Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction Restrictions, 68834-68849 [2012-27849]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 2012 / Notices
that the above requirements of this
exemption continue to be met.
Section IV. Effective Dates
Section I.A. of this exemption is
effective as of August 1, 2006, through
and until November 15, 2012, and
Section I.B. of this exemption is
effective as of November 16, 2012.
The Department invited all interested
persons to submit written comments
with respect to the proposed exemption
on or before September 30, 2012. During
the comment period, the Department
received one email inquiry which
generally concerned the individual’s
difficulty in understanding the notice of
proposed exemption. However, the
Department received no comments or
requests for a hearing from interested
persons.
Therefore, after giving full
consideration to the entire record, the
Department has decided to grant the
exemption. For further information
regarding the individual exemption,
interested persons are encouraged to
obtain copies of the exemption
application file (Application No. L–
11688) that the Department maintains
with respect to the individual
exemption. The complete application
file, as well as supplemental
submissions received by the
Department, is made available for public
inspection in the Public Documents
room of the Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Room N–1513, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20210.
For a complete statement of the facts
and representations supporting the
Department’s decision to grant this
exemption refer to the proposed
exemption published in the Federal
Register on August 28, 2012 at 77 FR
52061.
Mr.
Warren Blinder, Office of Exemption
Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, telephone (202)
693–8553. (This is not a toll-free
number.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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General Information
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or
disqualified person from certain other
provisions to which the exemption does
not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404
of the Act, which among other things
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require a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting the plan solely in the
interest of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan and in a
prudent fashion in accordance with
section 404(a)(1)(B) of the Act; nor does
it affect the requirement of section
401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining
the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Each exemption is supplemental to
and not in derogation of, any other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transactional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction; and
(3) The availability of an exemption is
subject to the express condition that the
material facts and representations
contained in the application accurately
describes all material terms of the
transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 9th day of
November 2012.
Lyssa E. Hall,
Director of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2012–27848 Filed 11–15–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain
Prohibited Transaction Restrictions
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Exemptions.
AGENCY:
This document contains
notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of
proposed exemptions from certain of the
prohibited transaction restrictions of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the
Code). This notice includes the
following proposed exemptions: D–
11610, UBS Financial Services, Inc. D–
11666, Central Pacific Bank 401(k)
Retirement and Savings Plan (the Plan);
D–11672, Studley, Inc. Section 401(k)
Plan Profit Sharing Plan (the Plan); and
D–11724, EquiLend Holdings LLC
(EquiLend).
DATES: All interested persons are invited
to submit written comments or requests
SUMMARY:
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for a hearing on the pending
exemptions, unless otherwise stated in
the Notice of Proposed Exemption,
within 45 days from the date of
publication of this Federal Register
Notice.
ADDRESSES: Comments and requests for
a hearing should state: (1) The name,
address, and telephone number of the
person making the comment or request,
and (2) the nature of the person’s
interest in the exemption and the
manner in which the person would be
adversely affected by the exemption. A
request for a hearing must also state the
issues to be addressed and include a
general description of the evidence to be
presented at the hearing. All written
comments and requests for a hearing (at
least three copies) should be sent to the
Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), Office of
Exemption Determinations, Room N–
5700, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20210. Attention: Application
No.lll, stated in each Notice of
Proposed Exemption. Interested persons
are also invited to submit comments
and/or hearing requests to EBSA via
email or FAX. Any such comments or
requests should be sent either by email
to: moffitt.betty@dol.gov, or by FAX to
(202) 219–0204 by the end of the
scheduled comment period. The
applications for exemption and the
comments received will be available for
public inspection in the Public
Documents Room of the Employee
Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N–1513,
200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20210.
Warning: If you submit written
comments or hearing requests, do not
include any personally-identifiable or
confidential business information that
you do not want to be publiclydisclosed. All comments and hearing
requests are posted on the Internet
exactly as they are received, and they
can be retrieved by most Internet search
engines. The Department will make no
deletions, modifications or redactions to
the comments or hearing requests
received, as they are public records.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions
will be provided to all interested
persons in the manner agreed upon by
the applicant and the Department
within 15 days of the date of publication
in the Federal Register. Such notice
shall include a copy of the notice of
proposed exemption as published in the
Federal Register and shall inform
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 222 / Friday, November 16, 2012 / Notices
interested persons of their right to
comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate).
The proposed exemptions were
requested in applications filed pursuant
to section 408(a) of the Act and/or
section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in
accordance with procedures set forth in
29 CFR Part 2570, Subpart B (76 FR
66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).1
Effective December 31, 1978, section
102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of
1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1 (1996), transferred
the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type
requested to the Secretary of Labor.
Therefore, these notices of proposed
exemption are issued solely by the
Department.
The applications contain
representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are
summarized below. Interested persons
are referred to the applications on file
with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and
representations.
UBS Financial Services Inc., Located in
Weehawken, New Jersey
[Application No. D–11610]
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Proposed Exemption
Based on the facts and representations
set forth in the application, the
Department is considering granting the
following exemption under the
authority of Code section 4975(c)(2),
and in accordance with the procedures
set forth in 29 CFR Part 2570, subpart
B (76 FR 66637, October 27, 2011), as
follows:
Section I: Covered Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code section 4975, by
reason of Code section 4975(c)(1)(A) and
(D)–(E), shall not apply, effective
January 4, 2002, until December 9, 2005,
to (1) principal trades by UBS Financial
Services Inc. (the Applicant) with
certain plans, subject to Code section
4975, but not subject to Title I of ERISA
(the IRAs), which resulted in the IRAs
purchasing or selling securities from the
Applicant (collectively, the
Transactions); and (2) compensation
paid by the IRAs to the Applicant in
connection with the Transactions (the
Transaction Compensation).
This proposed exemption is subject to
the conditions set forth below in
Sections II and III.
1 The Department has considered exemption
applications received prior to December 27, 2011
under the exemption procedures set forth in 29 CFR
Part 2570, Subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August
10, 1990).
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Section II: Specific Conditions
(a) The Transactions and the
Transaction Compensation were
corrected (1) pursuant to the
requirements set forth in the
Department’s Voluntary Fiduciary
Correction Program (the VFC Program) 2
and (2) in a manner consistent with
those transactions described in the
Applicant’s VFC Program application,
dated March 5, 2010 (the VFC Program
Application), that were substantially
similar to the Transactions but that
involved plans described in Code
section 4975(e)(1) and subject to Title I
of ERISA (the Qualified Plan
Transactions).
(b) The Applicant received a ‘‘noaction letter’’ from the Department in
connection with the Qualified Plan
Transactions described in the VFC
Program Application.
(c) An independent fiduciary
confirmed that the methods utilized to
correct the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation were
sufficient to return each affected IRA to
at least the position that it would have
been in had the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation not
occurred, and that the correction
methods were properly applied to the
Transactions and Transaction
Compensation based on a review of a
representative sample of the corrections,
selected at random by the independent
fiduciary.
For purposes of this exemption, a
fiduciary is ‘‘independent’’ if it is
independent of and unrelated to
Applicant and its affiliates. In this
regard, a fiduciary will not be deemed
independent of Applicant and its
affiliates if: (1) Such fiduciary directly
or indirectly controls, is controlled by,
or is under common control with
Applicant or its affiliates, (2) such
fiduciary directly or indirectly receives
any compensation or other
consideration in connection with any
transaction described in this exemption,
except that it may receive compensation
for acting as an independent fiduciary
from Applicant in connection with the
transactions described herein, if the
amount or payment of such
compensation is not contingent upon, or
in any way affected by such fiduciary’s
decision; or (3) the annual gross revenue
received by the fiduciary, in any fiscal
year, from Applicant or its affiliates
exceeds one percent (1%) of the
fiduciary’s annual gross revenue from
all sources (for federal income tax
purposes) for its prior tax year.
2 71
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FR 20262 (April 19, 2006).
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(d) The terms of the Transactions and
the Transaction Compensation were at
least as favorable to the IRAs as the
terms generally available in arm’s-length
transactions between unrelated parties.
(e) The Transactions and Transaction
Compensation were not part of an
agreement, arrangement or
understanding designed to benefit a
disqualified person, as defined in Code
section 4975(e)(2).
(f) The Applicant did not take
advantage of the relief provided by the
VFC Program and Prohibited
Transaction Exemption 2002–51 3 (PTE
2002–51) for three (3) years prior to the
date of the Applicant’s submission of
the VFC Program Application.
Section III: General Conditions
(a) The Applicant maintains, or
causes to be maintained, for a period of
six (6) years from the date of any
Transaction such records as are
necessary to enable the persons
described in Section III(b)(1) to
determine whether the conditions of
this exemption have been met, except
that:
(1) A separate prohibited transaction
shall not be considered to have occurred
if, due to circumstances beyond the
control of Applicant, the records are lost
or destroyed prior to the end of the sixyear period; and
(2) No disqualified person with
respect to an IRA, other than Applicant,
shall be subject to excise taxes imposed
by Code section 4975, if such records
are not maintained, or are not available
for examination, as required by Section
III(b)(1).
(b)(1) Except as provided in Section
III(b)(2), the records referred to in
Section III(a) are unconditionally
available at their customary location for
examination during normal business
hours by:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or
representative of the Department, the
Internal Revenue Service, or the
Securities and Exchange Commission;
(B) Any fiduciary of any IRA that
engaged in a Transaction, or any duly
authorized employee or representative
of such fiduciary; or
(C) Any owner or beneficiary of an
IRA that engaged in a Transaction or a
representative of such owner or
beneficiary.
(2) None of the persons described in
Sections III(b)(1)(B) and (C) shall be
authorized to examine trade secrets of
Applicant, or commercial or financial
information which is privileged or
confidential.
3 67 FR 70623 (Nov. 25, 2002), as amended, 71
FR 20135 (April 19, 2006).
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(3) Should Applicant refuse to
disclose information on the basis that
such information is exempt from
disclosure, Applicant shall, by the close
of the thirtieth (30th) day following the
request, provide a written notice
advising that person of the reasons for
the refusal and that the Department may
request such information.
Effective Date: If granted, this
proposed exemption will be effective
from January 4, 2002, until December 9,
2005.
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Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Applicant is UBS Financial
Services Inc., a wholly owned
subsidiary of UBS AG. The Applicant is
a large financial institution
headquartered in Basel and Zurich,
Switzerland. As of December 31, 2011,
UBS AG had invested assets of 2,167
billion CHF.
2. From January 4, 2002, to December
9, 2005, contrary to the Applicant’s
policies, certain of Applicant’s financial
advisors (the FAs) caused Applicant to
engage in a number of principal
transactions involving IRAs for which
the Applicant or the FA acted as an
ERISA fiduciary. These principal
transactions included: (a) 711 principal
purchases of bonds from the Applicant,
with an aggregate purchase price of
$18,359,746 in 88 IRAs (the Bond
Purchase Transactions) (b) 110 principal
sales of bonds to the Applicant, with an
aggregate sales price of $4,257,643 in 45
IRAs (the Bond Sale Transactions); (c)
128 principal purchases of stock from
the Applicant, for an aggregate purchase
price of $1,882,230 in 37 IRAs (the
Stock Purchase Transactions); and (d) 1
principal sale of stock to the Applicant,
for a sales price of less than $1 (the
Stock Sale Transaction) (collectively,
the Bond Purchase Transactions, the
Bond Sale Transactions, the Stock
Purchase Transactions and Stock Sale
Transaction are referred to as the
Transactions). A total of 105 IRAs were
involved in the Transactions. (Some of
the IRAs were involved in more than
one type of transaction.)
3. The Transactions caused the
payment of compensation to the
Applicant (Transaction Compensation).
With respect to Bond Purchase
Transactions and Bond Sale
Transactions, the Applicant was
compensated through a ‘‘mark-up’’ of
the bond price; the aggregate amount of
such mark-ups was $115,363. With
respect to the Stock Purchase
Transactions and the Stock Sale
Transaction, the Applicant was
compensated through commissions
totaling $44,964.
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4. Upon discovering that certain of the
FAs caused the Applicant to engage in
the Transactions, the Applicant
implemented changes to its policies and
procedures to prohibit the opening of
any brokerage accounts that would
permit FAs to exercise discretion. The
Applicant represents that the FAs can
now only open accounts that would
permit the exercise of discretion under
a discretionary advisory program where
principal trades are blocked.
5. The Applicant seeks relief with
respect to the Transactions and with
respect to the payment of the
Transaction Compensation. Specifically,
the Applicant believes that: (a) The
purchase and sale of securities, both
bonds and stocks, between the IRAs and
the Applicant was prohibited by Code
section 4975(c)(1)(A); (b) both the
Transactions and the payment of
Transaction Compensation were
prohibited by Code section
4975(c)(1)(D); and (c) the Transactions
and the receipt of Transaction
Compensation were prohibited by Code
section 4975(c)(1)(E). The Applicant
believes that, if the proposed exemption
is not granted, the IRAs would be
subject to hardship resulting from the
uncertainty of not having the prohibited
transactions outlined herein resolved.
Further, if the proposed exemption is
not granted, the IRAs would be subject
to additional hardship as a result of the
resultant uncertainty regarding the
correction methodology applied by the
Applicant.
6. The Applicant represents that as
soon as the Transactions and the
Qualified Plan Transactions were
discovered it began an investigation that
led to the correction process. The
Applicant corrected the Qualified Plan
Transactions pursuant to the
requirements set forth in the VFC
Program. The Applicant filed a VFC
Program Application, dated March 5,
2010, with respect to the Qualified Plan
Transactions, and it received a no-action
letter from the Department, dated
February 4, 2011, with respect to the
Qualified Plan Transactions.
7. While the Qualified Plan
Transactions were properly corrected
under the VFC Program, the Applicant
was not able to similarly correct the
Transactions and the Transaction
Compensation. Despite being
substantially similar to the Qualified
Plan Transactions, the Transactions and
the Transaction Compensation are
ineligible for relief under the VFC
Program and PTE 2002–51 because they
involved IRAs which are not covered
under Title I of ERISA. The Applicant,
however, believes that granting relief
pursuant to the proposed exemption is
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consistent with the Department’s
statement that ‘‘[the VFC Program] does
not foreclose its future consideration of
individual exemption requests for
transactions involving IRAs that are
outside the scope of relief provided by
both the VFC Program and the class
exemption under circumstance when,
for example, a financial institution
received a no action letter applicable
only to plans subject to [the VFC
Program] for a transaction(s) that
involved both plans and * * * IRAs.’’
71 FR 20135, 20137 (April 19, 2006).
8. The Applicant represents that the
Transactions were corrected pursuant to
the requirements set forth in the VFC
Program and in a manner consistent
with the Applicant’s VFC Program
Application, with such representation
made in the Applicant’s exemption
application, dated March 5, 2010, under
penalty of perjury. In this regard, the
Applicant corrected the Transactions in
the manner described below:
(a) With respect to the Bond Purchase
Transactions, since bonds are debt
instruments, the Applicant corrected the
Bond Purchase Transactions, based on
economic similarity to a loan
transaction correction, under the
procedures for loans made at a fair
market interest rate in Section 7.2(a) of
the VFC Program. The correction
method for a loan, which is set forth in
Section 7.2(a)(2) of the VFC program, is
for the party in interest to pay back the
loan in full, including any prepayment
penalties. The Applicant represents that
the Bond Purchase Transactions were
conducted at fair market values (FMVs)
because, among other things, the
transactions were conducted using
trading systems and procedures
designed to result in trades being
conducted at prices that are as favorable
as possible to the IRAs under prevailing
market conditions and were in fact
conducted at prices not less favorable to
the IRAs than the prices the FAs could
have obtained for the IRAs by
conducting the trades in arm’s-length
transactions with third-party market
participants.
(b) With respect to the Bond Sale
Transactions and the Stock Sale
Transaction, the Applicant corrected
these Transactions under the procedures
for sale of an asset by a plan to a party
in interest under Section 7.4(b) of the
VFC Program. Section 7.4(b)(2)(i) of the
VFC Program generally requires that the
asset be repurchased from the party in
interest at the lower of the price for
which it originally sold the property or
the FMV of the property at the time of
correction. As an alternative, Section
7.4(b)(2)(ii) of the VFC Program
provides that a plan may receive a cash
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settlement of the ‘‘Principal Amount,’’
defined as the amount by which the
FMV of the asset at the time of original
sale exceeds the original sales price,
plus the greater of ‘‘Lost Earnings,’’
which is generally defined as the
approximate amount that would have
been earned by a plan on the Principal
Amount but for the prohibited
transaction, or the ‘‘Restoration of
Profits,’’ as described in Section 5(b) of
the VFC Program, provided, that, an
independent fiduciary determines that
the applicable Plan would receive a
greater benefit with such correction than
by repurchase. The Applicant represents
that ‘‘Restoration of Profits,’’ as defined
under the VFC Program, did not apply
with respect to the Transactions because
no amounts were used for a specific
purpose such that a profit was
determinable. The Principal Amount for
each of the Bond Sale Transactions and
the Stock Sale Transaction was zero
because the bond or the stock was sold
at FMV.
It was impractical or impossible for
the IRAs to repurchase most of the
bonds in the Bond Sale Transactions
because most of the bonds had been
called, matured, were thinly traded or
not in the inventory of the Applicant or
its affiliates. For the remaining bonds in
the Bond Sale Transactions, none of the
IRAs elected to repurchase the bond
from the Applicant despite the
Applicant’s offer to sell the bond back
to the IRA at the lower of the price for
which the IRA originally sold the bond
or the FMV of the bond at the time of
correction. Therefore, the Applicant
corrected all of the Bond Sale
Transactions by paying the IRAs the
Transaction Compensation, if any, plus
Lost Earnings on the Transaction
Compensation from the time of the
Transaction.
For the Stock Sale Transaction, it was
impossible to repurchase the stock
because the company had dissolved.
Further, because no commissions were
charged by the Applicant for the Stock
Sale Transaction, no payment to the IRA
with respect to compensation was
necessary to correct the Stock Sale
Transaction. Finally, since the Principal
Amount with respect to the Stock Sale
Transaction was zero, there were no
Lost Earnings on the Principal Amount
to pay to the IRA.
(c) With respect to the Stock Purchase
Transactions, the Applicant corrected
the Stock Purchase Transactions under
the procedures for the purchase by a
plan of an asset from a party in interest
pursuant to Section 7.4(a) of the VFC
Program. Section 7.4(a) generally
requires that the asset be sold back to
the party in interest who originally sold
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the asset to the plan or to a person who
is not a party in interest for a price equal
to the greater of (1) the FMV of the asset
at the time of resale, without reduction
for the costs of sale, plus restoration to
the plan of the party in interest’s
investment return from the proceeds of
the sale, to the extent they exceed the
plan’s net profits from owning the
property, or (2) the plan’s original
purchase price, plus the greater of Lost
Earnings on the plan’s original purchase
price or the Restoration of Profits, if any.
As an alternative, the plan may retain
the asset and receive (1) the greater of
the Lost Earnings or the Restoration of
Profits, if any, on the original purchase
price, but only to the extent that such
Lost Earnings or Restoration of Profits
exceeds the difference between the FMV
of the asset as of correction and the
original purchase price and (2) the
amount by which the original purchase
price exceeded the FMV of the asset (at
the time of the original purchase), plus
the greater of Lost Earnings or
Restoration of Profits, if any, on such
excess; provided, an independent
fiduciary determined that the plan will
realize a greater benefit from this
correction than it would from the resale
described in section 7.4(a)(2)(i) of the
VFC Program. The Applicant corrected
the Stock Purchase Transactions under
the alternative correction methodology,
taking into account any prior
disposition of the stock by an IRA
subsequent to the original purchase.
9. With respect to the Applicant’s
correction of the Transactions, (a) the
Applicant took into account all
transaction costs (e.g., Transaction
Compensation), if any, paid by the IRAs
in calculating the corrective payments;
and (b) the Applicant engaged an
independent fiduciary, Evercore Trust
Company. Evercore Trust Company
stated that (x) the methods utilized to
correct the Transactions were sufficient
to return each affected IRA to at least
the position that it would have been in
had the Transactions not occurred, (y)
the alternative correction method
utilized for the Stock Purchase
Transactions did not result in the
affected IRAs being returned to more
unfavorable financial positions than if
the general correction method described
in 7.4(a) of the VFC Program been used
instead, and (z) the correction methods
were properly applied to the
Transactions based on a review of a
representative sample of the corrections.
10. Evercore Trust Company
confirmed to the Applicant that (a)
during the period beginning with the
date on which the earliest Transaction
occurred and ending with the date
Evercore Trust Company completed its
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Sfmt 4703
68837
engagement as an independent fiduciary
with respect to the Transactions and the
Transaction Compensation, it was not
an entity that was directly or indirectly
controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with, the Applicant or
its affiliates, (b) the compensation
received by Evercore Trust Company
from the Applicant for its services as an
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Transactions and the Transaction
Compensation was not contingent upon,
or in any way affected by, Evercore
Trust Company’s determination, and
Evercore Trust Company did not, and
will not, directly or indirectly receive
any other compensation or
consideration from the Applicant in
connection with the Transactions or
Transaction Compensation, and (c) for
any fiscal year of Evercore Trust
Company, during which, or during part
of which, it acted as an independent
fiduciary with respect to the
Transactions or Transaction
Compensation, or received any
compensation from the Applicant for its
services as an independent fiduciary
with respect to the Transactions or
Transaction Compensation (Subject
Fiscal Year), the annual gross revenue
received by Evercore Trust Company
and its affiliates from the Applicant or
its affiliates for the Subject Fiscal Year
did not exceed one percent (1%) of the
annual gross revenue received by
Evercore Trust Company and its
affiliates from all sources (for federal
income tax purposes) for their most
recent fiscal years that ended prior to
the Subject Fiscal Year.
11. The Applicant represents that it
credited, or issued a check to, each IRA
to which a corrective payment was due.
12. The Applicant believes that the
Transactions were inadvertent and
resulted in the IRAs paying no more
than the market price with respect to the
Bond Purchase Transactions and the
Stock Purchase Transactions, and
receiving at least the market price with
respect to the Bond Sale Transactions
and the Stock Sale Transaction, because
the Transactions were conducted using
trading systems and procedures
designed to result in trades being
conducted at prices that are as favorable
as possible to the IRAs under prevailing
market conditions and were in fact
conducted at prices not less favorable to
the IRAs than the prices the FAs could
have obtained for the IRAs by
conducting the trades in arm’s-length
transactions with third-party market
participants.
13. The Applicant represents that it
has not taken advantage of the relief
provided by the VFC Program and PTE
2002–51 for the three (3) years prior to
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the date of the Applicant’s submission
of the VFC Program Application, and
that the Transactions were not part of an
agreement, arrangement or
understanding designed to benefit a
disqualified person.
14. The Applicant represents that the
proposed exemption is: (a)
Administratively feasible because the
Applicant has corrected the
Transactions pursuant to the
requirements set forth in the VFC
Program; has obtained relief under the
VFC Program for the Qualified Plan
Transactions; has put procedures in
place to ensure that no similar
Transactions occur in the future; and
has obtained an opinion from an
independent fiduciary, Evercore Trust
Company, confirming that the methods
utilized to correct the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation were
sufficient to return each affected IRA to
at least the position that it would have
been in had the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation not
occurred, and that the correction
methods were properly applied to the
Transactions and Transaction
Compensation based on a review of a
representative sample of the corrections,
selected at random by the independent
fiduciary; (b) in the interests of the
affected IRAs and their owners and
beneficiaries because the Transactions
have been corrected pursuant to the
procedures set forth in the VFC
Program, which are designed to ensure
that the corrections are made in a
manner that is in the interests of the
IRAs and their owners and beneficiaries;
and (c) protective of the rights of the
owners and beneficiaries of the IRAs
because the requested relief is only with
respect to past transactions, which the
Applicant believes were conducted at
prices no less favorable to the IRAs than
prices the IRAs could have paid or
received in arm’s-length transactions
with third party market participants,
that have already been effectively
unwound pursuant to the requirements
set forth in the VFC Program.
15. In summary, the Applicant
represents that the Transactions and the
Transaction Compensation satisfy the
statutory criteria for an administrative
exemption contained in Code section
4975(c)(2) because, among other things:
(a) The Transactions and Transaction
Compensation were substantially
similar to the Qualified Plan
Transactions; (b) the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation were
corrected pursuant to the requirements
set forth in the VFC Program and in a
manner similar to those described in the
Applicant’s VFC Program Application;
(c) the Applicant received a ‘‘no-action
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letter’’ from the Department in
connection with Applicant’s VFC
Program Application; (d) the Applicant
obtained an opinion from an
independent fiduciary, Evercore Trust
Company, confirming that the methods
utilized to correct the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation were
sufficient to return each affected IRA to
at least the position that it would have
been in had the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation not
occurred, and that the correction
methods were properly applied to the
Transactions and Transaction
Compensation based on a review of a
representative sample of the corrections,
selected at random by the independent
fiduciary; (e) the terms of the
Transactions and the Transaction
Compensation were at least as favorable
to the IRAs as the terms generally
available in arm’s-length transactions
between unrelated parties; (f) the
Transactions and Transaction
Compensation were not part of an
agreement, arrangement or
understanding designed to benefit a
disqualified person; and (g) the
Applicant did not take advantage of the
relief provided by the VFC Program and
PTE 2002–51 for three (3) years prior to
the date of the Applicant’s submission
of the VFC Program Application.
(a) To the acquisition of certain
subscription right(s) (the Right or
Rights) by the individually-directed
account(s) (the Account or Accounts) of
certain participant(s) in the Plan in
connection with an offering (the
Offering) of shares of common stock (the
Stock) of Central Pacific Financial
Corporation (CPFC) by CPFC, a party in
interest with respect to the Plan; and
(b) To the holding of the Rights
received by the Accounts during the
subscription period of the Offering;
provided that the conditions, as set forth
in Section II of this proposed exemption
were satisfied for the duration of the
acquisition and holding.
If the proposed exemption is granted,
effective for the period beginning April
11, 2011 and ending May 6, 2011, the
restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(A),
406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), 406(b)(1),
406(b)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act
and the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code,
by reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A) and
4975(c)(1)(E) of the Code,4 shall not
apply:
Section II: Conditions
The relief provided in this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon
adherence to the material facts and
representations described, herein, and
as set forth in the application file, and
upon compliance with the conditions,
as set forth in this proposed exemption.
(a) The receipt of the Rights by the
Accounts occurred in connection with
the Offering, and the Rights were made
available by CPFC to all shareholders of
the Stock of CPFC, including the
Accounts;
(b) The acquisition of the Rights by
the Accounts resulted from an
independent corporate act of CPFC;
(c) Each shareholder of the Stock,
including each of the Accounts,
received the same proportionate number
of Rights, and this proportionate
number of Rights was based on the
number of shares of Stock held by each
such shareholder;
(d) The Rights were acquired pursuant
to, and in accordance with, provisions
under the Plan for individually-directed
investment of the Accounts by the
individual participants in the Plan, all
or a portion of whose Accounts in the
Plan held the Stock (the Invested
Participant(s));
(e) The decision with regard to the
holding and disposition of the Rights by
an Account was made by the Invested
Participant whose Account received the
Rights;
(f) If any of the Invested Participants
failed to give instructions as to the
exercise of the Rights received in the
Offering, such Rights were sold in blind
transactions on the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) and the proceeds from
such sales were distributed pro-rata to
the Accounts in the Plan of such
Invested Participants;
(g) No brokerage fees, no
commissions, and no fees or expenses
4 For purposes of this proposed exemption,
references to specific provisions of Title I of the
Act, unless otherwise specified, refer also to the
corresponding provisions of the Code.
Mr.
Brian Shiker of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8552. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Central Pacific Bank 401(k) Retirement
and Savings Plan (the Plan), Located in
Honolulu, HI
[Application No. D–11666]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act
and section 4975(c)(2) of the Code and
in accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55
FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).
Section I: Transactions
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were paid by the Plan or by the
Accounts to any related broker in
connection with the sale of any of the
Rights or in connection with the
exercise of any of the Rights, and no
brokerage fees, no commissions, no
subscription fees, and no other charges
were paid by the Plan or by the
Accounts with respect to the acquisition
and holding of the Stock; and
(h) Based on the difference ($1.13)
between the average proceeds per Right
($6.05) received by other holders who
sold Rights during the Offering and the
average proceeds per Right ($4.92)
received by Invested Participants whose
Accounts sold Rights, between April 26,
2011 and May 3, 2011, CPFC will make
a corrective payment to the Plan in the
amount of $30,618.48 ($1.13 x 27,096
Rights sold), plus a lost earnings
component on such amount, calculated
at a 2.83% annual rate of interest for the
period from May 6, 2011 to the date of
the grant of this proposed exemption,
and will distribute such corrective
payment, and the lost earnings
component, pro rata to the Accounts of
each of the 186 Invested Participants
whose Accounts in the Plan sold the
27,096 Rights.
Effective Date: This proposed
exemption, if granted, will be effective
for the period beginning on April 11,
2011, the commencement date of the
Offering, and ending on May 6, 2011,
the close of the Offering.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Plan is a defined contribution
401(k) retirement saving plan which
provides for a cash and deferred
arrangement. The Plan was adopted,
effective as of November 1, 1985.5 The
Plan obtained its latest determination
letter from the Internal Revenue Service
(the IRS) in 2002. Although the Plan has
been amended since receiving the
determination letter from the IRS, the
administrator of the Plan and the tax
counsel for the Plan believe that the
Plan is designed and is currently being
operated in compliance with the
applicable requirements of the Code.
As of April 11, 2011, there were 1,115
participants in the Plan. The Plan is a
participant directed account plan
designed and operated to comply with
the requirements of section 404(c) of the
Act.
The Plan is funded by elective
employee contributions, as well as
5 Effective July 1, 2003, December 31, 2004,
December 31, 2006, and July 26, 2007, respectively,
the Central Pacific Bank Employee Stock
Ownership Plan, the CB Bancshares, Inc. Profit
Sharing Retirement Saving Plan, the CB Bancshares,
Inc. ESOP, and the Hawaii HomeLoans, Inc. 401(k)
Retirement Savings Plan were merged into the Plan.
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Jkt 229001
employer matching contributions, and
discretionary employer profit sharing
contributions in cash to the ESOP. It is
represented that no discretionary
contributions were made in 2008, 2009,
and 2010. The fair market value of the
total assets of the Plan, as of April 11,
2011, was $85,827,254. As of August 30,
2012, the fair market value of the Plan’s
assets was $90,594,733. 2. CPFC is the
sponsor of the Plan. CPFC is a bank
holding company, incorporated in the
State of Hawaii on February 1, 1982, as
‘‘CPB Inc.’’ CPFC’s principal place of
business is Honolulu, Hawaii.
CPFC, a parent company, through its
subsidiaries, offers full-service
commercial banking throughout the
State of Hawaii and offers limited
commercial banking services in certain
areas of California. CPFC does not
employ any persons other than the
officers of the Central Pacific Bank (the
Bank) and from time to time the support
staff of the Bank. It is represented that
substantially all of the activities of CPFC
are conducted through the Bank.
According to the Form 10–Q, as of
March 3, 2012, on a consolidated basis,
CPFC and its subsidiaries had total
assets of $4,158,288,000, total liabilities
of $3,680,848,000, and total
stockholders’ equity of $477,440,000.
3. The Bank is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of CPFC. The Bank is a fullservice commercial bank incorporated
in the State of Hawaii on March 16,
1982, with 34 branches and 120 ATMs
located throughout the State of Hawaii.
The Bank also has an office in
California. The Bank offers a broad
range of products and services,
including accepting time and demand
deposits, and originating commercial,
construction, and consumer loans, and
commercial and residential mortgages.
All employees of the Bank, its
subsidiaries, and certain other affiliated
companies are covered by the Plan.
4. Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company
(Vanguard) is the third party
administrator, the trustee, and the
custodian of the Plan. Vanguard, as
trustee, has the responsibility of
investing, holding, collecting,
distributing, and accounting for the
assets of the Plan in the trust.
5. The Plan is administered by a
committee (the Committee), which is
composed of certain appointed
employees of the Bank. The Committee
has the responsibility of selecting the
investment options of the trust into
which the participants of the Plan can
direct their contributions.
6. Participants in the Plan are
permitted to self-direct the investments
in their Accounts based on certain
options held under the Plan. Among the
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68839
investment options offered to
participants are various types of
securities, including shares of the Stock
held in the CPFC stock fund (the Stock
Fund). Investment in the Stock Fund by
the Accounts of participants in the Plan
is entirely voluntary. It is represented
that neither CPFC nor its subsidiaries
contribute any capital Stock to the Plan.
Instead all employer contributions are
made in cash, and the Stock is acquired
by the Accounts in the Plan only as a
result of participant-directed investment
decisions.
The Plan provides that participants
are entitled to direct the voting of the
Stock held in their Accounts in the
Plan. Vanguard, as trustee, has the
responsibility of carrying out such
directions. As of December 31, 2009,
and December 31, 2010, respectively,
the Plan investments included 938,180
shares and 893,122 shares of the Stock
held in the Stock Fund.
7. The Stock of CPFC is publiclytraded on the NYSE under the symbol
‘‘CPF.’’ The Stock has no par value. It
is represented that the Stock is the same
class of shares available to other
investors. The Stock is a ‘‘qualifying
employer security,’’ as defined under
section 407(d)(5) of the Act and 4975(e)
of the Code.
Background
8. On February 2, 2011, CPFC effected
a one-for-twenty reverse stock split (the
Reverse Stock Split) of the outstanding
shares of Stock. As a result of the
Reverse Stock Split, the outstanding
shares of Stock decreased from
30,539,999 shares to 1,528,935 shares.
As part of its recapitalization plan to
raise $325 million from accredited
investors in a private placement (the
Private Placement), CPFC, on February
18, 2011, entered into subscription
agreements with affiliates of the Carlyle
Group and the Anchorage Capital
Group, LLC and with various other
investors. In this regard, CPFC sold
32,500,000 shares of Stock at a price of
$10 per share.
On the same day, February 18, 2011,
CPFC entered into an exchange
agreement (the Exchange Agreement)
with the United States Department of
the Treasury (Treasury), pursuant to
which the Treasury agreed, subject to
the terms and conditions in the
Exchange Agreement, to exchange
135,000 shares of CPFC’s preferred stock
designated as Fixed Rate Cumulative
Preferred Stock, having a liquidation
amount of $1,000 per share, held by the
Treasury and accrued and unpaid
dividends thereon for 5,620,117 shares
of CPFC’s Stock, and amended a warrant
held by the Treasury to reduce the
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number of shares of Stock issuable upon
exercise of the warrant from 1,585,748
to 79,288 (the TARP Exchange).
Following the closing of the Private
Placement and the TARP Exchange,
CPFC had 39,649,052 shares of Stock
outstanding, as of April 11, 2011. CPFC
commenced the Offering whereby
shareholders of record, as of 5 p.m. EST
on the February 17, 2011 (the Record
Date), would receive the Rights. CPFC
represents that it conducted the
Offering, because it wanted to provide
existing shareholders and other
investors, including the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan, who
could not participate in the Private
Placement, with the opportunity to
purchase the Stock at the same price per
share paid by the investors in the
Private Placement.
9. The Offering commenced on April
11, 2011, and closed on May 6, 2011. It
is represented that 2,000,000 shares of
Stock were subscribed for by all
shareholders. In this regard, the Offering
was fully subscribed. There were valid
exercises to purchase an aggregate of
1,325,230 shares, pursuant to directions
from holders of the basic Rights. The
remaining 674,770 shares available to be
issued in the Offering were allocated
pro rata among the holders entitled to
exercise the over-subscription privilege.
It is represented that the exercise of the
Rights resulted in gross proceeds for
CPFC of $20,000,000.
10. At the close of business on April
11, 2011, the date of the Offering, the
Stock was trading on the NYSE at
$19.43 per share. The closing price of
the Stock on the ending date of the
Offering on May 6, 2011, was $13.70.
11. Under the terms of the Offering,
all shareholders of the Stock, including
the Accounts of Invested Participants in
the Plan, automatically received the
Rights, at no charge. Each of the Rights
entitled the shareholders of the Stock,
including the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan, to purchase,
through the exercise of such Rights, the
Stock issued by CPFC in connection
with the Offering. With respect to the
Rights, under the terms of the Offering,
one (1) Right was issued for each whole
share of the Stock held by each
shareholder, including the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan, on the
Record Date.
12. The Rights entitled the holders
thereof to a basic right to subscribe for
their pro rata share of $20 million
dollars’ worth of Stock issued by CPFC,
as well as an over-subscription privilege
to subscribe for additional shares of
Stock, subject to certain limitations and
allocation procedures, up to the number
of shares of Stock that were not
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subscribed for by the other holders of
the Rights, pursuant to their basic
Rights.
However, the over-subscription
privilege was conditioned on each
shareholder first exercising their basic
Rights in full. Because the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan did not
exercise all of their basic Rights in full
and, because, as a practical matter it was
unlikely that all of the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan would
do so, given the number of Invested
Participants in the Plan whose Accounts
held the Stock, the over-subscription
privilege was not available to Rights
attributable to the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan.
13. All shareholders of the Stock,
including the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan, held the Rights
until such Rights were exercised, or
such Rights were sold. With regard to
the exercise of the Rights, it is
represented that the Rights could only
be exercised in whole numbers. Upon
exercise, each of the Rights permitted a
shareholder of the Stock, including each
of the Accounts of Invested Participants
in the Plan, to purchase 1.3081 shares
of Stock at a subscription price of
$10.00 per share (such amount is
represented to take into account the
Reverse Stock Split that occurred on
February 2, 2011). Fractional shares of
Stock resulting from the exercise of
basic Rights on an aggregate basis as to
any holder of such Rights, including the
Accounts of Invested Participants in the
Plan, were rounded down to the nearest
whole number.
A shareholder, including each of the
Accounts of Invested Participants in the
Plan, had the right to choose to exercise
some, all, or none of its Rights. The
election to exercise, some, all or none of
its Rights had to be received by 5 p.m.
EST on April 29, 2011, by the tabulation
agent, Wells Fargo Bank, NA
Shareowner Services (WFSS), in order
to allow sufficient processing time. The
election to exercise any of the Rights
was irrevocable.
14. With regard to the sale of the
Rights, it is represented that the Rights
were transferable. Further, it is
represented that the Rights were traded
on the NYSE. Any Rights that were not
exercised either as a result of a partial
exercise or as a result of insufficient
assets in an Account to cover an
exercise (excluding the assets in the
Stock Fund), or as a result of a failure
to timely return the election form were
automatically sold on the NYSE to
unrelated third parties by Vanguard, as
trustee, acting on behalf of each such
Account. The proceeds from such sale
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were credited pro rata to the Plan
Accounts of Invested Participants.
15. The Invested Participants were
notified of the issuance of the Rights in
a news release, in a posting on the
CPFC’s Web site, and in various letters
and email communications from CPFC
during the month of April 2011. In
addition, each of the Invested
Participants was also provided detailed
information regarding the Rights
Offering, including a copy of the
prospectus which described the
Offering, a document providing
frequently asked questions and answers
regarding the Offering, an election form,
a return envelope addressed to WFSS,
the tabulating agent, and a statement
indicating the number of shares of Stock
each such Invested Participant held in
his/her Account in the Plan, as of the
Record Date.
16. In order to exercise some or all of
the Rights, an Invested Participant 6 had
to complete an election form and to
submit such election form to WFSS by
the close of business on the fifth (5th)
business day (April 29, 2011, at 5 p.m.
EST), prior to the expiration of the
Offering on May 6, 2011.7
Each Invested Participant who
submitted an election form was required
to indicate on such election form a
sufficient amount of current
investments in the Account of such
Invested Participant in the Plan (other
than the assets in the Stock Fund) to be
liquidated on a pro-rated basis to cover
the purchase of Stock in connection
with the exercise of the Rights. The prorated funds were segregated from the
other investments within the Invested
Participant’s Account into a separate
holding fund (the Rights Fund) at
Vanguard which was established in
anticipation of the Offering. Vanguard
placed the order to purchase the Stock
with the subscription agent, Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A. (Wells Fargo Bank), a
registered broker-dealer that is unrelated
6 It is represented that the Accounts of the
Invested Participants in the Plan rely on the relief
provide by the statutory exemption, pursuant to
section 408(e) of the Act for the exercise of the
Rights.
The Department is offering no view, as to whether
the requirements of the statutory exemption
provided in section 408(e) of the Act have been
satisfied. Further, the Department, herein, is not
providing any relief with respect to the exercise of
the Rights.
7 It is represented that the extra five (5) business
days were required to provide sufficient time to
process all such elections by the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan to exercise their
Rights, tabulate and confirm the results, liquidate
each such Invested Participant’s funds, confirm the
orders and the availability of such funds, and remit
payment to purchase the shares. It is represented
that non-Plan shareholders were also required to
submit their election forms five (5) days prior to the
expiration of the Offering.
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to CPFC and the Plan. It is represented
that the Rights Fund was liquidated,
and cash equal to the necessary
subscription payment was transferred to
the Wells Fargo Bank. Following the
closing of the Offering, the purchased
shares of Stock were then converted
back to the equivalent number of units
of the Plan’s Stock Fund and credited to
the Account of the Invested Participant.
17. As of the Record Date, February
17, 2011, 287 Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan held the Stock.
As of the Record Date, the approximate
percentage of the fair market value of
the total assets of the Plan invested in
the Stock was two percent (2%). Also,
as of the Record Date, the shares of
Stock held in the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan constituted
approximately three percent (3%) of the
shares of Stock outstanding.
18. It is represented that based on the
ratio of one (1) Right for each share of
Stock held by the Accounts of Invested
Participants, the Plan acquired 46,327
Rights as a result of the Offering. Of the
Rights received by the Plan on behalf of
Accounts of the Invested Participants,
all such Rights were either exercised or
sold. None of the Rights expired.
Of the 46,327 Rights received by the
Accounts of Invested Participants as a
result of the Offering, it is represented
that 19,231 Rights held by 102 Accounts
of Invested Participants in the Plan were
exercised for Stock. It is represented
that on May 19, 2011, the Accounts of
the Invested Participants in the Plan
received the Stock purchased as a result
of the exercise of the Rights. It is further
represented that the Stock purchased in
connection with the Offering was
eligible for trading on NYSE by the
Accounts of the Invested Participants in
the Plan on May 19, 2011.
Unlike the other holders of the Rights,
the Invested Participants whose
Accounts in the Plan received the Rights
were not permitted to sell the Rights
throughout the period April 11–25,
2012, due to Plan administrative
constraints. However, of the 46,327
Rights received by the Accounts of
Invested Participants as a result of the
Offering, it is represented that over the
period from April 26, 2011 to May 3,
2011, the Invested Participants of 186
Accounts sold 27,096 Rights on the
NYSE. On May 9, 2011, the Accounts of
those Invested Participants received the
proceeds from the sales of such Rights
totaling $133,339.44.
Based on the difference ($1.13)
between the average proceeds per Right
($6.05) received by other holders who
sold Rights during the Offering and the
average proceeds per Right ($4.92)
received by Invested Participants whose
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Accounts sold Rights, between April 26,
2011 and May 3, 2011, CPFC will make
a corrective payment to the Plan in the
amount of $30,618.48 ($1.13 × 27,096
Rights sold). Further, CPFC proposes to
include a lost earnings component on
the amount of the corrective payment
calculated at a 2.83% annual rate of
interest for the period from May 6, 2011,
to the date of the grant of this proposed
exemption. It is represented that the
interest rate on the lost earnings
component was calculated taking the
greater of the weighted average return
for all investment funds available under
the Plan and the average return for the
Retirement Savings Trust (the stable
value fund under the Plan in which the
proceeds from the sale of the Rights
were distributed). CPFC will distribute
such corrective contribution, plus the
lost earnings component, pro rata to
each of the 186 Invested Participants
whose Accounts in the Plan sold Rights.
19. No brokerage fees, no
commissions, no subscription fees, and
no other charges were paid by the Plan
or by any of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan with respect to
the acquisition and holding of the Stock
and no brokerage fees, no commissions,
and no fees or expenses were paid by
the Plan or by any of the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan to any
related broker in connection with the
sale of the Rights or in connection with
the exercise of the Rights.
Requested Relief
20. The application was filed on
behalf of CPFC. In this regard, CPFC has
requested an exemption: (a) For the
acquisition of the Rights by the
Accounts of the Invested Participants in
the Plan in connection with the Offering
of Rights by CPFC; and (b) for the
holding of the Rights by the Accounts of
the Invested Participants in the Plan
during the subscription period of the
Offering.
It is represented that the Rights
acquired by the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan satisfy the
definition of ‘‘employer securities,’’
pursuant to section 407(d)(1) of the Act.
However, as the Rights were not stock
or a marketable obligation, such Rights
do not meet the definition of ‘‘qualifying
employer securities,’’ as set forth in
section 407(d)(5) of the Act.
Accordingly, the subject transactions
constitute an acquisition and holding on
behalf of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan, of employer
securities which are not qualifying
employer securities, in violation of
section 407(a) of the Act, for which
CPFC has requested relief from sections
406(a)(1)(A), 406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and
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68841
407(a)(1)(A) of the Act. CPFC has also
requested relief from the prohibitions of
section 406(b)(1) and 406(b)(2) of the
Act.
21. It is represented that the subject
transactions have already been
consummated. In this regard, the
Accounts of Invested Participants in the
Plan acquired the Rights pursuant to the
Offering on April 11, 2011, and held
such Rights pending the closing of the
Offering on May 6, 2011, when such
Rights either were exercised or sold. As
there was insufficient time between the
dates when the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan acquired the
Rights and when such Rights were
exercised or sold, to apply for and be
granted an exemption, CPFC is seeking
a retroactive exemption to be granted,
effective from April 11, 2011, the date
that the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan acquired the
Rights, to May 6, 2011, the closing date
of the Offering.
22. CPFC represents that the proposed
exemption is administratively feasible.
In this regard, the acquisition and
holding of the Rights by the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan were
one-time transactions that involved an
automatic distribution of the Rights to
all shareholders. It is represented that it
is customary for corporations to make a
rights offering available to all
shareholders.
23. CPFC represents that the
transactions which are the subject of
this proposed exemption are in the
interest of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan, because the
subject transactions represented a
valuable opportunity to such Accounts
to buy the Stock at a discount or to sell
the Rights. It is represented that this
discount could be realized by the
Accounts of Invested Participants in the
Plan by selling the Stock immediately
after the exercise of the Rights and
investing the proceeds from such sale of
the Stock in other investment options
under the Plan.
24. CPFC represents that the proposed
exemption provides sufficient
safeguards for the protection of the
Accounts of Invested Participants in the
Plan and the beneficiaries of such
Accounts. In this regard, participation
in the Offering protected the Accounts
of the Invested Participants in the Plan
from having their interests in CPFC
diluted as a result of the Offering.
It is further represented that the
interests of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan were adequately
protected in that such Accounts
acquired and held the Rights
automatically as a result of the Offering.
In addition, CPFC made the Rights
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available on the same terms to all
shareholders of the Stock, including the
Accounts. In this regard, each
shareholder of the Stock, including each
of the Accounts, received the same
proportionate number of Rights, and
this proportionate number of Rights was
based on the number of shares of Stock
held by such shareholder.
The Accounts of Invested Participants
in the Plan were protected against
economic loss by exercising the Rights
or by selling the Rights. It is represented
that the closing price of the Stock on
May 6, 2011, was $13.70 per share
which was in excess of the strike price
of $10.00 per share.
25. In summary, CPFC represents that
the subject transactions satisfy the
statutory criteria of section 408(a) of the
Act and section 4975(c)(2) of the Code
because:
(a) The receipt of the Rights by the
Accounts occurred in connection with
the Offering, and the Rights were made
available by CPFC to all shareholders of
the Stock of CPFC, including the
Accounts;
(b) The acquisition of the Rights by
the Accounts resulted from an
independent corporate act of CPFC;
(c) Each shareholder of the Stock,
including each of the Accounts,
received the same proportionate number
of Rights, and this proportionate
number of Rights was based on the
number of shares of Stock held by such
shareholder;
(d) The Rights were acquired pursuant
to, and in accordance with, provisions
under the Plan for individually-directed
investment of the Accounts by the
Invested Participants, all or a portion of
whose Accounts in the Plan held the
Stock;
(e) The decision with regard to the
holding and disposition of the Rights by
an Account was made by the Invested
Participant whose Account received the
Rights;
(f) If any of the Invested Participants
failed to give instructions as to the
exercise of the Rights received in the
Offering, such Rights were sold in blind
transactions on the NYSE and the
proceeds from such sales were
distributed pro-rata to the Accounts in
the Plan of such Invested Participants;
(g) No brokerage fees, no
commissions, and no fees or expenses
were paid by the Plan or by the
Accounts to any related broker in
connection with the sale of any of the
Rights or in connection with the
exercise of any of the Rights, and no
brokerage fees, no commissions, no
subscription fees, and no other charges
were paid by the Plan or by the
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15:43 Nov 15, 2012
Jkt 229001
Accounts with respect to the acquisition
and holding of the Stock; and
(h) Based on the difference ($1.13)
between the average proceeds per Right
($6.05) received by other holders who
sold Rights during the Offering and the
average proceeds per Right ($4.92)
received by Invested Participants whose
Accounts sold Rights, between April 26,
2011 and May 3, 2011, CPFC will make
a corrective payment to the Plan in the
amount of $30,618.48 ($1.13 × 27,096
Rights sold), plus a lost earnings
component on such amount calculated
at a 2.83% annual rate of interest for the
period from May 6, 2011 to the date of
the grant of this proposed exemption,
and will distribute such corrective
payment, and the lost earnings
component, pro rata to the Accounts of
each of the 186 Invested Participants
whose Accounts in the Plan sold Rights.
Notice to Interested Persons
The persons who may be interested in
the publication in the Federal Register
of the Notice of Proposed Exemption
(the Notice) include all Invested
Participants whose Accounts in the Plan
were invested in the Stock at the time
of the Offering.
It is represented that all such
interested persons will be notified of the
publication of the Notice by first class
mail, to each such interested person’s
last known address within fifteen (15)
days of publication of the Notice in the
Federal Register. Such mailing will
contain a copy of the Notice, as it
appears in the Federal Register on the
date of publication, plus a copy of the
Supplemental Statement, as required,
pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2), which
will advise all interested persons of
their right to comment and to request a
hearing. All written comments and/or
requests for a hearing must be received
by the Department from interested
persons within 45 days of the
publication of this proposed exemption
in the Federal Register.
All comments will be made available
to the public. Warning: Do not include
any personally identifiable information
(such as name, address, or other contact
information) or confidential business
information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may
be posted on the Internet and can be
retrieved by most Internet search
engines.
Ms.
Angelena C. Le Blanc of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8551. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Frm 00112
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Studley, Inc. Section 401(k) Profit
Sharing Plan (the Plan), Located in New
York, NY
[Application No. D–11672]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act
and section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, and
in accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR Part 2570 Subpart B (55
FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If
the proposed exemption is granted, the
restrictions of section 406(a)(1)(A) and
(D) and section 406(b) of the Act, and
the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code,
by reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A), (D),
(E) and (F) of the Code, shall not apply
to the sale (the Sale) of an 8.828121%
partnership interest (the Interest) in the
Julien J. Studley N Street Partnership, a
general partnership (the JJS
Partnership), by the Plan to Studley, Inc.
(the Employer), a party in interest with
respect to the Plan, provided that the
following conditions are satisfied:
(a) The Sale is a one-time transaction
for cash;
(b) The terms and conditions of the
Sale are at least as favorable to the Plan
as those that the Plan could obtain in an
arm’s length transaction with an
unrelated third party;
(c) The Interest is sold for $900,000;
(d) The Sale is consummated within
two weeks after the date a final
exemption regarding the Sale is
published in the Federal Register;
(e) If, (1) within seven years of the
date of the Sale of the Interest to the
Employer, (i) the Employer sells the
Interest, (ii) JJS Partnership sells its
interest in N19 Associates LLC (N19
Associates), or (iii) N19 Associates sells
its building on N Street, Washington,
DC, and (2) the net amount realized by
the Employer in respect of the Interest
upon and by reason of such sale,
exceeds the sum of (i) the $900,000
price paid for the Interest, and (ii) any
capital contributed by the Employer to
the JJS Partnership in respect of the
Interest after the date of the Sale and
any other funds paid or advanced by the
Employer to, or on behalf of, the JJS
Partnership in respect of the Interest
after the date of the Sale, the Employer
will contribute such excess amount to
the Plan within two weeks of its receipt
by the Employer;
(f) The Plan pays no commissions,
fees, or other expenses in connection
with the Sale; and
(g) The Plan has not waived or
released and does not waive or release
any claims, demands, and/or causes of
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action that the Plan may have against
the Employer or the Plan fiduciaries in
connection with the acquisition and
holding of the Interest or Sale of the
Interest to the Employer.
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Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Studley, Inc. Section 401(k)
Profit Sharing Plan (the Plan) is
sponsored by Studley, Inc. (the
Employer or the Applicant), located in
New York, New York. Julien Studley
(Mr. Studley) was the founder of the
Employer. Pursuant to a buyout, all of
his shares in the Employer not held in
an employee benefit plan were
purchased on December 12, 2002, by the
Employer, at which time Mr. Studley
resigned as a voting member from the
Employer’s Board of Directors. He
remained a non-voting member until
June 2004. Since then, Mr. Studley has
not held any position with, or interest
in, the Employer (other than shares held
in employee benefit plans). The
Employer is in the business of providing
commercial real estate advisory,
brokerage and related services.
The Plan had 61 participants and
beneficiaries, as of November 14, 2011.
Based on the most recently available
audited financial statements, the total
value of the Plan’s assets was
$26,830,211, as of December 31, 2010.
The Plan’s trustee is T. Rowe Price Trust
Company. The trust agreement indicates
that the trustee takes direction from the
named fiduciary (the Named Fiduciary),
which is the Employer. The Plan has a
non-participant directed profit sharing
component in which it holds real estate
investments, as well as a 401(k)
component which is participant
directed.
2. Among the assets of the Plan is an
8.828121% interest (the Interest) in the
Julien J. Studley N Street Partnership
(JJS Partnership), a general partnership
in which the Employer and the Plan are
both general partners. The Applicant
represents that there are currently eight
other members in the JJS Partnership in
addition to the Employer and the Plan.
No other employee benefit plans are
members of the JJS Partnership.
The managing partners of the JJS
Partnership are Mr. Studley and Mr.
Peter Speier, and neither the Plan nor
the Employer has management
responsibilities. The JJS Partnership was
formed and capitalized on or about
December 28, 1976. The Applicant
represents that the Interest was acquired
by the Plan in 1982 for $45,000 and is
held under an ancillary trust agreement
(the Ancillary Trust Agreement), with
Mitchell Steir and Michael Colacino as
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15:43 Nov 15, 2012
Jkt 229001
trustees.8 Mr. Steir is the Chairman of
the Board and Chief Executive Officer of
the Employer while Mr. Colacino is the
President of the Employer. Under the
Ancillary Trust Agreement, the trustees
are subject to the direction of the
Employer, as Named Fiduciary, with
respect to the investment and
disposition of the trust fund assets.
3. The Applicant represents that the
JJS Partnership was formed for the
purpose of holding an interest in an
entity known as N19 Associates. The JJS
Partnership holds a 32% interest in N19
Associates, which owns a building on N
Street in Washington, DC (the Building).
The Plan’s effective interest in the
Building is 2.825%, which is
8.828121% of 32%.
4. The NYRO opened an investigation
of the Plan and found that the Plan’s
interest in the JJS Partnership is an
illiquid and hard-to-value asset.9 The
Plan has been unable, in at least two
instances, to make requested
distributions to Plan participants
because of the Plan’s investment in the
Interest. In addition, certain recent
annual reports (Forms 5500) filed for the
Plan have not reflected a current
valuation for the Interest.10 The NYRO
and the Applicant agreed that the Plan
should liquidate its investment in the
JJS Partnership in order to be able to
make the distributions to eligible
participants. Because the Interest is an
illiquid asset, Studley is requesting an
exemption that, if granted, would
permit Studley to purchase the Interest
from the Plan.
5. The Applicant represents that N19
Associates is controlled by Melvin and
Edward Lenkin, who are not affiliated
with the Employer or the JJS
Partnership. The JJS Partnership has
commenced litigation against the
Lenkins based, in part, upon their
refusal to provide current information
regarding the Building. Due to the
disagreement among the parties, the
Applicant represents, among other
things, that JJS Partnership has been
unable to obtain and provide to the Plan
8 Pursuant to the Ancillary Trust Agreement, a
separate trust was established to hold the Plan’s real
estate investments. As part of its investigation (see
Representation 4, below), the Department’s New
York Regional Office (NYRO) inquired whether the
Plan’s acquisition of the Interest was a purchase or
a contribution by the Employer. The Plan’s records
are incomplete on this matter.
9 The reasons for these characterizations are
discussed in Representation 5, below.
10 The Internal Revenue Service (the IRS)
examined the Plan and determined that prohibited
transactions had been entered into involving loans
to the Plan from the Employer for the years 2002
through 2006. The prohibited transactions were
corrected on December 22, 2006 and the Employer
filed Forms 5330 for the years 2002 through 2006
and paid the resulting excise taxes.
PO 00000
Frm 00113
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
68843
the information that would enable the
Plan to obtain a current appraisal of the
Interest by an independent appraiser.
The most recently available
independent appraisal assigns the
Interest a value of $670,000, as of
November 3, 2006, which reflects a 25%
minority discount by reason of the
Plan’s holding a minority, noncontrolling interest. This was the value
for the Interest used in the Plan’s
audited financial statements as of
December 31, 2010.
6. The Applicant represents that the
most recent expression of interest from
an unrelated party [i.e., Goldstar Real
Estate Fund II, LP (Goldstar)] in
purchasing the Building received by the
JJS Partnership on August 2, 2010 was
$45 million. However, the potential sale
of the Building to Goldstar could not be
consummated in the absence of a
current independent appraisal of the
Building, which is currently not
obtainable due to the lack of
cooperation among the parties, as
described in Representation 5, above.
Therefore, the Employer proposes to
purchase the Interest from the Plan for
$900,000 on the following basis: After
deducting N19 Associates’ mortgage and
other liabilities and expenses associated
with the sale, a $45 million purchase
price for the Building would result in
$900,000 of net proceeds to the Plan in
respect of the Interest. It is represented
that this price is very favorable to the
Plan because it does not reflect any
discount for the fact that the JJS
Partnership and the Plan hold only
minority, non-controlling interests, and
the discounting of minority, noncontrolling interests is a recognized
principle of valuation.11 Assuming a
sale (the Sale) of the Interest for
$900,000, the Applicant represents that
the Plan will achieve an average annual
rate of return of approximately 11.5%
per annum, based on Plan records of
cash amounts received or paid by the
Plan during the term of this investment
(except for two years 12 for which no
records are available). This calculation
includes capital calls paid by the Plan.
The Applicant represents that
according to its available records, the
Plan has received approximately
$167,690 in cash distributions from the
JJS Partnership during the time it has
11 This representation was made by the Applicant
to both the Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations and the NYRO.
12 Although no records are available for the years
1982 and 2001, the NYRO reviewed the available
pertinent records and concluded that the Sale,
based upon the terms described herein, would
enable the NYRO to close its investigation.
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mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
held the Interest.13 Specifically,
according to the Applicant, the Plan has
historically received a portion of the
rental income generated by the
Building. However, this source of
revenue has been retained pending
completion of the litigation described
above. The Applicant requests that the
scope of relief contained in this
proposed exemption include relief from
section 406(b)(3) of ERISA (as well as
section 406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and section
406(b)(1) and (2) of ERISA) since the
Employer may receive from the
Partnership, subsequent to the Sale, the
Plan’s current share of the undistributed
revenue. According to the Applicant,
such amount is not currently
quantifiable due to the litigation and
other factors that are outside of the
control of Studley. The Applicant
stresses that it is in the best interests of
the Plan to consummate the Sale as soon
as possible in order to provide liquidity
to the Plan, rather than to delay the date
of the Sale until after the litigation is
resolved. The Applicant reiterates that
the amount of the Sale represents the
best price the Plan may be expected to
receive for the Interest.
7. In addition, the Employer has
included in the terms of the proposed
Sale a ‘‘true-up’’ provision that the
Employer will contribute an additional
amount to the Plan if (a) within seven
years of the date of the Sale of the
Interest to the Employer, (i) the
Employer sells the Interest, (ii) JJS
Partnership sells its interest in N19
Associates, or (iii) N19 Associates sells
the Building, and (b) the net amount
realized by the Employer in respect of
the Interest upon and by reason of such
Sale, exceeds the sum of (i) the $900,000
price paid for the Interest, and (ii) any
capital contributed by the Employer to
the JJS Partnership in respect of the
Interest after the date of the Sale and
any other funds paid or advanced by the
Employer to, or on behalf of, the JJS
Partnership in respect of the Interest
after the date of the Sale. The Employer
will contribute such excess amount to
the Plan within two weeks of its receipt
by the Employer. Such contribution will
be allocated to the Plan accounts of
participants who were invested in the
Interest at the time of the Sale.14 The
Applicant also represents that if, within
13 The Applicant also represents that the Plan has
paid approximately $18,645 in capital calls. Thus,
based on the available figures, the Plan has received
a net distribution of $149,045.
14 It is represented that the Plan’s recordkeeper T.
Rowe Price will determine the affected Plan
accounts in connection with both the Sale of the
Interest to the Employer and any future additional
contribution by the Employer per the true-up
provision of the Purchase and Sale Agreement.
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15:43 Nov 15, 2012
Jkt 229001
seven years of the date of the Sale of the
Interest by the Plan to the Employer, the
Employer, in its sole discretion, elects to
fund any capital call in respect of its
own interest (that it owned prior to the
subject Sale) in the JJS Partnership,
then, and only then, will the Employer
be obligated to the Plan to fund such
capital call in respect of the Interest.
8. The Applicant represents that the
requested exemption for the Sale of the
Plan’s Interest to the Employer is in the
interest of the Plan because it will
enable the participants and beneficiaries
to realize the value of the Interest and
receive requested distributions in
respect of their investment therein. The
Applicant also represents that the
requested exemption is also protective
of the rights of the participants and
beneficiaries of the Plan because the
Sale price reflects the best information
available to the Employer of the
Interest’s current fair market value, with
no discount taken for a minority, noncontrolling interest. Moreover,
according to the Applicant, the ‘‘trueup’’ provision gives the participants and
beneficiaries of the Plan protection
against a down market and allows their
full participation in any up market for
the next seven years.
The Applicant also represents that the
Sale of the Interest will be a one-time
transaction for cash, and the Plan will
incur no fees, commissions, or other
expenses in connection with the Sale.
Further, the Employer will bear the
costs of the exemption application and
notification of interested persons.
9. In consideration of the following
conditions, the Department has
tentatively determined that the Sale will
satisfy the statutory criteria for an
exemption under section 408(a) of the
Act: (a) The Sale will be a one-time
transaction for cash; (b) the terms and
conditions of the Sale will be at least as
favorable to the Plan as those that the
Plan could obtain in an arm’s length
transaction with an unrelated third
party; (c) the Interest will be sold for
$900,000; (d) the Sale will be
consummated within two weeks after
the date a final exemption regarding the
Sale is published in the Federal
Register; (e) If, (1) within seven years of
the date of the Sale of the Interest to the
Employer, (i) the Employer sells the
Interest, (ii) JJS Partnership sells its
interest in N19 Associates LLC (N19
Associates), or (iii) N19 Associates sells
its building on N Street, Washington,
DC, and (2) the net amount realized by
the Employer in respect of the Interest
upon and by reason of such sale,
exceeds the sum of (i) the $900,000
price paid for the Interest, and (ii) any
capital contributed by the Employer to
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Frm 00114
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
the JJS Partnership in respect of the
Interest after the date of the Sale and
any other funds paid or advanced by the
Employer to, or on behalf of, the JJS
Partnership in respect of the Interest
after the date of the Sale, the Employer
will contribute such excess amount to
the Plan within two weeks of its receipt
by the Employer; (f) the Plan will pay
no commissions, fees, or other expenses
in connection with the Sale; and (g) the
Plan has not waived or released and
does not waive or release any claims,
demands, and/or causes of action that
the Plan may have against the Employer
or the Plan fiduciaries in connection
with the acquisition and holding of the
Interest or Sale of the Interest to the
Employer.
Notice to Interested Persons
All comments will be made available
to the public. Warning: Do not include
any personally identifiable information
(such as name, address, or other contact
information) or confidential business
information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may
be posted on the Internet and can be
retrieved by most Internet search
engines.
Mr.
Eric A. Raps of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8532. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
EquiLend Holdings LLC (EquiLend), Located
in New York, New York
[Application No. D–11724]
Proposed Amendment to Exemption
Based on the facts and representations
set forth in the application, the
Department is considering granting the
following amendment to Prohibited
Transaction Exemption 2002–30 (67 FR
39069) under the authority of ERISA
section 408(a), section 8477(c)(3) of the
Federal Employees’ Retirement System
Act of 1986 (FERSA) and Code section
4975(c)(2), and in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 29 CFR Part
2570, Subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644,
October 27, 2011), as follows:
Section I. Sale of Equilend Products to
Plans
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA section
406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and the sanctions
resulting from the application of Code
section 4975(a) and (b), by reason of
Code section 4975(c)(1)(A) and (D), shall
not apply, effective October 1, 2012, to
the sale or licensing of certain data and/
or analytical tools to a plan by
EquiLend, a party in interest with
respect to such plan.
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This exemption, if granted, would be
subject to the following conditions:
(a) The terms of any such sale or
licensing are at least as favorable to the
plan as the terms generally available in
an arm’s-length transaction involving an
unrelated party;
(b) Any data sold/licensed to the plan
will be limited to:
(1) Current and historical data related
to transactions, whether or not proposed
or occurring on EquiLend’s electronic
securities lending platform (the
Platform) or,
(2) Data derived from current and
historical data using statistical or
computational techniques; and
(c) Each analytical tool sold/licensed
to the plan will be an objective
statistical or computational tool
designed to permit the evaluation of
securities lending activities.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Section II. Use of Platform by Owner
Lending Agent/Sale of Equilend
Products to Plans Represented by
Owner Lending Agent/Provision of
Securities Lending Data Involving Plans
to Equilend by Owner Lending Agent
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA sections
406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and 406(b), FERSA
section 8477(c)(2), and the sanctions
resulting from the application of Code
section 4975(a) and (b), by reason of
Code section 4975(c)(1)(A) and (D)
through (F), shall not apply, effective
October 1, 2012, to: (1) The
participation in the Platform by an
equity owner of EquiLend (an Equity
Owner), in its capacity as a securities
lending agent for a plan (an Owner
Lending Agent); (2) the sale or licensing
of certain data and/or analytical tools by
EquiLend to a plan for which an Equity
Owner acts as a securities lending agent;
and (3) the provision by an Owner
Lending Agent to EquiLend of securities
lending data based on off-Platform
securities lending transactions
conducted by an Owner Lending Agent
on behalf of a plan.
This proposed exemption, if granted,
would be subject to the following
conditions:
(a) In the case of participation in the
Platform on behalf of a plan, to the
extent an applicable exemption is
required, the securities lending
transactions conform to the provisions
of Prohibited Transaction Class
Exemption (PTE) 2006–16 (71 FR 63786
(Oct. 31, 2006)) (or its successor), and/
or any applicable individual exemption;
(b) None of the fees imposed by
EquiLend for securities lending
transactions conducted through the use
of the Platform at the direction of an
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15:43 Nov 15, 2012
Jkt 229001
Owner Lending Agent will be charged to
a plan;
(c) Each securities lender and
securities borrower participating in a
securities lending transaction through
EquiLend will be notified by EquiLend
as to its responsibilities with respect to
compliance, as applicable, with ERISA,
the Code, and FERSA. This requirement
may be met by including such
notification in the participation,
subscription or other user agreement
required to be executed by each
participant in EquiLend;
(d) EquiLend will not act as a
principal in any securities lending
transaction involving plan assets;
(e) Each Owner Lending Agent will
provide prior written notice to its plan
clients of its intention to participate in
EquiLend;
(f)(1) Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (i), the arrangement pursuant
to which the Owner Lending Agent
utilizes the services of EquiLend on
behalf of a plan for securities lending:
(A) Is subject to the prior written
authorization of an independent
fiduciary (an authorizing fiduciary) as
defined in paragraph (b) of Section III).
For purposes of subparagraph (f)(1), the
requirement that the authorizing
fiduciary be independent shall not
apply in the case of an Equity Owner
Plan;
(B) May be terminated by the
authorizing fiduciary, without penalty
to the plan, within the lesser of: (i) The
time negotiated for such notice of
termination by the plan and the Owner
Lending Agent, or (ii) five business
days. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
requirement for prior written
authorization will be deemed satisfied
in the case of any plan for which the
authorizing fiduciary has previously
provided written authorization to the
Owner Lending Agent pursuant to PTE
2006–16 (or any predecessor or
successor thereto), unless such
authorizing fiduciary objects to
participation in the Platform in writing
to the Owner Lending Agent within 30
days following disclosure of the
information described in paragraphs (e)
and (g) of this Section to such
authorizing fiduciary;
(2) Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (i), each purchase or license
of a securities lending-related product
from EquiLend on behalf of a plan by an
Owner Lending Agent:
(A) Is subject to the prior written
authorization of an authorizing
fiduciary. For purposes of subparagraph
(f)(2), the requirement for prior written
authorization shall not apply to any
purchase or licensing of an EquiLend
securities lending-related product by an
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68845
Equity Owner Plan if the fee or cost
associated with such purchase or
licensing is not paid by the Equity
Owner Plan; and
(B) May be terminated by the
authorizing fiduciary within: (i) The
time negotiated for such notice of
termination by the plan and the Owner
Lending Agent; or (ii) five business
days, whichever is lesser, in either case
without penalty to the plan, provided
that, such authorizing fiduciary shall be
deemed to have given the necessary
authorization in satisfaction of this
subparagraph (f)(2) with respect to each
specific product purchased or licensed
pursuant thereto unless such
authorizing fiduciary objects to the
Owner Lending Agent within 15 days
after the delivery of information
regarding such specific product to the
authorizing fiduciary in accordance
with paragraph (g) of this exemption;
and
(3) Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (i), provision by an Owner
Lending Agent to EquiLend of securities
lending data based on off-Platform
securities lending transactions
conducted on behalf of a plan:
(A) Is subject to the prior written
authorization of an authorizing
fiduciary; and
(B) May be terminated by the
authorizing fiduciary with respect to the
future provision of data within the
lesser of (i) the time negotiated for such
notice of termination by the plan and
the Owner Lending Agent or (ii) five
business days, in either case without
penalty to the plan. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, the requirement for prior
written authorization will be deemed
satisfied unless such authorizing
fiduciary objects to provision by the
Owner Lending Agent to EquiLend of
such data in writing to the Owner
Lending Agent within 30 days following
disclosure of the information described
in paragraph (g) of this Section to such
authorizing fiduciary.
(g) The authorization(s) described in
paragraph (f) of this Section shall not be
deemed to have been made unless the
Owner Lending Agent has furnished the
authorizing fiduciary with any
reasonably available information that
the Owner Lending Agent reasonably
believes to be necessary for the
authorizing fiduciary to determine
whether such authorization should be
made, and any other reasonably
available information regarding the
matter that the authorizing fiduciary
may reasonably request. This includes,
but is not limited to: (1) a statement that
the Equity Owner, as securities lending
agent, has a financial interest in the
successful operation of EquiLend, (2) a
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statement, provided on an annual basis,
that the authorizing fiduciary may
terminate the arrangement(s) described
in (f) above at any time, and (3) a
statement that the Owner Lending Agent
intends to provide to EquiLend
securities lending data based on offPlatform securities lending transactions
conducted by the Owner Lending Agent
on behalf of the plan;
(h) Any purchase or licensing of data
and/or analytical tools with respect to
securities lending activities by a plan
pursuant to this Section complies with
the relevant conditions of Section I and
will be authorized in advance by an
authorizing fiduciary in accordance
with the applicable procedures of
paragraphs (f), (g) and (i);
(i) In the case of a pooled separate
account maintained by an insurance
company qualified to do business in a
state or a common or collective trust
fund maintained by a bank or trust
company supervised by a state or
federal agency (Commingled Investment
Fund), the requirements of paragraph (f)
of this Section shall not apply, provided
that—
(1) The information described in
paragraph (g) (including information
with respect to any material change in
the arrangement) of this Section and a
description of the operation of the
Platform (including a description of the
fee structure paid by securities lenders
and borrowers), shall be furnished by
the Owner Lending Agent to the
authorizing fiduciary (described in
paragraph (b) of Section III) with respect
to each plan whose assets are invested
in the account or fund, not less than 30
days prior to implementation of any
such arrangement or material change
thereto, or, not less than 15 days prior
to the purchase or license of any
specific securities lending-related
product, and, where requested, upon the
reasonable request of the authorizing
fiduciary. For purposes of this
subparagraph, the requirement that the
authorizing fiduciary be independent
shall not apply in the case of an Equity
Owner Plan;
(2) In the event any such authorizing
fiduciary notifies the Owner Lending
Agent that it objects to participation in
the Platform, or to the purchase or
license of any EquiLend securities
lending-related tool or product, or to the
further provision by an Owner Lending
Agent to EquiLend of securities lending
data based on off-Platform securities
lending transactions conducted on
behalf of the plan, the plan on whose
behalf the objection was tendered is
given the opportunity to terminate its
investment in the account or fund,
without penalty to the plan, within such
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time as may be necessary to effect the
withdrawal in an orderly manner that is
equitable to all withdrawing plans and
to the non-withdrawing plans. In the
case of a plan that elects to withdraw
pursuant to the foregoing, such
withdrawal shall be effected prior to the
implementation of, or material change
in, the arrangement or purchase or
license, but any existing arrangement
need not be discontinued by reason of
a plan electing to withdraw; and
(3) In the case of a plan whose assets
are proposed to be invested in the
pooled account or fund subsequent to
the implementation of the arrangements
and which has not authorized the
arrangements in the manner described
in paragraphs (i)(1) and (i)(2), the plan’s
investment in the account or fund shall
be authorized in the manner described
in paragraph (f)(1)(A), (f)(2)(A), and
(f)(3)(A);
(j) The Equity Owner, together with
its affiliates (as defined in Section III(a)),
does not own at the time of the
execution of a securities lending
transaction on behalf of a plan by the
Equity Owner (i.e., in its capacity as
Owner Lending Agent) through
EquiLend or at the time of the purchase,
or commencement of licensing, of data
and/or analytical tools by the plan, more
than 20% of:
(1) If EquiLend is a corporation,
including a limited liability company
taxable as a corporation, the combined
voting power of all classes of stock
entitled to vote or the total value of
shares of all classes of stock of
EquiLend, or
(2) If EquiLend is a partnership,
including a limited liability company
taxable as a partnership, the capital
interest or the profits interest of
EquiLend;
(k) Any information, authorization, or
termination of authorization may be
provided by mail or electronically; and
(l) No Equity Owner Plan, as defined
in Section III(e), will participate in the
Platform, other than through a
Commingled Investment Fund in which
the aggregate investment of all Equity
Owner Plans at the time of the
transaction constitutes less than 20% of
the total assets of such fund.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, this
prohibition shall not apply to the
participation by an Equity Owner Plan
as of the date that the aggregate loan
balance of all securities lending
transactions entered into through
EquiLend by all participants
outstanding on such date (excluding
transactions entered into on behalf of
Equity Owner Plans) is equal to or
greater than $10 billion; provided that if
such aggregate loan balance is later
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determined to be less than $10 billion,
no additional participation by an Equity
Owner Plan (other than through a
Commingled Investment Fund) shall
occur until such time as the $10 billion
threshold amount is again met.
Section III. Definitions
For purposes of this proposed
exemption:
(a) An ‘‘affiliate’’ of another person
means:
(1) Any person directly or indirectly,
through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with such other
person;
(2) Any officer, director, partner,
employee, relative (as defined in ERISA
section 3(15)) of such other person; and
(3) Any corporation or partnership of
which such other person is an officer,
director or partner.
For purposes of this paragraph, the
term ‘‘control’’ means the power to
exercise a controlling influence over the
management or policies of a person
other than an individual.
(b) The term ‘‘authorizing fiduciary’’
means, with respect to an Owner
Lending Agent, a plan fiduciary who is
independent of such Owner Lending
Agent. In this regard, an authorizing
fiduciary will not be considered
independent of an Owner Lending
Agent if:
(1) Such fiduciary directly or
indirectly controls, is controlled by, or
is under common control with the
Owner Lending Agent; or
(2) Such fiduciary directly or
indirectly receives any compensation or
other consideration from the Owner
Lending Agent or an affiliate for his or
her own personal account in connection
with any securities lending transaction
described herein; provided that
Commingled Investment Funds and
Equity Owner Plans maintained by such
Owner Lending Agent or an affiliate will
not be deemed affiliates of such Owner
Lending Agent for purposes of this
subparagraph (2).
For purposes of Section II, no Equity
Owner or any affiliate may be an
authorizing fiduciary except in the case
of an Equity Owner Plan.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
requirements for consent by an
authorizing fiduciary with respect to
participation in the Platform, and the
annual right of such fiduciary to
terminate such participation, shall be
deemed met to the extent that the
Owner Lending Agent’s proposed
utilization of the services of EquiLend
on behalf of a plan for securities lending
has been approved by an order of a
United States district court.
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(c) The term ‘‘Owner Lending Agent’’
means an Equity Owner in its capacity
as a fiduciary of a plan acting as
securities lending agent in connection
with the loan of plan assets that are
securities.
(d) The term ‘‘Equity Owner’’ means
an entity that either directly or through
an affiliate owns an equity ownership
interest in EquiLend.
(e) The term ‘‘Equity Owner Plan’’
means a plan which is established or
maintained by an Equity Owner of
EquiLend as an employer of employees
covered by such plan, or by its affiliate.
(f) The terms ‘‘plan’’ means:
(1) An ‘‘employee benefit plan’’
within the meaning of ERISA section
3(3), subject to Part 4 of Subtitle B of
Title I of ERISA,
(2) A ‘‘plan’’ that is within the
meaning of Code section 4975(e)(1) and
subject to Code section 4975, or
(3) The Federal Thrift Savings Fund.
Effective Date: The proposed
exemption would be effective October 1,
2012 with respect to arrangements
entered into on or after that date. The
provisions of PTE 2002–30 shall
continue to apply to arrangements
entered into before October 1, 2012.
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Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The applicant is EquiLend, a
Delaware limited liability company
established on May 16, 2001. As of
March 15, 2012, the equity owners of
EquiLend were as follows: BlackRock,
Credit Suisse, JP Morgan Clearing Corp.,
JP Morgan Chase, Merrill Lynch,
Morgan Stanley, State Street, Goldman
Sachs, Northern Trust and UBS, or
affiliates of the foregoing entities. The
applicant represents that, as of March
15, 2012, each equity owner owned 10
percent of EquiLend.
2. The applicant submitted a request
that Prohibited Transaction Exemption
2002–30 (67 FR 39069) (PTE 2002–30)
be amended. PTE 2002–30 was
originally promulgated on June 6, 2002,
and it permits: (1) The sale or licensing
of certain data and/or analytical tools to
an employee benefit plan by EquiLend;
(2) participation in the Platform by an
equity owner of EquiLend (an Equity
Owner), in its capacity as a securities
lending agent for the plan (an Owner
Lending Agent); and (3) the sale or
licensing of certain data and/or
analytical tools by EquiLend to a plan
for which an Equity Owner acts as an
Owner Lending Agent. Unless otherwise
noted, the facts and representations of
PTE 2002–30, are integrated herein.15
15 The
applicant represents that, to the best of its
knowledge, EquiLend has complied with all
applicable conditions set forth in PTE 2002–30.
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3. The applicant represents that, as
permitted under Section I of PTE 2002–
30, EquiLend currently sells and/or
licenses certain data to plans. Consistent
with the terms of the individual
exemption, this data is: (A) Historical in
nature and relates to transactions
proposed or occurring on the system; or
(B) derived from current and historical
data utilizing statistical or
computational techniques. In this
regard, the applicant notes that Section
I(b) of PTE 2002–30 requires that, with
respect to the sale or licensing of certain
data and/or analytical tools to an
employee benefit plan by EquiLend:
(b) Any data sold/licensed to the plan will
be limited to: (1) current and historical data
related to transactions proposed or occurring
on the Platform or, (2) data derived from
current and historical data using statistical or
computational techniques.
4. The applicant is seeking to amend
Section I(b) of PTE 2002–30, effective
October 1, 2012. The applicant notes
that Section I(b) of PTE 2002–30 limits
the types of data that may be licensed
or sold by EquiLend. Specifically,
Section I(b) precludes the sale or
licensing of data to a plan by Equilend
where such data sold/licensed involves
the use of current or historical data
related to transactions that are proposed
or occurring off the Platform. The
applicant believes, however, that access
to off-Platform securities lending data
by plans will further enhance
EquiLend’s existing client service
functionality via the Platform by
expanding the information that is
available to plans. The applicant states
that the addition of additional data to
the Platform enhances the ability of a
plan to evaluate the performance of
lending agents and the returns on
lending portfolios.
5. The applicant, therefore, requests
that the Department revise Section I(b)
of PTE 2002–30 in a manner that would
permit, effective October 1, 2012,
EquiLend to use, sell or license data
relating to transactions occurring off the
Platform to plans. If this proposed
amendment is granted, Section I(b) of
PTE 2002–30 will provide that:
(b) Any data sold/licensed to the plan will
be limited to:
(1) Current and historical data related to
transactions, whether or not proposed or
occurring on EquiLend’s electronic securities
lending platform (the Platform) or,
(2) Data derived from current and historical
data using statistical or computational
techniques.
6. In the applicant’s view, affected
plans would be adequately protected
with respect to the sale and licensing by
EquiLend of this off-Platform data. In
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68847
this regard, the applicant notes that
Section I(b) of PTE 2002–30 limits the
type of data that may be sold and
licensed by EquiLend to current and
historical data related to securities
lending transactions, or data derived
from current and historical data using
statistical or computational techniques.
Further, the applicant notes that the
terms of any sale or licensing of data
must be at least as favorable to the plan
as the terms generally available in an
arm’s-length transaction involving an
unrelated party. The applicant
represents that these limitations/
conditions are sufficient to ensure that
plans would be adequately protected to
the extent Section I(b) of PTE 2002–30
is revised to include any current and
historical data related to transactions
proposed occurring off the Platform.16
7. The applicant also seeks to amend
Section II of PTE 2002–30, effective
October 1, 2012. Section II presently
permits: (1) Participation in the Platform
by an Equity Owner, in its capacity as
an Owner Lending Agent; and (2) the
sale or licensing of certain data and/or
analytical tools by EquiLend to a plan
for which an Equity Owner acts as an
Owner Lending Agent. The applicant
notes that Section II of the individual
exemption does not permit the
provision by an Owner Lending Agent
to EquiLend of securities lending data
based on off-Platform securities lending
transactions conducted by an Owner
Lending Agent on behalf of a plan.
8. However, for the same reasons
stated above, the applicant believes that
access to off-Platform securities lending
data by plans will further enhance
EquiLend’s existing client service
functionality via the Platform by
expanding the information that is
available to plans. The applicant,
therefore, requests that the Department
amend PTE 2002–30 to permit, effective
October 1, 2012, the provision by an
Owner Lending Agent to EquiLend of
securities lending data based on offPlatform securities lending transactions
conducted by an Owner Lending Agent
on behalf of a plan. The applicant notes
that, if this proposed amendment is
adopted, the three categories of
transactions covered by Section II
would be: (1) The participation in the
Platform by an Equity Owner, in its
capacity as an Owner Lending Agent; (2)
the sale or licensing of certain data and/
16 The proposed amended exemption does not
provide relief under Section I from ERISA section
406(a)(1)(C) with respect to the use of the Platform
on behalf of a plan by a lending fiduciary which
is not an Equity Owner. In this regard, the applicant
and the lending fiduciaries intend to rely on ERISA
section 408(b)(2) to the extent any such relief is
necessary.
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mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
or analytical tools by EquiLend to a plan
for which an Equity Owner acts as a
securities lending agent; and (3) the
provision by an Owner Lending Agent
to EquiLend of securities lending data
based on off-Platform securities lending
transactions conducted by an Owner
Lending Agent on behalf of a plan.
9. The applicant believes that affected
plans would be adequately protected
with respect to the proposed
amendment to Section II. In this regard,
a new condition is proposed in Section
II that would be applicable to the new
category of transactions that would be
covered therein. To the extent an Owner
Lending Agent provides to EquiLend
data based on off-Platform securities
lending transactions conducted on
behalf of plans, prior to such provision
of data, each Owner Lending Agent will
disclose to a plan’s authorizing
fiduciary who is independent of the
Owner Lending Agent and EquiLend
(other than in case of an Equity Owner
Plan) that such Owner Lending Agent
intends to provide to EquiLend data
based on off-Platform securities lending
transactions conducted on behalf the
plan. Thereafter, the plan’s authorizing
fiduciary must consent to provision of
such data by the Owner Lending Agent
to EquiLend (such authorizing fiduciary
will be deemed to have given the
required authorization unless such
authorizing fiduciary objects in writing
to the provision to EquiLend of data
based on off-Platform securities lending
transactions conducted on behalf of the
plan to the Owner Lending Agent
within 30 days after disclosure of such
information). This authorization may be
terminated with respect to the future
provision of data by the authorizing
fiduciary without penalty to the plan,
within the lesser of: (i) The time
negotiated for such notice of
termination by the plan and the Owner
Lending Agent, or (ii) five business
days.17
17 The Department notes that ERISA’s general
standards of fiduciary conduct also would apply. In
this regard, ERISA section 404 requires, among
other things, a fiduciary to discharge his duties
respecting a plan solely in the interest of the plan’s
participants and beneficiaries and in a prudent
manner. Accordingly, an independent plan
fiduciary must act prudently with respect to: (1)
The decision to enter into the described
arrangement; and (2) the negotiation of the terms of
such arrangement including any payment of
compensation. The Department further emphasizes
that it expects plan fiduciaries, prior to entering
into any of the proposed arrangements, to fully
understand the extent of the services to be
provided, the fee structure and the risks associated
with these types of arrangements following
disclosure by the service provider of all relevant
information. In addition, the Department notes that
such plan fiduciaries are responsible for
periodically monitoring the services provided.
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10. The applicant notes that Section II
of PTE 2002–30 contains other
conditions that are designed to ensure
that plans are adequately protected with
respect to this amendment, if adopted.
Specifically, conditions (a) through (j) of
the individual exemption require that:
(A) In the case of participation in the
Platform on behalf of a plan, to the
extent applicable the procedures
regarding the securities lending
activities conform to the provisions of
PTE 2006–16 (or its successor), and/or
any applicable individual exemption;
(B) None of the fees imposed by
EquiLend for securities lending
transactions conducted through the use
of the Platform at the direction of an
Owner Lending Agent will be charged to
a plan;
(C) Each securities lender and
securities borrower participating in a
securities lending transaction through
EquiLend will be notified by EquiLend
as to its responsibilities with respect to
compliance, as applicable, with ERISA,
the Code, and FERSA;
(D) Equilend will not act as a
principal in any security lending
transaction involving plan assets;
(E) Each Equity Owner will provide
prior written notice to its plan clients of
its intention to participate in EquiLend;
(F) The arrangement pursuant to
which the Equity Owner utilizes the
services of EquiLend on behalf of a plan:
(1) Is subject to the prior written
authorization of an authorizing
fiduciary;
(2) May be terminated by the
authorizing fiduciary, without penalty
to the plan, within the lesser of: (i) The
time negotiated for such notice of
termination by the plan and the Equity
Owner, or (ii) five business days;
(G) With certain limited exceptions,
each purchase or license of a securities
lending-related product from EquiLend
is subject to the prior authorization of
an authorizing fiduciary;
(H) The Equity Owner will furnish
each authorizing fiduciary with any
reasonably available information which
the Equity Owner reasonably believes to
be necessary to determine whether such
authorization should be made or
renewed;
(I) The provision by an Owner
Lending Agent to EquiLend of data
based on off-Platform securities lending
transactions conducted on behalf of a
plan:
(1) Is subject to the prior authorization
of an authorizing fiduciary ;
(2) May be terminated by the
authorizing fiduciary with respect to the
future provision of data, without
penalty to the plan, within the lesser of:
(i) The time negotiated for such notice
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of termination by the plan and the
Equity Owner, or (ii) five business days;
and
(J) The Equity Owner, together with
its affiliates, does not own at the time
of the execution of a securities lending
transaction on behalf of a plan by the
Equity Owner through EquiLend or at
the time of the purchase, or
commencement of licensing, of data
and/or analytical tools by the plan, more
than 20% of EquiLend.
11. In summary, the applicant
represents that this proposed
amendment to PTE 2002–30 satisfies the
statutory criteria for an administrative
exemption contained in ERISA section
408(a) and Code section 4975(c)(2)
because, among other things: (a) The
proposed amendment to Section I and
Section II of PTE 2002–30 will be
administratively feasible and protective
of and in the best interests of the plans
and their participants and beneficiaries
because of the conditions set forth
originally and for the same reasons as
set forth originally in PTE 2002–30; and
(b) the proposed amendment to Section
II of PTE 2002–30 will be additionally
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries because each Owner
Lending Agent will disclose to a plan’s
authorizing fiduciary who is
independent of the Owner Lending
Agent and EquiLend (other than in case
of an Equity Owner Plan) that such
Owner Lending Agent intends to
provide to EquiLend data based on offPlatform securities lending transactions
conducted on behalf a plan. Further, the
plan’s authorizing fiduciary must
consent to the provision of such data by
the Owner Lending Agent to EquiLend.
Notice to Interested Parties
The applicant represents that the
potentially interested participants and
beneficiaries cannot all be identified
and therefore the only practical means
of notifying such participants and
beneficiaries of this proposed
exemption is by the publication of this
notice in the Federal Register.
Comments and requests for a hearing
must be received by the Department not
later than 30 days from the date of
publication of this notice of proposed
exemption in the Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Shiker of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8552. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
General Information
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
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4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or
disqualified person from certain other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction
provisions to which the exemption does
not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404
of the Act, which, among other things,
require a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting the plan solely in the
interest of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan and in a
prudent fashion in accordance with
section 404(a)(1)(b) of the Act; nor does
it affect the requirement of section
401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining
the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be
granted under section 408(a) of the Act
and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code,
the Department must find that the
exemption is administratively feasible,
in the interests of the plan and of its
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of the plan;
(3) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be supplemental to, and
not in derogation of, any other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transitional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be subject to the express
condition that the material facts and
representations contained in each
application are true and complete, and
that each application accurately
describes all material terms of the
transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 9th day of
November, 2012.
Lyssa E. Hall,
Director of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
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[FR Doc. 2012–27849 Filed 11–15–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
[Docket No. OSHA–2012–0031]
Standard on 4,4’—Methylenedianiline
in Construction; Extension of the
Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) Approval of Information
Collection (Paperwork) Requirements
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA), Labor.
ACTION: Request for public comments.
AGENCY:
OSHA solicits public
comments concerning its proposal to
extend the Office of Management and
Budget’s (OMB) approval of the
information collection requirements
specified in the Standard on 4,4’—
Methylenedianiline in Construction (29
CFR 1926.60).
DATES: Comments must be submitted
(postmarked, sent, or received) by
January 15, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Electronically: You may
submit comments and attachments
electronically at https://
www.regulations.gov, which is the
Federal eRulemaking Portal. Follow the
instructions online for submitting
comments.
Facsimile: If your comments,
including attachments, are not longer
than 10 pages, you may fax them to the
OSHA Docket Office at (202) 693–1648.
Mail, hand delivery, express mail,
messenger, or courier service: When
using this method, you must submit a
copy of your comments and attachments
to the OSHA Docket Office, Docket No.
OSHA–2012–0031, Occupational Safety
and Health Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N–2625,
200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20210. Deliveries
(hand, express mail, messenger, and
courier service) are accepted during the
Department of Labor’s and Docket
Office’s normal business hours, 8:15
a.m. to 4:45 p.m., e.t.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the Agency name and OSHA
docket number (OSHA–2012–0031) for
the Information Collection Request
(ICR). All comments, including any
personal information you provide, are
placed in the public docket without
change, and may be made available
online at https://www.regulations.gov.
For further information on submitting
comments see the ‘‘Public
Participation’’ heading in the section of
this notice titled SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
Docket: To read or download
comments or other material in the
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
68849
docket, go to https://www.regulations.gov
or the OSHA Docket Office at the
address above. All documents in the
docket (including this Federal Register
notice) are listed in the https://
www.regulations.gov index; however,
some information (e.g., copyrighted
material) is not publicly available to
read or download from the Web site. All
submissions, including copyrighted
material, are available for inspection
and copying at the OSHA Docket Office.
You may also contact Theda Kenney at
the address below to obtain a copy of
the ICR.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Theda Kenney or Todd Owen,
Directorate of Standards and Guidance,
OSHA, U.S. Department of Labor, Room
N–3609, 200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20210; telephone (202)
693–2222.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Department of Labor, as part of its
continuing effort to reduce paperwork
and respondent (i.e., employer) burden,
conducts a preclearance consultation
program to provide the public with an
opportunity to comment on proposed
and continuing information collection
requirements in accord with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This program
ensures that information is in the
desired format, reporting burden (time
and costs) is minimal, collection
instruments are clearly understood, and
OSHA’s estimate of the information
collection burden is accurate. The
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970 (the OSH Act) (29 U.S.C. 651 et
seq.) authorizes information collection
by employers as necessary or
appropriate for enforcement of the OSH
Act or for developing information
regarding the causes and prevention of
occupational injuries, illnesses, and
accidents (29 U.S.C. 657). The OSH Act
also requires that OSHA obtain such
information with minimum burden
upon employers, especially those
operating small businesses, and to
reduce to the maximum extent feasible
unnecessary duplication of efforts in
obtaining information (29 U.S.C. 657).
The information collection
requirements specified in the 4,4’Methylenedianiline Standard for
Construction (the ‘‘MDA Standard’’) (29
CFR 1926.60) protect workers from the
adverse health effects that may result
from their exposure to MDA, including
cancer, liver and skin disease. The
major paperwork requirements specify
that employers must perform initial,
periodic, and additional exposure
E:\FR\FM\16NON1.SGM
16NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 222 (Friday, November 16, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 68834-68849]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-27849]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction
Restrictions
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Exemptions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of proposed exemptions from
certain of the prohibited transaction restrictions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code). This notice includes the
following proposed exemptions: D-11610, UBS Financial Services, Inc. D-
11666, Central Pacific Bank 401(k) Retirement and Savings Plan (the
Plan); D-11672, Studley, Inc. Section 401(k) Plan Profit Sharing Plan
(the Plan); and D-11724, EquiLend Holdings LLC (EquiLend).
DATES: All interested persons are invited to submit written comments or
requests for a hearing on the pending exemptions, unless otherwise
stated in the Notice of Proposed Exemption, within 45 days from the
date of publication of this Federal Register Notice.
ADDRESSES: Comments and requests for a hearing should state: (1) The
name, address, and telephone number of the person making the comment or
request, and (2) the nature of the person's interest in the exemption
and the manner in which the person would be adversely affected by the
exemption. A request for a hearing must also state the issues to be
addressed and include a general description of the evidence to be
presented at the hearing. All written comments and requests for a
hearing (at least three copies) should be sent to the Employee Benefits
Security Administration (EBSA), Office of Exemption Determinations,
Room N-5700, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20210. Attention: Application No.------, stated in each
Notice of Proposed Exemption. Interested persons are also invited to
submit comments and/or hearing requests to EBSA via email or FAX. Any
such comments or requests should be sent either by email to:
moffitt.betty@dol.gov, or by FAX to (202) 219-0204 by the end of the
scheduled comment period. The applications for exemption and the
comments received will be available for public inspection in the Public
Documents Room of the Employee Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, Room N-1513, 200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20210.
Warning: If you submit written comments or hearing requests, do not
include any personally-identifiable or confidential business
information that you do not want to be publicly-disclosed. All comments
and hearing requests are posted on the Internet exactly as they are
received, and they can be retrieved by most Internet search engines.
The Department will make no deletions, modifications or redactions to
the comments or hearing requests received, as they are public records.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions will be provided to all
interested persons in the manner agreed upon by the applicant and the
Department within 15 days of the date of publication in the Federal
Register. Such notice shall include a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal Register and shall inform
[[Page 68835]]
interested persons of their right to comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate).
The proposed exemptions were requested in applications filed
pursuant to section 408(a) of the Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with procedures set forth in 29 CFR Part 2570,
Subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).\1\ Effective December
31, 1978, section 102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C.
App. 1 (1996), transferred the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type requested to the Secretary of
Labor. Therefore, these notices of proposed exemption are issued solely
by the Department.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Department has considered exemption applications
received prior to December 27, 2011 under the exemption procedures
set forth in 29 CFR Part 2570, Subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August
10, 1990).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applications contain representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are summarized below. Interested persons are
referred to the applications on file with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and representations.
UBS Financial Services Inc., Located in Weehawken, New Jersey
[Application No. D-11610]
Proposed Exemption
Based on the facts and representations set forth in the
application, the Department is considering granting the following
exemption under the authority of Code section 4975(c)(2), and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR Part 2570, subpart B
(76 FR 66637, October 27, 2011), as follows:
Section I: Covered Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the sanctions resulting from
the application of Code section 4975, by reason of Code section
4975(c)(1)(A) and (D)-(E), shall not apply, effective January 4, 2002,
until December 9, 2005, to (1) principal trades by UBS Financial
Services Inc. (the Applicant) with certain plans, subject to Code
section 4975, but not subject to Title I of ERISA (the IRAs), which
resulted in the IRAs purchasing or selling securities from the
Applicant (collectively, the Transactions); and (2) compensation paid
by the IRAs to the Applicant in connection with the Transactions (the
Transaction Compensation).
This proposed exemption is subject to the conditions set forth
below in Sections II and III.
Section II: Specific Conditions
(a) The Transactions and the Transaction Compensation were
corrected (1) pursuant to the requirements set forth in the
Department's Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program (the VFC Program)
\2\ and (2) in a manner consistent with those transactions described in
the Applicant's VFC Program application, dated March 5, 2010 (the VFC
Program Application), that were substantially similar to the
Transactions but that involved plans described in Code section
4975(e)(1) and subject to Title I of ERISA (the Qualified Plan
Transactions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 71 FR 20262 (April 19, 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) The Applicant received a ``no-action letter'' from the
Department in connection with the Qualified Plan Transactions described
in the VFC Program Application.
(c) An independent fiduciary confirmed that the methods utilized to
correct the Transactions and Transaction Compensation were sufficient
to return each affected IRA to at least the position that it would have
been in had the Transactions and Transaction Compensation not occurred,
and that the correction methods were properly applied to the
Transactions and Transaction Compensation based on a review of a
representative sample of the corrections, selected at random by the
independent fiduciary.
For purposes of this exemption, a fiduciary is ``independent'' if
it is independent of and unrelated to Applicant and its affiliates. In
this regard, a fiduciary will not be deemed independent of Applicant
and its affiliates if: (1) Such fiduciary directly or indirectly
controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with Applicant
or its affiliates, (2) such fiduciary directly or indirectly receives
any compensation or other consideration in connection with any
transaction described in this exemption, except that it may receive
compensation for acting as an independent fiduciary from Applicant in
connection with the transactions described herein, if the amount or
payment of such compensation is not contingent upon, or in any way
affected by such fiduciary's decision; or (3) the annual gross revenue
received by the fiduciary, in any fiscal year, from Applicant or its
affiliates exceeds one percent (1%) of the fiduciary's annual gross
revenue from all sources (for federal income tax purposes) for its
prior tax year.
(d) The terms of the Transactions and the Transaction Compensation
were at least as favorable to the IRAs as the terms generally available
in arm's-length transactions between unrelated parties.
(e) The Transactions and Transaction Compensation were not part of
an agreement, arrangement or understanding designed to benefit a
disqualified person, as defined in Code section 4975(e)(2).
(f) The Applicant did not take advantage of the relief provided by
the VFC Program and Prohibited Transaction Exemption 2002-51 \3\ (PTE
2002-51) for three (3) years prior to the date of the Applicant's
submission of the VFC Program Application.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 67 FR 70623 (Nov. 25, 2002), as amended, 71 FR 20135 (April
19, 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section III: General Conditions
(a) The Applicant maintains, or causes to be maintained, for a
period of six (6) years from the date of any Transaction such records
as are necessary to enable the persons described in Section III(b)(1)
to determine whether the conditions of this exemption have been met,
except that:
(1) A separate prohibited transaction shall not be considered to
have occurred if, due to circumstances beyond the control of Applicant,
the records are lost or destroyed prior to the end of the six-year
period; and
(2) No disqualified person with respect to an IRA, other than
Applicant, shall be subject to excise taxes imposed by Code section
4975, if such records are not maintained, or are not available for
examination, as required by Section III(b)(1).
(b)(1) Except as provided in Section III(b)(2), the records
referred to in Section III(a) are unconditionally available at their
customary location for examination during normal business hours by:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or representative of the
Department, the Internal Revenue Service, or the Securities and
Exchange Commission;
(B) Any fiduciary of any IRA that engaged in a Transaction, or any
duly authorized employee or representative of such fiduciary; or
(C) Any owner or beneficiary of an IRA that engaged in a
Transaction or a representative of such owner or beneficiary.
(2) None of the persons described in Sections III(b)(1)(B) and (C)
shall be authorized to examine trade secrets of Applicant, or
commercial or financial information which is privileged or
confidential.
[[Page 68836]]
(3) Should Applicant refuse to disclose information on the basis
that such information is exempt from disclosure, Applicant shall, by
the close of the thirtieth (30th) day following the request, provide a
written notice advising that person of the reasons for the refusal and
that the Department may request such information.
Effective Date: If granted, this proposed exemption will be
effective from January 4, 2002, until December 9, 2005.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Applicant is UBS Financial Services Inc., a wholly owned
subsidiary of UBS AG. The Applicant is a large financial institution
headquartered in Basel and Zurich, Switzerland. As of December 31,
2011, UBS AG had invested assets of 2,167 billion CHF.
2. From January 4, 2002, to December 9, 2005, contrary to the
Applicant's policies, certain of Applicant's financial advisors (the
FAs) caused Applicant to engage in a number of principal transactions
involving IRAs for which the Applicant or the FA acted as an ERISA
fiduciary. These principal transactions included: (a) 711 principal
purchases of bonds from the Applicant, with an aggregate purchase price
of $18,359,746 in 88 IRAs (the Bond Purchase Transactions) (b) 110
principal sales of bonds to the Applicant, with an aggregate sales
price of $4,257,643 in 45 IRAs (the Bond Sale Transactions); (c) 128
principal purchases of stock from the Applicant, for an aggregate
purchase price of $1,882,230 in 37 IRAs (the Stock Purchase
Transactions); and (d) 1 principal sale of stock to the Applicant, for
a sales price of less than $1 (the Stock Sale Transaction)
(collectively, the Bond Purchase Transactions, the Bond Sale
Transactions, the Stock Purchase Transactions and Stock Sale
Transaction are referred to as the Transactions). A total of 105 IRAs
were involved in the Transactions. (Some of the IRAs were involved in
more than one type of transaction.)
3. The Transactions caused the payment of compensation to the
Applicant (Transaction Compensation). With respect to Bond Purchase
Transactions and Bond Sale Transactions, the Applicant was compensated
through a ``mark-up'' of the bond price; the aggregate amount of such
mark-ups was $115,363. With respect to the Stock Purchase Transactions
and the Stock Sale Transaction, the Applicant was compensated through
commissions totaling $44,964.
4. Upon discovering that certain of the FAs caused the Applicant to
engage in the Transactions, the Applicant implemented changes to its
policies and procedures to prohibit the opening of any brokerage
accounts that would permit FAs to exercise discretion. The Applicant
represents that the FAs can now only open accounts that would permit
the exercise of discretion under a discretionary advisory program where
principal trades are blocked.
5. The Applicant seeks relief with respect to the Transactions and
with respect to the payment of the Transaction Compensation.
Specifically, the Applicant believes that: (a) The purchase and sale of
securities, both bonds and stocks, between the IRAs and the Applicant
was prohibited by Code section 4975(c)(1)(A); (b) both the Transactions
and the payment of Transaction Compensation were prohibited by Code
section 4975(c)(1)(D); and (c) the Transactions and the receipt of
Transaction Compensation were prohibited by Code section 4975(c)(1)(E).
The Applicant believes that, if the proposed exemption is not granted,
the IRAs would be subject to hardship resulting from the uncertainty of
not having the prohibited transactions outlined herein resolved.
Further, if the proposed exemption is not granted, the IRAs would be
subject to additional hardship as a result of the resultant uncertainty
regarding the correction methodology applied by the Applicant.
6. The Applicant represents that as soon as the Transactions and
the Qualified Plan Transactions were discovered it began an
investigation that led to the correction process. The Applicant
corrected the Qualified Plan Transactions pursuant to the requirements
set forth in the VFC Program. The Applicant filed a VFC Program
Application, dated March 5, 2010, with respect to the Qualified Plan
Transactions, and it received a no-action letter from the Department,
dated February 4, 2011, with respect to the Qualified Plan
Transactions.
7. While the Qualified Plan Transactions were properly corrected
under the VFC Program, the Applicant was not able to similarly correct
the Transactions and the Transaction Compensation. Despite being
substantially similar to the Qualified Plan Transactions, the
Transactions and the Transaction Compensation are ineligible for relief
under the VFC Program and PTE 2002-51 because they involved IRAs which
are not covered under Title I of ERISA. The Applicant, however,
believes that granting relief pursuant to the proposed exemption is
consistent with the Department's statement that ``[the VFC Program]
does not foreclose its future consideration of individual exemption
requests for transactions involving IRAs that are outside the scope of
relief provided by both the VFC Program and the class exemption under
circumstance when, for example, a financial institution received a no
action letter applicable only to plans subject to [the VFC Program] for
a transaction(s) that involved both plans and * * * IRAs.'' 71 FR
20135, 20137 (April 19, 2006).
8. The Applicant represents that the Transactions were corrected
pursuant to the requirements set forth in the VFC Program and in a
manner consistent with the Applicant's VFC Program Application, with
such representation made in the Applicant's exemption application,
dated March 5, 2010, under penalty of perjury. In this regard, the
Applicant corrected the Transactions in the manner described below:
(a) With respect to the Bond Purchase Transactions, since bonds are
debt instruments, the Applicant corrected the Bond Purchase
Transactions, based on economic similarity to a loan transaction
correction, under the procedures for loans made at a fair market
interest rate in Section 7.2(a) of the VFC Program. The correction
method for a loan, which is set forth in Section 7.2(a)(2) of the VFC
program, is for the party in interest to pay back the loan in full,
including any prepayment penalties. The Applicant represents that the
Bond Purchase Transactions were conducted at fair market values (FMVs)
because, among other things, the transactions were conducted using
trading systems and procedures designed to result in trades being
conducted at prices that are as favorable as possible to the IRAs under
prevailing market conditions and were in fact conducted at prices not
less favorable to the IRAs than the prices the FAs could have obtained
for the IRAs by conducting the trades in arm's-length transactions with
third-party market participants.
(b) With respect to the Bond Sale Transactions and the Stock Sale
Transaction, the Applicant corrected these Transactions under the
procedures for sale of an asset by a plan to a party in interest under
Section 7.4(b) of the VFC Program. Section 7.4(b)(2)(i) of the VFC
Program generally requires that the asset be repurchased from the party
in interest at the lower of the price for which it originally sold the
property or the FMV of the property at the time of correction. As an
alternative, Section 7.4(b)(2)(ii) of the VFC Program provides that a
plan may receive a cash
[[Page 68837]]
settlement of the ``Principal Amount,'' defined as the amount by which
the FMV of the asset at the time of original sale exceeds the original
sales price, plus the greater of ``Lost Earnings,'' which is generally
defined as the approximate amount that would have been earned by a plan
on the Principal Amount but for the prohibited transaction, or the
``Restoration of Profits,'' as described in Section 5(b) of the VFC
Program, provided, that, an independent fiduciary determines that the
applicable Plan would receive a greater benefit with such correction
than by repurchase. The Applicant represents that ``Restoration of
Profits,'' as defined under the VFC Program, did not apply with respect
to the Transactions because no amounts were used for a specific purpose
such that a profit was determinable. The Principal Amount for each of
the Bond Sale Transactions and the Stock Sale Transaction was zero
because the bond or the stock was sold at FMV.
It was impractical or impossible for the IRAs to repurchase most of
the bonds in the Bond Sale Transactions because most of the bonds had
been called, matured, were thinly traded or not in the inventory of the
Applicant or its affiliates. For the remaining bonds in the Bond Sale
Transactions, none of the IRAs elected to repurchase the bond from the
Applicant despite the Applicant's offer to sell the bond back to the
IRA at the lower of the price for which the IRA originally sold the
bond or the FMV of the bond at the time of correction. Therefore, the
Applicant corrected all of the Bond Sale Transactions by paying the
IRAs the Transaction Compensation, if any, plus Lost Earnings on the
Transaction Compensation from the time of the Transaction.
For the Stock Sale Transaction, it was impossible to repurchase the
stock because the company had dissolved. Further, because no
commissions were charged by the Applicant for the Stock Sale
Transaction, no payment to the IRA with respect to compensation was
necessary to correct the Stock Sale Transaction. Finally, since the
Principal Amount with respect to the Stock Sale Transaction was zero,
there were no Lost Earnings on the Principal Amount to pay to the IRA.
(c) With respect to the Stock Purchase Transactions, the Applicant
corrected the Stock Purchase Transactions under the procedures for the
purchase by a plan of an asset from a party in interest pursuant to
Section 7.4(a) of the VFC Program. Section 7.4(a) generally requires
that the asset be sold back to the party in interest who originally
sold the asset to the plan or to a person who is not a party in
interest for a price equal to the greater of (1) the FMV of the asset
at the time of resale, without reduction for the costs of sale, plus
restoration to the plan of the party in interest's investment return
from the proceeds of the sale, to the extent they exceed the plan's net
profits from owning the property, or (2) the plan's original purchase
price, plus the greater of Lost Earnings on the plan's original
purchase price or the Restoration of Profits, if any. As an
alternative, the plan may retain the asset and receive (1) the greater
of the Lost Earnings or the Restoration of Profits, if any, on the
original purchase price, but only to the extent that such Lost Earnings
or Restoration of Profits exceeds the difference between the FMV of the
asset as of correction and the original purchase price and (2) the
amount by which the original purchase price exceeded the FMV of the
asset (at the time of the original purchase), plus the greater of Lost
Earnings or Restoration of Profits, if any, on such excess; provided,
an independent fiduciary determined that the plan will realize a
greater benefit from this correction than it would from the resale
described in section 7.4(a)(2)(i) of the VFC Program. The Applicant
corrected the Stock Purchase Transactions under the alternative
correction methodology, taking into account any prior disposition of
the stock by an IRA subsequent to the original purchase.
9. With respect to the Applicant's correction of the Transactions,
(a) the Applicant took into account all transaction costs (e.g.,
Transaction Compensation), if any, paid by the IRAs in calculating the
corrective payments; and (b) the Applicant engaged an independent
fiduciary, Evercore Trust Company. Evercore Trust Company stated that
(x) the methods utilized to correct the Transactions were sufficient to
return each affected IRA to at least the position that it would have
been in had the Transactions not occurred, (y) the alternative
correction method utilized for the Stock Purchase Transactions did not
result in the affected IRAs being returned to more unfavorable
financial positions than if the general correction method described in
7.4(a) of the VFC Program been used instead, and (z) the correction
methods were properly applied to the Transactions based on a review of
a representative sample of the corrections.
10. Evercore Trust Company confirmed to the Applicant that (a)
during the period beginning with the date on which the earliest
Transaction occurred and ending with the date Evercore Trust Company
completed its engagement as an independent fiduciary with respect to
the Transactions and the Transaction Compensation, it was not an entity
that was directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with, the Applicant or its affiliates, (b) the
compensation received by Evercore Trust Company from the Applicant for
its services as an independent fiduciary with respect to the
Transactions and the Transaction Compensation was not contingent upon,
or in any way affected by, Evercore Trust Company's determination, and
Evercore Trust Company did not, and will not, directly or indirectly
receive any other compensation or consideration from the Applicant in
connection with the Transactions or Transaction Compensation, and (c)
for any fiscal year of Evercore Trust Company, during which, or during
part of which, it acted as an independent fiduciary with respect to the
Transactions or Transaction Compensation, or received any compensation
from the Applicant for its services as an independent fiduciary with
respect to the Transactions or Transaction Compensation (Subject Fiscal
Year), the annual gross revenue received by Evercore Trust Company and
its affiliates from the Applicant or its affiliates for the Subject
Fiscal Year did not exceed one percent (1%) of the annual gross revenue
received by Evercore Trust Company and its affiliates from all sources
(for federal income tax purposes) for their most recent fiscal years
that ended prior to the Subject Fiscal Year.
11. The Applicant represents that it credited, or issued a check
to, each IRA to which a corrective payment was due.
12. The Applicant believes that the Transactions were inadvertent
and resulted in the IRAs paying no more than the market price with
respect to the Bond Purchase Transactions and the Stock Purchase
Transactions, and receiving at least the market price with respect to
the Bond Sale Transactions and the Stock Sale Transaction, because the
Transactions were conducted using trading systems and procedures
designed to result in trades being conducted at prices that are as
favorable as possible to the IRAs under prevailing market conditions
and were in fact conducted at prices not less favorable to the IRAs
than the prices the FAs could have obtained for the IRAs by conducting
the trades in arm's-length transactions with third-party market
participants.
13. The Applicant represents that it has not taken advantage of the
relief provided by the VFC Program and PTE 2002-51 for the three (3)
years prior to
[[Page 68838]]
the date of the Applicant's submission of the VFC Program Application,
and that the Transactions were not part of an agreement, arrangement or
understanding designed to benefit a disqualified person.
14. The Applicant represents that the proposed exemption is: (a)
Administratively feasible because the Applicant has corrected the
Transactions pursuant to the requirements set forth in the VFC Program;
has obtained relief under the VFC Program for the Qualified Plan
Transactions; has put procedures in place to ensure that no similar
Transactions occur in the future; and has obtained an opinion from an
independent fiduciary, Evercore Trust Company, confirming that the
methods utilized to correct the Transactions and Transaction
Compensation were sufficient to return each affected IRA to at least
the position that it would have been in had the Transactions and
Transaction Compensation not occurred, and that the correction methods
were properly applied to the Transactions and Transaction Compensation
based on a review of a representative sample of the corrections,
selected at random by the independent fiduciary; (b) in the interests
of the affected IRAs and their owners and beneficiaries because the
Transactions have been corrected pursuant to the procedures set forth
in the VFC Program, which are designed to ensure that the corrections
are made in a manner that is in the interests of the IRAs and their
owners and beneficiaries; and (c) protective of the rights of the
owners and beneficiaries of the IRAs because the requested relief is
only with respect to past transactions, which the Applicant believes
were conducted at prices no less favorable to the IRAs than prices the
IRAs could have paid or received in arm's-length transactions with
third party market participants, that have already been effectively
unwound pursuant to the requirements set forth in the VFC Program.
15. In summary, the Applicant represents that the Transactions and
the Transaction Compensation satisfy the statutory criteria for an
administrative exemption contained in Code section 4975(c)(2) because,
among other things: (a) The Transactions and Transaction Compensation
were substantially similar to the Qualified Plan Transactions; (b) the
Transactions and Transaction Compensation were corrected pursuant to
the requirements set forth in the VFC Program and in a manner similar
to those described in the Applicant's VFC Program Application; (c) the
Applicant received a ``no-action letter'' from the Department in
connection with Applicant's VFC Program Application; (d) the Applicant
obtained an opinion from an independent fiduciary, Evercore Trust
Company, confirming that the methods utilized to correct the
Transactions and Transaction Compensation were sufficient to return
each affected IRA to at least the position that it would have been in
had the Transactions and Transaction Compensation not occurred, and
that the correction methods were properly applied to the Transactions
and Transaction Compensation based on a review of a representative
sample of the corrections, selected at random by the independent
fiduciary; (e) the terms of the Transactions and the Transaction
Compensation were at least as favorable to the IRAs as the terms
generally available in arm's-length transactions between unrelated
parties; (f) the Transactions and Transaction Compensation were not
part of an agreement, arrangement or understanding designed to benefit
a disqualified person; and (g) the Applicant did not take advantage of
the relief provided by the VFC Program and PTE 2002-51 for three (3)
years prior to the date of the Applicant's submission of the VFC
Program Application.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Brian Shiker of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8552. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Central Pacific Bank 401(k) Retirement and Savings Plan (the Plan),
Located in Honolulu, HI
[Application No. D-11666]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code and in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part
2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990).
Section I: Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, effective for the period
beginning April 11, 2011 and ending May 6, 2011, the restrictions of
sections 406(a)(1)(A), 406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), 406(b)(1), 406(b)(2),
and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act and the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code, by reason of section
4975(c)(1)(A) and 4975(c)(1)(E) of the Code,\4\ shall not apply:
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\4\ For purposes of this proposed exemption, references to
specific provisions of Title I of the Act, unless otherwise
specified, refer also to the corresponding provisions of the Code.
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(a) To the acquisition of certain subscription right(s) (the Right
or Rights) by the individually-directed account(s) (the Account or
Accounts) of certain participant(s) in the Plan in connection with an
offering (the Offering) of shares of common stock (the Stock) of
Central Pacific Financial Corporation (CPFC) by CPFC, a party in
interest with respect to the Plan; and
(b) To the holding of the Rights received by the Accounts during
the subscription period of the Offering; provided that the conditions,
as set forth in Section II of this proposed exemption were satisfied
for the duration of the acquisition and holding.
Section II: Conditions
The relief provided in this proposed exemption is conditioned upon
adherence to the material facts and representations described, herein,
and as set forth in the application file, and upon compliance with the
conditions, as set forth in this proposed exemption.
(a) The receipt of the Rights by the Accounts occurred in
connection with the Offering, and the Rights were made available by
CPFC to all shareholders of the Stock of CPFC, including the Accounts;
(b) The acquisition of the Rights by the Accounts resulted from an
independent corporate act of CPFC;
(c) Each shareholder of the Stock, including each of the Accounts,
received the same proportionate number of Rights, and this
proportionate number of Rights was based on the number of shares of
Stock held by each such shareholder;
(d) The Rights were acquired pursuant to, and in accordance with,
provisions under the Plan for individually-directed investment of the
Accounts by the individual participants in the Plan, all or a portion
of whose Accounts in the Plan held the Stock (the Invested
Participant(s));
(e) The decision with regard to the holding and disposition of the
Rights by an Account was made by the Invested Participant whose Account
received the Rights;
(f) If any of the Invested Participants failed to give instructions
as to the exercise of the Rights received in the Offering, such Rights
were sold in blind transactions on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
and the proceeds from such sales were distributed pro-rata to the
Accounts in the Plan of such Invested Participants;
(g) No brokerage fees, no commissions, and no fees or expenses
[[Page 68839]]
were paid by the Plan or by the Accounts to any related broker in
connection with the sale of any of the Rights or in connection with the
exercise of any of the Rights, and no brokerage fees, no commissions,
no subscription fees, and no other charges were paid by the Plan or by
the Accounts with respect to the acquisition and holding of the Stock;
and
(h) Based on the difference ($1.13) between the average proceeds
per Right ($6.05) received by other holders who sold Rights during the
Offering and the average proceeds per Right ($4.92) received by
Invested Participants whose Accounts sold Rights, between April 26,
2011 and May 3, 2011, CPFC will make a corrective payment to the Plan
in the amount of $30,618.48 ($1.13 x 27,096 Rights sold), plus a lost
earnings component on such amount, calculated at a 2.83% annual rate of
interest for the period from May 6, 2011 to the date of the grant of
this proposed exemption, and will distribute such corrective payment,
and the lost earnings component, pro rata to the Accounts of each of
the 186 Invested Participants whose Accounts in the Plan sold the
27,096 Rights.
Effective Date: This proposed exemption, if granted, will be
effective for the period beginning on April 11, 2011, the commencement
date of the Offering, and ending on May 6, 2011, the close of the
Offering.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Plan is a defined contribution 401(k) retirement saving plan
which provides for a cash and deferred arrangement. The Plan was
adopted, effective as of November 1, 1985.\5\ The Plan obtained its
latest determination letter from the Internal Revenue Service (the IRS)
in 2002. Although the Plan has been amended since receiving the
determination letter from the IRS, the administrator of the Plan and
the tax counsel for the Plan believe that the Plan is designed and is
currently being operated in compliance with the applicable requirements
of the Code.
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\5\ Effective July 1, 2003, December 31, 2004, December 31,
2006, and July 26, 2007, respectively, the Central Pacific Bank
Employee Stock Ownership Plan, the CB Bancshares, Inc. Profit
Sharing Retirement Saving Plan, the CB Bancshares, Inc. ESOP, and
the Hawaii HomeLoans, Inc. 401(k) Retirement Savings Plan were
merged into the Plan.
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As of April 11, 2011, there were 1,115 participants in the Plan.
The Plan is a participant directed account plan designed and operated
to comply with the requirements of section 404(c) of the Act.
The Plan is funded by elective employee contributions, as well as
employer matching contributions, and discretionary employer profit
sharing contributions in cash to the ESOP. It is represented that no
discretionary contributions were made in 2008, 2009, and 2010. The fair
market value of the total assets of the Plan, as of April 11, 2011, was
$85,827,254. As of August 30, 2012, the fair market value of the Plan's
assets was $90,594,733. 2. CPFC is the sponsor of the Plan. CPFC is a
bank holding company, incorporated in the State of Hawaii on February
1, 1982, as ``CPB Inc.'' CPFC's principal place of business is
Honolulu, Hawaii.
CPFC, a parent company, through its subsidiaries, offers full-
service commercial banking throughout the State of Hawaii and offers
limited commercial banking services in certain areas of California.
CPFC does not employ any persons other than the officers of the Central
Pacific Bank (the Bank) and from time to time the support staff of the
Bank. It is represented that substantially all of the activities of
CPFC are conducted through the Bank.
According to the Form 10-Q, as of March 3, 2012, on a consolidated
basis, CPFC and its subsidiaries had total assets of $4,158,288,000,
total liabilities of $3,680,848,000, and total stockholders' equity of
$477,440,000.
3. The Bank is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CPFC. The Bank is a
full-service commercial bank incorporated in the State of Hawaii on
March 16, 1982, with 34 branches and 120 ATMs located throughout the
State of Hawaii. The Bank also has an office in California. The Bank
offers a broad range of products and services, including accepting time
and demand deposits, and originating commercial, construction, and
consumer loans, and commercial and residential mortgages. All employees
of the Bank, its subsidiaries, and certain other affiliated companies
are covered by the Plan.
4. Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company (Vanguard) is the third party
administrator, the trustee, and the custodian of the Plan. Vanguard, as
trustee, has the responsibility of investing, holding, collecting,
distributing, and accounting for the assets of the Plan in the trust.
5. The Plan is administered by a committee (the Committee), which
is composed of certain appointed employees of the Bank. The Committee
has the responsibility of selecting the investment options of the trust
into which the participants of the Plan can direct their contributions.
6. Participants in the Plan are permitted to self-direct the
investments in their Accounts based on certain options held under the
Plan. Among the investment options offered to participants are various
types of securities, including shares of the Stock held in the CPFC
stock fund (the Stock Fund). Investment in the Stock Fund by the
Accounts of participants in the Plan is entirely voluntary. It is
represented that neither CPFC nor its subsidiaries contribute any
capital Stock to the Plan. Instead all employer contributions are made
in cash, and the Stock is acquired by the Accounts in the Plan only as
a result of participant-directed investment decisions.
The Plan provides that participants are entitled to direct the
voting of the Stock held in their Accounts in the Plan. Vanguard, as
trustee, has the responsibility of carrying out such directions. As of
December 31, 2009, and December 31, 2010, respectively, the Plan
investments included 938,180 shares and 893,122 shares of the Stock
held in the Stock Fund.
7. The Stock of CPFC is publicly-traded on the NYSE under the
symbol ``CPF.'' The Stock has no par value. It is represented that the
Stock is the same class of shares available to other investors. The
Stock is a ``qualifying employer security,'' as defined under section
407(d)(5) of the Act and 4975(e) of the Code.
Background
8. On February 2, 2011, CPFC effected a one-for-twenty reverse
stock split (the Reverse Stock Split) of the outstanding shares of
Stock. As a result of the Reverse Stock Split, the outstanding shares
of Stock decreased from 30,539,999 shares to 1,528,935 shares.
As part of its recapitalization plan to raise $325 million from
accredited investors in a private placement (the Private Placement),
CPFC, on February 18, 2011, entered into subscription agreements with
affiliates of the Carlyle Group and the Anchorage Capital Group, LLC
and with various other investors. In this regard, CPFC sold 32,500,000
shares of Stock at a price of $10 per share.
On the same day, February 18, 2011, CPFC entered into an exchange
agreement (the Exchange Agreement) with the United States Department of
the Treasury (Treasury), pursuant to which the Treasury agreed, subject
to the terms and conditions in the Exchange Agreement, to exchange
135,000 shares of CPFC's preferred stock designated as Fixed Rate
Cumulative Preferred Stock, having a liquidation amount of $1,000 per
share, held by the Treasury and accrued and unpaid dividends thereon
for 5,620,117 shares of CPFC's Stock, and amended a warrant held by the
Treasury to reduce the
[[Page 68840]]
number of shares of Stock issuable upon exercise of the warrant from
1,585,748 to 79,288 (the TARP Exchange).
Following the closing of the Private Placement and the TARP
Exchange, CPFC had 39,649,052 shares of Stock outstanding, as of April
11, 2011. CPFC commenced the Offering whereby shareholders of record,
as of 5 p.m. EST on the February 17, 2011 (the Record Date), would
receive the Rights. CPFC represents that it conducted the Offering,
because it wanted to provide existing shareholders and other investors,
including the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan, who could
not participate in the Private Placement, with the opportunity to
purchase the Stock at the same price per share paid by the investors in
the Private Placement.
9. The Offering commenced on April 11, 2011, and closed on May 6,
2011. It is represented that 2,000,000 shares of Stock were subscribed
for by all shareholders. In this regard, the Offering was fully
subscribed. There were valid exercises to purchase an aggregate of
1,325,230 shares, pursuant to directions from holders of the basic
Rights. The remaining 674,770 shares available to be issued in the
Offering were allocated pro rata among the holders entitled to exercise
the over-subscription privilege. It is represented that the exercise of
the Rights resulted in gross proceeds for CPFC of $20,000,000.
10. At the close of business on April 11, 2011, the date of the
Offering, the Stock was trading on the NYSE at $19.43 per share. The
closing price of the Stock on the ending date of the Offering on May 6,
2011, was $13.70.
11. Under the terms of the Offering, all shareholders of the Stock,
including the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan,
automatically received the Rights, at no charge. Each of the Rights
entitled the shareholders of the Stock, including the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan, to purchase, through the exercise of
such Rights, the Stock issued by CPFC in connection with the Offering.
With respect to the Rights, under the terms of the Offering, one (1)
Right was issued for each whole share of the Stock held by each
shareholder, including the Accounts of Invested Participants in the
Plan, on the Record Date.
12. The Rights entitled the holders thereof to a basic right to
subscribe for their pro rata share of $20 million dollars' worth of
Stock issued by CPFC, as well as an over-subscription privilege to
subscribe for additional shares of Stock, subject to certain
limitations and allocation procedures, up to the number of shares of
Stock that were not subscribed for by the other holders of the Rights,
pursuant to their basic Rights.
However, the over-subscription privilege was conditioned on each
shareholder first exercising their basic Rights in full. Because the
Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan did not exercise all of
their basic Rights in full and, because, as a practical matter it was
unlikely that all of the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan
would do so, given the number of Invested Participants in the Plan
whose Accounts held the Stock, the over-subscription privilege was not
available to Rights attributable to the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan.
13. All shareholders of the Stock, including the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan, held the Rights until such Rights
were exercised, or such Rights were sold. With regard to the exercise
of the Rights, it is represented that the Rights could only be
exercised in whole numbers. Upon exercise, each of the Rights permitted
a shareholder of the Stock, including each of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan, to purchase 1.3081 shares of Stock at a
subscription price of $10.00 per share (such amount is represented to
take into account the Reverse Stock Split that occurred on February 2,
2011). Fractional shares of Stock resulting from the exercise of basic
Rights on an aggregate basis as to any holder of such Rights, including
the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan, were rounded down to
the nearest whole number.
A shareholder, including each of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan, had the right to choose to exercise some,
all, or none of its Rights. The election to exercise, some, all or none
of its Rights had to be received by 5 p.m. EST on April 29, 2011, by
the tabulation agent, Wells Fargo Bank, NA Shareowner Services (WFSS),
in order to allow sufficient processing time. The election to exercise
any of the Rights was irrevocable.
14. With regard to the sale of the Rights, it is represented that
the Rights were transferable. Further, it is represented that the
Rights were traded on the NYSE. Any Rights that were not exercised
either as a result of a partial exercise or as a result of insufficient
assets in an Account to cover an exercise (excluding the assets in the
Stock Fund), or as a result of a failure to timely return the election
form were automatically sold on the NYSE to unrelated third parties by
Vanguard, as trustee, acting on behalf of each such Account. The
proceeds from such sale were credited pro rata to the Plan Accounts of
Invested Participants.
15. The Invested Participants were notified of the issuance of the
Rights in a news release, in a posting on the CPFC's Web site, and in
various letters and email communications from CPFC during the month of
April 2011. In addition, each of the Invested Participants was also
provided detailed information regarding the Rights Offering, including
a copy of the prospectus which described the Offering, a document
providing frequently asked questions and answers regarding the
Offering, an election form, a return envelope addressed to WFSS, the
tabulating agent, and a statement indicating the number of shares of
Stock each such Invested Participant held in his/her Account in the
Plan, as of the Record Date.
16. In order to exercise some or all of the Rights, an Invested
Participant \6\ had to complete an election form and to submit such
election form to WFSS by the close of business on the fifth (5th)
business day (April 29, 2011, at 5 p.m. EST), prior to the expiration
of the Offering on May 6, 2011.\7\
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\6\ It is represented that the Accounts of the Invested
Participants in the Plan rely on the relief provide by the statutory
exemption, pursuant to section 408(e) of the Act for the exercise of
the Rights.
The Department is offering no view, as to whether the
requirements of the statutory exemption provided in section 408(e)
of the Act have been satisfied. Further, the Department, herein, is
not providing any relief with respect to the exercise of the Rights.
\7\ It is represented that the extra five (5) business days were
required to provide sufficient time to process all such elections by
the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan to exercise their
Rights, tabulate and confirm the results, liquidate each such
Invested Participant's funds, confirm the orders and the
availability of such funds, and remit payment to purchase the
shares. It is represented that non-Plan shareholders were also
required to submit their election forms five (5) days prior to the
expiration of the Offering.
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Each Invested Participant who submitted an election form was
required to indicate on such election form a sufficient amount of
current investments in the Account of such Invested Participant in the
Plan (other than the assets in the Stock Fund) to be liquidated on a
pro-rated basis to cover the purchase of Stock in connection with the
exercise of the Rights. The pro-rated funds were segregated from the
other investments within the Invested Participant's Account into a
separate holding fund (the Rights Fund) at Vanguard which was
established in anticipation of the Offering. Vanguard placed the order
to purchase the Stock with the subscription agent, Wells Fargo Bank,
N.A. (Wells Fargo Bank), a registered broker-dealer that is unrelated
[[Page 68841]]
to CPFC and the Plan. It is represented that the Rights Fund was
liquidated, and cash equal to the necessary subscription payment was
transferred to the Wells Fargo Bank. Following the closing of the
Offering, the purchased shares of Stock were then converted back to the
equivalent number of units of the Plan's Stock Fund and credited to the
Account of the Invested Participant.
17. As of the Record Date, February 17, 2011, 287 Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan held the Stock. As of the Record
Date, the approximate percentage of the fair market value of the total
assets of the Plan invested in the Stock was two percent (2%). Also, as
of the Record Date, the shares of Stock held in the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan constituted approximately three
percent (3%) of the shares of Stock outstanding.
18. It is represented that based on the ratio of one (1) Right for
each share of Stock held by the Accounts of Invested Participants, the
Plan acquired 46,327 Rights as a result of the Offering. Of the Rights
received by the Plan on behalf of Accounts of the Invested
Participants, all such Rights were either exercised or sold. None of
the Rights expired.
Of the 46,327 Rights received by the Accounts of Invested
Participants as a result of the Offering, it is represented that 19,231
Rights held by 102 Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan were
exercised for Stock. It is represented that on May 19, 2011, the
Accounts of the Invested Participants in the Plan received the Stock
purchased as a result of the exercise of the Rights. It is further
represented that the Stock purchased in connection with the Offering
was eligible for trading on NYSE by the Accounts of the Invested
Participants in the Plan on May 19, 2011.
Unlike the other holders of the Rights, the Invested Participants
whose Accounts in the Plan received the Rights were not permitted to
sell the Rights throughout the period April 11-25, 2012, due to Plan
administrative constraints. However, of the 46,327 Rights received by
the Accounts of Invested Participants as a result of the Offering, it
is represented that over the period from April 26, 2011 to May 3, 2011,
the Invested Participants of 186 Accounts sold 27,096 Rights on the
NYSE. On May 9, 2011, the Accounts of those Invested Participants
received the proceeds from the sales of such Rights totaling
$133,339.44.
Based on the difference ($1.13) between the average proceeds per
Right ($6.05) received by other holders who sold Rights during the
Offering and the average proceeds per Right ($4.92) received by
Invested Participants whose Accounts sold Rights, between April 26,
2011 and May 3, 2011, CPFC will make a corrective payment to the Plan
in the amount of $30,618.48 ($1.13 x 27,096 Rights sold). Further, CPFC
proposes to include a lost earnings component on the amount of the
corrective payment calculated at a 2.83% annual rate of interest for
the period from May 6, 2011, to the date of the grant of this proposed
exemption. It is represented that the interest rate on the lost
earnings component was calculated taking the greater of the weighted
average return for all investment funds available under the Plan and
the average return for the Retirement Savings Trust (the stable value
fund under the Plan in which the proceeds from the sale of the Rights
were distributed). CPFC will distribute such corrective contribution,
plus the lost earnings component, pro rata to each of the 186 Invested
Participants whose Accounts in the Plan sold Rights.
19. No brokerage fees, no commissions, no subscription fees, and no
other charges were paid by the Plan or by any of the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan with respect to the acquisition and
holding of the Stock and no brokerage fees, no commissions, and no fees
or expenses were paid by the Plan or by any of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan to any related broker in connection with the
sale of the Rights or in connection with the exercise of the Rights.
Requested Relief
20. The application was filed on behalf of CPFC. In this regard,
CPFC has requested an exemption: (a) For the acquisition of the Rights
by the Accounts of the Invested Participants in the Plan in connection
with the Offering of Rights by CPFC; and (b) for the holding of the
Rights by the Accounts of the Invested Participants in the Plan during
the subscription period of the Offering.
It is represented that the Rights acquired by the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan satisfy the definition of ``employer
securities,'' pursuant to section 407(d)(1) of the Act. However, as the
Rights were not stock or a marketable obligation, such Rights do not
meet the definition of ``qualifying employer securities,'' as set forth
in section 407(d)(5) of the Act. Accordingly, the subject transactions
constitute an acquisition and holding on behalf of the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan, of employer securities which are not
qualifying employer securities, in violation of section 407(a) of the
Act, for which CPFC has requested relief from sections 406(a)(1)(A),
406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act. CPFC has also
requested relief from the prohibitions of section 406(b)(1) and
406(b)(2) of the Act.
21. It is represented that the subject transactions have already
been consummated. In this regard, the Accounts of Invested Participants
in the Plan acquired the Rights pursuant to the Offering on April 11,
2011, and held such Rights pending the closing of the Offering on May
6, 2011, when such Rights either were exercised or sold. As there was
insufficient time between the dates when the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan acquired the Rights and when such Rights were
exercised or sold, to apply for and be granted an exemption, CPFC is
seeking a retroactive exemption to be granted, effective from April 11,
2011, the date that the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan
acquired the Rights, to May 6, 2011, the closing date of the Offering.
22. CPFC represents that the proposed exemption is administratively
feasible. In this regard, the acquisition and holding of the Rights by
the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan were one-time
transactions that involved an automatic distribution of the Rights to
all shareholders. It is represented that it is customary for
corporations to make a rights offering available to all shareholders.
23. CPFC represents that the transactions which are the subject of
this proposed exemption are in the interest of the Accounts of Invested
Participants in the Plan, because the subject transactions represented
a valuable opportunity to such Accounts to buy the Stock at a discount
or to sell the Rights. It is represented that this discount could be
realized by the Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan by
selling the Stock immediately after the exercise of the Rights and
investing the proceeds from such sale of the Stock in other investment
options under the Plan.
24. CPFC represents that the proposed exemption provides sufficient
safeguards for the protection of the Accounts of Invested Participants
in the Plan and the beneficiaries of such Accounts. In this regard,
participation in the Offering protected the Accounts of the Invested
Participants in the Plan from having their interests in CPFC diluted as
a result of the Offering.
It is further represented that the interests of the Accounts of
Invested Participants in the Plan were adequately protected in that
such Accounts acquired and held the Rights automatically as a result of
the Offering. In addition, CPFC made the Rights
[[Page 68842]]
available on the same terms to all shareholders of the Stock, including
the Accounts. In this regard, each shareholder of the Stock, including
each of the Accounts, received the same proportionate number of Rights,
and this proportionate number of Rights was based on the number of
shares of Stock held by such shareholder.
The Accounts of Invested Participants in the Plan were protected
against economic loss by exercising the Rights or by selling the
Rights. It is represented that the closing price of the Stock on May 6,
2011, was $13.70 per share which was in excess of the strike price of
$10.00 per share.
25. In summary, CPFC represents that the subject transactions
satisfy the statutory criteria of section 408(a) of the Act and section
4975(c)(2) of the Code because:
(a) The receipt of the Rights by the Accounts occurred in
connection with the Offering, and the Rights were made available by
CPFC to all shareholders of the Stock of CPFC, including the Accounts;
(b) The acquisition of the Rights by the Accounts resulted from an
independent corporate act of CPFC;
(c) Each shareholder of the Stock, including each of the Accounts,
received the same proportionate number of Rights, and this
proportionate number of Rights was based on the number of shares of
Stock held by such shareholder;
(d) The Rights were acquired pursuant to, and in accordance with,
provisions under the Plan for individually-directed investment of the
Accounts by the Invested Participants, all or a portion of whose
Accounts in the Plan held the Stock;
(e) The decision with regard to the holding and disposition of the
Rights by an Account was made by the Invested Participant whose Account
received the Rights;
(f) If any of the Invested Participants failed to give instructions
as to the exercise of the Rights received in the Offering, such Rights
were sold in blind transactions on the NYSE and the proceeds from such
sales were distributed pro-rata to the Accounts in the Plan of such
Invested Participants;
(g) No brokerage fees, no commissions, and no fees or expenses were
paid by the Plan or by the Accounts to any related broker in connection
with the sale of any of the Rights or in connection with the exercise
of any of the Rights, and no brokerage fees, no commissions, no
subscription fees, and no other charges were paid by the Plan or by the
Accounts with respect to the acquisition and holding of the Stock; and
(h) Based on the difference ($1.13) between the average proceeds
per Right ($6.05) received by other holders who sold Rights during the
Offering and the average proceeds per Right ($4.92) received by
Invested Participants whose Accounts sold Rights, between April 26,
2011 and May 3, 2011, CPFC will make a corrective payment to the Plan
in the amount of $30,618.48 ($1.13 x 27,096 Rights sold), plus a lost
earnings component on such amount calculated at a 2.83% annual rate of
interest for the period from May 6, 2011 to the date of the grant of
this proposed exemption, and will distribute such corrective payment,
and the lost earnings component, pro rata to the Accounts of each of
the 186 Invested Participants whose Accounts in the Plan sold Rights.
Notice to Interested Persons
The persons who may be interested in the publication in the Federal
Register of the Notice of Proposed Exemption (the Notice) include all
Invested Participants whose Accounts in the Plan were invested in the
Stock at the time of the Offering.
It is represented that all such interested persons will be notified
of the publication of the Notice by first class mail, to each such
interested person's last known address within fifteen (15) days of
publication of the Notice in the Federal Register. Such mailing will
contain a copy of the Notice, as it appears in the Federal Register on
the date of publication, plus a copy of the Supplemental Statement, as
required, pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2), which will advise all
interested persons of their right to comment and to request a hearing.
All written comments and/or requests for a hearing must be received by
the Department from interested persons within 45 days of the
publication of this proposed exemption in the Federal Register.
All comments will be made available to the public. Warning: Do not
include any personally identifiable information (such as name, address,
or other contact information) or confidential business information that
you do not want publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the
Internet and can be retrieved by most Internet search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Angelena C. Le Blanc of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8551. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Studley, Inc. Section 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan (the Plan), Located in
New York, NY
[Application No. D-11672]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR Part
2570 Subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10, 1990). If the proposed
exemption is granted, the restrictions of section 406(a)(1)(A) and (D)
and section 406(b) of the Act, and the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code, by reason of section
4975(c)(1)(A), (D), (E) and (F) of the Code, shall not apply to the
sale (the Sale) of an 8.828121% partnership interest (the Interest) in
the Julien J. Studley N Street Partnership, a general partnership (the
JJS Partnership), by the Plan to Studley, Inc. (the Employer), a party
in interest with respect to the Plan, provided that the following
conditions are satisfied:
(a) The Sale is a one-time transaction for cash;
(b) The terms and conditions of the Sale are at least as favorable
to the Plan as those that the Plan could obtain in an arm's length
transaction with an unrelated third party;
(c) The Interest is sold for $900,000;
(d) The Sale is consummated within two weeks after the date a final
exemption regarding the Sale is published in the Federal Register;
(e) If, (1) within seven years of the date of the Sale of the
Interest to the Employer, (i) the Employer sells the Interest, (ii) JJS
Partnership sells its interest in N19 Associates LLC (N19 Associates),
or (iii) N19 Associates sells its building on N Street, Washington, DC,
and (2) the net amount realized by the Employer in respect of the
Interest upon and by reason of such sale, exceeds the sum of (i) the
$900,000 price paid for the Interest, and (ii) any capital contributed
by the Employer to the JJS Partnership in respect of the Interest after
the date of the Sale and any other funds paid or advanced by the
Employer to, or on behalf of, the JJS Partnership in respect of the
Interest after the date of the Sale, the Employer will contribute such
excess amount to the Plan within two weeks of its receipt by the
Employer;
(f) The Plan pays no commissions, fees, or other expenses in
connection with the Sale; and
(g) The Plan has not waived or released and does not waive or
release any claims, demands, and/or causes of
[[Page 68843]]
action that the Plan may have against the Employer or the Plan
fiduciaries in connection with the acquisition and holding of the
Interest or Sale of the Interest to the Employer.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The Studley, Inc. Section 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan (the Plan)
is sponsored by Studley, Inc. (the Employer or the Applicant), located
in New York, New York. Julien Studley (Mr. Studley) was the founder of
the Employer. Pursuant to a buyout, all of his shares in the Employer
not held in an employee benefit plan were purchased on December 12,
2002, by the Employer, at which time Mr. Studley resigned as a voting
member from the Employer's Board of Directors. He remained a non-voting
member until June 2004. Since then, Mr. Studley has not held any
position with, or interest in, the Employer (other than shares held in
employee benefit plans). The Employer is in the business of providing
commercial real estate advisory, brokerage and related services.
The Plan had 61 participants and beneficiaries, as of November 14,
2011. Based on the most recently available audited financial
statements, the total value of the Plan's assets was $26,830,211, as of
December 31, 2010. The Plan's trustee is T. Rowe Price Trust Company.
The trust agreement indicates that the trustee takes direction from the
named fiduciary (the Named Fiduciary), which is the Employer. The Plan
has a non-participant directed profit sharing component in which it
holds real estate investments, as well as a 401(k) component which is
participant directed.
2. Among the assets of the Plan is an 8.828121% interest (the
Interest) in the Julien J. Studley N Street Partnership (JJS
Partnership), a general partnership in which the Employer and the Plan
are both general partners. The Applicant represents that there are
currently eight other members in the JJS Partnership in addition to the
Employer and the Plan. No other employee benefit plans are members of
the JJS Partnership.
The managing partners of the JJS Partnership are Mr. Studley and
Mr. Peter Speier, and neither the Plan nor the Employer has management
responsibilities. The JJS Partnership was formed and capitalized on or
about December 28, 1976. The Applicant represents that the Interest was
acquired by the Plan in 1982 for $45,000 and is held under an ancillary
trust agreement (the Ancillary Trust Agreement), with Mitchell Steir
and Michael Colacino as trustees.\8\ Mr. Steir is the Chairman of the
Board and Chief Executive Officer of the Employer while Mr. Colacino is
the President of the Employer. Under the Ancillary Trust Agreement, the
trustees are subject to the direction of the Employer, as Named
Fiduciary, with respect to the investment and disposition of the trust
fund assets.
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\8\ Pursuant to the Ancillary Trust Agreement, a separate trust
was established to hold the Plan's real estate investments. As part
of its investigation (see Representation 4, below), the Department's
New York Regional Office (NYRO) inquired whether the Plan's
acquisition of the Interest was a purchase or a contribution by the
Employer. The Plan's records are incomplete on this matter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. The Applicant represents that the JJS Partnership was formed for
the purpose of holding an interest in an entity known as N19
Associates. The JJS Partnership holds a 32% interest in N19 Associates,
which owns a building on N Street in Washington, DC (the Building). The
Plan's effective interest in the Building is 2.825%, which is 8.828121%
of 32%.
4. The NYRO opened an investigation of the Plan and found that the
Plan's interest in the JJS Partnership is an illiquid and hard-to-value
asset.\9\ The Plan has been unable, in at least two instances, to make
requested distributions to Plan participants because of the Plan's
investment in the Interest. In addition, certain recent annual reports
(Forms 5500) filed for the Plan have not reflected a current valuation
for the Interest.\10\ The NYRO and the Applicant agreed that the Plan
should liquidate its investment in the JJS Partnership in order to be
able to make the distributions to eligible participants. Because the
Interest is an illiquid asset, Studley is requesting an exemption that,
if granted, would permit Studley to purchase the Interest from the
Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The reasons for these characterizations are discussed in
Representation 5, below.
\10\ The Internal Revenue Service (the IRS) examined the Plan
and determined that prohibited transactions had been entered into
involving loans to the Plan from the Employer for the years 2002
through 2006. The prohibited transactions were corrected on December
22, 2006 and the Employer filed Forms 5330 for the years 2002
through 2006 and paid the resulting excise taxes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. The Applicant represents that N19 Associates is controlled by
Melvin and Edward Lenkin, who are not affiliated with the Employer or
the JJS Partnership. The JJS Partnership has commenced litigation
against the Lenkins based, in part, upon their refusal to provide
current information regarding the Building. Due to the disagreement
among the parties, the Applicant represents, among other things, that
JJS Partnership has been unable to obtain and provide to the Plan the
information that would enable the Plan to obtain a current appraisal of
the Interest by an independent appraiser. The most recently available
independent appraisal assigns the Interest a value of $670,000, as of
November 3, 2006, which reflects a 25% minority discount by reason of
the Plan's holding a minority, non-controlling interest. This was the
value for the Interest used in the Plan's audited financial statements
as of December 31, 2010.
6. The Applicant represents that the most recent expression of
interest from an unrelated party [i.e., Goldstar Real Estate Fund II,
LP (Goldstar)] in purchasing the Building received by the JJS
Partnership on August 2, 2010 was $45 million. However, the potential
sale of the Building to Goldstar could not be consummated in the
absence of a current independent appraisal of the Building, which is
currently not obtainable due to the lack of cooperation among the
parties, as described in Representation 5, above. Therefore, the
Employer proposes to purchase the Interest from the Plan for $900,000
on the following basis: After deducting N19 Associates' mortgage and
other liabilities and expenses associated with the sale, a $45 million
purchase price for the Building would result in $900,000 of net
proceeds to the Plan in respect of the Interest. It is represented that
this price is very favorable to the Plan because it does not reflect
any discount for the fact that the JJS Partnership and the Plan hold
only minority, non-controlling interests, and the discounting of
minority, non-controlling interests is a recognized principle of
valuation.\11\ Assuming a sale (the Sale) of the Interest for $900,000,
the Applicant represents that the Plan will achieve an average annual
rate of return of approximately 11.5% per annum, based on Plan records
of cash amounts received or paid by the Plan during the term of this
investment (except for two years \12\ for which no records are
available). This calculation includes capital calls paid by the Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ This representation was made by the Applicant to both the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations and the NYRO.
\12\ Although no records are available for the years 1982 and
2001, the NYRO reviewed the available pertinent records and
concluded that the Sale, based upon the terms described herein,
would enable the NYRO to close its investigation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Applicant represents that according to its available records,
the Plan has received approximately $167,690 in cash distributions from
the JJS Partnership during the time it has
[[Page 68844]]
held the Interest.\13\ Specifically, according to the Applicant, the
Plan has historically received a portion of the rental income generated
by the Building. However, this source of revenue has been retained
pending completion of the litigation described above. The Applicant
requests that the scope of relief contained in this proposed exemption
include relief from section 406(b)(3) of ERISA (as well as section
406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and section 406(b)(1) and (2) of ERISA) since the
Employer may receive from the Partnership, subsequent to the Sale, the
Plan's current share of the undistributed revenue. According to the
Applicant, such amount is not currently quantifiable due to the
litigation and other factors that are outside of the control of
Studley. The Applicant stresses that it is in the best interests of the
Plan to consummate the Sale as soon as possible in order to provide
liquidity to the Plan, rather than to delay the date of the Sale until
after the litigation is resolved. The Applicant reiterates that the
amount of the Sale represents the best price the Plan may be expected
to receive for the Interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ The Applicant also represents that the Plan has paid
approximately $18,645 in capital calls. Thus, based on the available
figures, the Plan has received a net distribution of $149,045.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. In addition, the Employer has included in the terms of the
proposed Sale a ``true-up'' provision that the Employer will contribute
an additional amount to the Plan if (a) within seven years of the date
of the Sale of the Interest to the Employer, (i) the Employer sells the
Interest, (ii) JJS Partnership sells its interest in N19 Associates, or
(iii) N19 Associates sells the Building, and (b) the net amount
realized by the Employer in respect of the Interest upon and by reason
of such Sale, exceeds the sum of (i) the $900,000 price paid for the
Interest, and (ii) any capital contributed by the Employer to the JJS
Partnership in respect of the Interest after the date of the Sale and
any other funds paid or advanced by the Employer to, or on behalf of,
the JJS Partnership in respect of the Interest after the date of the
Sale. The Employer will contribute such excess amount to the Plan
within two weeks of its receipt by the Employer. Such contribution will
be allocated to the Plan accounts of participants who were invested in
the Interest at the time of the Sale.\14\ The Applicant also represents
that if, within seven years of the date of the Sale of the Interest by
the Plan to the Employer, the Employer, in its sole discretion, elects
to fund any capital call in respect of its own interest (that it owned
prior to the subject Sale) in the JJS Partnership, then, and only then,
will the Employer be obligated to the Plan to fund such capital call in
respect of the Interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ It is represented that the Plan's recordkeeper T. Rowe
Price will determine the affected Plan accounts in connection with
both the Sale of the Interest to the Employer and any future
additional contribution by the Employer per the true-up provision of
the Purchase and Sale Agreement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. The Applicant represents that the requested exemption for the
Sale of the Plan's Interest to the Employer is in the interest of the
Plan because it will enable the participants and beneficiaries to
realize the value of the Interest and receive requested distributions
in respect of their investment therein. The Applicant also represents
that the requested exemption is also protective of the rights of the
participants and beneficiaries of the Plan because the Sale price
reflects the best information available to the Employer of the
Interest's current fair market value, with no discount taken for a
minority, non-controlling interest. Moreover, according to the
Applicant, the ``true-up'' provision gives the participants and
beneficiaries of the Plan protection against a down market and allows
their full participation in any up market for the next seven years.
The Applicant also represents that the Sale of the Interest will be
a one-time transaction for cash, and the Plan will incur no fees,
commissions, or other expenses in connection with the Sale. Further,
the Employer will bear the costs of the exemption application and
notification of interested persons.
9. In consideration of the following conditions, the Department has
tentatively determined that the Sale will satisfy the statutory
criteria for an exemption under section 408(a) of the Act: (a) The Sale
will be a one-time transaction for cash; (b) the terms and conditions
of the Sale will be at least as favorable to the Plan as those that the
Plan could obtain in an arm's length transaction with an unrelated
third party; (c) the Interest will be sold for $900,000; (d) the Sale
will be consummated within two weeks after the date a final exemption
regarding the Sale is published in the Federal Register; (e) If, (1)
within seven years of the date of the Sale of the Interest to the
Employer, (i) the Employer sells the Interest, (ii) JJS Partnership
sells its interest in N19 Associates LLC (N19 Associates), or (iii) N19
Associates sells its building on N Street, Washington, DC, and (2) the
net amount realized by the Employer in respect of the Interest upon and
by reason of such sale, exceeds the sum of (i) the $900,000 price paid
for the Interest, and (ii) any capital contributed by the Employer to
the JJS Partnership in respect of the Interest after the date of the
Sale and any other funds paid or advanced by the Employer to, or on
behalf of, the JJS Partnership in respect of the Interest after the
date of the Sale, the Employer will contribute such excess amount to
the Plan within two weeks of its receipt by the Employer; (f) the Plan
will pay no commissions, fees, or other expenses in connection with the
Sale; and (g) the Plan has not waived or released and does not waive or
release any claims, demands, and/or causes of action that the Plan may
have against the Employer or the Plan fiduciaries in connection with
the acquisition and holding of the Interest or Sale of the Interest to
the Employer.
Notice to Interested Persons
All comments will be made available to the public. Warning: Do not
include any personally identifiable information (such as name, address,
or other contact information) or confidential business information that
you do not want publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the
Internet and can be retrieved by most Internet search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Eric A. Raps of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8532. (This is not a toll-free number.)
EquiLend Holdings LLC (EquiLend), Located in New York, New York
[Application No. D-11724]
Proposed Amendment to Exemption
Based on the facts and representations set forth in the
application, the Department is considering granting the following
amendment to Prohibited Transaction Exemption 2002-30 (67 FR 39069)
under the authority of ERISA section 408(a), section 8477(c)(3) of the
Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986 (FERSA) and Code
section 4975(c)(2), and in accordance with the procedures set forth in
29 CFR Part 2570, Subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011), as
follows:
Section I. Sale of Equilend Products to Plans
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
section 406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code section 4975(a) and (b), by reason of Code section
4975(c)(1)(A) and (D), shall not apply, effective October 1, 2012, to
the sale or licensing of certain data and/or analytical tools to a plan
by EquiLend, a party in interest with respect to such plan.
[[Page 68845]]
This exemption, if granted, would be subject to the following
conditions:
(a) The terms of any such sale or licensing are at least as
favorable to the plan as the terms generally available in an arm's-
length transaction involving an unrelated party;
(b) Any data sold/licensed to the plan will be limited to:
(1) Current and historical data related to transactions, whether or
not proposed or occurring on EquiLend's electronic securities lending
platform (the Platform) or,
(2) Data derived from current and historical data using statistical
or computational techniques; and
(c) Each analytical tool sold/licensed to the plan will be an
objective statistical or computational tool designed to permit the
evaluation of securities lending activities.
Section II. Use of Platform by Owner Lending Agent/Sale of Equilend
Products to Plans Represented by Owner Lending Agent/Provision of
Securities Lending Data Involving Plans to Equilend by Owner Lending
Agent
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
sections 406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and 406(b), FERSA section 8477(c)(2), and
the sanctions resulting from the application of Code section 4975(a)
and (b), by reason of Code section 4975(c)(1)(A) and (D) through (F),
shall not apply, effective October 1, 2012, to: (1) The participation
in the Platform by an equity owner of EquiLend (an Equity Owner), in
its capacity as a securities lending agent for a plan (an Owner Lending
Agent); (2) the sale or licensing of certain data and/or analytical
tools by EquiLend to a plan for which an Equity Owner acts as a
securities lending agent; and (3) the provision by an Owner Lending
Agent to EquiLend of securities lending data based on off-Platform
securities lending transactions conducted by an Owner Lending Agent on
behalf of a plan.
This proposed exemption, if granted, would be subject to the
following conditions:
(a) In the case of participation in the Platform on behalf of a
plan, to the extent an applicable exemption is required, the securities
lending transactions conform to the provisions of Prohibited
Transaction Class Exemption (PTE) 2006-16 (71 FR 63786 (Oct. 31, 2006))
(or its successor), and/or any applicable individual exemption;
(b) None of the fees imposed by EquiLend for securities lending
transactions conducted through the use of the Platform at the direction
of an Owner Lending Agent will be charged to a plan;
(c) Each securities lender and securities borrower participating in
a securities lending transaction through EquiLend will be notified by
EquiLend as to its responsibilities with respect to compliance, as
applicable, with ERISA, the Code, and FERSA. This requirement may be
met by including such notification in the participation, subscription
or other user agreement required to be executed by each participant in
EquiLend;
(d) EquiLend will not act as a principal in any securities lending
transaction involving plan assets;
(e) Each Owner Lending Agent will provide prior written notice to
its plan clients of its intention to participate in EquiLend;
(f)(1) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (i), the
arrangement pursuant to which the Owner Lending Agent utilizes the
services of EquiLend on behalf of a plan for securities lending:
(A) Is subject to the prior written authorization of an independent
fiduciary (an authorizing fiduciary) as defined in paragraph (b) of
Section III). For purposes of subparagraph (f)(1), the requirement that
the authorizing fiduciary be independent shall not apply in the case of
an Equity Owner Plan;
(B) May be terminated by the authorizing fiduciary, without penalty
to the plan, within the lesser of: (i) The time negotiated for such
notice of termination by the plan and the Owner Lending Agent, or (ii)
five business days. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the requirement for
prior written authorization will be deemed satisfied in the case of any
plan for which the authorizing fiduciary has previously provided
written authorization to the Owner Lending Agent pursuant to PTE 2006-
16 (or any predecessor or successor thereto), unless such authorizing
fiduciary objects to participation in the Platform in writing to the
Owner Lending Agent within 30 days following disclosure of the
information described in paragraphs (e) and (g) of this Section to such
authorizing fiduciary;
(2) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (i), each purchase or
license of a securities lending-related product from EquiLend on behalf
of a plan by an Owner Lending Agent:
(A) Is subject to the prior written authorization of an authorizing
fiduciary. For purposes of subparagraph (f)(2), the requirement for
prior written authorization shall not apply to any purchase or
licensing of an EquiLend securities lending-related product by an
Equity Owner Plan if the fee or cost associated with such purchase or
licensing is not paid by the Equity Owner Plan; and
(B) May be terminated by the authorizing fiduciary within: (i) The
time negotiated for such notice of termination by the plan and the
Owner Lending Agent; or (ii) five business days, whichever is lesser,
in either case without penalty to the plan, provided that, such
authorizing fiduciary shall be deemed to have given the necessary
authorization in satisfaction of this subparagraph (f)(2) with respect
to each specific product purchased or licensed pursuant thereto unless
such authorizing fiduciary objects to the Owner Lending Agent within 15
days after the delivery of information regarding such specific product
to the authorizing fiduciary in accordance with paragraph (g) of this
exemption; and
(3) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (i), provision by an
Owner Lending Agent to EquiLend of securities lending data based on
off-Platform securities lending transactions conducted on behalf of a
plan:
(A) Is subject to the prior written authorization of an authorizing
fiduciary; and
(B) May be terminated by the authorizing fiduciary with respect to
the future provision of data within the lesser of (i) the time
negotiated for such notice of termination by the plan and the Owner
Lending Agent or (ii) five business days, in either case without
penalty to the plan. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the requirement for
prior written authorization will be deemed satisfied unless such
authorizing fiduciary objects to provision by the Owner Lending Agent
to EquiLend of such data in writing to the Owner Lending Agent within
30 days following disclosure of the information described in paragraph
(g) of this Section to such authorizing fiduciary.
(g) The authorization(s) described in paragraph (f) of this Section
shall not be deemed to have been made unless the Owner Lending Agent
has furnished the authorizing fiduciary with any reasonably available
information that the Owner Lending Agent reasonably believes to be
necessary for the authorizing fiduciary to determine whether such
authorization should be made, and any other reasonably available
information regarding the matter that the authorizing fiduciary may
reasonably request. This includes, but is not limited to: (1) a
statement that the Equity Owner, as securities lending agent, has a
financial interest in the successful operation of EquiLend, (2) a
[[Page 68846]]
statement, provided on an annual basis, that the authorizing fiduciary
may terminate the arrangement(s) described in (f) above at any time,
and (3) a statement that the Owner Lending Agent intends to provide to
EquiLend securities lending data based on off-Platform securities
lending transactions conducted by the Owner Lending Agent on behalf of
the plan;
(h) Any purchase or licensing of data and/or analytical tools with
respect to securities lending activities by a plan pursuant to this
Section complies with the relevant conditions of Section I and will be
authorized in advance by an authorizing fiduciary in accordance with
the applicable procedures of paragraphs (f), (g) and (i);
(i) In the case of a pooled separate account maintained by an
insurance company qualified to do business in a state or a common or
collective trust fund maintained by a bank or trust company supervised
by a state or federal agency (Commingled Investment Fund), the
requirements of paragraph (f) of this Section shall not apply, provided
that--
(1) The information described in paragraph (g) (including
information with respect to any material change in the arrangement) of
this Section and a description of the operation of the Platform
(including a description of the fee structure paid by securities
lenders and borrowers), shall be furnished by the Owner Lending Agent
to the authorizing fiduciary (described in paragraph (b) of Section
III) with respect to each plan whose assets are invested in the account
or fund, not less than 30 days prior to implementation of any such
arrangement or material change thereto, or, not less than 15 days prior
to the purchase or license of any specific securities lending-related
product, and, where requested, upon the reasonable request of the
authorizing fiduciary. For purposes of this subparagraph, the
requirement that the authorizing fiduciary be independent shall not
apply in the case of an Equity Owner Plan;
(2) In the event any such authorizing fiduciary notifies the Owner
Lending Agent that it objects to participation in the Platform, or to
the purchase or license of any EquiLend securities lending-related tool
or product, or to the further provision by an Owner Lending Agent to
EquiLend of securities lending data based on off-Platform securities
lending transactions conducted on behalf of the plan, the plan on whose
behalf the objection was tendered is given the opportunity to terminate
its investment in the account or fund, without penalty to the plan,
within such time as may be necessary to effect the withdrawal in an
orderly manner that is equitable to all withdrawing plans and to the
non-withdrawing plans. In the case of a plan that elects to withdraw
pursuant to the foregoing, such withdrawal shall be effected prior to
the implementation of, or material change in, the arrangement or
purchase or license, but any existing arrangement need not be
discontinued by reason of a plan electing to withdraw; and
(3) In the case of a plan whose assets are proposed to be invested
in the pooled account or fund subsequent to the implementation of the
arrangements and which has not authorized the arrangements in the
manner described in paragraphs (i)(1) and (i)(2), the plan's investment
in the account or fund shall be authorized in the manner described in
paragraph (f)(1)(A), (f)(2)(A), and (f)(3)(A);
(j) The Equity Owner, together with its affiliates (as defined in
Section III(a)), does not own at the time of the execution of a
securities lending transaction on behalf of a plan by the Equity Owner
(i.e., in its capacity as Owner Lending Agent) through EquiLend or at
the time of the purchase, or commencement of licensing, of data and/or
analytical tools by the plan, more than 20% of:
(1) If EquiLend is a corporation, including a limited liability
company taxable as a corporation, the combined voting power of all
classes of stock entitled to vote or the total value of shares of all
classes of stock of EquiLend, or
(2) If EquiLend is a partnership, including a limited liability
company taxable as a partnership, the capital interest or the profits
interest of EquiLend;
(k) Any information, authorization, or termination of authorization
may be provided by mail or electronically; and
(l) No Equity Owner Plan, as defined in Section III(e), will
participate in the Platform, other than through a Commingled Investment
Fund in which the aggregate investment of all Equity Owner Plans at the
time of the transaction constitutes less than 20% of the total assets
of such fund. Notwithstanding the foregoing, this prohibition shall not
apply to the participation by an Equity Owner Plan as of the date that
the aggregate loan balance of all securities lending transactions
entered into through EquiLend by all participants outstanding on such
date (excluding transactions entered into on behalf of Equity Owner
Plans) is equal to or greater than $10 billion; provided that if such
aggregate loan balance is later determined to be less than $10 billion,
no additional participation by an Equity Owner Plan (other than through
a Commingled Investment Fund) shall occur until such time as the $10
billion threshold amount is again met.
Section III. Definitions
For purposes of this proposed exemption:
(a) An ``affiliate'' of another person means:
(1) Any person directly or indirectly, through one or more
intermediaries, controlling, controlled by, or under common control
with such other person;
(2) Any officer, director, partner, employee, relative (as defined
in ERISA section 3(15)) of such other person; and
(3) Any corporation or partnership of which such other person is an
officer, director or partner.
For purposes of this paragraph, the term ``control'' means the
power to exercise a controlling influence over the management or
policies of a person other than an individual.
(b) The term ``authorizing fiduciary'' means, with respect to an
Owner Lending Agent, a plan fiduciary who is independent of such Owner
Lending Agent. In this regard, an authorizing fiduciary will not be
considered independent of an Owner Lending Agent if:
(1) Such fiduciary directly or indirectly controls, is controlled
by, or is under common control with the Owner Lending Agent; or
(2) Such fiduciary directly or indirectly receives any compensation
or other consideration from the Owner Lending Agent or an affiliate for
his or her own personal account in connection with any securities
lending transaction described herein; provided that Commingled
Investment Funds and Equity Owner Plans maintained by such Owner
Lending Agent or an affiliate will not be deemed affiliates of such
Owner Lending Agent for purposes of this subparagraph (2).
For purposes of Section II, no Equity Owner or any affiliate may be
an authorizing fiduciary except in the case of an Equity Owner Plan.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the requirements for consent by an
authorizing fiduciary with respect to participation in the Platform,
and the annual right of such fiduciary to terminate such participation,
shall be deemed met to the extent that the Owner Lending Agent's
proposed utilization of the services of EquiLend on behalf of a plan
for securities lending has been approved by an order of a United States
district court.
[[Page 68847]]
(c) The term ``Owner Lending Agent'' means an Equity Owner in its
capacity as a fiduciary of a plan acting as securities lending agent in
connection with the loan of plan assets that are securities.
(d) The term ``Equity Owner'' means an entity that either directly
or through an affiliate owns an equity ownership interest in EquiLend.
(e) The term ``Equity Owner Plan'' means a plan which is
established or maintained by an Equity Owner of EquiLend as an employer
of employees covered by such plan, or by its affiliate.
(f) The terms ``plan'' means:
(1) An ``employee benefit plan'' within the meaning of ERISA
section 3(3), subject to Part 4 of Subtitle B of Title I of ERISA,
(2) A ``plan'' that is within the meaning of Code section
4975(e)(1) and subject to Code section 4975, or
(3) The Federal Thrift Savings Fund.
Effective Date: The proposed exemption would be effective October
1, 2012 with respect to arrangements entered into on or after that
date. The provisions of PTE 2002-30 shall continue to apply to
arrangements entered into before October 1, 2012.
Summary of Facts and Representations
1. The applicant is EquiLend, a Delaware limited liability company
established on May 16, 2001. As of March 15, 2012, the equity owners of
EquiLend were as follows: BlackRock, Credit Suisse, JP Morgan Clearing
Corp., JP Morgan Chase, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, State Street,
Goldman Sachs, Northern Trust and UBS, or affiliates of the foregoing
entities. The applicant represents that, as of March 15, 2012, each
equity owner owned 10 percent of EquiLend.
2. The applicant submitted a request that Prohibited Transaction
Exemption 2002-30 (67 FR 39069) (PTE 2002-30) be amended. PTE 2002-30
was originally promulgated on June 6, 2002, and it permits: (1) The
sale or licensing of certain data and/or analytical tools to an
employee benefit plan by EquiLend; (2) participation in the Platform by
an equity owner of EquiLend (an Equity Owner), in its capacity as a
securities lending agent for the plan (an Owner Lending Agent); and (3)
the sale or licensing of certain data and/or analytical tools by
EquiLend to a plan for which an Equity Owner acts as an Owner Lending
Agent. Unless otherwise noted, the facts and representations of PTE
2002-30, are integrated herein.\15\
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\15\ The applicant represents that, to the best of its
knowledge, EquiLend has complied with all applicable conditions set
forth in PTE 2002-30.
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3. The applicant represents that, as permitted under Section I of
PTE 2002-30, EquiLend currently sells and/or licenses certain data to
plans. Consistent with the terms of the individual exemption, this data
is: (A) Historical in nature and relates to transactions proposed or
occurring on the system; or (B) derived from current and historical
data utilizing statistical or computational techniques. In this regard,
the applicant notes that Section I(b) of PTE 2002-30 requires that,
with respect to the sale or licensing of certain data and/or analytical
tools to an employee benefit plan by EquiLend:
(b) Any data sold/licensed to the plan will be limited to: (1)
current and historical data related to transactions proposed or
occurring on the Platform or, (2) data derived from current and
historical data using statistical or computational techniques.
4. The applicant is seeking to amend Section I(b) of PTE 2002-30,
effective October 1, 2012. The applicant notes that Section I(b) of PTE
2002-30 limits the types of data that may be licensed or sold by
EquiLend. Specifically, Section I(b) precludes the sale or licensing of
data to a plan by Equilend where such data sold/licensed involves the
use of current or historical data related to transactions that are
proposed or occurring off the Platform. The applicant believes,
however, that access to off-Platform securities lending data by plans
will further enhance EquiLend's existing client service functionality
via the Platform by expanding the information that is available to
plans. The applicant states that the addition of additional data to the
Platform enhances the ability of a plan to evaluate the performance of
lending agents and the returns on lending portfolios.
5. The applicant, therefore, requests that the Department revise
Section I(b) of PTE 2002-30 in a manner that would permit, effective
October 1, 2012, EquiLend to use, sell or license data relating to
transactions occurring off the Platform to plans. If this proposed
amendment is granted, Section I(b) of PTE 2002-30 will provide that:
(b) Any data sold/licensed to the plan will be limited to:
(1) Current and historical data related to transactions, whether
or not proposed or occurring on EquiLend's electronic securities
lending platform (the Platform) or,
(2) Data derived from current and historical data using
statistical or computational techniques.
6. In the applicant's view, affected plans would be adequately
protected with respect to the sale and licensing by EquiLend of this
off-Platform data. In this regard, the applicant notes that Section
I(b) of PTE 2002-30 limits the type of data that may be sold and
licensed by EquiLend to current and historical data related to
securities lending transactions, or data derived from current and
historical data using statistical or computational techniques. Further,
the applicant notes that the terms of any sale or licensing of data
must be at least as favorable to the plan as the terms generally
available in an arm's-length transaction involving an unrelated party.
The applicant represents that these limitations/conditions are
sufficient to ensure that plans would be adequately protected to the
extent Section I(b) of PTE 2002-30 is revised to include any current
and historical data related to transactions proposed occurring off the
Platform.\16\
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\16\ The proposed amended exemption does not provide relief
under Section I from ERISA section 406(a)(1)(C) with respect to the
use of the Platform on behalf of a plan by a lending fiduciary which
is not an Equity Owner. In this regard, the applicant and the
lending fiduciaries intend to rely on ERISA section 408(b)(2) to the
extent any such relief is necessary.
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7. The applicant also seeks to amend Section II of PTE 2002-30,
effective October 1, 2012. Section II presently permits: (1)
Participation in the Platform by an Equity Owner, in its capacity as an
Owner Lending Agent; and (2) the sale or licensing of certain data and/
or analytical tools by EquiLend to a plan for which an Equity Owner
acts as an Owner Lending Agent. The applicant notes that Section II of
the individual exemption does not permit the provision by an Owner
Lending Agent to EquiLend of securities lending data based on off-
Platform securities lending transactions conducted by an Owner Lending
Agent on behalf of a plan.
8. However, for the same reasons stated above, the applicant
believes that access to off-Platform securities lending data by plans
will further enhance EquiLend's existing client service functionality
via the Platform by expanding the information that is available to
plans. The applicant, therefore, requests that the Department amend PTE
2002-30 to permit, effective October 1, 2012, the provision by an Owner
Lending Agent to EquiLend of securities lending data based on off-
Platform securities lending transactions conducted by an Owner Lending
Agent on behalf of a plan. The applicant notes that, if this proposed
amendment is adopted, the three categories of transactions covered by
Section II would be: (1) The participation in the Platform by an Equity
Owner, in its capacity as an Owner Lending Agent; (2) the sale or
licensing of certain data and/
[[Page 68848]]
or analytical tools by EquiLend to a plan for which an Equity Owner
acts as a securities lending agent; and (3) the provision by an Owner
Lending Agent to EquiLend of securities lending data based on off-
Platform securities lending transactions conducted by an Owner Lending
Agent on behalf of a plan.
9. The applicant believes that affected plans would be adequately
protected with respect to the proposed amendment to Section II. In this
regard, a new condition is proposed in Section II that would be
applicable to the new category of transactions that would be covered
therein. To the extent an Owner Lending Agent provides to EquiLend data
based on off-Platform securities lending transactions conducted on
behalf of plans, prior to such provision of data, each Owner Lending
Agent will disclose to a plan's authorizing fiduciary who is
independent of the Owner Lending Agent and EquiLend (other than in case
of an Equity Owner Plan) that such Owner Lending Agent intends to
provide to EquiLend data based on off-Platform securities lending
transactions conducted on behalf the plan. Thereafter, the plan's
authorizing fiduciary must consent to provision of such data by the
Owner Lending Agent to EquiLend (such authorizing fiduciary will be
deemed to have given the required authorization unless such authorizing
fiduciary objects in writing to the provision to EquiLend of data based
on off-Platform securities lending transactions conducted on behalf of
the plan to the Owner Lending Agent within 30 days after disclosure of
such information). This authorization may be terminated with respect to
the future provision of data by the authorizing fiduciary without
penalty to the plan, within the lesser of: (i) The time negotiated for
such notice of termination by the plan and the Owner Lending Agent, or
(ii) five business days.\17\
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\17\ The Department notes that ERISA's general standards of
fiduciary conduct also would apply. In this regard, ERISA section
404 requires, among other things, a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting a plan solely in the interest of the plan's
participants and beneficiaries and in a prudent manner. Accordingly,
an independent plan fiduciary must act prudently with respect to:
(1) The decision to enter into the described arrangement; and (2)
the negotiation of the terms of such arrangement including any
payment of compensation. The Department further emphasizes that it
expects plan fiduciaries, prior to entering into any of the proposed
arrangements, to fully understand the extent of the services to be
provided, the fee structure and the risks associated with these
types of arrangements following disclosure by the service provider
of all relevant information. In addition, the Department notes that
such plan fiduciaries are responsible for periodically monitoring
the services provided.
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10. The applicant notes that Section II of PTE 2002-30 contains
other conditions that are designed to ensure that plans are adequately
protected with respect to this amendment, if adopted. Specifically,
conditions (a) through (j) of the individual exemption require that:
(A) In the case of participation in the Platform on behalf of a
plan, to the extent applicable the procedures regarding the securities
lending activities conform to the provisions of PTE 2006-16 (or its
successor), and/or any applicable individual exemption;
(B) None of the fees imposed by EquiLend for securities lending
transactions conducted through the use of the Platform at the direction
of an Owner Lending Agent will be charged to a plan;
(C) Each securities lender and securities borrower participating in
a securities lending transaction through EquiLend will be notified by
EquiLend as to its responsibilities with respect to compliance, as
applicable, with ERISA, the Code, and FERSA;
(D) Equilend will not act as a principal in any security lending
transaction involving plan assets;
(E) Each Equity Owner will provide prior written notice to its plan
clients of its intention to participate in EquiLend;
(F) The arrangement pursuant to which the Equity Owner utilizes the
services of EquiLend on behalf of a plan:
(1) Is subject to the prior written authorization of an authorizing
fiduciary;
(2) May be terminated by the authorizing fiduciary, without penalty
to the plan, within the lesser of: (i) The time negotiated for such
notice of termination by the plan and the Equity Owner, or (ii) five
business days;
(G) With certain limited exceptions, each purchase or license of a
securities lending-related product from EquiLend is subject to the
prior authorization of an authorizing fiduciary;
(H) The Equity Owner will furnish each authorizing fiduciary with
any reasonably available information which the Equity Owner reasonably
believes to be necessary to determine whether such authorization should
be made or renewed;
(I) The provision by an Owner Lending Agent to EquiLend of data
based on off-Platform securities lending transactions conducted on
behalf of a plan:
(1) Is subject to the prior authorization of an authorizing
fiduciary ;
(2) May be terminated by the authorizing fiduciary with respect to
the future provision of data, without penalty to the plan, within the
lesser of: (i) The time negotiated for such notice of termination by
the plan and the Equity Owner, or (ii) five business days; and
(J) The Equity Owner, together with its affiliates, does not own at
the time of the execution of a securities lending transaction on behalf
of a plan by the Equity Owner through EquiLend or at the time of the
purchase, or commencement of licensing, of data and/or analytical tools
by the plan, more than 20% of EquiLend.
11. In summary, the applicant represents that this proposed
amendment to PTE 2002-30 satisfies the statutory criteria for an
administrative exemption contained in ERISA section 408(a) and Code
section 4975(c)(2) because, among other things: (a) The proposed
amendment to Section I and Section II of PTE 2002-30 will be
administratively feasible and protective of and in the best interests
of the plans and their participants and beneficiaries because of the
conditions set forth originally and for the same reasons as set forth
originally in PTE 2002-30; and (b) the proposed amendment to Section II
of PTE 2002-30 will be additionally protective of the rights of
participants and beneficiaries because each Owner Lending Agent will
disclose to a plan's authorizing fiduciary who is independent of the
Owner Lending Agent and EquiLend (other than in case of an Equity Owner
Plan) that such Owner Lending Agent intends to provide to EquiLend data
based on off-Platform securities lending transactions conducted on
behalf a plan. Further, the plan's authorizing fiduciary must consent
to the provision of such data by the Owner Lending Agent to EquiLend.
Notice to Interested Parties
The applicant represents that the potentially interested
participants and beneficiaries cannot all be identified and therefore
the only practical means of notifying such participants and
beneficiaries of this proposed exemption is by the publication of this
notice in the Federal Register. Comments and requests for a hearing
must be received by the Department not later than 30 days from the date
of publication of this notice of proposed exemption in the Federal
Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brian Shiker of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8552. (This is not a toll-free number.)
General Information
The attention of interested persons is directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the subject of an exemption
under section 408(a) of the Act and/or section
[[Page 68849]]
4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve a fiduciary or other party in
interest or disqualified person from certain other provisions of the
Act and/or the Code, including any prohibited transaction provisions to
which the exemption does not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404 of the Act, which, among other
things, require a fiduciary to discharge his duties respecting the plan
solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries of the
plan and in a prudent fashion in accordance with section 404(a)(1)(b)
of the Act; nor does it affect the requirement of section 401(a) of the
Code that the plan must operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be granted under section 408(a) of the
Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, the Department must find
that the exemption is administratively feasible, in the interests of
the plan and of its participants and beneficiaries, and protective of
the rights of participants and beneficiaries of the plan;
(3) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be supplemental to,
and not in derogation of, any other provisions of the Act and/or the
Code, including statutory or administrative exemptions and transitional
rules. Furthermore, the fact that a transaction is subject to an
administrative or statutory exemption is not dispositive of whether the
transaction is in fact a prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be subject to the
express condition that the material facts and representations contained
in each application are true and complete, and that each application
accurately describes all material terms of the transaction which is the
subject of the exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 9th day of November, 2012.
Lyssa E. Hall,
Director of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2012-27849 Filed 11-15-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P