Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6 and Order Granting Accelerated Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6, To List and Trade of Shares of the Guggenheim Total Return Bond ETF Under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600, 80859-80865 [2015-32528]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 248 / Monday, December 28, 2015 / Notices
investment companies; and (4)
securities issued by companies: (i)
which are controlled primarily by such
issuer; (ii) through which such issuer
engages in a business other than that of
investing, reinvesting, owning, holding
or trading in securities; and (iii) which
are not investment companies; (b) the
issuer is not an investment company as
defined in section 3(a)(1)(A) or
3(a)(1)(B) of the Act and is not a special
situation investment company; and (c)
the percentages described in paragraph
(a) of this section are determined on an
unconsolidated basis, except that the
issuer shall consolidate its financial
statements with the financial statements
of any wholly-owned subsidiaries.’’
4. Applicant states that it is no longer
an investment company as defined in
section 3(a)(1)(A) or section 3(a)(1)(C).
As noted above, applicant states that, for
the last four fiscal quarters combined,
no more than 45 percent of its
consolidated net income after taxes was
derived from securities (other than
securities issued by companies (i) that
are wholly owned by applicant, (ii)
through which applicant engages in a
business other than that of investing,
reinvesting, owning, holding or trading
in securities and (iii) that are not
investment companies). Applicant
asserts that it is primarily engaged in the
business of owning, operating,
managing, acquiring, developing, and
redeveloping professionally managed
self storage facilities through its wholly
owned subsidiaries. Applicant argues
that its historical development, its
public representations, the activities of
its directors and officers, the nature of
its present assets and the sources of its
present income support this assertion.
Applicant states that it is thus qualified
for an order of the Commission pursuant
to section 8(f) of the Act.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, under delegated
authority.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–32579 Filed 12–24–15; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–76719; File No. SR–
NYSEArca–2015–73]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing of
Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6 and
Order Granting Accelerated Approval
of a Proposed Rule Change, as
Modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4,
5 and 6, To List and Trade of Shares
of the Guggenheim Total Return Bond
ETF Under NYSE Arca Equities Rule
8.600
December 21, 2015.
I. Introduction
On September 1, 2015, NYSE Arca,
Inc. (‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’ or ‘‘Exchange Act’’) 1 and
Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2 a proposed rule
change to list and trade shares
(‘‘Shares’’) of the Guggenheim Total
Return Bond ETF (‘‘Fund’’) under NYSE
Arca Equities Rule 8.600. On September
15, 2015, the Exchange filed
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change.3 The Commission published
notice of the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No. 1 thereto,
in the Federal Register on September
22, 2015.4 On September 22, 2015, the
Exchange submitted Amendment No. 3
to the proposed rule change.5 On
November 5, 2015, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Act,6 the Commission
designated a longer period within which
to either approve the proposed rule
change, disapprove the proposed rule
change, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change.7 On November
23, 2015, December 14, 2015, and
December 16, 2015, the Exchange
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change
replaced and superseded the original filing in its
entirety.
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 75930
(September 16, 2015), 80 FR 57251 (‘‘Notice’’).
5 On September 21, 2015, the Exchange submitted
and withdrew Amendment No. 2 to the proposal.
In Amendment No. 3, the Exchange clarified certain
representations regarding the availability of
quotation, last sale, and pricing information for the
Shares and the instruments in which the Fund may
invest. Amendment No. 3 is available at https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nysearca-2015-73/
nysearca201573-2.pdf.
6 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 76362,
80 FR 70044 (November 12, 2015). The Commission
designated December 21, 2015 as the date by which
it should approve, disapprove, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change.
2 17
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80859
submitted Amendment Nos. 4, 5, and 6,
respectively, to the proposed rule
change.8 The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comment on
Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5 and 6 to the
proposed rule change from interested
persons and is approving the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment
Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6, on an accelerated
basis.
II. The Exchange’s Description of the
Proposal 9
The Exchange proposes to list and
trade the Shares under NYSE Arca
Equities Rule 8.600, which governs the
listing and trading of Managed Fund
Shares on the Exchange.10 The Shares
will be offered by the Claymore
Exchange-Traded Fund Trust 2
(‘‘Trust’’),11 a statutory trust organized
8 Amendment No. 4 replaced and superseded the
original filing, as modified by Amendment Nos. 1
and 3, in its entirety. Amendment No. 4 is available
at https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nysearca-201573/nysearca201573-3.pdf. Amendment No. 5
replaced and superseded the original filing, as
modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3 and 4, in its
entirety. Amendment No. 5 is available at https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nysearca-2015-73/
nysearca201573-4.pdf. Amendment No. 6 replaced
and superseded the original filing, as modified by
Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4 and 5, in its entirety.
9 Additional information regarding the Fund, the
Trust (as defined herein), and the Shares, including
investment strategies, risks, creation and
redemption procedures, fees, portfolio holdings,
disclosure policies, calculation of net asset value
(‘‘NAV’’), distributions, and taxes, among other
things, can be found in the Notice and the
Registration Statement, as applicable. See Notice,
supra note 4, and Registration Statement, infra note
11.
10 The Commission previously approved a
proposed rule change relating to listing and trading
of shares of the Guggenheim Enhanced Total Return
ETF under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600. See
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 68488
(December 20, 2012), 77 FR 76326 (December 27,
2012) (SR–NYSEArca–2012–142) (‘‘Prior Notice’’);
and 68863 (February 7, 2013), 78 FR 10222
(February 13, 2013) (SR–NYSEArca–2012–142)
(‘‘Prior Order’’ and, together with the Prior Notice,
‘‘Prior Release’’). The Exchange represents that
shares of the Guggenheim Enhanced Total Return
ETF have not commenced listing and trading on the
Exchange, that the Fund would replace the
Guggenheim Enhanced Total Return ETF as
approved in the Prior Release, and that the Notice
supersedes the Prior Release in its entirety. The
Exchange represents that prior to commencement of
trading of Shares of the Fund, the Trust will file an
amendment to its Registration Statement to change
the name of the Guggenheim Enhanced Total
Return ETF to the name of the Fund.
11 The Exchange states that the Trust is registered
under the 1940 Act. According to the Exchange, on
November 25, 2014, the Trust filed with the
Commission an amendment to its registration
statement on Form N–1A under the Securities Act
of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77a) (‘‘Securities Act’’) and the
1940 Act relating to the Fund (File Nos. 333–
135105 and 811–21910) (‘‘Registration Statement’’).
The Exchange states that the Commission has
issued an order granting certain exemptive relief to
the Trust under the 1940 Act. See Investment
Company Act Release No. 29271 (May 18, 2010)
(File No. 812–13534) (‘‘Exemptive Order’’).
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under the laws of the State of Delaware
and registered with the Commission as
an open-end management investment
company. The investment adviser for
the Fund is Guggenheim Partners
Investment Management, LLC
(‘‘Adviser’’).12 The Bank of New York
Mellon is the custodian and transfer
agent for the Fund. Guggenheim Funds
Distributors, LLC is the distributor for
the Fund.
A. The Fund’s Principal Investments
The Exchange states that the Fund’s
investment objective is to seek
maximum total return, comprised of
income and capital appreciation.
According to the Exchange, the Fund
will normally 13 invest at least 80% of
its assets in ‘‘Fixed Income
Instruments’’ (as defined below) of
varying maturities and of any credit
quality, which may be represented by
certain derivative instruments as
discussed below,14 and exchange-traded
funds (‘‘ETFs’’) 15 and exchange-traded
and over-the-counter (‘‘OTC’’) closedend funds (‘‘CEFs’’) (which may include
ETFs and CEFs affiliated with the Fund)
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12 The
Exchange states that the Adviser is
affiliated with a broker-dealer and has represented
that it has implemented a fire wall with respect to
its broker-dealer affiliate regarding access to
information concerning the composition of and/or
changes to the portfolio. In the event (a) the Adviser
or any sub-adviser becomes newly affiliated with a
broker-dealer, or (b) any new adviser or sub-adviser
becomes affiliated with a broker-dealer, such
adviser or sub-adviser will implement a fire wall
with respect to such broker-dealer regarding access
to information concerning the composition of and/
or changes to the portfolio, and will be subject to
procedures designed to prevent the use and
dissemination of material non-public information
regarding such portfolio.
13 The term ‘‘normally’’ includes, but is not
limited to, the absence of extreme volatility or
trading halts in the securities markets or the
financial markets generally; circumstances under
which the Fund’s investments are made for
temporary defensive purposes; operational issues
causing dissemination of inaccurate market
information; or force majeure type events such as
systems failure, natural or man-made disaster, act
of God, armed conflict, act of terrorism, riot or labor
disruption or any similar intervening circumstance.
14 See Section II.D, infra. The Exchange states that
the Fund will invest in the following derivative
instruments on Fixed-Income Securities: Foreign
exchange forward contracts; exchange-traded
futures on securities, indices, currencies and other
investments; exchange-traded and OTC options;
exchange-traded and OTC options on futures
contracts; exchange-traded and OTC interest rate
swaps, cross-currency swaps, total return swaps,
inflation swaps, and credit default swaps; and
options on such swaps.
15 For purposes of this filing, ETFs consist of
Investment Company Units (as described in NYSE
Arca Equities Rule 5.2(j)(3)), Portfolio Depositary
Receipts (as described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule
8.100); and Managed Fund Shares (as described in
NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600). All ETFs will be
listed and traded in the U.S. on a national securities
exchange. While the Fund may invest in inverse
ETFs, the Fund will not invest in leveraged (e.g.,
2X, –2X, 3X or –3X) ETFs.
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that invest substantially all of their
assets in Fixed Income Instruments (the
‘‘80% Policy’’). The Fund has no target
duration for its investment portfolio.
The Fixed Income Instruments 16 in
which the Fund will invest, as
described further below, are the
following: Corporate debt securities of
U.S and non-U.S. issuers, including
corporate bonds; 17 inflation-indexed
bonds issued both by governments and
corporations; 18 securities issued by the
U.S. government or its agencies,
instrumentalities, or sponsored
corporations (including those not
backed by the full faith and credit of the
U.S. government); debt securities issued
by states or local governments and their
agencies, authorities, and other
government-sponsored enterprises;
obligations of non-U.S. governments
and their subdivisions, agencies, and
government-sponsored enterprises;
obligations of international agencies or
supranational entities; cash
equivalents;‘‘ 19 agency and non-agency
mortgage-backed securities (‘‘MBS’’) and
asset-backed securities (‘‘ABS’’); 20 U.S.
16 Fixed Income Instruments may be of varying
maturities and of any credit quality rating.
17 The Adviser expects that normally the Fund
generally will seek to invest at least 75% of its
corporate debt securities assets in issuances that
have at least $100,000,000 par amount outstanding
in developed countries or at least $200,000,000 par
amount outstanding in emerging market countries.
18 Inflation-indexed bonds (other than municipal
inflation-indexed bonds and certain corporate
inflation-indexed bonds) are fixed income securities
whose principal value is periodically adjusted
according to the rate of inflation (e.g., Treasury
Inflation Protected Securities (‘‘TIPS’’)). Municipal
inflation-indexed securities are municipal bonds
that pay coupons based on a fixed rate plus the
Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers.
With regard to municipal inflation-indexed bonds
and certain corporate inflation-indexed bonds, the
inflation adjustment is reflected in the semi-annual
coupon payment.
19 Cash equivalents in which the Fund may invest
include U.S. Treasury Bills, investment grade
commercial paper, cash, and Short Term
Investment Funds (‘‘STIFs’’). STIFs are a type of
fund that invests in short-term investments of high
quality and low risk.
20 The MBS in which the Fund may invest may
also include residential mortgage-backed securities
(‘‘RMBS’’), collateralized mortgage obligations
(‘‘CMOs’’), and commercial mortgage-backed
securities (‘‘CMBS’’). The ABS in which the Fund
may invest includes collateralized debt obligations
(‘‘CDOs’’). CDOs include collateralized bond
obligations (‘‘CBOs’’), collateralized loan
obligations (‘‘CLOs’’), and other similarly structured
securities. A CBO is a trust which is backed by a
diversified pool of high risk, below investment
grade fixed income securities. A CLO is a trust
typically collateralized by a pool of loans, which
may include domestic and foreign senior secured
loans, senior unsecured loans, and subordinate
corporate loans, including loans that may be rated
below investment grade or equivalent unrated
loans. Specifically, the Exchange notes that such
ABS are bonds backed by pools of loans or other
receivables and are securitized by a wide variety of
assets that are generally broken into three
categories: Consumer, commercial, and corporate.
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agency mortgage pass-through
securities; 21 repurchase agreements;
convertible securities; 22 preferred
securities; 23 bank capital; 24 commercial
instruments; 25 variable or floating rate
instruments and variable rate demand
instruments; 26 zero-coupon and pay-inThe consumer category includes credit card, auto
loan, student loan, and timeshare loan ABS. The
commercial category includes trade receivables,
equipment leases, oil receivables, film receivables,
rental cars, aircraft securitizations, ship and
container securitizations, whole business
securitizations, and diversified payment right
securitizations. Corporate ABS includes cash flow
collateralization loan obligations, collateralized by
both middle market and broadly syndicated bank
loans. An ABS is issued through a special purpose
vehicle that is bankruptcy remote from the issuer
of the collateral. The credit quality of an ABS
tranche depends on the performance of the
underlying assets and the structure. To protect ABS
investors from the possibility that some borrowers
could miss payments or even default on their loans,
ABS include various forms of credit enhancement.
21 The Fund will seek to obtain exposure to U.S.
agency mortgage pass-through securities primarily
through the use of ‘‘to-be-announced’’ or ‘‘TBA
transactions.’’ ‘‘TBA’’ refers to a commonly used
mechanism for the forward settlement of U.S.
agency mortgage pass-through securities, and not to
a separate type of mortgage-backed security. Most
transactions in mortgage pass-through securities
occur through the use of TBA transactions. TBA
transactions generally are conducted in accordance
with widely-accepted guidelines which establish
commonly observed terms and conditions for
execution, settlement, and delivery.
22 Convertible securities include bonds,
debentures, notes, and other securities that may be
converted into a prescribed amount of common
stock or other equity securities at a specified price
and time.
23 The preferred securities in which the Fund may
invest include preferred stock, contingent capital
securities, contingent convertible securities, capital
securities, and hybrid securities of debt and
preferred stock. The Fund may invest in preferred
securities traded on an exchange or OTC. Preferred
securities pay fixed or adjustable rate dividends to
investors, and have ‘‘preference’’ over common
stock in the payment of dividends and the
liquidation of a company’s assets.
24 There are two common types of bank capital:
Tier I and Tier II. Bank capital is generally, but not
always, of investment grade quality. Tier I securities
are typically preferred stock or contingent capital
securities. Tier I securities are often perpetual or
long-dated (with no maturity date). Tier II securities
are typically subordinated debt securities.
25 Commercial instruments include commercial
paper, master notes, asset-backed commercial
paper, and other short-term corporate instruments.
Commercial paper normally represents short-term
unsecured promissory notes issued in bearer form
by banks or bank holding companies, corporations,
finance companies and other issuers. Commercial
paper may be traded in the secondary market after
its issuance. Master notes are demand notes that
permit the investment of fluctuating amounts of
money at varying rates of interest pursuant to
arrangements with issuers who meet the quality
criteria of the Fund. Master notes are generally
illiquid and therefore subject to the Fund’s
percentage limitations for investments in illiquid
securities. Asset-backed commercial paper is issued
by a special purpose entity that is organized to issue
the commercial paper and to purchase trade
receivables or other financial assets.
26 Variable or floating rate instruments and
variable rate demand instruments, including
variable amount master demand notes, will
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kind securities; 27 bank instruments,
including certificates of deposit
(‘‘CDs’’), time deposits, and bankers’
acceptances from U.S. banks; 28 and
participations in and assignments of
bank loans or corporate loans, which
loans include senior loans, syndicated
bank loans, junior loans, bridge loans,29
unfunded commitments,30 revolving
credit facilities (‘‘revolvers’’),31 and
participation interests.32
normally involve industrial development or
revenue bonds that provide that the rate of interest
is set as a specific percentage of a designated base
rate (such as the prime rate) at a major commercial
bank. In addition, the interest rate on these
securities may be reset daily, weekly or on some
other reset period and may have a floor or ceiling
on interest rate changes. The Adviser will monitor
the pricing, quality and liquidity of the variable or
floating rate securities held by the Fund.
27 Zero-coupon and pay-in-kind securities are
debt securities that do not make regular cash
interest payments. Zero-coupon securities are sold
at a deep discount to their face value. Pay-in-kind
securities pay interest through the issuance of
additional securities.
28 A bankers’ acceptance is a bill of exchange or
time draft drawn on and accepted by a commercial
bank. A CD is a negotiable interest-bearing
instrument with a specific maturity.
29 Bridge loans are short-term loan arrangements
(e.g., maturities that are generally less than one
year) typically made by a borrower following the
failure of the borrower to secure other intermediateterm or long-term permanent financing. A bridge
loan remains outstanding until more permanent
financing, often in the form of high yield notes, can
be obtained. Most bridge loans have a step-up
provision under which the interest rate increases
incrementally the longer the loan remains
outstanding so as to incentivize the borrower to
refinance as quickly as possible. In exchange for
entering into a bridge loan, the Fund typically will
receive a commitment fee and interest payable
under the bridge loan and may also have other
expenses reimbursed by the borrower. Bridge loans
may be subordinate to other debt and generally are
unsecured.
30 Unfunded commitments are contractual
obligations pursuant to which the Fund agrees in
writing to make one or more loans up to a specified
amount at one or more future dates. The underlying
loan documentation sets out the terms and
conditions of the lender’s obligation to make the
loans as well as the economic terms of such loans.
The portion of the amount committed by a lender
that the borrower has not drawn down is referred
to as ‘‘unfunded.’’ Loan commitments may be
traded in the secondary market through dealer
desks at large commercial and investment banks
although these markets are generally not considered
liquid.
31 Revolving credit facilities (‘‘revolvers’’) are
borrowing arrangements in which the lender agrees
to make loans up to a maximum amount upon
demand by the borrower during a specified term.
As the borrower repays the loan, an amount equal
to the repayment may be borrowed again during the
term of the revolver. Revolvers usually provide for
floating or variable rates of interest.
32 All or a significant portion of the loans in
which the Fund will invest may be below
investment grade quality. The Fund normally will
invest at least 75% of its bank loan or corporate
loan assets, which includes senior loans, syndicated
bank loans, junior loans, bridge loans, unfunded
commitments, revolvers and participation interests,
in issuances that have at least $100 million par
amount outstanding.
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With respect to Fixed Income
Instrument investments, the Fund may
invest in restricted securities (Rule
144A securities), which are subject to
legal restrictions on their sale. In
addition, with respect to Fixed Income
Instrument investments, the Fund may,
without limitation, seek to obtain
market exposure to the securities in
which it primarily invests by entering
into a series of purchase and sale
contracts or by using other investment
techniques (such as buy backs or dollar
rolls).
The Fund may also use leverage to the
extent permitted under the 1940 Act by
entering into reverse repurchase
agreements and borrowing transactions
(principally lines of credit) for
investment purposes. The Fund’s
exposure to reverse repurchase
agreements will be covered by securities
having a value equal to or greater than
such commitments. The Exchange
represents that, under the 1940 Act,
reverse repurchase agreements are
considered borrowings. Although there
is no limit on the percentage of Fund
assets that can be used in connection
with reverse repurchase agreements, the
Portfolio does not expect to engage,
under normal circumstances, in reverse
repurchase agreements with respect to
more than 33 1/3% of its assets.
B. The Fund’s Other Investments
While the Fund normally will invest
at least 80% of its assets in the
securities and financial instruments
described above, the Fund may invest
its remaining assets in exchange-traded
and OTC hybrid instruments, which
combine a traditional stock, bond, or
commodity with an option or forward
contract. Generally, the principal
amount, amount payable upon maturity
or redemption, or interest rate of a
hybrid is tied (positively or negatively)
to the price of some commodity,
currency or securities index or another
interest rate or some other economic
factor (‘‘underlying benchmark’’).33 The
Fund is also permitted to invest in
33 According to the Exchange, certain hybrid
instruments may provide exposure to the
commodities markets. These are derivative
securities with one or more commodity-linked
components that have payment features similar to
commodity futures contracts, commodity options,
or similar instruments. Commodity-linked hybrid
instruments may be either equity or debt securities,
and are considered hybrid instruments because they
have both security and commodity-like
characteristics. A portion of the value of these
instruments may be derived from the value of a
commodity, futures contract, index or other
economic variable. The Fund would only invest in
commodity-linked hybrid instruments that qualify,
under applicable rules of the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, for an exemption from the
provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act (7
U.S.C. 1).
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80861
structured notes, which are debt
obligations that also contain an
embedded derivative component with
characteristics that adjust the
obligation’s risk/return profile.
Generally, the performance of a
structured note will track that of the
underlying debt obligation and the
derivative embedded within it. Further,
the Fund may invest in credit-linked
notes, which are a type of structured
note,34 and risk-linked securities
(‘‘RLS’’), which are a form of derivative
issued by insurance companies and
insurance-related special purpose
vehicles that apply securitization
techniques to catastrophic property and
casualty damages.35 The Fund may
invest a portion of its assets in highquality money market instruments and
U.S. and foreign common stocks, both
exchange-listed and OTC, and may gain
exposure to commodities through the
use of investments in exchange-traded
products (‘‘ETPs’’) 36 and exchangetraded notes (‘‘ETNs’’).37 Finally, the
Fund may invest in the securities of
exchange-traded and OTC real estate
investment trusts (‘‘REITs’’).
C. The Fund’s Investment Restrictions
The Fund may invest up to 20% of its
total assets in the aggregate in MBS and
ABS that are privately issued, nonagency, and non-government sponsored
entity (‘‘Private MBS/ABS’’), and in
34 The difference between a credit default swap
and a credit-linked note is that the seller of a creditlinked note receives the principal payment from the
buyer at the time the contract is originated. Through
the purchase of a credit-linked note, the buyer
assumes the risk of the reference asset and funds
this exposure through the purchase of the note. The
buyer takes on the exposure to the seller to the full
amount of the funding it has provided. The seller
has hedged its risk on the reference asset without
acquiring any additional credit exposure. The Fund
has the right to receive periodic interest payments
from the issuer of the credit-linked note at an
agreed-upon interest rate and a return of principal
at the maturity date.
35 RLS are typically debt obligations for which the
return of principal and the payment of interest are
contingent on the non-occurrence of a pre-defined
‘‘trigger event.’’ Depending on the specific terms
and structure of the RLS, this trigger could be the
result of a hurricane, earthquake or some other
catastrophic event. Insurance companies securitize
this risk to transfer to the capital markets the truly
catastrophic part of the risk exposure. A typical RLS
provides for income and return of capital similar to
other fixed income investments, but would involve
full or partial default if losses resulting from a
certain catastrophe exceeded a predetermined
amount.
36 Such ETPs include Trust Issued Receipts (as
described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.200);
Commodity-Based Trust Shares (as described in
NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.201); Currency Trust
Shares (as described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule
8.202); Commodity Index Trust Shares (as described
in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.203); and Trust Units
(as described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.500).
37 ETNs include Index-Linked Securities (as
described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 5.2(j)(6)).
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asset-backed commercial paper. Such
holdings would be subject to the
respective limitations on the Fund’s
investments in illiquid assets and high
yield securities. The liquidity of a
security, especially in the case of Private
MBS/ABS, will be a substantial factor in
the Fund’s security selection process.
The Fund may invest in defaulted or
distressed Private MBS/ABS.
The Fund may invest up to 20% of its
total assets in the aggregate in
participations in and assignments of
bank loans or corporate loans, which
loans include syndicated bank loans,
junior loans, bridge loans, unfunded
commitments, revolvers and
participation interests (but specifically
do not include senior loans), in
structured notes, in credit-linked notes,
in risk-linked securities, in OTC REITs,
and in OTC hybrid instruments. Such
holdings would be subject to the
respective limitations on the Fund’s
investments in illiquid assets and high
yield securities. The liquidity of such
securities will be a substantial factor in
the Fund’s security selection process.
The Fund may invest in debt
securities and instruments that are
economically tied to emerging market
countries and may invest without
limitation in securities denominated in
foreign currencies and in U.S. dollardenominated securities of foreign
issuers.38 Further, the Fund may invest
up to 331⁄3% of its total assets in high
yield debt securities (‘‘junk bonds’’),
which are debt securities that are rated
below investment grade by nationally
recognized statistical rating
organizations, or are unrated securities
that the Adviser believes are of
comparable below investment grade
quality.
The Fund will be considered nondiversified and can invest a greater
portion of assets in securities of
individual issuers than a diversified
fund. However, the Fund may not invest
more than 25% of the value of its net
assets in securities of issuers in any one
industry or group of industries. This
restriction does not apply to obligations
issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
38 See supra note 17. Generally, the Fund
considers an instrument to be economically tied to
an emerging market country through consideration
of some or all of the following factors: (i) Whether
the issuer is the government of the emerging market
country (or any political subdivision, agency,
authority or instrumentality of such government), or
is organized under the laws of the emerging market
country; (ii) amount of the issuer’s revenues that are
attributable to the emerging market country; (iii) the
location of the issuer’s management; (iv) if the
security is secured or collateralized, the country in
which the security or collateral is located; and/or
(v) the currency in which the instrument is
denominated or currency fluctuations to which the
issuer is exposed.
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Government, its agencies or
instrumentalities.
The Fund’s investments, including
investments in derivative instruments,
are subject to all of the restrictions
under the 1940 Act, including
restrictions with respect to illiquid
assets. The Fund may hold up to an
aggregate amount of 15% of its net
assets in illiquid assets (calculated at
the time of investment), including Rule
144A securities, Private MBS/ABS,
master notes, loans and loan
commitments deemed illiquid by the
Adviser,39 consistent with Commission
guidance. The Fund will monitor its
portfolio liquidity on an ongoing basis
to determine whether, in light of current
circumstances, an adequate level of
liquidity is being maintained, and will
consider taking appropriate steps in
order to maintain adequate liquidity if,
through a change in values, net assets,
or other circumstances, more than 15%
of the Fund’s net assets are held in
illiquid assets. Illiquid assets include
securities subject to contractual or other
restrictions on resale and other
instruments that lack readily available
markets as determined in accordance
with Commission staff guidance.
The Fund’s investments will be
consistent with the Fund’s investment
objective and will not be used to
enhance leverage. That is, while the
Fund will be permitted to borrow as
permitted under the 1940 Act, the
Fund’s investments will not be used to
seek performance that is the multiple or
inverse multiple (i.e., 2Xs and 3Xs) of
the Fund’s primary broad-based
securities benchmark index (as defined
in Form N–1A).40
D. The Fund’s Use of Derivatives
According to the Exchange, the Fund
proposes to seek certain exposures
through derivative transactions. The
Fund may invest in the following
derivative instruments: Foreign
exchange forward contracts; exchangetraded futures on securities, indices,
currencies and other investments;
exchange-traded and OTC options;
exchange-traded and OTC options on
futures contracts; exchange-traded and
39 In reaching liquidity decisions with respect to
Rule 144A securities, the Adviser may consider the
following factors: The frequency of trades and
quotes for the security; the number of dealers
willing to purchase or sell the security and the
number of other potential purchasers; dealer
undertakings to make a market in the security; and
the nature of the security and the nature of the
marketplace in which it trades (e.g., the time
needed to dispose of the security, the method of
soliciting offers, and the mechanics of transfer).
40 The Fund’s broad-based securities benchmark
index will be identified in a future amendment to
the Registration Statement following the Fund’s
first full calendar year of performance.
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
OTC interest rate swaps, cross-currency
swaps, total return swaps, inflation
swaps and credit default swaps; and
options on such swaps (‘‘swaptions’’).41
The Fund may, but is not required to,
use derivative instruments for risk
management purposes or as part of its
investment strategies.42 The Fund may
also engage in derivative transactions
for speculative purposes to enhance
total return, to seek to hedge against
fluctuations in securities prices, interest
rates or currency rates, to change the
effective duration of its portfolio, to
manage certain investment risks and/or
as a substitute for the purchase or sale
of securities or currencies.
The Exchange states that investments
in derivative instruments will be made
in accordance with the 1940 Act and
consistent with the Fund’s investment
objective and policies. To limit the
potential risk associated with such
transactions, the Fund will segregate or
‘‘earmark’’ assets determined to be
liquid by the Adviser in accordance
with procedures established by the
Trust’s Board of Trustees (‘‘Board’’) and
in accordance with the 1940 Act (or, as
permitted by applicable regulation,
enter into certain offsetting positions) to
cover its obligations under derivative
instruments. In addition, the Fund will
include appropriate risk disclosure in
its offering documents, including
leveraging risk.
In addition to the Fund’s use of
derivatives in connection with its 80%
Policy, under the proposal the Exchange
states that the Fund will seek to invest
in derivative instruments not based on
Fixed-Income Instruments, consistent
with the Fund’s investment restrictions
relating to exposure to those asset
classes.
III. Discussion and Commission
Findings
After careful review, the Commission
finds that the Exchange’s proposal to list
and trade the Shares is consistent with
the Exchange Act and the rules and
41 Options on swaps are traded OTC. In the
future, in the event that there are exchange-traded
options on swaps, the Fund may invest in these
instruments.
42 The Fund will seek, where possible, to use
counterparties whose financial status is such that
the risk of default is reduced; however, the risk of
losses resulting from default is still possible. The
Adviser will monitor the financial standing of
counterparties on an ongoing basis. This monitoring
may include information provided by credit
agencies, as well as the Adviser’s credit analysts
and other team members who evaluate approved
counterparties using various methods of analysis,
including but not limited to earnings updates, the
counterparty’s reputation, the Adviser’s past
experience with the broker-dealer, market levels for
the counterparty’s debt and equity, the
counterparty’s liquidity and its share of market
participation.
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regulations thereunder applicable to a
national securities exchange.43 In
particular, the Commission finds that
the proposed rule change, as modified
by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6, is
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Exchange Act,44 which requires, among
other things, that the Exchange’s rules
be designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest. The
Commission also finds that the proposal
to list and trade the Shares on the
Exchange is consistent with Section
11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) of the Exchange Act,45
which sets forth the finding of Congress
that it is in the public interest and
appropriate for the protection of
investors and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets to assure the
availability to brokers, dealers, and
investors of information with respect to
quotations for and transactions in
securities.
According to the Exchange, quotation
and last sale information will be
available via the Consolidated Tape
Association (‘‘CTA’’) high-speed line for
the Shares and for the following U.S.
exchange-traded securities: Common
stocks, hybrid instruments, convertible
securities, preferred securities, REITs,
CEFs, ETFs, ETPs, and ETNs. Intra-day
price information for foreign exchangetraded stocks will be available from the
applicable foreign exchange and from
major market data vendors. Intra-day
price information for exchange-traded
derivative instruments will be available
from the applicable exchange and from
major market data vendors. Intra-day
price information for OTC REITs, OTC
common stocks, OTC CEFs, OTC
options, money market instruments,
forwards, structured notes, RLS, OTC
derivative instruments, and OTC hybrid
instruments will be available from major
market data vendors. Intraday and
closing price information for exchangetraded options and futures will be
available from the applicable exchange
and from major market data vendors. In
addition, intra-day price information for
U.S. exchange-traded options is
available from the Options Price
Reporting Authority. Intra-day and
closing price information from brokers
43 In approving this proposed rule change, the
Commission has considered the proposed rule’s
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
44 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
45 15 U.S.C. 78k–1(a)(1)(C)(iii).
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and dealers or independent pricing
services will be available for Fixed
Income Instruments.
In addition, the Portfolio Indicative
Value, as defined in NYSE Arca Equities
Rule 8.600 (c)(3), will be widely
disseminated by one or more major
market data vendors at least every 15
seconds during the Core Trading
Session.46 On each business day, before
commencement of trading in Shares in
the Core Trading Session on the
Exchange, the Fund will disclose on its
Web site the Disclosed Portfolio, as
defined in NYSE Arca Equities Rule
8.600(c)(2), that will form the basis for
the Fund’s calculation of NAV at the
end of the business day.47
The NAV for the Shares will be
calculated after 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time
each trading day. A basket composition
file, which will include the security
names and share quantities required to
be delivered in exchange for the Shares,
together with estimates and actual cash
components, will be publicly
disseminated daily prior to the opening
of the New York Stock Exchange via the
National Securities Clearing
Corporation. Information regarding
market price and trading volume for the
Shares will be continually available on
a real-time basis throughout the day on
brokers’ computer screens and other
electronic services. Information
regarding the previous day’s closing
price and trading volume information
for the Shares will be published daily in
the financial section of newspapers. The
Web site for the Fund will include a
form of the prospectus for the Fund and
additional data relating to NAV and
other applicable quantitative
information.
The Commission further believes that
the proposal to list and trade the Shares
is reasonably designed to promote fair
disclosure of information that may be
46 Currently, it is the Exchange’s understanding
that several major market data vendors display and/
or make widely available Portfolio Indicative
Values taken from CTA or other data feeds.
47 On a daily basis, the Adviser will disclose on
the Fund’s Web site the following information
regarding each portfolio holding, as applicable to
the type of holding: Ticker symbol, CUSIP number
or other identifier, if any; a description of the
holding (including the type of holding, such as the
type of swap); the identity of the security,
commodity, index or other asset or instrument
underlying the holding, if any; for options, the
option strike price; quantity held (as measured by,
for example, par value, notional value or number
of shares, contracts or units); maturity date, if any;
coupon rate, if any; effective date, if any; market
value of the holding; and the percentage weighting
of the holding in the Fund’s portfolio. The Web site
information will be publicly available at no charge.
The Fund’s disclosure of derivative positions in the
Disclosed Portfolio will include information that
market participants can use to value these positions
intraday.
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
80863
necessary to price the Shares
appropriately and to prevent trading
when a reasonable degree of
transparency cannot be assured. The
Commission notes that the Exchange
will obtain a representation from the
issuer of the Shares that the NAV per
Share will be calculated daily and that
the NAV and the Disclosed Portfolio
will be made available to all market
participants at the same time.48 Trading
in Shares of the Fund will be halted if
the circuit-breaker parameters in NYSE
Arca Equities Rule 7.12 have been
reached. Trading also may be halted
because of market conditions or for
reasons that, in the view of the
Exchange, make trading in the Shares
inadvisable.49 Trading in the Shares also
will be subject to NYSE Arca Equities
Rule 8.600(d)(2)(D), which sets forth
circumstances under which Shares of
the Fund may be halted. The Exchange
represents that it has a general policy
prohibiting the distribution of material,
non-public information by its
employees. The Adviser is affiliated
with a broker-dealer and has
represented that it has implemented a
fire wall with respect to its brokerdealer affiliate regarding access to
information concerning the composition
and/or changes to the portfolio.50
Further, the Commission notes that the
Reporting Authority that provides the
Disclosed Portfolio of the Fund must
implement and maintain, or be subject
to, procedures designed to prevent the
use and dissemination of material, nonpublic information regarding the actual
components of the portfolio.51
Prior to the commencement of
trading, the Exchange will inform its
Equity Trading Permit Holders (‘‘ETP
Holders’’) in an Information Bulletin
(‘‘Bulletin’’) of the special
characteristics and risks associated with
trading the Shares. The Exchange
represents that trading in the Shares
will be subject to the existing trading
surveillances, administered by
regulatory staff of the Exchange, or the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
(‘‘FINRA’’) on behalf of the Exchange,
which are designed to detect violations
48 See
NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600(d)(1)(B).
may include: (1) The extent to which
trading is not occurring in the securities or the
financial instruments constituting the Disclosed
Portfolio of the Fund; or (2) whether other unusual
conditions or circumstances detrimental to the
maintenance of a fair and orderly market are
present.
50 See supra note 12. The Exchange represents
that an investment adviser to an open-end fund is
required to be registered under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940.
51 See NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600(d)(2)(B)(ii).
49 These
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of Exchange rules and applicable federal
securities laws.52
The Exchange represents that it deems
the Shares to be equity securities, thus
rendering trading in the Shares subject
to the Exchange’s existing rules
governing the trading of equity
securities. In support of this proposal,
the Exchange has also made the
following representations:
(1) The Shares will conform to the
initial and continued listing criteria
under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600.
(2) The Exchange has appropriate
rules to facilitate transactions in the
Shares during all trading sessions.
(3) Trading in the Shares will be
subject to the existing trading
surveillances, administered by
regulatory staff of the Exchange, or
FINRA on behalf of the Exchange,
which are designed to detect violations
of Exchange rules and applicable federal
securities laws, and these procedures
are adequate to properly monitor
Exchange trading of the Shares in all
trading sessions and to deter and detect
violations of Exchange rules and federal
securities laws applicable to trading on
the Exchange.
(4) FINRA, on behalf of the Exchange,
or the regulatory staff of the Exchange,
will communicate as needed regarding
trading in the Shares, certain exchangetraded options and futures, certain
exchange-traded equities (including
ETFs, ETPs. ETNs, CEFs, certain
common stocks, and certain REITs) with
other markets or other entities that are
members of the Intermarket
Surveillance Group (‘‘ISG’’), and FINRA
or regulatory staff of the Exchange may
obtain trading information regarding
trading in the Shares, certain exchangetraded options and futures, certain
exchange-traded equities (including
ETFs, ETPs, ETNs, CEFs, certain
common stocks and certain REITs) from
such markets or entities. In addition, the
Exchange may obtain information
regarding trading in the Shares, certain
exchange-traded options and futures,
certain exchange-traded equities
(including ETFs, ETPs, ETNs, CEFs,
certain common stocks, and certain
REITs) from markets or other entities
that are members of ISG or with which
the Exchange has in place a
comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement. FINRA, on behalf of the
Exchange, is able to access, as needed,
trade information for certain fixed
income securities held by the Fund
52 The Exchange states that FINRA surveils
trading on the Exchange pursuant to a regulatory
services agreement. The Exchange is responsible for
FINRA’s performance under this regulatory services
agreement.
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13:31 Dec 24, 2015
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reported to FINRA’s Trade Reporting
and Compliance Engine.
(5) Prior to the commencement of
trading of the Shares, the Exchange will
inform its ETP Holders in a Bulletin of
the special characteristics and risks
associated with trading the Shares. The
Bulletin will discuss the following: (a)
The procedures for purchases and
redemptions of Shares in creation units
(and that Shares are not individually
redeemable); (b) NYSE Arca Equities
Rule 9.2(a), which imposes a duty of
due diligence on its ETP Holders to
learn the essential facts relating to every
customer prior to trading the Shares; (c)
the risks involved in trading the Shares
during the Opening and Late Trading
Sessions when an updated Portfolio
Indicative Value will not be calculated
or publicly disseminated; (d) how
information regarding the Portfolio
Indicative Value and the Disclosed
Portfolio is disseminated; (e) the
requirement that ETP Holders deliver a
prospectus to investors purchasing
newly issued Shares prior to or
concurrently with the confirmation of a
transaction; and (f) trading information.
(6) For initial and continued listing,
the Fund will be in compliance with
Rule 10A–3 under the Exchange Act,53
as provided by NYSE Arca Equities Rule
5.3.
(7) A minimum of 100,000 Shares for
the Fund will be outstanding at the
commencement of trading on the
Exchange.
(8) While the Fund may invest in
inverse ETFs, the Fund will not invest
in leveraged (e.g., 2X, –2X, 3X or –3X)
ETFs.
(9) Not more than 10% of the net
assets of the Fund in the aggregate
invested in equity securities (other than
non-exchange-traded investment
company securities) will consist of
equity securities whose principal
market is not a member of the ISG or is
a market with which the Exchange does
not have a comprehensive surveillance
sharing agreement. In addition, not
more than 10% of the net assets of the
Fund in the aggregate invested in
futures contracts or exchange-traded
options contracts will consist of futures
contracts or exchange-traded options
contracts whose principal market is not
a member of ISG or is a market with
which the Exchange does not have a
comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement.
(10) Normally the Fund will seek to
invest at least 75% of its corporate debt
securities assets in issuances that have
at least $100,000,000 par amount
outstanding in developed countries or at
53 17
PO 00000
CFR 240.10A–3.
Frm 00120
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
least $200,000,000 par amount
outstanding in emerging market
countries.
(11) The Fund normally will invest at
least 75% of its bank loan or corporate
loan assets, which includes senior
loans, syndicated bank loans, junior
loans, bridge loans, unfunded
commitments, revolvers and
participation interests, in issuances that
have at least $100 million par amount
outstanding.
(12) The Fund may invest up to 20%
of its total assets in the aggregate in
Private MBS/ABS and in asset-backed
commercial paper. Such holdings would
be subject to the respective limitations
on the Fund’s investments in illiquid
assets and high yield securities. The
liquidity of such securities, especially in
the case of Private MBS/ABS, will be a
substantial factor in the Fund’s security
selection process.
(13) The Fund may invest up to 20%
of its total assets in the aggregate in
participations in and assignments of
bank loans or corporate loans, which
loans include syndicated bank loans,
junior loans, bridge loans, unfunded
commitments, revolvers and
participation interests (but specifically
do not include senior loans), in
structured notes, in credit-linked notes,
in risk-linked securities, in OTC REITs,
and in OTC hybrid instruments. Such
holdings would be subject to the
respective limitations on the Fund’s
investments in illiquid assets and high
yield securities. The liquidity of such
securities will be a substantial factor in
the Fund’s security selection process.
(14) Not more than 33 1/3% of the
Fund’s total assets will be in junk
bonds.
(15) The Fund may hold up to an
aggregate amount of 15% of its net
assets in illiquid assets (calculated at
the time of investment), including Rule
144A securities, Private MBS/ABS,
master notes, loans, and loan
commitments deemed illiquid by the
Adviser, consistent with Commission
guidance.
(16) The Fund’s investments will be
consistent with the Fund’s investment
objective and will not be used to
enhance leverage. That is, while the
Fund will be permitted to borrow as
permitted under the 1940 Act, the
Fund’s investments will not be used to
seek performance that is the multiple or
inverse multiple (i.e., 2Xs and 3Xs) of
the Fund’s primary broad-based
securities benchmark index (as defined
in Form N–1A).
(17) Investments in derivative
instruments will be made in accordance
with the 1940 Act and consistent with
the Fund’s investment objective and
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policies. The Fund will seek, where
possible, to use counterparties whose
financial status is such that the risk of
default is reduced. The Fund will
segregate or ‘‘earmark’’ assets
determined to be liquid by the Adviser
in accordance with procedures
established by the Board and in
accordance with the 1940 Act (or, as
permitted by applicable regulation,
enter into certain offsetting positions) to
cover its obligations under derivative
instruments. In addition, the Fund will
include appropriate risk disclosure in
its offering documents, including
leveraging risk. To mitigate leveraging
risk, the Adviser will segregate or
‘‘earmark’’ liquid assets or otherwise
cover the transactions that may give rise
to such risk.
This approval order is based on all of
the Exchange’s representations,
including those set forth above and in
the Notice. The Commission notes that
the Fund and the Shares must comply
with the requirements of NYSE Arca
Equities Rule 8.600 to be initially and
continuously listed and traded on the
Exchange.
IV. Solicitation of Comments on
Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether Amendment Nos. 3,
4, 5, and 6 to the proposed rule change
are consistent with the Act. Comments
may be submitted by any of the
following methods:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number SR–NYSEArca–2015–73 on the
subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSEArca–2015–73. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
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13:31 Dec 24, 2015
Jkt 238001
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–
NYSEArca–2015–73 and should be
submitted on or before January 19, 2016.
V. Accelerated Approval of Proposed
Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6
The Commission finds good cause to
approve the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5
and 6, prior to the 30th day after the
date of publication of notice of
Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6 in the
Federal Register. Amendment Nos. 3, 4,
5, and 6 revised the proposed rule
change by: (1) Modifying, and defining,
the Fixed Income Instruments in which
the Fund will invest; (2) representing
that normally corporate debt securities
and bank loan and corporate loan assets
will each have a certain par amount
outstanding; (3) modifying the
investment restrictions of the Fund; (4)
clarifying price information in, and
adding assets to, the Availability of
Information section, and (5) noting that
trading surveillances may be
administered by the regulatory staff of
the Exchange.
Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6
supplement the proposed rule change
by, among other things, clarifying the
scope of the Fund’s permitted
investments and investment restrictions
and providing additional information
about the availability of pricing
information for the Fund’s underlying
assets. They also help the Commission
evaluate whether the listing and trading
of the Shares of the Fund would be
consistent with the protection of
investors and the public interest.
Accordingly, the Commission finds
good cause, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2)
of the Act,54 to approve the proposed
54 15
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
Frm 00121
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
80865
rule change, as modified by Amendment
Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6, on an accelerated
basis.
VI. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act,55
that the proposed rule change (SR–
NYSEArca–2015–73), as modified by
Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6
thereto, be, and it hereby is, approved
on an accelerated basis.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.56
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–32528 Filed 12–24–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–76715; File No. SR–EDGX–
2015–65]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; EDGX
Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed
Rule Change to Rule 21.8, Order
Display and Book Processing
December 21, 2015.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on December
16, 2015, EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘EDGX’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the Exchange. The Exchange has
designated this proposal as a ‘‘noncontroversial’’ proposed rule change
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the
Act 3 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6)(iii)
thereunder,4 which renders it effective
upon filing with the Commission. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal to
authorize the Exchange’s equity options
platform (‘‘EDGX Options’’) to make a
modification to Rule 21.8 (Order
Display and Book Processing).
55 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
4 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6)(iii).
56 17
E:\FR\FM\28DEN1.SGM
28DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 248 (Monday, December 28, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 80859-80865]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-32528]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-76719; File No. SR-NYSEArca-2015-73]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing
of Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6 and Order Granting Accelerated
Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3,
4, 5 and 6, To List and Trade of Shares of the Guggenheim Total Return
Bond ETF Under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600
December 21, 2015.
I. Introduction
On September 1, 2015, NYSE Arca, Inc. (``Exchange'') filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission''), pursuant to
Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'' or
``Exchange Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule
change to list and trade shares (``Shares'') of the Guggenheim Total
Return Bond ETF (``Fund'') under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600. On
September 15, 2015, the Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed
rule change.\3\ The Commission published notice of the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No. 1 thereto, in the Federal Register
on September 22, 2015.\4\ On September 22, 2015, the Exchange submitted
Amendment No. 3 to the proposed rule change.\5\ On November 5, 2015,
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,\6\ the Commission designated a
longer period within which to either approve the proposed rule change,
disapprove the proposed rule change, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the proposed rule change.\7\ On
November 23, 2015, December 14, 2015, and December 16, 2015, the
Exchange submitted Amendment Nos. 4, 5, and 6, respectively, to the
proposed rule change.\8\ The Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comment on Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5 and 6 to the proposed rule
change from interested persons and is approving the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6, on an
accelerated basis.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change replaced and
superseded the original filing in its entirety.
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 75930 (September 16,
2015), 80 FR 57251 (``Notice'').
\5\ On September 21, 2015, the Exchange submitted and withdrew
Amendment No. 2 to the proposal. In Amendment No. 3, the Exchange
clarified certain representations regarding the availability of
quotation, last sale, and pricing information for the Shares and the
instruments in which the Fund may invest. Amendment No. 3 is
available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nysearca-2015-73/nysearca201573-2.pdf.
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 76362, 80 FR 70044
(November 12, 2015). The Commission designated December 21, 2015 as
the date by which it should approve, disapprove, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to disapprove the proposed rule
change.
\8\ Amendment No. 4 replaced and superseded the original filing,
as modified by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3, in its entirety. Amendment
No. 4 is available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nysearca-2015-73/nysearca201573-3.pdf. Amendment No. 5 replaced and superseded the
original filing, as modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3 and 4, in its
entirety. Amendment No. 5 is available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nysearca-2015-73/nysearca201573-4.pdf. Amendment No. 6
replaced and superseded the original filing, as modified by
Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4 and 5, in its entirety.
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II. The Exchange's Description of the Proposal \9\
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\9\ Additional information regarding the Fund, the Trust (as
defined herein), and the Shares, including investment strategies,
risks, creation and redemption procedures, fees, portfolio holdings,
disclosure policies, calculation of net asset value (``NAV''),
distributions, and taxes, among other things, can be found in the
Notice and the Registration Statement, as applicable. See Notice,
supra note 4, and Registration Statement, infra note 11.
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The Exchange proposes to list and trade the Shares under NYSE Arca
Equities Rule 8.600, which governs the listing and trading of Managed
Fund Shares on the Exchange.\10\ The Shares will be offered by the
Claymore Exchange-Traded Fund Trust 2 (``Trust''),\11\ a statutory
trust organized
[[Page 80860]]
under the laws of the State of Delaware and registered with the
Commission as an open-end management investment company. The investment
adviser for the Fund is Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC
(``Adviser'').\12\ The Bank of New York Mellon is the custodian and
transfer agent for the Fund. Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC is the
distributor for the Fund.
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\10\ The Commission previously approved a proposed rule change
relating to listing and trading of shares of the Guggenheim Enhanced
Total Return ETF under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600. See Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 68488 (December 20, 2012), 77 FR 76326
(December 27, 2012) (SR-NYSEArca-2012-142) (``Prior Notice''); and
68863 (February 7, 2013), 78 FR 10222 (February 13, 2013) (SR-
NYSEArca-2012-142) (``Prior Order'' and, together with the Prior
Notice, ``Prior Release''). The Exchange represents that shares of
the Guggenheim Enhanced Total Return ETF have not commenced listing
and trading on the Exchange, that the Fund would replace the
Guggenheim Enhanced Total Return ETF as approved in the Prior
Release, and that the Notice supersedes the Prior Release in its
entirety. The Exchange represents that prior to commencement of
trading of Shares of the Fund, the Trust will file an amendment to
its Registration Statement to change the name of the Guggenheim
Enhanced Total Return ETF to the name of the Fund.
\11\ The Exchange states that the Trust is registered under the
1940 Act. According to the Exchange, on November 25, 2014, the Trust
filed with the Commission an amendment to its registration statement
on Form N-1A under the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77a)
(``Securities Act'') and the 1940 Act relating to the Fund (File
Nos. 333-135105 and 811-21910) (``Registration Statement''). The
Exchange states that the Commission has issued an order granting
certain exemptive relief to the Trust under the 1940 Act. See
Investment Company Act Release No. 29271 (May 18, 2010) (File No.
812-13534) (``Exemptive Order'').
\12\ The Exchange states that the Adviser is affiliated with a
broker-dealer and has represented that it has implemented a fire
wall with respect to its broker-dealer affiliate regarding access to
information concerning the composition of and/or changes to the
portfolio. In the event (a) the Adviser or any sub-adviser becomes
newly affiliated with a broker-dealer, or (b) any new adviser or
sub-adviser becomes affiliated with a broker-dealer, such adviser or
sub-adviser will implement a fire wall with respect to such broker-
dealer regarding access to information concerning the composition of
and/or changes to the portfolio, and will be subject to procedures
designed to prevent the use and dissemination of material non-public
information regarding such portfolio.
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A. The Fund's Principal Investments
The Exchange states that the Fund's investment objective is to seek
maximum total return, comprised of income and capital appreciation.
According to the Exchange, the Fund will normally \13\ invest at least
80% of its assets in ``Fixed Income Instruments'' (as defined below) of
varying maturities and of any credit quality, which may be represented
by certain derivative instruments as discussed below,\14\ and exchange-
traded funds (``ETFs'') \15\ and exchange-traded and over-the-counter
(``OTC'') closed-end funds (``CEFs'') (which may include ETFs and CEFs
affiliated with the Fund) that invest substantially all of their assets
in Fixed Income Instruments (the ``80% Policy''). The Fund has no
target duration for its investment portfolio.
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\13\ The term ``normally'' includes, but is not limited to, the
absence of extreme volatility or trading halts in the securities
markets or the financial markets generally; circumstances under
which the Fund's investments are made for temporary defensive
purposes; operational issues causing dissemination of inaccurate
market information; or force majeure type events such as systems
failure, natural or man-made disaster, act of God, armed conflict,
act of terrorism, riot or labor disruption or any similar
intervening circumstance.
\14\ See Section II.D, infra. The Exchange states that the Fund
will invest in the following derivative instruments on Fixed-Income
Securities: Foreign exchange forward contracts; exchange-traded
futures on securities, indices, currencies and other investments;
exchange-traded and OTC options; exchange-traded and OTC options on
futures contracts; exchange-traded and OTC interest rate swaps,
cross-currency swaps, total return swaps, inflation swaps, and
credit default swaps; and options on such swaps.
\15\ For purposes of this filing, ETFs consist of Investment
Company Units (as described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 5.2(j)(3)),
Portfolio Depositary Receipts (as described in NYSE Arca Equities
Rule 8.100); and Managed Fund Shares (as described in NYSE Arca
Equities Rule 8.600). All ETFs will be listed and traded in the U.S.
on a national securities exchange. While the Fund may invest in
inverse ETFs, the Fund will not invest in leveraged (e.g., 2X, -2X,
3X or -3X) ETFs.
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The Fixed Income Instruments \16\ in which the Fund will invest, as
described further below, are the following: Corporate debt securities
of U.S and non-U.S. issuers, including corporate bonds; \17\ inflation-
indexed bonds issued both by governments and corporations; \18\
securities issued by the U.S. government or its agencies,
instrumentalities, or sponsored corporations (including those not
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government); debt
securities issued by states or local governments and their agencies,
authorities, and other government-sponsored enterprises; obligations of
non-U.S. governments and their subdivisions, agencies, and government-
sponsored enterprises; obligations of international agencies or
supranational entities; cash equivalents;`` \19\ agency and non-agency
mortgage-backed securities (``MBS'') and asset-backed securities
(``ABS''); \20\ U.S. agency mortgage pass-through securities; \21\
repurchase agreements; convertible securities; \22\ preferred
securities; \23\ bank capital; \24\ commercial instruments; \25\
variable or floating rate instruments and variable rate demand
instruments; \26\ zero-coupon and pay-in-
[[Page 80861]]
kind securities; \27\ bank instruments, including certificates of
deposit (``CDs''), time deposits, and bankers' acceptances from U.S.
banks; \28\ and participations in and assignments of bank loans or
corporate loans, which loans include senior loans, syndicated bank
loans, junior loans, bridge loans,\29\ unfunded commitments,\30\
revolving credit facilities (``revolvers''),\31\ and participation
interests.\32\
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\16\ Fixed Income Instruments may be of varying maturities and
of any credit quality rating.
\17\ The Adviser expects that normally the Fund generally will
seek to invest at least 75% of its corporate debt securities assets
in issuances that have at least $100,000,000 par amount outstanding
in developed countries or at least $200,000,000 par amount
outstanding in emerging market countries.
\18\ Inflation-indexed bonds (other than municipal inflation-
indexed bonds and certain corporate inflation-indexed bonds) are
fixed income securities whose principal value is periodically
adjusted according to the rate of inflation (e.g., Treasury
Inflation Protected Securities (``TIPS'')). Municipal inflation-
indexed securities are municipal bonds that pay coupons based on a
fixed rate plus the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers.
With regard to municipal inflation-indexed bonds and certain
corporate inflation-indexed bonds, the inflation adjustment is
reflected in the semi-annual coupon payment.
\19\ Cash equivalents in which the Fund may invest include U.S.
Treasury Bills, investment grade commercial paper, cash, and Short
Term Investment Funds (``STIFs''). STIFs are a type of fund that
invests in short-term investments of high quality and low risk.
\20\ The MBS in which the Fund may invest may also include
residential mortgage-backed securities (``RMBS''), collateralized
mortgage obligations (``CMOs''), and commercial mortgage-backed
securities (``CMBS''). The ABS in which the Fund may invest includes
collateralized debt obligations (``CDOs''). CDOs include
collateralized bond obligations (``CBOs''), collateralized loan
obligations (``CLOs''), and other similarly structured securities. A
CBO is a trust which is backed by a diversified pool of high risk,
below investment grade fixed income securities. A CLO is a trust
typically collateralized by a pool of loans, which may include
domestic and foreign senior secured loans, senior unsecured loans,
and subordinate corporate loans, including loans that may be rated
below investment grade or equivalent unrated loans. Specifically,
the Exchange notes that such ABS are bonds backed by pools of loans
or other receivables and are securitized by a wide variety of assets
that are generally broken into three categories: Consumer,
commercial, and corporate. The consumer category includes credit
card, auto loan, student loan, and timeshare loan ABS. The
commercial category includes trade receivables, equipment leases,
oil receivables, film receivables, rental cars, aircraft
securitizations, ship and container securitizations, whole business
securitizations, and diversified payment right securitizations.
Corporate ABS includes cash flow collateralization loan obligations,
collateralized by both middle market and broadly syndicated bank
loans. An ABS is issued through a special purpose vehicle that is
bankruptcy remote from the issuer of the collateral. The credit
quality of an ABS tranche depends on the performance of the
underlying assets and the structure. To protect ABS investors from
the possibility that some borrowers could miss payments or even
default on their loans, ABS include various forms of credit
enhancement.
\21\ The Fund will seek to obtain exposure to U.S. agency
mortgage pass-through securities primarily through the use of ``to-
be-announced'' or ``TBA transactions.'' ``TBA'' refers to a commonly
used mechanism for the forward settlement of U.S. agency mortgage
pass-through securities, and not to a separate type of mortgage-
backed security. Most transactions in mortgage pass-through
securities occur through the use of TBA transactions. TBA
transactions generally are conducted in accordance with widely-
accepted guidelines which establish commonly observed terms and
conditions for execution, settlement, and delivery.
\22\ Convertible securities include bonds, debentures, notes,
and other securities that may be converted into a prescribed amount
of common stock or other equity securities at a specified price and
time.
\23\ The preferred securities in which the Fund may invest
include preferred stock, contingent capital securities, contingent
convertible securities, capital securities, and hybrid securities of
debt and preferred stock. The Fund may invest in preferred
securities traded on an exchange or OTC. Preferred securities pay
fixed or adjustable rate dividends to investors, and have
``preference'' over common stock in the payment of dividends and the
liquidation of a company's assets.
\24\ There are two common types of bank capital: Tier I and Tier
II. Bank capital is generally, but not always, of investment grade
quality. Tier I securities are typically preferred stock or
contingent capital securities. Tier I securities are often perpetual
or long-dated (with no maturity date). Tier II securities are
typically subordinated debt securities.
\25\ Commercial instruments include commercial paper, master
notes, asset-backed commercial paper, and other short-term corporate
instruments. Commercial paper normally represents short-term
unsecured promissory notes issued in bearer form by banks or bank
holding companies, corporations, finance companies and other
issuers. Commercial paper may be traded in the secondary market
after its issuance. Master notes are demand notes that permit the
investment of fluctuating amounts of money at varying rates of
interest pursuant to arrangements with issuers who meet the quality
criteria of the Fund. Master notes are generally illiquid and
therefore subject to the Fund's percentage limitations for
investments in illiquid securities. Asset-backed commercial paper is
issued by a special purpose entity that is organized to issue the
commercial paper and to purchase trade receivables or other
financial assets.
\26\ Variable or floating rate instruments and variable rate
demand instruments, including variable amount master demand notes,
will normally involve industrial development or revenue bonds that
provide that the rate of interest is set as a specific percentage of
a designated base rate (such as the prime rate) at a major
commercial bank. In addition, the interest rate on these securities
may be reset daily, weekly or on some other reset period and may
have a floor or ceiling on interest rate changes. The Adviser will
monitor the pricing, quality and liquidity of the variable or
floating rate securities held by the Fund.
\27\ Zero-coupon and pay-in-kind securities are debt securities
that do not make regular cash interest payments. Zero-coupon
securities are sold at a deep discount to their face value. Pay-in-
kind securities pay interest through the issuance of additional
securities.
\28\ A bankers' acceptance is a bill of exchange or time draft
drawn on and accepted by a commercial bank. A CD is a negotiable
interest-bearing instrument with a specific maturity.
\29\ Bridge loans are short-term loan arrangements (e.g.,
maturities that are generally less than one year) typically made by
a borrower following the failure of the borrower to secure other
intermediate-term or long-term permanent financing. A bridge loan
remains outstanding until more permanent financing, often in the
form of high yield notes, can be obtained. Most bridge loans have a
step-up provision under which the interest rate increases
incrementally the longer the loan remains outstanding so as to
incentivize the borrower to refinance as quickly as possible. In
exchange for entering into a bridge loan, the Fund typically will
receive a commitment fee and interest payable under the bridge loan
and may also have other expenses reimbursed by the borrower. Bridge
loans may be subordinate to other debt and generally are unsecured.
\30\ Unfunded commitments are contractual obligations pursuant
to which the Fund agrees in writing to make one or more loans up to
a specified amount at one or more future dates. The underlying loan
documentation sets out the terms and conditions of the lender's
obligation to make the loans as well as the economic terms of such
loans. The portion of the amount committed by a lender that the
borrower has not drawn down is referred to as ``unfunded.'' Loan
commitments may be traded in the secondary market through dealer
desks at large commercial and investment banks although these
markets are generally not considered liquid.
\31\ Revolving credit facilities (``revolvers'') are borrowing
arrangements in which the lender agrees to make loans up to a
maximum amount upon demand by the borrower during a specified term.
As the borrower repays the loan, an amount equal to the repayment
may be borrowed again during the term of the revolver. Revolvers
usually provide for floating or variable rates of interest.
\32\ All or a significant portion of the loans in which the Fund
will invest may be below investment grade quality. The Fund normally
will invest at least 75% of its bank loan or corporate loan assets,
which includes senior loans, syndicated bank loans, junior loans,
bridge loans, unfunded commitments, revolvers and participation
interests, in issuances that have at least $100 million par amount
outstanding.
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With respect to Fixed Income Instrument investments, the Fund may
invest in restricted securities (Rule 144A securities), which are
subject to legal restrictions on their sale. In addition, with respect
to Fixed Income Instrument investments, the Fund may, without
limitation, seek to obtain market exposure to the securities in which
it primarily invests by entering into a series of purchase and sale
contracts or by using other investment techniques (such as buy backs or
dollar rolls).
The Fund may also use leverage to the extent permitted under the
1940 Act by entering into reverse repurchase agreements and borrowing
transactions (principally lines of credit) for investment purposes. The
Fund's exposure to reverse repurchase agreements will be covered by
securities having a value equal to or greater than such commitments.
The Exchange represents that, under the 1940 Act, reverse repurchase
agreements are considered borrowings. Although there is no limit on the
percentage of Fund assets that can be used in connection with reverse
repurchase agreements, the Portfolio does not expect to engage, under
normal circumstances, in reverse repurchase agreements with respect to
more than 33 1/3% of its assets.
B. The Fund's Other Investments
While the Fund normally will invest at least 80% of its assets in
the securities and financial instruments described above, the Fund may
invest its remaining assets in exchange-traded and OTC hybrid
instruments, which combine a traditional stock, bond, or commodity with
an option or forward contract. Generally, the principal amount, amount
payable upon maturity or redemption, or interest rate of a hybrid is
tied (positively or negatively) to the price of some commodity,
currency or securities index or another interest rate or some other
economic factor (``underlying benchmark'').\33\ The Fund is also
permitted to invest in structured notes, which are debt obligations
that also contain an embedded derivative component with characteristics
that adjust the obligation's risk/return profile. Generally, the
performance of a structured note will track that of the underlying debt
obligation and the derivative embedded within it. Further, the Fund may
invest in credit-linked notes, which are a type of structured note,\34\
and risk-linked securities (``RLS''), which are a form of derivative
issued by insurance companies and insurance-related special purpose
vehicles that apply securitization techniques to catastrophic property
and casualty damages.\35\ The Fund may invest a portion of its assets
in high-quality money market instruments and U.S. and foreign common
stocks, both exchange-listed and OTC, and may gain exposure to
commodities through the use of investments in exchange-traded products
(``ETPs'') \36\ and exchange-traded notes (``ETNs'').\37\ Finally, the
Fund may invest in the securities of exchange-traded and OTC real
estate investment trusts (``REITs'').
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\33\ According to the Exchange, certain hybrid instruments may
provide exposure to the commodities markets. These are derivative
securities with one or more commodity-linked components that have
payment features similar to commodity futures contracts, commodity
options, or similar instruments. Commodity-linked hybrid instruments
may be either equity or debt securities, and are considered hybrid
instruments because they have both security and commodity-like
characteristics. A portion of the value of these instruments may be
derived from the value of a commodity, futures contract, index or
other economic variable. The Fund would only invest in commodity-
linked hybrid instruments that qualify, under applicable rules of
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, for an exemption from the
provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1).
\34\ The difference between a credit default swap and a credit-
linked note is that the seller of a credit-linked note receives the
principal payment from the buyer at the time the contract is
originated. Through the purchase of a credit-linked note, the buyer
assumes the risk of the reference asset and funds this exposure
through the purchase of the note. The buyer takes on the exposure to
the seller to the full amount of the funding it has provided. The
seller has hedged its risk on the reference asset without acquiring
any additional credit exposure. The Fund has the right to receive
periodic interest payments from the issuer of the credit-linked note
at an agreed-upon interest rate and a return of principal at the
maturity date.
\35\ RLS are typically debt obligations for which the return of
principal and the payment of interest are contingent on the non-
occurrence of a pre-defined ``trigger event.'' Depending on the
specific terms and structure of the RLS, this trigger could be the
result of a hurricane, earthquake or some other catastrophic event.
Insurance companies securitize this risk to transfer to the capital
markets the truly catastrophic part of the risk exposure. A typical
RLS provides for income and return of capital similar to other fixed
income investments, but would involve full or partial default if
losses resulting from a certain catastrophe exceeded a predetermined
amount.
\36\ Such ETPs include Trust Issued Receipts (as described in
NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.200); Commodity-Based Trust Shares (as
described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.201); Currency Trust Shares
(as described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.202); Commodity Index
Trust Shares (as described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.203); and
Trust Units (as described in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.500).
\37\ ETNs include Index-Linked Securities (as described in NYSE
Arca Equities Rule 5.2(j)(6)).
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C. The Fund's Investment Restrictions
The Fund may invest up to 20% of its total assets in the aggregate
in MBS and ABS that are privately issued, non-agency, and non-
government sponsored entity (``Private MBS/ABS''), and in
[[Page 80862]]
asset-backed commercial paper. Such holdings would be subject to the
respective limitations on the Fund's investments in illiquid assets and
high yield securities. The liquidity of a security, especially in the
case of Private MBS/ABS, will be a substantial factor in the Fund's
security selection process. The Fund may invest in defaulted or
distressed Private MBS/ABS.
The Fund may invest up to 20% of its total assets in the aggregate
in participations in and assignments of bank loans or corporate loans,
which loans include syndicated bank loans, junior loans, bridge loans,
unfunded commitments, revolvers and participation interests (but
specifically do not include senior loans), in structured notes, in
credit-linked notes, in risk-linked securities, in OTC REITs, and in
OTC hybrid instruments. Such holdings would be subject to the
respective limitations on the Fund's investments in illiquid assets and
high yield securities. The liquidity of such securities will be a
substantial factor in the Fund's security selection process.
The Fund may invest in debt securities and instruments that are
economically tied to emerging market countries and may invest without
limitation in securities denominated in foreign currencies and in U.S.
dollar-denominated securities of foreign issuers.\38\ Further, the Fund
may invest up to 33\1/3\% of its total assets in high yield debt
securities (``junk bonds''), which are debt securities that are rated
below investment grade by nationally recognized statistical rating
organizations, or are unrated securities that the Adviser believes are
of comparable below investment grade quality.
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\38\ See supra note 17. Generally, the Fund considers an
instrument to be economically tied to an emerging market country
through consideration of some or all of the following factors: (i)
Whether the issuer is the government of the emerging market country
(or any political subdivision, agency, authority or instrumentality
of such government), or is organized under the laws of the emerging
market country; (ii) amount of the issuer's revenues that are
attributable to the emerging market country; (iii) the location of
the issuer's management; (iv) if the security is secured or
collateralized, the country in which the security or collateral is
located; and/or (v) the currency in which the instrument is
denominated or currency fluctuations to which the issuer is exposed.
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The Fund will be considered non-diversified and can invest a
greater portion of assets in securities of individual issuers than a
diversified fund. However, the Fund may not invest more than 25% of the
value of its net assets in securities of issuers in any one industry or
group of industries. This restriction does not apply to obligations
issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or
instrumentalities.
The Fund's investments, including investments in derivative
instruments, are subject to all of the restrictions under the 1940 Act,
including restrictions with respect to illiquid assets. The Fund may
hold up to an aggregate amount of 15% of its net assets in illiquid
assets (calculated at the time of investment), including Rule 144A
securities, Private MBS/ABS, master notes, loans and loan commitments
deemed illiquid by the Adviser,\39\ consistent with Commission
guidance. The Fund will monitor its portfolio liquidity on an ongoing
basis to determine whether, in light of current circumstances, an
adequate level of liquidity is being maintained, and will consider
taking appropriate steps in order to maintain adequate liquidity if,
through a change in values, net assets, or other circumstances, more
than 15% of the Fund's net assets are held in illiquid assets. Illiquid
assets include securities subject to contractual or other restrictions
on resale and other instruments that lack readily available markets as
determined in accordance with Commission staff guidance.
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\39\ In reaching liquidity decisions with respect to Rule 144A
securities, the Adviser may consider the following factors: The
frequency of trades and quotes for the security; the number of
dealers willing to purchase or sell the security and the number of
other potential purchasers; dealer undertakings to make a market in
the security; and the nature of the security and the nature of the
marketplace in which it trades (e.g., the time needed to dispose of
the security, the method of soliciting offers, and the mechanics of
transfer).
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The Fund's investments will be consistent with the Fund's
investment objective and will not be used to enhance leverage. That is,
while the Fund will be permitted to borrow as permitted under the 1940
Act, the Fund's investments will not be used to seek performance that
is the multiple or inverse multiple (i.e., 2Xs and 3Xs) of the Fund's
primary broad-based securities benchmark index (as defined in Form N-
1A).\40\
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\40\ The Fund's broad-based securities benchmark index will be
identified in a future amendment to the Registration Statement
following the Fund's first full calendar year of performance.
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D. The Fund's Use of Derivatives
According to the Exchange, the Fund proposes to seek certain
exposures through derivative transactions. The Fund may invest in the
following derivative instruments: Foreign exchange forward contracts;
exchange-traded futures on securities, indices, currencies and other
investments; exchange-traded and OTC options; exchange-traded and OTC
options on futures contracts; exchange-traded and OTC interest rate
swaps, cross-currency swaps, total return swaps, inflation swaps and
credit default swaps; and options on such swaps (``swaptions'').\41\
The Fund may, but is not required to, use derivative instruments for
risk management purposes or as part of its investment strategies.\42\
The Fund may also engage in derivative transactions for speculative
purposes to enhance total return, to seek to hedge against fluctuations
in securities prices, interest rates or currency rates, to change the
effective duration of its portfolio, to manage certain investment risks
and/or as a substitute for the purchase or sale of securities or
currencies.
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\41\ Options on swaps are traded OTC. In the future, in the
event that there are exchange-traded options on swaps, the Fund may
invest in these instruments.
\42\ The Fund will seek, where possible, to use counterparties
whose financial status is such that the risk of default is reduced;
however, the risk of losses resulting from default is still
possible. The Adviser will monitor the financial standing of
counterparties on an ongoing basis. This monitoring may include
information provided by credit agencies, as well as the Adviser's
credit analysts and other team members who evaluate approved
counterparties using various methods of analysis, including but not
limited to earnings updates, the counterparty's reputation, the
Adviser's past experience with the broker-dealer, market levels for
the counterparty's debt and equity, the counterparty's liquidity and
its share of market participation.
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The Exchange states that investments in derivative instruments will
be made in accordance with the 1940 Act and consistent with the Fund's
investment objective and policies. To limit the potential risk
associated with such transactions, the Fund will segregate or
``earmark'' assets determined to be liquid by the Adviser in accordance
with procedures established by the Trust's Board of Trustees
(``Board'') and in accordance with the 1940 Act (or, as permitted by
applicable regulation, enter into certain offsetting positions) to
cover its obligations under derivative instruments. In addition, the
Fund will include appropriate risk disclosure in its offering
documents, including leveraging risk.
In addition to the Fund's use of derivatives in connection with its
80% Policy, under the proposal the Exchange states that the Fund will
seek to invest in derivative instruments not based on Fixed-Income
Instruments, consistent with the Fund's investment restrictions
relating to exposure to those asset classes.
III. Discussion and Commission Findings
After careful review, the Commission finds that the Exchange's
proposal to list and trade the Shares is consistent with the Exchange
Act and the rules and
[[Page 80863]]
regulations thereunder applicable to a national securities
exchange.\43\ In particular, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6, is
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act,\44\ which
requires, among other things, that the Exchange's rules be designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to promote just
and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments to and perfect
the mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system,
and, in general, to protect investors and the public interest. The
Commission also finds that the proposal to list and trade the Shares on
the Exchange is consistent with Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) of the
Exchange Act,\45\ which sets forth the finding of Congress that it is
in the public interest and appropriate for the protection of investors
and the maintenance of fair and orderly markets to assure the
availability to brokers, dealers, and investors of information with
respect to quotations for and transactions in securities.
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\43\ In approving this proposed rule change, the Commission has
considered the proposed rule's impact on efficiency, competition,
and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\44\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\45\ 15 U.S.C. 78k-1(a)(1)(C)(iii).
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According to the Exchange, quotation and last sale information will
be available via the Consolidated Tape Association (``CTA'') high-speed
line for the Shares and for the following U.S. exchange-traded
securities: Common stocks, hybrid instruments, convertible securities,
preferred securities, REITs, CEFs, ETFs, ETPs, and ETNs. Intra-day
price information for foreign exchange-traded stocks will be available
from the applicable foreign exchange and from major market data
vendors. Intra-day price information for exchange-traded derivative
instruments will be available from the applicable exchange and from
major market data vendors. Intra-day price information for OTC REITs,
OTC common stocks, OTC CEFs, OTC options, money market instruments,
forwards, structured notes, RLS, OTC derivative instruments, and OTC
hybrid instruments will be available from major market data vendors.
Intraday and closing price information for exchange-traded options and
futures will be available from the applicable exchange and from major
market data vendors. In addition, intra-day price information for U.S.
exchange-traded options is available from the Options Price Reporting
Authority. Intra-day and closing price information from brokers and
dealers or independent pricing services will be available for Fixed
Income Instruments.
In addition, the Portfolio Indicative Value, as defined in NYSE
Arca Equities Rule 8.600 (c)(3), will be widely disseminated by one or
more major market data vendors at least every 15 seconds during the
Core Trading Session.\46\ On each business day, before commencement of
trading in Shares in the Core Trading Session on the Exchange, the Fund
will disclose on its Web site the Disclosed Portfolio, as defined in
NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600(c)(2), that will form the basis for the
Fund's calculation of NAV at the end of the business day.\47\
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\46\ Currently, it is the Exchange's understanding that several
major market data vendors display and/or make widely available
Portfolio Indicative Values taken from CTA or other data feeds.
\47\ On a daily basis, the Adviser will disclose on the Fund's
Web site the following information regarding each portfolio holding,
as applicable to the type of holding: Ticker symbol, CUSIP number or
other identifier, if any; a description of the holding (including
the type of holding, such as the type of swap); the identity of the
security, commodity, index or other asset or instrument underlying
the holding, if any; for options, the option strike price; quantity
held (as measured by, for example, par value, notional value or
number of shares, contracts or units); maturity date, if any; coupon
rate, if any; effective date, if any; market value of the holding;
and the percentage weighting of the holding in the Fund's portfolio.
The Web site information will be publicly available at no charge.
The Fund's disclosure of derivative positions in the Disclosed
Portfolio will include information that market participants can use
to value these positions intraday.
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The NAV for the Shares will be calculated after 4:00 p.m. Eastern
Time each trading day. A basket composition file, which will include
the security names and share quantities required to be delivered in
exchange for the Shares, together with estimates and actual cash
components, will be publicly disseminated daily prior to the opening of
the New York Stock Exchange via the National Securities Clearing
Corporation. Information regarding market price and trading volume for
the Shares will be continually available on a real-time basis
throughout the day on brokers' computer screens and other electronic
services. Information regarding the previous day's closing price and
trading volume information for the Shares will be published daily in
the financial section of newspapers. The Web site for the Fund will
include a form of the prospectus for the Fund and additional data
relating to NAV and other applicable quantitative information.
The Commission further believes that the proposal to list and trade
the Shares is reasonably designed to promote fair disclosure of
information that may be necessary to price the Shares appropriately and
to prevent trading when a reasonable degree of transparency cannot be
assured. The Commission notes that the Exchange will obtain a
representation from the issuer of the Shares that the NAV per Share
will be calculated daily and that the NAV and the Disclosed Portfolio
will be made available to all market participants at the same time.\48\
Trading in Shares of the Fund will be halted if the circuit-breaker
parameters in NYSE Arca Equities Rule 7.12 have been reached. Trading
also may be halted because of market conditions or for reasons that, in
the view of the Exchange, make trading in the Shares inadvisable.\49\
Trading in the Shares also will be subject to NYSE Arca Equities Rule
8.600(d)(2)(D), which sets forth circumstances under which Shares of
the Fund may be halted. The Exchange represents that it has a general
policy prohibiting the distribution of material, non-public information
by its employees. The Adviser is affiliated with a broker-dealer and
has represented that it has implemented a fire wall with respect to its
broker-dealer affiliate regarding access to information concerning the
composition and/or changes to the portfolio.\50\ Further, the
Commission notes that the Reporting Authority that provides the
Disclosed Portfolio of the Fund must implement and maintain, or be
subject to, procedures designed to prevent the use and dissemination of
material, non-public information regarding the actual components of the
portfolio.\51\
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\48\ See NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600(d)(1)(B).
\49\ These may include: (1) The extent to which trading is not
occurring in the securities or the financial instruments
constituting the Disclosed Portfolio of the Fund; or (2) whether
other unusual conditions or circumstances detrimental to the
maintenance of a fair and orderly market are present.
\50\ See supra note 12. The Exchange represents that an
investment adviser to an open-end fund is required to be registered
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
\51\ See NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600(d)(2)(B)(ii).
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Prior to the commencement of trading, the Exchange will inform its
Equity Trading Permit Holders (``ETP Holders'') in an Information
Bulletin (``Bulletin'') of the special characteristics and risks
associated with trading the Shares. The Exchange represents that
trading in the Shares will be subject to the existing trading
surveillances, administered by regulatory staff of the Exchange, or the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (``FINRA'') on behalf of the
Exchange, which are designed to detect violations
[[Page 80864]]
of Exchange rules and applicable federal securities laws.\52\
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\52\ The Exchange states that FINRA surveils trading on the
Exchange pursuant to a regulatory services agreement. The Exchange
is responsible for FINRA's performance under this regulatory
services agreement.
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The Exchange represents that it deems the Shares to be equity
securities, thus rendering trading in the Shares subject to the
Exchange's existing rules governing the trading of equity securities.
In support of this proposal, the Exchange has also made the following
representations:
(1) The Shares will conform to the initial and continued listing
criteria under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600.
(2) The Exchange has appropriate rules to facilitate transactions
in the Shares during all trading sessions.
(3) Trading in the Shares will be subject to the existing trading
surveillances, administered by regulatory staff of the Exchange, or
FINRA on behalf of the Exchange, which are designed to detect
violations of Exchange rules and applicable federal securities laws,
and these procedures are adequate to properly monitor Exchange trading
of the Shares in all trading sessions and to deter and detect
violations of Exchange rules and federal securities laws applicable to
trading on the Exchange.
(4) FINRA, on behalf of the Exchange, or the regulatory staff of
the Exchange, will communicate as needed regarding trading in the
Shares, certain exchange-traded options and futures, certain exchange-
traded equities (including ETFs, ETPs. ETNs, CEFs, certain common
stocks, and certain REITs) with other markets or other entities that
are members of the Intermarket Surveillance Group (``ISG''), and FINRA
or regulatory staff of the Exchange may obtain trading information
regarding trading in the Shares, certain exchange-traded options and
futures, certain exchange-traded equities (including ETFs, ETPs, ETNs,
CEFs, certain common stocks and certain REITs) from such markets or
entities. In addition, the Exchange may obtain information regarding
trading in the Shares, certain exchange-traded options and futures,
certain exchange-traded equities (including ETFs, ETPs, ETNs, CEFs,
certain common stocks, and certain REITs) from markets or other
entities that are members of ISG or with which the Exchange has in
place a comprehensive surveillance sharing agreement. FINRA, on behalf
of the Exchange, is able to access, as needed, trade information for
certain fixed income securities held by the Fund reported to FINRA's
Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine.
(5) Prior to the commencement of trading of the Shares, the
Exchange will inform its ETP Holders in a Bulletin of the special
characteristics and risks associated with trading the Shares. The
Bulletin will discuss the following: (a) The procedures for purchases
and redemptions of Shares in creation units (and that Shares are not
individually redeemable); (b) NYSE Arca Equities Rule 9.2(a), which
imposes a duty of due diligence on its ETP Holders to learn the
essential facts relating to every customer prior to trading the Shares;
(c) the risks involved in trading the Shares during the Opening and
Late Trading Sessions when an updated Portfolio Indicative Value will
not be calculated or publicly disseminated; (d) how information
regarding the Portfolio Indicative Value and the Disclosed Portfolio is
disseminated; (e) the requirement that ETP Holders deliver a prospectus
to investors purchasing newly issued Shares prior to or concurrently
with the confirmation of a transaction; and (f) trading information.
(6) For initial and continued listing, the Fund will be in
compliance with Rule 10A-3 under the Exchange Act,\53\ as provided by
NYSE Arca Equities Rule 5.3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ 17 CFR 240.10A-3.
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(7) A minimum of 100,000 Shares for the Fund will be outstanding at
the commencement of trading on the Exchange.
(8) While the Fund may invest in inverse ETFs, the Fund will not
invest in leveraged (e.g., 2X, -2X, 3X or -3X) ETFs.
(9) Not more than 10% of the net assets of the Fund in the
aggregate invested in equity securities (other than non-exchange-traded
investment company securities) will consist of equity securities whose
principal market is not a member of the ISG or is a market with which
the Exchange does not have a comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement. In addition, not more than 10% of the net assets of the Fund
in the aggregate invested in futures contracts or exchange-traded
options contracts will consist of futures contracts or exchange-traded
options contracts whose principal market is not a member of ISG or is a
market with which the Exchange does not have a comprehensive
surveillance sharing agreement.
(10) Normally the Fund will seek to invest at least 75% of its
corporate debt securities assets in issuances that have at least
$100,000,000 par amount outstanding in developed countries or at least
$200,000,000 par amount outstanding in emerging market countries.
(11) The Fund normally will invest at least 75% of its bank loan or
corporate loan assets, which includes senior loans, syndicated bank
loans, junior loans, bridge loans, unfunded commitments, revolvers and
participation interests, in issuances that have at least $100 million
par amount outstanding.
(12) The Fund may invest up to 20% of its total assets in the
aggregate in Private MBS/ABS and in asset-backed commercial paper. Such
holdings would be subject to the respective limitations on the Fund's
investments in illiquid assets and high yield securities. The liquidity
of such securities, especially in the case of Private MBS/ABS, will be
a substantial factor in the Fund's security selection process.
(13) The Fund may invest up to 20% of its total assets in the
aggregate in participations in and assignments of bank loans or
corporate loans, which loans include syndicated bank loans, junior
loans, bridge loans, unfunded commitments, revolvers and participation
interests (but specifically do not include senior loans), in structured
notes, in credit-linked notes, in risk-linked securities, in OTC REITs,
and in OTC hybrid instruments. Such holdings would be subject to the
respective limitations on the Fund's investments in illiquid assets and
high yield securities. The liquidity of such securities will be a
substantial factor in the Fund's security selection process.
(14) Not more than 33 1/3% of the Fund's total assets will be in
junk bonds.
(15) The Fund may hold up to an aggregate amount of 15% of its net
assets in illiquid assets (calculated at the time of investment),
including Rule 144A securities, Private MBS/ABS, master notes, loans,
and loan commitments deemed illiquid by the Adviser, consistent with
Commission guidance.
(16) The Fund's investments will be consistent with the Fund's
investment objective and will not be used to enhance leverage. That is,
while the Fund will be permitted to borrow as permitted under the 1940
Act, the Fund's investments will not be used to seek performance that
is the multiple or inverse multiple (i.e., 2Xs and 3Xs) of the Fund's
primary broad-based securities benchmark index (as defined in Form N-
1A).
(17) Investments in derivative instruments will be made in
accordance with the 1940 Act and consistent with the Fund's investment
objective and
[[Page 80865]]
policies. The Fund will seek, where possible, to use counterparties
whose financial status is such that the risk of default is reduced. The
Fund will segregate or ``earmark'' assets determined to be liquid by
the Adviser in accordance with procedures established by the Board and
in accordance with the 1940 Act (or, as permitted by applicable
regulation, enter into certain offsetting positions) to cover its
obligations under derivative instruments. In addition, the Fund will
include appropriate risk disclosure in its offering documents,
including leveraging risk. To mitigate leveraging risk, the Adviser
will segregate or ``earmark'' liquid assets or otherwise cover the
transactions that may give rise to such risk.
This approval order is based on all of the Exchange's
representations, including those set forth above and in the Notice. The
Commission notes that the Fund and the Shares must comply with the
requirements of NYSE Arca Equities Rule 8.600 to be initially and
continuously listed and traded on the Exchange.
IV. Solicitation of Comments on Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether Amendment Nos. 3,
4, 5, and 6 to the proposed rule change are consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-NYSEArca-2015-73 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NYSEArca-2015-73. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other
than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549 on official business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available
for inspection and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All
comments received will be posted without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File Number SR-NYSEArca-2015-73 and should
be submitted on or before January 19, 2016.
V. Accelerated Approval of Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6
The Commission finds good cause to approve the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6, prior to the
30th day after the date of publication of notice of Amendment Nos. 3,
4, 5, and 6 in the Federal Register. Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6
revised the proposed rule change by: (1) Modifying, and defining, the
Fixed Income Instruments in which the Fund will invest; (2)
representing that normally corporate debt securities and bank loan and
corporate loan assets will each have a certain par amount outstanding;
(3) modifying the investment restrictions of the Fund; (4) clarifying
price information in, and adding assets to, the Availability of
Information section, and (5) noting that trading surveillances may be
administered by the regulatory staff of the Exchange.
Amendment Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6 supplement the proposed rule change
by, among other things, clarifying the scope of the Fund's permitted
investments and investment restrictions and providing additional
information about the availability of pricing information for the
Fund's underlying assets. They also help the Commission evaluate
whether the listing and trading of the Shares of the Fund would be
consistent with the protection of investors and the public interest.
Accordingly, the Commission finds good cause, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Act,\54\ to approve the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6, on an accelerated basis.
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\54\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
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VI. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Exchange Act,\55\ that the proposed rule change (SR-NYSEArca-2015-73),
as modified by Amendment Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6 thereto, be, and it
hereby is, approved on an accelerated basis.
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\55\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\56\
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\56\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-32528 Filed 12-24-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P