Embarcadero Funds, Inc., et al.; Notice of Application, 31073-31076 [E9-15225]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 123 / Monday, June 29, 2009 / Notices
(f) NASA, John C. Stennis Space
Center, MS 39529 (228–688–2118);
(g) NASA, Lyndon B. Johnson Space
Center, Houston, TX 77058 (281–483–
8612);
(h) NASA, Langley Research Center,
Hampton, VA 23681 (757–864–2497);
(i) NASA, Michoud Assembly
Facility, New Orleans, LA 70189 (504–
257–2629); and
(j) NASA, White Sands Test Facility,
Las Cruces, NM 88004 (505–524–5024);
(k) Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Visitors
Lobby, Building 249, 4800 Oak Grove
Drive, Pasadena, CA 91109.
Limited hard copies of the specific
environmental documentation named
below that supports this FONSI are
available on a first-request basis by
contacting Mark Sistilli at the address,
telephone number, and e-mail address
indicated wherein.
References
A complete list of all references cited
in this rule is available on the Internet
at https://oim.hq.nasa.gov/oia/emd/
ep.html or by e-mailing a request to
nepa@hq.nasa.gov.
Edward J. Weiler,
Associate Administrator for Science Mission
Directorate.
[FR Doc. E9–15203 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[NRC–2009–0262]
Draft Regulatory Guide: Issuance,
Availability
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of Issuance and
Availability of Draft Regulatory Guide,
DG–3037.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Margie Kotzalas, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, telephone: (301) 492–
3202, e-mail Margie.Kotzalas@nrc.gov,
or, R.A. Jervey, telephone (301) 251–
7404, e-mail Richard.Jervey@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
I. Introduction
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is issuing for public
comment a draft guide in the agency’s
‘‘Regulatory Guide’’ series. This series
was developed to describe and make
available to the public information and
methods that are acceptable to the NRC
staff for implementing specific parts of
the NRC’s regulations, techniques that
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20:04 Jun 26, 2009
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the staff uses in evaluating specific
problems or postulated accidents, and
data that the staff needs in its review of
applications.
The draft regulatory guide (DG),
entitled, ‘‘Guidance for Fuel Cycle
Facility Change Processes,’’ is
temporarily identified by its task
number, DG–3037, which should be
mentioned in all related
correspondence. DG–3037 will be a new
regulatory guide.
Title 10 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, Part 70, ‘‘Domestic
Licensing of Special Nuclear Material’’
(10 CFR Part 70) contains the
regulations for fuel cycle facility
licensees that possess greater than a
critical mass of special nuclear material
and are engaged in enriched uranium
processing, fabrication of uranium fuel
or fuel assemblies, uranium enrichment,
enriched uranium hexafluoride
conversion, plutonium processing, and
fabrication of mixed-oxide fuel or fuel
assemblies.
Subsection (a) of 10 CFR 70.72,
‘‘Facility changes and change process,’’
requires that fuel cycle facility licensees
establish a configuration management
system to evaluate, implement, and
track each change to the site, structures,
processes, systems, equipment,
components, computer programs, and
activities of personnel. Such changes
may be made by the licensee without
prior approval of the NRC, provided that
the changes meet the criteria of 10 CFR
70.72(c). DG–3037 provides guidance on
how to meet the requirements of 10 CFR
70.72(c).
II. Further Information
The NRC staff is soliciting comments
on DG–3037. Comments may be
accompanied by relevant information or
supporting data and should reference
DG–3037 in the subject line. Comments
submitted in writing or in electronic
form will be made available to the
public in their entirety through the
NRC’s Agencywide Documents Access
and Management System (ADAMS).
Personal information will not be
removed from your comments. You may
submit comments by any of the
following methods:
1. Mail comments to: Rulemaking and
Directives Branch, Office of
Administration, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001.
2. E-mail comments to:
nrcrep.resource@nrc.gov.
Requests for technical information
about DG–3037 may be directed to the
NRC contact, Margie Kotzalas at (301)
492–3202 or e-mail to
Margie.Kotzalas@nrc.gov.
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Comments would be most helpful if
received by August 17, 2009. Comments
received after that date will be
considered if it is practical to do so, but
the NRC is able to ensure consideration
only for comments received on or before
this date. Although a time limit is given,
comments and suggestions in
connection with items for inclusion in
guides currently being developed or
improvements in all published guides
are encouraged at any time.
Electronic copies of DG–3037 are
available through the NRC’s public Web
site under Draft Regulatory Guides in
the ‘‘Regulatory Guides’’ collection of
the NRC’s Electronic Reading Room at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doccollections/. Electronic copies are also
available in ADAMS (https://
www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html),
under Accession No. ML091200493.
In addition, regulatory guides are
available for inspection at the NRC’s
Public Document Room (PDR), which is
located at 11555 Rockville Pike,
Rockville, Maryland. The PDR’s mailing
address is USNRC PDR, Washington, DC
20555–0001. The PDR can also be
reached by telephone at (301) 415–4737
or (800) 397–4205, by fax at (301) 415–
3548, and by e-mail to
pdr.resource@nrc.gov.
Regulatory guides are not
copyrighted, and Commission approval
is not required to reproduce them.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 22nd
day of June, 2009. For the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
M.P. Orr,
Acting Chief, Regulatory Guide Development
Branch, Division of Engineering, Office of
Nuclear Regulatory Research.
[FR Doc. E9–15279 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Investment Company Act Release No.
28769; File No. 812–13633]
Embarcadero Funds, Inc., et al.; Notice
of Application
June 22, 2009.
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’).
ACTION: Notice of an application under
section 6(c) of the Investment Company
Act of 1940 (‘‘Act’’ or ‘‘1940 Act’’) for
an exemption from section 15(a) of the
Act and rule 18f–2 under the Act, as
well as from certain disclosure
requirements.
SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicants
request an order that would permit them
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to enter into and materially amend
subadvisory agreements without
shareholder approval and would grant
relief from certain disclosure
requirements.
APPLICANTS: Embarcadero Funds, Inc.
(the ‘‘Company’’) and Van Wagoner
Capital Management, Inc. (the
‘‘Adviser’’).
FILING DATES: The application was filed
on February 18, 2009, and amended on
June 15, 2009.
HEARING OR NOTIFICATION OF HEARING:
An order granting the application will
be issued unless the Commission orders
a hearing. Interested persons may
request a hearing by writing to the
Commission’s Secretary and serving
applicants with a copy of the request,
personally or by mail. Hearing requests
should be received by the Commission
by 5:30 p.m. on July 17, 2009 and
should be accompanied by proof of
service on applicants, in the form of an
affidavit or, for lawyers, a certificate of
service. Hearing requests should state
the nature of the writer’s interest, the
reason for the request, and the issues
contested. Persons who wish to be
notified of a hearing may request
notification by writing to the
Commission’s Secretary.
ADDRESSES: Secretary, U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549–
1090. Applicants, Three Embarcadero
Center, Suite 1100, San Francisco, CA
94111.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barbara T. Heussler, Senior Attorney, at
(202) 551–6990, or Jennifer L. Sawin,
Branch Chief, at (202) 551–6821
(Division of Investment Management,
Office of Investment Company
Regulation).
The
following is a summary of the
application. The complete application
may be obtained via the Commission’s
Web site by searching for the file
number or an applicant using the
Company name box, at https://
www.sec.gov/search/search.htm or by
calling (202) 551–8090.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
Applicants’ Representations
1. The Company, a Maryland
corporation organized as a series
investment company, is registered
under the Act as an open-end
management investment company and
currently consists of five series: The AllCap Growth Fund, Small-Cap Growth
Fund, Alternative Strategies Fund,
Absolute Return Fund and Market
Neutral Fund (each a ‘‘Fund’’ and
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19:07 Jun 26, 2009
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collectively, the ‘‘Funds’’).1 Each series
has separate investment objectives,
policies and restrictions. The Adviser, a
Delaware corporation, is an investment
adviser registered under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, as amended
(‘‘Advisers Act’’). The Adviser serves as
investment adviser to all five series of
the Company under investment
advisory agreements with the Company
(‘‘Advisory Agreements’’). The Advisory
Agreements have been approved by the
shareholders of each Fund and by the
board of directors of the Company
(‘‘Board’’), including a majority of those
directors who are not ‘‘interested
persons’’ of the Company or the Adviser
as defined in section 2(a)(19) of the Act
(‘‘Independent Directors’’).
2. Under the terms of the Advisory
Agreements, the Adviser shall, subject
to and in accordance with the
investment objective and policies of a
Fund and any directions which the
Board may issue to the Adviser, have
overall responsibility for the general
management and investment of the
assets and securities portfolios of the
Fund. For the investment management
services it provides to each Fund, the
Adviser receives from that Fund the fee
specified in the Advisory Agreements,
payable monthly at an annual rate based
the average daily net assets of the Fund.
The Advisory Agreements permit the
Adviser, to delegate certain asset
management responsibilities to one or
more subadvisers (‘‘Subadvisers’’). The
Adviser has entered or intends to enter
into investment subadvisory agreements
(‘‘Subadvisory Agreements’’) with
various Subadvisers to provide
investment advisory services to four of
the Funds.2 Each Subadviser is, and any
1 Applicants also request relief with respect to
existing and future series of the Company and any
other existing or future registered open-end
management investment company or series thereof
that: (i) Is advised by the Adviser or any person
controlling, controlled by, or under common
control with the Adviser or its successors; (ii) uses
the management structure described in this
application; and (iii) complies with the terms and
conditions of this application (together with the
Funds that use Subadvisers, as defined below, the
‘‘Subadvised Funds’’). For purposes of the
requested order, ‘‘successor’’ is limited to an entity
or entities that result from a reorganization into
another jurisdiction or a change in the type of
business organization. The only existing registered
open-end management investment company that
currently intends to rely on the requested order is
named as an applicant. If the name of any
Subadvised Fund contains the name of a
Subadviser, the name of the Adviser or the name
of the entity controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with the Adviser that serves as the
primary adviser to the Subadvised Fund will
precede the name of the Subadviser.
2 The Adviser may enter into Subadvisory
Agreements in the future to provide investment
advisory services to the fifth fund, the Alternative
Strategies Fund.
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future Subadviser will be, registered as
an investment adviser under the
Advisers Act. The Adviser monitors and
evaluates the Subadvisers and
recommends to the Board their hiring,
retention or termination. Subadvisers
recommended to the Board by the
Adviser are selected and approved by
the Board, including a majority of the
Independent Directors. Subadvisers
have discretionary authority to invest
the assets or a portion of the assets of
a particular Fund. The Adviser will
compensate each Subadviser out of the
fees paid to the Adviser under the
Advisory Agreements.
3. Applicants request an order to
permit the Adviser, subject to Board
approval, to select certain Subadvisers
and materially amend an existing
Subadvisory Agreement without
obtaining shareholder approval. The
requested relief will not extend to any
Subadviser who is an affiliated person,
as defined in section 2(a)(3) of the Act,
of the Company or of the Adviser, other
than by reason of serving as a
Subadviser to one or more Funds
(‘‘Affiliated Subadviser’’).
4. Applicants also request an
exemption from the various disclosure
provisions described below that may
require the Funds to disclose fees paid
by the Adviser to each Subadviser. An
exemption is requested to permit the
Company to disclose for each
Subadvised Fund (as both a dollar
amount and as a percentage of the
Subadvised Fund’s net assets): (i) The
aggregate fees paid to the Adviser and
any Affiliated Subadviser, if any; and
(ii) the aggregate fees paid to
Subadvisers other than Affiliated
Subadvisers (collectively, the
‘‘Aggregate Fee Disclosure’’). Any
Subadvised Fund that employs an
Affiliated Subadviser will provide
separate disclosure of any fees paid to
the Affiliated Subadviser.
Applicants’ Legal Analysis
1. Section 15(a) of the Act provides,
in relevant part, that it is unlawful for
any person to act as an investment
adviser to a registered investment
company except pursuant to a written
contract that has been approved by a
vote of a majority of the company’s
outstanding voting securities. Rule
18f–2 under the Act provides that each
series or class of stock in a series
investment company affected by a
matter must approve that matter if the
Act requires shareholder approval.
2. Form N–1A is the registration
statement used by open-end investment
companies. Item 19(a)(3) of Form N–1A
requires disclosure of the method and
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amount of the investment adviser’s
compensation.
3. Rule 20a–1 under the Act requires
proxies solicited with respect to an
investment company to comply with
Schedule 14A under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘1934 Act’’).
Items 22(c)(1)(ii), 22(c)(1)(iii), 22(c)(8)
and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A, taken
together, require a proxy statement for a
shareholder meeting at which the
advisory contract will be voted upon to
include the ‘‘rate of compensation of the
investment adviser,’’ the ‘‘aggregate
amount of the investment adviser’s
fees,’’ a description of the ‘‘terms of the
contract to be acted upon,’’ and, if a
change in the advisory fee is proposed,
the existing and proposed fees and the
difference between the two fees.
4. Form N–SAR is the semi-annual
report filed with the Commission by
registered investment companies. Item
48 of Form N–SAR requires investment
companies to disclose the rate schedule
for fees paid to their investment
advisers, including the Subadvisers.
5. Regulation S–X sets forth the
requirements for financial statements
required to be included as part of
investment company registration
statements and shareholder reports filed
with the Commission. Sections 6–
07(2)(a), (b), and (c) of Regulation S–X
require that investment companies
include in their financial statements
information about investment advisory
fees.
6. Section 6(c) of the Act provides that
the Commission may exempt any
person, security, or transaction or any
class or classes of persons, securities, or
transactions from any provisions of the
Act, or from any rule thereunder, if such
exemption is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest and consistent
with the protection of investors and the
purposes fairly intended by the policy
and provisions of the Act. Applicants
state that their requested relief meets
this standard for the reasons discussed
below.
7. Applicants assert that the
shareholders rely on the Adviser’s
experience to select one or more
Subadvisers best suited to achieve the
Subadvised Fund’s investment
objectives. Applicants assert that, from
the perspective of the investor, the role
of the Subadvisers is comparable to that
of the individual portfolio managers
employed by traditional investment
company advisory firms. Applicants
state that requiring shareholder
approval of each Subadvisory
Agreement would impose unnecessary
delays and expenses on the Subadvised
Funds, and may preclude the Fund from
acting promptly in a manner considered
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19:07 Jun 26, 2009
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advisable by the Adviser and the Board.
Applicants note that each Subadvised
Fund’s Advisory Agreements and
Subadvisory Agreements with Affiliated
Subadvisers (if any) will continue to be
subject to the shareholder approval
requirements of section 15(a) of the Act
and rule 18f–2 under the Act.
8. Applicants assert that many
investment advisers use a ‘‘posted’’ rate
schedule to set their fees. Applicants
state that while investment advisers are
willing to negotiate fees that are lower
than those posted on the schedule, they
are reluctant to do so where the fees are
disclosed to other prospective and
existing customers. Applicants submit
that the relief requested to use Aggregate
Fee Disclosure will encourage potential
Subadvisers to negotiate lower
subadvisory fees with the Adviser.
Applicants’ Conditions
Applicants agree that any order
granting the requested relief will be
subject to the following conditions:
1. Before a Subadvised Fund may rely
on the order requested in the
application, the operation of the
Subadvised Fund in the manner
described in the application will be
approved by a majority of the
Subadvised Fund’s outstanding voting
securities, as defined in the Act, or, in
the case of a Subadvised Fund whose
public shareholders purchase shares on
the basis of a prospectus containing the
disclosure contemplated by condition 2
below, by the sole initial shareholder
before offering the Subadvised Fund’s
shares to the public.
2. The prospectus for each
Subadvised Fund will disclose the
existence, substance, and effect of any
order granted pursuant to the
application. Each Subadvised Fund will
hold itself out to the public as
employing the management structure
described in the application. The
prospectus will prominently disclose
that the Adviser has ultimate
responsibility (subject to oversight by
the Board) to oversee the Subadvisers
and recommend their hiring,
termination, and replacement.
3. Within 90 days of the hiring of any
new Subadviser, the affected
Subadvised Fund’s shareholders will be
furnished all information about the new
Subadviser that would be included in a
proxy statement, except as modified to
permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure. This
information will include Aggregate Fee
Disclosure and any change in such
disclosure caused by the addition of the
new Subadviser. To meet this
obligation, a Subadvised Fund will
provide shareholders within 90 days of
the hiring of a new Subadviser with an
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information statement meeting the
requirements of Regulation 14C,
Schedule 14C, and Item 22 of Schedule
14A under the 1934 Act, except as
modified by the order to permit
Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
4. The Adviser will not enter into a
Subadvisory Agreement with any
Affiliated Subadviser without that
agreement, including the compensation
to be paid thereunder, being approved
by the shareholders of the applicable
Subadvised Fund.
5. At all times, at least a majority of
the Board will be Independent
Directors, and the nomination of new or
additional Independent Directors will
be placed within the discretion of the
then-existing Independent Directors.
6. When a Subadviser change is
proposed for a Subadvised Fund with
an Affiliated Subadviser, the Board,
including a majority of the Independent
Directors, will make a separate finding,
reflected in the applicable Board
minutes, that such change is in the best
interests of the Subadvised Fund and its
shareholders and does not involve a
conflict of interest from which the
Adviser or the Affiliated Subadviser
derives an inappropriate advantage.
7. Independent legal counsel, as
defined in rule 0–1(a)(6) under the Act,
will be engaged to represent the
Independent Directors. The selection of
such counsel will be within the
discretion of the then existing
Independent Directors.
8. The Adviser will provide the
Board, no less frequently than quarterly,
with information about the profitability
of the Adviser on a per-Subadvised
Fund basis. The information will reflect
the impact on profitability of the hiring
or termination of any Subadviser during
the applicable quarter.
9. Whenever a Subadviser is hired or
terminated, the Adviser will provide the
Board with information showing the
expected impact on the profitability of
the Adviser.
10. The Adviser will provide general
management services to each
Subadvised Fund, including overall
supervisory responsibility for the
general management and investment of
the Subadvised Fund’s assets and,
subject to review and approval of the
Board, will: (i) Set each Subadvised
Fund’s overall investment strategies; (ii)
evaluate, select and recommend
Subadvisers to manage all or part of a
Subadvised Fund’s assets; (iii) when
appropriate, allocate and reallocate a
Subadvised Fund’s assets among
multiple Subadvisers; (iv) monitor and
evaluate the performance of
Subadvisers; and (v) implement
procedures reasonably designed to
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ensure that the Subadvisers comply
with each Subadvised Fund’s
investment objective, policies and
restrictions.
11. No director or officer of the
Company, or director or officer of the
Adviser, will own directly or indirectly
(other than through a pooled investment
vehicle that is not controlled by such
person) any interest in a Subadviser,
except for: (i) Ownership of interests in
the Adviser or any entity that controls,
is controlled by, or is under common
control with the Adviser; or (ii)
ownership of less than 1% of the
outstanding securities of any class of
equity or debt of a publicly traded
company that is either a Subadviser or
an entity that controls, is controlled by,
or is under common control with a
Subadviser.
12. Each Subadvised Fund will
disclose in its registration statement the
Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
13. In the event the Commission
adopts a rule under the 1940 Act
providing substantially similar relief to
that in the order requested in the
application, the requested order will
expire on the effective date of that rule.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, under delegated
authority.
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–15225 Filed 6–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–60154; File No. SR–CTA–
2008–01]
Consolidated Tape Association; Notice
of Filing of the Eleventh Charges
Amendment to the Second
Restatement of the Consolidated Tape
Association Plan To Waive the
Automatic Annual Increase in the
Enterprise Cap for 2008
June 19, 2009.
Pursuant to Section 11A of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 608 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on June 7,
2009, the Consolidated Tape
Association (‘‘CTA’’) Plan Participants
(‘‘Participants’’) 3 filed with the
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
1 15
U.S.C. 78k–1.
2 17 CFR 242.608.
3 Each Participant executed the proposed
amendment. The Participants are the American
Stock Exchange LLC (n/k/a NYSE Amex LLC);
Boston Stock Exchange, Inc. (n/k/a NASDAQ OMX
BX, Inc.); Chicago Board Options Exchange,
Incorporated; Chicago Stock Exchange, Inc.;
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.,
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19:07 Jun 26, 2009
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Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) a proposal to amend
the Second Restatement of the CTA Plan
(the ‘‘CTA Plan’’).4 The proposal
represents the eleventh charges
amendment to the Plan (‘‘Eleventh
Charges Amendment’’) and reflects
changes unanimously adopted by the
Participants. The Eleventh Charges
Amendment would waive the
Automatic Annual Increase for 2008 in
the maximum monthly charge that a
broker-dealer is required to pay in
respect of the aggregate amount of
Network A display-device charges and
per-quote-packet charges that a brokerdealer pays in respect of
nonprofessional subscribers that
maintain brokerage accounts with the
broker-dealers (the ‘‘Enterprise Cap’’).
The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments from
interested persons on the proposed
Eleventh Charges Amendment to the
CTA Plan.
‘‘Television Ticker Maximum,’’ also set
forth in Footnote 6 to Schedule A–1 of
Exhibit E to the CTA Plan. The
amendment also proposes to update
Footnote 6 by applying the automatic
annual increase to the ‘‘Television
Ticker Maximum,’’ by bringing that
monthly fee to $157,000 for 2008.
The text of the proposed Amendment
is available on the CTA’s Web site
(https://www.nysedata.com/cta), at the
principal office of the CTA, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
I. Rule 608(a)
3. Development and Implementation
Phases
A. Description and Purpose of the
Amendment
The Plan currently caps the maximum
monthly charge that a broker-dealer is
required to pay in respect of the
aggregate amount of: (1) Network A
display-device charges for devices that
the broker-dealer’s officers, partners and
employees use; plus (2) Network A
display-device and per-quote-packet
charges that the broker-dealer pays in
respect of services that it provides to
nonprofessional subscribers that are
brokerage account customers of the
broker-dealer.5
Footnote 5 to Schedule A–1 of Exhibit
E to the CTA Plan subjects the
Enterprise Cap to an automatic annual
increase. The automatic annual increase
is equal to ‘‘the percentage increase in
the annual composite share volume for
the preceding calendar year, subject to
a maximum annual increase of five
percent.’’
Through this amendment, the
Participants propose to amend the CTA
Plan to waive the automatic annual
increase in the Enterprise Cap for 2008.
As a result, the monthly fee will remain
at $660,000 for 2008, the same amount
as for 2007. The waiver applies to the
Enterprise Cap only, and not to the
International Securities Exchange, LLC; The
NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; National Stock
Exchange, Inc.; New York Stock Exchange LLC
(‘‘NYSE’’); NYSE Arca, Inc.; and Philadelphia Stock
Exchange, Inc. (n/k/a NASDAQ OMX PHLX, Inc.).
4 The proposal was originally submitted on June
19, 2008. However, it was refiled on June 7, 2009
with appropriate exhibits.
5 Enterprise Cap found in Schedule A–1 of
Exhibit E to the CTA Plan.
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B. Additional Information Required by
Rule 608(a)
1. Governing or Constituent Documents
Not applicable.
2. Implementation of the Amendment
The Participants propose to
implement the change upon receipt of
Commission approval of the
Amendment.
See Item I(B)(2) above.
4. Analysis of Impact on Competition
The amendment will impose no
burden on competition.
5. Written Understanding or Agreements
Relating to Interpretation of, or
Participation in, Plan
The Participants have no written
understandings or agreements relating
to interpretation of the CTA Plan as a
result of the amendment.
6. Approval by Sponsors in Accordance
With Plan
Under Section IV(b) of the CTA Plan,
each Plan Participant must execute a
written amendment to the CTA Plan
before the amendment can become
effective. The amendment is so
executed.
7. Description of Operation of Facility
Contemplated by the Proposed
Amendment
a. Terms and Conditions of Access
Not applicable.
b. Method of Determination and
Imposition, and Amount of, Fees and
Charges
Not applicable.
c. Method of Frequency of Processor
Evaluation
Not applicable.
d. Dispute Resolution
Not applicable.
E:\FR\FM\29JNN1.SGM
29JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 123 (Monday, June 29, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31073-31076]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-15225]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Investment Company Act Release No. 28769; File No. 812-13633]
Embarcadero Funds, Inc., et al.; Notice of Application
June 22, 2009.
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'').
ACTION: Notice of an application under section 6(c) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (``Act'' or ``1940 Act'') for an exemption from
section 15(a) of the Act and rule 18f-2 under the Act, as well as from
certain disclosure requirements.
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Summary of Application: Applicants request an order that would permit
them
[[Page 31074]]
to enter into and materially amend subadvisory agreements without
shareholder approval and would grant relief from certain disclosure
requirements.
Applicants: Embarcadero Funds, Inc. (the ``Company'') and Van Wagoner
Capital Management, Inc. (the ``Adviser'').
Filing Dates: The application was filed on February 18, 2009, and
amended on June 15, 2009.
Hearing or Notification of Hearing: An order granting the application
will be issued unless the Commission orders a hearing. Interested
persons may request a hearing by writing to the Commission's Secretary
and serving applicants with a copy of the request, personally or by
mail. Hearing requests should be received by the Commission by 5:30
p.m. on July 17, 2009 and should be accompanied by proof of service on
applicants, in the form of an affidavit or, for lawyers, a certificate
of service. Hearing requests should state the nature of the writer's
interest, the reason for the request, and the issues contested. Persons
who wish to be notified of a hearing may request notification by
writing to the Commission's Secretary.
ADDRESSES: Secretary, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090. Applicants, Three Embarcadero
Center, Suite 1100, San Francisco, CA 94111.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara T. Heussler, Senior Attorney,
at (202) 551-6990, or Jennifer L. Sawin, Branch Chief, at (202) 551-
6821 (Division of Investment Management, Office of Investment Company
Regulation).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the
application. The complete application may be obtained via the
Commission's Web site by searching for the file number or an applicant
using the Company name box, at https://www.sec.gov/search/search.htm or
by calling (202) 551-8090.
Applicants' Representations
1. The Company, a Maryland corporation organized as a series
investment company, is registered under the Act as an open-end
management investment company and currently consists of five series:
The All-Cap Growth Fund, Small-Cap Growth Fund, Alternative Strategies
Fund, Absolute Return Fund and Market Neutral Fund (each a ``Fund'' and
collectively, the ``Funds'').\1\ Each series has separate investment
objectives, policies and restrictions. The Adviser, a Delaware
corporation, is an investment adviser registered under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (``Advisers Act''). The Adviser serves
as investment adviser to all five series of the Company under
investment advisory agreements with the Company (``Advisory
Agreements''). The Advisory Agreements have been approved by the
shareholders of each Fund and by the board of directors of the Company
(``Board''), including a majority of those directors who are not
``interested persons'' of the Company or the Adviser as defined in
section 2(a)(19) of the Act (``Independent Directors'').
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\1\ Applicants also request relief with respect to existing and
future series of the Company and any other existing or future
registered open-end management investment company or series thereof
that: (i) Is advised by the Adviser or any person controlling,
controlled by, or under common control with the Adviser or its
successors; (ii) uses the management structure described in this
application; and (iii) complies with the terms and conditions of
this application (together with the Funds that use Subadvisers, as
defined below, the ``Subadvised Funds''). For purposes of the
requested order, ``successor'' is limited to an entity or entities
that result from a reorganization into another jurisdiction or a
change in the type of business organization. The only existing
registered open-end management investment company that currently
intends to rely on the requested order is named as an applicant. If
the name of any Subadvised Fund contains the name of a Subadviser,
the name of the Adviser or the name of the entity controlling,
controlled by, or under common control with the Adviser that serves
as the primary adviser to the Subadvised Fund will precede the name
of the Subadviser.
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2. Under the terms of the Advisory Agreements, the Adviser shall,
subject to and in accordance with the investment objective and policies
of a Fund and any directions which the Board may issue to the Adviser,
have overall responsibility for the general management and investment
of the assets and securities portfolios of the Fund. For the investment
management services it provides to each Fund, the Adviser receives from
that Fund the fee specified in the Advisory Agreements, payable monthly
at an annual rate based the average daily net assets of the Fund. The
Advisory Agreements permit the Adviser, to delegate certain asset
management responsibilities to one or more subadvisers
(``Subadvisers''). The Adviser has entered or intends to enter into
investment subadvisory agreements (``Subadvisory Agreements'') with
various Subadvisers to provide investment advisory services to four of
the Funds.\2\ Each Subadviser is, and any future Subadviser will be,
registered as an investment adviser under the Advisers Act. The Adviser
monitors and evaluates the Subadvisers and recommends to the Board
their hiring, retention or termination. Subadvisers recommended to the
Board by the Adviser are selected and approved by the Board, including
a majority of the Independent Directors. Subadvisers have discretionary
authority to invest the assets or a portion of the assets of a
particular Fund. The Adviser will compensate each Subadviser out of the
fees paid to the Adviser under the Advisory Agreements.
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\2\ The Adviser may enter into Subadvisory Agreements in the
future to provide investment advisory services to the fifth fund,
the Alternative Strategies Fund.
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3. Applicants request an order to permit the Adviser, subject to
Board approval, to select certain Subadvisers and materially amend an
existing Subadvisory Agreement without obtaining shareholder approval.
The requested relief will not extend to any Subadviser who is an
affiliated person, as defined in section 2(a)(3) of the Act, of the
Company or of the Adviser, other than by reason of serving as a
Subadviser to one or more Funds (``Affiliated Subadviser'').
4. Applicants also request an exemption from the various disclosure
provisions described below that may require the Funds to disclose fees
paid by the Adviser to each Subadviser. An exemption is requested to
permit the Company to disclose for each Subadvised Fund (as both a
dollar amount and as a percentage of the Subadvised Fund's net assets):
(i) The aggregate fees paid to the Adviser and any Affiliated
Subadviser, if any; and (ii) the aggregate fees paid to Subadvisers
other than Affiliated Subadvisers (collectively, the ``Aggregate Fee
Disclosure''). Any Subadvised Fund that employs an Affiliated
Subadviser will provide separate disclosure of any fees paid to the
Affiliated Subadviser.
Applicants' Legal Analysis
1. Section 15(a) of the Act provides, in relevant part, that it is
unlawful for any person to act as an investment adviser to a registered
investment company except pursuant to a written contract that has been
approved by a vote of a majority of the company's outstanding voting
securities. Rule 18f-2 under the Act provides that each series or class
of stock in a series investment company affected by a matter must
approve that matter if the Act requires shareholder approval.
2. Form N-1A is the registration statement used by open-end
investment companies. Item 19(a)(3) of Form N-1A requires disclosure of
the method and
[[Page 31075]]
amount of the investment adviser's compensation.
3. Rule 20a-1 under the Act requires proxies solicited with respect
to an investment company to comply with Schedule 14A under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``1934 Act''). Items 22(c)(1)(ii),
22(c)(1)(iii), 22(c)(8) and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A, taken together,
require a proxy statement for a shareholder meeting at which the
advisory contract will be voted upon to include the ``rate of
compensation of the investment adviser,'' the ``aggregate amount of the
investment adviser's fees,'' a description of the ``terms of the
contract to be acted upon,'' and, if a change in the advisory fee is
proposed, the existing and proposed fees and the difference between the
two fees.
4. Form N-SAR is the semi-annual report filed with the Commission
by registered investment companies. Item 48 of Form N-SAR requires
investment companies to disclose the rate schedule for fees paid to
their investment advisers, including the Subadvisers.
5. Regulation S-X sets forth the requirements for financial
statements required to be included as part of investment company
registration statements and shareholder reports filed with the
Commission. Sections 6-07(2)(a), (b), and (c) of Regulation S-X require
that investment companies include in their financial statements
information about investment advisory fees.
6. Section 6(c) of the Act provides that the Commission may exempt
any person, security, or transaction or any class or classes of
persons, securities, or transactions from any provisions of the Act, or
from any rule thereunder, if such exemption is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest and consistent with the protection of investors
and the purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the
Act. Applicants state that their requested relief meets this standard
for the reasons discussed below.
7. Applicants assert that the shareholders rely on the Adviser's
experience to select one or more Subadvisers best suited to achieve the
Subadvised Fund's investment objectives. Applicants assert that, from
the perspective of the investor, the role of the Subadvisers is
comparable to that of the individual portfolio managers employed by
traditional investment company advisory firms. Applicants state that
requiring shareholder approval of each Subadvisory Agreement would
impose unnecessary delays and expenses on the Subadvised Funds, and may
preclude the Fund from acting promptly in a manner considered advisable
by the Adviser and the Board. Applicants note that each Subadvised
Fund's Advisory Agreements and Subadvisory Agreements with Affiliated
Subadvisers (if any) will continue to be subject to the shareholder
approval requirements of section 15(a) of the Act and rule 18f-2 under
the Act.
8. Applicants assert that many investment advisers use a ``posted''
rate schedule to set their fees. Applicants state that while investment
advisers are willing to negotiate fees that are lower than those posted
on the schedule, they are reluctant to do so where the fees are
disclosed to other prospective and existing customers. Applicants
submit that the relief requested to use Aggregate Fee Disclosure will
encourage potential Subadvisers to negotiate lower subadvisory fees
with the Adviser.
Applicants' Conditions
Applicants agree that any order granting the requested relief will
be subject to the following conditions:
1. Before a Subadvised Fund may rely on the order requested in the
application, the operation of the Subadvised Fund in the manner
described in the application will be approved by a majority of the
Subadvised Fund's outstanding voting securities, as defined in the Act,
or, in the case of a Subadvised Fund whose public shareholders purchase
shares on the basis of a prospectus containing the disclosure
contemplated by condition 2 below, by the sole initial shareholder
before offering the Subadvised Fund's shares to the public.
2. The prospectus for each Subadvised Fund will disclose the
existence, substance, and effect of any order granted pursuant to the
application. Each Subadvised Fund will hold itself out to the public as
employing the management structure described in the application. The
prospectus will prominently disclose that the Adviser has ultimate
responsibility (subject to oversight by the Board) to oversee the
Subadvisers and recommend their hiring, termination, and replacement.
3. Within 90 days of the hiring of any new Subadviser, the affected
Subadvised Fund's shareholders will be furnished all information about
the new Subadviser that would be included in a proxy statement, except
as modified to permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure. This information will
include Aggregate Fee Disclosure and any change in such disclosure
caused by the addition of the new Subadviser. To meet this obligation,
a Subadvised Fund will provide shareholders within 90 days of the
hiring of a new Subadviser with an information statement meeting the
requirements of Regulation 14C, Schedule 14C, and Item 22 of Schedule
14A under the 1934 Act, except as modified by the order to permit
Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
4. The Adviser will not enter into a Subadvisory Agreement with any
Affiliated Subadviser without that agreement, including the
compensation to be paid thereunder, being approved by the shareholders
of the applicable Subadvised Fund.
5. At all times, at least a majority of the Board will be
Independent Directors, and the nomination of new or additional
Independent Directors will be placed within the discretion of the then-
existing Independent Directors.
6. When a Subadviser change is proposed for a Subadvised Fund with
an Affiliated Subadviser, the Board, including a majority of the
Independent Directors, will make a separate finding, reflected in the
applicable Board minutes, that such change is in the best interests of
the Subadvised Fund and its shareholders and does not involve a
conflict of interest from which the Adviser or the Affiliated
Subadviser derives an inappropriate advantage.
7. Independent legal counsel, as defined in rule 0-1(a)(6) under
the Act, will be engaged to represent the Independent Directors. The
selection of such counsel will be within the discretion of the then
existing Independent Directors.
8. The Adviser will provide the Board, no less frequently than
quarterly, with information about the profitability of the Adviser on a
per-Subadvised Fund basis. The information will reflect the impact on
profitability of the hiring or termination of any Subadviser during the
applicable quarter.
9. Whenever a Subadviser is hired or terminated, the Adviser will
provide the Board with information showing the expected impact on the
profitability of the Adviser.
10. The Adviser will provide general management services to each
Subadvised Fund, including overall supervisory responsibility for the
general management and investment of the Subadvised Fund's assets and,
subject to review and approval of the Board, will: (i) Set each
Subadvised Fund's overall investment strategies; (ii) evaluate, select
and recommend Subadvisers to manage all or part of a Subadvised Fund's
assets; (iii) when appropriate, allocate and reallocate a Subadvised
Fund's assets among multiple Subadvisers; (iv) monitor and evaluate the
performance of Subadvisers; and (v) implement procedures reasonably
designed to
[[Page 31076]]
ensure that the Subadvisers comply with each Subadvised Fund's
investment objective, policies and restrictions.
11. No director or officer of the Company, or director or officer
of the Adviser, will own directly or indirectly (other than through a
pooled investment vehicle that is not controlled by such person) any
interest in a Subadviser, except for: (i) Ownership of interests in the
Adviser or any entity that controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with the Adviser; or (ii) ownership of less than 1% of
the outstanding securities of any class of equity or debt of a publicly
traded company that is either a Subadviser or an entity that controls,
is controlled by, or is under common control with a Subadviser.
12. Each Subadvised Fund will disclose in its registration
statement the Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
13. In the event the Commission adopts a rule under the 1940 Act
providing substantially similar relief to that in the order requested
in the application, the requested order will expire on the effective
date of that rule.
For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management,
under delegated authority.
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9-15225 Filed 6-26-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010-01-P