Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction Restrictions, 78768-78775 [2010-31570]
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transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 13th day of
December 2010.
Ivan Strasfeld,
Director of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2010–31571 Filed 12–15–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain
Prohibited Transaction Restrictions
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed exemptions.
AGENCY:
This document contains
notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of
proposed exemptions from certain of the
prohibited transaction restrictions of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the
Code). This notice includes the
following proposed exemptions: D–
11592, TD Ameritrade, Inc. (TD
Ameritrade or the Applicant); and D–
11638, Owens & Minor, Inc.; et al.
DATES: All interested persons are invited
to submit written comments or requests
for a hearing on the pending
exemptions, unless otherwise stated in
the Notice of Proposed Exemption,
within 45 days from the date of
publication of this Federal Register
Notice.
ADDRESSES: Comments and requests for
a hearing should state: (1) The name,
address, and telephone number of the
person making the comment or request,
and (2) the nature of the person’s
interest in the exemption and the
manner in which the person would be
adversely affected by the exemption. A
request for a hearing must also state the
issues to be addressed and include a
general description of the evidence to be
presented at the hearing.
All written comments and requests for
a hearing (at least three copies) should
be sent to the Employee Benefits
Security Administration (EBSA), Office
of Exemption Determinations, Room N–
5700, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20210. Attention: Application No.
__, stated in each Notice of Proposed
Exemption. Interested persons are also
invited to submit comments and/or
hearing requests to EBSA via e-mail or
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SUMMARY:
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FAX. Any such comments or requests
should be sent either by e-mail to:
moffitt.betty@dol.gov, or by FAX to
(202) 219–0204 by the end of the
scheduled comment period. The
applications for exemption and the
comments received will be available for
public inspection in the Public
Documents Room of the Employee
Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N–1513,
200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210.
Warning: If you submit written
comments or hearing requests, do not
include any personally-identifiable or
confidential business information that
you do not want to be publiclydisclosed. All comments and hearing
requests are posted on the Internet
exactly as they are received, and they
can be retrieved by most Internet search
engines. The Department will make no
deletions, modifications or redactions to
the comments or hearing requests
received, as they are public records.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions
will be provided to all interested
persons in the manner agreed upon by
the applicant and the Department
within 15 days of the date of publication
in the Federal Register. Such notice
shall include a copy of the notice of
proposed exemption as published in the
Federal Register and shall inform
interested persons of their right to
comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate). The proposed
exemptions were requested in
applications filed pursuant to section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in
accordance with procedures set forth in
29 CFR Part 2570, Subpart B (55 FR
32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).
Effective December 31, 1978, section
102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of
1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1 (1996), transferred
the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type
requested to the Secretary of Labor.
Therefore, these notices of proposed
exemption are issued solely by the
Department.
The applications contain
representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are
summarized below. Interested persons
are referred to the applications on file
with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and
representations.
TD Ameritrade, Inc. (TD Ameritrade
or the Applicant) Located in Omaha,
NE.
[Application No. D–11592]
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Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and
section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR Part 2570, Subpart B (55
FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).1
SECTION I. SALES OF AUCTION
RATE SECURITIES FROM PLANS TO
TD AMERITRADE: UNRELATED TO A
SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of section 406(a)(1)(A)
and (D) and section 406(b)(1) and (2) of
the Act and the sanctions resulting from
the application of section 4975 of the
Code, by reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A),
(D), and (E) of the Code, shall not apply,
effective July 20, 2009, to the sale by a
Plan (as defined in Section V(e)) of an
Auction Rate Security (as defined in
Section V(c)) to TD Ameritrade, where
such sale (an Unrelated Sale) is
unrelated to, is not made in connection
with, and is entered into after the
finalization of, a Settlement Agreement
(as defined in Section V(f)), provided
that the conditions set forth in Section
II have been met.
SECTION II. CONDITIONS
APPLICABLE TO TRANSACTIONS
DESCRIBED IN SECTION I
(a) The Plan acquired the Auction
Rate Security in connection with
brokerage services provided by TD
Ameritrade to the Plan;
(b) The last auction for the Auction
Rate Security was unsuccessful;
(c) The Unrelated Sale is made
pursuant to a written offer by TD
Ameritrade (the Unrelated Offer)
containing all of the material terms of
the Unrelated Sale, including, but not
limited to: (1) The identity and par
value of the Auction Rate Security; (2)
the interest or dividend amounts that
are due with respect to the Auction Rate
Security; and (3) the most recent
information for the Auction Rate
Security (if reliable information is
available).
(d) The Unrelated Sale is for no
consideration other than cash payment
against prompt delivery of the Auction
Rate Security;
(e) The sales price for the Auction
Rate Security is equal to the par value
of the Auction Rate Security, plus any
1 For purposes of this proposed exemption,
references to section 406 of ERISA should be read
to refer as well to the corresponding provisions of
section 4975 of the Code.
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accrued but unpaid interest or
dividends;
(f) The Plan does not waive any rights
or claims in connection with the
Unrelated Sale;
(g) The decision to accept the
Unrelated Offer or retain the Auction
Rate Security is made by a Plan
fiduciary or Plan participant or IRA
owner who is independent (as defined
in Section V(d)) of TD Ameritrade.2
(h) Neither TD Ameritrade nor any
affiliate exercises investment discretion
or renders investment advice within the
meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3–21(c) with
respect to the decision to accept the
Unrelated Offer or retain the Auction
Rate Security;
(i) The Plan does not pay any
commissions or transaction costs with
respect to the Unrelated Sale;
(j) The Unrelated Sale is not part of an
arrangement, agreement or
understanding designed to benefit a
party in interest to the Plan;
(k) TD Ameritrade and its affiliates, as
applicable, maintain, or cause to be
maintained, for a period of six (6) years
from the date of the Unrelated Sale,
such records as are necessary to enable
the persons described below in
paragraph (l)(1), to determine whether
the conditions of this exemption, if
granted, have been met, except that:
(1) No party in interest with respect
to a Plan which engages in an Unrelated
Sale, other than TD Ameritrade and its
affiliates, as applicable, shall be subject
to a civil penalty under section 502(i) of
the Act or the taxes imposed by section
4975(a) and (b) of the Code, if such
records are not maintained, or not
available for examination, as required,
below, by paragraph (l)(1); and
(2) A separate prohibited transaction
shall not be considered to have occurred
solely because, due to circumstances
beyond the control of TD Ameritrade or
its affiliates, as applicable, such records
are lost or destroyed prior to the end of
the six-year period;
(l)(1) Except as provided below in
paragraph (l)(2), and notwithstanding
2 The Department notes that the Act’s general
standards of fiduciary conduct also would apply to
the transactions described herein. In this regard,
section 404 of the Act requires, among other things,
that a fiduciary discharge his duties respecting a
plan solely in the interest of the plan’s participants
and beneficiaries and in a prudent manner.
Accordingly, a plan fiduciary must act prudently
with respect to, among other things, the decision to
sell the Auction Rate Security to TD Ameritrade for
the par value of the Auction Rate Security, plus
unpaid interest and dividends. The Department
further emphasizes that it expects Plan fiduciaries,
prior to entering into any of the proposed
transactions, to fully understand the risks
associated with this type of transaction following
disclosure by TD Ameritrade of all relevant
information.
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any provisions of subsections (a)(2) and
(b) of section 504 of the Act, the records
referred to above in paragraph (k) are
unconditionally available at their
customary location for examination
during normal business hours by:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or
representative of the Department, the
Internal Revenue Service, or the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission
(the Commission);
(B) Any fiduciary of any Plan,
including any IRA owner, that engages
in an Unrelated Sale, or any duly
authorized employee or representative
of such fiduciary; or
(C) Any employer of participants and
beneficiaries and any employee
organization whose members are
covered by a Plan that engages in the
Unrelated Sale, or any authorized
employee or representative of these
entities;
(2) None of the persons described
above in paragraphs (l)(1)(B)–(C) shall
be authorized to examine trade secrets
of TD Ameritrade, or commercial or
financial information which is
privileged or confidential; and
(3) Should TD Ameritrade refuse to
disclose information on the basis that
such information is exempt from
disclosure, TD Ameritrade shall, by the
close of the thirtieth (30th) day
following the request, provide a written
notice advising that person of the
reasons for the refusal and that the
Department may request such
information.
SECTION III. SALES OF AUCTION
RATE SECURITIES FROM PLANS TO
TD AMERITRADE: RELATED TO A
SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of section 406(a)(1)(A)
and (D) and section 406(b)(1) and (2) of
the Act and the sanctions resulting from
the application of section 4975 of the
Code, by reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A),
(D), and (E) of the Code shall not apply,
effective July 20, 2009, to the sale by a
Plan of an Auction Rate Security to TD
Ameritrade, where such sale (a
Settlement Sale) is related to, and made
in connection with, a Settlement
Agreement, provided that the conditions
set forth in Section IV have been met.
SECTION IV. CONDITIONS
APPLICABLE TO TRANSACTIONS
DESCRIBED IN SECTION III
(a) The terms and delivery of the offer
(the Purchase Offer) are consistent with
the requirements set forth in the
Settlement Agreement;
(b) The Purchase Offer or other
documents available to the Plan
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specifically describe, among other
things:
(1) How a Plan may determine: the
Auction Rate Securities held by the Plan
with TD Ameritrade; the number of
shares and par value of the Auction Rate
Securities; the interest or dividend
amounts that are due with respect to the
Auction Rate Securities; purchase dates
for the Auction Rate Securities; and (if
reliable information is available) the
most recent rate information for the
Auction Rate Securities;
(2) The background of the Purchase
Offer;
(3) That neither the tender of Auction
Rate Securities nor the purchase of any
Auction Rate Securities pursuant to the
Purchase Offer will constitute a waiver
of any claim of the tendering Plan;
(4) The methods and timing by which
Plans may accept the Purchase Offer;
(5) The purchase dates, or the manner
of determining the purchase dates, for
Auction Rate Securities tendered
pursuant to the Purchase Offer;
(6) The timing for acceptance by TD
Ameritrade of tendered Auction Rate
Securities;
(7) The timing of payment for Auction
Rate Securities accepted by TD
Ameritrade for payment;
(8) The methods and timing by which
a Plan may elect to withdraw tendered
Auction Rate Securities from the
Purchase Offer;
(9) The expiration date of the
Purchase Offer;
(10) The fact that TD Ameritrade may
make purchases of Auction Rate
Securities outside of the Purchase Offer
following the termination or expiration
of the Purchase Offer and may otherwise
buy, sell, hold or seek to restructure,
redeem or otherwise dispose of the
Auction Rate Securities;
(11) A description of the risk factors
relating to the Purchase Offer as TD
Ameritrade deems appropriate;
(12) How to obtain additional
information concerning the Purchase
Offer; and
(13) The manner in which
information concerning material
amendments or changes to the Purchase
Offer will be communicated to the Plan.
(c) The terms of the Settlement Sale
are consistent with the requirements set
forth in the Settlement Agreement; and
(d) All the conditions of Section II
have been met.
SECTION V. DEFINITIONS
For purposes of this proposed
exemption:
(a) The term ‘‘affiliate’’ means any
person directly or indirectly, through
one or more intermediaries, controlling,
controlled by, or under common control
with such other person;
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(b) The term ‘‘control’’ means the
power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or
policies of a person other than an
individual;
(c) The term ‘‘Auction Rate Security’’
means a security: (1) That is either a
debt instrument (generally with a longterm nominal maturity) or preferred
stock; and (2) with an interest rate or
dividend that is reset at specific
intervals through a Dutch Auction
process;
(d) A person is ‘‘independent’’ of TD
Ameritrade if the person is (1) not TD
Ameritrade or an affiliate; and (2) not a
relative (as defined in section 3(15) of
the Act) of the party engaging in the
transaction;
(e) The term ‘‘Plan’’ means an
individual retirement account or similar
account described in section
4975(e)(1)(B) through (F) of the Code (an
IRA); an employee benefit plan as
defined in section 3(3) of the Act; or an
entity holding plan assets within the
meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3–101, as
modified by section 3(42) of the Act;
and
(f) The term ‘‘Settlement Agreement’’
means a legal settlement involving TD
Ameritrade and a U.S. state or federal
authority that provides for the purchase
of an Auction Rate Security by TD
Ameritrade from a Plan.
Effective Date: If granted, this
proposed exemption will be effective as
of July 20, 2009.
Summary Of Facts And
Representations
1. The Applicant, TD Ameritrade, is a
New York corporation headquartered in
Omaha, Nebraska. The Applicant is an
online broker-dealer that provides
market access and electronic tools to
self-directed investors. The Applicant is
registered as a broker-dealer with the
Commission pursuant to section 15(c) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and
is a member of the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority. The Applicant is
also a wholly-owned subsidiary of TD
Ameritrade Holding Corporation (TD
Ameritrade Holding). As of September
30, 2009, TD Ameritrade Holding had
total assets of $18,371,810,000. As of the
same date, TD Ameritrade had total
assets of $3,240,360,000.
The Applicant was formed as a result
of the consolidation of retail brokerage
operations of Ameritrade, Inc. and TD
Waterhouse Investors Services, Inc.
following TD Ameritrade Holding’s
acquisition of TD Waterhouse Group,
Inc. on January 24, 2006. The Applicant
and its affiliates and subsidiaries
provide a wide range of investmentrelated services, including discount
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brokerage and investment advisory
services. In this regard, the Applicant
acts as a broker and dealer with respect
to the purchase and sale of securities,
including Auction Rate Securities, as
discussed herein.
2. The Applicant describes Auction
Rate Securities (or ARS) and the
arrangement by which ARS are bought
and sold as follows. Auction Rate
Securities are preferred stock or bonds
that are generally issued with maturities
of thirty years, but the maturities can
range from five years to perpetuity. ARS
interest rates or dividend yields are
determined and periodically reset at
auctions commonly referred to as
‘‘Dutch Auctions,’’ during which ARS
are auctioned at par. Ordinarily, ARS
can be bought or sold only at a Dutch
Auction. Dutch Auctions are
customarily held every seven, twentyeight, or thirty-five days.
Under the typical procedures for a
Dutch Auction, investors who wish to
purchase ARS submit a bid to a brokerdealer selected by the entity that issued
the ARS, which includes the minimum
interest or dividend rate that the
investors will accept. Holders of ARS
may either choose to keep their
securities until the next auction or
submit an offer to sell their ARS. An
auction agent collects all of the bids and
offers for a particular auction. The final
rate at which all of the ARS offered for
sale are sold in the auction is the
‘‘clearing rate’’ that applies to that
particular ARS until the next auction.
Bids with the lowest rate and then
successively higher rates are accepted
until all of the sell orders are filled.
If there are not enough bids to cover
the securities offered for sale in a Dutch
Auction, then the auction will fail. In a
failed auction, investors who want to
sell securities are not able to do so, and
hold their ARS until at least the next
auction. In this event, the issuer pays
the holders a maximum rate or ‘‘penalty’’
rate. These rates might be higher or
lower than the prior clearing rate or
market rates on similar products.
3. The Applicant states that to
facilitate the auction process, the issuers
of the ARS selected one or more brokerdealers to underwrite the offering and to
manage the auction process. In many
instances, these broker-dealers
submitted their own bids to support the
auctions and to prevent the auctions
from failing. The Applicant states that it
did not act as an underwriter, manager
or agent for any issuer of ARS. Instead,
the Applicant represents that it acted
solely as an agent, both on a solicited
and unsolicited basis, for its customers
by submitting their bids to purchase and
orders to sell ARS. Specifically, the
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Applicant would act as an order taker
and process client-generated requests to
purchase ARS. As a so-called
‘‘distributing’’ or ‘‘downstream’’ brokerdealer, the Applicant represents that it
did not submit bids in an effort to
support any of the Dutch Auctions or to
prevent them from failing. The
Applicant further represents that it did
not hold any significant inventory of
ARS in its proprietary accounts.3
However, the Applicant represents that,
in certain instances, it may have
previously advised or otherwise caused
a Plan to acquire and hold ARS.4
4. According to the Applicant, in the
early part of 2008, the broker-dealers
that acted as underwriters of the ARS
offerings or as lead managers for the
Dutch Auctions stopped submitting
their own bids in support of the Dutch
Auctions. As a result, by February 13,
2008, the ARS market began
experiencing widespread auction
failures, leaving investors unable to sell
their ARS holdings. Consequently, Plans
holding ARS may or may not have
sufficient liquidity to make benefit
payments, mandatory payments and
withdrawals and expense payments
when due.5
3 The Applicant states that it did not have a
practice of holding ARS in inventory or for
investment purposes. The Applicant explains that
at any given time and in the ordinary course of
business, its Fixed Income Trading Desk (the Desk)
may have held a nominal number of ARS units in
proprietary accounts in between auctions as a result
of data entry or communications errors that may
have resulted in a customer account receiving more
ARS units than the customer intended to purchase.
The Applicant further explains that it was the
Desk’s practice to sell such units in the next
auction. The Applicant also states that on other
isolated occasions, it received the opportunity to
obtain a nominal number of ARS units in
connection with an initial public offering by the
issuer. On such occasions, the Applicant states that
it would obtain those units at a discount and sell
them at par to clients seeking to purchase such
securities.
The Applicant represents that the sales of ARS
units out of its inventory to plans are exempt
transactions under Part II of Prohibited Transaction
Exemption (PTE) 75–1 (40 FR 50845, October 31,
1975, 71 FR 5883, February 3, 2006), with respect
to principal transactions. In those isolated
situations when it had ARS units in its inventory,
the Applicant explains that it sold them to plans at
par, which satisfies the condition of PTE 75–1 that
the transaction be at least as favorable to the plan
as an arm’s length transaction with an unrelated
party. This is because a plan would have paid the
same price for the particular ARS unit regardless of
where it purchased such unit.
The Department expresses no opinion herein on
whether these transactions comply with the
provisions of PTE 75–1. Accordingly, the
Department is not proposing any relief beyond that
offered by PTE 75–1.
4 The relief contained in this proposed exemption
does not extend to the fiduciary provisions of
section 404 of the Act.
5 The Department notes that PTE 80–26 (45 FR
28545 (April 29, 1980), as amended at 71 FR 17917
(April 7, 2006)), permits interest-free loans or other
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5. The Applicant further states that
from February 13, 2008 through the
present, the ARS market continues to
experience widespread failures, making
many ARS holdings illiquid. Although
ARS have been redeemed by their
issuers since that time, numerous
investors, including some of TD
Ameritrade’s customers, currently hold
ARS that they have been unable to sell
through the auction process or redeem
by the issuers.
6. The Applicant is requesting
exemptive relief for the sale of ARS
under two different circumstances: (a)
Where a Plan sells ARS to TD
Ameritrade and such sale (i.e., an
Unrelated Sale) is unrelated to, is not
made in connection with, and is entered
into after the finalization of, a
Settlement Agreement; and (b) where a
Plan sells ARS to TD Ameritrade and
such sale (i.e., a Settlement Sale) is
related to, and made in connection with,
a Settlement Agreement. If granted, the
exemption would be effective as of July
20, 2009.
7. With respect to Unrelated Sales, the
Applicant represents that it may
purchase ARS from its customers
outside the Purchase Offer at times and
on terms other than those provided in
the Purchase Offer (i.e., an Unrelated
Offer). For example, TD Ameritrade may
purchase ARS from Plans who failed to
respond to the Purchase Offer prior to
the expiration of the Purchase Offer or
from Plans not covered by the
Settlements and the Purchase Offer.6 In
determining whether to make an
Unrelated Offer, TD Ameritrade will
consider the relevant facts and
circumstances. With respect to Plans
covered by the Settlements and the
Purchase Offer as well as Plans not
covered by the Settlements and the
Purchase Offer, any Unrelated Offer will
extensions of credit from a party in interest to a
plan if, among other things, the proceeds of the loan
or extension of credit are used only: (1) For the
payment of ordinary operating expenses of the plan,
including the payment of benefits in accordance
with the terms of the plan and periodic premiums
under an insurance or annuity contract, or (2) for
a purpose incidental to the ordinary operation of
the plan.
6 The Applicant states that there has been only
one Unrelated Sale since the close of the Purchase
Offer under the Settlement Agreement and that the
purchase occurred as if there had been a timely
tender of the securities under the Purchase Offer.
In that case, the widow of an IRA holder, who did
not realize that her husband held ARS in his IRA,
discovered the holding after the deadline had
passed. TD Ameritrade waited until the tender
period had closed and bought back the ARS on
April 12, 2010. TD Ameritrade treated the
Unrelated Sale as though the ARS holder had
timely tendered under the Purchase Offer and used
the pricing methodology set forth in the Settlement
Agreement (i.e., par plus accrued and unpaid
interest and/or dividends).
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be made at the same price offered under
the Purchase Offer (i.e., par plus accrued
and unpaid interest and/or dividends).
Therefore, TD Ameritrade is requesting
retroactive relief (and prospective relief)
for an Unrelated Sale that has occurred
outside the Settlement process and in
the event a sale of ARS by a Plan to TD
Ameritrade occurs outside the
Settlement process in the future.
8. With respect to Settlement Sales,
the Applicant represents that it entered
into Settlement Agreements with certain
U.S. state and federal authorities in
connection with TD Ameritrade’s role in
the acquisition and holding of ARS by
various TD Ameritrade customers (the
Eligible Customers), including Plans. As
of July 20, 2009, the date that the
Settlements were publicly announced,
the Applicant’s Eligible Customers held
approximately $456 million in ARS. Of
this amount, $5.8 million was held in 87
brokerage accounts for Eligible
Customers of the Applicant that were
Plans.
9. Pursuant to the Settlement
Agreements, among other things, TD
Ameritrade was required to send a
written offer (i.e., the Purchase Offer) to
certain Plans that held ARS in
connection with the brokerage services
provided by TD Ameritrade. Only ARS
purchased from the Applicant on or
before February 13, 2008 that had failed
at auction at least once since February
13, 2008 were considered ‘‘Eligible ARS’’
for purposes of the Purchase Offer. The
Purchase Offer explained what Eligible
Customers had to do to participate and
it informed them of the relevant terms
of the Settlement Agreement and other
material terms regarding their rights.
The Settlement Agreements required
that the Purchase Offer be sent by
August 10, 2009.
10. Eligible Customers had different
lengths of time to respond to the
Purchase Offer depending on various
factors described in the Settlement
Agreements. In general, Eligible
Customers with assets of $250,000 or
less as of March 13, 2009 had 75 days
from the date the Purchase Offer was
sent to respond; Eligible Customers with
more than $250,000 had until March 23,
2010, which gave them as much as
seven months or more to respond,
depending on when they were
identified as eligible.7 As described in
further detail below, Eligible Customers
that accepted the Purchase Offer were
permitted to sell the ARS to TD
Ameritrade for cash equal to the par
7 Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, TD
Ameritrade was permitted to extend the Purchase
Offer period up until, but not beyond, June 30, 2010
for those Eligible Customers with more than
$250,000 in ‘‘Eligible ARS’’.
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value of such securities, plus any
accrued interest and/or dividends.
Eligible Customers that did not respond
to the Purchase Offer within a specified
period of time were sent a second notice
informing them of the Applicant’s
Purchase Offer, the relevant terms of the
Settlement Agreement, and any other
material issues regarding such
customer’s rights. To assist Eligible
Customers, the Applicant established a
dedicated toll-free telephone assistance
line and a public Internet page to
provide information and to respond to
questions concerning the terms of the
Settlement Agreements. The Applicant
maintained the telephone assistance
line and Internet page through March
31, 2010, the date of the Applicant’s last
payment under the Settlement
Agreement.
11. The Applicant states that ARS
units have been tendered by Plans to TD
Ameritrade pursuant to a Purchase Offer
issued by TD Ameritrade under a
Settlement Agreement. In this regard,
the Applicant states that with respect to
the Purchase Offer that closed on March
23, 2010, it purchased approximately
$302.9 million of ARS from
approximately 1,180 Eligible Customers,
which includes $5,525,000 8 in ARS
held by thirty Eligible Customers that
were Plans. The Applicant estimates
that as of the close of the tender offer
period on March 23, 2010,
approximately $81.9 million in ‘‘Eligible
ARS’’ remained outstanding, including
ARS that had been transferred away
from TD Ameritrade and that could not
be confirmed. Accordingly, the
Applicant is requesting exemptive relief
retroactive to July 20, 2009 for
Settlement Sales.
12. The Applicant opines that
Settlement Sales and Unrelated Sales
(hereinafter, each, a Covered Sale) are in
the interests of Plans. In this regard, the
Applicant states that the Covered Sales
allow Plans to normalize their
investments. The Applicant represents
that each Covered Sale has been and
will be for no consideration other than
cash payment against prompt delivery
of the ARS, and such cash has equaled
and will equal the par value of the ARS,
plus any accrued but unpaid interest or
dividends. The Applicant represents
further that Plans have not paid and will
not pay any commissions or transaction
costs with respect to any Covered Sale.
13. The Applicant also represents that
the proposed exemption is protective of
the Plans. The Applicant states that
each Covered Sale has been made and
8 The Applicant represents that the amount of
ARS involved in the Unrelated Sale described in
Footnote 6 above is included in this amount.
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will be made pursuant to a written
Purchase Offer and the decision to
accept such offer or retain the ARS has
been made and will be made by a Plan
fiduciary or Plan participant or IRA
owner who is independent of TD
Ameritrade. Additionally, each
Purchase Offer has been delivered and
will be delivered in a manner designed
to alert a Plan fiduciary that TD
Ameritrade is willing to purchase ARS
from the Plan. Purchase Offers made in
connection with a Settlement
Agreement have specifically included,
among other things: The background of
the Purchase Offer; the method and
timing by which a Plan may accept the
Purchase Offer; the expiration date of
the Purchase Offer; a description of
certain risk factors relating to the
Purchase Offer; how to obtain additional
information concerning the Purchase
Offer; and the manner in which
information concerning material
amendments or changes to the Purchase
Offer will be communicated. Further,
the Applicant states that, neither TD
Ameritrade nor any affiliate has
exercised or will exercise investment
discretion or render investment advice
within the meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3–
21(c) with respect to a Plan’s decision
to accept the Purchase Offer or to retain
the ARS.9
In addition, an Unrelated Offer made
in connection with an Unrelated Sale
has included and will include all of the
material terms of the Unrelated Sale as
follows: The identity and par value of
the ARS; the interest or dividend
amounts that are due with respect to the
ARS; and the most recent information
for the ARS (if reliable information is
available). The Applicant represents
further that Plans have not waived and
will not waive any rights or claims in
connection with any Covered Sale.
14. The Applicant further represents
that the proposed exemption, if granted,
would be administratively feasible. In
this regard, the Applicant notes that
each Covered Sale has occurred and will
occur at the par value of the affected
ARS, plus accrued but unpaid interest
and dividends, to the extent applicable,
and such value is readily ascertainable.
The Applicant represents further that
TD Ameritrade has maintained and will
maintain the records necessary to enable
the Department and Plan fiduciaries,
among others, to determine whether the
conditions of this exemption, if granted,
have been met.
9 The Applicant states that while there may have
been or may be communication between a Plan and
TD Ameritrade subsequent to a Purchase Offer,
such communication has not involved and will not
involve advice regarding whether the Plan should
accept the Purchase Offer.
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15. In summary, the Applicant
represents that the transactions
described herein have satisfied or will
satisfy the statutory criteria for an
exemption under section 408(a) of the
Act because, among other things:
(a) Each Covered Sale has been made
and shall be made pursuant to a written
Purchase Offer;
(b) Each Covered Sale has been and
shall be for no consideration other than
cash payment against prompt delivery
of the ARS;
(c) The amount of each Covered Sale
has equaled and shall equal the par
value of the ARS, plus any accrued but
unpaid interest or dividends;
(d) No Plan has waived nor shall
waive any rights or claims in connection
with any Covered Sale;
(e)(1) The decision to accept a
Purchase Offer or retain the ARS has
been made and shall be made by a Plan
fiduciary or Plan participant or IRA
owner who is independent of TD
Ameritrade; and (2) neither TD
Ameritrade nor any affiliate has
exercised or shall exercise investment
discretion or render investment advice
within the meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3–
21(c) with respect to the decision to
accept the Purchase Offer or retain the
ARS;
(f) Plans have not paid and shall not
pay any commissions or transaction
costs with respect to any Covered Sale;
(g) A Covered Sale has not been part
of and shall not be part of an
arrangement, agreement or
understanding designed to benefit a
party in interest to the affected Plan;
(h) With respect to any Settlement
Sale, the terms and delivery of the
Purchase Offer, and the terms of
Settlement Sale, have been consistent
with and shall be consistent with the
requirements set forth in the Settlement
Agreement;
(i) TD Ameritrade has made and shall
make available in connection with an
Unrelated Sale the material terms of the
Unrelated Sale, including: (1) The
identity and par value of the Auction
Rate Security; (2) the interest or
dividend amounts that are due but
unpaid with respect to the Auction Rate
Security; and (3) the most recent
information for the Auction Rate
Security (if reliable information is
available).
(j) Each Purchase Offer made in
connection with a Settlement
Agreement has described or shall
describe the material terms of the
Settlement Sale, including the following
(and shall not constitute a waiver of any
claim of the tendering Plan): (1) How
the Plan can determine: The ARS held
by the Plan with TD Ameritrade, the
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number of shares and par value of the
ARS, interest or dividend amounts, and
purchase dates for the ARS, and (if
reliable information is available) the
most recent rate information for the
ARS; (2) the background of the Purchase
Offer; (3) the methods and timing by
which the Plan may accept the Purchase
Offer; (4) the purchase dates, or the
manner of determining the purchase
dates, for ARS pursuant to the Purchase
Offer and the timing for acceptance by
TD Ameritrade of tendered ARS for the
payment; (5) the expiration date of the
Purchase Offer; and (6) how to obtain
additional information concerning the
Purchase Offer.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant represents that the
potentially interested participants and
beneficiaries cannot all be identified,
and, therefore, the only practical means
of notifying such participants and
beneficiaries of this proposed
exemption is by the publication of this
notice in the Federal Register.
Comments and requests for a hearing
must be received by the Department not
later than 30 days from the date of
publication of this notice of proposed
exemption in the Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Anna Mpras Vaughan of the
Department, telephone (202) 693–8565.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
Owens & Minor, Inc.,
Located in Mechanicsville, Virginia.
[Application No. D–11638]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act
and section 4975(c)(2) of the Code and
in accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR Part 2570 Subpart B (55
FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If
the proposed exemption is granted, the
restrictions of section 406(a)(1)(A) and
(D) and section 406(b)(1) and (b)(2) of
the Act, and the sanctions resulting
from the application of section 4975 of
the Code, by reason of section
4975(c)(1)(A), (D), and (E) of the Code,
shall not apply to the sale of certain
shares in a hedge fund (the Shares) by
the Owens & Minor, Inc. Pension Plan
(the Plan) to Owens & Minor, Inc. (the
Employer), a party in interest with
respect to the Plan, provided that the
following conditions are satisfied:
(a) The sale is a one-time transaction
for cash;
(b) The terms and conditions of the
sale are at least as favorable to the Plan
as those that the Plan could obtain in an
arm’s-length transaction with an
unrelated third party;
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(c) The sales price is the greater of: (1)
$1,029.93 per Share (the highest per
share purchase price paid by the Plan),
or (2) the net asset value of the Shares
reported in the most recently available
monthly statement, as determined by
the hedge fund manager, who is
independent and unrelated to the
Employer, (which is supported by the
report of the independent auditors);
(d) The Plan pays no commissions,
fees, or other expenses in connection
with the sale;
(e) Upon termination of the Plan, the
Plan participants and beneficiaries will
be paid 100% of their accrued benefits
from the assets of the Plan, as a result
of the Employer’s sufficiency
contribution to the Plan;
(f) The Plan has not waived or
released and does not waive or release
any claims, demands, and/or causes of
action that the Plan may have against
the Employer, the Plan Fiduciary, or the
hedge fund manager in connection with
the acquisition, holding and sale of the
Shares to the Employer; and
(g) The Employer maintains, or causes
to be maintained, for a period of at least
six (6) years from the date of the sale,
such records as are necessary to enable
the persons described in paragraph (h),
below, to determine whether the
conditions of this exemption, if granted,
have been met, except that—
(1) No party in interest with respect
to the Plan other than the Employer
shall be subject to a civil penalty under
section 502(i) of ERISA or the taxes
imposed by section 4975(a) and (b) of
the Code, if such records are not
maintained, or are not available for
examination, as required, below, by
paragraph (h); and
(2) A separate prohibited transaction
shall not be considered to have occurred
solely because, due to circumstances
beyond the control of the Employer,
such records are lost or destroyed prior
to the end of the six-year period; and
(h)(1) Except as provided in
subparagraph (2), below, and
notwithstanding any provisions of
subsections (a)(2) and (b) of section 504
of ERISA, the records referred to in
paragraph (g), above, are
unconditionally available at their
customary location for examination
during normal business hours by—
(A) Any duly authorized employee or
representative of the Department, the
Internal Revenue Service, or the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission;
(B) Any fiduciary of the Plan, or any
duly authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary; or
(C) Any employer of participants and
beneficiaries and any employee
organization whose members are
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covered by the Plan or any authorized
employee or representative thereof;
(2) None of the persons described
above in paragraph (h)(1)(B) or (C) shall
be authorized to examine trade secrets
of the Employer, or commercial or
financial information that is privileged
or confidential; and
(3) Should the Employer refuse to
disclose information on the basis that
such information is exempt from
disclosure, the Employer shall, by the
close of the thirtieth (30th) day
following the request, provide a written
notice advising that person of the
reasons for the refusal and that the
Department may request such
information.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Owens & Minor, Inc. Pension
Plan (the Plan) is a defined benefit plan
sponsored by Owens & Minor, Inc. (the
Employer or the applicant), a distributor
of national name-brand medical and
surgical supplies who serves its
healthcare provider customers from 55
distribution centers located throughout
the United States. The Plan was
originally established effective March
31, 1957 and was last amended and
restated effective January 1, 2002. The
Plan was frozen effective December 31,
1996. The aggregate fair market value of
the Plan’s assets was approximately
$31,276,861, as of April 30, 2010. The
Plan had 1,789 participants and
beneficiaries, as of June 4, 2010. The
Plan’s trustee is Reliance Trust
Company. The Employer sponsors two
defined contribution plans, a 401(k)
profit sharing plan and an employee
stock purchase plan, in addition to the
Plan.
On April 30, 2010, the Employer filed
a request for a determination as to the
Plan’s qualified status with the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS). The Employer
filed PBGC Form 500 (Standard
Termination Notice) with the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) by
July 30, 2010. If PBGC does not object
to the proposed termination of the Plan
within the 60-day period following the
filing of the Standard Termination
Notice, the Plan must distribute all its
assets by its ‘‘Distribution Date,’’ which
is the later of (i) 180 days after the end
of PBGC’s 60-day review period, or (ii)
120 days after receipt of a favorable
determination from the IRS.
2. As of April 30, 2010, the assets of
the Plan consisted of: (i) FDICguaranteed bank notes in the amount of
$25,540,900, (ii) money market accounts
valued at $1,835,666, (iii) a brokerage
account consisting of several alternative
investments valued at $3,058,882, and
(iv) 943.66 shares of a non-publicly
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78773
traded hedge fund (the Shares), with a
value of $841,413 (based upon a net
asset value (NAV) of $891.65 per share).
The Plan’s investments, including the
Shares, are approved by the
Compensation and Benefits Committee
(the Committee) of the Employer’s
Board of Directors. The Plan purchased
2,570.42 Shares at $1,029.931 per share
on November 28, 2007 and 99.56 Shares
at $1,004.381 per share on July 30, 2008,
at a total cost of approximately
$2,747,351.37.10 The Employer owns no
shares in the Fund.
The hedge fund is the Selectinvest
Institutional ARV ASW Fund (the
Fund), which, in turn, invests
substantially all its assets in a ‘‘fund of
funds,’’ (the Master Feeder Fund).
The Fund manager is Alternate
Strategies Group (ASG), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Wells Fargo. The Master
Feeder Fund is unrelated to ASG and is
managed by Union Bancaire Privee
Asset Management LLC (UBPAM),
which is also its investment advisor.
The Master Feeder Fund invests in the
following three funds: Selectinvest ARV
Ltd. (Master Fund I); Selectinvest ARV
II Ltd. (Master Fund II); and Selectinvest
ARV L.P. (Master Fund III). UBPAM is
the investment manager for Master Fund
I, Master Fund II, and Master Fund III
(collectively, the Master Funds).11 In
February 2009, ASG announced that it
intended to terminate all Selectinvest
ARV Funds, including the Fund.12
ASG began the process of redeeming
all interests in the Fund on March 31,
2009. Since that time, ASG has
redeemed approximately 1,781 of the
10 The Department expresses no opinion herein as
to whether the acquisition and holding of the
Shares by the Plan have met the requirements of
Part 4 in Title I of the Act.
11 It is represented that, in general, the standard
investment management fees assessed by the Fund
had been a 1.25% Advisory Fee per annum and a
0.35% Program Fee per annum. Because ASG is
liquidating all investments in the Fund, however,
the Advisory Fee was reduced to 0.50% per annum
starting on March 31, 2009. The Limited Liability
Company Agreement defines the term ‘‘Program’’ as
comprised of Feeder Funds that provide access to
underlying Master Funds; thus, the ‘‘Program Fee’’
is an annual fee charged to Fund members to
participate in the Program. As is typical with
mutual funds and other collective funds, the
Advisory Fee and the Program Fee are netted out
of the Fund’s investment performance and
published net asset value (NAV). The applicant
further represents that the Plan is not paying
duplicative fees at the underlying funds level.
12 The exemption application states: ‘‘Although a
secondary market exists for the Feeder Fund’s
investments, it is not active and individual
transactions are typically not observable. When
transactions do occur in this limited secondary
market, they may occur at discounts to the reported
net asset value. It is therefore reasonably possible
that if the Feeder Funds were to sell these
investments in the secondary market, a buyer may
require a discount to the reported net asset value,
and the discount could be significant.’’
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Plan’s Shares, approximately 67% of the
Plan’s interest in the Fund, in five
separate redemptions. The Plan received
its first redemption payment of
$811,700 on May 13, 2009, in exchange
for 972.11 shares, which represents a
per share value of $834.988. On
September 10, 2009, the Plan received
its second redemption payment of
$319,500, in exchange for 367.01 shares,
which represents a per share value of
$870.548. On January 21, 2010, the Plan
received its third redemption payment
of $203,100, in exchange for 225.09
shares, which represents a per share
value of $902.306. On April 27, 2010,
the Plan received its fourth redemption
payment of $148,000, in exchange for
162.10 shares, which represents a per
share value of $913.016. On October 20,
2010, the Plan received its most recent
redemption payment of $48,100, in
exchange for 54.79 shares, which
represents a per share value of $877.897.
In order for ASG to redeem shares in
the Fund, the Master Feeder Fund must
have sufficient cash reserves. Because
ASG’s complete redemption request
exceeded such reserves, the redemption
of the Plan’s Shares will likely not be
finalized until a sufficient portion of the
underlying assets of the Master Feeder
Fund and its ‘‘down-stream’’
investments in the Master Funds are
liquidated.
3. The Employer represents that all
the assets of the Plan, including the
remaining Shares, must be liquidated
and the proceeds used to fund the
purchase of annuity contracts and
distributions of lump sum benefit
amounts. The Plan is contractually
prohibited from selling its Shares to a
third party without the permission of
ASG. There is only a very limited
secondary market for the Shares. In the
event that the Plan’s Shares are not
entirely redeemed by the Fund prior to
the Distribution Date, the Employer
proposes to purchase the remaining
Shares from the Plan for a price that is
the greater of: (1) $1,029.93 per Share
(the highest per share purchase price
paid by the Plan), or (2) the NAV of the
Shares as determined by ASG. It is
represented that the Plan will pay no
commissions, fees, or other expenses in
connection with the sale.
4. The applicant represents that ASG
determines the Fund’s NAV, which it
publishes at the end of each month in
its monthly statements, according to the
Fund’s membership agreement, based
upon the current fair market value of the
underlying investments (based on the
NAV of the Master Feeder Fund, which
in turn is based upon the Master Feeder
Fund’s interest in the Master Funds
based upon their underlying
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investments). The applicant further
represents that ASG is the only qualified
appraiser to determine the value of the
Plan’s interest in the Fund because ASG
is solely responsible for the
determination of the Fund’s NAV. It is
represented that ASG’s method of
calculating the Fund’s NAV meets the
requirements of FAS 157.13 It is also
represented that ASG is independent
from the Employer and receives no
income from the Employer. The Fund’s
independent auditor is KPMG LLP,
located in Boston, Massachusetts and
the applicant represents that the net
asset value of the Shares reported in the
most recently available monthly
statement, as determined by ASG, is
supported by the report of KPMG.
The value of the Plan’s membership
interest in the Fund is calculated as the
number of Shares owned by the Plan
relative to all outstanding Fund shares.
According to ASG’s determination of
the Fund’s NAV as of April 30, 2010,
the Plan’s remaining Shares have a
value of approximately $792,561.
The applicant represents that the
Fund’s NAV as set forth in ASG’s most
recently available statement prior to the
date of the sale would be used to
determine the dollar value of the Plan’s
Shares. Furthermore, the Committee, as
the Plan fiduciary, will review and
approve the valuation methodology
used by ASG, ensure that such
methodology is properly applied in
determining the value of the Shares, and
will also determine whether it is
prudent to go forward with the
proposed transaction. The proposed sale
of the Shares is anticipated to take place
on or about the Distribution Date,
contingent upon obtaining the requested
exemption from the Department.
5. Because of the Plan’s underfunded
status, as the final step in the Plan
termination process, the Employer has
made a commitment to contribute an
estimated additional $1,000,000 to the
Plan to ensure that the Plan has
sufficient assets to satisfy all its accrued
benefit obligations.
In accordance with the requirements
for a Standard Termination under
section 4041(b) of the Act and the PBGC
guidelines, the amount that the
Employer will contribute to the Plan to
make it sufficient will be calculated as
follows: The actuarial present value of
the total Plan liabilities for accrued
benefits less (the amount received for
13 FAS 157 provides guidance for measuring the
fair value of assets and liabilities, including hardto-value alternative investments. Effective January
1, 2008, the Fund, the Master Feeder Fund, and
each of the Master Funds adopted FAS 157. The
description of these accounting policies appears in
the financial statements of each fund.
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the remaining Shares, either through the
redemption process or consummation of
the proposed sale, plus the value of all
other Plan assets).
The applicant represents that, if it
completes the standard termination
process for the Plan, the PBGC will not
be liable or responsible for paying any
Plan benefits, and, in fact, will not pay
any Plan benefits. Upon termination of
the Plan, the Plan participants and
beneficiaries will receive 100% of their
accrued benefits, as a result of the
Employer’s sufficiency contribution to
the Plan.
6. According to the applicant, if the
requested exemption is denied and the
Shares are not fully redeemed prior to
the Distribution Date, the Plan will lack
sufficient liquid assets to satisfy the
distribution deadline. The failure to
distribute all accrued benefits by the
Distribution Date could result in the
PBGC issuing the Plan a notice of
noncompliance, which would require
re-starting the standard termination
process and nullify all actions taken to
date to terminate the Plan, including the
re-issuance of the required multiple
notices to the Plan participants and
beneficiaries required by the
termination process, and delay the
distribution of plan benefits.
The applicant represents that the
proposed transaction is in the best
interests of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries because it will enable
the Plan to convert an illiquid, nonmarketable asset into cash in order to
complete the standard termination
process and purchase of annuity
contracts and lump-sum distributions to
satisfy all its accrued benefit
obligations. The proposed transaction
would also allow the Plan to avoid the
discount that would be expected if the
Shares were sold in the secondary
market. The Employer is also bearing
the costs of the exemption application
and of notifying interested persons.
7. In summary, the applicant
represents that the proposed transaction
satisfies the statutory criteria for an
exemption under section 408(a) of the
Act for the following reasons: (a) The
sale will be a one-time transaction for
cash; (b) the terms and conditions of the
sale will be at least as favorable to the
Plan as those that the Plan could obtain
in an arm’s length transaction with an
unrelated third party; (c) the sales price
will be the greater of: (1) $1,029.93 per
Share (the highest per share purchase
price paid by the Plan), or (2) the net
asset value of the Shares reported in the
most recently available monthly
statement, as determined by the hedge
fund manager, who is independent and
unrelated to the Employer, (which is
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supported by the report of the
independent auditors); (d) the Plan will
pay no commissions, fees, or other
expenses in connection with the sale;
and (e) upon termination of the Plan,
the Plan participants and beneficiaries
will be paid 100% of their accrued
benefits from the assets of the Plan, as
a result of the Employer’s sufficiency
contribution to the Plan.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Karin Weng of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8557. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
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General Information
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or
disqualified person from certain other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction
provisions to which the exemption does
not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404
of the Act, which, among other things,
require a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting the plan solely in the
interest of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan and in a
prudent fashion in accordance with
section 404(a)(1)(b) of the Act; nor does
it affect the requirement of section
401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining
the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be
granted under section 408(a) of the Act
and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code,
the Department must find that the
exemption is administratively feasible,
in the interests of the plan and of its
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of the plan;
(3) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be supplemental to, and
not in derogation of, any other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transitional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be subject to the express
condition that the material facts and
representations contained in each
application are true and complete, and
that each application accurately
describes all material terms of the
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Jkt 223001
transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 13th day of
December 2010.
Ivan Strasfeld,
Director of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2010–31570 Filed 12–15–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
[Docket No. OSHA–2010–0012]
National Advisory Committee on
Occupational Safety and Health
(NACOSH)
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA), Labor.
ACTION: Announcement of meeting of
the National Advisory Committee on
Occupational Safety and Health
(NACOSH) and NACOSH subgroup
meetings.
AGENCY:
The National Advisory
Committee on Occupational Safety and
Health (NACOSH) will meet January 19
and 20, 2011, in Washington, DC.
DATES: NACOSH meeting: NACOSH will
meet from 8:15 a.m. to 5 p.m., on
Wednesday, January 19, and from
8:15 a.m. to 4:15 p.m., on Thursday,
January 20, 2011.
Submission of comments, requests to
speak, and requests for special
accommodation: Comments, requests to
speak at the NACOSH meeting, and
requests for special accommodations for
the NACOSH meeting must be
submitted (postmarked, sent,
transmitted) by January 12, 2011.
ADDRESSES: NACOSH meeting:
NACOSH will meet in Room N–N4437
A/B/C/D, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20210.
Submission of comments and requests
to speak: You may submit comments
and requests to speak at the NACOSH
meeting, identified by docket number
for this Federal Register notice (Docket
No. OSHA–2010–0012), by one of the
following methods:
Electronically: You may submit
materials, including attachments,
electronically at https://
www.regulations.gov, the Federal
eRulemaking Portal. Follow the online
instructions for making submissions.
Facsimile: If your submission,
including attachments, does not exceed
10 pages, you may fax it to the OSHA
Docket Office at (202) 693–1648.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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78775
Mail, express delivery, messenger or
courier service: Submit three copies of
your submissions to the OSHA Docket
Office, Room N–2625, U.S. Department
of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20210, telephone
(202) 693–2350 (TTY (887) 889–5627).
Deliveries (hand, express mail,
messenger, courier service) are accepted
during the Department of Labor’s and
OSHA Docket Office’s normal business
hours, 8:15 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. e.t.
Requests for special accommodation:
Submit requests for special
accommodations for the NACOSH
meeting by hard copy, telephone, or
e-mail to Ms. Veneta Chatmon, OSHA,
Office of Communications, Room N–
3647, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20210; telephone (202) 693–1999;
e-mail chatmon.veneta@dol.gov.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the Agency name and docket
number for this Federal Register notice
(Docket No. OSHA–2010–0012).
Because of security-related procedures,
submission by regular mail may result
in a significant delay in receipt. Please
contact the OSHA Docket Office for
information about security procedures
for making submissions by hand
delivery, express delivery, messenger or
courier service. For additional
information about submitting comments
and requests to speak, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this notice.
Comments and requests to speak,
including personal information
provided, will be placed in the public
docket and may be available online.
Therefore, OSHA cautions interested
parties about submitting personal
information such as social security
numbers and birthdates.
Docket: To read or download
documents in the public docket for this
NACOSH meeting, go to https://
www.regulations.gov. All documents in
the public docket are listed in the index;
however, some documents (e.g.,
copyrighted material) are not publicly
available to read or download through
https://www.regulations.gov. All
submissions, including copyrighted
material, are available for inspection
and copying at the OSHA Docket Office
at the address above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
press inquiries: MaryAnn Garrahan,
OSHA, Office of Communications, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N3647, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20210; telephone (202) 693–1999.
For general information: Ms. Deborah
Crawford, OSHA, Directorate of
Evaluation and Analysis, U.S.
E:\FR\FM\16DEN1.SGM
16DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 241 (Thursday, December 16, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 78768-78775]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-31570]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction
Restrictions
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed exemptions.
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SUMMARY: This document contains notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of proposed exemptions from
certain of the prohibited transaction restrictions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code). This notice includes the
following proposed exemptions: D-11592, TD Ameritrade, Inc. (TD
Ameritrade or the Applicant); and D-11638, Owens & Minor, Inc.; et al.
DATES: All interested persons are invited to submit written comments or
requests for a hearing on the pending exemptions, unless otherwise
stated in the Notice of Proposed Exemption, within 45 days from the
date of publication of this Federal Register Notice.
ADDRESSES: Comments and requests for a hearing should state: (1) The
name, address, and telephone number of the person making the comment or
request, and (2) the nature of the person's interest in the exemption
and the manner in which the person would be adversely affected by the
exemption. A request for a hearing must also state the issues to be
addressed and include a general description of the evidence to be
presented at the hearing.
All written comments and requests for a hearing (at least three
copies) should be sent to the Employee Benefits Security Administration
(EBSA), Office of Exemption Determinations, Room N-5700, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC
20210. Attention: Application No. ----, stated in each Notice of
Proposed Exemption. Interested persons are also invited to submit
comments and/or hearing requests to EBSA via e-mail or FAX. Any such
comments or requests should be sent either by e-mail to:
moffitt.betty@dol.gov, or by FAX to (202) 219-0204 by the end of the
scheduled comment period. The applications for exemption and the
comments received will be available for public inspection in the Public
Documents Room of the Employee Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N-1513, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210.
Warning: If you submit written comments or hearing requests, do not
include any personally-identifiable or confidential business
information that you do not want to be publicly-disclosed. All comments
and hearing requests are posted on the Internet exactly as they are
received, and they can be retrieved by most Internet search engines.
The Department will make no deletions, modifications or redactions to
the comments or hearing requests received, as they are public records.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions will be provided to all
interested persons in the manner agreed upon by the applicant and the
Department within 15 days of the date of publication in the Federal
Register. Such notice shall include a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal Register and shall inform
interested persons of their right to comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate). The proposed exemptions were requested in
applications filed pursuant to section 408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in accordance with procedures set forth in
29 CFR Part 2570, Subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).
Effective December 31, 1978, section 102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4
of 1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1 (1996), transferred the authority of the
Secretary of the Treasury to issue exemptions of the type requested to
the Secretary of Labor. Therefore, these notices of proposed exemption
are issued solely by the Department.
The applications contain representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are summarized below. Interested persons are
referred to the applications on file with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and representations.
TD Ameritrade, Inc. (TD Ameritrade or the Applicant) Located in
Omaha, NE.
[Application No. D-11592]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, and
in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR Part 2570,
Subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).\1\
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\1\ For purposes of this proposed exemption, references to
section 406 of ERISA should be read to refer as well to the
corresponding provisions of section 4975 of the Code.
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SECTION I. SALES OF AUCTION RATE SECURITIES FROM PLANS TO TD
AMERITRADE: UNRELATED TO A SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of section
406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and section 406(b)(1) and (2) of the Act and the
sanctions resulting from the application of section 4975 of the Code,
by reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A), (D), and (E) of the Code, shall not
apply, effective July 20, 2009, to the sale by a Plan (as defined in
Section V(e)) of an Auction Rate Security (as defined in Section V(c))
to TD Ameritrade, where such sale (an Unrelated Sale) is unrelated to,
is not made in connection with, and is entered into after the
finalization of, a Settlement Agreement (as defined in Section V(f)),
provided that the conditions set forth in Section II have been met.
SECTION II. CONDITIONS APPLICABLE TO TRANSACTIONS DESCRIBED IN SECTION
I
(a) The Plan acquired the Auction Rate Security in connection with
brokerage services provided by TD Ameritrade to the Plan;
(b) The last auction for the Auction Rate Security was
unsuccessful;
(c) The Unrelated Sale is made pursuant to a written offer by TD
Ameritrade (the Unrelated Offer) containing all of the material terms
of the Unrelated Sale, including, but not limited to: (1) The identity
and par value of the Auction Rate Security; (2) the interest or
dividend amounts that are due with respect to the Auction Rate
Security; and (3) the most recent information for the Auction Rate
Security (if reliable information is available).
(d) The Unrelated Sale is for no consideration other than cash
payment against prompt delivery of the Auction Rate Security;
(e) The sales price for the Auction Rate Security is equal to the
par value of the Auction Rate Security, plus any
[[Page 78769]]
accrued but unpaid interest or dividends;
(f) The Plan does not waive any rights or claims in connection with
the Unrelated Sale;
(g) The decision to accept the Unrelated Offer or retain the
Auction Rate Security is made by a Plan fiduciary or Plan participant
or IRA owner who is independent (as defined in Section V(d)) of TD
Ameritrade.\2\
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\2\ The Department notes that the Act's general standards of
fiduciary conduct also would apply to the transactions described
herein. In this regard, section 404 of the Act requires, among other
things, that a fiduciary discharge his duties respecting a plan
solely in the interest of the plan's participants and beneficiaries
and in a prudent manner. Accordingly, a plan fiduciary must act
prudently with respect to, among other things, the decision to sell
the Auction Rate Security to TD Ameritrade for the par value of the
Auction Rate Security, plus unpaid interest and dividends. The
Department further emphasizes that it expects Plan fiduciaries,
prior to entering into any of the proposed transactions, to fully
understand the risks associated with this type of transaction
following disclosure by TD Ameritrade of all relevant information.
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(h) Neither TD Ameritrade nor any affiliate exercises investment
discretion or renders investment advice within the meaning of 29 CFR
2510.3-21(c) with respect to the decision to accept the Unrelated Offer
or retain the Auction Rate Security;
(i) The Plan does not pay any commissions or transaction costs with
respect to the Unrelated Sale;
(j) The Unrelated Sale is not part of an arrangement, agreement or
understanding designed to benefit a party in interest to the Plan;
(k) TD Ameritrade and its affiliates, as applicable, maintain, or
cause to be maintained, for a period of six (6) years from the date of
the Unrelated Sale, such records as are necessary to enable the persons
described below in paragraph (l)(1), to determine whether the
conditions of this exemption, if granted, have been met, except that:
(1) No party in interest with respect to a Plan which engages in an
Unrelated Sale, other than TD Ameritrade and its affiliates, as
applicable, shall be subject to a civil penalty under section 502(i) of
the Act or the taxes imposed by section 4975(a) and (b) of the Code, if
such records are not maintained, or not available for examination, as
required, below, by paragraph (l)(1); and
(2) A separate prohibited transaction shall not be considered to
have occurred solely because, due to circumstances beyond the control
of TD Ameritrade or its affiliates, as applicable, such records are
lost or destroyed prior to the end of the six-year period;
(l)(1) Except as provided below in paragraph (l)(2), and
notwithstanding any provisions of subsections (a)(2) and (b) of section
504 of the Act, the records referred to above in paragraph (k) are
unconditionally available at their customary location for examination
during normal business hours by:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or representative of the
Department, the Internal Revenue Service, or the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission (the Commission);
(B) Any fiduciary of any Plan, including any IRA owner, that
engages in an Unrelated Sale, or any duly authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary; or
(C) Any employer of participants and beneficiaries and any employee
organization whose members are covered by a Plan that engages in the
Unrelated Sale, or any authorized employee or representative of these
entities;
(2) None of the persons described above in paragraphs (l)(1)(B)-(C)
shall be authorized to examine trade secrets of TD Ameritrade, or
commercial or financial information which is privileged or
confidential; and
(3) Should TD Ameritrade refuse to disclose information on the
basis that such information is exempt from disclosure, TD Ameritrade
shall, by the close of the thirtieth (30th) day following the request,
provide a written notice advising that person of the reasons for the
refusal and that the Department may request such information.
SECTION III. SALES OF AUCTION RATE SECURITIES FROM PLANS TO TD
AMERITRADE: RELATED TO A SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of section
406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and section 406(b)(1) and (2) of the Act and the
sanctions resulting from the application of section 4975 of the Code,
by reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A), (D), and (E) of the Code shall not
apply, effective July 20, 2009, to the sale by a Plan of an Auction
Rate Security to TD Ameritrade, where such sale (a Settlement Sale) is
related to, and made in connection with, a Settlement Agreement,
provided that the conditions set forth in Section IV have been met.
SECTION IV. CONDITIONS APPLICABLE TO TRANSACTIONS DESCRIBED IN SECTION
III
(a) The terms and delivery of the offer (the Purchase Offer) are
consistent with the requirements set forth in the Settlement Agreement;
(b) The Purchase Offer or other documents available to the Plan
specifically describe, among other things:
(1) How a Plan may determine: the Auction Rate Securities held by
the Plan with TD Ameritrade; the number of shares and par value of the
Auction Rate Securities; the interest or dividend amounts that are due
with respect to the Auction Rate Securities; purchase dates for the
Auction Rate Securities; and (if reliable information is available) the
most recent rate information for the Auction Rate Securities;
(2) The background of the Purchase Offer;
(3) That neither the tender of Auction Rate Securities nor the
purchase of any Auction Rate Securities pursuant to the Purchase Offer
will constitute a waiver of any claim of the tendering Plan;
(4) The methods and timing by which Plans may accept the Purchase
Offer;
(5) The purchase dates, or the manner of determining the purchase
dates, for Auction Rate Securities tendered pursuant to the Purchase
Offer;
(6) The timing for acceptance by TD Ameritrade of tendered Auction
Rate Securities;
(7) The timing of payment for Auction Rate Securities accepted by
TD Ameritrade for payment;
(8) The methods and timing by which a Plan may elect to withdraw
tendered Auction Rate Securities from the Purchase Offer;
(9) The expiration date of the Purchase Offer;
(10) The fact that TD Ameritrade may make purchases of Auction Rate
Securities outside of the Purchase Offer following the termination or
expiration of the Purchase Offer and may otherwise buy, sell, hold or
seek to restructure, redeem or otherwise dispose of the Auction Rate
Securities;
(11) A description of the risk factors relating to the Purchase
Offer as TD Ameritrade deems appropriate;
(12) How to obtain additional information concerning the Purchase
Offer; and
(13) The manner in which information concerning material amendments
or changes to the Purchase Offer will be communicated to the Plan.
(c) The terms of the Settlement Sale are consistent with the
requirements set forth in the Settlement Agreement; and
(d) All the conditions of Section II have been met.
SECTION V. DEFINITIONS
For purposes of this proposed exemption:
(a) The term ``affiliate'' means any person directly or indirectly,
through one or more intermediaries, controlling, controlled by, or
under common control with such other person;
[[Page 78770]]
(b) The term ``control'' means the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of a person other than an
individual;
(c) The term ``Auction Rate Security'' means a security: (1) That
is either a debt instrument (generally with a long-term nominal
maturity) or preferred stock; and (2) with an interest rate or dividend
that is reset at specific intervals through a Dutch Auction process;
(d) A person is ``independent'' of TD Ameritrade if the person is
(1) not TD Ameritrade or an affiliate; and (2) not a relative (as
defined in section 3(15) of the Act) of the party engaging in the
transaction;
(e) The term ``Plan'' means an individual retirement account or
similar account described in section 4975(e)(1)(B) through (F) of the
Code (an IRA); an employee benefit plan as defined in section 3(3) of
the Act; or an entity holding plan assets within the meaning of 29 CFR
2510.3-101, as modified by section 3(42) of the Act; and
(f) The term ``Settlement Agreement'' means a legal settlement
involving TD Ameritrade and a U.S. state or federal authority that
provides for the purchase of an Auction Rate Security by TD Ameritrade
from a Plan.
Effective Date: If granted, this proposed exemption will be
effective as of July 20, 2009.
Summary Of Facts And Representations
1. The Applicant, TD Ameritrade, is a New York corporation
headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska. The Applicant is an online broker-
dealer that provides market access and electronic tools to self-
directed investors. The Applicant is registered as a broker-dealer with
the Commission pursuant to section 15(c) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 and is a member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
The Applicant is also a wholly-owned subsidiary of TD Ameritrade
Holding Corporation (TD Ameritrade Holding). As of September 30, 2009,
TD Ameritrade Holding had total assets of $18,371,810,000. As of the
same date, TD Ameritrade had total assets of $3,240,360,000.
The Applicant was formed as a result of the consolidation of retail
brokerage operations of Ameritrade, Inc. and TD Waterhouse Investors
Services, Inc. following TD Ameritrade Holding's acquisition of TD
Waterhouse Group, Inc. on January 24, 2006. The Applicant and its
affiliates and subsidiaries provide a wide range of investment-related
services, including discount brokerage and investment advisory
services. In this regard, the Applicant acts as a broker and dealer
with respect to the purchase and sale of securities, including Auction
Rate Securities, as discussed herein.
2. The Applicant describes Auction Rate Securities (or ARS) and the
arrangement by which ARS are bought and sold as follows. Auction Rate
Securities are preferred stock or bonds that are generally issued with
maturities of thirty years, but the maturities can range from five
years to perpetuity. ARS interest rates or dividend yields are
determined and periodically reset at auctions commonly referred to as
``Dutch Auctions,'' during which ARS are auctioned at par. Ordinarily,
ARS can be bought or sold only at a Dutch Auction. Dutch Auctions are
customarily held every seven, twenty-eight, or thirty-five days.
Under the typical procedures for a Dutch Auction, investors who
wish to purchase ARS submit a bid to a broker-dealer selected by the
entity that issued the ARS, which includes the minimum interest or
dividend rate that the investors will accept. Holders of ARS may either
choose to keep their securities until the next auction or submit an
offer to sell their ARS. An auction agent collects all of the bids and
offers for a particular auction. The final rate at which all of the ARS
offered for sale are sold in the auction is the ``clearing rate'' that
applies to that particular ARS until the next auction. Bids with the
lowest rate and then successively higher rates are accepted until all
of the sell orders are filled.
If there are not enough bids to cover the securities offered for
sale in a Dutch Auction, then the auction will fail. In a failed
auction, investors who want to sell securities are not able to do so,
and hold their ARS until at least the next auction. In this event, the
issuer pays the holders a maximum rate or ``penalty'' rate. These rates
might be higher or lower than the prior clearing rate or market rates
on similar products.
3. The Applicant states that to facilitate the auction process, the
issuers of the ARS selected one or more broker-dealers to underwrite
the offering and to manage the auction process. In many instances,
these broker-dealers submitted their own bids to support the auctions
and to prevent the auctions from failing. The Applicant states that it
did not act as an underwriter, manager or agent for any issuer of ARS.
Instead, the Applicant represents that it acted solely as an agent,
both on a solicited and unsolicited basis, for its customers by
submitting their bids to purchase and orders to sell ARS. Specifically,
the Applicant would act as an order taker and process client-generated
requests to purchase ARS. As a so-called ``distributing'' or
``downstream'' broker-dealer, the Applicant represents that it did not
submit bids in an effort to support any of the Dutch Auctions or to
prevent them from failing. The Applicant further represents that it did
not hold any significant inventory of ARS in its proprietary
accounts.\3\ However, the Applicant represents that, in certain
instances, it may have previously advised or otherwise caused a Plan to
acquire and hold ARS.\4\
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\3\ The Applicant states that it did not have a practice of
holding ARS in inventory or for investment purposes. The Applicant
explains that at any given time and in the ordinary course of
business, its Fixed Income Trading Desk (the Desk) may have held a
nominal number of ARS units in proprietary accounts in between
auctions as a result of data entry or communications errors that may
have resulted in a customer account receiving more ARS units than
the customer intended to purchase. The Applicant further explains
that it was the Desk's practice to sell such units in the next
auction. The Applicant also states that on other isolated occasions,
it received the opportunity to obtain a nominal number of ARS units
in connection with an initial public offering by the issuer. On such
occasions, the Applicant states that it would obtain those units at
a discount and sell them at par to clients seeking to purchase such
securities.
The Applicant represents that the sales of ARS units out of its
inventory to plans are exempt transactions under Part II of
Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 75-1 (40 FR 50845, October
31, 1975, 71 FR 5883, February 3, 2006), with respect to principal
transactions. In those isolated situations when it had ARS units in
its inventory, the Applicant explains that it sold them to plans at
par, which satisfies the condition of PTE 75-1 that the transaction
be at least as favorable to the plan as an arm's length transaction
with an unrelated party. This is because a plan would have paid the
same price for the particular ARS unit regardless of where it
purchased such unit.
The Department expresses no opinion herein on whether these
transactions comply with the provisions of PTE 75-1. Accordingly,
the Department is not proposing any relief beyond that offered by
PTE 75-1.
\4\ The relief contained in this proposed exemption does not
extend to the fiduciary provisions of section 404 of the Act.
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4. According to the Applicant, in the early part of 2008, the
broker-dealers that acted as underwriters of the ARS offerings or as
lead managers for the Dutch Auctions stopped submitting their own bids
in support of the Dutch Auctions. As a result, by February 13, 2008,
the ARS market began experiencing widespread auction failures, leaving
investors unable to sell their ARS holdings. Consequently, Plans
holding ARS may or may not have sufficient liquidity to make benefit
payments, mandatory payments and withdrawals and expense payments when
due.\5\
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\5\ The Department notes that PTE 80-26 (45 FR 28545 (April 29,
1980), as amended at 71 FR 17917 (April 7, 2006)), permits interest-
free loans or other extensions of credit from a party in interest to
a plan if, among other things, the proceeds of the loan or extension
of credit are used only: (1) For the payment of ordinary operating
expenses of the plan, including the payment of benefits in
accordance with the terms of the plan and periodic premiums under an
insurance or annuity contract, or (2) for a purpose incidental to
the ordinary operation of the plan.
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[[Page 78771]]
5. The Applicant further states that from February 13, 2008 through
the present, the ARS market continues to experience widespread
failures, making many ARS holdings illiquid. Although ARS have been
redeemed by their issuers since that time, numerous investors,
including some of TD Ameritrade's customers, currently hold ARS that
they have been unable to sell through the auction process or redeem by
the issuers.
6. The Applicant is requesting exemptive relief for the sale of ARS
under two different circumstances: (a) Where a Plan sells ARS to TD
Ameritrade and such sale (i.e., an Unrelated Sale) is unrelated to, is
not made in connection with, and is entered into after the finalization
of, a Settlement Agreement; and (b) where a Plan sells ARS to TD
Ameritrade and such sale (i.e., a Settlement Sale) is related to, and
made in connection with, a Settlement Agreement. If granted, the
exemption would be effective as of July 20, 2009.
7. With respect to Unrelated Sales, the Applicant represents that
it may purchase ARS from its customers outside the Purchase Offer at
times and on terms other than those provided in the Purchase Offer
(i.e., an Unrelated Offer). For example, TD Ameritrade may purchase ARS
from Plans who failed to respond to the Purchase Offer prior to the
expiration of the Purchase Offer or from Plans not covered by the
Settlements and the Purchase Offer.\6\ In determining whether to make
an Unrelated Offer, TD Ameritrade will consider the relevant facts and
circumstances. With respect to Plans covered by the Settlements and the
Purchase Offer as well as Plans not covered by the Settlements and the
Purchase Offer, any Unrelated Offer will be made at the same price
offered under the Purchase Offer (i.e., par plus accrued and unpaid
interest and/or dividends). Therefore, TD Ameritrade is requesting
retroactive relief (and prospective relief) for an Unrelated Sale that
has occurred outside the Settlement process and in the event a sale of
ARS by a Plan to TD Ameritrade occurs outside the Settlement process in
the future.
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\6\ The Applicant states that there has been only one Unrelated
Sale since the close of the Purchase Offer under the Settlement
Agreement and that the purchase occurred as if there had been a
timely tender of the securities under the Purchase Offer. In that
case, the widow of an IRA holder, who did not realize that her
husband held ARS in his IRA, discovered the holding after the
deadline had passed. TD Ameritrade waited until the tender period
had closed and bought back the ARS on April 12, 2010. TD Ameritrade
treated the Unrelated Sale as though the ARS holder had timely
tendered under the Purchase Offer and used the pricing methodology
set forth in the Settlement Agreement (i.e., par plus accrued and
unpaid interest and/or dividends).
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8. With respect to Settlement Sales, the Applicant represents that
it entered into Settlement Agreements with certain U.S. state and
federal authorities in connection with TD Ameritrade's role in the
acquisition and holding of ARS by various TD Ameritrade customers (the
Eligible Customers), including Plans. As of July 20, 2009, the date
that the Settlements were publicly announced, the Applicant's Eligible
Customers held approximately $456 million in ARS. Of this amount, $5.8
million was held in 87 brokerage accounts for Eligible Customers of the
Applicant that were Plans.
9. Pursuant to the Settlement Agreements, among other things, TD
Ameritrade was required to send a written offer (i.e., the Purchase
Offer) to certain Plans that held ARS in connection with the brokerage
services provided by TD Ameritrade. Only ARS purchased from the
Applicant on or before February 13, 2008 that had failed at auction at
least once since February 13, 2008 were considered ``Eligible ARS'' for
purposes of the Purchase Offer. The Purchase Offer explained what
Eligible Customers had to do to participate and it informed them of the
relevant terms of the Settlement Agreement and other material terms
regarding their rights. The Settlement Agreements required that the
Purchase Offer be sent by August 10, 2009.
10. Eligible Customers had different lengths of time to respond to
the Purchase Offer depending on various factors described in the
Settlement Agreements. In general, Eligible Customers with assets of
$250,000 or less as of March 13, 2009 had 75 days from the date the
Purchase Offer was sent to respond; Eligible Customers with more than
$250,000 had until March 23, 2010, which gave them as much as seven
months or more to respond, depending on when they were identified as
eligible.\7\ As described in further detail below, Eligible Customers
that accepted the Purchase Offer were permitted to sell the ARS to TD
Ameritrade for cash equal to the par value of such securities, plus any
accrued interest and/or dividends. Eligible Customers that did not
respond to the Purchase Offer within a specified period of time were
sent a second notice informing them of the Applicant's Purchase Offer,
the relevant terms of the Settlement Agreement, and any other material
issues regarding such customer's rights. To assist Eligible Customers,
the Applicant established a dedicated toll-free telephone assistance
line and a public Internet page to provide information and to respond
to questions concerning the terms of the Settlement Agreements. The
Applicant maintained the telephone assistance line and Internet page
through March 31, 2010, the date of the Applicant's last payment under
the Settlement Agreement.
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\7\ Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, TD Ameritrade was
permitted to extend the Purchase Offer period up until, but not
beyond, June 30, 2010 for those Eligible Customers with more than
$250,000 in ``Eligible ARS''.
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11. The Applicant states that ARS units have been tendered by Plans
to TD Ameritrade pursuant to a Purchase Offer issued by TD Ameritrade
under a Settlement Agreement. In this regard, the Applicant states that
with respect to the Purchase Offer that closed on March 23, 2010, it
purchased approximately $302.9 million of ARS from approximately 1,180
Eligible Customers, which includes $5,525,000 \8\ in ARS held by thirty
Eligible Customers that were Plans. The Applicant estimates that as of
the close of the tender offer period on March 23, 2010, approximately
$81.9 million in ``Eligible ARS'' remained outstanding, including ARS
that had been transferred away from TD Ameritrade and that could not be
confirmed. Accordingly, the Applicant is requesting exemptive relief
retroactive to July 20, 2009 for Settlement Sales.
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\8\ The Applicant represents that the amount of ARS involved in
the Unrelated Sale described in Footnote 6 above is included in this
amount.
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12. The Applicant opines that Settlement Sales and Unrelated Sales
(hereinafter, each, a Covered Sale) are in the interests of Plans. In
this regard, the Applicant states that the Covered Sales allow Plans to
normalize their investments. The Applicant represents that each Covered
Sale has been and will be for no consideration other than cash payment
against prompt delivery of the ARS, and such cash has equaled and will
equal the par value of the ARS, plus any accrued but unpaid interest or
dividends. The Applicant represents further that Plans have not paid
and will not pay any commissions or transaction costs with respect to
any Covered Sale.
13. The Applicant also represents that the proposed exemption is
protective of the Plans. The Applicant states that each Covered Sale
has been made and
[[Page 78772]]
will be made pursuant to a written Purchase Offer and the decision to
accept such offer or retain the ARS has been made and will be made by a
Plan fiduciary or Plan participant or IRA owner who is independent of
TD Ameritrade. Additionally, each Purchase Offer has been delivered and
will be delivered in a manner designed to alert a Plan fiduciary that
TD Ameritrade is willing to purchase ARS from the Plan. Purchase Offers
made in connection with a Settlement Agreement have specifically
included, among other things: The background of the Purchase Offer; the
method and timing by which a Plan may accept the Purchase Offer; the
expiration date of the Purchase Offer; a description of certain risk
factors relating to the Purchase Offer; how to obtain additional
information concerning the Purchase Offer; and the manner in which
information concerning material amendments or changes to the Purchase
Offer will be communicated. Further, the Applicant states that, neither
TD Ameritrade nor any affiliate has exercised or will exercise
investment discretion or render investment advice within the meaning of
29 CFR 2510.3-21(c) with respect to a Plan's decision to accept the
Purchase Offer or to retain the ARS.\9\
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\9\ The Applicant states that while there may have been or may
be communication between a Plan and TD Ameritrade subsequent to a
Purchase Offer, such communication has not involved and will not
involve advice regarding whether the Plan should accept the Purchase
Offer.
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In addition, an Unrelated Offer made in connection with an
Unrelated Sale has included and will include all of the material terms
of the Unrelated Sale as follows: The identity and par value of the
ARS; the interest or dividend amounts that are due with respect to the
ARS; and the most recent information for the ARS (if reliable
information is available). The Applicant represents further that Plans
have not waived and will not waive any rights or claims in connection
with any Covered Sale.
14. The Applicant further represents that the proposed exemption,
if granted, would be administratively feasible. In this regard, the
Applicant notes that each Covered Sale has occurred and will occur at
the par value of the affected ARS, plus accrued but unpaid interest and
dividends, to the extent applicable, and such value is readily
ascertainable. The Applicant represents further that TD Ameritrade has
maintained and will maintain the records necessary to enable the
Department and Plan fiduciaries, among others, to determine whether the
conditions of this exemption, if granted, have been met.
15. In summary, the Applicant represents that the transactions
described herein have satisfied or will satisfy the statutory criteria
for an exemption under section 408(a) of the Act because, among other
things:
(a) Each Covered Sale has been made and shall be made pursuant to a
written Purchase Offer;
(b) Each Covered Sale has been and shall be for no consideration
other than cash payment against prompt delivery of the ARS;
(c) The amount of each Covered Sale has equaled and shall equal the
par value of the ARS, plus any accrued but unpaid interest or
dividends;
(d) No Plan has waived nor shall waive any rights or claims in
connection with any Covered Sale;
(e)(1) The decision to accept a Purchase Offer or retain the ARS
has been made and shall be made by a Plan fiduciary or Plan participant
or IRA owner who is independent of TD Ameritrade; and (2) neither TD
Ameritrade nor any affiliate has exercised or shall exercise investment
discretion or render investment advice within the meaning of 29 CFR
2510.3-21(c) with respect to the decision to accept the Purchase Offer
or retain the ARS;
(f) Plans have not paid and shall not pay any commissions or
transaction costs with respect to any Covered Sale;
(g) A Covered Sale has not been part of and shall not be part of an
arrangement, agreement or understanding designed to benefit a party in
interest to the affected Plan;
(h) With respect to any Settlement Sale, the terms and delivery of
the Purchase Offer, and the terms of Settlement Sale, have been
consistent with and shall be consistent with the requirements set forth
in the Settlement Agreement;
(i) TD Ameritrade has made and shall make available in connection
with an Unrelated Sale the material terms of the Unrelated Sale,
including: (1) The identity and par value of the Auction Rate Security;
(2) the interest or dividend amounts that are due but unpaid with
respect to the Auction Rate Security; and (3) the most recent
information for the Auction Rate Security (if reliable information is
available).
(j) Each Purchase Offer made in connection with a Settlement
Agreement has described or shall describe the material terms of the
Settlement Sale, including the following (and shall not constitute a
waiver of any claim of the tendering Plan): (1) How the Plan can
determine: The ARS held by the Plan with TD Ameritrade, the number of
shares and par value of the ARS, interest or dividend amounts, and
purchase dates for the ARS, and (if reliable information is available)
the most recent rate information for the ARS; (2) the background of the
Purchase Offer; (3) the methods and timing by which the Plan may accept
the Purchase Offer; (4) the purchase dates, or the manner of
determining the purchase dates, for ARS pursuant to the Purchase Offer
and the timing for acceptance by TD Ameritrade of tendered ARS for the
payment; (5) the expiration date of the Purchase Offer; and (6) how to
obtain additional information concerning the Purchase Offer.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant represents that the potentially interested
participants and beneficiaries cannot all be identified, and,
therefore, the only practical means of notifying such participants and
beneficiaries of this proposed exemption is by the publication of this
notice in the Federal Register. Comments and requests for a hearing
must be received by the Department not later than 30 days from the date
of publication of this notice of proposed exemption in the Federal
Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Anna Mpras Vaughan of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8565. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Owens & Minor, Inc.,
Located in Mechanicsville, Virginia.
[Application No. D-11638]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code and in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR Part
2570 Subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If the proposed
exemption is granted, the restrictions of section 406(a)(1)(A) and (D)
and section 406(b)(1) and (b)(2) of the Act, and the sanctions
resulting from the application of section 4975 of the Code, by reason
of section 4975(c)(1)(A), (D), and (E) of the Code, shall not apply to
the sale of certain shares in a hedge fund (the Shares) by the Owens &
Minor, Inc. Pension Plan (the Plan) to Owens & Minor, Inc. (the
Employer), a party in interest with respect to the Plan, provided that
the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) The sale is a one-time transaction for cash;
(b) The terms and conditions of the sale are at least as favorable
to the Plan as those that the Plan could obtain in an arm's-length
transaction with an unrelated third party;
[[Page 78773]]
(c) The sales price is the greater of: (1) $1,029.93 per Share (the
highest per share purchase price paid by the Plan), or (2) the net
asset value of the Shares reported in the most recently available
monthly statement, as determined by the hedge fund manager, who is
independent and unrelated to the Employer, (which is supported by the
report of the independent auditors);
(d) The Plan pays no commissions, fees, or other expenses in
connection with the sale;
(e) Upon termination of the Plan, the Plan participants and
beneficiaries will be paid 100% of their accrued benefits from the
assets of the Plan, as a result of the Employer's sufficiency
contribution to the Plan;
(f) The Plan has not waived or released and does not waive or
release any claims, demands, and/or causes of action that the Plan may
have against the Employer, the Plan Fiduciary, or the hedge fund
manager in connection with the acquisition, holding and sale of the
Shares to the Employer; and
(g) The Employer maintains, or causes to be maintained, for a
period of at least six (6) years from the date of the sale, such
records as are necessary to enable the persons described in paragraph
(h), below, to determine whether the conditions of this exemption, if
granted, have been met, except that--
(1) No party in interest with respect to the Plan other than the
Employer shall be subject to a civil penalty under section 502(i) of
ERISA or the taxes imposed by section 4975(a) and (b) of the Code, if
such records are not maintained, or are not available for examination,
as required, below, by paragraph (h); and
(2) A separate prohibited transaction shall not be considered to
have occurred solely because, due to circumstances beyond the control
of the Employer, such records are lost or destroyed prior to the end of
the six-year period; and
(h)(1) Except as provided in subparagraph (2), below, and
notwithstanding any provisions of subsections (a)(2) and (b) of section
504 of ERISA, the records referred to in paragraph (g), above, are
unconditionally available at their customary location for examination
during normal business hours by--
(A) Any duly authorized employee or representative of the
Department, the Internal Revenue Service, or the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission;
(B) Any fiduciary of the Plan, or any duly authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary; or
(C) Any employer of participants and beneficiaries and any employee
organization whose members are covered by the Plan or any authorized
employee or representative thereof;
(2) None of the persons described above in paragraph (h)(1)(B) or
(C) shall be authorized to examine trade secrets of the Employer, or
commercial or financial information that is privileged or confidential;
and
(3) Should the Employer refuse to disclose information on the basis
that such information is exempt from disclosure, the Employer shall, by
the close of the thirtieth (30th) day following the request, provide a
written notice advising that person of the reasons for the refusal and
that the Department may request such information.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Owens & Minor, Inc. Pension Plan (the Plan) is a defined
benefit plan sponsored by Owens & Minor, Inc. (the Employer or the
applicant), a distributor of national name-brand medical and surgical
supplies who serves its healthcare provider customers from 55
distribution centers located throughout the United States. The Plan was
originally established effective March 31, 1957 and was last amended
and restated effective January 1, 2002. The Plan was frozen effective
December 31, 1996. The aggregate fair market value of the Plan's assets
was approximately $31,276,861, as of April 30, 2010. The Plan had 1,789
participants and beneficiaries, as of June 4, 2010. The Plan's trustee
is Reliance Trust Company. The Employer sponsors two defined
contribution plans, a 401(k) profit sharing plan and an employee stock
purchase plan, in addition to the Plan.
On April 30, 2010, the Employer filed a request for a determination
as to the Plan's qualified status with the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS). The Employer filed PBGC Form 500 (Standard Termination Notice)
with the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) by July 30, 2010.
If PBGC does not object to the proposed termination of the Plan within
the 60-day period following the filing of the Standard Termination
Notice, the Plan must distribute all its assets by its ``Distribution
Date,'' which is the later of (i) 180 days after the end of PBGC's 60-
day review period, or (ii) 120 days after receipt of a favorable
determination from the IRS.
2. As of April 30, 2010, the assets of the Plan consisted of: (i)
FDIC-guaranteed bank notes in the amount of $25,540,900, (ii) money
market accounts valued at $1,835,666, (iii) a brokerage account
consisting of several alternative investments valued at $3,058,882, and
(iv) 943.66 shares of a non-publicly traded hedge fund (the Shares),
with a value of $841,413 (based upon a net asset value (NAV) of $891.65
per share). The Plan's investments, including the Shares, are approved
by the Compensation and Benefits Committee (the Committee) of the
Employer's Board of Directors. The Plan purchased 2,570.42 Shares at
$1,029.931 per share on November 28, 2007 and 99.56 Shares at
$1,004.381 per share on July 30, 2008, at a total cost of approximately
$2,747,351.37.\10\ The Employer owns no shares in the Fund.
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\10\ The Department expresses no opinion herein as to whether
the acquisition and holding of the Shares by the Plan have met the
requirements of Part 4 in Title I of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The hedge fund is the Selectinvest Institutional ARV ASW Fund (the
Fund), which, in turn, invests substantially all its assets in a ``fund
of funds,'' (the Master Feeder Fund).
The Fund manager is Alternate Strategies Group (ASG), a wholly-
owned subsidiary of Wells Fargo. The Master Feeder Fund is unrelated to
ASG and is managed by Union Bancaire Privee Asset Management LLC
(UBPAM), which is also its investment advisor. The Master Feeder Fund
invests in the following three funds: Selectinvest ARV Ltd. (Master
Fund I); Selectinvest ARV II Ltd. (Master Fund II); and Selectinvest
ARV L.P. (Master Fund III). UBPAM is the investment manager for Master
Fund I, Master Fund II, and Master Fund III (collectively, the Master
Funds).\11\ In February 2009, ASG announced that it intended to
terminate all Selectinvest ARV Funds, including the Fund.\12\
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\11\ It is represented that, in general, the standard investment
management fees assessed by the Fund had been a 1.25% Advisory Fee
per annum and a 0.35% Program Fee per annum. Because ASG is
liquidating all investments in the Fund, however, the Advisory Fee
was reduced to 0.50% per annum starting on March 31, 2009. The
Limited Liability Company Agreement defines the term ``Program'' as
comprised of Feeder Funds that provide access to underlying Master
Funds; thus, the ``Program Fee'' is an annual fee charged to Fund
members to participate in the Program. As is typical with mutual
funds and other collective funds, the Advisory Fee and the Program
Fee are netted out of the Fund's investment performance and
published net asset value (NAV). The applicant further represents
that the Plan is not paying duplicative fees at the underlying funds
level.
\12\ The exemption application states: ``Although a secondary
market exists for the Feeder Fund's investments, it is not active
and individual transactions are typically not observable. When
transactions do occur in this limited secondary market, they may
occur at discounts to the reported net asset value. It is therefore
reasonably possible that if the Feeder Funds were to sell these
investments in the secondary market, a buyer may require a discount
to the reported net asset value, and the discount could be
significant.''
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ASG began the process of redeeming all interests in the Fund on
March 31, 2009. Since that time, ASG has redeemed approximately 1,781
of the
[[Page 78774]]
Plan's Shares, approximately 67% of the Plan's interest in the Fund, in
five separate redemptions. The Plan received its first redemption
payment of $811,700 on May 13, 2009, in exchange for 972.11 shares,
which represents a per share value of $834.988. On September 10, 2009,
the Plan received its second redemption payment of $319,500, in
exchange for 367.01 shares, which represents a per share value of
$870.548. On January 21, 2010, the Plan received its third redemption
payment of $203,100, in exchange for 225.09 shares, which represents a
per share value of $902.306. On April 27, 2010, the Plan received its
fourth redemption payment of $148,000, in exchange for 162.10 shares,
which represents a per share value of $913.016. On October 20, 2010,
the Plan received its most recent redemption payment of $48,100, in
exchange for 54.79 shares, which represents a per share value of
$877.897.
In order for ASG to redeem shares in the Fund, the Master Feeder
Fund must have sufficient cash reserves. Because ASG's complete
redemption request exceeded such reserves, the redemption of the Plan's
Shares will likely not be finalized until a sufficient portion of the
underlying assets of the Master Feeder Fund and its ``down-stream''
investments in the Master Funds are liquidated.
3. The Employer represents that all the assets of the Plan,
including the remaining Shares, must be liquidated and the proceeds
used to fund the purchase of annuity contracts and distributions of
lump sum benefit amounts. The Plan is contractually prohibited from
selling its Shares to a third party without the permission of ASG.
There is only a very limited secondary market for the Shares. In the
event that the Plan's Shares are not entirely redeemed by the Fund
prior to the Distribution Date, the Employer proposes to purchase the
remaining Shares from the Plan for a price that is the greater of: (1)
$1,029.93 per Share (the highest per share purchase price paid by the
Plan), or (2) the NAV of the Shares as determined by ASG. It is
represented that the Plan will pay no commissions, fees, or other
expenses in connection with the sale.
4. The applicant represents that ASG determines the Fund's NAV,
which it publishes at the end of each month in its monthly statements,
according to the Fund's membership agreement, based upon the current
fair market value of the underlying investments (based on the NAV of
the Master Feeder Fund, which in turn is based upon the Master Feeder
Fund's interest in the Master Funds based upon their underlying
investments). The applicant further represents that ASG is the only
qualified appraiser to determine the value of the Plan's interest in
the Fund because ASG is solely responsible for the determination of the
Fund's NAV. It is represented that ASG's method of calculating the
Fund's NAV meets the requirements of FAS 157.\13\ It is also
represented that ASG is independent from the Employer and receives no
income from the Employer. The Fund's independent auditor is KPMG LLP,
located in Boston, Massachusetts and the applicant represents that the
net asset value of the Shares reported in the most recently available
monthly statement, as determined by ASG, is supported by the report of
KPMG.
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\13\ FAS 157 provides guidance for measuring the fair value of
assets and liabilities, including hard-to-value alternative
investments. Effective January 1, 2008, the Fund, the Master Feeder
Fund, and each of the Master Funds adopted FAS 157. The description
of these accounting policies appears in the financial statements of
each fund.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The value of the Plan's membership interest in the Fund is
calculated as the number of Shares owned by the Plan relative to all
outstanding Fund shares. According to ASG's determination of the Fund's
NAV as of April 30, 2010, the Plan's remaining Shares have a value of
approximately $792,561.
The applicant represents that the Fund's NAV as set forth in ASG's
most recently available statement prior to the date of the sale would
be used to determine the dollar value of the Plan's Shares.
Furthermore, the Committee, as the Plan fiduciary, will review and
approve the valuation methodology used by ASG, ensure that such
methodology is properly applied in determining the value of the Shares,
and will also determine whether it is prudent to go forward with the
proposed transaction. The proposed sale of the Shares is anticipated to
take place on or about the Distribution Date, contingent upon obtaining
the requested exemption from the Department.
5. Because of the Plan's underfunded status, as the final step in
the Plan termination process, the Employer has made a commitment to
contribute an estimated additional $1,000,000 to the Plan to ensure
that the Plan has sufficient assets to satisfy all its accrued benefit
obligations.
In accordance with the requirements for a Standard Termination
under section 4041(b) of the Act and the PBGC guidelines, the amount
that the Employer will contribute to the Plan to make it sufficient
will be calculated as follows: The actuarial present value of the total
Plan liabilities for accrued benefits less (the amount received for the
remaining Shares, either through the redemption process or consummation
of the proposed sale, plus the value of all other Plan assets).
The applicant represents that, if it completes the standard
termination process for the Plan, the PBGC will not be liable or
responsible for paying any Plan benefits, and, in fact, will not pay
any Plan benefits. Upon termination of the Plan, the Plan participants
and beneficiaries will receive 100% of their accrued benefits, as a
result of the Employer's sufficiency contribution to the Plan.
6. According to the applicant, if the requested exemption is denied
and the Shares are not fully redeemed prior to the Distribution Date,
the Plan will lack sufficient liquid assets to satisfy the distribution
deadline. The failure to distribute all accrued benefits by the
Distribution Date could result in the PBGC issuing the Plan a notice of
noncompliance, which would require re-starting the standard termination
process and nullify all actions taken to date to terminate the Plan,
including the re-issuance of the required multiple notices to the Plan
participants and beneficiaries required by the termination process, and
delay the distribution of plan benefits.
The applicant represents that the proposed transaction is in the
best interests of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries
because it will enable the Plan to convert an illiquid, non-marketable
asset into cash in order to complete the standard termination process
and purchase of annuity contracts and lump-sum distributions to satisfy
all its accrued benefit obligations. The proposed transaction would
also allow the Plan to avoid the discount that would be expected if the
Shares were sold in the secondary market. The Employer is also bearing
the costs of the exemption application and of notifying interested
persons.
7. In summary, the applicant represents that the proposed
transaction satisfies the statutory criteria for an exemption under
section 408(a) of the Act for the following reasons: (a) The sale will
be a one-time transaction for cash; (b) the terms and conditions of the
sale will be at least as favorable to the Plan as those that the Plan
could obtain in an arm's length transaction with an unrelated third
party; (c) the sales price will be the greater of: (1) $1,029.93 per
Share (the highest per share purchase price paid by the Plan), or (2)
the net asset value of the Shares reported in the most recently
available monthly statement, as determined by the hedge fund manager,
who is independent and unrelated to the Employer, (which is
[[Page 78775]]
supported by the report of the independent auditors); (d) the Plan will
pay no commissions, fees, or other expenses in connection with the
sale; and (e) upon termination of the Plan, the Plan participants and
beneficiaries will be paid 100% of their accrued benefits from the
assets of the Plan, as a result of the Employer's sufficiency
contribution to the Plan.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Karin Weng of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8557. (This is not a toll-free number.)
General Information
The attention of interested persons is directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the subject of an exemption
under section 408(a) of the Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code
does not relieve a fiduciary or other party in interest or disqualified
person from certain other provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction provisions to which the exemption
does not apply and the general fiduciary responsibility provisions of
section 404 of the Act, which, among other things, require a fiduciary
to discharge his duties respecting the plan solely in the interest of
the participants and beneficiaries of the plan and in a prudent fashion
in accordance with section 404(a)(1)(b) of the Act; nor does it affect
the requirement of section 401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the employees of the employer
maintaining the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be granted under section 408(a) of the
Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, the Department must find
that the exemption is administratively feasible, in the interests of
the plan and of its participants and beneficiaries, and protective of
the rights of participants and beneficiaries of the plan;
(3) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be supplemental to,
and not in derogation of, any other provisions of the Act and/or the
Code, including statutory or administrative exemptions and transitional
rules. Furthermore, the fact that a transaction is subject to an
administrative or statutory exemption is not dispositive of whether the
transaction is in fact a prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be subject to the
express condition that the material facts and representations contained
in each application are true and complete, and that each application
accurately describes all material terms of the transaction which is the
subject of the exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 13th day of December 2010.
Ivan Strasfeld,
Director of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2010-31570 Filed 12-15-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P