Companies Engaged in the Business of Acquiring Mortgages and Mortgage-Related Instruments, 55300-55308 [2011-22771]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2011 / Proposed Rules
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 270
[Release No. IC–29778; File No. S7–34–11]
RIN 3235–AL21
Companies Engaged in the Business
of Acquiring Mortgages and MortgageRelated Instruments
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Concept release; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) and its
staff (‘‘Commission staff’’ or ‘‘staff’’) are
reviewing interpretive issues under the
Investment Company Act of 1940
(‘‘Investment Company Act’’ or ‘‘Act’’)
relating to the status under the Act of
companies that are engaged in the
business of acquiring mortgages and
mortgage-related instruments and that
rely on the exclusion from the definition
of investment company in Section
3(c)(5)(C) of the Act (together,
‘‘mortgage-related pools’’). This review
is focusing, among others, on certain
real estate investment trusts (‘‘REITs’’).
To help facilitate this review, the
Commission requests information about
these companies and how Section
3(c)(5)(C) of the Act is interpreted by,
and affects investors in, these
companies. The Commission solicits
commenters’ views about the
application of the Investment Company
Act to mortgage-related pools, including
suggestions on the steps that the
Commission should take to provide
greater clarity, consistency or regulatory
certainty with respect to Section
3(c)(5)(C).
SUMMARY:
Comments should be received on
or before November 7, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
DATES:
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Electronic Comments
Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form https://www.sec.gov/
rules/concept.shtml); or send an e-mail
to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please
include File No. S7–34–11 on the
subject line; or use the Federal
eRulemaking Portal (https://
www.regulations.gov). Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to
Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
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100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File No.
S7–34–11. This file number should be
included on the subject line if e-mail is
used. To help process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/concept.shtml). Comments are also
available for public inspection and
copying in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. All comments received
will be posted without charge; we do
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rochelle Kauffman Plesset, Senior
Counsel, at (202) 551–6840, or Nadya
Roytblat, Assistant Chief Counsel, at
(202) 551–6825, Division of Investment
Management, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction and Executive Summary
II. Companies That Rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C)
A. Overview
B. Management Style and Corporate
Governance
C. Similarities to Traditional Investment
Companies
D. Request for Comment
III. The Exclusion Provided by Section
3(c)(5)(C)
A. Legislative and Administrative
Background
B. Commission Staff No-Action Letters and
Other Interpretations
C. Request for Comment on the Current
Interpretation of Section 3(c)(5)(C)
IV. Request for Comment on Possible
Commission Action
V. General Request for Comment
I. Introduction and Executive Summary
The Commission and staff are
reviewing interpretive issues relating to
the status of mortgage-related pools
under the Investment Company Act.1
Companies that are engaged in the
business of acquiring mortgages and
mortgage-related instruments, and that
issue securities, generally hold assets
that are securities under the Investment
Company Act and typically meet the
1 Certain companies that are engaged in the
business of acquiring mortgages and mortgagerelated instruments are issuers of mortgage-backed
securities that may rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C). Such
issuers are not included in the term ‘‘mortgagerelated pools’’ as it is used in this release. See infra
note 5 and accompanying text.
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definition of investment company under
the Act.2 While some such companies
register as investment companies under
the Act,3 many seek to rely on Section
3(c)(5)(C) of the Act, which generally
excludes from the definition of
investment company any person who is
primarily engaged in, among other
things, ‘‘purchasing or otherwise
acquiring mortgages and other liens on
and interests in real estate.’’ 4 The
2 Section 3(a)(1)(A) of the Investment Company
Act defines an investment company as any issuer
which ‘‘is or holds itself out as being engaged
primarily, or proposes to engage primarily, in the
business of investing, reinvesting, or trading in
securities.’’ 15 U.S.C. 80a–3(a)(1)(A). Section
3(a)(1)(C) defines an investment company as any
issuer which ‘‘is engaged or proposes to engage in
the business of investing, reinvesting, owning,
holding, or trading in securities, and owns or
proposes to acquire investment securities [as that
term is defined in the Act] having a value exceeding
40 per centum of the value of such issuer’s total
assets (exclusive of Government securities and cash
items) on a unconsolidated basis.’’ 15 U.S.C. 80a–
3(a)(1)(C). A company that issues securities and is
primarily engaged in investing in, owning, or
holding mortgages and mortgage-related
instruments typically meets one, if not both, of
these definitions. See, e.g., SEC, Report on the
Public Policy Implications of Investment Company
Growth, H.R. Rep. No. 2337, 89th Cong. 2d Sess.
328 (1966) (‘‘PPI Report’’) (stating that mortgages
and other interests in real estate are investment
securities for purposes of the Act).
Section 2(a)(36) of the Investment Company Act
broadly defines ‘‘security’’ as ‘‘any note, stock,
treasury stock, security future, bond, debenture,
evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest or
participation in any profit-sharing agreement,
collateral-trust certificate, preorganization
certificate or subscription, transferable share,
investment contract, voting-trust certificate,
certificate of deposit for a security, fractional
undivided interest in oil, gas, or other mineral
rights, any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege
on any security (including a certificate of deposit)
or on any group or index of securities (including
any interest therein or based on the value thereof),
or any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege
entered into on a national securities exchange
relating to foreign currency, or, in general, any
interest or instrument commonly known as a
‘security’, or any certificate of interest or
participation in, temporary or interim certificate for,
receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant or right to
subscribe to or purchase, any of the foregoing.’’
3 According to industry statistics derived from
Lipper’s LANA Database, as of June 30, 2011, there
were 23 series of registered open-end investment
companies with total assets of $70.6 billion that
invested ‘‘at least 65% of their assets in
Government National Mortgage Association
securities.’’ In addition, as of that date, there were
34 series of registered open-end investment
companies with total assets of $26.6 billion, and 11
registered closed-end investment companies with
total assets of $1.8 billion, that invested ‘‘at least
65% of their assets in mortgages/securities issued
or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the
U.S. government and certain Federal agencies.’’
4 15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(5)(C). Section 3(c)(5)
excludes from the definition of investment
company ‘‘[a]ny person who is not engaged in the
business of issuing redeemable securities, faceamount certificates of the installment type or
periodic payment plan certificates, and who is
primarily engaged in one or more of the following
businesses: (A) Purchasing or otherwise acquiring
notes, drafts, acceptances, open accounts
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exclusion provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C)
sometimes also is used by issuers of
mortgage-backed securities, whose
reliance on this statutory provision is
discussed in a companion release.5
Section 3(c)(5)(C) of the Act was
enacted in 1940 to exclude from
regulation under the Investment
Company Act companies that were
engaged in the mortgage banking
business and that did not resemble, or
were not considered to be, issuers that
were in the investment company
business.6 Since that time, as the
mortgage markets have evolved and
expanded, a wide variety of companies,
many of them unforeseen in 1940, have
relied upon Section 3(c)(5)(C).7 The
statutory exclusion from the definition
of investment company provided by
Section 3(c)(5)(C) does not have an
extensive legislative history and has not
been comprehensively addressed by the
Commission. Section 3(c)(5)(C) has been
addressed in staff no-action letters on a
case-by-case basis.8
receivable, and other obligations representing part
or all of the sales price of merchandise, insurance,
and services; (B) making loans to manufacturers,
wholesalers, and retailers of, and to prospective
purchasers of, specified merchandise, insurance,
and services; and (C) purchasing or otherwise
acquiring mortgages and other liens on and interest
in real estate.’’
5 Treatment of Asset-Backed Issuers under the
Investment Company Act, Investment Company Act
Release No. 29779 (Aug. 31, 2011) (‘‘3a–7
Companion Release’’).
6 See infra note 38 and accompanying text.
7 Some companies that privately place their
securities may instead rely on the private
investment company exclusions set forth in
Sections 3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the Act. Section
3(c)(1) of the Investment Company Act excludes
from the definition of investment company any
issuer whose outstanding securities (other than
short-term paper) are beneficially owned by not
more than 100 investors and which is not making
and does not presently propose to make a public
offering of its securities. 15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(1).
Section 3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act
excludes from the definition of investment
company any issuer whose outstanding securities
are owned exclusively by persons who, at the time
of acquisition of such securities, are ‘‘qualified
purchasers’’ as defined in the Act and which is not
making and does not at that time propose to make
a public offering of its securities. 15 U.S.C. 80a–
3(c)(7).
8 This release includes extensive discussion of
staff no-action letters; accordingly the Commission
notes that its discussion of staff statements is
provided solely for background and to facilitate
comment on issues that the Commission might
address. The discussion is in no way intended to
suggest that the Commission has adopted the
analysis, conclusions or any other portion of the
staff statements discussed here. Staff no-action
letters are issued by the Commission staff in
response to written requests regarding the
application of the Federal securities laws to
proposed transactions. Many of the staff no-action
letters are ‘‘enforcement-only’’ letters, in which the
staff states whether it will recommend enforcement
action to the Commission if the proposed
transaction proceeds in accordance with the facts,
circumstances and representations set forth in the
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In light of the evolution of mortgagerelated pools and the development of
new and complex mortgage-related
instruments, the Commission is
reviewing interpretive issues relating to
the status of mortgage-related pools
under the Investment Company Act and
whether mortgage-related pools
potentially are making judgments about
their status under the Act without
sufficient Commission guidance. It
appears that some types of mortgagerelated pools might interpret the
statutory exclusion provided by Section
3(c)(5)(C) in a broad manner, while
others might interpret the exclusion too
narrowly, suggesting that there may be
confusion among some mortgage-related
pools about when the exclusion applies.
The Commission also is concerned that
the staff no-action letters that have
addressed the statutory exclusion in
Section 3(c)(5)(C) may have contained,
or led to, interpretations that are beyond
the intended scope of the exclusion and
inconsistent with investor protection.
The Commission is concerned that
certain types of mortgage-related pools
today appear to resemble in many
respects investment companies such as
closed-end funds and may not be the
kinds of companies that were intended
to be excluded from regulation under
the Act by Section 3(c)(5)(C). Therefore,
the Commission believes that both
investors and mortgage-related pools
may benefit from the Commission’s
comprehensive review of the status of
mortgage-related pools under the
Investment Company Act and from any
resulting guidance.
Accordingly, the Commission is
requesting data and other information
from the public about mortgage-related
pools and soliciting views about the
application of Section 3(c)(5)(C) of the
Investment Company Act to mortgagerelated pools, including steps that the
Commission might take in this area. The
Commission’s goals in this effort are to:
(1) be consistent with the Congressional
intent underlying the exclusion from
regulation under the Act provided by
Section 3(c)(5)(C); (2) ensure that the
exclusion is administered in a manner
that is consistent with the purposes and
policies underlying the Act, the public
interest, and the protection of investors;
(3) provide greater clarity, consistency
and regulatory certainty in this area; and
(4) facilitate capital formation.
requester’s letter. Other staff no-action letters
provide the staff’s interpretation of a specific
statute, rule or regulation in the context of a specific
situation. See Informal Guidance Program for Small
Entities, Investment Company Act Release No.
22587 (Mar. 27, 1997).
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II. Companies That Rely on Section
3(c)(5)(C)
A. Overview
By its terms, Section 3(c)(5)(C),9
excludes from the definition of
investment company ‘‘[a]ny person who
is not engaged in the business of issuing
redeemable securities, face-amount
certificates of the installment type or
periodic payment plan certificates, and
who is primarily engaged * * * [in the
business of] purchasing or otherwise
acquiring mortgages and other liens on
and interests in real estate.’’ Many
different types of companies that engage
in a variety of businesses rely on this
exclusion.10 Such companies include:
Those that originate and hold mortgages
and participations of mortgages that
they originated; companies engaged in
the business of acquiring from affiliates
or third parties mortgages and mortgagerelated instruments (such as mortgage
participations, mezzanine loans and
mortgage-backed securities); companies
that invest in real estate, mortgages and
mortgage-related instruments; and
companies whose primary business is to
invest in so-called agency securities 11
and other mortgage-backed securities.12
Companies that rely on the exclusion
in Section 3(c)(5)(C) are structured and
operated in various ways. Nevertheless,
it appears that several general
9 Section 3(c)(5) was initially enacted in 1940 as
Section 3(c)(6). Congress redesignated the provision
as Section 3(c)(5) in 1970. Investment Company
Amendments Act of 1970, Public Law 91–547, 84
Stat. 1413 (1970) (codified as amended 15 U.S.C.
80a–3(c)(5)).
10 See infra note 13.
11 Agency securities are mortgage-backed
securities issued by the government-sponsored
enterprises, Government National Mortgage
Association (Ginnie Mae), Federal National
Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac).
12 A summary review by the staff of filings under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange
Act’’) of issuers identifying themselves as REITs
suggests that, as of April 2011, there were
approximately 49 REITs that had disclosed that
they were primarily engaged in the business of
holding mortgages and/or mortgage-related
instruments, with most indicating that they or their
subsidiaries were relying on Section 3(c)(5)(C). Of
these companies, 15 stated that they were primarily
engaged in the business of acquiring agency
securities and other types of mortgage-backed
securities. The staff’s review also identified 57
companies that had disclosed in their Exchange Act
filings that they were investing in both (i) real
estate, and (ii) mortgages and mortgage-related
instruments, with 28 of such companies suggesting
that they or their subsidiaries may be relying on
Section 3(c)(5)(C). This review did not include
those companies that have not elected to be treated
as REITs under the Internal Revenue Code but may
nevertheless be relying on the Section 3(c)(5)(C)
exclusion.
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observations about mortgage-related
pools can be made.13
Many, if not most, mortgage-related
pools are corporations or business trusts
that have elected to be treated as REITs
for purposes of their tax status under the
Internal Revenue Code.14 Special tax
provisions for REITs were created by
Congress in 1960 as a means to make
available to retail investors
opportunities to invest in incomeproducing real estate and real estaterelated assets.15 In a REIT structure,
investor assets are pooled together to
acquire, or provide financing for,
various types of income-producing real
estate interests that are selected and
managed by professional asset
managers. Like most registered
investment companies, companies that
qualify for REIT status typically seek
pass-through tax treatment. To achieve
this tax benefit, a company electing
REIT status must comply with
restrictions and limitations set forth in
the Internal Revenue Code.16
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13 The
Commission’s information about mortgagerelated pools discussed in this release is derived
primarily from the staff’s review of registration
statements filed under the Securities Act of 1933
(‘‘Securities Act’’) and periodic reports filed under
the Exchange Act, to the extent that these filings
discuss whether a company is relying on Section
3(c)(5)(C). Information available to the Commission
is further limited by the fact that companies that
rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) also include companies
that privately place their securities without
registering under the Securities Act and companies
that may not be subject to the periodic reporting
requirements under the Exchange Act. The
description of mortgage-related pools provided in
this section of the release relates primarily to
companies that make filings with the Commission
under the Securities Act and the Exchange Act, and
is based on these filings.
14 The REIT provisions are set forth in Sections
856 through 859 of the Internal Revenue Code. 26
U.S.C. 856–859.
15 See, e.g. Real Estate Investment Trusts, H.R.
Rep. No. 2020, 86th Cong. 2nd Sess. 3–4 (1960).
REITs may be classified into one of three categories.
The National Association of Real Estate Investment
Trusts (‘‘NAREIT’’) generally defines equity REITS
to be companies that own and operate incomeproducing real estate, and mortgage REITs to be
companies that lend money directly to real estate
owners and their operators, or indirectly through
the acquisition of loans or mortgage-backed
securities. See NAREIT, The REIT Story: and
Introduction to the Benefits of Investing in Real
Estate Stocks, REIT.com (Feb. 2011). Hybrid REITs
generally are companies that use the investment
strategies of both Equity REITs and Mortgage REITs.
As noted above, mortgage REITs and some Hybrid
REITs typically seek to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C).
See supra note 12. Equity REITs that hold fee
interests directly typically do not invest in
securities to such an extent as to fall within the
definition of investment company under the
Investment Company Act. See supra note 2.
16 These requirements generally provide that: (1)
the company distribute at least 90% of its taxable
income in dividends to its shareholders annually;
(2) at least 75% of the company’s total assets on the
last day of each quarter of the company’s taxable
year consist of real estate assets (including interests
in real property, interests in mortgages on real
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Although mortgage-related pools may
utilize a variety of investment strategies,
most mortgage-related pools use
leverage to magnify their returns.17 For
example, some mortgage-related pools
that primarily hold agency securities
and other mortgage-backed securities
operate using a business model that
depends on the use of leverage, with
their profits, if any, generated by the
spread between the cost of borrowing
and the return on holdings purchased
with the proceeds from such
borrowing.18 According to data
provided by the National Association of
Real Estate Investment Trusts
(‘‘NAREIT’’), as of September 30, 2010,
the debt ratio of publicly traded
Mortgage REITs averaged 83.5%, a debtto-equity ratio of nearly five to one.19 In
contrast, as of June 30, 2010, the debtto-equity ratio of registered closed-end
investment companies that use
borrowings was generally less than one
quarter to one.20
property and shares of other REITs), cash and cash
items, and government securities; and (3) the
company derive at least 75% of its gross income
during the past year from, among other things, rents
from real property, interest on obligations secured
by mortgages on real property or on interests in real
property, and 95% of its gross income from the
same assets that qualify for the 75% test or from
dividends or interest from any source. In addition
to the asset and income tests and the 90% dividend
distribution requirements, the Internal Revenue
Code requires a company that elects REIT status to:
be a corporation, trust, or association; be managed
by one or more trustees or directors; have
transferable shares; have a minimum of 100
shareholders; have no more than 50% of its shares
held by five or fewer individuals; and not engage
in certain prohibited transactions. See supra note
14.
17 See, e.g., Peter C. Beller, Bet Against the Fed,
Buy Mortgage REITs, Forbes.com, Jan. 25, 2010;
Anthracite Capital Files Chapter 7,
REITwrecks.com (Mar. 15, 2010).
18 See, e.g., Vivian Marino, Some REITS Have a
Contrarian Flavor, NY Times.com, Mar. 29, 2009.
19 NAREIT REITWatch: A Monthly Statistical
Report on the Real Estate Investment Trust Industry
(Apr. 2011). NAREIT calculates the debt ratio by
dividing the total debt outstanding in a REIT sector
by that REIT sector’s total market capitalization.
Total capitalization equals the sum of total debt
plus implied market capitalization.
20 See Thomas J. Herzfeld, Survey of Closed-End
Fund Leverage, Investor’s Guide to Closed-End
Funds (Oct. 2010). We compared REITs to
registered closed-end investment companies
because, as discussed below, certain mortgagerelated pools have characteristics similar to such
registered companies. See infra section II.C.
We note that certain REITs follow the North
American Securities Administrators Association’s
Statement of Policy Regarding Real Estate
Investment Trusts (‘‘NASAA Guidelines’’), which
generally state that the maximum level of
borrowings (in relation to the company’s net asset
value) should not exceed 300% without ‘‘a
satisfactory showing that a higher level of
borrowing is appropriate’’ and that any borrowing
in excess of that level must be approved by a
majority of the company’s independent trustees and
disclosed to shareholders. NASAA Guidelines at
V.J. See infra note 22. We understand from filings
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B. Management Style and Corporate
Governance
Some mortgage-related pools are
internally managed and have their own
employees to carry out the
administrative, investment and other
activities necessary to operate the
companies. Other mortgage-related
pools have few, if any, employees and
instead rely on separate advisory
entities for the day-to-day operations of
the companies. These advisory entities
often are the mortgage-related pool’s
sponsor (typically, a real estate
investment firm, an investment
management firm, a private equity
manager or other similar company that
sponsors REITs, hedge funds and/or
private equity funds) or an affiliate of
the sponsor. An adviser of an externally
managed mortgage-related pool is
compensated by the company through a
variety of different compensation
schemes, which may include a
performance or incentive fee. Regardless
of whether they are internally or
externally managed, most mortgagerelated pools have boards of directors or
trustees to oversee the companies’
management.
Many mortgage-related pools list and
trade their securities on a national
securities exchange and, like other
public companies listed on a national
securities exchange, must comply with
the exchange’s listing and maintenance
requirements, including corporate
governance rules. Such rules require,
among other things, that a majority of
the members of the company’s board of
directors or trustees be independent of
its management.21 Other mortgagerelated pools do not list and trade their
securities on a national securities
exchange and may not be subject to any
such corporate governance rules. Many
non-exchange traded REITs, however,
are structured in accordance with the
NASAA Guidelines, as well as any
applicable regulations of the states in
which they sell their shares.22 Among
other things, the NASAA Guidelines
provide for a REIT to have a board of
made by mortgage-related pools under the
Securities Act and the Exchange Act that other
mortgage-related pools may specify in their
organizational documents the level of leverage that
they may use, although that level often may be
increased with the approval of a majority of the
company’s board of directors or trustees, and still
others may use leverage up to any level deemed
appropriate by their investment advisers.
21 See, e.g., Section 303A of the New York Stock
Exchange Listed Company Manual.
22 Most states require non-exchange traded REITs
to comply with the provisions of the NASAA
Guidelines, although certain states have adopted
their own guidelines. See supra note 20. See, e.g.,
Foss, et al., Real Estate Investment Trusts
Handbook, § 4:1 (2009–2010 ed).
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trustees that has a majority of
independent members.23
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C. Similarities to Traditional Investment
Companies
Some mortgage-related pools today
have characteristics similar to, and may
operate like, traditional investment
companies. For example, both mortgagerelated pools and traditional investment
companies pool investor assets to
purchase securities and provide
investors with professional asset
management.24 Like traditional
investment companies, mortgage-related
pools may be internally or externally
managed, with externally managed
mortgage-related pools typically having
few, if any, employees, and instead
relying on their investment advisers,
which may be their sponsors or the
sponsors’ affiliates, to operate the
companies.25 Like investment advisers
to traditional investment companies,
investment advisers to mortgage-related
pools typically are compensated with an
asset-based fee.26 Some mortgagerelated pools invest in the same types of
assets as registered investment
companies and private investment
funds.27 Finally, some mortgage-related
23 NASAA Guidelines at III.B. The NASAA
Guidelines also address: A REIT’s issuing certain
securities, including redeemable securities;
minimum suitability requirements; leverage
concerns; potential conflicts of interests (such as
providing for a majority of a REIT’s board of
trustees, including a majority of its independent
trustees, to approve transactions between the REIT
and its affiliates); and annual reports to
shareholders. NASAA Guidelines at III., V.,VI.
24 Like registered investment companies, many
mortgage-related pools publicly offer their
securities to both retail and institutional investors.
25 In addition, as discussed previously, both
registered investment companies that seek to avoid
corporate taxation and mortgage-related pools that
elect REIT status must distribute at least 90% of
their income to investors annually so as to avoid
corporate taxation. See supra note 16 and
accompanying text.
26 Investment advisers to mortgage-related pools
also may receive incentive-based fees of a type that
is prohibited for investment advisers to registered
investment companies under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 (‘‘Advisers Act’’), but typically
charged by investment advisers to hedge funds and
certain other private investment companies. See
Section 205 of the Advisers Act. 15 U.S.C. 80b–5.
An investment adviser to a mortgage-related pool
may be required to register under the Advisers Act.
See generally Section 203 of the Advisers Act and
Commission rules thereunder.
27 For example, many mortgage-related pools and
registered investment companies, including money
market funds, invest in agency securities.
According to the Federal Reserve, as of March 31,
2011, registered investment companies (not
including money market funds) held $800.8 billion
(or 10.5%), and money market funds held $373.4
billion (or 4.9%), of outstanding ‘‘agency- and GSEbacked securities,’’ defined as issues of Federal
budget agencies (such as those for TVA), issues of
government-sponsored enterprises (such as Fannie
Mae and FHLB) and agency- and GSE-backed
mortgage pool securities issued by Ginnie Mae,
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pools are perceived by investors and the
media as being investment vehicles and
not as companies that are engaged in the
mortgage banking business.28
With respect to investment
companies, the Investment Company
Act 29 seeks to prevent such companies
from, among other things, (i) Employing
unsound or misleading methods, or not
receiving adequate independent
scrutiny, when computing the asset
value of their investments or their
outstanding securities; 30 (ii) engaging in
excessive borrowing and issuing
excessive amounts of senior
securities; 31 and (iii) being organized,
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Farmers Home
Administration. In contrast, REITs held $191.1
billion (or 2.5%) of such securities. Federal Reserve
Statistical Release, Flow of Funds Accounts of the
United States: Flows and Outstandings First
Quarter 2011 (June 9, 2011). As noted previously,
certain registered investment companies focus their
investments on the same types of assets as
mortgage-related pools that primarily hold agency
securities and other mortgage-backed securities. See
supra note 3. In addition, in recent years, some
hedge funds and offshore funds have been investing
in the same types of assets as some mortgage-related
pools. See, e.g., Hedge Funds Investing in
Delinquent Mortgages, MSNBC.com (July 30, 2008).
28 For example, a number of mortgage REITs
appear to have been formed with the intent of
targeting retail investors who may be unable to
make the high minimum investments often required
of large bond funds. See A.D. Pruitt, Mortgage REITs
on a Tear as High Yields Fuel Demand, Wall St. J.
(Apr. 13, 2011). Press reports have also
characterized some such companies as investment
vehicles. See, e.g., Jonathan Weil, Hedge Fund
Instant IPO Tests the New Complacency,
Bloomberg.net (Jun. 18, 2009) (‘‘PennyMac is a
hedge fund dressed up as a real estate investment
trust’’). See also Nathan Vardi, High-Profile Investor
Sues Carlyle Group, Forbes.com (July 13, 2009)
(‘‘Michael Huffington, the wealthy former
Republican congressman from California, is suing
the Carlyle Group and its co-founder, David
Rubenstein, over misrepresentations and deceptions
Huffington claims they made regarding his $20
million investment loss in Carlyle Corp., Carlyle’s
failed * * * mortgage fund.’’).
29 See, e.g., Section 1(b) of the Investment
Company Act (setting forth findings and declaration
of policy). 15 U.S.C. 80a–1(b).
30 The Investment Company Act places significant
emphasis on the manner in which a registered
investment company must value its portfolio. See,
e.g., Section 2(a)(41) of the Act. 15 U.S.C. 80(a)–
2(a)(41) (defining ‘‘value,’’ with respect to securities
held by a registered investment company, to be (a)
Market value for securities for which market
quotations are readily available or (b) for other
securities or assets, fair value as determined in good
faith by the company’s board of directors).
31 Prior to 1940, some investment companies
were highly leveraged through the issuance of
‘‘senior securities’’ in the form of debt or preferred
stock, which often resulted in the companies being
unable to meet their obligations to the holders of
their senior securities. See generally Investment
Trusts and Investment Companies: Report of the
Securities and Exchange Commission (1940)
(‘‘Investment Trusts Study’’). Excessive leverage
also greatly increased the speculative nature of the
common stock of the companies. Id. Section 18 of
the Investment Company Act limits the ability of
registered investment companies to engage in
borrowing and to issue senior securities. 15 U.S.C.
80a–18.
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55303
operated, managed, or having their
portfolio securities selected, in the
interests of company insiders.32 In
addition, the Investment Company Act
seeks to protect the assets of investment
companies, including imposing custody
controls and preventing controlling
persons of an investment company from
commingling the investment company’s
assets with their own and
misappropriating them.33
We are concerned that some
mortgage-related pools, as pooled
investment vehicles, may raise the
potential for the same types of abuses,
such as deliberate misvaluation of the
company’s holdings,34 extensive
leveraging,35 and overreaching by
insiders.36 The Commission also has
32 A study conducted prior to the adoption of the
Act documented numerous instances in which
investment companies were managed for the benefit
of their sponsors and affiliates to the detriment of
investors. See Investment Trusts Study, supra note
31. Section 17 of the Investment Company Act
prohibits certain transactions involving investment
companies and their affiliates. 15 U.S.C. 80a–17(a).
Other provisions of the Investment Company Act
also effectively limit opportunities for overreaching
by investment company sponsors and affiliates. See,
e.g., Section 10(f) of the Investment Company,
which generally prohibits a registered investment
company from knowingly purchasing, during the
existence of any underwriting or selling syndicate,
any security a principal underwriter of which is an
affiliated person of the investment company. 15
U.S.C. 80a–10(f).
33 See, e.g., Investment Trusts Study, supra note
31. Prior to 1940, investment company assets were
not adequately protected from misuse by
investment company insiders. Id. In many cases,
controlling persons of investment companies
commingled the investment companies’ assets with
the investment advisers’ assets and then proceeded
to misuse the assets themselves. Id. Section 17(f) of
the Investment Company Act and the rules
thereunder set forth requirements with respect to
the custody of investment company assets. 15
U.S.C. 80a–17(f). See, e.g., Rule 17f–2 under the
Investment Company Act governing custody of
investments by a registered investment company.
17 CFR 270.17f–2.
34 For example, the Commission has brought an
enforcement action against the management of a
company that had, among other things, improperly
recorded mortgages that had decreased in value at
cost rather than at market value in order to avoid
writing down certain mortgages held for resale,
thereby adversely affecting the company’s income
and equity. See SEC v. Patrick Quinlan, 2008 Fed.
Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) ¶ 95,005 (E.D. Mich. Nov. 7,
2008), aff’d, 373 Fed. Appx. 581 (6th Cir. 2010).
35 For example, an offshore fund that held
mortgage-backed securities reportedly had a 32:1
leverage ratio (borrowing against the security of the
mortgage-backed securities), so that when the
mortgage-backed securities lost value, the fund
could not service its debts, resulting in lenders
seizing the fund’s assets. See, e.g., Nathan Vardi,
High-Profile Investor Sues Carlyle Group,
Forbes.com (July 13, 2009).
36 For example, the Commission brought a settled
administrative proceeding against a former chief
executive officer of both a publicly held REIT and
its manager (which owned approximately 52% of
the REIT) who had used his significant influence on
the advisory services provided by the REIT manager
to cause the REIT, its manager and other related
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brought a number of enforcement cases,
for example, in which controlling
persons of companies that hold
mortgage-related assets used such
companies’ assets to further their own
interests.37
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D. Request for Comment
The Commission is interested in
learning more about mortgage-related
pools. Accordingly, commenters are
requested to provide information about
companies that rely on Section
3(c)(5)(C) of the Act, including, among
other things, the various types of such
companies; how such companies are
operated, including their strategies for
the acquisition and management of their
holdings; the types of investors that
invest in such companies; and the roles
of such companies in the mortgage
markets. We ask commenters to discuss
the differences, if any, between
companies that originate mortgages and
then continue to hold all or portions of
those mortgages, and companies that
only invest in mortgages and mortgagerelated instruments. The Commission
also invites commenters to provide the
same type of information about any
similar companies that do not rely on
Section 3(c)(5)(C) and to explain
whether they are registered under the
Act or rely on another exclusion or
exemption and, if so, which exclusion
or exemption. The Commission is
interested in obtaining information
parties together to purchase over a million shares
of a publicly traded company over a 13-month
period, representing 16.1% of the total shares of
that company. These purchases accounted for
approximately 54% of the total trading volume in
the company’s stock during that period, and on
some days these parties purchased all of the
company’s stock that traded that day. Although no
entity itself purchased more than 5% of the
company’s securities, the Commission determined
that given the interrelationships that existed, the
REIT and others constituted a ‘‘group’’ for purposes
of Section 13(d), and that a Schedule 13D should
have been filed. See In the Matter of Basic Capital
Management Inc., et al., Exchange Act Release No.
46538 (Sept. 24, 2002). This case illustrates how a
mortgage-related pool insider has the potential to
influence the management of the company’s assets
for the insider’s benefit.
37 See, e.g., SEC v. Pittsford Capital Income
Partners LLC, et al., No. 06–6353 (W.D.N.Y. Aug.
23, 2007), aff’d, 305 Fed. Appx. 694 (2d. Cir. 2008)
(persons that controlled certain real estate
investment companies sold to senior citizens
engaged in a fraudulent scheme involving, among
other things, transfers of large amounts of money
from the companies to entities in which the
controlling persons had significant personal
interests); SEC v. Global Express Capital Real Estate
Investment Fund I et al., No. 03–1514 (Nev. Mar.
28, 2006), aff’d in part, rev’d and remanded in part,
289 Fed. Appx. 183 (9th Cir. 2008) (a Ponzi-like
scheme which purported to pool investor funds to
purchase interests in mortgage loans and trust
deeds); SEC v. LandOak Securities, LLC, et al., No.
3:08–209 (E.D. Tenn., Mar. 29, 2011) (persons that
controlled a mortgage company misappropriated
funds due to the company’s investors).
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about both public (exchange-traded and
non-exchange traded) and privately
offered mortgage-related pools and
similar companies. The Commission
also requests that commenters provide
any other information about mortgagerelated pools they believe is relevant to
the Commission’s review of the status of
such companies under the Investment
Company Act.
We also ask commenters for their
views on the apparent similarities
between certain mortgage-related pools
and traditional investment companies.
We ask commenters to describe any key
operational or structural characteristics
of mortgage-related pools that serve to
distinguish them from traditional
investment companies regulated under
the Investment Company Act. The
Commission requests that commenters
provide any other information that may
be relevant to evaluating the similarities
and differences between mortgagerelated pools and investment
companies.
Finally, we request comment on the
types of potential abuses that the
Investment Company Act was intended
to prevent that might be associated with
mortgage-related pools. We also are
interested in learning about any existing
safeguards in the structure and
operations of mortgage-related pools
that may address concerns similar to
those addressed by the Investment
Company Act. Commenters also are
invited to comment on whether certain
concerns addressed by the Investment
Company Act may not be relevant to
mortgage-related pools and the reasons
why. Commenters also should discuss
whether, and to what extent, such
potential abuses are addressed by any
industry practices or other regulatory
schemes that may be applicable to
mortgage-related pools.
III. The Exclusion Provided by Section
3(c)(5)(C)
A. Legislative and Administrative
Background
Section 3(c)(5) originally was
intended to exclude from the definition
of investment company, among other
things, companies that did not resemble,
or were not considered to be, issuers
that were in the investment company
business.38 In 1970, Congress amended
38 See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 2639, 76th Cong., 3d
Sess. 12(1940) (‘‘Subsection (c) specifically
excludes * * * companies dealing in mortgages.
* * * ’’); H.R. Rep. No. 1382, 91st Cong., 2d Sess.
17 (1970) (‘‘Although the companies enumerated
* * * have portfolios of securities in the form of
* * * mortgages and other liens on and interests in
real estate, they are excluded from the act’s
coverage because they do not come within the
generally understood concept of a conventional
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Section 3(c)(5) to prohibit any issuer
relying on the exclusion from issuing
redeemable securities. According to the
legislative history, certain companies
that had been relying on Section 3(c)(5)
sought to capitalize on the popularity of
mutual funds by issuing redeemable
securities.39 Because Section 3(c)(5) was
not intended to cover those companies
that fell within the generally understood
concept of a traditional investment
company,40 the 1970 amendment sought
to ensure that companies that structured
themselves like mutual funds would be
subject to regulation under the
Investment Company Act, regardless of
the types of securities that they held.41
In 1960, the Commission addressed
Section 3(c)(5)(C) in a release that
discussed the applicability of the
Federal securities laws to REITs.42 In
the 1960 Release, the Commission,
among other things, stated that a REIT
may fall within the definition of
investment company under the
Investment Company Act but,
depending on the characteristics of its
investment company investing in stocks and bonds
of corporate issuers’’) (‘‘1970 House Report’’). See
also PPI Report, supra note 2 at 328 (‘‘Section
3(c)(6) provides for an exclusion from the definition
of investment company for companies primarily
engaged in the * * * real estate businesses.
Although these companies are engaged in acquiring
* * * mortgages and other interests in real estate—
thus acquiring investment securities, such activities
are generally understood not to be within the
concept of a conventional investment company
which invests in stocks and bonds of corporate
issuers’’); Exclusion from the Definition of
Investment Company for Certain Structured
Financings, Investment Company Act Release No.
18736 (May 29, 1992) (‘‘Proposing Release to Rule
3a–7’’) at text following n.5 (‘‘section 3(c)(5)] * * *
originally was intended to exclude issuers engaged
in the commercial finance and mortgage banking
industries.’’).
As initially enacted by Congress in 1940, Section
3(c)(5) was limited to companies that did not issue
face-amount certificates of the installment type or
periodic payment plan certificates, in response to
the abuses found prior to 1940 in the sale of these
types of securities by certain companies, including
those of the type that would have otherwise been
excluded by this provision. See generally
Investment Trusts and Investment Companies:
Hearings Before a Subcomm. of the Senate Comm.
on Banking and Currency on S. 3580, 76th Cong.,
3d. at 182 (1940) (statement of David Schenker).
The prohibition on issuing face-amount certificates
also may have been added to ensure that Investors
Syndicate, a face-amount certificate company that
held real estate and mortgage interests, would not
be able to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) and instead be
required to register under the Investment Company
Act, as detailed in the Investment Trusts Study,
supra note 31, at Ch. II of Companies Issuing Face
Amount Installment Contracts (1940).
39 See, e.g., 1970 House Report, supra note 38 at
17; PPI Report, supra note 2 at 328–329.
40 See supra note 38.
41 See, e.g., 1970 House Report, supra note 38.
42 Real Estate Investment Trusts, Investment
Company Act Release No. 3140 (Nov. 18, 1960)
(‘‘1960 Release’’) (discussing Section 3(c)(6)(C),
which was subsequently redesignated as Section
3(c)(5)(C)). See supra note 9.
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assets and the nature of the securities it
issues, the REIT may be able to rely on
Section 3(c)(5)(C).43 In the 1960 Release,
the Commission also generally stated
that the applicability of the Section
3(c)(5)(C) exclusion could be
determined only on the basis of the facts
and circumstances of the particular
REIT. The Commission further stated,
however, that any REIT that invested
‘‘exclusively in fee interests in real
estate or mortgages or liens secured by
real estate’’ could rely on the Section
3(c)(5)(C) exclusion, provided that the
REIT also met the exclusion’s other
criteria with respect to the nature of the
securities it issued.44 The Commission
explained that a REIT might not qualify
for the exclusion if it ‘‘invested to a
substantial extent in other real estate
investment trusts * * * or in companies
engaged in the real estate business or in
other securities.’’ 45 The Commission
has not specifically addressed the scope
of Section 3(c)(5)(C) since the 1960
Release.46
B. Commission Staff No-Action Letters
and Other Interpretations
As noted above, Section 3(c)(5)(C)
generally excludes from the definition
of investment company any person who
43 Id.
44 Id.
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45 Id.
46 The Commission testified before Congress in
1983 and 1984 concerning the applicability of the
Investment Company Act to issuers of some
mortgage-related securities in connection with
legislation that became the Secondary Mortgage
Market Enhancement Act of 1984. Statement of the
Securities and Exchange Commission Submitted to
the Subcommittee on Housing and Urban Affairs,
U.S. Senate, on S. 1821 (Sep. 27, 1983) (‘‘The
Commission believes that the Investment Company
Act offers important protections to investors in
entities coming within the definition of the term
‘investment company’ that should not be sacrificed
lightly, even in the name of an objective as
worthwhile as enhancing the private secondary
mortgage market’’).
In the Proposing Release to Rule 3a–7, issued in
1992, the Commission discussed the reliance on
Section 3(c)(5) by certain private sector issuers of
asset-backed securities, including mortgage-backed
securities. See Proposing Release to Rule 3a–7,
supra note 38. In that release, the Commission
requested comment on whether Section 3(c)(5)
should be amended to prevent such issuers from
continuing to rely on this exclusion, because such
issuers could instead rely on Rule 3a-7. In response
to commenters’ arguments, including that it would
be inappropriate to narrow the scope of Section
3(c)(5) until both the market and the Commission
gained experience with Rule 3a–7, the Commission
decided not to pursue any legislative changes with
respect to Section 3(c)(5) at that time. See Exclusion
from the Definition of Investment Company for
Structured Financings, Investment Company Act
Release No. 19105 (Nov. 19, 1992) [57 FR 56248
(Nov. 27, 1992)] (‘‘Adopting Release to Rule 3a–7’’).
In the 3a–7 Companion Release, the Commission
once again is seeking comment on whether Section
3(c)(5) should be amended to limit the ability of
asset-backed issuers to rely on this exclusion. 3a–
7 Companion Release, supra note 5.
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is primarily engaged in, among other
things, ‘‘purchasing or otherwise
acquiring mortgages and other liens on
and interests in real estate.’’ The staff,
in providing guidance on this exclusion,
generally has focused on whether at
least 55% of the issuer’s assets will
consist of mortgages and other liens on
and interests in real estate (called
‘‘qualifying interests’’) 47 and the
remaining 45% of the issuer’s assets
will consist primarily of real estate-type
interests.48 The staff generally has
viewed the following types of assets as
qualifying interests:
• Assets that represent an actual
interest in real estate or are loans or
liens fully secured by real estate. Thus,
the staff generally took the position that
an issuer may treat as qualifying
interests such assets as mortgage loans
fully secured by real estate, fee interests
in real estate, second mortgages secured
by real property, deeds of trust on real
property, installment land contracts and
leasehold interests secured solely by
real property.49
• Assets that can be viewed as being
the functional equivalent of, and
provide their holder with the same
economic experience as, an actual
interest in real estate or a loan or lien
fully secured by real estate. Thus, the
staff took the position that a Tier 1 real
estate mezzanine loan, under certain
conditions, may be considered a
qualifying interest if the loan may be
viewed as being the functional
equivalent of, and provide its holder
47 See, e.g., Salomon Brothers, Inc., SEC Staff NoAction Letter (June 17, 1985).
48 See, e.g., Citytrust, SEC Staff No-Action Letter
(Dec. 19, 1990); Greenwich Capital Acceptance Inc.,
SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Aug. 8, 1991) (issuer
represented its intention to invest at least 25% of
its total assets in real estate-type interests (subject
to reduction to the extent that the issuer invested
more than 55% of its total assets in qualifying
interests) and no more than 20% of its total assets
in miscellaneous investments).
49 See, e.g., United States Property Investment
N.V., SEC Staff No-Action Letter (May 1, 1989)
(mortgage loan secured exclusively by real estate in
which the value of the real estate was equal or
greater than the note evidencing the loan); Division
of Investment Management, SEC, The Treatment of
Structured Finance Under the Investment Company
Act, Protecting Investors: A Half Century of
Investment Company Regulation (1992) Ch. 1
(‘‘Protecting Investors Report’’) at n. 345 and
accompanying text (mortgage loan in which 100%
of the principal amount of each loan was fully
secured by real estate at the time of origination and
100% of the market value of the loan was fully
secured by real estate at the time of acquisition);
United Bankers, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Mar.
23, 1988) (fee interests in real estate); The State
Street Mortgage Co., SEC Staff No-Action Letter
(July 17, 1986) (second mortgages); First National
Bank of Fremont, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Nov.
18, 1985) (deeds of trust on real property);
American Housing Trust I, SEC Staff No-Action
Letter (May 21, 1988) (installment land contracts);
Health Facility Credit Corp., SEC Staff No-Action
Letter (Feb. 6, 1985) (leasehold interests).
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55305
with the same economic experience as,
a second mortgage.50
Consistent with the view the
Commission expressed in the 1960
Release, the staff has taken the position
that an issuer that is primarily engaged
in the business of holding interests in
the nature of a security in another
person engaged in the real estate
business, generally may not rely on
Section 3(c)(5)(C).51 Thus, securities
issued by REITs, limited partnerships,
or other entities that invest in real
estate, mortgages or mortgage-related
instruments, or that are engaged in the
real estate business, generally are not
considered by the staff to be qualifying
interests. In two particular
circumstances, however, the staff
expressed the view that certain interests
in another person engaged in the real
estate business may be regarded as
qualifying interests:
• The staff has expressed the view
that ‘‘whole pool certificates’’ that are
issued or guaranteed by Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac or Ginnie Mae (‘‘agency
whole pool certificates’’) provide the
holder with the same economic
experience as an investor who
purchases the underlying mortgages
directly, and therefore would be
qualifying interests; 52 and
• The staff has expressed the view
that certain subordinate participations
in commercial real estate first mortgage
loans, called B–Notes, have a number of
attributes that, when taken together,
may allow them to be classified as an
interest in real estate rather than an
interest in the nature of a security
issued by a person that is engaged in the
real estate business.53
50 See Capital Trust Inc., SEC Staff No-Action
Letter (May 24, 2007).
51 See 1960 Release, supra note 42. See also
Urban Land Investments Inc., SEC Staff No-Action
Letter (Nov. 4, 1971); The Realex Capital, SEC Staff
No-Action Letter (Mar. 19, 1984); M.D.C. Holdings,
SEC Staff No-Action Letter (May 5, 1987). The staff
also has stated its view that an issuer that is
engaged primarily in purchasing or otherwise
acquiring participations or fractionalized interests
in individual or pooled mortgages or deeds of trust
would not qualify to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C)
because such participations and interests are in the
nature of a security in another person engaged in
the real estate business. MGIC Mortgage Corp., SEC
Staff No-Action Letter (Oct. 6, 1972 and Aug. 1,
1974); M.D.C Holdings, SEC Staff No-Action Letter
(May 5, 1987).
52 See Protecting Investors Report, supra note 49
at n. 267. A whole pool certificate is a security that
represents the entire ownership interest in a
particular pool of mortgage loans. Id. See also
American Home Finance Corp. (pub. avail. Apr. 9,
1981).
53 Capital Trust Letter, SEC Staff No-Action Letter
(Feb. 3, 2009) (‘‘Capital Trust B-Note Letter’’). The
Capital Trust B-Note Letter was intended to clarify
the staff’s earlier statements with respect to
mortgage participations as qualifying interests. In
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Finally, the staff has expressed the
view that certain mortgage-related
instruments that were not treated as
qualifying interests may be treated as
real estate-type interests. In the staff’s
view, such instruments would include
loans in which at least 55% of the fair
market value of each loan was secured
by real estate at the time the issuer
acquired the loan,54 and agency partial
pool certificates.55
Some mortgage-related pools have
determined that certain other assets
constitute qualifying assets for purposes
of that exclusion. For example, we
understand that mortgage-related pools
generally treat bridge loans, certain
construction and rehabilitation loans,
wrap-around mortgage loans and
investments in distressed debt as
qualifying interests, provided that the
loans are fully secured by real estate.
We also understand that some mortgagerelated pools have determined to treat a
convertible mortgage (which is a
mortgage plus an option to purchase the
underlying real estate) as two assets—a
mortgage loan (treated as a qualifying
interest provided that it is fully secured
by real estate) and an option to purchase
real estate (which is assigned an
independent value and treated as a real
estate-type interest).
With respect to certain other
mortgage-related instruments, there
appears to be a degree of uncertainty or
prior letters, the staff had expressed the view that
a trust that held certain participation interests in
construction period mortgage loans acquired from
mortgage lenders may rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C),
concluding that each mortgage participation interest
held by the trust was an interest in real estate
because the participation interest was in a mortgage
loan that was fully secured by real property and the
trustee had the right by itself to foreclose on the
mortgage securing the loan in the event of default.
See, e.g. Northwestern Ohio Building and
Construction Trades Foundation, SEC Staff NoAction Letter (Apr. 20, 1984); Baton Rouge Building
and Construction Industry Foundation, SEC Staff
No-Action Letter (Aug. 31, 1984). Although the
Capital Trust B-Note Letter specifically did not
withdraw the prior staff no-action letters, it noted
the staff’s view that, while the right to foreclose is
an important attribute to consider when
determining whether an asset should be considered
a qualifying interest, other attributes of the asset
also need to be considered when making such a
determination.
54 NAB Asset Corp., SEC Staff No-Action Letter
(June 20, 1991).
55 The staff has expressed the view that, while an
agency partial pool certificate (which is a certificate
that represents less than the entire ownership
interest in a mortgage pool) is not a qualifying
interest because it is more akin to being an
investment in the securities of an issuer holding
mortgages rather than an investment directly in the
underlying mortgages, such asset may be treated as
a real estate-type interest for purposes of
determining whether an issuer may rely on Section
3(c)(5)(C). See, e.g., Nottingham Realty Securities,
SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Apr. 19, 1984);
Protecting Investors Report, supra note 49 at n. 268
and accompanying text.
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differing views among mortgage-related
pools as to the availability of the Section
3(c)(5)(C) exclusion. For example, it
appears that some mortgage-related
pools that invest in certificates issued
by pools that hold whole loans and
participation interests in loans that are
secured by commercial real estate
(‘‘CMBS’’) limit the amount of CMBS
that they hold, treating such assets as
real estate-type interests under Section
3(c)(5)(C), whereas others treat certain
CMBS as qualifying interests.
guidance and interpretation concerning
Section 3(c)(5)(C). The Commission is
interested in learning from mortgagerelated pools and their legal counsel
about any difficulties they may have
encountered in determining the status of
such companies under the Investment
Company Act. Are we correct that there
is uncertainty or differing views among
companies as to the availability of the
Section 3(c)(5)(C) exclusion? If so,
please explain and provide specific
examples. Do commenters believe that
the exclusion provided by Section
C. Request for Comment on the Current
3(c)(5)(C) is generally being used
Interpretation of Section 3(c)(5)(C)
As the discussion above indicates, the consistent with the purposes and
policies underlying that provision and
exclusion from the definition of
investor protection? Do commenters
investment company provided by
believe that certain mortgage-related
Section 3(c)(5)(C) does not have an
pools may be giving too broad an
extensive legislative history, has not
been comprehensively addressed by the interpretation to this statutory
exclusion? If so, does such broad
Commission, and generally has been
interpretation result in companies that
addressed in staff no-action letters only
on a case-by-case basis. The evolution of resemble traditional investment
companies avoiding regulation under
mortgage-related pools and the
the Act and, if so, is it inconsistent with
development of new and complex
the purposes and policies underlying
mortgage-related instruments have led
us to be concerned that mortgage-related that provision and investor protection?
Do commenters believe that certain
pools are making judgments about their
companies may be giving too narrow an
status under the Investment Company
Act without sufficient Commission
interpretation to this statutory
guidance.56 It appears that some types of exclusion? Commenters are requested to
mortgage-related pools might interpret
provide detailed explanations of their
the statutory exclusion provided by
views, including specific examples, if
Section 3(c)(5)(C) in a broad manner,
appropriate.
while others might interpret the
We noted above that companies
exclusion too narrowly. The
generally determine whether they are
Commission also is concerned that the
primarily engaged in the business of
staff no-action letters that have
purchasing or otherwise acquiring
addressed the statutory exclusion in
mortgages and other liens on and
Section 3(c)(5)(C) may have contained,
interests in real estate, based on whether
or led to, interpretations that are beyond
at least 55% of the company’s assets
the intended scope of the exclusion and
consist of qualifying interests and the
inconsistent with investor protection.
remaining 45% of the company’s assets
The Commission is concerned that
certain types of companies today appear consist primarily of real estate-type
interests. Is this an appropriate
to resemble in many respects
management investment companies that approach to determining an issuer’s
primary engagement for purposes of
are registered under the Act and may
not be the kinds of companies that were Section 3(c)(5)(C)? Is it a difficult
intended to be excluded from regulation determination to make? Is the approach
too broad or, conversely, too narrow in
under the Act by Section 3(c)(5)(C).
terms of identifying the types of
The Commission requests comment
companies that are able to rely on the
from mortgage-related pools, investors,
exclusion, consistent with legislative
and the public on the current state of
intent? Does this approach lead certain
56 In this regard we note that most mortgagecompanies to invest their assets in a
related pools, when publicly offering their
different manner than they otherwise
securities, disclose in their registration statements
would in accordance with their business
that their determinations whether they may rely on
model, in order to have the certainty of
the Section 3(c)(5)(C) exclusion will be based on
staff no-action letters and Commission guidance
being able to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C)?
and, where such guidance does not exist, on their
Are there companies that have
own judgments. Such companies also state that
concluded that they do not qualify for
there can be no assurance that the Commission staff
the exclusion in Section 3(c)(5)(C)? If so,
will concur with their views, or that the laws
governing the Investment Company Act status of
how did such companies address their
mortgage-related pools, or the guidance provided by status under the Investment Company
the Commission or its staff, will not change in a
Act? Commenters are requested to
manner that would not adversely affect their
comment on their experiences in this
operations.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2011 / Proposed Rules
area, including the economic impact of
this approach.
With respect to the staff no-action
letters, we ask for comment on whether
any of the staff’s analysis relating to the
determination of whether an asset is a
‘‘lien on or interest in real estate’’ for
purposes of Section 3(c)(5)(C) would be
relevant in formulating Commission
guidance for today’s mortgage-related
pools. Commenters should identify any
such staff position and explain its
relevance. For example, should certain
mortgage participations be treated as
interests in real estate and, if so, what
types of participations and why? Is a
company whose primary business
activity consists of holding mortgage
participations, the type of entity that
should be excluded from the definition
of investment company? Why or why
not, and does it matter what type(s) of
participations the company holds? If
participations are to be treated as
interests in real estate, what features
should be considered in making a
determination about such assets? For
example, should the right to foreclose be
considered an important attribute, even
though such right only exists if the
underlying mortgage defaults? 57
Commenters are encouraged to discuss
the costs and benefits of their
recommendations.
We also request comment on the view
that the Commission should take
concerning agency whole pool
certificates under Section 3(c)(5)(C).
Should the Commission revisit the
staff’s view that agency whole pool
certificates may be treated as interests in
real estate? 58 Should we view a
company whose primary business
consists of investing in agency whole
pool certificates—or other mortgagebacked securities—as the type of entity
57 See
supra note 53.
Commission issued a similar request for
comment in 1992. See Proposing Release to Rule 3a7, supra note 38 at n.103 and accompanying text.
That request for comment stemmed from the
Protecting Investors Report, issued in 1992, in
which the staff discussed whether it should
reconsider its position with respect to agency whole
pool certificates, noting that an agency whole pool
certificate holder does not have the same economic
experience as an investor who holds the underlying
mortgages because of the agency guarantee, which
increases the certificates’ liquidity. Protecting
Investors Report, supra note 49 at text following
n.346. Commenters strongly urged the staff not to
withdraw its position, arguing that agency whole
pool certificates are interests in real estate because
certificate holders receive payment streams that
reflect payments on the underlying mortgages.
Commenters also argued that withdrawal of the
position could result in some REITs and mortgage
bankers that held these instruments becoming
subject to the Investment Company Act. In response
to commenters’ concerns at that time, the staff
ultimately decided not to withdraw its position.
Adopting Release to Rule 3a–7, supra note 46 at nn.
90–92 and accompanying text.
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58 The
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that Congress intended to be
encompassed by the exclusion provided
by Section 3(c)(5)(C) or not? What
would be the economic impact of the
Commission adopting a position that
would not treat agency whole pool
certificates as interests in real estate?
Commenters should explain how such
companies are similar to, or differ from,
traditional investment companies that
invest in similar assets, and how any
such similarities or differences should
affect the status of such companies
under the Investment Company Act.
Finally, we ask for comment generally
on whether guidance is needed with
respect to other mortgage-related
instruments. If so, which instruments
and what should that guidance provide?
We note in particular the differing
approaches taken by certain mortgagerelated pools as to the appropriate
treatment of certain types of CMBS for
purposes of determining a company’s
ability to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C).
Should the Commission provide
guidance with respect to these
mortgage-related instruments, what
should that guidance address, and what
would be the potential economic impact
of this guidance? We also request
comment on whether a company whose
primary business consists of investing
in CMBS, or any other type of mortgagebacked security, is the type of entity that
Congress intended to be encompassed
by the exclusion provided by Section
3(c)(5)(C).
IV. Request for Comment on Possible
Commission Action
The Commission requests comment
on what steps, if any, it should take to
provide greater clarity, consistency or
regulatory certainty regarding the status
of mortgage-related pools under the
Investment Company Act. The
Commission potentially could engage in
rulemaking (such as a safe harbor or
definitional rule), issue an interpretive
release, and/or provide exemptive relief
to address mortgage-related pools and
the scope of Section 3(c)(5)(C), or take
no further action at this time.
Commenters are encouraged to discuss
the benefits and costs of each such
option.
Commenters are asked to address
whether a test could be devised that
would differentiate companies that are
primarily engaged in the real estate and
mortgage banking business from those
companies that resemble traditional
investment companies. If commenters
believe that such a test is appropriate,
the Commission is interested in
commenters’ views as to the factors that
would be suitable in such a test, the
benefits and costs associated with any
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55307
suggested test, and the effect that any
suggested test may have on investor
protection, competition, efficiency and
capital formation.
Section 3(c)(5)(C) suggests that one
factor that must be considered when
determining whether a company is
primarily engaged in the business set
forth in Section 3(c)(5)(C) is the
composition of the company’s assets.
Would it be helpful for the Commission
to define the term ‘‘liens on and other
interests in real estate’’ for purposes of
Section 3(c)(5)(C)? If so, how should the
Commission define that term? For
example, in light of the reference to
‘‘mortgages’’ in Section 3(c)(5)(C),
should the term ‘‘liens on and interests
in real estate’’ also be defined to include
only those assets that are directly
related to real estate, rather than
include, for example, interests in a
mortgage or in a pool or other entity that
holds real estate? The Commission
requests comment on the advantages
and disadvantages of defining the term
‘‘liens on and interests in real estate’’ in
this manner. If commenters believe that
a broader definition of the term ‘‘liens
on and interests in real estate’’ is more
appropriate, the Commission requests
comment on the principles or concepts
that could be used to craft such a
definition. Commenters are encouraged
to discuss the benefits and costs of
alternative definitions.
In addition to the composition of a
company’s assets, other factors may
help to differentiate companies that are
primarily engaged in the real estate and
mortgage banking business from those
companies that resemble traditional
investment companies. What are such
other factors? Should a company also
look to its sources of income in
determining its ‘‘primary business’’
under Section 3(c)(5)(C)? 59 Should
factors such as the company’s historical
development, the activities of its
officers, directors and employees, and
its public representations also be
considered in determining the
company’s primary business under
Section 3(c)(5)(C)? Are there factors that
may be potentially indicative of a
company’s non-investment company
business? For example, are there any
types of business activities or types of
business expenses that differentiate
such a company from an investment
company? 60 Commenters are urged to
be specific in their responses.
59 See, e.g., Section 3(c)(6) of the Investment
Company Act. 15 U.S.C. 80a–3(c)(6). We note that
the Internal Revenue Code’s REIT provisions
contain an asset and income test. See supra note 16.
60 See e.g., Rule 3a–8 under the Investment
Company Act (addressing the status under the Act
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2011 / Proposed Rules
IV. General Request for Comment
In addition to the issues raised or
mentioned in this release, the
Commission requests and encourages all
interested persons, including investors
in mortgage-related pools, to submit
their views on any other issues relating
to the status of such companies under
the Investment Company Act. The
Commission particularly welcomes
statistical, empirical, and other data
from commenters that may support their
views and/or support or refute the views
or issues raised in this release.
Dated: August 31, 2011.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–22771 Filed 9–6–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. IC–29779; File Nos. S7–35–
11]
17 CFR Part 270
RIN 3235–AL03
Treatment of Asset-Backed Issuers
Under the Investment Company Act
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking; withdrawal.
AGENCY:
The Commission is
considering proposing amendments to
Rule 3a–7 under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (‘‘Investment
Company Act’’ or ‘‘Act’’), the rule that
provides certain asset-backed issuers
with a conditional exclusion from the
definition of investment company.
Amendments to Rule 3a–7 that the
Commission may consider could reflect
market developments since 1992, when
Rule 3a–7 was adopted, and recent
developments affecting asset-backed
issuers, including the passage of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (the ‘‘DoddFrank Act’’) and the Commission’s
recent rulemakings regarding the assetbacked securities markets. The
Commission is withdrawing its 2008
proposal to amend Rule 3a–7, which
was published July 11, 2008.
DATES: Comments should be received on
or before November 7, 2011.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
of certain research and development companies
based on, among other things, their research and
development expenses, the activities of their
officers, directors and employees, their public
representations of policies, and their historical
development). 17 CFR 270.3a–8.
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Jkt 223001
Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
ADDRESSES:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/concept.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number S7–35–11 on the subject line;
or
• Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal
(https://www.regulations.gov). Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number S7–35–11. This file number
should be included on the subject line
if e-mail is used. To help us process and
review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The
Commission will post all comments on
the Commission’s Web site (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/concept.shtml).
Comments also are available for Web
site viewing and printing in the
Commission’s Public Reference Room,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549, on official business days
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
All comments received will be posted
without change; we do not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
publicly available.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rochelle Kauffman Plesset, Senior
Counsel, at (202) 551–6840 or Nadya
Roytblat, Assistant Chief Counsel, at
(202) 551–6825, Office of the Chief
Counsel, Division of Investment
Management, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction and Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Asset-Backed Issuers as Investment
Companies
B. Rule 3a–7
III. Discussion
A. Revisiting Rule 3a–7
1. Rating Requirements
2. Possible New Conditions for Rule 3a–7
a. Structure and Operation of the Issuer
b. Independent Review
c. Preservation and Safekeeping of Eligible
Assets and Cash Flow
d. Other Possible Investor Protections
i. Other Commission Rules
ii. Eligibility to Use Rule 3a–7
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
3. Standard for Acquisition and
Disposition of Eligible Assets
B. The Effect of the Exclusion Provided by
Rule 3a–7
1. Holders of an Asset-Backed Issuer’s
Securities
2. Eligible Portfolio Company
C. Asset-Backed Issuers Relying on Section
3(c)(5)
IV. General Request for Comment
I. Introduction and Executive Summary
Asset-backed issuers 1 typically meet
the definition of investment company
under the Investment Company Act, but
generally cannot operate under certain
of the Act’s requirements and
restrictions.2 In 1992, the Commission
adopted Rule 3a–7 under the Investment
Company Act specifically to exclude
from the definition of investment
company certain asset-backed issuers
that meet the rule’s conditions.3 These
conditions were designed to incorporate
then-existing practices in the assetbacked securities market that we
believed served to distinguish assetbacked issuers from registered
investment companies and addressed
investor protection under the
Investment Company Act.4
Rule 3a–7 includes several conditions
that refer to credit ratings by nationally
recognized statistical rating
organizations (‘‘NRSROs’’ or ‘‘rating
agencies’’). One such condition is that
certain of the asset-backed issuer’s
fixed-income securities receive certain
credit ratings by at least one rating
agency. These conditions were included
in Rule 3a–7 not principally as
standards of credit-worthiness, but,
because we believed that rating
agencies, when providing a rating
assessing the credit risk of an asset1 We use the term ‘‘asset-backed issuer’’ in this
release to refer generally to any issuer of fixedincome securities the payments on which depend
primarily on the cash flows generated by a specified
pool of underlying financial assets. See also infra
section III.A.2.d.ii for a discussion of the definition
of ‘‘asset-backed securities’’ under other Federal
securities laws.
2 See infra note 29.
3 17 CFR 270.3a–7.
4 The conditions also were intended to
accommodate future innovations in the
securitization market, consistent with investor
protection. See Exclusion from the Definition of
Investment Company for Structured Financings,
Investment Company Act Release No. 19105 (Nov.
19, 1992) [57 FR 56248 (Nov. 27, 1992)] (‘‘Adopting
Release’’) at text accompanying n.8. Rule 3a–7
effectuated the recommendation made by the
Division of Investment Management’s staff in its
report, Protecting Investors: A Half Century of
Investment Company Regulation, The Treatment of
Structured Finance under the Investment Company
Act 1–101 (May 1992) (‘‘Protecting Investors
Report’’). The Protecting Investors Report contains
a discussion of the issues raised by asset-backed
issuers under the Investment Company Act and the
state of the asset-backed securities market prior to
the Rule’s adoption.
E:\FR\FM\07SEP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 173 (Wednesday, September 7, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 55300-55308]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-22771]
[[Page 55300]]
=======================================================================
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 270
[Release No. IC-29778; File No. S7-34-11]
RIN 3235-AL21
Companies Engaged in the Business of Acquiring Mortgages and
Mortgage-Related Instruments
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Concept release; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') and
its staff (``Commission staff'' or ``staff'') are reviewing
interpretive issues under the Investment Company Act of 1940
(``Investment Company Act'' or ``Act'') relating to the status under
the Act of companies that are engaged in the business of acquiring
mortgages and mortgage-related instruments and that rely on the
exclusion from the definition of investment company in Section
3(c)(5)(C) of the Act (together, ``mortgage-related pools''). This
review is focusing, among others, on certain real estate investment
trusts (``REITs''). To help facilitate this review, the Commission
requests information about these companies and how Section 3(c)(5)(C)
of the Act is interpreted by, and affects investors in, these
companies. The Commission solicits commenters' views about the
application of the Investment Company Act to mortgage-related pools,
including suggestions on the steps that the Commission should take to
provide greater clarity, consistency or regulatory certainty with
respect to Section 3(c)(5)(C).
DATES: Comments should be received on or before November 7, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form https://www.sec.gov/rules/concept.shtml); or send an e-mail to rule-comments@sec.gov.
Please include File No. S7-34-11 on the subject line; or use the
Federal eRulemaking Portal (https://www.regulations.gov). Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File No. S7-34-11. This file number
should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help
process and review your comments more efficiently, please use only one
method. The Commission will post all comments on the Commission's
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/concept.shtml). Comments
are also available for public inspection and copying in the
Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
All comments received will be posted without charge; we do not edit
personal identifying information from submissions. You should submit
only information that you wish to make available publicly.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rochelle Kauffman Plesset, Senior
Counsel, at (202) 551-6840, or Nadya Roytblat, Assistant Chief Counsel,
at (202) 551-6825, Division of Investment Management, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction and Executive Summary
II. Companies That Rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C)
A. Overview
B. Management Style and Corporate Governance
C. Similarities to Traditional Investment Companies
D. Request for Comment
III. The Exclusion Provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C)
A. Legislative and Administrative Background
B. Commission Staff No-Action Letters and Other Interpretations
C. Request for Comment on the Current Interpretation of Section
3(c)(5)(C)
IV. Request for Comment on Possible Commission Action
V. General Request for Comment
I. Introduction and Executive Summary
The Commission and staff are reviewing interpretive issues relating
to the status of mortgage-related pools under the Investment Company
Act.\1\ Companies that are engaged in the business of acquiring
mortgages and mortgage-related instruments, and that issue securities,
generally hold assets that are securities under the Investment Company
Act and typically meet the definition of investment company under the
Act.\2\ While some such companies register as investment companies
under the Act,\3\ many seek to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) of the Act,
which generally excludes from the definition of investment company any
person who is primarily engaged in, among other things, ``purchasing or
otherwise acquiring mortgages and other liens on and interests in real
estate.'' \4\ The
[[Page 55301]]
exclusion provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C) sometimes also is used by
issuers of mortgage-backed securities, whose reliance on this statutory
provision is discussed in a companion release.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Certain companies that are engaged in the business of
acquiring mortgages and mortgage-related instruments are issuers of
mortgage-backed securities that may rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C). Such
issuers are not included in the term ``mortgage-related pools'' as
it is used in this release. See infra note 5 and accompanying text.
\2\ Section 3(a)(1)(A) of the Investment Company Act defines an
investment company as any issuer which ``is or holds itself out as
being engaged primarily, or proposes to engage primarily, in the
business of investing, reinvesting, or trading in securities.'' 15
U.S.C. 80a-3(a)(1)(A). Section 3(a)(1)(C) defines an investment
company as any issuer which ``is engaged or proposes to engage in
the business of investing, reinvesting, owning, holding, or trading
in securities, and owns or proposes to acquire investment securities
[as that term is defined in the Act] having a value exceeding 40 per
centum of the value of such issuer's total assets (exclusive of
Government securities and cash items) on a unconsolidated basis.''
15 U.S.C. 80a-3(a)(1)(C). A company that issues securities and is
primarily engaged in investing in, owning, or holding mortgages and
mortgage-related instruments typically meets one, if not both, of
these definitions. See, e.g., SEC, Report on the Public Policy
Implications of Investment Company Growth, H.R. Rep. No. 2337, 89th
Cong. 2d Sess. 328 (1966) (``PPI Report'') (stating that mortgages
and other interests in real estate are investment securities for
purposes of the Act).
Section 2(a)(36) of the Investment Company Act broadly defines
``security'' as ``any note, stock, treasury stock, security future,
bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest
or participation in any profit-sharing agreement, collateral-trust
certificate, preorganization certificate or subscription,
transferable share, investment contract, voting-trust certificate,
certificate of deposit for a security, fractional undivided interest
in oil, gas, or other mineral rights, any put, call, straddle,
option, or privilege on any security (including a certificate of
deposit) or on any group or index of securities (including any
interest therein or based on the value thereof), or any put, call,
straddle, option, or privilege entered into on a national securities
exchange relating to foreign currency, or, in general, any interest
or instrument commonly known as a `security', or any certificate of
interest or participation in, temporary or interim certificate for,
receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or
purchase, any of the foregoing.''
\3\ According to industry statistics derived from Lipper's LANA
Database, as of June 30, 2011, there were 23 series of registered
open-end investment companies with total assets of $70.6 billion
that invested ``at least 65% of their assets in Government National
Mortgage Association securities.'' In addition, as of that date,
there were 34 series of registered open-end investment companies
with total assets of $26.6 billion, and 11 registered closed-end
investment companies with total assets of $1.8 billion, that
invested ``at least 65% of their assets in mortgages/securities
issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the U.S.
government and certain Federal agencies.''
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(5)(C). Section 3(c)(5) excludes from the
definition of investment company ``[a]ny person who is not engaged
in the business of issuing redeemable securities, face-amount
certificates of the installment type or periodic payment plan
certificates, and who is primarily engaged in one or more of the
following businesses: (A) Purchasing or otherwise acquiring notes,
drafts, acceptances, open accounts receivable, and other obligations
representing part or all of the sales price of merchandise,
insurance, and services; (B) making loans to manufacturers,
wholesalers, and retailers of, and to prospective purchasers of,
specified merchandise, insurance, and services; and (C) purchasing
or otherwise acquiring mortgages and other liens on and interest in
real estate.''
\5\ Treatment of Asset-Backed Issuers under the Investment
Company Act, Investment Company Act Release No. 29779 (Aug. 31,
2011) (``3a-7 Companion Release'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 3(c)(5)(C) of the Act was enacted in 1940 to exclude from
regulation under the Investment Company Act companies that were engaged
in the mortgage banking business and that did not resemble, or were not
considered to be, issuers that were in the investment company
business.\6\ Since that time, as the mortgage markets have evolved and
expanded, a wide variety of companies, many of them unforeseen in 1940,
have relied upon Section 3(c)(5)(C).\7\ The statutory exclusion from
the definition of investment company provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C)
does not have an extensive legislative history and has not been
comprehensively addressed by the Commission. Section 3(c)(5)(C) has
been addressed in staff no-action letters on a case-by-case basis.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See infra note 38 and accompanying text.
\7\ Some companies that privately place their securities may
instead rely on the private investment company exclusions set forth
in Sections 3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) of the Act. Section 3(c)(1) of the
Investment Company Act excludes from the definition of investment
company any issuer whose outstanding securities (other than short-
term paper) are beneficially owned by not more than 100 investors
and which is not making and does not presently propose to make a
public offering of its securities. 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(1). Section
3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act excludes from the definition
of investment company any issuer whose outstanding securities are
owned exclusively by persons who, at the time of acquisition of such
securities, are ``qualified purchasers'' as defined in the Act and
which is not making and does not at that time propose to make a
public offering of its securities. 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(7).
\8\ This release includes extensive discussion of staff no-
action letters; accordingly the Commission notes that its discussion
of staff statements is provided solely for background and to
facilitate comment on issues that the Commission might address. The
discussion is in no way intended to suggest that the Commission has
adopted the analysis, conclusions or any other portion of the staff
statements discussed here. Staff no-action letters are issued by the
Commission staff in response to written requests regarding the
application of the Federal securities laws to proposed transactions.
Many of the staff no-action letters are ``enforcement-only''
letters, in which the staff states whether it will recommend
enforcement action to the Commission if the proposed transaction
proceeds in accordance with the facts, circumstances and
representations set forth in the requester's letter. Other staff no-
action letters provide the staff's interpretation of a specific
statute, rule or regulation in the context of a specific situation.
See Informal Guidance Program for Small Entities, Investment Company
Act Release No. 22587 (Mar. 27, 1997).
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In light of the evolution of mortgage-related pools and the
development of new and complex mortgage-related instruments, the
Commission is reviewing interpretive issues relating to the status of
mortgage-related pools under the Investment Company Act and whether
mortgage-related pools potentially are making judgments about their
status under the Act without sufficient Commission guidance. It appears
that some types of mortgage-related pools might interpret the statutory
exclusion provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C) in a broad manner, while
others might interpret the exclusion too narrowly, suggesting that
there may be confusion among some mortgage-related pools about when the
exclusion applies. The Commission also is concerned that the staff no-
action letters that have addressed the statutory exclusion in Section
3(c)(5)(C) may have contained, or led to, interpretations that are
beyond the intended scope of the exclusion and inconsistent with
investor protection. The Commission is concerned that certain types of
mortgage-related pools today appear to resemble in many respects
investment companies such as closed-end funds and may not be the kinds
of companies that were intended to be excluded from regulation under
the Act by Section 3(c)(5)(C). Therefore, the Commission believes that
both investors and mortgage-related pools may benefit from the
Commission's comprehensive review of the status of mortgage-related
pools under the Investment Company Act and from any resulting guidance.
Accordingly, the Commission is requesting data and other
information from the public about mortgage-related pools and soliciting
views about the application of Section 3(c)(5)(C) of the Investment
Company Act to mortgage-related pools, including steps that the
Commission might take in this area. The Commission's goals in this
effort are to: (1) be consistent with the Congressional intent
underlying the exclusion from regulation under the Act provided by
Section 3(c)(5)(C); (2) ensure that the exclusion is administered in a
manner that is consistent with the purposes and policies underlying the
Act, the public interest, and the protection of investors; (3) provide
greater clarity, consistency and regulatory certainty in this area; and
(4) facilitate capital formation.
II. Companies That Rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C)
A. Overview
By its terms, Section 3(c)(5)(C),\9\ excludes from the definition
of investment company ``[a]ny person who is not engaged in the business
of issuing redeemable securities, face-amount certificates of the
installment type or periodic payment plan certificates, and who is
primarily engaged * * * [in the business of] purchasing or otherwise
acquiring mortgages and other liens on and interests in real estate.''
Many different types of companies that engage in a variety of
businesses rely on this exclusion.\10\ Such companies include: Those
that originate and hold mortgages and participations of mortgages that
they originated; companies engaged in the business of acquiring from
affiliates or third parties mortgages and mortgage-related instruments
(such as mortgage participations, mezzanine loans and mortgage-backed
securities); companies that invest in real estate, mortgages and
mortgage-related instruments; and companies whose primary business is
to invest in so-called agency securities \11\ and other mortgage-backed
securities.\12\
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\9\ Section 3(c)(5) was initially enacted in 1940 as Section
3(c)(6). Congress redesignated the provision as Section 3(c)(5) in
1970. Investment Company Amendments Act of 1970, Public Law 91-547,
84 Stat. 1413 (1970) (codified as amended 15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(5)).
\10\ See infra note 13.
\11\ Agency securities are mortgage-backed securities issued by
the government-sponsored enterprises, Government National Mortgage
Association (Ginnie Mae), Federal National Mortgage Association
(Fannie Mae) and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie
Mac).
\12\ A summary review by the staff of filings under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') of issuers
identifying themselves as REITs suggests that, as of April 2011,
there were approximately 49 REITs that had disclosed that they were
primarily engaged in the business of holding mortgages and/or
mortgage-related instruments, with most indicating that they or
their subsidiaries were relying on Section 3(c)(5)(C). Of these
companies, 15 stated that they were primarily engaged in the
business of acquiring agency securities and other types of mortgage-
backed securities. The staff's review also identified 57 companies
that had disclosed in their Exchange Act filings that they were
investing in both (i) real estate, and (ii) mortgages and mortgage-
related instruments, with 28 of such companies suggesting that they
or their subsidiaries may be relying on Section 3(c)(5)(C). This
review did not include those companies that have not elected to be
treated as REITs under the Internal Revenue Code but may
nevertheless be relying on the Section 3(c)(5)(C) exclusion.
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Companies that rely on the exclusion in Section 3(c)(5)(C) are
structured and operated in various ways. Nevertheless, it appears that
several general
[[Page 55302]]
observations about mortgage-related pools can be made.\13\
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\13\ The Commission's information about mortgage-related pools
discussed in this release is derived primarily from the staff's
review of registration statements filed under the Securities Act of
1933 (``Securities Act'') and periodic reports filed under the
Exchange Act, to the extent that these filings discuss whether a
company is relying on Section 3(c)(5)(C). Information available to
the Commission is further limited by the fact that companies that
rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) also include companies that privately
place their securities without registering under the Securities Act
and companies that may not be subject to the periodic reporting
requirements under the Exchange Act. The description of mortgage-
related pools provided in this section of the release relates
primarily to companies that make filings with the Commission under
the Securities Act and the Exchange Act, and is based on these
filings.
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Many, if not most, mortgage-related pools are corporations or
business trusts that have elected to be treated as REITs for purposes
of their tax status under the Internal Revenue Code.\14\ Special tax
provisions for REITs were created by Congress in 1960 as a means to
make available to retail investors opportunities to invest in income-
producing real estate and real estate-related assets.\15\ In a REIT
structure, investor assets are pooled together to acquire, or provide
financing for, various types of income-producing real estate interests
that are selected and managed by professional asset managers. Like most
registered investment companies, companies that qualify for REIT status
typically seek pass-through tax treatment. To achieve this tax benefit,
a company electing REIT status must comply with restrictions and
limitations set forth in the Internal Revenue Code.\16\
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\14\ The REIT provisions are set forth in Sections 856 through
859 of the Internal Revenue Code. 26 U.S.C. 856-859.
\15\ See, e.g. Real Estate Investment Trusts, H.R. Rep. No.
2020, 86th Cong. 2nd Sess. 3-4 (1960). REITs may be classified into
one of three categories. The National Association of Real Estate
Investment Trusts (``NAREIT'') generally defines equity REITS to be
companies that own and operate income-producing real estate, and
mortgage REITs to be companies that lend money directly to real
estate owners and their operators, or indirectly through the
acquisition of loans or mortgage-backed securities. See NAREIT, The
REIT Story: and Introduction to the Benefits of Investing in Real
Estate Stocks, REIT.com (Feb. 2011). Hybrid REITs generally are
companies that use the investment strategies of both Equity REITs
and Mortgage REITs. As noted above, mortgage REITs and some Hybrid
REITs typically seek to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C). See supra note
12. Equity REITs that hold fee interests directly typically do not
invest in securities to such an extent as to fall within the
definition of investment company under the Investment Company Act.
See supra note 2.
\16\ These requirements generally provide that: (1) the company
distribute at least 90% of its taxable income in dividends to its
shareholders annually; (2) at least 75% of the company's total
assets on the last day of each quarter of the company's taxable year
consist of real estate assets (including interests in real property,
interests in mortgages on real property and shares of other REITs),
cash and cash items, and government securities; and (3) the company
derive at least 75% of its gross income during the past year from,
among other things, rents from real property, interest on
obligations secured by mortgages on real property or on interests in
real property, and 95% of its gross income from the same assets that
qualify for the 75% test or from dividends or interest from any
source. In addition to the asset and income tests and the 90%
dividend distribution requirements, the Internal Revenue Code
requires a company that elects REIT status to: be a corporation,
trust, or association; be managed by one or more trustees or
directors; have transferable shares; have a minimum of 100
shareholders; have no more than 50% of its shares held by five or
fewer individuals; and not engage in certain prohibited
transactions. See supra note 14.
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Although mortgage-related pools may utilize a variety of investment
strategies, most mortgage-related pools use leverage to magnify their
returns.\17\ For example, some mortgage-related pools that primarily
hold agency securities and other mortgage-backed securities operate
using a business model that depends on the use of leverage, with their
profits, if any, generated by the spread between the cost of borrowing
and the return on holdings purchased with the proceeds from such
borrowing.\18\ According to data provided by the National Association
of Real Estate Investment Trusts (``NAREIT''), as of September 30,
2010, the debt ratio of publicly traded Mortgage REITs averaged 83.5%,
a debt-to-equity ratio of nearly five to one.\19\ In contrast, as of
June 30, 2010, the debt-to-equity ratio of registered closed-end
investment companies that use borrowings was generally less than one
quarter to one.\20\
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\17\ See, e.g., Peter C. Beller, Bet Against the Fed, Buy
Mortgage REITs, Forbes.com, Jan. 25, 2010; Anthracite Capital Files
Chapter 7, REITwrecks.com (Mar. 15, 2010).
\18\ See, e.g., Vivian Marino, Some REITS Have a Contrarian
Flavor, NY Times.com, Mar. 29, 2009.
\19\ NAREIT REITWatch: A Monthly Statistical Report on the Real
Estate Investment Trust Industry (Apr. 2011). NAREIT calculates the
debt ratio by dividing the total debt outstanding in a REIT sector
by that REIT sector's total market capitalization. Total
capitalization equals the sum of total debt plus implied market
capitalization.
\20\ See Thomas J. Herzfeld, Survey of Closed-End Fund Leverage,
Investor's Guide to Closed-End Funds (Oct. 2010). We compared REITs
to registered closed-end investment companies because, as discussed
below, certain mortgage-related pools have characteristics similar
to such registered companies. See infra section II.C.
We note that certain REITs follow the North American Securities
Administrators Association's Statement of Policy Regarding Real
Estate Investment Trusts (``NASAA Guidelines''), which generally
state that the maximum level of borrowings (in relation to the
company's net asset value) should not exceed 300% without ``a
satisfactory showing that a higher level of borrowing is
appropriate'' and that any borrowing in excess of that level must be
approved by a majority of the company's independent trustees and
disclosed to shareholders. NASAA Guidelines at V.J. See infra note
22. We understand from filings made by mortgage-related pools under
the Securities Act and the Exchange Act that other mortgage-related
pools may specify in their organizational documents the level of
leverage that they may use, although that level often may be
increased with the approval of a majority of the company's board of
directors or trustees, and still others may use leverage up to any
level deemed appropriate by their investment advisers.
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B. Management Style and Corporate Governance
Some mortgage-related pools are internally managed and have their
own employees to carry out the administrative, investment and other
activities necessary to operate the companies. Other mortgage-related
pools have few, if any, employees and instead rely on separate advisory
entities for the day-to-day operations of the companies. These advisory
entities often are the mortgage-related pool's sponsor (typically, a
real estate investment firm, an investment management firm, a private
equity manager or other similar company that sponsors REITs, hedge
funds and/or private equity funds) or an affiliate of the sponsor. An
adviser of an externally managed mortgage-related pool is compensated
by the company through a variety of different compensation schemes,
which may include a performance or incentive fee. Regardless of whether
they are internally or externally managed, most mortgage-related pools
have boards of directors or trustees to oversee the companies'
management.
Many mortgage-related pools list and trade their securities on a
national securities exchange and, like other public companies listed on
a national securities exchange, must comply with the exchange's listing
and maintenance requirements, including corporate governance rules.
Such rules require, among other things, that a majority of the members
of the company's board of directors or trustees be independent of its
management.\21\ Other mortgage-related pools do not list and trade
their securities on a national securities exchange and may not be
subject to any such corporate governance rules. Many non-exchange
traded REITs, however, are structured in accordance with the NASAA
Guidelines, as well as any applicable regulations of the states in
which they sell their shares.\22\ Among other things, the NASAA
Guidelines provide for a REIT to have a board of
[[Page 55303]]
trustees that has a majority of independent members.\23\
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\21\ See, e.g., Section 303A of the New York Stock Exchange
Listed Company Manual.
\22\ Most states require non-exchange traded REITs to comply
with the provisions of the NASAA Guidelines, although certain states
have adopted their own guidelines. See supra note 20. See, e.g.,
Foss, et al., Real Estate Investment Trusts Handbook, Sec. 4:1
(2009-2010 ed).
\23\ NASAA Guidelines at III.B. The NASAA Guidelines also
address: A REIT's issuing certain securities, including redeemable
securities; minimum suitability requirements; leverage concerns;
potential conflicts of interests (such as providing for a majority
of a REIT's board of trustees, including a majority of its
independent trustees, to approve transactions between the REIT and
its affiliates); and annual reports to shareholders. NASAA
Guidelines at III., V.,VI.
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C. Similarities to Traditional Investment Companies
Some mortgage-related pools today have characteristics similar to,
and may operate like, traditional investment companies. For example,
both mortgage-related pools and traditional investment companies pool
investor assets to purchase securities and provide investors with
professional asset management.\24\ Like traditional investment
companies, mortgage-related pools may be internally or externally
managed, with externally managed mortgage-related pools typically
having few, if any, employees, and instead relying on their investment
advisers, which may be their sponsors or the sponsors' affiliates, to
operate the companies.\25\ Like investment advisers to traditional
investment companies, investment advisers to mortgage-related pools
typically are compensated with an asset-based fee.\26\ Some mortgage-
related pools invest in the same types of assets as registered
investment companies and private investment funds.\27\ Finally, some
mortgage-related pools are perceived by investors and the media as
being investment vehicles and not as companies that are engaged in the
mortgage banking business.\28\
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\24\ Like registered investment companies, many mortgage-
related pools publicly offer their securities to both retail and
institutional investors.
\25\ In addition, as discussed previously, both registered
investment companies that seek to avoid corporate taxation and
mortgage-related pools that elect REIT status must distribute at
least 90% of their income to investors annually so as to avoid
corporate taxation. See supra note 16 and accompanying text.
\26\ Investment advisers to mortgage-related pools also may
receive incentive-based fees of a type that is prohibited for
investment advisers to registered investment companies under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (``Advisers Act''), but typically
charged by investment advisers to hedge funds and certain other
private investment companies. See Section 205 of the Advisers Act.
15 U.S.C. 80b-5. An investment adviser to a mortgage-related pool
may be required to register under the Advisers Act. See generally
Section 203 of the Advisers Act and Commission rules thereunder.
\27\ For example, many mortgage-related pools and registered
investment companies, including money market funds, invest in agency
securities. According to the Federal Reserve, as of March 31, 2011,
registered investment companies (not including money market funds)
held $800.8 billion (or 10.5%), and money market funds held $373.4
billion (or 4.9%), of outstanding ``agency- and GSE-backed
securities,'' defined as issues of Federal budget agencies (such as
those for TVA), issues of government-sponsored enterprises (such as
Fannie Mae and FHLB) and agency- and GSE-backed mortgage pool
securities issued by Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the
Farmers Home Administration. In contrast, REITs held $191.1 billion
(or 2.5%) of such securities. Federal Reserve Statistical Release,
Flow of Funds Accounts of the United States: Flows and Outstandings
First Quarter 2011 (June 9, 2011). As noted previously, certain
registered investment companies focus their investments on the same
types of assets as mortgage-related pools that primarily hold agency
securities and other mortgage-backed securities. See supra note 3.
In addition, in recent years, some hedge funds and offshore funds
have been investing in the same types of assets as some mortgage-
related pools. See, e.g., Hedge Funds Investing in Delinquent
Mortgages, MSNBC.com (July 30, 2008).
\28\ For example, a number of mortgage REITs appear to have been
formed with the intent of targeting retail investors who may be
unable to make the high minimum investments often required of large
bond funds. See A.D. Pruitt, Mortgage REITs on a Tear as High Yields
Fuel Demand, Wall St. J. (Apr. 13, 2011). Press reports have also
characterized some such companies as investment vehicles. See, e.g.,
Jonathan Weil, Hedge Fund Instant IPO Tests the New Complacency,
Bloomberg.net (Jun. 18, 2009) (``PennyMac is a hedge fund dressed up
as a real estate investment trust''). See also Nathan Vardi, High-
Profile Investor Sues Carlyle Group, Forbes.com (July 13, 2009)
(``Michael Huffington, the wealthy former Republican congressman
from California, is suing the Carlyle Group and its co-founder,
David Rubenstein, over misrepresentations and deceptions Huffington
claims they made regarding his $20 million investment loss in
Carlyle Corp., Carlyle's failed * * * mortgage fund.'').
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With respect to investment companies, the Investment Company Act
\29\ seeks to prevent such companies from, among other things, (i)
Employing unsound or misleading methods, or not receiving adequate
independent scrutiny, when computing the asset value of their
investments or their outstanding securities; \30\ (ii) engaging in
excessive borrowing and issuing excessive amounts of senior securities;
\31\ and (iii) being organized, operated, managed, or having their
portfolio securities selected, in the interests of company
insiders.\32\ In addition, the Investment Company Act seeks to protect
the assets of investment companies, including imposing custody controls
and preventing controlling persons of an investment company from
commingling the investment company's assets with their own and
misappropriating them.\33\
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\29\ See, e.g., Section 1(b) of the Investment Company Act
(setting forth findings and declaration of policy). 15 U.S.C. 80a-
1(b).
\30\ The Investment Company Act places significant emphasis on
the manner in which a registered investment company must value its
portfolio. See, e.g., Section 2(a)(41) of the Act. 15 U.S.C. 80(a)-
2(a)(41) (defining ``value,'' with respect to securities held by a
registered investment company, to be (a) Market value for securities
for which market quotations are readily available or (b) for other
securities or assets, fair value as determined in good faith by the
company's board of directors).
\31\ Prior to 1940, some investment companies were highly
leveraged through the issuance of ``senior securities'' in the form
of debt or preferred stock, which often resulted in the companies
being unable to meet their obligations to the holders of their
senior securities. See generally Investment Trusts and Investment
Companies: Report of the Securities and Exchange Commission (1940)
(``Investment Trusts Study''). Excessive leverage also greatly
increased the speculative nature of the common stock of the
companies. Id. Section 18 of the Investment Company Act limits the
ability of registered investment companies to engage in borrowing
and to issue senior securities. 15 U.S.C. 80a-18.
\32\ A study conducted prior to the adoption of the Act
documented numerous instances in which investment companies were
managed for the benefit of their sponsors and affiliates to the
detriment of investors. See Investment Trusts Study, supra note 31.
Section 17 of the Investment Company Act prohibits certain
transactions involving investment companies and their affiliates. 15
U.S.C. 80a-17(a). Other provisions of the Investment Company Act
also effectively limit opportunities for overreaching by investment
company sponsors and affiliates. See, e.g., Section 10(f) of the
Investment Company, which generally prohibits a registered
investment company from knowingly purchasing, during the existence
of any underwriting or selling syndicate, any security a principal
underwriter of which is an affiliated person of the investment
company. 15 U.S.C. 80a-10(f).
\33\ See, e.g., Investment Trusts Study, supra note 31. Prior to
1940, investment company assets were not adequately protected from
misuse by investment company insiders. Id. In many cases,
controlling persons of investment companies commingled the
investment companies' assets with the investment advisers' assets
and then proceeded to misuse the assets themselves. Id. Section
17(f) of the Investment Company Act and the rules thereunder set
forth requirements with respect to the custody of investment company
assets. 15 U.S.C. 80a-17(f). See, e.g., Rule 17f-2 under the
Investment Company Act governing custody of investments by a
registered investment company. 17 CFR 270.17f-2.
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We are concerned that some mortgage-related pools, as pooled
investment vehicles, may raise the potential for the same types of
abuses, such as deliberate misvaluation of the company's holdings,\34\
extensive leveraging,\35\ and overreaching by insiders.\36\ The
Commission also has
[[Page 55304]]
brought a number of enforcement cases, for example, in which
controlling persons of companies that hold mortgage-related assets used
such companies' assets to further their own interests.\37\
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\34\ For example, the Commission has brought an enforcement
action against the management of a company that had, among other
things, improperly recorded mortgages that had decreased in value at
cost rather than at market value in order to avoid writing down
certain mortgages held for resale, thereby adversely affecting the
company's income and equity. See SEC v. Patrick Quinlan, 2008 Fed.
Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) ] 95,005 (E.D. Mich. Nov. 7, 2008), aff'd, 373
Fed. Appx. 581 (6th Cir. 2010).
\35\ For example, an offshore fund that held mortgage-backed
securities reportedly had a 32:1 leverage ratio (borrowing against
the security of the mortgage-backed securities), so that when the
mortgage-backed securities lost value, the fund could not service
its debts, resulting in lenders seizing the fund's assets. See,
e.g., Nathan Vardi, High-Profile Investor Sues Carlyle Group,
Forbes.com (July 13, 2009).
\36\ For example, the Commission brought a settled
administrative proceeding against a former chief executive officer
of both a publicly held REIT and its manager (which owned
approximately 52% of the REIT) who had used his significant
influence on the advisory services provided by the REIT manager to
cause the REIT, its manager and other related parties together to
purchase over a million shares of a publicly traded company over a
13-month period, representing 16.1% of the total shares of that
company. These purchases accounted for approximately 54% of the
total trading volume in the company's stock during that period, and
on some days these parties purchased all of the company's stock that
traded that day. Although no entity itself purchased more than 5% of
the company's securities, the Commission determined that given the
interrelationships that existed, the REIT and others constituted a
``group'' for purposes of Section 13(d), and that a Schedule 13D
should have been filed. See In the Matter of Basic Capital
Management Inc., et al., Exchange Act Release No. 46538 (Sept. 24,
2002). This case illustrates how a mortgage-related pool insider has
the potential to influence the management of the company's assets
for the insider's benefit.
\37\ See, e.g., SEC v. Pittsford Capital Income Partners LLC, et
al., No. 06-6353 (W.D.N.Y. Aug. 23, 2007), aff'd, 305 Fed. Appx. 694
(2d. Cir. 2008) (persons that controlled certain real estate
investment companies sold to senior citizens engaged in a fraudulent
scheme involving, among other things, transfers of large amounts of
money from the companies to entities in which the controlling
persons had significant personal interests); SEC v. Global Express
Capital Real Estate Investment Fund I et al., No. 03-1514 (Nev. Mar.
28, 2006), aff'd in part, rev'd and remanded in part, 289 Fed. Appx.
183 (9th Cir. 2008) (a Ponzi-like scheme which purported to pool
investor funds to purchase interests in mortgage loans and trust
deeds); SEC v. LandOak Securities, LLC, et al., No. 3:08-209 (E.D.
Tenn., Mar. 29, 2011) (persons that controlled a mortgage company
misappropriated funds due to the company's investors).
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D. Request for Comment
The Commission is interested in learning more about mortgage-
related pools. Accordingly, commenters are requested to provide
information about companies that rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) of the Act,
including, among other things, the various types of such companies; how
such companies are operated, including their strategies for the
acquisition and management of their holdings; the types of investors
that invest in such companies; and the roles of such companies in the
mortgage markets. We ask commenters to discuss the differences, if any,
between companies that originate mortgages and then continue to hold
all or portions of those mortgages, and companies that only invest in
mortgages and mortgage-related instruments. The Commission also invites
commenters to provide the same type of information about any similar
companies that do not rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) and to explain whether
they are registered under the Act or rely on another exclusion or
exemption and, if so, which exclusion or exemption. The Commission is
interested in obtaining information about both public (exchange-traded
and non-exchange traded) and privately offered mortgage-related pools
and similar companies. The Commission also requests that commenters
provide any other information about mortgage-related pools they believe
is relevant to the Commission's review of the status of such companies
under the Investment Company Act.
We also ask commenters for their views on the apparent similarities
between certain mortgage-related pools and traditional investment
companies. We ask commenters to describe any key operational or
structural characteristics of mortgage-related pools that serve to
distinguish them from traditional investment companies regulated under
the Investment Company Act. The Commission requests that commenters
provide any other information that may be relevant to evaluating the
similarities and differences between mortgage-related pools and
investment companies.
Finally, we request comment on the types of potential abuses that
the Investment Company Act was intended to prevent that might be
associated with mortgage-related pools. We also are interested in
learning about any existing safeguards in the structure and operations
of mortgage-related pools that may address concerns similar to those
addressed by the Investment Company Act. Commenters also are invited to
comment on whether certain concerns addressed by the Investment Company
Act may not be relevant to mortgage-related pools and the reasons why.
Commenters also should discuss whether, and to what extent, such
potential abuses are addressed by any industry practices or other
regulatory schemes that may be applicable to mortgage-related pools.
III. The Exclusion Provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C)
A. Legislative and Administrative Background
Section 3(c)(5) originally was intended to exclude from the
definition of investment company, among other things, companies that
did not resemble, or were not considered to be, issuers that were in
the investment company business.\38\ In 1970, Congress amended Section
3(c)(5) to prohibit any issuer relying on the exclusion from issuing
redeemable securities. According to the legislative history, certain
companies that had been relying on Section 3(c)(5) sought to capitalize
on the popularity of mutual funds by issuing redeemable securities.\39\
Because Section 3(c)(5) was not intended to cover those companies that
fell within the generally understood concept of a traditional
investment company,\40\ the 1970 amendment sought to ensure that
companies that structured themselves like mutual funds would be subject
to regulation under the Investment Company Act, regardless of the types
of securities that they held.\41\
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\38\ See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 2639, 76th Cong., 3d Sess.
12(1940) (``Subsection (c) specifically excludes * * * companies
dealing in mortgages. * * * ''); H.R. Rep. No. 1382, 91st Cong., 2d
Sess. 17 (1970) (``Although the companies enumerated * * * have
portfolios of securities in the form of * * * mortgages and other
liens on and interests in real estate, they are excluded from the
act's coverage because they do not come within the generally
understood concept of a conventional investment company investing in
stocks and bonds of corporate issuers'') (``1970 House Report'').
See also PPI Report, supra note 2 at 328 (``Section 3(c)(6) provides
for an exclusion from the definition of investment company for
companies primarily engaged in the * * * real estate businesses.
Although these companies are engaged in acquiring * * * mortgages
and other interests in real estate--thus acquiring investment
securities, such activities are generally understood not to be
within the concept of a conventional investment company which
invests in stocks and bonds of corporate issuers''); Exclusion from
the Definition of Investment Company for Certain Structured
Financings, Investment Company Act Release No. 18736 (May 29, 1992)
(``Proposing Release to Rule 3a-7'') at text following n.5
(``section 3(c)(5)] * * * originally was intended to exclude issuers
engaged in the commercial finance and mortgage banking
industries.'').
As initially enacted by Congress in 1940, Section 3(c)(5) was
limited to companies that did not issue face-amount certificates of
the installment type or periodic payment plan certificates, in
response to the abuses found prior to 1940 in the sale of these
types of securities by certain companies, including those of the
type that would have otherwise been excluded by this provision. See
generally Investment Trusts and Investment Companies: Hearings
Before a Subcomm. of the Senate Comm. on Banking and Currency on S.
3580, 76th Cong., 3d. at 182 (1940) (statement of David Schenker).
The prohibition on issuing face-amount certificates also may have
been added to ensure that Investors Syndicate, a face-amount
certificate company that held real estate and mortgage interests,
would not be able to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) and instead be
required to register under the Investment Company Act, as detailed
in the Investment Trusts Study, supra note 31, at Ch. II of
Companies Issuing Face Amount Installment Contracts (1940).
\39\ See, e.g., 1970 House Report, supra note 38 at 17; PPI
Report, supra note 2 at 328-329.
\40\ See supra note 38.
\41\ See, e.g., 1970 House Report, supra note 38.
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In 1960, the Commission addressed Section 3(c)(5)(C) in a release
that discussed the applicability of the Federal securities laws to
REITs.\42\ In the 1960 Release, the Commission, among other things,
stated that a REIT may fall within the definition of investment company
under the Investment Company Act but, depending on the characteristics
of its
[[Page 55305]]
assets and the nature of the securities it issues, the REIT may be able
to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C).\43\ In the 1960 Release, the Commission
also generally stated that the applicability of the Section 3(c)(5)(C)
exclusion could be determined only on the basis of the facts and
circumstances of the particular REIT. The Commission further stated,
however, that any REIT that invested ``exclusively in fee interests in
real estate or mortgages or liens secured by real estate'' could rely
on the Section 3(c)(5)(C) exclusion, provided that the REIT also met
the exclusion's other criteria with respect to the nature of the
securities it issued.\44\ The Commission explained that a REIT might
not qualify for the exclusion if it ``invested to a substantial extent
in other real estate investment trusts * * * or in companies engaged in
the real estate business or in other securities.'' \45\ The Commission
has not specifically addressed the scope of Section 3(c)(5)(C) since
the 1960 Release.\46\
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\42\ Real Estate Investment Trusts, Investment Company Act
Release No. 3140 (Nov. 18, 1960) (``1960 Release'') (discussing
Section 3(c)(6)(C), which was subsequently redesignated as Section
3(c)(5)(C)). See supra note 9.
\43\ Id.
\44\ Id.
\45\ Id.
\46\ The Commission testified before Congress in 1983 and 1984
concerning the applicability of the Investment Company Act to
issuers of some mortgage-related securities in connection with
legislation that became the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement
Act of 1984. Statement of the Securities and Exchange Commission
Submitted to the Subcommittee on Housing and Urban Affairs, U.S.
Senate, on S. 1821 (Sep. 27, 1983) (``The Commission believes that
the Investment Company Act offers important protections to investors
in entities coming within the definition of the term `investment
company' that should not be sacrificed lightly, even in the name of
an objective as worthwhile as enhancing the private secondary
mortgage market'').
In the Proposing Release to Rule 3a-7, issued in 1992, the
Commission discussed the reliance on Section 3(c)(5) by certain
private sector issuers of asset-backed securities, including
mortgage-backed securities. See Proposing Release to Rule 3a-7,
supra note 38. In that release, the Commission requested comment on
whether Section 3(c)(5) should be amended to prevent such issuers
from continuing to rely on this exclusion, because such issuers
could instead rely on Rule 3a-7. In response to commenters'
arguments, including that it would be inappropriate to narrow the
scope of Section 3(c)(5) until both the market and the Commission
gained experience with Rule 3a-7, the Commission decided not to
pursue any legislative changes with respect to Section 3(c)(5) at
that time. See Exclusion from the Definition of Investment Company
for Structured Financings, Investment Company Act Release No. 19105
(Nov. 19, 1992) [57 FR 56248 (Nov. 27, 1992)] (``Adopting Release to
Rule 3a-7''). In the 3a-7 Companion Release, the Commission once
again is seeking comment on whether Section 3(c)(5) should be
amended to limit the ability of asset-backed issuers to rely on this
exclusion. 3a-7 Companion Release, supra note 5.
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B. Commission Staff No-Action Letters and Other Interpretations
As noted above, Section 3(c)(5)(C) generally excludes from the
definition of investment company any person who is primarily engaged
in, among other things, ``purchasing or otherwise acquiring mortgages
and other liens on and interests in real estate.'' The staff, in
providing guidance on this exclusion, generally has focused on whether
at least 55% of the issuer's assets will consist of mortgages and other
liens on and interests in real estate (called ``qualifying interests'')
\47\ and the remaining 45% of the issuer's assets will consist
primarily of real estate-type interests.\48\ The staff generally has
viewed the following types of assets as qualifying interests:
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\47\ See, e.g., Salomon Brothers, Inc., SEC Staff No-Action
Letter (June 17, 1985).
\48\ See, e.g., Citytrust, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Dec. 19,
1990); Greenwich Capital Acceptance Inc., SEC Staff No-Action Letter
(Aug. 8, 1991) (issuer represented its intention to invest at least
25% of its total assets in real estate-type interests (subject to
reduction to the extent that the issuer invested more than 55% of
its total assets in qualifying interests) and no more than 20% of
its total assets in miscellaneous investments).
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Assets that represent an actual interest in real estate or
are loans or liens fully secured by real estate. Thus, the staff
generally took the position that an issuer may treat as qualifying
interests such assets as mortgage loans fully secured by real estate,
fee interests in real estate, second mortgages secured by real
property, deeds of trust on real property, installment land contracts
and leasehold interests secured solely by real property.\49\
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\49\ See, e.g., United States Property Investment N.V., SEC
Staff No-Action Letter (May 1, 1989) (mortgage loan secured
exclusively by real estate in which the value of the real estate was
equal or greater than the note evidencing the loan); Division of
Investment Management, SEC, The Treatment of Structured Finance
Under the Investment Company Act, Protecting Investors: A Half
Century of Investment Company Regulation (1992) Ch. 1 (``Protecting
Investors Report'') at n. 345 and accompanying text (mortgage loan
in which 100% of the principal amount of each loan was fully secured
by real estate at the time of origination and 100% of the market
value of the loan was fully secured by real estate at the time of
acquisition); United Bankers, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Mar. 23,
1988) (fee interests in real estate); The State Street Mortgage Co.,
SEC Staff No-Action Letter (July 17, 1986) (second mortgages); First
National Bank of Fremont, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Nov. 18, 1985)
(deeds of trust on real property); American Housing Trust I, SEC
Staff No-Action Letter (May 21, 1988) (installment land contracts);
Health Facility Credit Corp., SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Feb. 6,
1985) (leasehold interests).
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Assets that can be viewed as being the functional
equivalent of, and provide their holder with the same economic
experience as, an actual interest in real estate or a loan or lien
fully secured by real estate. Thus, the staff took the position that a
Tier 1 real estate mezzanine loan, under certain conditions, may be
considered a qualifying interest if the loan may be viewed as being the
functional equivalent of, and provide its holder with the same economic
experience as, a second mortgage.\50\
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\50\ See Capital Trust Inc., SEC Staff No-Action Letter (May
24, 2007).
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Consistent with the view the Commission expressed in the 1960
Release, the staff has taken the position that an issuer that is
primarily engaged in the business of holding interests in the nature of
a security in another person engaged in the real estate business,
generally may not rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C).\51\ Thus, securities
issued by REITs, limited partnerships, or other entities that invest in
real estate, mortgages or mortgage-related instruments, or that are
engaged in the real estate business, generally are not considered by
the staff to be qualifying interests. In two particular circumstances,
however, the staff expressed the view that certain interests in another
person engaged in the real estate business may be regarded as
qualifying interests:
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\51\ See 1960 Release, supra note 42. See also Urban Land
Investments Inc., SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Nov. 4, 1971); The
Realex Capital, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Mar. 19, 1984); M.D.C.
Holdings, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (May 5, 1987). The staff also
has stated its view that an issuer that is engaged primarily in
purchasing or otherwise acquiring participations or fractionalized
interests in individual or pooled mortgages or deeds of trust would
not qualify to rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C) because such
participations and interests are in the nature of a security in
another person engaged in the real estate business. MGIC Mortgage
Corp., SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Oct. 6, 1972 and Aug. 1, 1974);
M.D.C Holdings, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (May 5, 1987).
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The staff has expressed the view that ``whole pool
certificates'' that are issued or guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
or Ginnie Mae (``agency whole pool certificates'') provide the holder
with the same economic experience as an investor who purchases the
underlying mortgages directly, and therefore would be qualifying
interests; \52\ and
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\52\ See Protecting Investors Report, supra note 49 at n. 267. A
whole pool certificate is a security that represents the entire
ownership interest in a particular pool of mortgage loans. Id. See
also American Home Finance Corp. (pub. avail. Apr. 9, 1981).
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The staff has expressed the view that certain subordinate
participations in commercial real estate first mortgage loans, called
B-Notes, have a number of attributes that, when taken together, may
allow them to be classified as an interest in real estate rather than
an interest in the nature of a security issued by a person that is
engaged in the real estate business.\53\
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\53\ Capital Trust Letter, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Feb. 3,
2009) (``Capital Trust B-Note Letter''). The Capital Trust B-Note
Letter was intended to clarify the staff's earlier statements with
respect to mortgage participations as qualifying interests. In prior
letters, the staff had expressed the view that a trust that held
certain participation interests in construction period mortgage
loans acquired from mortgage lenders may rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C),
concluding that each mortgage participation interest held by the
trust was an interest in real estate because the participation
interest was in a mortgage loan that was fully secured by real
property and the trustee had the right by itself to foreclose on the
mortgage securing the loan in the event of default. See, e.g.
Northwestern Ohio Building and Construction Trades Foundation, SEC
Staff No-Action Letter (Apr. 20, 1984); Baton Rouge Building and
Construction Industry Foundation, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Aug.
31, 1984). Although the Capital Trust B-Note Letter specifically did
not withdraw the prior staff no-action letters, it noted the staff's
view that, while the right to foreclose is an important attribute to
consider when determining whether an asset should be considered a
qualifying interest, other attributes of the asset also need to be
considered when making such a determination.
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[[Page 55306]]
Finally, the staff has expressed the view that certain mortgage-
related instruments that were not treated as qualifying interests may
be treated as real estate-type interests. In the staff's view, such
instruments would include loans in which at least 55% of the fair
market value of each loan was secured by real estate at the time the
issuer acquired the loan,\54\ and agency partial pool certificates.\55\
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\54\ NAB Asset Corp., SEC Staff No-Action Letter (June 20,
1991).
\55\ The staff has expressed the view that, while an agency
partial pool certificate (which is a certificate that represents
less than the entire ownership interest in a mortgage pool) is not a
qualifying interest because it is more akin to being an investment
in the securities of an issuer holding mortgages rather than an
investment directly in the underlying mortgages, such asset may be
treated as a real estate-type interest for purposes of determining
whether an issuer may rely on Section 3(c)(5)(C). See, e.g.,
Nottingham Realty Securities, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Apr. 19,
1984); Protecting Investors Report, supra note 49 at n. 268 and
accompanying text.
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Some mortgage-related pools have determined that certain other
assets constitute qualifying assets for purposes of that exclusion. For
example, we understand that mortgage-related pools generally treat
bridge loans, certain construction and rehabilitation loans, wrap-
around mortgage loans and investments in distressed debt as qualifying
interests, provided that the loans are fully secured by real estate. We
also understand that some mortgage-related pools have determined to
treat a convertible mortgage (which is a mortgage plus an option to
purchase the underlying real estate) as two assets--a mortgage loan
(treated as a qualifying interest provided that it is fully secured by
real estate) and an option to purchase real estate (which is assigned
an independent value and treated as a real estate-type interest).
With respect to certain other mortgage-related instruments, there
appears to be a degree of uncertainty or differing views among
mortgage-related pools as to the availability of the Section 3(c)(5)(C)
exclusion. For example, it appears that some mortgage-related pools
that invest in certificates issued by pools that hold whole loans and
participation interests in loans that are secured by commercial real
estate (``CMBS'') limit the amount of CMBS that they hold, treating
such assets as real estate-type interests under Section 3(c)(5)(C),
whereas others treat certain CMBS as qualifying interests.
C. Request for Comment on the Current Interpretation of Section
3(c)(5)(C)
As the discussion above indicates, the exclusion from the
definition of investment company provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C) does
not have an extensive legislative history, has not been comprehensively
addressed by the Commission, and generally has been addressed in staff
no-action letters only on a case-by-case basis. The evolution of
mortgage-related pools and the development of new and complex mortgage-
related instruments have led us to be concerned that mortgage-related
pools are making judgments about their status under the Investment
Company Act without sufficient Commission guidance.\56\ It appears that
some types of mortgage-related pools might interpret the statutory
exclusion provided by Section 3(c)(5)(C) in a broad manner, while
others might interpret the exclusion too narrowly. The Commission also
is concerned that the staff no-action letters that have addressed the
statutory exclusion in Section 3(c)(5)(C) may have contained, or led
to, interpretations that are beyond the intended scope of the exclusion
and inconsistent with investor protection. The Commission is concerned
that certain types of companies today appear to resemble in many
respects management investment companies that are registered under the
Act and may not be the kinds of companies that were intended to be
excluded from regulation under the Act by Section 3(c)(5)(C).
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\56\ In this regard we note that most mortgage-related pools,
when publicly offering their securities, disclose in their
registration statements that their determinations whether they