The RBB Fund, Inc., et al.;, 31420-31426 [2015-13176]
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comment letters regarding the proposed
rule change.
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 3 provides
that, within 45 days of the publication
of the notice of the filing of a proposed
rule change, or within such longer
period up to 90 days as the Commission
may designate if it finds such longer
period to be appropriate and publishes
its reasons for so finding, or as to which
the self-regulatory organization
consents, the Commission shall either
approve the proposed rule change,
disapprove the proposed rule change, or
institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved. The
Commission is extending this 45-day
time period.
The Commission finds that it is
appropriate to designate a longer period
within which to take action on the
proposed rule change so that it has
sufficient time to consider the proposed
rule change. Accordingly, the
Commission, pursuant to section
19(b)(2) of the Act,4 designates July 13,
2015 as the date by which the
Commission should either approve or
disapprove or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change (File Number SR–
NYSE–2015–15).
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.5
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–13171 Filed 6–1–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. IC–31648; File No. 812–14206]
The RBB Fund, Inc., et al.; Notice of
Application
May 27, 2015.
Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’).
ACTION: Notice of application pursuant
to section 6(c) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended (the
‘‘1940 Act’’), seeking exemptions from
sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a) and 15(b) of
the 1940 Act and Rules 6e–2(b)(15) and
6e–3(T)(b)(15) thereunder.
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AGENCY:
The RBB Fund, Inc. (the
‘‘Company’’), Matson Money, Inc.
(‘‘Matson’’) and Summit Global
Investments, LLC (‘‘Summit’’ and,
APPLICANTS:
3 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
4 Id.
5 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(31).
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collectively with the Company and
Matson, the ‘‘Applicants’’).
SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicants
request an order granting exemptions
from sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a), and
15(b) of the 1940 Act and Rules 6e–
2(b)(15) and 6e–3(T)(b)(15) thereunder,
in cases where a life insurance separate
account supporting variable life
insurance contracts (‘‘VLI Accounts’’)
holds shares of an existing portfolio of
the Company that is designed to be sold
to VLI Accounts or VA Accounts (as
defined below) for which Matson,
Summit or any of their affiliates, may
serve as investment adviser, subadviser, manager, administrator,
principal underwriter or sponsor
(‘‘Existing Fund’’) or ‘‘Future Fund’’ 1
(any Existing Fund or Future Fund is
referred to herein as a ‘‘Fund’’ and
collectively, the ‘‘Funds’’), and one or
more of the following other types of
investors also hold shares of the Funds:
(i) Any life insurance company separate
account supporting variable annuity
contracts (‘‘VA Accounts’’) and any VLI
Account; (ii) trustees of qualified group
pension or group retirement plans
outside the separate account context
(‘‘Qualified Plans’’); (iii) the investment
adviser or any subadviser to a Fund or
affiliated persons of the adviser or
subadviser (representing seed money
investments in a Fund) (‘‘Advisers’’);
and (iv) any general account of an
insurance company depositor of VA
Accounts and/or VLI Accounts
(‘‘General Accounts’’).
FILING DATE: The application was filed
on August 30, 2013, and amended and
restated on September 25, 2014, and
May 13, 2015.
HEARING OR NOTIFICATION OF HEARING:
An order granting the application will
be issued unless the Commission orders
a hearing. Interested persons may
request a hearing by writing to the
Secretary of the Commission and
serving Applicants with a copy of the
request, personally or by mail. Hearing
requests should be received by the
Commission by 5:30 p.m. on June 22,
2015, and should be accompanied by
proof of service on Applicants, in the
form of an affidavit or, for lawyers, a
certificate of service. Hearing requests
should state the nature of the writer’s
interest, the reason for the request, and
the issues contested. Persons may
request notification of a hearing by
1 As used herein, a ‘‘Future Fund’’ is any
investment portfolio or series thereof of the
Company, other than an Existing Fund, designed to
be sold to VA Accounts and/or VLI Accounts and
to which Matson, Summit or their affiliates may in
the future serve as investment adviser, sub-adviser,
manager, administrator, principal underwriter or
sponsor.
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writing to the Secretary of the
Commission.
ADDRESSES: Secretary, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
Applicants: The RBB Fund, Inc. c/o
Mary Jo Reilly, Esq., Drinker Biddle &
Reath LLP, One Logan Square, Ste.
2000, Philadelphia, PA, 19103–6996;
Mark E. Matson, Matson Money, Inc.,
5955 Deerfield Blvd., Mason, OH 45040;
and David Harden, Summit Global
Investments, LLC, 620 South Main St.,
Bountiful, UT, 84010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sonny Oh, Senior Counsel, or Joyce M.
Pickholz, Branch Chief, Disclosure
Review Office (Insured Investments),
Division of Investment Management at
(202) 551–6795.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
following is a summary of the
application. The complete application
may be obtained via the Commission’s
Web site by searching for the file
number, or for an applicant using the
Company name box, at https://
www.sec.gov/search.htm, or by calling
(202) 551–8090.
Applicants’ Representations
1. The Company was organized as a
Maryland corporation on February 29,
1988 and is registered under the 1940
Act as an open-end management
investment company (Reg. File No. 811–
5518). The Company is a series
investment company as defined by Rule
18f–2 under the 1940 Act and is
currently comprised of twenty-three
portfolios managed by ten different
investment advisers, six sub-advisers
and seven commodity trading subadvisers hereinafter collectively, (the
‘‘investment advisers’’). The investment
advisers may or may not be affiliated
with each other. None of the current
investment advisers are affiliated with
the Company. Each portfolio pursues its
own investment strategy and is liable for
its own expenses. However, the
combination of multiple portfolios
managed by multiple investment
advisers into a single registered
investment company allows the
portfolios to share a single Board of
Directors (‘‘Board’’), as well as common
officers, fund counsel, custodian and
other service providers. Expenses
common to one or more portfolios can
be shared by those portfolios, thus
allowing the portfolios to realize
economies of scale and reduce operating
expenses. The Company may establish
additional portfolios and classes of
shares of each portfolio in the future.
Shares of the Funds will not be offered
to the general public.
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2. Matson currently serves as the
investment adviser to six portfolios of
the Company, including the Existing
Funds. It is anticipated that Matson will
also serve as the Adviser to one or more
of the Future Funds, subject to the
authority of the Board. Matson is
registered as an investment adviser
under the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 Act (‘‘Advisers Act’’).
3. Summit currently serves as the
investment adviser to one portfolio of
the Company. It is anticipated that
Summit will serve as the Adviser to one
or more of the Funds, subject to the
authority of the Board. Summit is
registered as an investment adviser
under the Advisers Act.
4. The Funds propose to, and other
Funds may in the future propose to,
offer and sell their shares to VLI and VA
Accounts of affiliated and unaffiliated
life insurance companies (‘‘Participating
Insurance Companies’’) to serve as
investment media to support variable
life insurance contracts (VLI Contracts’’)
and variable annuity contracts (‘‘VA
Contacts’’) (VLI Contracts and VA
Contracts together, ‘‘Variable
Contracts’’) issued through such
accounts respectively, VLI Accounts
and VA Accounts (VLI Accounts and
VA Accounts together, ‘‘Separate
Accounts’’). Each Separate Account is or
will be established as a segregated asset
account by a Participating Insurance
Company pursuant to the insurance law
of the insurance company’s state of
domicile. Presently, TIAA–CREF Life
Insurance Company is the only
Participating Insurance Company.
5. The Funds will sell their shares to
Separate Accounts only if each
Participating Insurance Company
sponsoring such a Separate Account
enters into a participation agreement
with the Funds. The participation
agreements define or will define the
relationship between each Fund and
each Participating Insurance Company
and memorialize or will memorialize,
among other matters, the fact that,
except where the agreement specifically
provides otherwise, the Participating
Insurance Company will remain
responsible for establishing and
maintaining any Separate Account
covered by the agreement and for
complying with all applicable
requirements of state and federal law
pertaining to such accounts and to the
sale and distribution of Variable
Contracts issued through such Separate
Accounts. The role of the Funds under
this arrangement, with regard to the
federal securities laws, will consist of
offering and selling shares of the Funds
to the Separate Accounts and fulfilling
any conditions that the Commission
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may impose in granting the requested
order.
6. The use of a common management
investment company (or investment
portfolio thereof) as an investment
medium for both VLI Accounts and VA
Accounts of the same Participating
Insurance Company, or of two or more
insurance companies that are affiliated
persons of each other, is referred to
herein as ‘‘mixed funding.’’ The use of
a common management investment
company (or investment portfolio
thereof) as an investment medium for
VLI Accounts and/or VA Accounts of
two or more Participating Insurance
Companies that are not affiliated
persons of each other is referred to
herein as ‘‘shared funding.’’
7. Applicants propose that the Funds
may offer their shares directly to
Qualified Plans, Advisers, and the
General Accounts of a Participating
Insurance Company.
8. The use of a common management
investment company (or investment
portfolio thereof) as an investment
medium for Separate Accounts,
Qualified Plans, Advisers and General
Accounts is referred to herein as
‘‘extended mixed funding.’’
Applicants’ Legal Analysis
1. Section 9(a)(3) of the 1940 Act
makes it unlawful for any company to
serve as an investment adviser or
principal underwriter of any investment
company, including a unit investment
trust, if an affiliated person of that
company is subject to disqualification
enumerated in section 9(a)(1) or (2) of
the 1940 Act. Sections 13(a), 15(a), and
15(b) of the 1940 Act have been deemed
by the Commission to require ‘‘passthrough’’ voting with respect to an
underlying investment company’s
shares.
2. Rules 6e–2(b)(15) and
6e–3(T)(b)(15) under the 1940 Act
provide partial exemptions from
sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a), and 15(b) of
the 1940 Act to VLI Accounts
supporting certain VLI Contracts and to
their life insurance company depositors
under limited circumstances, as
described in the application. VLI
Accounts, their depositors and their
principal underwriters may not rely on
the exemptions provided by Rules 6e–
2(b)(15) and 6e–3(T)(b)(15) if shares of
the Fund are held by a VLI Account
through which certain VLI Contracts are
issued, a VLI Account of an unaffiliated
Participating Insurance Company, an
unaffiliated Adviser, any VA Account, a
Qualified Plan or a General Account.
Accordingly, Applicants request an
order of the Commission granting
exemptions from sections 9(a), 13(a),
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15(a), and 15(b) of the 1940 Act and
Rules 6e–2(b)(15) and 6e–3(T)(b)(15)
thereunder in cases where a scheduled
premium VLI Account holds shares of a
Fund and one or more of the following
types of investors also hold Shares of
the Funds: (i) VA Accounts and VLI
Accounts (supporting scheduled
premium or flexible premium VLI
Contracts) of affiliated and unaffiliated
Participating Insurance Companies; (ii)
Qualified Plans; (iii) Advisers; and/or
(iv) General Accounts.
3. Applicants maintain that there is
no policy reason for the sale of Fund
Shares to Qualified Plans, Advisers or
General Accounts to prohibit or
otherwise limit a Participating
Insurance Company from relying on the
relief provided by Rules 6e–2(b)(15) and
6e–3(T)(b)(15). Nonetheless, Rule 6e–2
and Rule 6e–3(T) each specifically
provides that the relief granted
thereunder is available only where
shares of the underlying fund are
offered exclusively to insurance
company separate accounts. In this
regard, Applicants request exemptive
relief to the extent necessary to permit
shares of the Funds to be sold to
Qualified Plans, Advisers and General
Accounts while allowing Participating
Insurance Companies and their Separate
Accounts to enjoy the benefits of the
relief granted under Rule 6e–2(b)(15)
and Rule 6e–3(T)(b)(15). Applicants
note that if the Funds were to sell their
shares only to Qualified Plans,
exemptive relief under Rule 6e–2 and
Rule 6e–3(T) would not be necessary.
The relief provided for under Rule
6e–2(b)(15) and Rule 6e–3(T)(b)(15)
does not relate to Qualified Plans,
Advisers or General Accounts or to a
registered investment company’s ability
to sell its shares to such purchasers.
4. Applicants are not aware of any
reason for excluding separate accounts
and investment companies engaged in
shared funding from the exemptive
relief provided under Rules 6e–2(b)(15)
and 6e–3(T)(b)(15), or for excluding
separate accounts and investment
companies engaged in mixed funding
from the exemptive relief provided
under Rule 6e–2(b)(15). Similarly,
Applicants are not aware of any reason
for excluding Participating Insurance
Companies from the exemptive relief
requested because the Funds may also
sell their shares to Qualified Plans,
Advisers and General Accounts. Rather,
Applicants submit that the proposed
sale of shares of the Funds to these
purchasers may allow for the
development of larger pools of assets
resulting in the potential for greater
investment and diversification
opportunities, and for decreased
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expenses at higher asset levels resulting
in greater cost efficiencies.
5. For the reasons explained below,
Applicants have concluded that
investment by Qualified Plans, Advisers
and General Accounts in the Funds
should not increase the risk of material
irreconcilable conflicts between owners
of VLI Contracts and other types of
investors or between owners of VLI
Contracts issued by unaffiliated
Participating Insurance Companies.
6. Consistent with the Commission’s
authority under section 6(c) of the 1940
Act to grant exemptive orders to a class
or classes of persons and transactions,
Applicants request exemptions for a
class consisting of Participating
Insurance Companies and their separate
accounts investing in Existing and
Future Funds of the Company, as well
as their principal underwriters.
7. Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act
provides, in part, that the Commission,
by order upon application, may
conditionally or unconditionally
exempt any person, security or
transaction, or any class or classes of
persons, securities or transactions, from
any provision or provisions of the 1940
Act, or any rule or regulation
thereunder, if and to the extent that
such exemption is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest and
consistent with the protection of
investors and the purposes fairly
intended by the policy and provisions of
the 1940 Act. Applicants submit that the
exemptions requested are appropriate in
the public interest and consistent with
the protection of investors and the
purposes fairly intended by the policy
and provisions of the 1940 Act.
8. Section 9(a)(3) of the 1940 Act
provides, among other things, that it is
unlawful for any company to serve as
investment adviser or principal
underwriter of any registered open-end
investment company if an affiliated
person of that company is subject to a
disqualification enumerated in sections
9(a)(1) or (2). Rules 6e–2(b)(15)(i) and
(ii) and Rules 6e–3(T)(b)(15)(i) and (ii)
under the 1940 Act provide exemptions
from section 9(a) under certain
circumstances, subject to the limitations
discussed above on mixed funding,
extended mixed funding and shared
funding. These exemptions limit the
application of the eligibility restrictions
to affiliated individuals or companies
that directly participate in management
or administration of the underlying
investment company.
9. Rules 6e–2(b)(15)(iii) and
6e–3(T)(b)(15)(iii) under the 1940 Act
provide exemptions from pass-through
voting requirements with respect to
several significant matters, assuming the
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limitations on mixed funding, extended
mixed funding and shared funding are
observed. Rules 6e–2(b)(15)(iii)(A) and
6e–3(T)(b)(15)(iii)(A) provide that the
insurance company may disregard the
voting instructions of its variable life
insurance contract owners with respect
to the investments of an underlying
investment company, or any contract
between such an investment company
and its investment adviser, when
required to do so by an insurance
regulatory authority (subject to the
provisions of paragraphs (b)(5)(i) and
(b)(7)(ii)(A) of Rules 6e–2 and 6e–3(T)).
Rules 6e–2(b)(15)(iii)(B) and 6e–
3(T)(b)(15)(iii)(A)(2) provide that an
insurance company may disregard the
voting instructions of owners of its
variable life insurance contracts if such
owners initiate any change in an
underlying investment company’s
investment policies, principal
underwriter or any investment adviser
(provided that disregarding such voting
instructions is reasonable and subject to
the other provisions of paragraphs
(b)(5)(ii), (b)(7)(ii)(B) and (b)(7)(ii)(C) of
Rules 6e–2 and 6e–3(T)).
10. Applicants represent that the sale
of Fund shares to Qualified Plans,
Advisers or General Accounts will not
have any impact on the exemptions
requested herein regarding the disregard
of pass-through voting rights. Shares
sold to Qualified Plans will be held by
such Qualified Plans. The exercise of
voting rights by Qualified Plans,
whether by trustees, participants,
beneficiaries, or investment managers
engaged by the Qualified Plans, does not
raise the type of issues respecting
disregard of voting rights that are raised
by VLI Accounts. With respect to
Qualified Plans, which are not
registered as investment companies
under the 1940 Act, there is no
requirement to pass through voting
rights to Qualified Plan participants.
Indeed, to the contrary, applicable law
expressly reserves voting rights
associated with Qualified Plan assets to
certain specified persons.
11. Similarly, Advisers and General
Accounts are not subject to any passthrough voting rights. Accordingly,
unlike the circumstances surrounding
Separate Account investments in shares
of the Funds, the issue of the resolution
of any material irreconcilable conflicts
with respect to voting is not present
with respect to Advisers or General
Accounts of Participating Insurance
Companies.
12. Applicants recognize that the
prohibitions on mixed and shared
funding might reflect concern regarding
possible different investment
motivations among investors. When
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Rule 6e–2 was first adopted, variable
annuity separate accounts could invest
in mutual funds whose shares were also
offered to the general public. However,
now, under the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 (the ‘‘Code’’), any underlying
fund, including the Funds, that sells
shares to VA Accounts or VLI Accounts,
would, in effect, be precluded from also
selling its shares to the public.
Consequently, the Funds may not sell
their shares to the public.
13. Applicants assert that the rights of
an insurance company on its own
initiative or on instructions from a state
insurance regulator to disregard the
voting instructions of owners of
Variable Contracts is not inconsistent
with either mixed funding or shared
funding. Applicants state that The
National Association of Insurance
Commissioners Variable Life Insurance
Model Regulation (the ‘‘NAIC Model
Regulation’’) suggests that it is unlikely
that insurance regulators would find an
underlying fund’s investment policy,
investment adviser or principal
underwriter objectionable for one type
of Variable Contract but not another
type.
14. Applicants assert that shared
funding by unaffiliated insurance
companies does not present any issues
that do not already exist where a single
insurance company is licensed to do
business in several or all states. A
particular state insurance regulator
could require action that is inconsistent
with the requirements of other states in
which the insurance company offers its
contracts. However, the fact that
different insurers may be domiciled in
different states does not create a
significantly different or enlarged
problem. Shared funding by unaffiliated
insurers, in this respect, is no different
than the use of the same investment
company as the funding vehicle for
affiliated insurers, which Rules 6e–
2(b)(15) and 6e–3(T)(b)(15) permit.
Affiliated insurers may be domiciled in
different states and be subject to
differing state law requirements.
Affiliation does not reduce the
potential, if any exists, for differences in
state regulatory requirements.
Applicants state that in any event, the
conditions set forth below are designed
to safeguard against, and provide
procedures for resolving, any adverse
effects that differences among state
regulatory requirements may produce. If
a particular state insurance regulator’s
decision conflicts with the majority of
other state regulators, then the affected
Participating Insurance Company will
be required to withdraw its separate
account investments in the relevant
Fund. This requirement will be
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provided for in the participation
agreement that will be entered into by
Participating Insurance Companies with
the relevant Fund.
15. Rules 6e–2(b)(15) and 6e–
3(T)(b)(15) give Participating Insurance
Companies the right to disregard the
voting instructions of VLI Contract
owners in certain circumstances. This
right derives from the authority of state
insurance regulators over Separate
Accounts. Under Rules 6e–2(b)(15) and
6e–3(T)(b)(15), a Participating Insurance
Company may disregard VLI Contract
owner voting instructions only with
respect to certain specified items.
Affiliation does not eliminate the
potential, if any exists, for divergent
judgments as to the advisability or
legality of a change in investment
policies, principal underwriter or
investment adviser initiated by such
Contract owners. The potential for
disagreement is limited by the
requirements in Rules 6e–2 and 6e–3(T)
that the Participating Insurance
Company’s disregard of voting
instructions be reasonable and based on
specific good faith determinations.
16. A particular Participating
Insurance Company’s disregard of
voting instructions, nevertheless, could
conflict with the voting instructions of
a majority of VLI Contract owners. The
Participating Insurance Company’s
action possibly could be different than
the determination of all or some of the
other Participating Insurance
Companies (including affiliated
insurers) that the voting instructions of
VLI Contract owners should prevail, and
either could preclude a majority vote
approving the change or could represent
a minority view. If the Participating
Insurance Company’s judgment
represents a minority position or would
preclude a majority vote, then the
Participating Insurance Company may
be required, at the relevant Fund’s
election, to withdraw its Separate
Accounts’ investments in the relevant
Fund. No charge or penalty will be
imposed as a result of such withdrawal.
This requirement will be provided for in
the participation agreement entered into
by the Participating Insurance
Companies with the relevant Fund.
17. Applicants assert there is no
reason why the investment policies of a
Fund would or should be materially
different from what these policies
would or should be if the Fund
supported only VA Accounts or VLI
Accounts supporting flexible premium
or scheduled premium VLI Contracts.
Each type of insurance contract is
designed as a long-term investment
program.
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18. Each Fund will be managed to
attempt to achieve its specified
investment objective, and not favor or
disfavor any particular Participating
Insurance Company or type of insurance
contract. Applicants assert there is no
reason to believe that different features
of various types of Variable Contracts
will lead to different investment
policies for each or for different
Separate Accounts. The sale of Variable
Contracts and ultimate success of all
Separate Accounts depends, at least in
part, on satisfactory investment
performance, which provides an
incentive for each Participating
Insurance Company to seek optimal
investment performance.
19. Furthermore, no single investment
strategy can be identified as appropriate
to a particular Variable Contract. Each
‘‘pool’’ of VLI Contract and VA Contract
owners is composed of individuals of
diverse financial status, age, insurance
needs and investment goals. A Fund
supporting even one type of Variable
Contract must accommodate these
diverse factors in order to attract and
retain purchasers. Permitting mixed and
shared funding will provide economic
support for the continuation of the
Funds. Applicants state further that
mixed and shared funding will broaden
the base of potential Variable Contract
owner investors, which may facilitate
the establishment of additional Funds
serving diverse goals.
20. Applicants do not believe that the
sale of the shares to Qualified Plans,
Advisers or General Accounts will
increase the potential for material
irreconcilable conflicts of interest
between or among different types of
investors. In particular, Applicants see
very little potential for such conflicts
beyond those that would otherwise exist
between owners of VLI Contracts and
VA Contracts. Applicants submit that
either there are no conflicts of interest
or that there exists the ability by the
affected parties to resolve such conflicts
consistent with the best interests of VLI
Contract owners, VA Contract owners
and Qualified Plan participants.
21. Applicants state they considered
whether there are any issues raised
under the Code, Treasury Regulations,
or Revenue Rulings thereunder, if
Qualified Plans, Separate Accounts,
Advisers and General Accounts all
invest in the same Fund. Applicants
have concluded that neither the Code,
nor the Treasury Regulations nor
Revenue Rulings thereunder present any
inherent conflicts of interest if Qualified
Plans, Advisers, General Accounts, and
Separate Accounts all invest in the same
Fund.
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31423
22. Applicants note that, while there
are differences in the manner in which
distributions from separate accounts
and Qualified Plans are taxed, these
differences have no impact on the
Funds. When distributions are to be
made, and a separate account or
Qualified Plan is unable to net purchase
payments to make distributions, the
separate account or Qualified Plan will
redeem shares of the relevant Fund at its
net asset values in conformity with Rule
22c–1 under the 1940 Act (without the
imposition of any sales charge) to
provide proceeds to meet distribution
needs. A Participating Insurance
Company will then make distributions
in accordance with the terms of its
Variable Contracts, and a Qualified Plan
will then make distributions in
accordance with the terms of the
Qualified Plan.
23. Applicants state that they
considered whether it is possible to
provide an equitable means of giving
voting rights to Variable Contract
owners, Qualified Plans, Advisers and
General Accounts. In connection with
any meeting of Fund shareholders, the
Fund or its transfer agent will inform
each Participating Insurance Company
(with respect to its Separate Accounts
and General Account), Adviser, and
Qualified Plan of its share holdings and
provide other information necessary for
such shareholders to participate in the
meeting (e.g., proxy materials). Each
Participating Insurance Company then
will solicit voting instructions from
owners of VLI Contracts and VA
Contracts in accordance with Rules
6e–2 or 6e–3(T), or section
12(d)(1)(E)(iii)(aa) of the 1940 Act, as
applicable, and its participation
agreement with the relevant Fund.
Shares of a Fund that are held by an
Adviser or a General Account will
generally be in the same proportion as
all votes cast on behalf of all Variable
Contract owners having voting rights.
However, an Adviser or General
Account will vote its shares in such
other manner as may be required by the
Commission or its staff. Shares held by
Qualified Plans will be voted in
accordance with applicable law. The
voting rights provided to Qualified
Plans with respect to the shares would
be no different from the voting rights
that are provided to Qualified Plans
with respect to shares of mutual funds
sold to the general public. Furthermore,
if a material irreconcilable conflict
arises because of a Qualified Plan’s
decision to disregard Qualified Plan
participant voting instructions, if
applicable, and that decision represents
a minority position or would preclude
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a majority vote, the Qualified Plan may
be required, at the election of the
relevant Fund, to withdraw its
investment in the Fund, and no charge
or penalty will be imposed as a result
of such withdrawal.
24. Applicants do not believe that the
ability of a Fund to sell its shares to a
Qualified Plan, Adviser or General
Account gives rise to a ‘‘senior security’’
as defined by section 18(g) of the 1940
Act. Regardless of the rights and
benefits of participants under Qualified
Plans or owners of Variable Contracts;
Separate Accounts, Qualified Plans,
Advisers and General Accounts only
have, or will only have, rights with
respect to their respective shares of a
Fund. These parties can only redeem
such shares at net asset value. No
shareholder of a Fund has any
preference over any other shareholder
with respect to distribution of assets or
payment of dividends.
25. Applicants do not believe that the
veto power of state insurance
commissioners over certain potential
changes to Fund investment objectives
approved by Variable Contract owners
creates conflicts between the interests of
such owners and the interests of
Qualified Plan participants, Advisers or
General Accounts. Applicants note that
a basic premise of corporate democracy
and shareholder voting is that not all
shareholders may agree with a
particular proposal. Their interests and
opinions may differ, but this does not
mean that inherent conflicts of interest
exist between or among such
shareholders or that occasional conflicts
of interest that do occur between or
among them are likely to be
irreconcilable.
26. Although Participating Insurance
Companies may have to overcome
regulatory impediments in redeeming
shares of a Fund held by their Separate
Accounts, Applicants state that the
Qualified Plans and participants in
participant-directed Qualified Plans can
make decisions quickly and redeem
their shares in a Fund and reinvest in
another investment company or other
funding vehicle without impediments,
or as is the case with most Qualified
Plans, hold cash pending suitable
investment. As a result, conflicts
between the interests of Variable
Contract owners and the interests of
Qualified Plans and Qualified Plan
participants can usually be resolved
quickly since the Qualified Plans can,
on their own, redeem their Fund shares.
Advisers and General accounts can
similarly redeem their shares of a Fund
and make alternative investments at any
time.
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27. Finally, Applicants considered
whether there is a potential for future
conflicts of interest between
Participating Insurance Companies and
Qualified Plans created by future
changes in the tax laws. Applicants do
not see any greater potential for material
irreconcilable conflicts arising between
the interests of Variable Contract owners
and Qualified Plan participants from
future changes in the federal tax laws
than that which already exists between
VLI Contract owners and VA Contract
owners.
28. Applicants recognize that the
foregoing is not an all-inclusive list, but
rather is representative of issues that
they believe are relevant to the
Application. Applicants believe that the
sale of Fund shares to Qualified Plans
would not increase the risk of material
irreconcilable conflicts between the
interests of Qualified Plan participants
and Variable Contract owners or other
investors. Further, Applicants submit
that the use of the Funds with respect
to Qualified Plans is not substantially
dissimilar from each Fund’s current and
anticipated use, in that Qualified Plans,
like separate accounts, are generally
long-term investors.
29. Applicants assert that permitting a
Fund to sell its shares to an Adviser or
to the General Account of a
Participating Insurance Company will
enhance management of each Fund
without raising significant concerns
regarding material irreconcilable
conflicts among different types of
investors.
30. Applicants assert that various
factors have limited the number of
insurance companies that offer Variable
Contracts. These factors include the
costs of organizing and operating a
funding vehicle, certain insurers’ lack of
experience with respect to investment
management, and the lack of name
recognition by the public of certain
insurance companies as investment
experts. In particular, some smaller life
insurance companies may not find it
economically feasible, or within their
investment or administrative expertise,
to enter the Variable Contract business
on their own. Applicants state that use
of a Fund as a common investment
vehicle for Variable Contracts would
reduce or eliminate these concerns.
Mixed and shared funding should also
provide several benefits to owners of
Variable Contracts by eliminating a
significant portion of the costs of
establishing and administering separate
underlying funds.
31. Applicants state that the
Participating Insurance Companies will
benefit not only from the investment
and administrative expertise of the
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Sfmt 4703
Funds’ Adviser, but also from the
potential cost efficiencies and
investment flexibility afforded by larger
pools of funds. Therefore, making the
Funds available for mixed and shared
funding will encourage more insurance
companies to offer Variable Contracts.
This should result in increased
competition with respect to both
Variable Contract design and pricing,
which can in turn be expected to result
in more product variety. Applicants also
assert that sale of shares in a Fund to
Qualified Plans, in addition to Separate
Accounts, will result in an increased
amount of assets available for
investment in a Fund.
32. Applicants also submit that,
regardless of the type of shareholder in
a Fund, an Adviser is or would be
contractually and otherwise obligated to
manage the Fund solely and exclusively
in accordance with the Fund’s
investment objectives, policies and
restrictions, as well as any guidelines
established by the Fund’s Board of
Trustees (the ‘‘Board’’).
33. Applicants assert that sales of
Fund shares, as described above, will
not have any adverse federal income tax
consequences to other investors in such
Fund.
34. In addition, Applicants assert that
granting the exemptions requested
herein is in the public interest and, as
discussed above, will not compromise
the regulatory purposes of sections 9(a),
13(a), 15(a), or 15(b) of the 1940 Act or
Rules 6e–2 or 6e–3(T) thereunder.
Applicants’ Conditions
Applicants agree that the Commission
order requested herein shall be subject
to the following conditions:
1. A majority of the Board of each
Fund will consist of persons who are
not ‘‘interested persons’’ of the Fund, as
defined by section 2(a)(19) of the 1940
Act, and the rules thereunder, and as
modified by any applicable orders of the
Commission, except that if this
condition is not met by reason of death,
disqualification or bona fide resignation
of any director/trustee or directors/
trustees, then the operation of this
condition will be suspended: (a) For a
period of 90 days if the vacancy or
vacancies may be filled by the Board; (b)
for a period of 150 days if a vote of
shareholders is required to fill the
vacancy or vacancies; or (c) for such
longer period as the Commission may
prescribe by order upon application, or
by future rule.
2. The Board will monitor a Fund for
the existence of any material
irreconcilable conflict between and
among the interests of the owners of all
VLI Contracts and VA Contracts and
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participants of all Qualified Plans
investing in the Fund, and determine
what action, if any, should be taken in
response to such conflicts. A material
irreconcilable conflict may arise for a
variety of reasons, including: (a) An
action by any state insurance regulatory
authority; (b) a change in applicable
federal or state insurance, tax, or
securities laws or regulations, or a
public ruling, private letter ruling, noaction or interpretive letter, or any
similar action by insurance, tax or
securities regulatory authorities; (c) an
administrative or judicial decision in
any relevant proceeding; (d) the manner
in which the investments of the Fund
are being managed; (e) a difference in
voting instructions given by VA
Contract owners, VLI Contract owners,
and Qualified Plans or Qualified Plan
participants; (f) a decision by a
Participating Insurance Company to
disregard the voting instructions of
contract owners; or (g) if applicable, a
decision by a Qualified Plan to
disregard the voting instructions of
Qualified Plan participants.
3. Participating Insurance Companies
(on their own behalf, as well as by
virtue of any investment of General
Account assets in a Fund), any
Advisers, and any Qualified Plan that
executes a participation agreement upon
its becoming an owner of 10% or more
of the net assets of a Fund (collectively,
‘‘Participants’’) will report any potential
or existing conflicts to the Board. Each
Participant will be responsible for
assisting the Board in carrying out the
Board’s responsibilities under these
conditions by providing the Board with
all information reasonably necessary for
the Board to consider any issues raised.
This responsibility includes, but is not
limited to, an obligation by each
Participating Insurance Company to
inform the Board whenever Variable
Contract owner voting instructions are
disregarded, and, if pass-through voting
is applicable, an obligation by each
trustee for a Qualified Plan to inform the
Board whenever it has determined to
disregard Qualified Plan participant
voting instructions. The responsibility
to report such information and conflicts,
and to assist the Board, will be a
contractual obligation of all
Participating Insurance Companies
under their participation agreement
with a Fund, and these responsibilities
will be carried out with a view only to
the interests of the Variable Contract
owners. The responsibility to report
such information and conflicts, and to
assist the Board, also will be contractual
obligations of all Qualified Plans under
their participation agreement with a
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17:26 Jun 01, 2015
Jkt 235001
Fund, and such agreements will provide
that these responsibilities will be
carried out with a view only to the
interests of Qualified Plan participants.
4. If it is determined by a majority of
the Board, or a majority of the
disinterested directors/trustees of the
Board, that a material irreconcilable
conflict exists, then the relevant
Participant will, at its expense and to
the extent reasonably practicable (as
determined by a majority of the
disinterested directors/trustees), take
whatever steps are necessary to remedy
or eliminate the material irreconcilable
conflict, up to and including: (a)
Withdrawing the assets allocable to
some or all of their VLI Accounts or VA
Accounts from the relevant Fund and
reinvesting such assets in a different
investment vehicle, including another
Fund; (b) in the case of a Participating
Insurance Company, submitting the
question as to whether such segregation
should be implemented to a vote of all
affected Variable Contract owners and,
as appropriate, segregating the assets of
any appropriate group (i.e., VA Contract
owners or VLI Contact owners of one or
more Participating Insurance
Companies) that votes in favor of such
segregation, or offering to the affected
Variable Contract owners the option of
making such a change; (c) withdrawing
the assets allocable to some or all of the
Qualified Plans from the affected Fund
and reinvesting them in a different
investment medium; and (d)
establishing a new registered
management investment company or
managed separate account. If a material
irreconcilable conflict arises because of
a decision by a Participating Insurance
Company to disregard Variable Contract
owner voting instructions, and that
decision represents a minority position
or would preclude a majority vote, then
the Participating Insurance Company
may be required, at the election of the
Fund, to withdraw such Participating
Insurance Company’s Separate Account
investments in a Fund, and no charge or
penalty will be imposed as a result of
such withdrawal. If a material
irreconcilable conflict arises because of
a Qualified Plan’s decision to disregard
Qualified Plan participant voting
instructions, if applicable, and that
decision represents a minority position
or would preclude a majority vote, the
Qualified Plan may be required, at the
election of the Fund, to withdraw its
investment in a Fund, and no charge or
penalty will be imposed as a result of
such withdrawal. The responsibility to
take remedial action in the event of a
Board determination of a material
irreconcilable conflict and to bear the
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Fmt 4703
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31425
cost of such remedial action will be a
contractual obligation of all Participants
under their participation agreement
with a Fund, and these responsibilities
will be carried out with a view only to
the interests of Variable Contract owners
or, as applicable, Qualified Plan
participants.
For purposes of this Condition 4, a
majority of the disinterested directors/
trustees of the Board of a Fund will
determine whether or not any proposed
action adequately remedies any material
irreconcilable conflict, but, in no event,
will the Fund or its investment adviser
be required to establish a new funding
vehicle for any Variable Contract or
Qualified Plan. No Participating
Insurance Company will be required by
this Condition 4 to establish a new
funding vehicle for any Variable
Contract if any offer to do so has been
declined by vote of a majority of the
Variable Contract owners materially and
adversely affected by the material
irreconcilable conflict. Further, no
Qualified Plan will be required by this
Condition 4 to establish a new funding
vehicle for the Qualified Plan if: (a) A
majority of the Qualified Plan
participants materially and adversely
affected by the irreconcilable material
conflict vote to decline such offer, or (b)
pursuant to documents governing the
Qualified Plan, the Qualified Plan
trustee makes such decision without a
Qualified Plan participant vote.
5. The determination by the Board of
the existence of a material irreconcilable
conflict and its implications will be
made known in writing promptly to all
Participants.
6. Participating Insurance Companies
will provide pass-through voting
privileges to all Variable Contract
owners whose Variable Contracts are
issued through registered Separate
Accounts for as long as the Commission
continues to interpret the 1940 Act as
requiring such pass-through voting
privileges. However, as to Variable
Contracts issued through Separate
Accounts not registered as investment
companies under the 1940 Act, passthrough voting privileges will be
extended to owners of such Variable
Contracts to the extent granted by the
Participating Insurance Company.
Accordingly, such Participating
Insurance Companies, where applicable,
will vote the shares of each Fund held
in their Separate Accounts in a manner
consistent with voting instructions
timely received from Variable Contract
owners. Participating Insurance
Companies will be responsible for
assuring that each of their Separate
Accounts investing in a Fund calculates
voting privileges in a manner consistent
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with all other Participating Insurance
Companies investing in that Fund.
The obligation to calculate voting
privileges as provided in the
Application shall be a contractual
obligation of all Participating Insurance
Companies under their participation
agreement with the Fund. Each
Participating Insurance Company will
vote shares of each Fund held in its
Separate Accounts for which no timely
voting instructions are received, as well
as shares held in its General Account or
otherwise attributed to it, in the same
proportion as those shares for which
voting instructions are received. Each
Qualified Plan will vote as required by
applicable law, governing Qualified
Plan documents and as provided in the
Application.
7. As long as the Commission
continues to interpret the 1940 Act as
requiring that pass-through voting
privileges be provided to Variable
Contract owners, a Fund Adviser or any
General Account will vote its respective
shares of a Fund in the same proportion
as all votes cast on behalf of all Variable
Contract owners having voting rights;
provided, however, that such an
Adviser or General Account shall vote
its shares in such other manner as may
be required by the Commission or its
staff.
8. Each Fund will comply with all
provisions of the 1940 Act requiring
voting by shareholders (which, for these
purposes, shall be the persons having a
voting interest in its shares), and, in
particular, the Fund will either provide
for annual meetings (except to the
extent that the Commission may
interpret section 16 of the 1940 Act not
to require such meetings) or comply
with section 16(c) of the 1940 Act
(although each Fund is not, or will not
be, one of those trusts of the type
described in section 16(c) of the 1940
Act), as well as with section 16(a) of the
1940 Act and, if and when applicable,
section 16(b) of the 1940 Act. Further,
each Fund will act in accordance with
the Commission’s interpretations of the
requirements of section 16(a) with
respect to periodic elections of
directors/trustees and with whatever
rules the Commission may promulgate
thereunder.
9. A Fund will make its shares
available to the VLI Accounts, VA
Accounts, and Qualified Plans at or
about the time it accepts any seed
capital from its Adviser or from the
General Account of a Participating
Insurance Company.
10. Each Fund has notified, or will
notify, all Participants that disclosure
regarding potential risks of mixed and
shared funding may be appropriate in
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17:26 Jun 01, 2015
Jkt 235001
VA Account and VLI Account
prospectuses or Qualified Plan
documents. Each Fund will disclose, in
its prospectus that: (a) shares of the
Fund may be offered to both VA
Accounts and VLI Accounts and, if
applicable, to Qualified Plans; (b) due to
differences in tax treatment and other
considerations, the interests of various
Variable Contract owners participating
in the Fund and the interests of
Qualified Plan participants investing in
the Fund, if applicable, may conflict;
and (c) the Fund’s Board will monitor
events in order to identify the existence
of any material irreconcilable conflicts
and to determine what action, if any,
should be taken in response to any such
conflicts.
11. If and to the extent Rule 6e–2 and
Rule 6e–3(T) under the 1940 Act are
amended, or proposed Rule 6e–3 under
the 1940 Act is adopted, to provide
exemptive relief from any provision of
the 1940 Act, or the rules thereunder,
with respect to mixed or shared
funding, on terms and conditions
materially different from any
exemptions granted in the order
requested in the Application, then each
Fund and/or Participating Insurance
Companies, as appropriate, shall take
such steps as may be necessary to
comply with Rules 6e–2 or 6e–3(T), as
amended, or Rule 6e–3, to the extent
such rules are applicable.
12. Each Participant, at least annually,
shall submit to the Board of each Fund
such reports, materials or data as the
Board reasonably may request so that
the directors/trustees may fully carry
out the obligations imposed upon the
Board by the conditions contained in
the Application. Such reports, materials
and data shall be submitted more
frequently if deemed appropriate by the
Board. The obligations of the
Participants to provide these reports,
materials and data to the Board, when
it so reasonably requests, shall be a
contractual obligation of all Participants
under their participation agreement
with the Fund.
13. All reports of potential or existing
conflicts received by a Board, and all
Board action with regard to determining
the existence of a conflict, notifying
Participants of a conflict and
determining whether any proposed
action adequately remedies a conflict,
will be properly recorded in the minutes
of the Board or other appropriate
records, and such minutes or other
records shall be made available to the
Commission upon request.
14. Each Fund will not accept a
purchase order from a Qualified Plan if
such purchase would make the
Qualified Plan an owner of 10 percent
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Sfmt 4703
or more of the assets of a Fund unless
the Qualified Plan executes an
agreement with the Fund governing
participation in the Fund that includes
the conditions set forth herein to the
extent applicable. A Qualified Plan will
execute an application containing an
acknowledgement of this condition at
the time of its initial purchase of shares.
Conclusion
Applicants submit, for all of the
reasons explained above, that the
exemptions requested are appropriate in
the public interest and consistent with
the protection of investors and the
purposes fairly intended by the policy
and provisions of the 1940 Act.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, pursuant to
delegated authority.
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–13176 Filed 6–1–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Extension: Rule 10f–3; OMB Control No.
3235–0226, SEC File No. 270–237]
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
Upon Written Request, Copies Available
From: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC
20549–2736.
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520), the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) has submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget a
request for extension and approval of
the collections of information discussed
below.
Section 10(f) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a)
(the ‘‘Act’’) prohibits a registered
investment company (‘‘fund’’) from
purchasing any security during an
underwriting or selling syndicate if the
fund has certain relationships with a
principal underwriter for the security.
Congress enacted this provision in 1940
to protect funds and their shareholders
by preventing underwriters from
‘‘dumping’’ unmarketable securities on
affiliated funds.
Rule 10f–3 (17 CFR 270.10f–3)
permits a fund to engage in a securities
transaction that otherwise would violate
section 10(f) if, among other things: (i)
Each transaction effected under the rule
is reported on Form N–SAR; (ii) the
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 105 (Tuesday, June 2, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31420-31426]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-13176]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. IC-31648; File No. 812-14206]
The RBB Fund, Inc., et al.; Notice of Application
May 27, 2015.
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'').
ACTION: Notice of application pursuant to section 6(c) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the ``1940 Act''), seeking
exemptions from sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a) and 15(b) of the 1940 Act
and Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) thereunder.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicants: The RBB Fund, Inc. (the ``Company''), Matson Money, Inc.
(``Matson'') and Summit Global Investments, LLC (``Summit'' and,
collectively with the Company and Matson, the ``Applicants'').
Summary of Application: Applicants request an order granting
exemptions from sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a), and 15(b) of the 1940 Act
and Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) thereunder, in cases where a
life insurance separate account supporting variable life insurance
contracts (``VLI Accounts'') holds shares of an existing portfolio of
the Company that is designed to be sold to VLI Accounts or VA Accounts
(as defined below) for which Matson, Summit or any of their affiliates,
may serve as investment adviser, sub-adviser, manager, administrator,
principal underwriter or sponsor (``Existing Fund'') or ``Future Fund''
\1\ (any Existing Fund or Future Fund is referred to herein as a
``Fund'' and collectively, the ``Funds''), and one or more of the
following other types of investors also hold shares of the Funds: (i)
Any life insurance company separate account supporting variable annuity
contracts (``VA Accounts'') and any VLI Account; (ii) trustees of
qualified group pension or group retirement plans outside the separate
account context (``Qualified Plans''); (iii) the investment adviser or
any subadviser to a Fund or affiliated persons of the adviser or
subadviser (representing seed money investments in a Fund)
(``Advisers''); and (iv) any general account of an insurance company
depositor of VA Accounts and/or VLI Accounts (``General Accounts'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ As used herein, a ``Future Fund'' is any investment
portfolio or series thereof of the Company, other than an Existing
Fund, designed to be sold to VA Accounts and/or VLI Accounts and to
which Matson, Summit or their affiliates may in the future serve as
investment adviser, sub-adviser, manager, administrator, principal
underwriter or sponsor.
Filing Date: The application was filed on August 30, 2013, and amended
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
and restated on September 25, 2014, and May 13, 2015.
Hearing or Notification of Hearing: An order granting the application
will be issued unless the Commission orders a hearing. Interested
persons may request a hearing by writing to the Secretary of the
Commission and serving Applicants with a copy of the request,
personally or by mail. Hearing requests should be received by the
Commission by 5:30 p.m. on June 22, 2015, and should be accompanied by
proof of service on Applicants, in the form of an affidavit or, for
lawyers, a certificate of service. Hearing requests should state the
nature of the writer's interest, the reason for the request, and the
issues contested. Persons may request notification of a hearing by
writing to the Secretary of the Commission.
ADDRESSES: Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090. Applicants: The RBB Fund, Inc. c/o Mary
Jo Reilly, Esq., Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP, One Logan Square, Ste.
2000, Philadelphia, PA, 19103-6996; Mark E. Matson, Matson Money, Inc.,
5955 Deerfield Blvd., Mason, OH 45040; and David Harden, Summit Global
Investments, LLC, 620 South Main St., Bountiful, UT, 84010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sonny Oh, Senior Counsel, or Joyce M.
Pickholz, Branch Chief, Disclosure Review Office (Insured Investments),
Division of Investment Management at (202) 551-6795.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the
application. The complete application may be obtained via the
Commission's Web site by searching for the file number, or for an
applicant using the Company name box, at https://www.sec.gov/search.htm,
or by calling (202) 551-8090.
Applicants' Representations
1. The Company was organized as a Maryland corporation on February
29, 1988 and is registered under the 1940 Act as an open-end management
investment company (Reg. File No. 811-5518). The Company is a series
investment company as defined by Rule 18f-2 under the 1940 Act and is
currently comprised of twenty-three portfolios managed by ten different
investment advisers, six sub-advisers and seven commodity trading sub-
advisers hereinafter collectively, (the ``investment advisers''). The
investment advisers may or may not be affiliated with each other. None
of the current investment advisers are affiliated with the Company.
Each portfolio pursues its own investment strategy and is liable for
its own expenses. However, the combination of multiple portfolios
managed by multiple investment advisers into a single registered
investment company allows the portfolios to share a single Board of
Directors (``Board''), as well as common officers, fund counsel,
custodian and other service providers. Expenses common to one or more
portfolios can be shared by those portfolios, thus allowing the
portfolios to realize economies of scale and reduce operating expenses.
The Company may establish additional portfolios and classes of shares
of each portfolio in the future. Shares of the Funds will not be
offered to the general public.
[[Page 31421]]
2. Matson currently serves as the investment adviser to six
portfolios of the Company, including the Existing Funds. It is
anticipated that Matson will also serve as the Adviser to one or more
of the Future Funds, subject to the authority of the Board. Matson is
registered as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940 Act (``Advisers Act'').
3. Summit currently serves as the investment adviser to one
portfolio of the Company. It is anticipated that Summit will serve as
the Adviser to one or more of the Funds, subject to the authority of
the Board. Summit is registered as an investment adviser under the
Advisers Act.
4. The Funds propose to, and other Funds may in the future propose
to, offer and sell their shares to VLI and VA Accounts of affiliated
and unaffiliated life insurance companies (``Participating Insurance
Companies'') to serve as investment media to support variable life
insurance contracts (VLI Contracts'') and variable annuity contracts
(``VA Contacts'') (VLI Contracts and VA Contracts together, ``Variable
Contracts'') issued through such accounts respectively, VLI Accounts
and VA Accounts (VLI Accounts and VA Accounts together, ``Separate
Accounts''). Each Separate Account is or will be established as a
segregated asset account by a Participating Insurance Company pursuant
to the insurance law of the insurance company's state of domicile.
Presently, TIAA-CREF Life Insurance Company is the only Participating
Insurance Company.
5. The Funds will sell their shares to Separate Accounts only if
each Participating Insurance Company sponsoring such a Separate Account
enters into a participation agreement with the Funds. The participation
agreements define or will define the relationship between each Fund and
each Participating Insurance Company and memorialize or will
memorialize, among other matters, the fact that, except where the
agreement specifically provides otherwise, the Participating Insurance
Company will remain responsible for establishing and maintaining any
Separate Account covered by the agreement and for complying with all
applicable requirements of state and federal law pertaining to such
accounts and to the sale and distribution of Variable Contracts issued
through such Separate Accounts. The role of the Funds under this
arrangement, with regard to the federal securities laws, will consist
of offering and selling shares of the Funds to the Separate Accounts
and fulfilling any conditions that the Commission may impose in
granting the requested order.
6. The use of a common management investment company (or investment
portfolio thereof) as an investment medium for both VLI Accounts and VA
Accounts of the same Participating Insurance Company, or of two or more
insurance companies that are affiliated persons of each other, is
referred to herein as ``mixed funding.'' The use of a common management
investment company (or investment portfolio thereof) as an investment
medium for VLI Accounts and/or VA Accounts of two or more Participating
Insurance Companies that are not affiliated persons of each other is
referred to herein as ``shared funding.''
7. Applicants propose that the Funds may offer their shares
directly to Qualified Plans, Advisers, and the General Accounts of a
Participating Insurance Company.
8. The use of a common management investment company (or investment
portfolio thereof) as an investment medium for Separate Accounts,
Qualified Plans, Advisers and General Accounts is referred to herein as
``extended mixed funding.''
Applicants' Legal Analysis
1. Section 9(a)(3) of the 1940 Act makes it unlawful for any
company to serve as an investment adviser or principal underwriter of
any investment company, including a unit investment trust, if an
affiliated person of that company is subject to disqualification
enumerated in section 9(a)(1) or (2) of the 1940 Act. Sections 13(a),
15(a), and 15(b) of the 1940 Act have been deemed by the Commission to
require ``pass-through'' voting with respect to an underlying
investment company's shares.
2. Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) under the 1940 Act provide
partial exemptions from sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a), and 15(b) of the
1940 Act to VLI Accounts supporting certain VLI Contracts and to their
life insurance company depositors under limited circumstances, as
described in the application. VLI Accounts, their depositors and their
principal underwriters may not rely on the exemptions provided by Rules
6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) if shares of the Fund are held by a VLI
Account through which certain VLI Contracts are issued, a VLI Account
of an unaffiliated Participating Insurance Company, an unaffiliated
Adviser, any VA Account, a Qualified Plan or a General Account.
Accordingly, Applicants request an order of the Commission granting
exemptions from sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a), and 15(b) of the 1940 Act
and Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) thereunder in cases where a
scheduled premium VLI Account holds shares of a Fund and one or more of
the following types of investors also hold Shares of the Funds: (i) VA
Accounts and VLI Accounts (supporting scheduled premium or flexible
premium VLI Contracts) of affiliated and unaffiliated Participating
Insurance Companies; (ii) Qualified Plans; (iii) Advisers; and/or (iv)
General Accounts.
3. Applicants maintain that there is no policy reason for the sale
of Fund Shares to Qualified Plans, Advisers or General Accounts to
prohibit or otherwise limit a Participating Insurance Company from
relying on the relief provided by Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15).
Nonetheless, Rule 6e-2 and Rule 6e-3(T) each specifically provides that
the relief granted thereunder is available only where shares of the
underlying fund are offered exclusively to insurance company separate
accounts. In this regard, Applicants request exemptive relief to the
extent necessary to permit shares of the Funds to be sold to Qualified
Plans, Advisers and General Accounts while allowing Participating
Insurance Companies and their Separate Accounts to enjoy the benefits
of the relief granted under Rule 6e-2(b)(15) and Rule 6e-3(T)(b)(15).
Applicants note that if the Funds were to sell their shares only to
Qualified Plans, exemptive relief under Rule 6e-2 and Rule 6e-3(T)
would not be necessary. The relief provided for under Rule 6e-2(b)(15)
and Rule 6e-3(T)(b)(15) does not relate to Qualified Plans, Advisers or
General Accounts or to a registered investment company's ability to
sell its shares to such purchasers.
4. Applicants are not aware of any reason for excluding separate
accounts and investment companies engaged in shared funding from the
exemptive relief provided under Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15),
or for excluding separate accounts and investment companies engaged in
mixed funding from the exemptive relief provided under Rule 6e-
2(b)(15). Similarly, Applicants are not aware of any reason for
excluding Participating Insurance Companies from the exemptive relief
requested because the Funds may also sell their shares to Qualified
Plans, Advisers and General Accounts. Rather, Applicants submit that
the proposed sale of shares of the Funds to these purchasers may allow
for the development of larger pools of assets resulting in the
potential for greater investment and diversification opportunities, and
for decreased
[[Page 31422]]
expenses at higher asset levels resulting in greater cost efficiencies.
5. For the reasons explained below, Applicants have concluded that
investment by Qualified Plans, Advisers and General Accounts in the
Funds should not increase the risk of material irreconcilable conflicts
between owners of VLI Contracts and other types of investors or between
owners of VLI Contracts issued by unaffiliated Participating Insurance
Companies.
6. Consistent with the Commission's authority under section 6(c) of
the 1940 Act to grant exemptive orders to a class or classes of persons
and transactions, Applicants request exemptions for a class consisting
of Participating Insurance Companies and their separate accounts
investing in Existing and Future Funds of the Company, as well as their
principal underwriters.
7. Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act provides, in part, that the
Commission, by order upon application, may conditionally or
unconditionally exempt any person, security or transaction, or any
class or classes of persons, securities or transactions, from any
provision or provisions of the 1940 Act, or any rule or regulation
thereunder, if and to the extent that such exemption is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest and consistent with the protection
of investors and the purposes fairly intended by the policy and
provisions of the 1940 Act. Applicants submit that the exemptions
requested are appropriate in the public interest and consistent with
the protection of investors and the purposes fairly intended by the
policy and provisions of the 1940 Act.
8. Section 9(a)(3) of the 1940 Act provides, among other things,
that it is unlawful for any company to serve as investment adviser or
principal underwriter of any registered open-end investment company if
an affiliated person of that company is subject to a disqualification
enumerated in sections 9(a)(1) or (2). Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(i) and (ii)
and Rules 6e-3(T)(b)(15)(i) and (ii) under the 1940 Act provide
exemptions from section 9(a) under certain circumstances, subject to
the limitations discussed above on mixed funding, extended mixed
funding and shared funding. These exemptions limit the application of
the eligibility restrictions to affiliated individuals or companies
that directly participate in management or administration of the
underlying investment company.
9. Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(iii) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15)(iii) under the 1940
Act provide exemptions from pass-through voting requirements with
respect to several significant matters, assuming the limitations on
mixed funding, extended mixed funding and shared funding are observed.
Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(iii)(A) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15)(iii)(A) provide that the
insurance company may disregard the voting instructions of its variable
life insurance contract owners with respect to the investments of an
underlying investment company, or any contract between such an
investment company and its investment adviser, when required to do so
by an insurance regulatory authority (subject to the provisions of
paragraphs (b)(5)(i) and (b)(7)(ii)(A) of Rules 6e-2 and 6e-3(T)).
Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(iii)(B) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15)(iii)(A)(2) provide that an
insurance company may disregard the voting instructions of owners of
its variable life insurance contracts if such owners initiate any
change in an underlying investment company's investment policies,
principal underwriter or any investment adviser (provided that
disregarding such voting instructions is reasonable and subject to the
other provisions of paragraphs (b)(5)(ii), (b)(7)(ii)(B) and
(b)(7)(ii)(C) of Rules 6e-2 and 6e-3(T)).
10. Applicants represent that the sale of Fund shares to Qualified
Plans, Advisers or General Accounts will not have any impact on the
exemptions requested herein regarding the disregard of pass-through
voting rights. Shares sold to Qualified Plans will be held by such
Qualified Plans. The exercise of voting rights by Qualified Plans,
whether by trustees, participants, beneficiaries, or investment
managers engaged by the Qualified Plans, does not raise the type of
issues respecting disregard of voting rights that are raised by VLI
Accounts. With respect to Qualified Plans, which are not registered as
investment companies under the 1940 Act, there is no requirement to
pass through voting rights to Qualified Plan participants. Indeed, to
the contrary, applicable law expressly reserves voting rights
associated with Qualified Plan assets to certain specified persons.
11. Similarly, Advisers and General Accounts are not subject to any
pass-through voting rights. Accordingly, unlike the circumstances
surrounding Separate Account investments in shares of the Funds, the
issue of the resolution of any material irreconcilable conflicts with
respect to voting is not present with respect to Advisers or General
Accounts of Participating Insurance Companies.
12. Applicants recognize that the prohibitions on mixed and shared
funding might reflect concern regarding possible different investment
motivations among investors. When Rule 6e-2 was first adopted, variable
annuity separate accounts could invest in mutual funds whose shares
were also offered to the general public. However, now, under the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the ``Code''), any underlying fund,
including the Funds, that sells shares to VA Accounts or VLI Accounts,
would, in effect, be precluded from also selling its shares to the
public. Consequently, the Funds may not sell their shares to the
public.
13. Applicants assert that the rights of an insurance company on
its own initiative or on instructions from a state insurance regulator
to disregard the voting instructions of owners of Variable Contracts is
not inconsistent with either mixed funding or shared funding.
Applicants state that The National Association of Insurance
Commissioners Variable Life Insurance Model Regulation (the ``NAIC
Model Regulation'') suggests that it is unlikely that insurance
regulators would find an underlying fund's investment policy,
investment adviser or principal underwriter objectionable for one type
of Variable Contract but not another type.
14. Applicants assert that shared funding by unaffiliated insurance
companies does not present any issues that do not already exist where a
single insurance company is licensed to do business in several or all
states. A particular state insurance regulator could require action
that is inconsistent with the requirements of other states in which the
insurance company offers its contracts. However, the fact that
different insurers may be domiciled in different states does not create
a significantly different or enlarged problem. Shared funding by
unaffiliated insurers, in this respect, is no different than the use of
the same investment company as the funding vehicle for affiliated
insurers, which Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) permit. Affiliated
insurers may be domiciled in different states and be subject to
differing state law requirements. Affiliation does not reduce the
potential, if any exists, for differences in state regulatory
requirements. Applicants state that in any event, the conditions set
forth below are designed to safeguard against, and provide procedures
for resolving, any adverse effects that differences among state
regulatory requirements may produce. If a particular state insurance
regulator's decision conflicts with the majority of other state
regulators, then the affected Participating Insurance Company will be
required to withdraw its separate account investments in the relevant
Fund. This requirement will be
[[Page 31423]]
provided for in the participation agreement that will be entered into
by Participating Insurance Companies with the relevant Fund.
15. Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) give Participating
Insurance Companies the right to disregard the voting instructions of
VLI Contract owners in certain circumstances. This right derives from
the authority of state insurance regulators over Separate Accounts.
Under Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15), a Participating Insurance
Company may disregard VLI Contract owner voting instructions only with
respect to certain specified items. Affiliation does not eliminate the
potential, if any exists, for divergent judgments as to the
advisability or legality of a change in investment policies, principal
underwriter or investment adviser initiated by such Contract owners.
The potential for disagreement is limited by the requirements in Rules
6e-2 and 6e-3(T) that the Participating Insurance Company's disregard
of voting instructions be reasonable and based on specific good faith
determinations.
16. A particular Participating Insurance Company's disregard of
voting instructions, nevertheless, could conflict with the voting
instructions of a majority of VLI Contract owners. The Participating
Insurance Company's action possibly could be different than the
determination of all or some of the other Participating Insurance
Companies (including affiliated insurers) that the voting instructions
of VLI Contract owners should prevail, and either could preclude a
majority vote approving the change or could represent a minority view.
If the Participating Insurance Company's judgment represents a minority
position or would preclude a majority vote, then the Participating
Insurance Company may be required, at the relevant Fund's election, to
withdraw its Separate Accounts' investments in the relevant Fund. No
charge or penalty will be imposed as a result of such withdrawal. This
requirement will be provided for in the participation agreement entered
into by the Participating Insurance Companies with the relevant Fund.
17. Applicants assert there is no reason why the investment
policies of a Fund would or should be materially different from what
these policies would or should be if the Fund supported only VA
Accounts or VLI Accounts supporting flexible premium or scheduled
premium VLI Contracts. Each type of insurance contract is designed as a
long-term investment program.
18. Each Fund will be managed to attempt to achieve its specified
investment objective, and not favor or disfavor any particular
Participating Insurance Company or type of insurance contract.
Applicants assert there is no reason to believe that different features
of various types of Variable Contracts will lead to different
investment policies for each or for different Separate Accounts. The
sale of Variable Contracts and ultimate success of all Separate
Accounts depends, at least in part, on satisfactory investment
performance, which provides an incentive for each Participating
Insurance Company to seek optimal investment performance.
19. Furthermore, no single investment strategy can be identified as
appropriate to a particular Variable Contract. Each ``pool'' of VLI
Contract and VA Contract owners is composed of individuals of diverse
financial status, age, insurance needs and investment goals. A Fund
supporting even one type of Variable Contract must accommodate these
diverse factors in order to attract and retain purchasers. Permitting
mixed and shared funding will provide economic support for the
continuation of the Funds. Applicants state further that mixed and
shared funding will broaden the base of potential Variable Contract
owner investors, which may facilitate the establishment of additional
Funds serving diverse goals.
20. Applicants do not believe that the sale of the shares to
Qualified Plans, Advisers or General Accounts will increase the
potential for material irreconcilable conflicts of interest between or
among different types of investors. In particular, Applicants see very
little potential for such conflicts beyond those that would otherwise
exist between owners of VLI Contracts and VA Contracts. Applicants
submit that either there are no conflicts of interest or that there
exists the ability by the affected parties to resolve such conflicts
consistent with the best interests of VLI Contract owners, VA Contract
owners and Qualified Plan participants.
21. Applicants state they considered whether there are any issues
raised under the Code, Treasury Regulations, or Revenue Rulings
thereunder, if Qualified Plans, Separate Accounts, Advisers and General
Accounts all invest in the same Fund. Applicants have concluded that
neither the Code, nor the Treasury Regulations nor Revenue Rulings
thereunder present any inherent conflicts of interest if Qualified
Plans, Advisers, General Accounts, and Separate Accounts all invest in
the same Fund.
22. Applicants note that, while there are differences in the manner
in which distributions from separate accounts and Qualified Plans are
taxed, these differences have no impact on the Funds. When
distributions are to be made, and a separate account or Qualified Plan
is unable to net purchase payments to make distributions, the separate
account or Qualified Plan will redeem shares of the relevant Fund at
its net asset values in conformity with Rule 22c-1 under the 1940 Act
(without the imposition of any sales charge) to provide proceeds to
meet distribution needs. A Participating Insurance Company will then
make distributions in accordance with the terms of its Variable
Contracts, and a Qualified Plan will then make distributions in
accordance with the terms of the Qualified Plan.
23. Applicants state that they considered whether it is possible to
provide an equitable means of giving voting rights to Variable Contract
owners, Qualified Plans, Advisers and General Accounts. In connection
with any meeting of Fund shareholders, the Fund or its transfer agent
will inform each Participating Insurance Company (with respect to its
Separate Accounts and General Account), Adviser, and Qualified Plan of
its share holdings and provide other information necessary for such
shareholders to participate in the meeting (e.g., proxy materials).
Each Participating Insurance Company then will solicit voting
instructions from owners of VLI Contracts and VA Contracts in
accordance with Rules 6e-2 or 6e-3(T), or section 12(d)(1)(E)(iii)(aa)
of the 1940 Act, as applicable, and its participation agreement with
the relevant Fund. Shares of a Fund that are held by an Adviser or a
General Account will generally be in the same proportion as all votes
cast on behalf of all Variable Contract owners having voting rights.
However, an Adviser or General Account will vote its shares in such
other manner as may be required by the Commission or its staff. Shares
held by Qualified Plans will be voted in accordance with applicable
law. The voting rights provided to Qualified Plans with respect to the
shares would be no different from the voting rights that are provided
to Qualified Plans with respect to shares of mutual funds sold to the
general public. Furthermore, if a material irreconcilable conflict
arises because of a Qualified Plan's decision to disregard Qualified
Plan participant voting instructions, if applicable, and that decision
represents a minority position or would preclude
[[Page 31424]]
a majority vote, the Qualified Plan may be required, at the election of
the relevant Fund, to withdraw its investment in the Fund, and no
charge or penalty will be imposed as a result of such withdrawal.
24. Applicants do not believe that the ability of a Fund to sell
its shares to a Qualified Plan, Adviser or General Account gives rise
to a ``senior security'' as defined by section 18(g) of the 1940 Act.
Regardless of the rights and benefits of participants under Qualified
Plans or owners of Variable Contracts; Separate Accounts, Qualified
Plans, Advisers and General Accounts only have, or will only have,
rights with respect to their respective shares of a Fund. These parties
can only redeem such shares at net asset value. No shareholder of a
Fund has any preference over any other shareholder with respect to
distribution of assets or payment of dividends.
25. Applicants do not believe that the veto power of state
insurance commissioners over certain potential changes to Fund
investment objectives approved by Variable Contract owners creates
conflicts between the interests of such owners and the interests of
Qualified Plan participants, Advisers or General Accounts. Applicants
note that a basic premise of corporate democracy and shareholder voting
is that not all shareholders may agree with a particular proposal.
Their interests and opinions may differ, but this does not mean that
inherent conflicts of interest exist between or among such shareholders
or that occasional conflicts of interest that do occur between or among
them are likely to be irreconcilable.
26. Although Participating Insurance Companies may have to overcome
regulatory impediments in redeeming shares of a Fund held by their
Separate Accounts, Applicants state that the Qualified Plans and
participants in participant-directed Qualified Plans can make decisions
quickly and redeem their shares in a Fund and reinvest in another
investment company or other funding vehicle without impediments, or as
is the case with most Qualified Plans, hold cash pending suitable
investment. As a result, conflicts between the interests of Variable
Contract owners and the interests of Qualified Plans and Qualified Plan
participants can usually be resolved quickly since the Qualified Plans
can, on their own, redeem their Fund shares. Advisers and General
accounts can similarly redeem their shares of a Fund and make
alternative investments at any time.
27. Finally, Applicants considered whether there is a potential for
future conflicts of interest between Participating Insurance Companies
and Qualified Plans created by future changes in the tax laws.
Applicants do not see any greater potential for material irreconcilable
conflicts arising between the interests of Variable Contract owners and
Qualified Plan participants from future changes in the federal tax laws
than that which already exists between VLI Contract owners and VA
Contract owners.
28. Applicants recognize that the foregoing is not an all-inclusive
list, but rather is representative of issues that they believe are
relevant to the Application. Applicants believe that the sale of Fund
shares to Qualified Plans would not increase the risk of material
irreconcilable conflicts between the interests of Qualified Plan
participants and Variable Contract owners or other investors. Further,
Applicants submit that the use of the Funds with respect to Qualified
Plans is not substantially dissimilar from each Fund's current and
anticipated use, in that Qualified Plans, like separate accounts, are
generally long-term investors.
29. Applicants assert that permitting a Fund to sell its shares to
an Adviser or to the General Account of a Participating Insurance
Company will enhance management of each Fund without raising
significant concerns regarding material irreconcilable conflicts among
different types of investors.
30. Applicants assert that various factors have limited the number
of insurance companies that offer Variable Contracts. These factors
include the costs of organizing and operating a funding vehicle,
certain insurers' lack of experience with respect to investment
management, and the lack of name recognition by the public of certain
insurance companies as investment experts. In particular, some smaller
life insurance companies may not find it economically feasible, or
within their investment or administrative expertise, to enter the
Variable Contract business on their own. Applicants state that use of a
Fund as a common investment vehicle for Variable Contracts would reduce
or eliminate these concerns. Mixed and shared funding should also
provide several benefits to owners of Variable Contracts by eliminating
a significant portion of the costs of establishing and administering
separate underlying funds.
31. Applicants state that the Participating Insurance Companies
will benefit not only from the investment and administrative expertise
of the Funds' Adviser, but also from the potential cost efficiencies
and investment flexibility afforded by larger pools of funds.
Therefore, making the Funds available for mixed and shared funding will
encourage more insurance companies to offer Variable Contracts. This
should result in increased competition with respect to both Variable
Contract design and pricing, which can in turn be expected to result in
more product variety. Applicants also assert that sale of shares in a
Fund to Qualified Plans, in addition to Separate Accounts, will result
in an increased amount of assets available for investment in a Fund.
32. Applicants also submit that, regardless of the type of
shareholder in a Fund, an Adviser is or would be contractually and
otherwise obligated to manage the Fund solely and exclusively in
accordance with the Fund's investment objectives, policies and
restrictions, as well as any guidelines established by the Fund's Board
of Trustees (the ``Board'').
33. Applicants assert that sales of Fund shares, as described
above, will not have any adverse federal income tax consequences to
other investors in such Fund.
34. In addition, Applicants assert that granting the exemptions
requested herein is in the public interest and, as discussed above,
will not compromise the regulatory purposes of sections 9(a), 13(a),
15(a), or 15(b) of the 1940 Act or Rules 6e-2 or 6e-3(T) thereunder.
Applicants' Conditions
Applicants agree that the Commission order requested herein shall
be subject to the following conditions:
1. A majority of the Board of each Fund will consist of persons who
are not ``interested persons'' of the Fund, as defined by section
2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act, and the rules thereunder, and as modified by
any applicable orders of the Commission, except that if this condition
is not met by reason of death, disqualification or bona fide
resignation of any director/trustee or directors/trustees, then the
operation of this condition will be suspended: (a) For a period of 90
days if the vacancy or vacancies may be filled by the Board; (b) for a
period of 150 days if a vote of shareholders is required to fill the
vacancy or vacancies; or (c) for such longer period as the Commission
may prescribe by order upon application, or by future rule.
2. The Board will monitor a Fund for the existence of any material
irreconcilable conflict between and among the interests of the owners
of all VLI Contracts and VA Contracts and
[[Page 31425]]
participants of all Qualified Plans investing in the Fund, and
determine what action, if any, should be taken in response to such
conflicts. A material irreconcilable conflict may arise for a variety
of reasons, including: (a) An action by any state insurance regulatory
authority; (b) a change in applicable federal or state insurance, tax,
or securities laws or regulations, or a public ruling, private letter
ruling, no-action or interpretive letter, or any similar action by
insurance, tax or securities regulatory authorities; (c) an
administrative or judicial decision in any relevant proceeding; (d) the
manner in which the investments of the Fund are being managed; (e) a
difference in voting instructions given by VA Contract owners, VLI
Contract owners, and Qualified Plans or Qualified Plan participants;
(f) a decision by a Participating Insurance Company to disregard the
voting instructions of contract owners; or (g) if applicable, a
decision by a Qualified Plan to disregard the voting instructions of
Qualified Plan participants.
3. Participating Insurance Companies (on their own behalf, as well
as by virtue of any investment of General Account assets in a Fund),
any Advisers, and any Qualified Plan that executes a participation
agreement upon its becoming an owner of 10% or more of the net assets
of a Fund (collectively, ``Participants'') will report any potential or
existing conflicts to the Board. Each Participant will be responsible
for assisting the Board in carrying out the Board's responsibilities
under these conditions by providing the Board with all information
reasonably necessary for the Board to consider any issues raised. This
responsibility includes, but is not limited to, an obligation by each
Participating Insurance Company to inform the Board whenever Variable
Contract owner voting instructions are disregarded, and, if pass-
through voting is applicable, an obligation by each trustee for a
Qualified Plan to inform the Board whenever it has determined to
disregard Qualified Plan participant voting instructions. The
responsibility to report such information and conflicts, and to assist
the Board, will be a contractual obligation of all Participating
Insurance Companies under their participation agreement with a Fund,
and these responsibilities will be carried out with a view only to the
interests of the Variable Contract owners. The responsibility to report
such information and conflicts, and to assist the Board, also will be
contractual obligations of all Qualified Plans under their
participation agreement with a Fund, and such agreements will provide
that these responsibilities will be carried out with a view only to the
interests of Qualified Plan participants.
4. If it is determined by a majority of the Board, or a majority of
the disinterested directors/trustees of the Board, that a material
irreconcilable conflict exists, then the relevant Participant will, at
its expense and to the extent reasonably practicable (as determined by
a majority of the disinterested directors/trustees), take whatever
steps are necessary to remedy or eliminate the material irreconcilable
conflict, up to and including: (a) Withdrawing the assets allocable to
some or all of their VLI Accounts or VA Accounts from the relevant Fund
and reinvesting such assets in a different investment vehicle,
including another Fund; (b) in the case of a Participating Insurance
Company, submitting the question as to whether such segregation should
be implemented to a vote of all affected Variable Contract owners and,
as appropriate, segregating the assets of any appropriate group (i.e.,
VA Contract owners or VLI Contact owners of one or more Participating
Insurance Companies) that votes in favor of such segregation, or
offering to the affected Variable Contract owners the option of making
such a change; (c) withdrawing the assets allocable to some or all of
the Qualified Plans from the affected Fund and reinvesting them in a
different investment medium; and (d) establishing a new registered
management investment company or managed separate account. If a
material irreconcilable conflict arises because of a decision by a
Participating Insurance Company to disregard Variable Contract owner
voting instructions, and that decision represents a minority position
or would preclude a majority vote, then the Participating Insurance
Company may be required, at the election of the Fund, to withdraw such
Participating Insurance Company's Separate Account investments in a
Fund, and no charge or penalty will be imposed as a result of such
withdrawal. If a material irreconcilable conflict arises because of a
Qualified Plan's decision to disregard Qualified Plan participant
voting instructions, if applicable, and that decision represents a
minority position or would preclude a majority vote, the Qualified Plan
may be required, at the election of the Fund, to withdraw its
investment in a Fund, and no charge or penalty will be imposed as a
result of such withdrawal. The responsibility to take remedial action
in the event of a Board determination of a material irreconcilable
conflict and to bear the cost of such remedial action will be a
contractual obligation of all Participants under their participation
agreement with a Fund, and these responsibilities will be carried out
with a view only to the interests of Variable Contract owners or, as
applicable, Qualified Plan participants.
For purposes of this Condition 4, a majority of the disinterested
directors/trustees of the Board of a Fund will determine whether or not
any proposed action adequately remedies any material irreconcilable
conflict, but, in no event, will the Fund or its investment adviser be
required to establish a new funding vehicle for any Variable Contract
or Qualified Plan. No Participating Insurance Company will be required
by this Condition 4 to establish a new funding vehicle for any Variable
Contract if any offer to do so has been declined by vote of a majority
of the Variable Contract owners materially and adversely affected by
the material irreconcilable conflict. Further, no Qualified Plan will
be required by this Condition 4 to establish a new funding vehicle for
the Qualified Plan if: (a) A majority of the Qualified Plan
participants materially and adversely affected by the irreconcilable
material conflict vote to decline such offer, or (b) pursuant to
documents governing the Qualified Plan, the Qualified Plan trustee
makes such decision without a Qualified Plan participant vote.
5. The determination by the Board of the existence of a material
irreconcilable conflict and its implications will be made known in
writing promptly to all Participants.
6. Participating Insurance Companies will provide pass-through
voting privileges to all Variable Contract owners whose Variable
Contracts are issued through registered Separate Accounts for as long
as the Commission continues to interpret the 1940 Act as requiring such
pass-through voting privileges. However, as to Variable Contracts
issued through Separate Accounts not registered as investment companies
under the 1940 Act, pass-through voting privileges will be extended to
owners of such Variable Contracts to the extent granted by the
Participating Insurance Company. Accordingly, such Participating
Insurance Companies, where applicable, will vote the shares of each
Fund held in their Separate Accounts in a manner consistent with voting
instructions timely received from Variable Contract owners.
Participating Insurance Companies will be responsible for assuring that
each of their Separate Accounts investing in a Fund calculates voting
privileges in a manner consistent
[[Page 31426]]
with all other Participating Insurance Companies investing in that
Fund.
The obligation to calculate voting privileges as provided in the
Application shall be a contractual obligation of all Participating
Insurance Companies under their participation agreement with the Fund.
Each Participating Insurance Company will vote shares of each Fund held
in its Separate Accounts for which no timely voting instructions are
received, as well as shares held in its General Account or otherwise
attributed to it, in the same proportion as those shares for which
voting instructions are received. Each Qualified Plan will vote as
required by applicable law, governing Qualified Plan documents and as
provided in the Application.
7. As long as the Commission continues to interpret the 1940 Act as
requiring that pass-through voting privileges be provided to Variable
Contract owners, a Fund Adviser or any General Account will vote its
respective shares of a Fund in the same proportion as all votes cast on
behalf of all Variable Contract owners having voting rights; provided,
however, that such an Adviser or General Account shall vote its shares
in such other manner as may be required by the Commission or its staff.
8. Each Fund will comply with all provisions of the 1940 Act
requiring voting by shareholders (which, for these purposes, shall be
the persons having a voting interest in its shares), and, in
particular, the Fund will either provide for annual meetings (except to
the extent that the Commission may interpret section 16 of the 1940 Act
not to require such meetings) or comply with section 16(c) of the 1940
Act (although each Fund is not, or will not be, one of those trusts of
the type described in section 16(c) of the 1940 Act), as well as with
section 16(a) of the 1940 Act and, if and when applicable, section
16(b) of the 1940 Act. Further, each Fund will act in accordance with
the Commission's interpretations of the requirements of section 16(a)
with respect to periodic elections of directors/trustees and with
whatever rules the Commission may promulgate thereunder.
9. A Fund will make its shares available to the VLI Accounts, VA
Accounts, and Qualified Plans at or about the time it accepts any seed
capital from its Adviser or from the General Account of a Participating
Insurance Company.
10. Each Fund has notified, or will notify, all Participants that
disclosure regarding potential risks of mixed and shared funding may be
appropriate in VA Account and VLI Account prospectuses or Qualified
Plan documents. Each Fund will disclose, in its prospectus that: (a)
shares of the Fund may be offered to both VA Accounts and VLI Accounts
and, if applicable, to Qualified Plans; (b) due to differences in tax
treatment and other considerations, the interests of various Variable
Contract owners participating in the Fund and the interests of
Qualified Plan participants investing in the Fund, if applicable, may
conflict; and (c) the Fund's Board will monitor events in order to
identify the existence of any material irreconcilable conflicts and to
determine what action, if any, should be taken in response to any such
conflicts.
11. If and to the extent Rule 6e-2 and Rule 6e-3(T) under the 1940
Act are amended, or proposed Rule 6e-3 under the 1940 Act is adopted,
to provide exemptive relief from any provision of the 1940 Act, or the
rules thereunder, with respect to mixed or shared funding, on terms and
conditions materially different from any exemptions granted in the
order requested in the Application, then each Fund and/or Participating
Insurance Companies, as appropriate, shall take such steps as may be
necessary to comply with Rules 6e-2 or 6e-3(T), as amended, or Rule 6e-
3, to the extent such rules are applicable.
12. Each Participant, at least annually, shall submit to the Board
of each Fund such reports, materials or data as the Board reasonably
may request so that the directors/trustees may fully carry out the
obligations imposed upon the Board by the conditions contained in the
Application. Such reports, materials and data shall be submitted more
frequently if deemed appropriate by the Board. The obligations of the
Participants to provide these reports, materials and data to the Board,
when it so reasonably requests, shall be a contractual obligation of
all Participants under their participation agreement with the Fund.
13. All reports of potential or existing conflicts received by a
Board, and all Board action with regard to determining the existence of
a conflict, notifying Participants of a conflict and determining
whether any proposed action adequately remedies a conflict, will be
properly recorded in the minutes of the Board or other appropriate
records, and such minutes or other records shall be made available to
the Commission upon request.
14. Each Fund will not accept a purchase order from a Qualified
Plan if such purchase would make the Qualified Plan an owner of 10
percent or more of the assets of a Fund unless the Qualified Plan
executes an agreement with the Fund governing participation in the Fund
that includes the conditions set forth herein to the extent applicable.
A Qualified Plan will execute an application containing an
acknowledgement of this condition at the time of its initial purchase
of shares.
Conclusion
Applicants submit, for all of the reasons explained above, that the
exemptions requested are appropriate in the public interest and
consistent with the protection of investors and the purposes fairly
intended by the policy and provisions of the 1940 Act.
For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management,
pursuant to delegated authority.
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-13176 Filed 6-1-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P