897
(July 7, 1992) [57 FR 30985 (July 13, 1992)], at text accompanying
n. 9.
\17\ See, e.g., T. Rowe Price Retirement Funds, Prospectus 1-10
(Oct. 1, 2005).
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II. Discussion
Since 1940 we have provided limited relief for funds to acquire
shares of other funds when the proposed arrangements did not present
the risk of abuses that section 12(d)(1) was designed to prevent. We
issued those orders under our general exemptive authority in section
6(c) of the Act.\18\ In 1996, when Congress added section 12(d)(1)(G),
it also gave us specific authority to exempt any person, security or
transaction, or any class or classes of transactions, from section
12(d)(1) of the Act if the exemption is consistent with the public
interest and the protection of investors.\19\
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\18\ 15 U.S.C. 80a-6(c).
\19\ National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996, Pub.
L. 104-290, Sec. 202, 110 Stat. 3416, 3427 (1996) (codified at 15
U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(J)).
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In October 2003, we proposed three new rules to address the ability
of a registered fund to invest in shares of another fund without first
having to seek Commission approval.\20\ The rules were proposed to
codify and expand upon a number of exemptive orders we have issued that
permit funds to invest in other funds.\21\ We also proposed amendments
to Forms N-1A, N-2, N-3, N-4, and N-6 to require funds of funds to
disclose acquired fund expenses in their prospectuses. We received five
comments on the proposal.\22\ Commenters supported the proposed rules
and amendments, but suggested changes. Today, we are adopting rules
12d1-1, 12d1-2 and 12d1-3, and amendments to Forms N-1A, N-2, N-3, N-4,
and N-6 substantially as proposed, with changes that respond to issues
raised by commenters.
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\20\ Proposing Release, supra note 4.
\21\ See id, at nn. 36, 72 and 87.
\22\ See Comment Letter of Fidelity Management & Research
Company (``FMR'') (Dec. 19, 2003); Comment Letter of the Investment
Company Institute (``ICI'') (Dec. 3, 2003); Comment Letter of IMRC
Group (Nov. 18, 2003); Comment Letter of Man Investments, Inc. (Dec.
1, 2003); Comment Letter of Joel Torrance (June 17, 2004). The
comment letters are available for public inspection and copying in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549 (File No. S7-18-03). The comment letters are
also available on the Commission's Internet Web site (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s71803.shtml).
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A. Rule 12d1-1: Investments in Money Market Funds
Rule 12d1-1 allows funds to invest in shares of money market funds
in excess of the limits of section 12(d)(1). The rule is designed to
permit ``cash sweep'' arrangements in which a fund invests all or a
portion of its available cash in a money market fund rather than
directly in short-term instruments. Commenters agreed with our
assessment that fund investments in money market funds, which did not
exist in 1940, do not raise the concerns that underlie section
12(d)(1).\23\ Some, however, persuaded us to make some modifications to
the rule, which we describe below.\24\
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\23\ See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003); Comment
Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). For a more extensive discussion of
this analysis, see Proposing Release, supra note 4, at nn. 38-39 and
accompanying text.
\24\ One commenter recommended amending rule 17d-1 to permit
joint transactions that would allow funds to take advantage of other
cash management tools, such as joint repurchase agreements where the
fund participates on terms not different from those applicable to
its affiliated participant. See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3,
2003). The broader relief suggested is outside the scope of our
proposals. We are, however, adopting a technical amendment to rule
12d1-1 in response to this commenter's assertion that the proposed
defined term ``Administrative Fees'' could create confusion because
the term is used elsewhere in our rules. See, e.g., 17 CFR 270.11a-3
and Instruction 3 to Item 3 of Form N-1A. We have eliminated the
term and defined the fees subject to the rule in the applicable
provision without any substantive changes to the provision. See rule
12d1-1(b)(1).
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[[Page 36642]]
1. Scope of Exemption
(a) Registered Money Market Funds
Rule 12d1-1 permits a fund to invest an unlimited amount of its
uninvested cash in a money market fund rather than directly in short-
term instruments.\25\ Any investment would, of course, have to be
consistent with the fund's investment objectives and policies.\26\ The
acquired fund may be a fund in the same fund complex or in a different
fund complex. Thus, a fund in a small complex that does not have a
money market fund may invest available cash in an unaffiliated money
market fund.
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\25\ Rule 12d1-1(a). Our exemptive orders had limited cash sweep
investments to 25 percent of the acquiring fund's total assets. See,
e.g., Vanguard Group, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release
Nos. 26406 (Mar. 29, 2004) [69 FR 17460 (Apr. 2, 2004)] (notice) and
26436 (Apr. 23, 2004) (order); Putnam American Government Income
Fund, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 26200 (Oct. 1,
2003) [68 FR 57937 (Oct. 7, 2003)] (notice) and 26414 (Apr. 9, 2004)
(order) (``Putnam Order''); Credit Suisse Asset Management, LLC, et
al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 25789 (Oct. 29, 2002) [67
FR 67220 (Nov. 4, 2002)] (notice) and 25832 (Nov. 22, 2002) (order).
\26\ See infra note 49.
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In addition to providing an exemption from section 12(d)(1) of the
Act, the rule provides exemptions from section 17(a) and rule 17d-1,
which restrict a fund's ability to enter into transactions and joint
arrangements with affiliated persons.\27\ These provisions would
otherwise prohibit an acquiring fund from investing in a money market
fund in the same fund complex,\28\ or prohibit a fund that acquires
five percent or more of the securities of a money market fund in
another fund complex from making any additional investments in the
money market fund.\29\
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\27\ Section 17(a) generally prohibits affiliated persons of a
registered fund (``first-tier affiliates'') or affiliated persons of
the fund's affiliated persons (``second-tier affiliates'') from
selling securities or other property to the fund (or any company the
fund controls). 15 U.S.C. 80a-17(a). Section 17(d) of the Act makes
it unlawful for first- and second-tier affiliates, the fund's
principal underwriters, and affiliated persons of the fund's
principal underwriters, acting as principal, to effect any
transaction in which the fund, or a company it controls, is a joint
or a joint and several participant in contravention of Commission
rules. 15 U.S.C. 80a-17(d). Rule 17d-1(a) prohibits first- and
second-tier affiliates of a registered fund, the fund's principal
underwriters, and affiliated persons of the fund's principal
underwriter, acting as principal, from participating in or effecting
any transaction in connection with any joint enterprise or other
joint arrangement or profit-sharing plan in which the fund (or any
company it controls) is a participant unless an application
regarding the enterprise, arrangement or plan has been filed with
the Commission and has been granted. 17 CFR 270.17d-1.
\28\ An affiliated person of a fund includes any person directly
or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control
with such other person. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(3)(C) (definition of
``affiliated person''). Most funds today are organized by an
investment adviser that advises or provides administrative services
to other funds in the same complex. Funds in a fund complex are
generally under common control of an investment adviser or other
person exercising a controlling influence over the management or
policies of the funds. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(9). Not all advisers
control funds they advise. The determination of whether a fund is
under the control of its adviser, officers, or directors depends on
all the relevant facts and circumstances. See Investment Company
Mergers, Investment Company Act Release No. 25259 (Nov. 8, 2001) [66
FR 57602 (Nov. 15, 2001)], at n. 11. For purposes of this release,
we presume that funds in a fund complex are under common control
because funds that are not affiliated persons would not require, and
thus not rely on, the exemptions from section 17(a) and rule 17d-1.
\29\ An affiliated person of a fund also includes: (i) Any
person directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or holding with
power to vote, five percent or more of the outstanding voting
securities of the fund; and (ii) any person five percent or more of
whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly
owned, controlled, or held with power to vote by the fund. See 15
U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(3)(A), (B). Thus, a fund that acquires five percent
of the securities of another fund would be affiliated with that fund
and any transactions with the fund would be subject to the
limitations of section 17. See supra note 27.
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Commenters agreed with us that an acquiring fund's purchase and
redemption of money market fund shares at net asset value would provide
little opportunity for the insider self-dealing or overreaching that
section 17 was designed to prevent.\30\ They agreed that these
exemptions would benefit funds and their shareholders, supporting our
conclusion that these provisions are appropriate and in the public
interest.\31\
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\30\ See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003).
\31\ See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003); Comment Letter of
FMR (Dec. 19, 2003).
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One commenter expressed concern, however, that without additional
relief from section 17, acquiring funds might not be able to take full
advantage of the proposed exemption.\32\ If a fund in one fund complex
acquired more than five percent of the assets of a money market fund in
another fund complex, any broker-dealer affiliated with that money
market fund would become a (second-tier) affiliated person of the
acquiring fund.\33\ As a result of the affiliation, the broker-dealer's
fee for effecting the sale of securities to the acquiring fund would be
subject to the conditions set forth in rule 17e-1, including the
quarterly board review and recordkeeping requirements with respect to
certain securities transactions involving the affiliated broker-
dealer.\34\ We believe that it is unlikely that a broker-dealer would
be in a position to take advantage of a fund merely because that fund
owned a position in a money market fund affiliated with the broker-
dealer.\35\ Accordingly, the final rule permits an acquiring fund to
pay commissions, fees, or other remuneration to a (second-tier)
affiliated broker-dealer without complying with the quarterly board
review and recordkeeping requirements set forth in rules 17e-1(b)(3)
and 17e-1(d)(2).\36\ This relief is available only if the broker-dealer
and the acquiring fund become affiliated solely because of the
acquiring fund's investment in the money market fund. We believe this
additional relief will enable more funds to take advantage of the
exemption provided by the rule.
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\32\ See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003). Although
the commenter requested additional relief from section 17 of the
Act, the commenter did not specify any sections or rules other than
section 17(e) and rule 17e-1 thereunder. The additional section 17
relief we are providing is limited to certain provisions of rule
17e-1 under the Act.
\33\ See supra note 29.
\34\ Section 17(e)(2) of the Act prohibits an affiliated person
(or second-tier affiliate) of a fund from receiving compensation for
acting as a broker, in connection with the sale of securities to or
by the fund if the compensation exceeds limits prescribed by the
section unless permitted by rule 17e-1 under the Act. 15 U.S.C. 80a-
17(e)(2). Rule 17e-1 sets forth the conditions under which a
commission, fee or other remuneration shall be deemed as not
exceeding the ``usual and customary broker's commission'' for
purposes of section 17(e)(2)(A) of the Act. Rule 17e-1(b)(3)
requires the fund's board of directors, including a majority of the
directors who are not interested persons under section 2(a)(19) of
the Act, to determine at least quarterly that all transactions
effected in reliance on the rule have complied with procedures which
are reasonably designed to provide that the brokerage compensation
is consistent with the rule's standards. Rule 17e-1(d)(2) specifies
the records that must be maintained by each fund with respect to any
transaction effected pursuant to rule 17e-1.
\35\ The money market fund's adviser would have no influence
over the decisions made by the acquiring fund's adviser. In
addition, because the interests of the adviser to the money market
fund and the adviser to the acquiring fund are directly aligned with
their respective funds, transactions between the acquiring fund and
a broker-dealer affiliate of the money market fund are likely to be
at arm's length.
\36\ Rule 12d1-1(c). This exemption also is available for
payments to broker-dealer affiliates of unregistered money market
funds. See infra notes 37-42 and accompanying text. The relief
provided by this exemption is similar to relief provided in a number
of exemptive orders issued by the Commission. See, e.g., SunAmerica
Series Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 21203
(July 14, 1995) [60 FR 37485 (July 20, 1995)] (notice) and 21276
(Aug. 9. 1995) (order); Prudential Investments LLC, et al.,
Investment Company Act Release Nos. 25736 (Sept. 18, 2002) [67 FR
59869 (Sept. 24, 2002)] (notice) and 25771 (Oct. 16, 2002) (order).
An acquiring fund relying on this exemption is required to comply
with all of the provisions of rule 17e-1, except 17e-1(b)(3) and
(d)(2). We do not believe that having to comply with the other
provisions contained in rule 17e-1 would deter acquiring funds from
taking full advantage of the exemption provided by the rule.
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(b) Unregistered Money Market Funds
Rule 12d1-1 also permits funds to invest in money market funds that
are not registered investment companies
[[Page 36643]]
(``unregistered money market funds''). Unregistered money market funds
are typically organized by a fund adviser for the purpose of managing
the cash of other funds in a fund complex and operate in almost all
respects as a registered money market fund, except that their
securities are privately offered and thus not registered under the
Securities Act.\37\ Although a fund's investments in unregistered money
market funds are not restricted by section 12(d)(1), these investments
are subject to the affiliate transaction restrictions in the Act and
rules thereunder and thus require exemptions from section 17(a) and
rule 17d-1.\38\
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\37\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(1) (excepting from the definition of
``investment company'' an issuer whose securities are owned by no
more than 100 persons and which is not making and does not presently
propose to make a public offering of its securities); 15 U.S.C. 80a-
3(c)(7) (excepting from the definition of ``investment company'' an
issuer whose securities are owned exclusively by ``qualified
purchasers'' and which is not making and does not presently propose
to make a public offering of its securities).
\38\ See supra notes 27-29 and accompanying text.
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Commenters had no specific comments on this provision of the
proposal, and we have adopted it substantially as proposed.\39\ The
exemption is available only for investments in an unregistered money
market fund that operates like a money market fund registered under the
Act. To be eligible, an unregistered money market fund is required to
(i) limit its investments to those in which a money market fund may
invest under rule 2a-7 under the Act,\40\ and (ii) undertake to comply
with all the other provisions of rule 2a-7.\41\ In addition, the
unregistered money market fund's adviser must be registered as an
investment adviser with the Commission.\42\ Finally, the acquiring fund
is required to reasonably believe that the unregistered money market
fund operates like a registered money market fund and that it complies
with certain provisions of the Act.\43\ A fund would reasonably believe
that an acquired fund was in compliance with these provisions if, for
example, it received a representation from the acquired fund (or the
adviser to the acquired fund) that the fund would comply with the
relevant provisions in all material respects and if the acquiring fund
had no reason to believe that the acquired fund was not, in fact,
complying with the relevant provisions in all material respects. Thus,
an acquired fund's failure to comply will not automatically result in
the loss of the acquiring fund's exemption.
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\39\ We have made a technical change to conform the wording in
paragraphs 12d1-1(b)(2)(i)(A) through (E) by adding to paragraph
12d1-1(b)(2)(i) the words ``satisfies the following conditions as if
it were a registered open-end investment company.''
\40\ See 17 CFR 270.2a-7.
\41\ Rule 12d1-1(d)(2)(ii).
\42\ Rule 12d1-1(b)(2)(ii). In order for a registered fund to
invest in reliance on rule 12d1-1 in an unregistered money market
fund that does not have a board of directors (because, for example,
it is organized as a limited partnership), the unregistered money
market fund's investment adviser must perform the duties required of
a money market fund's board of directors under rule 2a-7. Rule 12d1-
1(d)(2)(ii)(B).
\43\ Rule 12d1-1(b)(2)(i). To rely on the rule, an acquiring
fund must reasonably believe that the unregistered money market fund
complies, as if it were a registered open-end fund, with provisions
of the Act that limit affiliate transactions (sections 17(a), (d),
and (e)), issuance of senior securities (section 18), and suspension
of redemption rights (section 22(e)). Rule 12d1-1(b)(2)(i)(B). The
fund also must reasonably believe that the unregistered money market
fund (i) has adopted and periodically reviews procedures designed to
ensure compliance with these requirements, and maintains books and
records describing the procedures, and (ii) maintains and preserves
the books and records required under rules 31a-1(b)(1) [17 CFR
270.31a-1(b)(1)], 31a-1(b)(2)(ii) [17 CFR 270.31a-1(b)(2)(ii)], 31a-
1(b)(2)(iv) [17 CFR 270.31a-1(b)(2)(iv)], and 31a-1(b)(9) [17 CFR
270.31a-1(b)(9)]. Rule 12d1-1(b)(2)(i)(C), (D).
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(c) Closed-End Funds of Funds
The exemptions we are adopting are also available for closed-end
funds, including business development companies,\44\ which are closed-
end funds that are exempted from registration under the Act.\45\ In
response to comments, the final rule provides an additional exemption
from section 57 of the Act, which restricts certain transactions
between business development companies and certain of their
affiliates.\46\ This relief is consistent with the relief we are
granting from section 17(a) and rule 17d-1 with respect to affiliated
money market funds. We agree with the commenter that the possibility of
self-dealing or overreaching in the case of business development
companies that invest in money market funds does not appear to be any
greater than investments in money market funds by registered closed-end
funds.
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\44\ A business development company is any closed-end fund that:
(i) Is organized under the laws of, and has its principal place of
business in, any state or states; (ii) is operated for the purpose
of investing in securities described in section 55(a)(1)-(3) of the
Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-54(a)(1)-(3)] and makes available ``significant
managerial assistance'' to the issuers of those securities, subject
to certain conditions; and (iii) has elected under section 54(a) of
the Act to be subject to the sections addressing activities of
business development companies under the Act. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-
2(a)(48). Section 60 of the Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-59] extends the
limits of section 12(d) to a business development company to the
same extent as if it were a registered closed-end fund.
\45\ Section 6(f) of the Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-6(f)] exempts from
registration and other provisions of the Act companies that have
elected to be regulated as business development companies under
section 54 [15 U.S.C. 80a-53].
\46\ 15 U.S.C. 80a-56. See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov.
18, 2003).
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(d) Unregistered Funds of Funds
Unregistered funds also are subject to the section 12(d)(1)
restrictions on the acquisition of shares of registered funds.\47\ As
proposed, the final rule permits unregistered funds to invest their
cash in shares of a registered money market fund. This allows a hedge
fund, for example, to sweep its cash into a registered money market
fund pending investment or distribution of the cash to investors. In
the Proposing Release, we asked whether any special concerns arise with
respect to unregistered funds' use of money market funds in cash sweep
arrangements, and we received no comment on the question.
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\47\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(A); 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(B).
In the case of unregistered investment companies (such as most
foreign funds) the full restrictions of sections 12(d)(1)(A) and (B)
apply. Companies that are unregistered because they are excepted
from the definition of investment company by sections 3(c)(1) and
3(c)(7) of the Act are prohibited from acquiring more than three
percent of the outstanding voting securities of a registered fund.
Both section 3(c)(1) and section 3(c)(7) deem issuers that rely on
these sections to be investment companies for the purposes of
sections 12(d)(1)(A)(i) and 12(d)(1)(B)(i) with respect to their
acquisition of registered funds. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(1); 15
U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(7)(D).
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2. Conditions
As proposed, we are eliminating most of the conditions that have
been included in our exemptive orders.\48\ One condition we have
retained precludes the acquiring fund from paying a sales load,
distribution fee, or service fee on acquired fund shares, or if it
does, the acquiring fund's investment adviser must waive a sufficient
amount of its advisory fee to offset the cost of the loads or
distribution fees.\49\ Rarely do institutional investors (such as an
acquiring fund) pay sales loads or bear distribution expenses on an
investment in a money market fund. Thus, a money market fund that
charges a sales load or
[[Page 36644]]
distribution fees to the acquiring fund may not be an appropriate
investment for that fund. Commenters who addressed the issue generally
supported this condition.\50\
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\48\ See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 36.
\49\ See Rule 12d1-1(b)(1). As discussed in the Proposing
Release, we did not propose to limit the amount an acquiring fund
could invest in a money market fund because a fund's own investment
restrictions should provide appropriate investment limitations. See
Proposing Release, supra note 25, at text following n. 64. With
respect to cash sweeps into unregistered money market funds, we have
also retained the requirement in our prior exemptive orders that the
money market funds operate as if they were money market funds
registered under the Act. As proposed (unlike our exemptive orders),
the final rule requires the acquiring fund to ``reasonably
believe,'' rather than ``determine,'' that the unregistered money
market funds operate in this manner. See supra notes 40-43 and
accompanying text; see, e.g., Putnam Order, supra note 25.
\50\ See Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003). One
commenter recommended we impose another condition to allow a money
market fund to limit the percentage of fund assets that another fund
complex can redeem during a business day as long as the limits are
disclosed in the money market fund's registration statement. Id. We
do not believe this is necessary in the context of money market
funds, which are designed to easily accommodate large redemptions.
Money market funds with large investors, such as a fund of funds,
may need to pay particularly close attention to their obligations
under rule 2a-7, however, because a large redemption may result in a
growth in any deviation between the fund's net asset value per
share, as computed using available market quotations, and the money
market fund's amortized cost per share.
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Unlike our prior exemptive orders, the rule does not limit advisory
fees or require directors to make any special findings that investors
are not paying multiple advisory fees for the same service.\51\ A fund
could pay duplicative fees if an adviser invests a fund's cash in a
money market fund (which itself pays an advisory fee) without reducing
its advisory fee by an amount it was compensated to manage the cash. As
we noted in the Proposing Release, fund directors have fiduciary
duties,\52\ which obligate them to protect funds from being overcharged
for services provided to the fund, regardless of any special findings
we might require. Moreover, and as we describe in more detail below, we
have adopted amendments to the disclosure rules that require a
registered fund of funds to disclose to shareholders expenses paid by
both the acquiring and acquired funds so that shareholders may better
evaluate the costs of investing in a fund with a cash sweep
arrangement.\53\
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\51\ See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 65 and
accompanying text.
\52\ See id, at n. 66 and accompanying text; see also 15 U.S.C.
80a-35(a). See generally 2 T. Frankel, The Regulation of Money
Managers, Sec. 9.05 (2001). Section 15(c) of the Act requires the
board of directors to evaluate the terms (which would include fees,
or the elimination of fees, for services provided by an acquired
fund's adviser) of any advisory contract. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-15(c).
Section 36(b) of the Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-35(b)] imposes on fund
advisers a fiduciary duty with respect to their compensation. We
believe that to the extent advisory services are being performed by
another person, such as the adviser to an acquired money market
fund, this fiduciary duty would require an acquiring fund's adviser
to reduce its fee by the amount that represents compensation for the
services performed by the other person. See Proposing Release, supra
note 4, at n.66.
\53\ Of course, disclosure of the cumulative amount of fees does
not absolve the directors of their obligations to evaluate fund
expenses. See supra note 52; Investment Company Governance,
Investment Company Act Release No. 26520 (July 27, 2004) [69 FR
46378 (Aug. 2, 2004)], at text accompanying n.17. Nevertheless, we
believe that the disclosure requirements are essential because they
provide investors with the relevant information to compare directly
the costs of investing in alternative funds of funds, or the costs
of investing in a fund of funds to a more traditional fund.
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B. Rule 12d1-2: Affiliated Funds of Funds
As discussed above, section 12(d)(1)(G) permits a registered open-
end fund to acquire an unlimited amount of shares of registered open-
end funds and UITs that are part of the same ``group of investment
companies'' as the acquiring fund.\54\ We proposed to codify, and in
some cases expand, three types of relief we have provided for these
fund of funds arrangements that we concluded were consistent with the
public interest and the protection of investors, but that did not
conform to section 12(d)(1)(G) limits. We proposed to permit an
affiliated fund of funds to make investments in addition to shares of
funds in the same group of investment companies. Commenters supported
the proposal, and we are adopting rule 12d1-2 substantially as
proposed.\55\
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\54\ See supra notes 12-17 and accompanying text.
\55\ See, e.g., Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003);
Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003); Comment Letter of Man
Investments, Inc. (Dec. 1, 2003). The other limitations in section
12(d)(1)(G) will continue to apply to a fund of funds relying on
that provision. One commenter requested expanding relief under rule
12d1-2 to permit funds to obtain shares of an acquired fund using
in-kind transfers and exempt such transactions from the ``for cash''
requirement of rule 17a-7 under the Act. See Comment Letter of ICI
(Dec. 3, 2003). That relief is outside the scope of our proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Investments in Unaffiliated Funds
Rule 12d1-2 permits an affiliated fund of funds to acquire
securities of funds that are not part of the same group of investment
companies, subject to the limits in section 12(d)(1)(A) or
12(d)(1)(F).\56\ This exemption, in effect, permits funds to combine
the relief provided by the statutory exceptions. There do not appear to
be any greater risks to an acquired fund or its shareholders if three
percent of its shares are acquired by an affiliated fund of funds as
opposed to being acquired by other types of funds specifically
permitted to purchase shares by section 12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F).\57\
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\56\ Rule 12d1-2(a)(1). A fund relying on section 12(d)(1)(A)
(together with any companies or funds it controls) could not acquire
more than 3 percent of the outstanding voting securities of any
other fund in a different fund group. In addition, the acquiring
fund would be limited to investing no more than 5 percent of its own
assets (together with assets of any companies it controls) in the
securities of any one fund in a different fund group, and no more
than 10 percent of its assets (together with assets of any companies
it controls) in securities of other funds in one or more different
fund groups, in the aggregate. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(A)(i)-
(iii). A fund relying on section 12(d)(1)(F) (together with its
affiliates) could not acquire more than 3 percent of the outstanding
stock of any other fund in a different fund group. The acquiring
fund also would be required either to seek instructions from its
shareholders as to how to vote shares of those acquired funds, or to
vote the shares in the same proportion as the vote of all other
shareholders of the acquired fund. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(F)
(referencing 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(E)). In addition, the acquiring
fund would be limited to charging a sales load of 1\1/2\ percent on
its shares and could be prevented from redeeming more than 1 percent
of the shares of any acquired fund during any period of less than 30
days. Id.
\57\ A commenter also suggested that we clarify the scope of
rule 12d1-2(a)(1) because it could be read to subject investments in
registered funds in the same complex as the acquiring fund to the
limits of sections 12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F). See Comment Letter of
ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). We agree, and the final rule clarifies that the
limits apply only to investments in securities of unaffiliated funds
rather than registered funds in the same complex. See rule 12d1-
2(a)(1).
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2. Investments in Other Types of Issuers
Rule 12d1-2 also provides an exemption from section 12(d)(1)(G) of
the Act to permit an affiliated fund of funds to invest directly in
stocks, bonds, and other types of securities (i.e., securities not
issued by a fund).\58\ Those investments would, of course, have to be
consistent with the fund's investment policies.\59\ A significant
consequence of the rule is that an equity or bond fund can invest any
portion of its assets in an affiliated fund if the acquisition is
consistent with the investment policies of the fund and the
restrictions of the rule.\60\ Commenters agreed that these investments
would allow an acquiring fund greater flexibility in meeting investment
objectives that may not be met as well by investments in other funds in
the same fund group, while not presenting any additional concerns that
section 12(d)(1)(G) was intended to address.\61\
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\58\ Rule 12d1-2(a)(2). Under this exemption, a fund may invest
in any security as that term is defined under the Act. See 15 U.S.C.
80a-2(a)(36).
\59\ See Item 4 of Form N-1A (requiring disclosure of fund's
investment objectives and principal investment strategies).
\60\ See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at nn. 81-82 and
accompanying text. To the extent that a fund that normally invests
directly in securities begins to make investments in affiliated
funds in reliance on the rule, we would expect the fund's directors
to be aware of the investments, particularly in the context of their
consideration of potentially duplicative fees. See supra notes 52-53
and accompanying text.
\61\ See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003); Comment Letter of
IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003).
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3. Investments in Money Market Funds
Rule 12d1-2 permits an affiliated fund of funds to invest in
affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds in reliance on rule 12d1-
1, which, as discussed above, is designed to permit cash sweep
arrangements involving money market funds.\62\ This provision
[[Page 36645]]
allows the affiliated fund of funds the same opportunities as any other
fund to invest in a cash sweep arrangement that will provide the
greatest benefit to the acquiring fund. As proposed, we are
conditioning the investment on compliance with rule 12d1-1 in order to
ensure that the same limitations on sales loads and distribution
expenses apply to any fund's investment in a money market fund. Thus,
any fund that invests in a money market fund in reliance on rule 12d1-2
must comply with the conditions in rule 12d1-1.
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\62\ Rule 12d1-2(a)(3). See supra notes 23-50 and accompanying
text. A collateral effect of our rule is to permit an affiliated
fund of funds to invest in an acquired fund that itself has a cash
sweep arrangement. As discussed above, section 12(d)(1)(G) prohibits
a fund from acquiring shares of another fund that does not have an
investment policy prohibiting it from investing in shares of funds
in reliance on section 12(d)(1)(F) or (G). An acquired fund
investing in a money market fund under a cash sweep arrangement
permitted under rule 12d1-1 would not be relying on either of those
sections. The fees and expenses of acquired funds would be
aggregated and shown in the fee table in the acquiring fund's
prospectus. See discussion below at Section II.D of this release.
We are not, as one commenter suggested, providing expanded
section 17 relief under rule 12d1-2. See Comment Letter of IMRC
Group (Nov. 18, 2003). Affiliated funds of funds' investments in
money market funds will be made in reliance upon rule 12d1-1, and we
are including additional relief from certain provisions of rule 17e-
1 in rule 12d1-1. We do not believe it is necessary to provide a
duplicative exemption under rule 12d1-2. See supra notes 32-35 and
accompanying text.
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C. Rule 12d1-3: Unaffiliated Funds of Funds
Section 12(d)(1)(F) of the Act provides an exemption from section
12(d)(1) that allows a registered fund to invest all its assets in
other registered funds if: (i) The acquiring fund (together with its
affiliates) acquires no more than 3 percent of the outstanding stock of
any acquired fund; and (ii) the sales load charged on the acquiring
fund's shares is no greater than 1\1/2\ percent.\63\
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\63\ See 15 U.S.C. 80a-12(d)(1)(F)(i)-(ii). Section 12(d)(1)(F)
also provides that the acquired fund is not obligated to redeem more
than 1 percent of its outstanding securities held by the acquiring
fund in any period of less than 30 days, and requires the acquiring
fund to vote shares of an acquired fund either by seeking
instructions from the acquiring fund's shareholders or by voting in
the same proportion as the other shareholders of the acquired fund.
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Rule 12d1-3 allows funds relying on section 12(d)(1)(F) to charge
sales loads greater than 1\1/2\ percent provided that the aggregate
sales load any investor pays (i.e., the combined distribution expenses
of both the acquiring and acquired funds) does not exceed the limits on
sales loads established by the NASD for funds of funds.\64\ The rule is
intended to provide funds greater flexibility in structuring sales
loads, consistent with the approach Congress took in section
12(d)(1)(G) to prevent excessive sales loads in affiliated funds of
funds, while providing shareholders greater protection by requiring
that funds relying on the rule limit overall distribution fees (rather
than only sales loads).\65\ We are adopting this rule substantially as
proposed.\66\
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\64\ See NASD Sales Charge Rule 2830(d)(3), supra note 16. We
note that any fund relying on the exemption provided in rule 12d1-3
must comply with the limitations set forth in NASD Sales Charge Rule
2830(d)(3), regardless of whether sales of the fund's shares by
broker-dealers are otherwise subject to the rule according to its
terms. See NASD Sales Charge Rule 2830(d) (NASD Sales Charge Rule
limits apply to sales of open-end funds, any closed-end funds that
make periodic repurchase offers under rule 23c-3(b) under the Act
and offer their shares on a continuous basis, or single payment
plans issued by UITs). Unlike the proposal, the final rule text
limits sales charges and service fees charged with respect to the
acquiring fund, but the rule does not specifically limit those fees
when aggregated with sales charges and service fees charged with
respect to acquired funds. The additional language on aggregation is
not necessary in the rule because limits in NASD Sales Charge Rule
2830(d)(3) specifically apply to fees imposed by the acquiring fund,
the acquired fund and those funds in combination.
\65\ See Proposing Release, supra note 4, at n. 88 and
accompanying text. An affiliated fund of funds may rely on rule
12d1-2 to invest in funds in a different fund complex subject to the
limits of section 12(d)(1)(A) or 12(d)(1)(F). If the acquiring
fund's investment is subject to the limits of section 12(d)(1)(F),
the acquiring fund may also rely on the exemption provided under
rule 12d1-3 to charge sales loads greater than 1\1/2\ percent
provided it complies with the conditions of rule 12d1-3.
\66\ Commenters generally supported this provision. See Comment
Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003); Comment Letter of FMR (Dec. 19, 2003).
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D. Amendments to Disclosure Forms: Transparency of Fund of Funds
Expenses
We are also adopting amendments to our disclosure requirements to
require each fund that invests in shares of other funds to disclose in
its prospectus fee table the expenses of funds in which it invests. The
amendments are designed to provide investors with a better
understanding of the actual costs of investing in a fund that invests
in other funds, which have their own expenses that may be as high or
higher than the acquiring fund's expenses.\67\ Investors may not be
aware of these potentially higher expenses. Most commenters supported
these amendments, which we are adopting substantially as proposed.\68\
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\67\ A fund of funds may have higher fees and expenses than a
fund that invests directly in debt and equity securities.
\68\ See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003); Comment Letter of
FMR (Dec. 19, 2003) (supporting position taken in the ICI comment
letter); Comment Letter of IMRC Group (Nov. 18, 2003); Comment
Letter of Joel Torrance (June 17, 2004).
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Open-End Funds. Form N-1A is used by open-end management funds to
register under the Act and to offer their securities under the
Securities Act. Form N-1A sets forth the disclosure requirements for
fund prospectuses. Our amendments to Form N-1A require any registered
open-end fund investing in shares of another fund to include in its
prospectus fee table an additional line item titled ``Acquired Fund
Fees and Expenses'' under the section that discloses total annual fund
operating expenses.\69\ The line item will set forth the acquiring
fund's pro rata portion of the cumulative expenses charged by funds in
which the acquiring fund invests. Those costs will be included in the
acquiring funds' total annual fund operating expenses, which will be
reflected in the ``Example'' portion of the fee table.\70\ One
commenter suggested that we add an instruction to permit a fund to omit
the new separate line item if the aggregate expenses attributable to
acquired funds do not exceed 0.01 percent (one basis point) of average
net assets of the acquiring fund. We agree with the commenter that the
disclosure of this de minimis amount in a separate line item would not
be important to investors. Therefore, the instructions to the amended
fee table allow these expenses to be included in ``Other Expenses.''
\71\
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\69\ The item will appear directly above the line item titled
``Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses.'' The proposed instructions
to Form N-1A would have permitted funds to use terms in the fee
table other than the term ``Acquired Fund.'' We received no comment
in response to our question whether the proposed instructions were
consistent with the current fee table. We have decided not to permit
funds to use other terms, however, because no variation is permitted
for other line items in the fee table (except for the subcaptions
that may be used under ``Other Expenses'' in order to identify the
largest expenses comprising ``Other Expenses''). Accordingly, the
instruction, as adopted, is consistent with the other line items in
the expense table, and allows investors to more easily compare
disclosure among funds. In the event a fund uses another defined
term to describe acquired funds in its prospectus, it may include
this term in a parenthetical following the title of the new line
item. See Instruction 3(f)(i) to Item 3 of Form N-1A. We are
adopting conforming amendments to Forms N-2 and N-3. See Instruction
10.a to Item 3.1 of Form N-2; Instruction 19(a) to Item 3(a) of Form
N-3.
\70\ The fee table example requires the fund to disclose the
cumulative amount of fund expenses of 1, 3, 5, and 10 years based on
a hypothetical investment of $10,000 and an annual 5 percent return.
See Item 3 of Form N-1A.
\71\ See Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). See Instruction
3(f)(i) to Item 3 of Form N-1A. Inclusion of the de minimis amount
under ``Other Expenses,'' however, ensures that the acquired funds'
expenses will be included in the acquiring fund's total annual
operating expense ratio. Form N-2 and Form N-3 filers may also rely
on this exception and we have amended the relevant instructions
accordingly. See Instruction 10.a to Item 3.1 of Form N-2;
Instruction 19(a) to Item 3(a) of Form N-3.
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We also are adopting instructions to assist an acquiring fund in
determining the amount of acquired funds' fees and expenses that must
be reflected in its fee
[[Page 36646]]
table. The acquiring fund must aggregate the amount of total annual
fund operating expenses of acquired funds (which are indirectly paid by
the acquiring fund) and transaction fees (which are directly paid by
the acquiring fund over the past year) and express the total amount as
a percentage of average net assets of the acquiring fund. Under this
approach, the acquiring fund must determine the average invested
balance and number of actual days invested in each acquired fund.\72\
We also are adopting the proposed instruction that requires the
acquiring fund to include in the expense calculation any transaction
fee the acquiring fund paid to acquire or dispose of shares of a fund
during the past fiscal year (even if it no longer holds shares of that
fund).\73\
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\72\ See Instruction 3(f)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N-1A (to
calculate the pro rata share of total annual fund operating expenses
for each acquired fund, an acquiring fund will divide the acquired
fund's expense ratio by the number of days in the relevant calendar
year, and multiply the result by the average invested balance and
the number of days invested in the acquired fund). We have revised
the divisor in the calculation for the daily expense ratio from the
proposed 365 days to the number of days in the fiscal year to
reflect that some fiscal years will have 366 days. One commenter
asserted that our proposed formula in Instruction 3(f)(ii) to Item 3
of Form N-1A would not correspond to the expense ratio (i.e., the
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets) currently in Item 8 of Form
N-1A, ``Financial Highlights Information.'' The commenter stated
that, as a result, the total annual fund operating expenses
disclosed in response to Item 3 would be generally higher than those
reflected in response to Item 8 because the expense ratio in Item 8
would only reflect expenses paid directly by the acquiring fund. See
Comment Letter of ICI (Dec. 3, 2003). We agree that this potential
discrepancy may be confusing to investors, and have revised the
instruction to permit funds to address this discrepancy in a
clarifying footnote to the fee table. See Instruction 3(f)(vii) to
Item 3 of Form N-1A. Because Form N-2 and Form N-3 filers would face
the same issue, the adopted instructions permit those funds also to
include a clarifying footnote. See Instruction 10.i to Item 3.1 of
Form N-2; Instruction 19(g) to Item 3(a) of Form N-3. We also have
directed the staff to continue monitoring funds of funds' disclosure
to determine whether additional disclosure of acquired funds' fees
is needed, such as in the financial highlights section or
shareholder reports.
We are also revising Instruction 3(f)(v) to Item 3 of Form N-1A.
The proposed instructions would have required the acquiring fund to
calculate an ``average invested balance'' based on month-end
balances. One commenter recommended that funds be permitted to
calculate ``average invested balances'' based on the value of
investment measured no less frequently than monthly to allow funds
the flexibility of using daily balances. See Comment Letter of ICI
(Dec. 3, 2003). We believe that the recommendation will allow the
most accurate disclosure for funds that use the more frequent
measure and have revised the instruction to allow the acquiring fund
to calculate ``average invested balance'' based on the value of
investment measured no less frequently than monthly. See Instruction
10.e to Item 3.1 of Form N-2; Instruction 19(e) to Item 3 of Form N-
3.
\73\ See Instruction 3(f)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N-1A
(``transaction fees'' included in the calculation for acquired
funds' fees and expenses include the total amount of sales loads,
redemption fees, or other transaction fees paid