Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction Restrictions, 67654-67676 [2018-28091]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2018 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain
Prohibited Transaction Restrictions
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Exemptions.
AGENCY:
This document contains
notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of
proposed exemptions from certain of the
prohibited transaction restrictions of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the
Code). If granted, these proposed
exemptions allow designated parties to
engage in transactions that would
otherwise be prohibited provided the
conditions stated there in are met. This
notice includes the following proposed
exemptions: D–11924, The Les Schwab
Tire Centers of Washington, Inc., the Les
Schwab Tire Centers of Boise, Inc., and
the Les Schwab Tire Centers of
Portland, Inc.; D–11918, Seventy Seven
Energy Inc. Retirement & Savings Plan;
D–11940, Tidewater Savings and
Retirement Plan; and D–11947,
Principal Life Insurance Company
(PLIC) and its Affiliates.
DATES: All interested persons are invited
to submit written comments or requests
for a hearing on the pending
exemptions, unless otherwise stated in
the Notice of Proposed Exemption, by
February 11, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments and requests for
a hearing should state: (1) The name,
address, and telephone number of the
person making the comment or request,
and (2) the nature of the person’s
interest in the exemption and the
manner in which the person would be
adversely affected by the exemption. A
request for a hearing must also state the
issues to be addressed and include a
general description of the evidence to be
presented at the hearing.
All written comments and requests for
a hearing (at least three copies) should
be sent via mail to the Employee
Benefits Security Administration
(EBSA), Office of Exemption
Determinations, U.S. Department of
Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW,
Suite 400, Washington, DC 20210.
Attention: Application No._ stated in
each Notice of Proposed Exemption or
via private delivery service or courier to
the Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), Office of
Exemption Determinations, U.S.
Department of Labor, 122 C St. NW,
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SUMMARY:
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Suite 400, Washington, DC 20001.
Attention: Application No._ stated in
each Notice of Proposed Exemption.
Interested persons are also invited to
submit comments and/or hearing
requests to EBSA via email or FAX. Any
such comments or requests should be
sent either by email to: e-OED@dol.gov,
by FAX to (202) 693–8474, or online
through https://www.regulations.gov by
the end of the scheduled comment
period. The applications for exemption
and the comments received will be
available for public inspection in the
Public Documents Room of the
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor, Room N–1515, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210.
WARNING: All comments will be
made available to the public. Do not
include any personally identifiable
information (such as Social Security
number, name, address, or other contact
information) or confidential business
information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may
be posted on the internet and can be
retrieved by most internet search
engines.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions
will be provided to all interested
persons in the manner agreed upon by
the applicant and the Department,
unless otherwise stated in the Notice of
Proposed Exemption, within 15 days of
the date of publication in the Federal
Register. Such notice shall include a
copy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal
Register and shall inform interested
persons of their right to comment and to
request a hearing (where appropriate).
The proposed exemptions were
requested in applications filed pursuant
to section 408(a) of the Act and/or
section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in
accordance with procedures set forth in
29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76 FR
66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).1
Effective December 31, 1978, section
102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of
1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1 (1996), transferred
the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type
requested to the Secretary of Labor.
Therefore, these notices of proposed
exemption are issued solely by the
Department.
1 The Department has considered exemption
applications received prior to December 27, 2011
under the exemption procedures set forth in 29 CFR
part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August
10, 1990).
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The applications contain
representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are
summarized below. Interested persons
are referred to the applications on file
with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and
representations.
The Les Schwab Tire Centers of
Washington, Inc. (Les Schwab
Washington), the Les Schwab Tire
Centers of Boise, Inc. (Les Schwab
Boise), and the Les Schwab Tire Centers
of Portland, Inc. (Les Schwab Portland),
(collectively, with their Affiliates, Les
Schwab or the Applicant) Located in
Aloha, Oregon; Boise, Idaho; Centralia,
Washington; and Other Locations
[Application No. D–11924].
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act (or
ERISA), and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 29 CFR part
2570, subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644,
October 27, 2011).2 If the proposed
exemption is granted, the restrictions of
sections 406(a)(1)(A), 406(a)(1)(D),
406(b)(1) and 406(b)(2) of the Act, and
the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code,
by reason of sections 4975(c)(1)(A),
4975(c)(1)(D) and 4975(c)(1)(E) of the
Code, shall not apply to the sales (each
a ‘‘Sale’’ or collectively, the ‘‘Sales’’) by
the Les Schwab Profit Sharing
Retirement Plan (the Plan) of the parcels
of real property described herein (each,
a ‘‘Parcel’’ or collectively, the ‘‘Parcels’’)
to the Applicant, where the Applicant is
a party in interest with respect to the
Plan, provided that certain conditions
are satisfied.
Summary of Facts and
Representations 3
Background
1. Les Schwab Tire Centers (together
with its affiliates, Les Schwab) was
founded by its namesake in 1952 in
Prineville, Oregon, in order to sell tires,
batteries and other automotive
equipment, and provide vehicle
maintenance services. There are now
approximately 482 Les Schwab tire and
automotive service centers located
primarily in the Northwest and with
over $1.7 billion in annual sales. Their
2 For purposes of this proposed exemption,
references to the provisions of Title I of the Act,
unless otherwise specified, should be read to refer
as well to the corresponding provisions of the Code.
3 The Summary of Facts and Representations is
based solely on the representations of the Applicant
and does not reflect the views of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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facilities are located in Alaska,
Washington, Oregon, Montana, Nevada,
Utah, California, Colorado, and Idaho.
2. Les Schwab is comprised of 13
distinct legal entities. Certain entities
are ‘‘S’’ corporations. The 13 entities
constitute various controlled groups but
do not constitute a single controlled
group. The Form 5500 Annual Report
for the Plan is filed as a multiple
employer plan. The thirteen entities do
include Les Schwab Washington, Les
Schwab Idaho, Les Schwab Portland,
and Les Schwab Warehouse Center, Inc.
(the Warehouse Center).
3. All entities within the Les Schwab
controlled groups are owned by Alan
Schwab, Diana Tomseth, Julie Waibel,
and Leslie Tuftin (or by trusts for the
benefit of such individuals and/or their
children). Mr. Schwab and Ms. Tomseth
are siblings, and Ms. Waibel and Ms.
Tuftin are siblings. These four
individuals are the grandchildren of Les
Schwab and they are also currently
employees of the Warehouse Center and
board members of Les Schwab. The
Applicant states that each of these four
individuals is a Plan participant, as well
as an owner-employee because they
each own more than 5 percent of the
stock of Les Schwab.4
4. The Plan is a qualified multipleemployer, defined contribution profitsharing plan located in Bend, Oregon.
The Plan is sponsored by the Warehouse
Center. Thirteen employers, including
Les Schwab Washington, Les Schwab
Idaho, and Les Schwab Portland
participate in the Plan. As of December
31, 2017, the Plan had 7,444
participants and beneficiaries. Also, as
of December 31, 2017, the Plan had total
assets of $730,454,671. The Applicant
states that the Plan is the sole retirement
plan available for Les Schwab
employees.
5. The Administrative and Investment
Committee of the Plan (the Committee)
has the sole discretionary investment
authority over the Plan and is a named
fiduciary. The Committee has the
4 The term ‘‘owner-employee’’ is defined under
section 408(d) of the Act to include persons as
defined in section 401(c)(3) of the Code, such as an
employee who owns the entire interest in an
unincorporated trade or business, or in the case of
a partnership, a partner who owns more than 10
percent of either the capital interest or profits
interest of such partnership. The term ‘‘owneremployee’’ also includes, in relevant part, (a) a
shareholder-employee, which is an employee or
officer of an S corporation who owns more than 5
percent of the outstanding stock of such
corporation; (b) a member of the family of such
owner-employee; or (c) a corporation in which such
shareholder-employee owns, directly or indirectly,
50% or more of the total combined voting power
of all classes of voting stock of a corporation or 50%
or more of the total value of all classes of stock of
such corporation.
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exclusive right and discretionary
authority to control, manage and operate
the Plan. This includes the authority to
direct the investment of the Plan’s assets
and to appoint and remove the Plan’s
Trustees and investment managers.
The Committee consists of seven
trustees (the Trustees), who include
executives and officers of Les Schwab.
The Trustees are appointed by the Chief
Executive Officer of the Warehouse
Center. All of the Trustees are
employees of the Warehouse Center,
and some are officers of the Warehouse
Center and Les Schwab Washington, Les
Schwab Idaho and Les Schwab
Portland.
Parcel Purchases
6. Over time, the Plan purchased
twenty-six parcels of real property
(collectively, the Parcels). As described
below, following the purchases, the Plan
entered into leases with various Les
Schwab entities.5 These Parcels of real
property were then improved by the
construction of buildings that were paid
for by the Les Schwab entities or the
Plan. Under the terms of the leases, the
Les Schwab entities or the Plan retained
title to these buildings.
The Applicant asserts that the Plan
was initially motivated to purchase and
lease the Parcels to Les Schwab as a
means to provide a secure return on the
Plan’s investments. In this regard, the
Plan had intimate knowledge of Les
Schwab’s business success and
creditworthiness, and determined that
leasing the Parcels to Les Schwab was
a prudent investment decision.
7. On October 6, 2015, the Department
issued a notice of final exemption in
connection with the sale by the Plan to
the Applicant of five Parcels of real
property.6 The Applicant seeks a similar
individual exemption for the Sales of 19
Parcels on which Les Schwab leases the
Parcels from the Plan and operates tire
centers through an affiliate.7 Given that
5 The Applicant represents that these leases are
exempt under section 408(e) of the Act. Section
408(e) of the Act provides, in pertinent part, that
the restrictions of sections 406 and 407 of the Act
shall not apply to the acquisition, sale or lease by
a plan of qualifying employer real property if—(a)
such acquisition, sale, or lease is for adequate
consideration; (b) no commission is charged with
respect thereto; and (c) the plan is an eligible
individual account plan.
6 See PTE 2015–18, 80 FR 60503 (October 6,
2015).
7 Les Schwab represents that, in addition to the
five parcels covered by PTE 2015–18 and the 19
parcels covered by this proposed exemption, the
Plan owns a parcel in Aberdeen, Washington (the
Aberdeen Parcel) and a parcel in Moscow, Idaho
(the Moscow Parcel). With respect to the Aberdeen
Parcel, Les Schwab represents that the Applicant
has not made a business decision on whether Les
Schwab Washington will purchase the property. Les
Schwab represents that, with respect to the Moscow
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Les Schwab has retained title to the
buildings that have been constructed on
some of the Parcels, pursuant to the
terms of the relevant leases, in some
instances, the purchases do not involve
the buildings themselves. Each Parcel
that is the subject of the proposed Sales
is described below in further detail.
The Aloha Parcel
8. The Plan purchased a 1.97-acre
parcel of property, located at 19100 SW
Shaw Street in Aloha, Oregon (the
Aloha Parcel), from an unrelated party
in October 1986, for a total purchase
price of $300,194.
The Plan and Les Schwab Portland
entered into a lease of the Aloha Parcel
(the Aloha Parcel Lease), on January 1,
1987, with the Plan as landlord, and Les
Schwab Portland, as tenant. Effective as
of its renewal term commencing January
1, 2014, the monthly rent is $14,453 per
month.
In March 1988, the Plan completed
the construction of two general
automotive buildings and the canopy,
for a total cost of $614,824. Les Schwab
Portland then constructed a third
general automotive building for a cost of
$171,968.
The Aloha Parcel Lease includes a
purchase option under which Les
Schwab Portland has the right to
purchase the Aloha Parcel. Pursuant to
the terms of the Aloha Parcel Lease, the
applicable option price is based on the
greater of $300,194 plus the landlord’s
total cost of improvements, or the fair
market value of the Aloha Parcel, as
determined by the corresponding
independent appraisal discussed in
paragraph 31 (the Independent
Appraisal). Les Schwab Portland now
seeks to exercise its option to purchase
the Aloha Parcel from the Plan.
The Boise Broadway Parcel
9. On February 13, 1990, the Plan
purchased 1.66 acres of land, located at
2045 Broadway Avenue in Boise, Idaho
(the Boise Broadway Parcel), from an
unrelated party, for a total purchase
price, including closing costs, of
$398,085.
On June 1, 1990, the Plan and Les
Schwab Tire Centers of Boise, Idaho
(Les Schwab Boise) entered into a
ground lease of the Boise Broadway
Parcel (the Boise Broadway Parcel
Lease), with the Plan, as landlord, and
Les Schwab Boise, as tenant. On May 1,
1991, Les Schwab Boise opened a retail
tire store facility on the Boise Broadway
Property in a building that it had
constructed for $437,061. Effective as of
Parcel, the option to purchase the property from the
Plan is not yet exercisable.
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the lease renewal term of January 1,
2016, the monthly rent is $6,163 per
month.
The Boise Broadway Parcel Lease
includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Boise has the right to
purchase the Boise Broadway Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Boise
Broadway Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of
$398,085, plus the landlord’s total cost
of improvements, or the fair market
value of the Boise Broadway Parcel, as
determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Boise now seeks
to exercise its option to purchase the
Boise Broadway Parcel from the Plan.
The Boise State Street Parcel
10. On May 12, 1978, the Plan
purchased 1.41 acres of real property
located at 6520 West State Street in
Boise, Idaho (the Boise State Street
Parcel) from an unrelated party. The
total purchase price for the Boise State
Street Parcel was $238,600. The Boise
State Street Parcel is comprised of: (a)
Two buildings: A 7,000 square foot
retail store building, and a 6,400 square
foot building housing a shop warehouse;
and (b) two canopy areas, of 1,920
square feet and 1,400 square feet, that
are attached to the retail store building.
On April 1, 1981, the Plan and Les
Schwab Boise entered into a ground
lease of a portion of the Boise State
Street Parcel, with the Plan as landlord,
and Les Schwab Boise, as tenant (the
Boise State Street Parcel Lease). The
Plan purchased additional land in 1988,
which was added to the leased
premises. The additional land was used
for the construction of a brake and
alignment center to expand Les Schwab
Boise’s business. The cost of the
additional land was $42,185. The Plan
in 1988 constructed a brake and
alignment building on recentlypurchased land for $137,198. The Plan
made improvements to the roof system
in 1989, for which the Plan paid
$10,807. Effective as of its lease renewal
term of August 1, 2017, the monthly
rent for the Boise State Street Parcel is
$11,977.
The Boise State Street Parcel Lease
includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Boise has the right to
purchase the Boise State Street Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Boise State
Street Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of
$103,900 plus the landlord’s total cost
of improvements, or the fair market
value of the Boise State Street Parcel, as
determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Boise now seeks
to exercise its option to purchase the
Boise State Street Parcel from the Plan.
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The Centralia Parcel
11. On June 18, 1987, the Plan
purchased a 1.06 acre parcel of real
property consisting of vacant land
located at 1211 Harrison Avenue in
Centralia, Washington (the Centralia
Parcel) from an unrelated party, for a
total purchase price, including closing
costs of $139,909.
On October 1, 1987, the Plan, as
landlord, leased the Centralia Parcel to
Les Schwab Washington, as tenant,
under the provisions of a ground lease
(the Centralia Parcel Lease). In 1988, Les
Schwab Washington completed the
construction of a building and
improvements that were suitable for the
operation of a retail tire store and other
commercial purposes, at its own
expense, for a total cost of $347,378.
Since January 1, 2014, Les Schwab
Washington has been paying the Plan
$1,860 per month under the Centralia
Parcel Lease.
The Centralia Parcel Lease includes a
purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Centralia Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Centralia Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $139,909, or the
fair market value of the Centralia Parcel,
as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now
seeks to exercise its option to purchase
the Centralia Parcel from the Plan.
The Chehalis Parcel
12. On April 21, 1980, the Plan
purchased a 44,615 square foot parcel of
real property located at 36 N Market
Boulevard in Chehalis, Washington,
including the land and a building (the
Chehalis Parcel), from an unrelated
party, for a total purchase price of
$200,000.
On June 1, 1980, the Plan, as landlord,
entered into a lease of the Chehalis
Parcel (the Chehalis Parcel Lease) with
Les Schwab Washington, as tenant,
which commenced on September 1,
1980. Pursuant to the current Chehalis
Parcel Lease, since August 1, 2017, Les
Schwab Washington pays the Plan
monthly rent of $10,487.
The Plan constructed, at its own
expense, two buildings and related
improvements on the Chehalis Parcel
that were suitable for the operation of a
retail tire store and other purposes by
Les Schwab Washington. The cost of the
building and improvements was
$286,947.
The Chehalis Parcel Lease includes a
purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Chehalis Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Chehalis Parcel
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Lease, the applicable option price is
based on: The greater of (a) $120,000
plus the Plan’s total cost of
improvements made on the Chehalis
Parcel, or (b) the fair market value of
Chehalis Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Chehalis Parcel
from the Plan.
The Ellensburg Parcels
13. In August 1977, Les Schwab
Washington purchased approximately
71,438 square feet of land located at
1206 South Canyon Road, Ellensburg,
Washington from unrelated parties for
$80,000. Les Schwab Washington then
subdivided the land into three parcels:
Ellensburg Parcel #1, Ellensburg Parcel
#2, and Ellensburg Parcel #3. Because
Les Schwab Washington retained
Ellensburg Parcel #3, and subsequently
sold it to an unrelated party, the
property and lease descriptions below
pertain solely to Ellensburg Parcels #1
and #2, which are together referred to
herein as the ‘‘Ellensburg Parcels.’’
In December 1979, Les Schwab
Washington and the Plan entered into a
sale and leaseback arrangement,
whereby Les Schwab Washington sold
Ellensburg Parcel #1 to the Plan for
$108,600. Effective January 1, 1980, the
Plan entered into a lease with Les
Schwab Washington (the Ellensburg
Parcel #1 Lease). The Plan paid
$214,567 to construct a building and
related improvements suitable for the
retail tire store and other purposes. Les
Schwab Washington has been paying
the Plan $7,503 per month since January
1, 2016.
With respect to Ellensburg Parcel #2,
which shares the same street address as
Ellensburg Parcel #1, the Applicant
represents that Les Schwab Washington
constructed a small general purpose
commercial building (an alignment
center) thereon for $85,834. The
building was subsequently incorporated
into the Ellensburg Parcel #1 Leases.
The Ellensburg Parcel #1 Lease
includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Ellensburg Parcels. Under
the terms of the Ellensburg Parcel #1
Lease, the option price will be the
greater of $425,232 plus the landlord’s
total cost of improvements, or the fair
market value of the Ellensburg Parcels,
as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now
seeks to exercise the option to purchase
the Ellensburg Parcels from the Plan.
The Independence Parcel
14. In December 1979, the Plan
purchased a 53,000-square foot parcel of
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property located at 1710 Monmouth
Avenue, Independence, Oregon (the
Independence Parcel), consisting of land
and a building from Les Schwab
Portland for $301,149.
On January 1, 1980, the Plan began
leasing the Independence Parcel to Les
Schwab Portland, under the provisions
of a written lease (the Independence
Parcel Lease). Les Schwab Portland has
been paying the Plan $6,984 per month
since January 1, 2016.
The Independence Parcel Lease
includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Portland has the right to
purchase the Independence Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the
Independence Parcel Lease, the
applicable option price is based on the
greater of $329,197 plus the landlord’s
total cost of improvements, or the fair
market value of the Independence
Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Independence
Parcel from the Plan.
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The Lakewood Parcel
15. On May 31, 1988, the Plan
purchased two parcels of land, located
at 3809 Steilacoom Boulevard SW,
Tacoma, Washington (with the
additions described below, the
Lakewood Parcel), and totaling 43,050
square feet, from unrelated parties, for
$200,388. On June 1, 1988, the Plan
entered into a ground lease of one of the
parcels with Les Schwab Washington,
for an initial monthly rent of $1,336 (the
Lakewood Parcel Lease).
In January 1989, the Plan purchased
an additional 11,760 square foot parcel
of land, from unrelated parties, for
$59,033. Furthermore, in 2002, the Plan
purchased a 12,000 square foot tract of
land on the Lakewood Parcel, from
unrelated parties, for $85,596. In 2005,
the Plan purchased 7,730 square feet of
land from unrelated parties, for
$126,480. Since January 1, 2014, the
monthly rent for the Lakewood Parcel
has been $5,429.
The Lakewood Parcel Lease includes
a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Lakewood Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Lakewood Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $200,388, plus
the landlord’s total cost of
improvements, or the fair market value
of the Lakewood Parcel, as determined
by the Independent Appraisal. Les
Schwab Washington now seeks to
exercise its option to purchase the
Lakewood Parcel from the Plan.
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The Longview Parcel
16. On December 18, 1979, Les
Schwab Washington purchased 1.89
acres of land located at 1420 Industrial
Way in Longview, Washington (the
Longview Parcel) from an unrelated
party for $86,350. On May 14, 1981, Les
Schwab Washington sold the Longview
Parcel to the Plan for $90,704.
On May 14, 1981, the Plan and Les
Schwab Washington entered into a
commercial lease of the land comprising
the Longview Parcel, with the Plan as
landlord, and Les Schwab Washington,
as tenant (the Longview Parcel Lease).
Since August 1, 2017, the monthly rent
has been $13,979.
In 1981, the Plan completed
improvements on the Longview Parcel
that included a 14,830 square foot retail
tire store costing $267,902. Other
improvements were funded and
constructed by the Plan in 1983, at an
expense of $70,174, and in 1986, at an
expense of $88,773, for a 3,600 square
foot warehouse building.
The Longview Parcel Lease includes a
purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Longview Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Longview Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $90,704 plus the
landlord’s total cost of improvements, or
the fair market value of the Longview
Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Longview Parcel
from the Plan.
The Marysville Parcels
17. On July 24, 1984, the Plan
purchased 61,346 square feet of land
located at 8405 State Avenue,
Marysville, Washington (Marysville
Parcel A) from an unrelated party, for a
total contract price of $235,287.
Pursuant to a ground lease dated August
1, 1984, the Plan began leasing the land
‘‘as is’’ to Les Schwab Washington (the
Marysville Parcel Lease). Les Schwab
Washington subsequently completed
construction of a retail store at its own
cost in 1985.
The Plan acquired 26,136 square feet
of additional land (Marysville Parcel
B) 8 in March 1999 for a price of
$160,125. Marysville Parcel B was
added to the Marysville Parcel Lease,
effective June 15, 1999. Since August 1,
2014, the monthly rent charged by the
Plan to Les Schwab Washington was
$6,229.
8 Marysville Parcel A and Marysville Parcel B are
together referred to herein as the ‘‘Marysville
Parcels.’’
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The Marysville Parcel Lease includes
a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Marysville Parcels.
Pursuant to the terms of the Marysville
Parcel Lease, the applicable option price
is based on the greater of $398,564, or
the fair market value of the Marysville
Parcels, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Marysville
Parcels from the Plan.
The North Bend Parcel
18. On June 3, 1988, the Plan
purchased land located at 610 E North
Bend Way, North Bend, Washington
(the North Bend Parcel) from an
unrelated party for $200,364. On
September 1, 1988, the Plan and Les
Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising the
North Bend Parcel, with the Plan as
landlord, and Les Schwab Washington,
as tenant (the North Bend Parcel Lease).
In 1991, Les Schwab Washington
opened a 3,500-square-foot retail tire
store facility on the North Bend Parcel
that it had constructed for $878,000.
Since January 1, 2014, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Washington has
been $2,578.
The North Bend Parcel Lease includes
a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the North Bend Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the North Bend
Parcel Lease, the applicable option price
is based on the greater of $200,364 plus
Landlord’s total cost of improvements,
or the fair market value of the North
Bend Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the North Bend
Parcel from the Plan.
The Oregon City Parcels
19. In October 1980, the Plan
purchased two parcels of land. The first
parcel comprised of 41,951 square feet
of land (Oregon City Parcel #1), and the
second parcel comprised of 42,757
square feet of land (Oregon City Parcel
#2), located at 1625 Beavercreek Road,
Oregon City, Oregon, from an unrelated
third party for $250,000. In July 1984,
the Plan sold Oregon City Parcel #2 to
Les Schwab Portland for $151,000.
On November 1, 1981, the Plan and
Les Schwab Portland entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising
Oregon City Parcel #1, with the Plan, as
landlord, and Les Schwab Portland, as
tenant (the Oregon City Parcel #1 Lease).
In 1982, Les Schwab Portland opened
a 7,850-square-foot retail tire store
facility on Oregon City Parcel #1 that it
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had constructed for $366,000. Since
August 1, 2017, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Portland
increased to $4,470.
The Oregon City Parcel #1 Lease
includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Portland has the right to
purchase Oregon City Parcel #1.
Pursuant to the terms of the Oregon City
Parcel #1 Lease, the applicable option
price is based on the greater of
$136,500, or the fair market value of
Oregon City Parcel #1, as determined by
the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Portland now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase Oregon City Parcel
#1 from the Plan.
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The Pullman Parcel
20. In November 1981, the Plan
purchased 0.77 acres of land, located at
160 SE Bishop Boulevard in Pullman,
Washington (the Pullman Parcel), from
an unrelated party for a total purchase
price of $75,704.
On November 10, 1981, the Plan and
Les Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising the
Pullman Parcel, with the Plan, as
landlord, and Les Schwab Washington,
as tenant (the Pullman Parcel Lease). In
1987, Les Schwab Washington opened a
7,300-square-foot retail tire store facility
on the Pullman Parcel that it had
constructed for $345,000. Since August
1, 2017, the monthly rent charged to Les
Schwab Washington has been $3,356.
The Pullman Parcel Lease includes a
purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Pullman Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Pullman Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $80,704, or the
fair market value of the Pullman Parcel,
as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now
seeks to exercise its option to purchase
the Pullman Parcel from the Plan.
The Silverton Parcel
21. In November 1986, the Plan
purchased 1.18 acres of land, located at
911 North 1st Street in Silverton,
Oregon (the Silverton Parcel), from an
unrelated party for a total purchase
price of $50,739.
On March 1, 1987, the Plan and Les
Schwab Portland entered into a ground
lease of the land comprising the
Silverton Parcel, with the Plan, as
landlord, and Les Schwab Portland, as
tenant (the Silverton Parcel Lease).
As agreed upon under the Silverton
Parcel Lease, in 1987, the Plan
constructed a tire store facility on the
Silverton Parcel, for a total cost of
$307,725. In 1992 the Plan funded
additional improvements on the
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Silverton Parcel at a cost of $153,276.
Since January 1, 2013, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Portland has
been $7,900.
The Silverton Parcel Lease includes a
purchase option under which Les
Schwab Portland has the right to
purchase the Silverton Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Silverton Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $50,730 plus the
landlord’s total cost of improvements, or
the fair market value of the Silverton
Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Portland now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Silverton Parcel
from the Plan.
The Snohomish Parcel
22. In March 1992, the Plan
purchased 1.01 acres of land located at
711 Avenue D, Snohomish, Washington,
from an unrelated party for an aggregate
purchase price of $614,534. In January
1993, the Plan purchased approximately
0.07 acres of land adjacent to the initial
tract for $46,800, also from an unrelated
party. For purposes of this proposed
exemption, both tracts of land are
referred to herein as the ‘‘Snohomish
Parcel.’’
On July 1, 1992, the Plan and Les
Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease with the Plan of the initial
tract of land comprising the Snohomish
Parcel (the Snohomish Parcel), with the
Plan as landlord, and Les Schwab
Washington, as tenant.
In 1993, Les Schwab Washington
opened a 14,300-square-foot retail tire
store facility on the Snohomish Parcel
that it had constructed for $825,000.
Since January 1, 2013, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Washington has
been $7,283.
The Snohomish Parcel Lease includes
a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Snohomish Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Snohomish
Parcel Lease, the applicable option price
is based on the greater of $614,534, plus
the landlord’s total cost of
improvements, or the fair market value
of the Snohomish Parcel, as determined
by the Independent Appraisal. Les
Schwab Washington now seeks to
exercise its option to purchase the
Snohomish Parcel from the Plan.
The Spanaway Parcel
23. In January 1985, the Plan
purchased 0.97 acres of land located at
16819 Pacific Avenue South, Spanaway,
Washington (the Spanaway Parcel) from
an unrelated third party for an aggregate
purchase price of $283,340. In July
1990, the Plan purchased a 14,100
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square foot parcel next to the initial
parcel from an unrelated third party for
$45,743. In May 1999, the Plan
purchased an additional 8,000 square
foot parcel from an unrelated third party
for $58,000. The three land parcels
totaling 1.48 acres comprise the
Spanaway property (the Spanaway
Parcel). On February 1, 1985, the Plan
and Les Schwab Washington entered
into a ground lease of the land
comprising the initial parcel (the
Spanaway Parcel Lease), with the Plan,
as landlord, and Les Schwab
Washington, as tenant.
In late 1985, Les Schwab Washington
opened a 15,000-spare-foot retail tire
store facility on the Spanaway Parcel
that it had constructed for $406,000.
Since August 1, 2015, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Washington has
been $6,615.
The Spanaway Parcel Lease includes
a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Spanaway Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Spanaway Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $329,083, or the
fair market value of the Spanaway
Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Spanaway Parcel
from the Plan.
The Spokane Parcel
24. In November 1981, the Plan
purchased 0.88 acres of land, located at
8103 North Division Street, Spokane,
Washington (the Spokane Parcel), from
an unrelated third party for an aggregate
purchase price of $205,000.
On November 10, 1981, the Plan and
Les Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising the
Spokane Parcel, with the Plan, as
landlord, and Les Schwab Washington,
as tenant (the Spokane Parcel Lease).
In 1982, Les Schwab Washington
opened a 7,400-square-foot retail tire
store facility on the Spokane Parcel that
it had constructed for $263,000. Since
August 1, 2012, the monthly rent to Les
Schwab Washington has been $5,175.
The Spokane Parcel Lease includes a
purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Spokane Parcel. Pursuant
to the terms of the Spokane Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $205,172, or the
fair market value of the Spokane Parcel,
as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now
seeks to exercise its option to purchase
the Spokane Parcel from the Plan.
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The Vancouver Andresen Parcel
25. On October 12, 1989, the Plan
purchased 0.78 acres of land located at
2420 NE Andresen Road, Vancouver,
Washington (the Vancouver Andresen
Parcel), from an unrelated third party
for an aggregate purchase price of
$245,265.
On January 1, 1990, the Plan and Les
Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising the
Vancouver Andresen Parcel (the
Vancouver Andresen Parcel Lease), with
the Plan, as landlord, and Les Schwab
Washington, as tenant.
In 1991, Les Schwab Washington
opened a 10,300-square-foot retail tire
store facility on the Vancouver
Andresen Parcel that it had constructed
for $557,000. Since January 1, 2015, the
monthly rent charged to Les Schwab
Washington has been $3,671.
The Vancouver Andresen Parcel Lease
includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to
purchase the Vancouver Andresen
Parcel. Pursuant to the terms of the
Vancouver Andresen Parcel Lease, the
applicable option price is based on the
greater of $245,264, or the fair market
value of the Vancouver Andresen
Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Vancouver
Andresen Parcel from the Plan.
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The Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel
26. On August 26, 1981, the Plan
purchased 0.69 acres of land located at
216 SE 118th Avenue, Vancouver,
Washington (the Vancouver Cascade
Park Parcel), from an unrelated third
party for an aggregate purchase price of
$156,300.
On July 1, 1983, the Plan and Les
Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising the
Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel (the
Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel Lease),
with the Plan, as landlord, and Les
Schwab Washington, as tenant.
In late 1983, Les Schwab Washington
opened a 13,000-square-foot retail tire
store facility on the Vancouver Cascade
Park Parcel that it had constructed for
$304,000. Since January 1, 2015, the
monthly rent charged to Les Schwab
Washington has been $3,765.
The Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel
Lease includes a purchase option under
which Les Schwab Washington has the
right to purchase the Vancouver
Cascade Park Parcel. Pursuant to the
terms of the Vancouver Cascade Park
Parcel Lease, the applicable option price
is based on the greater of $156,300, or
the fair market value of the Vancouver
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Cascade Park Parcel, as determined by
the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Vancouver
Cascade Park Parcel from the Plan.
Terms of the Sales
27. Each Sale must be a one-time
transaction for cash. At the time of the
Sales, the Plan will receive no less than
the fair market value of each Parcel, as
determined by the Appraisers, whose
current Appraisals will be updated on
the date of the Sales. In this regard, to
the extent the terms of any lease allow
a Sale price that is greater than a
Parcel’s fair market value, then the price
received by the Plan for such Parcel will
equal such greater Sale price. In
addition, the Applicant represents that
the Plan will not pay any costs,
including brokerage commissions, fees,
appraisal costs, or any other expenses
associated with the Sales. Further, the
terms and conditions of each Sale will
be at least as favorable to the Plan as
those obtainable in an arm’s-length
transaction with an unrelated party.
Finally, a qualified independent
fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan with respect to each Sale.
Among other things, such independent
fiduciary will monitor each sale
throughout its duration, review and
approve the methodology and ultimate
valuation determination of the qualified
independent appraiser (the Independent
Appraiser), and determine, on behalf of
the Plan, whether it is prudent to
proceed with the transaction.
The Independent Fiduciary
28. Les Schwab represents that
American Realty Advisors (ARA) of
Glendale, California was retained to
serve as a qualified independent
fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary) to
the Plan for purposes of evaluating and
approving the Sales. ARA represents
that it is an investment manager of
institutional quality commercial real
estate portfolios with 529 investors and
over $8.7 billion in assets under
management as of June 30, 2018. ARA
is one of the largest privately-held real
estate investment management firms in
the United States and has been
providing real estate investment
management for over 28 years.
ARA represents that it qualifies as an
independent fiduciary under the
Department’s Prohibited Transaction
Exemption Procedures (see 29 CFR
2570, October 27, 2011, at 29 CFR
2570.34(d)).9 ARA states that it
9 29 CFR 2570.34(d) requires that an Independent
Fiduciary provide to the Department, under penalty
of perjury: (1) A summary of the Independent
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67659
acknowledges, understands, and accepts
its duties under ERISA and is acting as
the Independent Fiduciary to the Plan
in relation to the exemption application.
Further, ARA represents that it is
authorized by the Plan to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the
interests of the Plan and will, during the
pendency of the Sales: (a) Monitor the
Sales on behalf of the Plan; (b) ensure
that the Sales remain in the interests of
the Plan and, if not, take any
appropriate actions available under the
particular circumstances; and (c)
enforce compliance with all conditions
and obligations imposed on any party
dealing with the Plan with respect to
each transaction.
ARA represents that it does not have
any relationship with the parties
involved in the proposed transaction,
beyond its role as the Independent
Fiduciary.
As part of its Independent Fiduciary
duties and responsibilities, ARA
completed the following tasks: (a)
Toured each of the Parcels and
inspected comparable land sales, as
outlined in each of the appraisals CBRE,
Inc. (CBRE) completed for each Parcel
(the Independent Appraisals); (b)
engaged the Independent Appraisers
and instructed them with respect to the
objectives of each Independent
Appraisal, the specific nuances of the
Parcel leases between Les Schwab and
the Plan (the Leases), and the valuation
process, taking into account the
questions posed by the Department
during its review of the exemption
application in connection with its
granting of PTE 2015–18; (c) reviewed
the Independent Appraisals; (d)
reviewed the annual audited financial
statements for the Plan from 1980 to the
present to assess the treatment of the
Leases by the auditor and obtained
additional documentation from Les
Schwab in support of the rental
payments made under the Leases; (e)
reviewed and summarized the terms
and conditions of the Leases and
relevant amendments; (f) researched
additional questions posed by the
Department; and (g) reviewed the
composition of the existing real estate
portfolio of the Plan and the Plan’s
Statement of Investment Policy dated
September 1, 2015. Further, the
Independent Fiduciary examined
Fiduciary’s qualifications to serve in such capacity;
(2) a description of any relationship between the
Independent Fiduciary and a party in interest with
respect to the transaction or its affiliates; (3) an
acknowledgement by the Independent Fiduciary of
its duties and responsibilities under ERISA in
acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the plan; and (4)
the percentage of the Independent Fiduciary’s
current revenue that is derived from any party in
interest involved in the transaction or its affiliates.
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whether the Plan received rental income
on a timely basis under the Leases, and
reviewed audited financial statements
for the Plan prepared by
PriceWaterhouse Coopers and Roberts,
McMains, Sellman & Co. for the years
1981–2015.
The Independent Fiduciary represents
that it will represent the interests of the
Plan in the proposed Sales. In so doing,
the Independent Fiduciary will: (a)
Determine whether it is prudent to go
forward with each Sale; (b) negotiate,
review, and approve the terms and
conditions of each Sale; (c) monitor and
manage the Sales on behalf of the Plan
throughout their duration, taking any
appropriate actions it deems necessary
to safeguard the interests of the Plan.
The Independent Fiduciary Reports
29. ARA submitted to the Department
its reports, dated September 8, 2016 (the
Independent Fiduciary Reports), that
document ARA’s analysis of the
proposed Sale for each Parcel and
ARA’s recommendations for the Plan.
In the Independent Fiduciary Reports,
ARA represents that the Sales are the
most favorable option for the Plan and
its participants and beneficiaries,
because the improvements have
significant age and limited future value
(in addition to the current value of the
underlying land), to anyone other than
Les Schwab.
ARA concludes that the Leases
between the Plan and the applicable Les
Schwab affiliates with their rental rates
and Consumer Price Index (CPI)
adjustments are consistent with market
terms and conditions at the time the
Leases were negotiated and are
consistent of similar transactions
between unrelated parties. ARA also
concludes that the appraised values of
the Parcels as presented within the
Independent Appraisals are accurate
reflections of current market conditions
and form the basis for establishing fair
market prices for the Sales.
Further, ARA notes that the Plan’s
real estate holdings as outlined by the
2015 audited statement are
approximately 14.7% of the total assets
of the Plan and are just below the
parameters of the Plan’s Statement of
Investment Policy dated January 1,
2015. The proposed Sales of the Parcels,
in addition to the recent January 2016
sale of the Lacey, Renton, Bothell,
Sandy and Twin Falls Parcels, would
reduce the real estate holdings of the
Plan to approximately 10.8% of the total
assets of the Plan. This falls below the
investment threshold but would
modestly increase the liquidity of the
Plan. The Investment Policy Statement
establishes the policy range for real
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estate and other real assets within a
range of 15% and 25% of the portfolio.
The Sales results in a real estate
allocation that is under the policy range
but would allow the Plan to continue its
diversification strategy away from
directly owned real estate toward real
estate assets with greater liquidity,
increased diversification and decreased
liability risk.
ARA also represents, in the
Independent Fiduciary Reports, that it
has reviewed audited financial
statements of the Plan, as noted above,
for the years 1981 through 2015,
unaudited financial statements to the
end of February 2016, the Plan records
of rental income received from the
present back to 1995, and the scheduled
rent for all of the leases individually
from inception to the present. ARA
states that there is no reason to conclude
that the lessees owe the Plan any
additional rent related the failure of
either party to comply with the terms
and conditions of the Leases.
Further, ARA concludes, in the
Independent Fiduciary Reports, that the
Sales are administratively feasible and
would be fairly routine executions for
an experienced real estate investment
manager. ARA represents that it will: (a)
Monitor and manage the proposed
transactions on behalf of the Plan; (b)
take any appropriate actions to
safeguard the interests of the Plan; (c)
represent the interests of the Plan in the
proposed Sales; and (d) negotiate,
review, and approve the terms and
conditions of the proposed Sales.
The Independent Appraisers
30. The Applicant represents that the
appraisals of the Parcels were
conducted by Whitney Haucke, David
Adamson, Jeff Grose, Katriina White,
and Kevin Nguyen of CBRE. (Ms.
Haucke, Mr. Adamson, Mr. Grose, Ms.
White, and Mr. Nguyen are referred to
herein as the ‘‘Independent
Appraisers.’’) Ms. Haucke, Mr.
Adamson, Mr. Grose, and Mr. Nguyen
are Certified General Real Estate
Appraisers in the areas where the
Parcels are located, and they are all
Members of the Appraisal Institute. Ms.
White is a Registered Real Estate
Appraiser Trainee in the State of
Washington. The Independent
Appraisers also have experience in
appraising residential properties, vacant
land, and commercial properties.
Pursuant to its Appraisal Engagement
Letter, CBRE was retained to perform,
among other things, the following tasks,
on behalf of the Plan: (a) Provide a fair
market valuation of the Parcels using
commercially acceptable methods of
valuation for unrelated third party
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transactions; (b) explain whether or not,
in the Independent Appraisers’ opinion,
the Plan has received adequate
consideration from the Leases; and (c)
opine on whether the proper CPI was
used for the rent increases for each
Parcel. The Applicant represents that
the appraisal work completed by CBRE
produced fees from Les Schwab to CBRE
of $98,250 in 2016 and $0.00 in 2017.
According to CBRE’s 2017 10K filing, its
2016 gross revenue was $13.09 billion
and its 2017 gross revenue was $14.21
billion. As such, CBRE’s revenue from
the Les Schwab appraisal work was less
than 2% of its revenue for 2016 and
2017.
The Independent Appraisals
31. In valuing the Parcels, the
Independent Appraisers applied the
Sales Comparison Approach and the
Income Capitalization Approach to
valuation. As represented by the
Independent Appraisers, the Sales
Comparison Approach is typically used
for retail sites that are feasible for either
immediate or near-term development.
The Income Capitalization Approach,
according to the Independent
Appraisers, reflects the property’s
income-producing capabilities, and is
based on the assumption that value is
created by the expectation of benefits to
be derived in the future. The
Independent Appraisers did not use the
Cost Approach to valuation because
they did not consider this methodology
to be applicable in the estimation of
market value due to age of the
improvements and lack of depreciation
data for the Parcels.
a. The Aloha Parcel Appraisal. The
Independent Appraisers used the Sales
Comparison Approach and the Income
Capitalization Approach methodologies
in determining the fair market value of
the Aloha Parcel. Based on the Sales
Comparison Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated eight properties,
which included fee simple or leased fee
sales or listings of comparable
properties. The Independent Appraisers
determined that the fee simple sales
comparables indicated an adjusted
range of $131 per square foot to $149
per square foot, at an average of $136
per square foot. According to the
Independent Appraisers, the Sales
Comparison Approach yielded a value
of $135 per square foot, which when
multiplied by the actual square footage
of the Aloha Parcel (16,700 square feet),
equaled a fair market value of
$2,250,000 for the Aloha Parcel as of
April 1, 2016.
In employing the Income
Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers noted that there
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were no rents of buildings or facilities
similar to the subject property.
Therefore, the Independent Appraisers
expanded their search for comparable
rental properties, regionally, and they
evaluated six rental property
comparables. After reviewing the rental
incomes and operating expenses of
these properties, the Independent
Appraisers determined that, under the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers concluded that
the fair market value of the Aloha Parcel
was $129 per square foot, or $2,150,721,
rounded to $2,150,000 as of April 1,
2016.
The Independent Appraisers
determined that the Sales Comparison
Approach should be given primary
consideration in the reconciliation
process. As such, the Independent
Appraisers determined the fair market
value of the Aloha Parcel as of April 1,
2016, was $2,250,000.
b. The Boise Broadway Parcel
Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
used the Sales Comparison Approach to
value the Boise Broadway Parcel. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated six
prior sales and one pending sale. Based
on the Sales Comparison Approach and
evaluating land sale comparables, the
Independent Appraisers derived a fair
market value for the Boise Broadway
Parcel of $13 per square foot, which
when multiplied by the actual square
footage of the Boise Broadway Parcel
(72,310 square feet) equaled a fair
market value of $940,000 as of April 1,
2016.
c. The Boise State Street Parcel
Appraisal. The Boise State Street
Appraisal provides that the Independent
Appraisers employed the Sales
Comparison Approach and Income
Capitalization Approach to value the
Boise State Street Parcel. In using the
Sales Comparison Approach, the
Independent Appraisers evaluated two
prior fee simple sales, two pending fee
simple sales, two prior leased fee sales,
and two pending leased fee sales. The
Independent Appraisers determined
that, based on the Sales Comparison
Approach, evaluating the land sale
comparables derived a fair market value
for the Boise State Street Parcel of
$2,100,000 as of April 1, 2016.
In using the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated five lease comparables and
one comparable listing for a lease. After
reviewing the rental incomes and
operating expenses of the six
comparables, the Appraiser determined
that, under the Income Capitalization
Approach, the fair market value of the
Boise State Street Parcel is $2,060,000 as
of April 1, 2016.
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The Independent Appraisers
determined that both methodologies
should be given equal emphasis, and
determined the fair market value of the
Boise State Street Parcel as of April 1,
2016, to be $2,090,000.
d. The Centralia Parcel Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers used the
Sales Comparison Approach to value
the Centralia Parcel. The Independent
Appraisers evaluated three prior sales
and one listing. The Independent
Appraisers determined that, based on
the Sales Comparison Approach,
evaluating the land sale comparables
derived a fair market value for the
Centralia Parcel of $8.01 per square foot,
which when multiplied by the actual
square footage of the Centralia Parcel
(46,200 square feet) equaled a fair
market value of $370,000, as of April 1,
2016.
e. The Chehalis Parcel Appraisal. The
Independent Appraisers employed the
Sales Comparison Approach and
Income Capitalization Approach to
value the Chehalis Parcel. In using the
Sales Comparison Approach, the
Independent Appraisers evaluated five
prior sales and one pending sale, and
determined the fair market value of the
Chehalis Parcel to be $1,150,000, as of
April 1, 2016.
In using the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated five lease comparables. After
reviewing the rental incomes and
operating expenses of the five
comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined the fair market
value of the Chehalis Parcel to be
$1,100,000 as of April 1, 2016.
The Independent Appraisers noted
that market participants are analyzing
properties based on their income
generating capability. As such, the
income capitalization approach was
given primary emphasis in the final
value estimate. Thus, based on the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers determined the
fair market value of the Chehalis Parcel
was $1,100,000 as of April 1, 2016.
f. The Ellensburg Parcels Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers employed
the Sales Comparison Approach and
Income Capitalization Approach to
value the Ellensburg Parcels. In using
the Sales Comparison Approach, the
Independent Appraisers evaluated five
prior sales and one sale listing. The
Independent Appraisers determined
that evaluating the land sale
comparables derived a fair market value
after adjustments for the Ellensburg
Parcels of $1,080,000 as of April 1,
2016.
In using the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers
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evaluated six lease comparables. After
reviewing the rental incomes and
operating expenses of the six
comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that, under the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
fair market value of the Ellensburg
Parcels was $1,096,990, rounded to
$1,100,000, as of April 1, 2016.
The Independent Appraisers noted
that market participants were analyzing
properties based on their incomegenerating capability. As such, the
Income Capitalization Approach was
given primary emphasis in the final
value estimate. Thus, based on the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers determined the
fair market value of the Ellensburg
Parcels was $1,100,000 as of April 1,
2016.
g. The Independence Parcel
Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
employed the Sales Comparison
Approach and Income Capitalization
Approach to value the Independence
Parcel. In using the Sales Comparison
Approach, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated four prior fee simple sales and
four prior leased fee sales of comparable
parcels. The Independent Appraisers
calculated the value of the
Independence Parcel to be $990,000, as
of April 1, 2016.
In using the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated six lease comparables. After
reviewing the rental incomes and
operating expenses of the six
comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that, under the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
fair market value of the Independence
Parcel was $918,034 as of April 1, 2016
($920,000, if rounded).
After giving more weight to the Sales
Comparison Approach, the Independent
Appraisers concluded that the
Independence Parcel had a fair market
value of $990,000 as of April 1, 2016.
h. The Lakewood Parcel Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers employed
the Sales Comparison Approach to
value the Lakewood Parcel. They valued
Parcels A and B and Parcels C and D,
comprising the Lakewood Parcel, using
different comparables. With respect to
Parcels A and B, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated four comparable
land sales and one land sale listing that
was current at the time of the valuation.
The Independent Appraisers
determined that the fair market value for
Parcels A and B was $600,000 as of
April 1, 2016.
With respect to the valuation of
Parcels C and D, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated four comparable
land sales and one land sale listing that
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was current at the time of the valuation.
The Independent Appraisers
determined that the fair market values
of Parcel C and Parcel D were $21,000
and $44,000, respectively, as of April 1,
2016.
i. The Longview Parcel Appraisal. The
Independent Appraisers used the Sales
Comparison Approach and Income
Capitalization Approach to value the
Longview Parcel. In using the Sales
Comparison Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated sales of eight
comparable properties, four
representing fee simple sales, and four
representing leased fee sales, and
determined that the fair market value of
the Longview Parcel was $2,385,000,
rounded to $2,400,000, as of April 1,
2016.
Using the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated six lease comparables. After
reviewing the rental incomes and
operating expenses of the six
comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that, under the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
fair market value of the Longview Parcel
was $2,373,521, rounded to $2,370,000,
as of April 1, 2016.
After giving more weight to the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers concluded that
the Independence Parcel had a fair
market value of $2,385,000 as of April
1, 2016.
j. The Marysville Parcels Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers valued the
Marysville Parcel using the Sales
Comparison Approach. With respect to
both Marysville Parcels A and B, the
Independent Appraisers evaluated four
similar sale-listings in the area and
determined that the fair market values
of Marysville Parcel A and Parcel B
were $740,000 and $265,000,
respectively, as of April 1, 2016.
k. The North Bend Parcel Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers valued the
North Bend Parcel using the Sales
Comparison Approach. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated four
prior sales. The Appraisers determined
that the fair market value of the North
Bend Parcel was $1,220,000, as of April
1, 2016.
l. The Oregon City Parcel Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers used the
Sales Comparison Approach to value
the Oregon City Parcel. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated two
prior sales, one pending sale of a single
parcel, and one pending sale of two
adjacent parcels. The Appraisers
determined that the fair market value of
the Oregon City Parcel was $600,000 as
of April 1, 2016.
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m. The Pullman Parcel Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers used the
Sales Comparison Approach to value
the Pullman Parcel. The Independent
Appraiser evaluated six prior land sales
of similar parcels, based on zoning and
intended uses. The Independent
determined that the fair market value of
the Pullman Parcel was $575,000 as of
April 1, 2016.
n. The Silverton Parcel Appraisal. The
Independent Appraisers valued the
Silverton Parcel using the Sales
Comparison Approach and the Income
Capitalization Approach. In using the
Sales Comparison Approach, the
Independent Appraisers evaluated sales
of eight comparable properties, four
representing fee simple sales, and four
representing leased fee sales. The
Independent Appraisers determined the
fair market value of the Silverton Parcel
was $1,451,000, rounded to $1,450,000,
as of April 1, 2016.
Using the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated six lease comparables. After
reviewing the rental incomes and
operating expenses of the six
comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that the fair
market value of the Silverton Parcel was
$1,375,895, rounded to $1,380,000, as of
April 1, 2016.
After giving more weight to the
Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers concluded that
the Silverton Parcel had a fair market
value of $1,415,000 as of April 1, 2016.
o. The Snohomish Parcel Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers used the
Sales Comparison Approach to value
the Snohomish Parcel. The Independent
Appraisers evaluated four prior land
sales of similar parcels, based on zoning
and intended uses. The Independent
Appraisers determined that the fair
market value of the Snohomish Parcel
was $590,000, rounded, as of April 1,
2016.
p. The Spanaway Parcel Appraisal.
The Independent Appraisers valued the
Spanaway Parcel using the Sales
Comparison Approach. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated five
similar sale-listings in the area. The
Independent Appraisers determined the
fair market value of the Spanaway
Parcel to be approximately $540,000,
rounded, as of April 1, 2016.
q. The Spokane Parcel Appraisal. The
Independent Appraisers used the Sales
Comparison Approach to value the
Spokane Parcel. The Independent
Appraisers evaluated five prior land
sales of similar parcels, based on zoning
and intended uses. The Independent
Appraisers determined the fair market
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value of the Spokane Parcel to be
$725,000, rounded, as of April 1, 2016.
r. The Vancouver Andresen Parcel
Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
valued the Vancouver Andresen Parcel
using the Sales Comparison Approach.
The Independent Appraisers evaluated
five similar sale-listings in the area,
which included two under contract/
offer sales. The Independent Appraisers
determined the fair market value of the
Vancouver Andresen Parcel to be
$450,000, rounded, as of April 1, 2016.
s. The Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel
Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
used the Sales Comparison Approach to
value the Vancouver Cascade Park
Parcel. The Independent Appraisers
evaluated three prior sales and two
pending sales. The Independent
Appraisers determined the fair market
value of the Vancouver Cascade Park
Parcel to be $390,000 as of April 1,
2016.
Analysis
31. The Applicant represents that the
statutory exemption under ERISA
section 408(e) is not available for the
proposed transactions due to the
application of section 408(d)(l)(C) of the
Act, which provides that the statutory
exemption under section 408(e) of the
Act will not apply to a transaction in
which a plan sells any property to a
corporation in which an owneremployee with respect to the plan owns,
directly or indirectly, 50% or more of
the total combined voting power of all
classes of stock entitled to vote or 50%
or more of the total value of shares of
all classes of stock of the corporation.
The Applicant notes that section
408(d)(2)(A) of the Act provides that a
‘‘shareholder-employee’’ will be treated
as an owner-employee. Further, the
Applicant states that section 408(d)(3) of
the Act provides that a ‘‘shareholderemployee’’ is an employee or officer of
an ‘‘S’’ corporation who owns more than
5% of the outstanding stock of the
corporation on any day during the
taxable year of such corporation.
According to the Applicant, both Julie
Waibel and Leslie Tuftin own more than
5% of S corporations that are within the
various controlled groups with
employees that participate in the Plan.
As such, due to their ownership interest
in these S corporations, the Applicant
asserts that Ms. Waibel and Ms. Tuftin
are owner-employees with respect to the
Plan.
The Applicant represents that because
Ms. Waibel and Ms. Tuftin are owneremployees, and each is deemed to own
50% or more of the total combined
voting power of all classes of the S
corporations’ stock entitled to vote,
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section 408(d)(l)(C) of the Act precludes
the reliance upon section 408(e) of the
Act with respect to the Sales.
Section 406(a)(l)(A) of the Act
prohibits a fiduciary with respect to a
plan from causing the plan to engage in
a transaction if he or she knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale,
exchange, or lease of any property
between the plan and a party in interest.
Therefore, the proposed transactions
would constitute prohibited
transactions under section 406(a)(l)(A)
of the Act because the Plan would be
selling real property to parties in
interest and disqualified persons with
respect to the Plan.
Section 406(a)(l)(D) of the Act
prohibits a fiduciary with respect to a
plan to cause the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect transfer
to, or use by or for the benefit of, a party
in interest, of any asset of the plan. The
Applicant represents that the proposed
transactions would violate section
406(a)(l)(D) of the Act because the Plan
will transfer Plan assets to parties in
interest and disqualified persons with
respect to the Plan.
In addition, section 406(b)(1) of the
Act prohibits a fiduciary from dealing
with the assets of a plan in his own
interest or for his own account. Section
406(b)(2) of the Act prohibits a
fiduciary, with respect to a plan, from
acting in a transaction involving the
plan on behalf of a party whose interests
are adverse to those of the plan or of its
participants and beneficiaries. As
described above, the Trustees and the
Committee are fiduciaries of the Plan.
The Trustees are also comprised of
certain executive officers of Les Schwab,
including officers of the Warehouse
Center, Les Schwab Washington, Les
Schwab Idaho, and Les Schwab
Portland, and are appointed by the Chief
Executive Officer of the Warehouse
Center, the Plan sponsor.
The proposed Sales of the Parcels by
the Plan to Les Schwab would involve
a violation of section 406(b)(1) of the
Act because Les Schwab, as a Plan
fiduciary, would be dealing with the
assets of the Plan for its own interest or
own account. Les Schwab, as a Plan
fiduciary, in effecting the Sales to itself,
is acting on behalf of itself and of the
Plan in violation of section 406(b)(2) of
the Act.
Statutory Findings
32. The Department has tentatively
determined that the requested
exemption is administratively feasible
because: (a) The Sales are one-time
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transactions for cash; and (b) the price
paid by Les Schwab to the Plan for each
Parcel will be no less than the fair
market value of each Parcel (exclusive
of the buildings or other improvements
paid for by Les Schwab, to which Les
Schwab retains title), as determined by
the Independent Appraisers in separate
Independent Appraisals that are
updated on the date of each Sale.
The Department has tentatively
determined that the proposed
exemption is in the interest of the Plan
because: (a) The Sales will allow the
Plan to diversify its holdings and invest
the proceeds from the Sales in more
productive investments; (b) the Plan
will not incur any transaction costs in
connection with such Sales; (c) the
Sales will not be subject to any
financing contingencies because Les
Schwab will make a one-time, lumpsum, cash payment on the closing date
for each respective Parcel; and (d) the
Sales will eliminate ongoing appraisal
fees, administrative costs, and legal
responsibilities that are associated with
the Plan’s continuing ownership of the
Parcels.
The Department has tentatively
determined that the proposed
exemption is protective of the
participants and beneficiaries because
the Independent Fiduciary will
represent the interests of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries with
respect to: (a) The decision to sell the
Parcels to the Applicant; (b) the terms
and execution of the Sales; and (c) the
selection of the Independent Appraiser.
In addition, the Applicant states that the
Independent Fiduciary will determine
whether the transactions are prudent
and in the best interest of the
participants and beneficiaries, including
whether or not the terms and conditions
of the Sales are equivalent to an arm’slength transaction with an unrelated
party. Finally, the Applicant states that
the Independent Appraisers will
appraise the fair market value of the
Parcels as of the transaction date and
ensure that the Plan receives adequate
consideration, based on appropriate
appraisal methodologies used by the
Independent Appraisers in Independent
Appraisals that will be updated on the
date of each Sale.
Summary
33. In summary, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief
sought by the Applicant satisfies the
statutory requirements for an exemption
under section 408(a) of ERISA, provided
that the conditions described below are
satisfied.
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Proposed Exemption
Section I. Covered Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(A),
406(a)(1)(D), 406(b)(1) and 406(b)(2) of
the Act, and the sanctions resulting
from the application of section 4975 of
the Code, by reason of sections
4975(c)(1)(A), 4975(c)(1)(D) and
4975(c)(1)(E) of the Code, shall not
apply to the sales (the Sales) by the Les
Schwab Profit Sharing Retirement Plan
(the Plan) of the following parcels of
real property (each, a ‘‘Parcel’’ and
collectively, the ‘‘Parcels’’) to the
Applicant:
(a) The Parcel located at 19100 SW
Shaw Street, Aloha, Oregon;
(b) The Parcel located at 2045
Broadway Avenue, Boise, Idaho;
(c) The Parcel located at 6520 W State
Street, Boise, Idaho;
(d) The Parcel located at 1211
Harrison Avenue, Centralia,
Washington;
(e) The Parcel located at 36 N Market
Boulevard, Chehalis, Washington;
(f) The Parcels located at 1206 Canyon
Road, Ellensburg, Washington;
(g) The Parcel located at 1710
Monmouth Avenue, Independence,
Oregon;
(h) The Parcel located at 3809
Steilacoom Boulevard SW, Lakewood,
Washington;
(i) The Parcel located at 1420
Industrial Way, Longview, Washington;
(j) The Parcel located at 8405 State
Avenue, Marysville, Washington;
(k) The Parcel located at 610 E. North
Bend Way, North Bend, Washington;
(l) The Parcel located at 1625
Beavercreek Road, Oregon City, Oregon;
(m) The Parcel located at 160 SE
Bishop Boulevard, Pullman,
Washington;
(n) The Parcel located at 911 N 1st
Street, Silverton, Oregon;
(o) The Parcel located at 711 Avenue
D, Snohomish, Washington;
(p) The Parcel located at 16819 Pacific
Avenue S, Spanaway, Washington;
(q) The Parcel located at 8103 N
Division Street, Spokane, Washington;
(r) The Parcel located at 2420 NE
Andresen Road, Vancouver,
Washington; and
(s) The Parcel located at 216 SE 118th
Avenue, Vancouver, Washington; where
the Applicant is a party in interest with
respect to the Plan, provided that the
conditions set forth in Section II of this
proposed exemption are met.
Section II. General Conditions
(a) The price paid by Les Schwab to
the Plan for each Parcel is no less than
the fair market value of each Parcel
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(exclusive of the buildings or other
improvements paid for by Les Schwab,
to which Les Schwab retains title), as
determined by qualified independent
appraisers (the Independent
Appraisers), working for CBRE, Inc., in
separate appraisal reports (the
Independent Appraisals) that are
updated on the date of each Sale.
(b) Each Sale is a one-time transaction
for cash.
(c) The Plan does not pay any costs,
including brokerage commissions, fees,
appraisal costs, or any other expenses
associated with each Sale.
(d) The Independent Appraisers
determine the fair market value of their
assigned Parcel, on the date of the Sale,
using commercially accepted methods
of valuation for unrelated third-party
transactions, taking into account the
following considerations:
(1) The fact that a lease between Les
Schwab and the Plan is a ground lease
and not a standard commercial lease;
(2) The assemblage value of the
Parcel, where applicable;
(3) Any special or unique value the
Parcel holds for Les Schwab; and
(4) Any instructions from the
qualified independent fiduciary (the
Independent Fiduciary) regarding the
terms of the Sale, including the extent
to which the Independent Appraiser
should consider the effect that Les
Schwab’s option to purchase a Parcel
would have on the fair market value of
the Parcel.
(e) The Independent Fiduciary
represents the interests of the Plan with
respect to each Sale, and in doing so:
(1) Determines that it is prudent to go
forward with each Sale;
(2) Approves the terms and conditions
of each Sale;
(3) Reviews and approves the
methodology used by the Independent
Appraiser and ensures that such
methodology is properly applied in
determining the Parcel’s fair market
value on the date of each Sale;
(4) Reviews and approves the
determination of the purchase price;
and
(5) Monitors each Sale throughout its
duration on behalf of the Plan for
compliance with the general terms of
the transaction and with the conditions
of this exemption, if granted, and takes
any appropriate actions to safeguard the
interests of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries.
(f) The terms and conditions of each
Sale are at least as favorable to the Plan
as those obtainable in an arm’s length
transaction with an unrelated party.
Notice to Interested Parties
The persons who may be interested in
the publication in the Federal Register
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of the Notice of Proposed Exemption
(the Notice) include all individuals who
are participants and beneficiaries in the
Plan. It is represented that all such
interested persons will be notified of the
publication of the Notice by first class
mail to each such interested person’s
last known address within fifteen (15)
days of publication of the Notice in the
Federal Register. Such mailing will
contain a copy of the Notice, as it
appears in the Federal Register on the
date of publication, plus a copy of the
Supplemental Statement, as required,
pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2), which
will advise all interested persons of
their right to comment on and/or to
request a hearing. All written comments
or hearing requests must be received by
the Department from interested persons
within forty-five (45) days of the
publication of this proposed exemption
in the Federal Register.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Scott Ness of the Department, telephone
(202) 693–8561. (This is not a toll-free
number.)
Seventy Seven Energy Inc. Retirement &
Savings Plan, (the Plan or the
Applicant), Located in Oklahoma
City, OK, [Application No. D–11918].
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act (or
ERISA) and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 29 CFR part
2570, subpart B (76 FR 46637, 66644,
October 27, 2011). If the exemption is
granted, the restrictions of sections
406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2),and 407(a)(1)(A)
of the Act shall not apply, effective
August 1, 2016 through April 20, 2017,
to: (1) The acquisition by participant
accounts in the Plan (the Plan Accounts)
of warrants (the Warrants) issued by
Seventy Seven Energy, Inc. (SSE), the
Plan sponsor, in connection with SSE’s
bankruptcy; and (2) the holding of the
Warrants by the Plan, provided that
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certain conditions set forth below are
met.
Summary of Facts and Representations
Background
1. SSE (or the Applicant) is an
Oklahoma-based company that offers
drilling, pressure-pumping, oilfield
rental tools and trucking services. On
June 30, 2014, SSE became an
independent, publicly-traded company
by separating from Chesapeake Energy
Corporation (CHK) in a series of
transactions (the Spin-Off). Prior to the
Spin-Off, SSE was an Oklahoma limited
liability company operating under the
name ‘‘Chesapeake Oilfield Operating,
L.L.C.’’ (COO), and an indirect, whollyowned subsidiary of CHK. As a result of
the Spin-Off, approximately 5,200
employees of COO and its subsidiaries
became employees of SSE.
2. The Plan, which provides for
participant-directed investments, is a
defined contribution plan that was
created by SSE for the exclusive benefit
of SSE employee-participants and their
beneficiaries, as well as for SSE
affiliates that have adopted the Plan.
The Plan is intended to qualify under
sections 401(a), 401(k) and 4975(e)(7) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the Code). The trust created
under the Plan is intended to be exempt
under section 501(a) of the Code.
The Plan was established, effective
July 1, 2014, as the result of a spin-off
from the Chesapeake Energy
Corporation Savings and Incentive
Stock Bonus Plan (the CHK Plan.) At
that time, $196,210,229 in assets was
transferred from the CHK Plan to the
Plan. As of August 1, 2016, the Plan had
total assets of approximately
$72,786,235 and 2,450 participants. On
July 31, 2016, the Plan held 3,571,255
shares of SSE common stock (Old SSE
Common Stock) that was valued at
$393,012.66, and represented
approximately 0.54% of the fair market
value of the assets of the Plan. The
shares of Old SSE Common Stock were
allocated to the individual accounts
(Plan Accounts) of 2,228 participants
and held in a stock fund (the Stock
Fund) within the Plan.10
The Plan’s directed trustee (the
Trustee) and recordkeeper is Delaware
Charter Guarantee & Trust Company of
Wilmington, Delaware, which conducts
business under the trade name
‘‘Principal Trust Company.’’
3. SSE’s Administrative Committee
formerly served as the administrator and
10 The Applicant represents that after 2015, SSE
ceased making employer matching contributions to
the Plan of Old SSE Common Stock due to the
financial condition of SSE.
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named fiduciary for the Plan. However,
in connection with the merger (the
Merger) of SSE with Patterson-UTI
Energy, Inc. (Patterson-UTI) and
Pyramid Merger Sub, Inc. (Merger Sub),
effective as of April 20, 2017, the Plan
administrator and named fiduciary was
changed to the Seventy Seven Energy
LLC 401(k) Plan Committee (the
Committee).
The Reorganization Plan
4. On May 9, 2016, SSE and all of its
wholly-owned subsidiaries entered into
an Amended and Restated Restructuring
Support Agreement with certain
lenders, which set forth a ‘‘prepackaged’’ or pre-negotiated plan of
reorganization (the Reorganization
Plan). Also, on this date, SSE started
soliciting creditors.
On May 12, 2016, the Reorganization
Plan was revised and executed to add
certain noteholders as signatories and to
provide the noteholders with nominal
concessions. On June 7, 2016, the
revised Reorganization Plan, was filed
with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District Court of Delaware (the
Bankruptcy Court), under Chapter 11 of
Title I of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (the
Bankruptcy Code).11 After the
Reorganization Plan was accepted by a
sufficient number of creditors and was
confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court
during the Chapter 11 cases, a
reorganized SSE emerged from
bankruptcy on August 1, 2016 (the
Emergence Date).12
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The Warrants
5. On the Emergence Date, the
Warrants were issued to SSE
shareholders, including the Plan
Accounts, in accordance with the
Reorganization Plan by Computershare
Inc. (Computershare), a Delaware
corporation, and its wholly-owned
subsidiary, Computershare Trust
Company, N.A., a federally-chartered
trust company (CTS), both of which
served in the capacity as the ‘‘Warrant
Agent.’’ (Neither Computershare nor
CTS is affiliated with SSE.)
The Warrants were: (a) Registered
pursuant to Section 12(g) the U.S.
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
Exchange Act), and the rules and
regulations promulgated thereunder;
11 The Applicant represents that none of the
changes between the May 9, 2016 and May 12, 2016
versions of the Reorganization Plan had any effect
on the terms of the Warrants.
12 The Applicant represents that the Old SSE
Common Stock was able to be traded until the
Emergence Date. In addition, the Applicant
confirms that the Trustee and Plan participants
were able to trade the Old SSE Common Stock in
their accounts up until the Emergence Date when
the stock was replaced by the Warrants.
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22:07 Dec 27, 2018
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and (b) exempt from registration under
the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, pursuant to Section 1145 of
the Bankruptcy Code.
Neither the Trustee nor SSE’s
Administrative Committee had any
involvement with the bankruptcy
proceedings or the decision to issue the
5-year Warrants (the Series B Warrants)
and the 7-year warrants (the Series C
Warrants) to shareholders in connection
with the emergence of SSE from
bankruptcy. The Plan was in the same
position as the other holders of Old SSE
Common Stock. Thus the Warrants were
issued to the Plan Accounts on the same
basis that they were issued to all other
shareholders of Old SSE Common
Stock.
6. Each shareholder of Old SSE
Common Stock received 0.05004 5-Year
Warrants (the Series B Warrants) and
0.05560 7-Year Warrants (the Series C
Warrants), to replace their shares of Old
SSE Common Stock. Accordingly,
2,875,814 Series B Warrants and
3,195,352 Series C Warrants were
distributed to all shareholders of Old
SSE Common Stock as of the Emergence
Date, with 178,703 of the Series B
Warrants and 198,560 of the Series C
Warrants received by the Plan with
respect to 2,230 Plan participants. The
Trustee allocated the Warrants to the
Plan Accounts based upon the share
positions held by the Accounts of Old
SSE Common Stock within the Stock
Fund. The Applicant states that Plan
participants were not allowed by the
Trustee to purchase additional
Warrants, as there was no market for the
Warrants.
Under the Warrant Agreement, each
shareholder of Old SSE Common Stock,
including the Plan’s Stock Fund,
received a pro rata share of Series B
Warrants and Series C Warrants to
replace Old SSE Common Stock prior to
the Emergence Date. The Warrants
could be exercised for post-emergence
common stock of SSE (New SSE
Common Stock). Based on the number
of Warrants issued by the reorganized
SSE, each Series B Warrant and each
Series C Warrant could be exercised for
one share of New SSE Common Stock,
having a par value $0.01 per share, at an
exercise price of $69.08 per share for
each Series B Warrant, and $86.93 per
share for each Series C Warrant. The
Warrants could be exercised during the
period beginning on the date of the
Warrant Agreement and ending on the
five-year or seven-year anniversary of
the date of the Warrant Agreement.
7. Upon the exercise of a Warrant,
SSE would not be required to issue any
fractional shares of New SSE Common
Stock. Instead, SSE would be required
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67665
to round up to the nearest whole share
the number of shares of New SSE
Common Stock designated in the
applicable Exercise Notice. The Warrant
Agreement provided that payment of the
exercise price could be made at the
option of the holder of the Warrants
either: (a) Through a net share
settlement; or (b) by paying or
submitting payment for the exercise
price.13
8. According to the Applicant, the
Warrants could be sold, assigned,
transferred, pledged, encumbered, or in
any other manner transferred or
disposed of, in whole or in party in
accordance with the terms of the
Warrant Agreement and all applicable
laws. In this regard, the Applicant
represents that the Plan had the right to
sell the Warrants allocated to the Plan
Accounts at any time prior to the
Warrants’ expiration date, in the same
manner as other holders of the
Warrants.
All decisions regarding the exercise or
sale of the Warrants acquired by the
Plan Accounts in connection with the
Reorganization Plan could be made only
by the individual Plan participants in
whose Accounts the Warrants were
allocated, in accordance with the terms
of the Warrant Agreement, as well as in
accordance with the respective
provisions of the Plan and the
regulations pertaining to the
individually-directed investment of
such accounts. According to the
Applicant, if no action was taken by a
Plan participant to exercise or sell the
Warrants, then the Warrants would
expire at the end of their respective
term.
9. The Warrants were described to
Plan participants in frequently-asked
questions (FAQs) regarding the
Reorganization Plan, which the
Applicant states were posted to SSE’s
website on or about May 18, 2016, and
taken down from the website on or
before October 1, 2016. The Applicant
represents that SSE’s CEO sent an initial
13 Following the Emergence Date, the Applicant
states that SSE and the Trustee were working
together to set up a system and procedures to
facilitate the exercise or sale of the Warrants.
However, the Applicant states that these procedures
were not finalized prior to the Merger of SSE with
Patterson-UTI. The Applicant states that upon the
closing of the Merger on April 20, 2017 (the Merger
Date), all of the Warrants were cancelled, rendering
the completion of the system and procedures for
exercising and/or selling the Warrants moot.
However, the Applicant states that it is its
understanding that at all times during the period
that the Warrants were held by the Plan (from the
Emergence Date to the Merger Date), both classes of
Warrants (the Series B Warrants and the Series C
Warrants) held by the Plan were underwater. Thus,
the Applicant states that none of the Warrants
would have been exercised from a practical
standpoint.
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email to all employees with a link to the
FAQs on or about May 18, 2016,
followed by a second email with a link
to updated FAQs on or about August 1,
2016.
According to the Applicant, as of
October 17, 2016, New SSE Common
Stock was not traded on a national
securities exchange, but was instead
traded over-the-counter. Although the
Bankruptcy Court authorized 22,000,000
shares of New SSE Common Stock to be
issued under the Reorganization Plan,
former shareholders of Old SSE
Common Stock received Warrants, but
they did not receive any shares of New
SSE Common Stock.
The Applicant also represents that the
value of SSE as of the Emergence Date
was anticipated to be $345,000,000.
However, based on this projected
market value, the Applicant states that
the imputed fair market value per share
of New SSE Common Stock was only
approximately $15.68 per share.14
Therefore, the Applicant represents that
as of October 17, 2016, the Warrants
were ‘‘underwater.’’
The Merger
10. On December 12, 2016, SSE
entered into an Agreement and Plan of
Merger (the Merger Agreement) with
Patterson-UTI and Merger Sub. The
Merger was effective on April 20, 2017
(the Merger Date). Pursuant to the
Merger Agreement, the Warrants were
treated in accordance with the terms of
the Warrant Agreement. Holders of the
Warrants were provided a notice of the
merger at least fifteen days prior to the
effective time of the Merger. Any
Warrants that were not exercised
immediately prior to the effective time
of the Merger expired, and all rights of
the Warrant holders ceased.
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The Merger’s Effect on the Warrants
11. Because the Warrants were
underwater, all Warrants expired
(unexercised) immediately prior to the
Merger Date. The Applicant represents
that when the Committee decided to
keep New SSE Common Stock as an
investment option under the Plan,
knowing that New SSE Common Stock
would be converted into Warrants, the
Committee was of the view that this was
in the participants’ interest as it
potentially allowed the participants to
14 The Applicant states that New SSE Common
Stock was not traded on an exchange on October
17, 2016 and so the Applicant has no market price
for the stock on that date. The Applicant is not
aware that a specific value was calculated for SSE
as of the Emergence Date. As a result, the Applicant
provided an imputed value based on the anticipated
value of SSE as of the Emergence Date, which was
intended to show that the warrants were
underwater.
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Jkt 247001
participate in the appreciation of New
SSE Common Stock. While ultimately
this potential was not realized, the
Applicant does not believe that this
result should be considered in
hindsight.
In this regard, the Applicant
represents that SSE and the Trustee set
up a system and procedures to facilitate
the exercise of the Warrants or the sale
of the Warrants (if the Warrants had
become listed on a market, which they
were not). However, these plans were
not finalized prior to the announcement
of the Merger with Patterson-UTI
because, upon closing of the Merger on
April 20, 2017, the Warrants were
cancelled.
Merger-Related Litigation
12. According to the Applicant,
several SSE shareholder and Warrant
holder plaintiffs filed class action
lawsuits against SSE in connection with
the Merger.15
In this regard,
• On February 22, 2017, an SSE
shareholder challenged the disclosures made
in connection with the Merger against SSE
and the members of SSE’s Board of Directors
(the Board) in the United States District Court
for the Western District of Oklahoma (the
Oklahoma District Court), and alleged
inadequacies in the Merger price, the process
leading up to it, and claimed that the Joint
Proxy Statement/Prospectus filed in
connection with the merger failed to disclose
certain material information. Based on these
allegations, the shareholder sought to enjoin
the shareholder vote on the Merger unless
and until SSE disclosed the allegedly omitted
material information summarized above. On
February 26, 2018, the Oklahoma District
Court entered an order awarding the
shareholder’s counsel $128,354.50 in
attorneys’ fees and expenses. The parties
subsequently settled for an amount less than
the Oklahoma District Court’s award.
• On March 31, 2017, a shareholder of
Series B and Series C Warrants, filed a class
action lawsuit against SSE, Patterson-UTI
and Merger Sub in the U. S. District Court for
the Southern District of New York (the New
York District Court), alleging: (a) That SSE
had breached the Warrant Agreement; and (b)
tortious interference with the Warrant
Agreement by Patterson-UTI and Merger Sub.
Based on these allegations, the Warrant
15 See Maria Comeaux et al. v. Seventy Seven
Energy, Inc. et al., Case No. CIV–5:17–191M, U.S.
District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma;
Garud Sudarsan et al. v. Seventy Seven Energy, Inc.
et al. Case No. 1:17–cv–02342, U.S. District Court
for the Southern District of New York; Mainard Gael
et al. v. Seventy Seven Energy, Inc. et al., Case No.
2017–0266, Court of Chancery of the State of
Delaware; Louis Scarantino et al. v. Seventy Seven
Energy, Inc. et al., Case No. 2017–0278, Court of
Chancery of the State of Delaware; and, Kathleen J.
Myers v. Administrative Committee, Seventy Seven
Energy, Inc. Retirement and Savings Plan, et al.,
Case No. CIV–17–200–D, United States District
Court for the Western District of Oklahoma.
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4703
holder sought to enjoin the cancelation of
SSE’s Series A, Series B, and Series C
Warrants in connection with the proposed
Merger on February 6, 2018. The New York
District Court dismissed the Warrant holder’s
complaint and struck the Warrant holder’s
amended complaint. On March 6, 2018,
Warrant holder filed a notice of appeal of the
dismissal. According to the Applicant, the
parties have reached an agreement to resolve
the matter and are working to prepare and
finalize a formal settlement agreement.
• On April 7, 2017, an SSE shareholder
filed a class action lawsuit challenging the
disclosures made in connection with the
Merger against SSE and the members of SSE’s
Board. The lawsuit in was filed in the Court
of Chancery of the State of Delaware (the
Delaware Chancery Court), and alleged that
SSE’s Board had breached its fiduciary duties
by failing to disclose in the Joint Proxy
Statement/Prospectus filed in connection
with the merger certain material information.
Based on these allegations, the Warrant
holder sought to enjoin damages if the
Merger was consummated. On July 20, 2017,
the Warrant holder filed a notice and
proposed order voluntarily dismissing the
action, and on July 21, 2017, the Delaware
Chancery Court signed the order dismissing
the action.
• On April 10, 2017, an SSE shareholder
filed a class action lawsuit, challenging the
disclosures made in connection with the
Merger against SSE, the members of SSE’s
Board, Patterson-UTI, and Merger Sub in the
Delaware Chancery Court. On July 20, 2017,
the shareholder filed a notice and proposed
order voluntarily dismissing the action, and
on July 21, 2017, the Delaware Chancery
Court dismissed the action.
• On February 24, 2017, an SSE
shareholder filed a class action lawsuit on
behalf of herself and others, alleging that the
Plan’s investment in, or retention of, a stock
fund invested in CHK stock amounted to a
breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. On
June 26, 2017, defendants, representing SSE’s
Administrative Committee and the Trustee
filed respective motions to dismiss the
shareholder’s complaint for failure to state a
claim and the motions have been fully
briefed. As of this time, the parties are
awaiting the Court’s decision on the
defendants’ motions to dismiss.
Analysis
13. The Applicant has requested
retroactive exemptive relief that is
effective for the period, August 1, 2016
through April 20, 2017, from sections
406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A)
of the Act.16 Section 406(a)(1)(E) of the
Act prohibits the acquisition, on behalf
of a plan, of any ‘‘employer security in
violation of section 407(a) of the Act.’’
16 The Applicant states that, although the
Warrants constitute ‘‘employer securities,’’ as
defined under section 407(d)(1) of the Act, they do
not satisfy the definition of ‘‘qualifying employer
securities’’ as defined under section 407(d)(5) of the
Act because they are not ‘‘stock,’’ ‘‘marketable
securities,’’ or ‘‘interests in a publicly-traded
partnership.’’
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Section 406(a)(2) of the Act prohibits a
fiduciary who has authority or
discretion to control or manage the
assets of a plan to permit the plan to
hold any ‘‘employer security’’ that
violates section 407(a) of the Act.
Section 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act provides
that a plan may not acquire or hold an
‘‘employer security’’ which is not a
‘‘qualifying employer security.’’
Therefore, the acquisition and holding
by the Plan Accounts of the Warrants
constitute prohibited transactions in
violation of the Act.
Statutory Findings
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES2
14. SSE represents the proposed
exemption is administratively feasible
because Old SSE Common Stock held
by the Plan was automatically converted
into the Warrants. In addition, SSE
represents that the proposed exemption
is in the interests of the Plan and
participants because the Plan held
shares of Old SSE Common Stock on the
date the Warrants were issued pursuant
to the Reorganization Plan. Therefore,
SSE represents that the Plan acquired
the Warrants automatically in the same
manner as all other shareholders of Old
SSE Common Stock. SSE also states that
neither the Plan nor the Plan’s
fiduciaries took any action to cause the
shares of Old SSE Common Stock to be
replaced with the Warrants and were
not part of, and did not participate in,
the bankruptcy process or the
Reorganization Plan.
SSE represents that the exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan
participants because: (a) The issuance of
the Warrants, which was the result of
the Reorganization Plan, occurred
without any participation on the part of
the Plan; (b) Plan participants were
treated similarly to all other holders of
Old SSE Common Stock under the
Reorganization Plan; (c) the Trustee did
not allow Plan participants to exercise
the Warrants held by their Plan
Accounts because the fair market value
of New SSE Common Stock did not, at
any time prior to the date that the
Warrants expired, exceed the exercise
price of the Warrants; and (d) the Plan
did not pay any fees or commissions
with respect to the acquisition or
holding of the Warrants.
Summary
15. Given the conditions described
below, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements for an exemption under
section 408(a) of the Act.
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Jkt 247001
Proposed Exemption Operative
Language
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act (or
ERISA) and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 29 CFR part
2570, subpart B (76 FR 46637, 66644,
October 27, 2011). If the exemption is
granted, the restrictions of sections
406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A)
of the Act shall not apply, effective
August 1, 2016 through April 20, 2017,
to: (1) The acquisition by participantdirected accounts (the Accounts) in the
Plan of certain warrants (the Warrants),
issued by Seventy Seven Energy, Inc.
(SSE), the Plan sponsor, in connection
with SSE’s bankruptcy; and (2) the
holding of the Warrants by the Plan,
provided that the following conditions
were or would have been met:
(a) The Plan acquired the Warrants
automatically in connection with the
Reorganization Plan, under which all
holders of Old SSE Common Stock,
including the Plan, were treated in the
same manner;
(b) The Plan acquired the Warrants
without any unilateral action on its part;
(c) The Plan did not pay any fees or
commissions in connection with the
acquisition or holding of the Warrants;
(d) Had the Warrants not expired
unexercised, all decisions regarding the
exercise or sale of the Warrants acquired
by the Plan would have been made by
the Plan participants in whose Plan
Accounts the Warrants were allocated,
in accordance with the terms of the
Warrant Agreement and in accordance
with the Plan provisions and regulations
pertaining to the individually-directed
investment of the Plan Accounts; and
(e) The Plan trustee did not allow
Plan participants to exercise the
Warrants held by their Plan Accounts
because the fair market value of New
SSE Common Stock did not, at any time
prior to the date that the Warrants
expired, exceed the exercise price of the
Warrants.
Effective Date: If granted, this
proposed exemption will be effective as
of August 1, 2016 through April 20,
2017.
Notice to Interested Persons
SSE will provide notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons, including all participants in
the Plan, former employees with vested
account balances in the Plan, all retirees
and beneficiaries currently receiving
benefits from the Plan, all employers
with employees participating in the
Plan, all unions with members
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67667
participating in the Plan (of which there
are none), and all Plan fiduciaries, by
first class mail, within 10 days of the
date of publication of the notice of
proposed exemption in the Federal
Register. The notice will include a copy
of the proposed exemption, as
published in the Federal Register, and
a supplemental statement, as required
pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(b)(2), which
will inform interested persons of their
right to comment with respect to the
proposed exemption. Comments
regarding the proposed exemption are
due within 40 days of the date of
publication of the notice of pendency in
the Federal Register. All comments will
be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but do not submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as social security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
Ms.
Anna Mpras Vaughan of the
Department, telephone (202) 693–8565.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
Tidewater Savings and Retirement Plan
(the Plan), Located in New Orleans,
LA, [Application No. D–11940].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended, (ERISA or the
Act) and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the Code), and in accordance
with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR
part 2570, subpart B (76 FR 66637,
66644, October 27, 2011). If the
proposed exemption is granted, the
restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(E),
406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act
will not apply, effective July 31, 2017,
to: (1) The acquisition, by certain
participant-directed accounts (the
Accounts) in the Plan, of Series A
Warrants and Series B Warrants
(together, the Equity Warrants), issued
by Tidewater Inc., the Plan sponsor and
a party in interest with respect to the
Plan; and (2) the holding of the Equity
Warrants by the Accounts, provided the
conditions set forth below in Section I
are met.
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Summary of Facts and
Representations 17
Background
1. Tidewater (the Applicant) is a
publicly-traded international petroleum
service company headquartered in New
Orleans, Louisiana. Tidewater operates
a fleet of ships, providing vessels and
marine services to the offshore
petroleum industry.
2. Tidewater sponsors the Plan, a
defined contribution profit-sharing plan
with approximately 565 participants
and $89,496,494 total assets, as of
March 31, 2018. Generally, all
employees are eligible to make
employee pre-tax contributions to the
Plan and receive matching
contributions. Prior to January 1, 2016,
the matching contributions were in
Tidewater common stock.
3. Bank of America, N.A. serves as the
directed trustee of the Plan. The Plan is
administered by the Employee Benefits
Committee (the Committee), whose
eight members are appointed by
Tidewater. The Committee members are
also Tidewater officers.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES2
Tidewater’s Bankruptcy and Plan of
Reorganization
4. On May 11, 2017, Tidewater
reached an agreement with certain of its
creditors to support a restructuring
under the terms of a prepackaged plan
of reorganization. On May 12, 2017,
Tidewater provided notice to Plan
participants and employees in the form
of memoranda explaining Tidewater’s
Restructuring Support Agreement with
lenders and noteholders.
On May 17, 2017, Tidewater and
certain subsidiaries filed voluntary
petitions for reorganization in the
United States Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Delaware (the Bankruptcy
Court) seeking relief under the
provisions of Chapter 11 of Title 11 of
the United States Code (the Bankruptcy
Cases).
On July 17, 2017, the Bankruptcy
Court issued a written order (the
Confirmation Order) confirming the
Second Amended Joint Prepackaged
Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization of the
Affiliated Debtors (the Prepackaged
Plan). On July 31, 2017 (the Effective
Date), the Prepackaged Plan became
effective in accordance with its terms
and Tidewater emerged from the
Bankruptcy Cases.
5. As of the Effective Date, all shares
of Tidewater’s pre-bankruptcy common
stock (the Old Common Stock) were
17 The Summary of Facts and Representations is
based on the Applicant’s representations, unless
indicated otherwise.
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22:07 Dec 27, 2018
Jkt 247001
cancelled, and those stockholders of
Tidewater received, in the aggregate, 1.5
million shares of the New Common
Stock, which represented 5% of the pro
forma common equity in the
reorganized Tidewater. In addition,
holders of the Old Common Stock
received approximately: 0.0516 Series A
Warrants for each share of the Old
Common Stock the shareholder
previously owned, and 0.0558 Series B
Warrants for each share of the Old
Common Stock the shareholder
previously owned. Further, the Series A
Warrants and the Series B Warrants
entitled each shareholder to purchase
one share of the New Common Stock for
$57.06 and $62.28, respectively. Unless
terminated earlier, each Equity Warrant
has a six year duration.
Effect of the Prepackaged Plan on the
Plan
6. The Applicant represents that on
June 30, 2017, Plan participants held
approximately 277,716 shares of the Old
Common Stock. On July 31, 2017, when
Tidewater emerged from bankruptcy,
these shares were cancelled and, in
consideration, Plan participants
received approximately 8,800 shares of
the New Common Stock and
approximately 29,800 Equity Warrants
to purchase additional shares of the
New Common Stock. The New Common
Stock and the Equity Warrants, which
are traded on the New York Stock
Exchange (the NYSE), were held in the
Plan’s trust (the Trust), and managed by
Bank of America Merrill Lynch (Merrill
Lynch), an unrelated party.
Sale of the Equity Warrants
7. The Applicant represents that the
Committee met on multiple occasions to
monitor the Equity Warrants. On
November 1, 2017, Committee members
proposed that it would be prudent to
direct Merrill Lynch to liquidate the
Equity Warrants held by the Plan. Each
sale transaction would be for cash, and
no sale would enrich the Plan
fiduciaries. As structured by the
Committee, the sale of the Equity
Warrants would be for no less than the
fair market value of the Equity Warrants
as traded on the NYSE. Also, Plan
participants would not be charged a
commission or fee in connection with
the sales. Further, the Committee would
authorize the sale of the Equity
Warrants through the Merrill Lynch
trading desk.18
18 The Applicant represents that the services
provided by Merrill Lynch in connection with the
sale of the Equity Warrants would be exempt under
section 408(b)(2) of the Act. However, the
Department is not opining on whether the
conditions, as set forth in section 408(b)(2) of the
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8. The Applicant represents that Plan
participants received notice, dated
November 7, 2017, regarding the
Committee’s decision to sell the Equity
Warrants. Plan participants were
informed that: (a) Derivative
investments, like the Equity Warrants,
were not typically part of a retirement
plan’s holdings; and (b) these
investments only had a value for a
specified period of time (i.e., six years
in the case of the Equity Warrants). Plan
participants were also informed that the
Committee had elected to sell the Equity
Warrants on the NYSE in three tranches
over a six month period to minimize the
impact on the market price of these
securities. Plan participants were told
that the sale proceeds would be
reinvested in their individual accounts
under the Plan (the Plan Accounts),
with the cash invested in accordance
with the Plan participant’s current
investment allocation.
With the exception of those Plan
participants who were reporting persons
under SEC Rule 16(b), Plan participants
could elect to sell their Equity Warrants
at any time by contacting a Merrill
Lynch representative or direct the
investment change at the Plan’s website.
The sale of Equity Warrants was not
restricted to the six month period
(November 9, 2017 to May 9, 2018), but
participants were told that the positions
would be liquidated in lots by the end
of the six month time frame. According
to the Applicant, twenty Plan
participants sold a total of 116.001
Equity Warrants between August 24,
2017 and April 25, 2018, for an
aggregate sales price of $323.81 and
$240.88, respectively. The final tranche
of the Equity Warrants was sold on May
11, 14, and 15, 2018.
Exemptive Relief Requested/Analysis
9. The Applicant has requested
retroactive exemptive relief that is
effective as of July 31, 2017, the date the
Plan Accounts acquired the Equity
Warrants, and requests exemptive relief
from sections 406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and
407(a)(1)(A) of the Act.19 Section
406(a)(1)(E) of the Act prohibits the
Act and the Department’s regulations, pursuant to
29 CFR 2550.408(b)(2) were satisfied. In addition,
the Department is not providing exemptive relief in
connection with the sale of the Equity Warrants in
blind transactions to unrelated parties in open
market transactions on the NYSE beyond that
provided under section 408(b)(2) and 29 CFR
2550.408(b)(2).
19 The Applicant states that, although the Equity
Warrants constitute ‘‘employer securities,’’ as
defined under section 407(d)(1) of the Act, they do
not satisfy the definition of ‘‘qualifying employer
securities’’ as defined under section 407(d)(5) of the
Act because they are not ‘‘stock,’’ ‘‘marketable
securities,’’ or ‘‘interests in a publicly-traded
partnership.’’
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acquisition, on behalf of a plan, of any
‘‘employer security in violation of
section 407(a) of the Act.’’ Section
406(a)(2) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary
who has authority or discretion to
control or manage the assets of a plan
to permit the plan to hold any
‘‘employer security’’ that violates
section 407(a) of the Act. Section
407(a)(1)(A) of the Act provides that a
plan may not acquire or hold an
‘‘employer security’’ which is not a
‘‘qualifying employer security.’’
Therefore, the acquisition and holding
by the Plan Accounts of the Equity
Warrants constitute prohibited
transactions in violation of the Act.20
Statutory Findings
10. The Applicant represents that the
proposed exemption with respect to the
Equity Warrants is administratively
feasible because all shareholders of
Tidewater, Inc., including the Plan,
were, and will be treated in the same
manner with respect to any acquisition,
holding and exercise or other
disposition of the Equity Warrants.
11. The Applicant represents that the
proposed exemption is in the interests
of the Plan and participants because: (a)
Plan participants were treated in the
same manner as other stockholders; (b)
Plan participants could acquire shares
of the New Common Stock for their Plan
Accounts by exercising their purchase
rights under the Equity Warrants; (c)
Plan participants could direct Merrill
Lynch to sell the Equity Warrants, at
any time on the NYSE; and (d) Plan
participants were notified when the
Committee approved the sale of the
Equity Warrants.
12. The Applicant represents that the
proposed exemption is protective of the
rights of Plan participants and
beneficiaries because the Equity
Warrants could be sold by Merrill Lynch
on the NYSE, at the direction of either
the Plan participants or the Committee.
Further, the Applicant represents that
the Plan did not pay any fees or
commissions with respect to the
acquisition or holding of the Equity
Warrants.
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Summary
13. Given the conditions described
below, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
20 The Applicant represents that the receipt, by
the Plan Accounts, of the New Common Stock from
Tidewater as the result of the cancellation of the
Plan’s shares of the Old Common Stock is covered
by the statutory exemption under section 408(e) of
the Act. The Department is not expressing an
opinion herein on whether the acquisition by the
Plan Accounts of New Common Stock is statutorily
exempt under section 408(e) of the Act.
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requirements for an exemption under
section 408(a) of the Act.
Proposed Exemption Operative
Language
Section I. Covered Transactions
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended, (ERISA or the
Act) and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the Code), and in accordance
with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR
part 2570, subpart B (76 FR 66637,
66644, October 27, 2011). If the
proposed exemption is granted, the
restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(E),
406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act
will not apply, effective July 31, 2017,
to: (1) The acquisition in the Tidewater
Savings and Retirement Plan (the Plan),
by the participant-directed accounts (the
Accounts) of certain participants, of
Series A Warrants and Series B
Warrants (collectively, the Equity
Warrants) of Tidewater, Inc.
(Tidewater), the Plan sponsor and a
party in interest with respect to the
Plan; and (2) the holding of the Equity
Warrants by the Accounts, provided that
the conditions set forth in Section II
below are or were satisfied.
Section II. Conditions for Relief
(a) The acquisition of the Equity
Warrants by the Accounts of Plan
participants occurred in connection
with Tidewater’s bankruptcy
proceeding;
(b) The Equity Warrants were
acquired pursuant to, and in accordance
with, provisions under the Plan for
individually-directed investments of the
Accounts by the individual participants
in the Plan, a portion of whose
Accounts in the Plan held shares of old
Tidewater common stock (the Old
Common Stock);
(c) Each shareholder of the Old
Common Stock, including each Account
of an affected Plan participant, was
issued the same proportionate shares of
the Equity Warrants based on the
number of shares of the Old Common
Stock held by the shareholder as of July
31, 2017;
(d) All holders of the Equity Warrants,
including the Accounts, were treated in
a like manner;
(e) The decisions with regard to the
acquisition, holding or disposition of
the Equity Warrants by an Account were
made by each Plan participant whose
Account received the Equity Warrants;
(f) The Accounts did not pay any
brokerage fees, commissions, or other
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67669
fees or expenses to any related broker in
connection with the acquisition and
holding of the Equity Warrants, nor did
the Accounts pay any brokerage fees or
commissions in connection with the
sale of the Equity Warrants;
(g) Each sale transaction involving the
Equity Warrants was for cash, and no
sale would enrich the Plan fiduciaries;
(h) Plan participants could: (1)
Acquire shares of the New Common
Stock for their Plan Accounts by
exercising their purchase rights under
the Equity Warrants; or (2) direct Merrill
Lynch to sell the Equity Warrants held
in their Accounts, at any time; and
(i) Plan participants were notified
when the Committee approved the sale
of the Equity Warrants.
Effective Date: This proposed
exemption, if granted, will be effective
for the period beginning July 31, 2017,
and ending whenever the Equity
Warrants are exercised by Plan
participants or they expire.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemption (the
Notice) will be provided by Tidewater
to interested persons within fifteen (15)
days of publication in the Federal
Register. Tidewater will provide the
Notice to Plan participants who are
affected by the cancellation of the Old
Common Stock and the issuance of the
New Common Stock and the Equity
Warrants. The Notice will be provided
to Plan participants by: (1) First class
U.S. mail to the last known address of
these individuals, or (2) electronic
delivery to each shipping vessel
Tidewater operates and posting on
bulletin boards. The Notice will contain
a copy of the Notice, as published in the
Federal Register, and a supplemental
statement, as required pursuant to 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on and to
request a hearing with respect to the
pending exemption. Written comments
and hearing requests are due within
forty-five (45) days of the publication of
the Notice in the Federal Register. All
comments will be made available to the
public.
Warning: Do not include any
personally identifiable information
(such as name, address, or other contact
information) or confidential business
information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may
be posted on the internet and can be
retrieved by most internet search
engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of the
Department, telephone (202) 693–8567.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
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Principal Life Insurance Company
(PLIC) and its Affiliates (collectively,
Principal or the Applicant), Located
in Des Moines, IA, [Application No.
D–11947].
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA or the
Act) and section 4975(c)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the Code), and in accordance
with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR
part 2570, subpart B (76 FR 66637,
66644, October 27, 2011).21 If the
proposed exemption is granted, the
restrictions of sections 406(a)(l)(D),
406(b)(l), and section 406(b)(2) of the
Act and the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code
by reason of section 4975(c)(l)(D) and
(E) of the Code, shall not apply, to the
direct or indirect acquisition, holding,
and disposition of common stock issued
by Principal Financial Group, Inc.
(PFG), and/or common stock issued by
an affiliate of PFG (together, the
Principal Stock), by index funds (Index
Funds) and model-driven funds (ModelDriven Funds) that are managed by
PLIC, an indirectly wholly-owned
subsidiary of PFG, or an affiliate of PLIC
(collectively, Principal), in which client
plans of Principal invest, provided that
the conditions in Sections II and III are
met.
Summary of Facts and Representations
The Parties
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1. PLIC is an indirect, wholly-owned
subsidiary of PFG. As a stock life
insurance company domiciled in Iowa,
PLIC provides recordkeeping,
administrative, and investment
management services to plans.
2. PFG is a publicly-traded company
that is incorporated in Delaware. PFG
offers businesses, individuals, and
institutional clients a wide range of
financial products and services,
including retirement, asset management,
and insurance through a diverse family
of financial services companies. As of
December 31, 2017, PFG had $669
billion in total assets under management
and 22.8 million customers, worldwide.
The Funds
3. Principal maintains, or may in the
future maintain, insurance company
21 For purposes of this proposed exemption,
references to the provisions of section 406 of Title
I of the Act, unless otherwise specified, should be
read to refer as well to the corresponding provisions
of section 4975 of the Code.
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separate accounts, separately-managed
accounts, collective trusts, or other
investment funds, accounts, or
portfolios that: (a) Will hold plan assets,
as defined in section 3(42) of the Act
and 29 CFR 2510.3–101; and (b) are
designed to track a Standard & Poor’s
(S&P) or other third-party index (the
Index Funds). Principal manages, or
will manage, the Index Funds’ assets as
a fiduciary under the Act.
The Index Funds currently managed
by Principal include three pooled
insurance company separate accounts
that directly invest in equity securities
that mirror, and replicate the investment
performance of, Indexes maintained by
S&P. The Index Funds presently consist
of: (a) The Principal LargeCap S&P 500
Index Separate Account (the LargeCap
Separate Account); (b) the Principal
MidCap S&P 400 Index Separate
Account (the MidCap Separate
Account); and (c) the Principal
SmallCap S&P 600 Index Separate
Account (the SmallCap Separate
Account). The Index Funds also include
the Principal Total Market Stock Index
Separate Account (the Total Market
Separate Account), a pooled insurance
company separate account that mirrors
and replicates the investment
performance of the S&P Supercomposite
1500 Index by investing in the LargeCap
Separate Account, the Mid-Cap Separate
Account, and the SmallCap Separate
Account.
As of July 31, 2017, 20,632 plans
participated in the Large Cap Separate
Account; 14,839 plans participated in
the Mid-Cap Separate Account; 15,901
plans participated in the SmallCap
Separate Account; and 522 plans
participated in the Total Market
Separate Account. Also, as of July 31,
2017, the total plan assets invested in
the Index Funds were as follows: The
Large Cap Separate Account—
$20,016,535,718; the Mid-Cap Separate
Account—$5,559,742,215; the SmallCap
Separate Account—$4,293,584,718; and
the Total Market Separate Account—
$122,178,926.
The Index Funds are managed by
PLIC. The LargeCap Separate Account,
the MidCap Separate Account and the
SmallCap Separate Account are
subadvised by Principal Global
Investors LLC, an affiliate. The Total
Market Separate Account is subadvised
by Principal Financial Advisors, Inc.,
another affiliate.
4. According to the Applicant,
Principal may, in the future, maintain
insurance company separate accounts,
separately-managed accounts, collective
trusts, or other investment funds,
accounts, or portfolios that hold plan
assets. These investment vehicles are
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designed to invest in securities, of
which the identity and the amount
would be determined by a computer
model that is based on prescribed,
objective criteria using independent,
third-party data to transform an
independently-maintained index that
would not be within Principal’s control
(the Model-Driven Funds). The
Applicant represents that Principal
would manage the assets of the ModelDriven Funds as a fiduciary under the
Act.22
Investing in Principal Stock
5. Although PFG Stock is included in
the S&P 500 Index, the LargeCap
Separate Account does not currently
hold any PFG Stock. However, the
Applicant represents that it intends to
invest the LargeCap Separate Account in
PFG Stock to track the performance of
the S&P 500 Index more closely. The
Applicant states that, if the S&P were to
remove PFG Stock from the S&P 500
Index and include it in the S&P 400
Index or the S&P 600 Index, PLIC would
invest the corresponding Index Fund in
PFG Stock.
6. The Applicant represents that the
Total Market Separate Account does not
indirectly hold any PFG Stock through
the Total Market Account’s investments
in the three underlying separate
accounts: The LargeCap Separate
Account, the MidCap Separate Account,
and the SmallCap Separate Account.
However, the Applicant states, if one of
the underlying Index Funds were to
hold PFG Stock, the Total Market
Separate Account would indirectly hold
PFG Stock.
In addition, the Applicant represents
that if Principal establishes a new Index
Fund or Model-Driven Fund, and if PFG
Stock or the stock of an affiliate of PFG
(collectively, Principal Stock) is
included in the relevant Index,
Principal intends to invest the assets of
the Index Fund or the Model-Driven
Fund in Principal Stock. The Applicant
states that, similar to the Total Market
Separate Account, a newly-established
Index Fund may indirectly invest in
Principal Stock through another Index
Fund. Although only PFG Stock is
currently publicly-traded, the Applicant
represents that Principal intends to
invest both Index Funds and ModelDriven Funds in the common stock of
an affiliate of PFG, if due to a corporate
reorganization or other action, the
common stock is included in the
relevant Index.
22 Unless otherwise noted, the Index Funds and
the Model-Driven Funds are collectively referred to
herein as ‘‘the Funds.’’
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7. The Applicant represents that the
acquisition or disposition of Principal
Stock will be for the sole purpose of
maintaining strict quantitative
conformity with the Index upon which
the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
is based and not for the purpose of
benefitting Principal. Each Index must
be, among other things, created and
maintained by an organization
independent of Principal.
8. The Applicant represents that it
intends to invest the LargeCap Separate
Account in PFG Stock in order to track
more closely the performance of the S&P
500 Index. The Applicant states that, if
S&P were to remove PFG Stock from the
S&P 500 Index and include it in the S&P
400 Index or the S&P 600 Index, PLIC
would invest the corresponding Index
Fund in PFG Stock. The Applicant also
states that the Total Market Separate
Account will indirectly invest in PFG
Stock if one of the Index Funds, in
which the Total Market Account
invests, were to invest in PFG Stock.
The Applicant further represents that,
even though currently the only Index
Funds or Model-Driven Funds in
existence are those referenced above,
and the only Principal Stock is PFG
Stock, the proposed exemption would
cover: (a) Any future Index Fund that
directly or indirectly invests in any
Principal Stock; and (b) any future
Model-Driven Fund that invests in any
Principal Stock.
9. The Applicant represents that the
proposed exemption is necessary to
allow Funds holding ‘‘plan assets’’ to
purchase and hold Principal Stock in
order to replicate the capitalizationweighted or other specified composition
of Principal Stock in an independentlymaintained third-party index used by an
Index Fund, or to achieve the
transformation of an Index used to
create a portfolio for a Model-Driven
Fund.23 The Applicant represents that
the inclusion or exclusion of Principal
Stock from an Index and the weighting
or changes to the weighting of Principal
Stock in an Index are based on data,
criteria, and methodology determined
by the organization that creates and
maintains the Index, which cannot be
varied by PLIC. The Applicant
represents that changes in the weighting
of Principal Stock in an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund would occur when
23 The Applicant is not requesting any relief from
sections 406 or 407(a) of the Act in connection of
the acquisition and holding of Principal Stock by
any employee benefit plans established and
maintained by the Applicant or its affiliates for its
own employees that invest in Index Funds or
Model-Driven Funds. In this regard, these
transactions are covered by the statutory exemption
under section 408(e) of the Act, if the conditions of
this statutory exemption are met.
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there is a change in factors underlying
the applicable weighting methodology.
Changes in Index weightings are, for the
most part, triggered by corporate
actions, such as buying back shares,
issuing more shares or acquiring another
company for stock.
In addition, the Applicant represents
that there will be instances, once the
proposed exemption is granted, when
Principal Stock will be added to an
Index on which a Fund is based, or will
be added to a Fund portfolio which
seeks to track an Index that includes
Principal Stock. In these instances,
acquisitions of Principal Stock will be
necessary to bring the Fund’s holdings
of Principal Stock either to its
capitalization-weighted or other
specified composition in the Index, as
determined by an independent
organization maintaining the Index, or
to the correct weighting for the Stock, as
determined by a computer model that
has been used to transform the Index. If
the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
holds ‘‘plan assets,’’ all acquisitions of
Principal Stock by the Fund must
comply with the ‘‘Buy-up’’ condition set
forth in Section II(b) of this proposed
exemption.24
Independent Fiduciary (Independent
Fiduciary) Appointment
10. The Applicant states that, in the
case of a Buy-up, if the necessary
number of shares of Principal Stock
cannot be acquired within ten (10)
business days from the date of the event
that causes the particular Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund to require Principal
Stock, PLIC, or another affiliated fund
manager (the Affiliated Fund Manager)
will appoint an Independent Fiduciary
to design acquisition procedures and
monitor PLIC’s, or the Affiliated Fund
Manager’s compliance with these
procedures. The Applicant represents
that Institutional Shareholder Services,
Inc. (ISS) is expected to serve as the
Independent Fiduciary with respect to
the transactions.
The Applicant represents that the
Independent Fiduciary and its
principals will be completely
independent from PLIC and its affiliates.
The Applicant represents that the
Independent Fiduciary will be
experienced in developing and
operating investment strategies for
24 The Applicant anticipates that, generally,
acquisitions of Principal Stock by an Index Fund or
a Model-Driven Fund in a ‘‘Buy-up’’ will occur
within ten (10) business days from the date of the
event that causes the particular Fund to require the
addition of Principal Stock. The Applicant does not
anticipate that the amounts of Principal Stock
acquired by any Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
in a ‘‘Buy-up’’ will be significant.
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67671
individual and collective investment
vehicles that track third-party indices.
Furthermore, the Applicant states that
the Independent Fiduciary will not act
as the broker for any purchases or sales
of Principal Stock and will not receive
any commissions as a result of this
initial acquisition program. The
Applicant notes that the Independent
Fiduciary will have, as its primary goal,
the development of trading procedures
that minimize the market impact of
purchases made pursuant to the initial
acquisition program by the Index Funds
or Model-Driven Funds.
The Applicant represents that under
the trading procedures established by
the Independent Fiduciary, the trading
activities will be conducted in a lowprofile, mechanical, non-discretionary
manner and would involve a number of
small purchases over the course of each
day, randomly timed. The Applicant
also represents that this program will
allow PLIC, or other Affiliated Fund
Manager, to acquire the necessary shares
of Principal Stock for the Index Funds
or Model-Driven Funds with minimum
impact on the market, and in a manner
that will be in the best interests of any
employee benefit plans that participate
in these Funds.
The Applicant represents that the
Independent Fiduciary will also be
required to monitor PLIC’s or other
Affiliated Fund Manager’s compliance
with the trading program and
procedures developed for the initial
acquisition of Principal Stock.
The Applicant represents that, during
the course of any initial acquisition
program, the Independent Fiduciary
will be required to review the activities
weekly to determine compliance with
the trading procedures and notify PLIC,
or other Affiliated Fund Manager,
should any non-compliance be detected.
The Applicant represents that the
Independent Fiduciary must consult
with PLIC, or other Affiliated Fund
Manager, and must approve in advance
any alteration of the trading procedures
should the trading procedures need
modifications due to unforeseen events
or consequences.
Future Fund Transactions
11. The Applicant represents that
subsequent to initial acquisitions
pursuant to a Buy-up, all aggregate daily
purchases of Principal Stock by the
Index Funds and Model-Driven Funds
will not exceed, on any particular day,
the greater of: (a) Fifteen (15) percent of
the average daily trading volume for the
Principal Stock occurring on the
applicable exchange and automated
trading system for the previous five (5)
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business days; 25 or (b) fifteen (15)
percent of the trading volume for
Principal Stock occurring on the
applicable exchange and automated
trading system on the date of the
transaction, as determined by the best
available information for the trades that
occurred on this date.
12. The Applicant represents that all
future transactions by the Index Funds
and Model-Driven Funds involving
Principal Stock, which do not occur in
connection with a Buy-up of the Stock
by an Index Fund or a Model-Driven
Fund will be either: (a) Entered into on
a principal basis with a broker-dealer
that is registered under the 1934 Act,
and thereby subject to regulation by the
SEC; (b) effected on an automated
trading system operated by a brokerdealer independent of PLIC subject to
regulation by the SEC, or on an
automated trading system operated by a
recognized securities exchange which,
in either case, provides a mechanism for
customer orders to be matched on an
anonymous basis without the
participation of a broker-dealer; or (c)
effected through a recognized securities
exchange (as defined in Section III(i) of
this proposed exemption, so long as the
broker is acting on an agency basis.26
13. All future acquisitions and
dispositions of Principal Stock by Index
Funds or Model-Driven Funds
maintained by PLIC or its affiliates also
will not involve any purchases from or
sales to PLIC (including officers,
directors, or employees thereof), or any
party in interest that is a fiduciary with
discretion to invest plan assets in the
fund (unless the transaction by the fund
with this party in interest would
otherwise be subject to an exemption),
other than on a blind basis through an
exchange or automated trading system,
where the identity of each counterparty
is not known to the other.
14. The Applicant represents that, for
purposes of future acquisitions and
holdings of Principal Stock by Index
Funds and Model-Driven Funds, if the
proposed exemption is granted,
Principal Stock will constitute no more
than five (5) percent of any independent
25 The Department notes that ERISA’s fiduciary
responsibility provisions would apply to the
manager’s selection of a trading venue, including an
automated trading system, to effect purchases and
sales of Principal Stock on behalf of its managed
Index and Model-Driven Funds.
26 PTE 86–128, 51 FR 41686 (November 18, 1986),
as amended at 67 FR 64137 (October 17, 2002),
provides a class exemption, under certain
conditions, permitting persons who serve as
fiduciaries for employee benefit plans to effect or
execute securities transactions on behalf of the
plans. The Department expresses no opinion on
whether the conditions of this class exemption
would be satisfied.
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third-party index on which the
investments of an Index Fund or ModelDriven Fund are based. The Applicant
represents that, with respect to an
Index’s specified composition of
particular stocks in its portfolio, future
Index Funds or Model-Driven Funds
may track an Index where the
appropriate weighting for stocks listed
in the Index is not capitalizationweighted.
As such, the Applicant states that
Index Funds and Model-Driven Funds
maintained by PLIC and its affiliates
may track Indexes where the selection
of a particular stock by the Index, and
the amount of stock to be included in
the Index, is not established based on
the market capitalization of the
corporation issuing the stock.
The Applicant also represents that
since an independent organization may
choose to create an Index where there
are other Index weightings for stocks
comprising the Index, the proposed
exemption should allow for Principal
Stock to be acquired by an Index Fund
or Model-Driven Fund in the amounts
that are specified by the particular
Index, subject to the other restrictions
imposed by this proposed exemption.
The Applicant represents that in all
instances, acquisitions or dispositions of
Principal Stock by an Index Fund or a
Model-Driven Fund will be for the sole
purpose of maintaining strict
quantitative conformity with the
relevant Index upon which the Index
Fund is based or, in the case of a ModelDriven Fund, a modified version of the
Index, as created by a computer model
based on prescribed objective criteria
and third-party data.
Plan Fiduciary Consent To Fund
Investments
15. With respect to any plan holding
an interest in an Index Fund or ModelDriven Fund that intends to start
investing in Principal Stock, the
Applicant represents that before
Principal Stock is purchased directly or
indirectly by the Index Fund or ModelDriven Fund, Principal will provide the
independent plan fiduciary (the
Independent Plan Fiduciary) with a
notice through email. The email will
state that if the Independent Plan
Fiduciary does not indicate disapproval
of investments in Principal Stock within
sixty (60) days from the date of the
email, then the Independent Plan
Fiduciary will be deemed to have
consented to the investment in Principal
Stock. The Department is adding
requirements regarding Principal’s
delivery of the email, as described in
paragraph 19.
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In addition, the Applicant represents
that in the event the Independent Plan
Fiduciary disapproves of the
investment, plan assets invested in the
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund will
be withdrawn, and the proceeds will be
processed, as directed by the
Independent Plan Fiduciary. The timing
of the withdrawal will be as follows:
• With respect to a plan that is not an
individual account plan within the meaning
of section 3(34) of the Act, the plan’s assets
will be withdrawn within five (5) days from
when the Independent Plan Fiduciary
notifies the Applicant of its disapproval of
investment in Principal Stock.
• With respect to an individual account
plan within the meaning of section 3(34) of
the Act, the Applicant will work with the
Independent Plan Fiduciary to ensure the
timing of withdrawal of the plan’s assets
from an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
complies with any participant notification
requirement that may be applicable to the
plan under the Department’s regulation at 29
CFR 2550.404a–5. This regulation generally
requires that plan participants be notified at
least thirty (30) days in advance of a change
in any designated investment alternative
available under the plan. (See 29 CFR
2550.404a–5(c)(ii). The Applicant anticipates
that the plan’s assets will be withdrawn from
the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund within
sixty (60) days from the time the Independent
Plan Fiduciary notifies Principal of its
disapproval of investment in Principal Stock.
For new plan investors in an Index
Fund or Model-Driven Fund, the
Applicant represents that the
Independent Plan Fiduciary will
affirmatively consent to the investment
in Principal Stock by executing a
written subscription or similar
agreement for the Index Fund or ModelDriven Fund that contains the
appropriate approval language.
However, if the Independent Plan
Fiduciary does not specifically approve
language in the agreement allowing the
investment of plan assets in Funds
which hold or may hold Principal
Stock, then no investment will be made.
Voting of Principal Stock
17. The Applicant will appoint an
independent fiduciary that will direct
the voting of Principal Stock held by the
Funds. The Applicant expects that ISS,
the Independent Fiduciary, will serve in
this capacity. The Applicant will
provide the Independent Fiduciary with
all necessary information regarding the
Funds that hold Principal Stock, the
amount of Principal Stock held by the
Funds on the record date for
shareholder meetings of the Applicant,
and all proxy and consent materials
with respect to Principal Stock. The
Independent Fiduciary will maintain
records with respect to its activities as
an Independent Fiduciary on behalf of
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the Funds, including the number of
shares of Principal Stock voted, the
manner in which they were voted, and
the rationale for the vote. The
Independent Fiduciary will supply the
Applicant with this information after
each shareholder meeting. The
Independent Fiduciary will be required
to acknowledge that it will be acting as
a fiduciary with respect to the plans that
invest in the Funds that own Principal
Stock, when voting Principal Stock.
Request for Exemptive Relief
18. The Applicant requests an
administrative exemption from the
Department with respect to the direct or
indirect acquisition, holding, and
disposition of Principal Stock by Index
and Model-Driven Funds that are
managed by Principal, in which client
plans invest. Section 406(a)(l)(D) of the
Act prohibits the use by, or for the
benefit of, a party in interest of any
assets of a plan, including plan assets
held by an Index Fund or a ModelDriven Fund.
The Applicant represents that as the
current or future Fund Manager of an
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund,
PLIC or an affiliate is (or will become)
a party in interest with respect to plans
investing in the Index Fund or ModelDriven Fund under sections 3(14)(A)
and 3(14)(B) of the Act. The Applicant
also represents that the issuer of
Principal Stock, such as PFG, is a party
in interest with respect to a plan, under
section 3(14)(E) of the Act, as the direct
or indirect corporate parent of the Fund
Manager. According to the Applicant,
the acquisition, holding, or disposition
of Principal Stock by an Index Fund or
a Model-Driven Fund (including an
indirect acquisition, holding, or
disposition of Principal Stock by an
Index Fund through its investment in
another Index Fund) would involve the
Fund Manager’s use of plan assets by or
for the benefit of its own interest and/
or the interest of another Principal
entity, in violation of section
406(a)(l)(D) of the Act.
18. In addition, section 406(b)(l) of the
Act prohibits a fiduciary from dealing
with the assets of the plan in its own
interest or for its own account. Section
406(b)(2) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary
from acting in any transaction involving
a plan on behalf of a party whose
interests are adverse to the interests of
the plan. The Applicant represents that
a Fund Manager’s direct or indirect
acquisition, holding, or disposition of
Principal Stock as an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund investment would
violate section 406(b)(l) and section
406(b)(2) of the Act due to the Fund
Manager’s affiliation with the issuer of
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the Principal Stock. Therefore, the
Applicant requests exemptive relief
from section 406(b)(1) and section
406(b)(2) of the Act.
Statutory Findings
19. The Department has tentatively
determined that the proposed
exemption is administratively feasible.
Among other things, an Independent
Plan Fiduciary must authorize the
investment of the plan’s assets in an
Index Fund or a Model-Driven Fund
which directly or indirectly purchases
and/or holds Principal Stock. Also,
prior to the direct or indirect purchase
of Principal Stock by an Index Fund or
a Model-Driven Fund, Principal must
provide the Independent Plan Fiduciary
with an email notice stating that if the
Independent Plan Fiduciary does not
indicate disapproval of investments in
Principal Stock within sixty (60) days of
the email, the Independent Plan
Fiduciary will be deemed to have
consented to the investment in Principal
Stock. The Department is requiring that:
(1) Principal obtains from such
Independent Plan Fiduciary prior
consent in writing to the receipt by such
Independent Plan Fiduciary of such
disclosure via electronic email; (2) Such
Independent Plan Fiduciary has
provided to Principal a valid email
address; and (3) The delivery of such
electronic email to such Independent
Plan Fiduciary is provided by Principal
in a manner consistent with the relevant
provisions of the Department’s
regulations at 29 CFR 2520.104b–1(c)
(substituting the word ‘‘Principal’’ for
the word ‘‘administrator’’ as set forth
therein, and substituting the phrase
‘‘Independent Plan Fiduciary’’ for the
phrase ‘‘the participant, beneficiary or
other individual’’ as set forth therein).
Furthermore, in the event the
Independent Plan Fiduciary
disapproves of the investment, plan
assets invested in the Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund will be withdrawn
and the proceeds processed as directed
by the Independent Plan Fiduciary.
For new plan investors in an Index
Fund or Model-Driven Fund,
Independent Plan Fiduciaries must
consent to the investment in Principal
Stock through execution of a
subscription or similar agreement for
the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
that contains the appropriate approval
language.
20. The Department has tentatively
determined that the proposed
exemption is in the interests of plans
invested in the Index Funds and ModelDriven Funds. The exemption is
intended to allow Index Funds to track
the performance of independently-
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maintained, third-party Indexes more
closely. Furthermore, with respect to
Model-Driven Fund plan investors, the
investment in Principal Stock by ModelDriven Funds will allow the Funds to
match, more closely, the performance of
portfolios selected by computer models
that are based on prescribed objective
criteria and use independent third-party
data to transform an independentlymaintained third-party Index.
21. The Department has tentatively
determined that the proposed
exemption is protective of the rights of
the plans investing in Index Funds and
Model-Driven Funds, and their
participants and beneficiaries. In this
regard: (a) Each Index Fund and ModelDriven Fund will be based on a
securities index that is created and
maintained by an organization
independent of Principal; (b) the
acquisition or disposition of Principal
Stock will be for the sole purpose of
maintaining strict quantitative
conformity with the relevant index
upon which the Index Fund or ModelDriven Fund is based; (c) all initial
purchases of Principal Stock will occur
through a recognized U.S. securities
exchange or through an automated
trading system operated by a brokerdealer independent of Principal or by a
recognized U.S. securities exchange;
and (d) subsequent purchases of
Principal Stock will also occur as direct,
arm’s length transactions with brokerdealers independent of Principal,
thereby ensuring that the purchases of
Principal Stock occur at market price.
The requested exemption contains
conditions on the timing and size of
purchase transactions designed to
preclude possible market price
manipulations. Specifically, the
proposed exemption requires that no
more than five (5) percent of the total
amount of Principal Stock, that is issued
and outstanding at any time, is held in
the aggregate by Index and ModelDriven Funds managed by PLIC or a
Principal affiliate. Furthermore,
Principal Stock must constitute no more
than five (5) percent of any
independent, third-party Index on
which the investments of an Index Fund
or Model-Driven Fund are based.
22. Finally, an Independent Plan
Fiduciary must authorize the
investment of the plan’s assets in an
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
which will directly or indirectly
purchase and/or hold Principal Stock.
Further, on any matter for which
shareholders of Principal Stock are
required or permitted to vote, PLIC or
the respective Principal affiliate will
cause the Principal Stock held by an
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund to be
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voted as determined by an Independent
Fiduciary.
Summary
23. Given the conditions described
below, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements for an exemption under
section 408(a) of the Act.
Proposed Exemption
Section I. Covered Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of sections 406(a)(l)(D),
406(b)(l), and section 406(b)(2) of the
Act and the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code
by reason of section 4975(c)(l)(D) and
(E) of the Code, shall not apply to the
direct or indirect acquisition, holding,
and disposition of common stock issued
by Principal Financial Group, Inc.
(PFG), and/or common stock issued by
an affiliate of PFG (together, the
Principal Stock), by index funds (Index
Funds) and model-driven funds (ModelDriven Funds) that are managed by
Principal Life Insurance Company
(PLIC), an indirectly wholly-owned
subsidiary of PFG, or an affiliate of PLIC
(collectively, Principal), in which client
plans of Principal invest, provided that
the conditions of Sections II and III are
met.
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Section II. Exemption for the
Acquisition, Holding and Disposition of
Principal Stock
(a) The acquisition or disposition of
Principal Stock is for the sole purpose
of maintaining strict quantitative
conformity with the relevant Index
upon which the Index Fund or ModelDriven Fund is based, and does not
involve any agreement, arrangement or
understanding regarding the design or
operation of the Fund acquiring
Principal Stock that is intended to
benefit Principal or any party in which
Principal may have an interest;
(b) Whenever Principal Stock is
initially added to an Index on which an
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund is
based, or initially added to the portfolio
of an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
(or added to the portfolio of an
underlying Index Fund in which
another Index Fund invests), all
purchases of Principal Stock pursuant to
a Buy-up (as defined in Section III(d))
occur in the following manner:
(1) Purchases are from one or more
brokers or dealers;
(2) Based on the best available
information, purchases are not the
opening transaction for the trading day;
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(3) Purchases are not effected in the
last half hour before the scheduled close
of the trading day;
(4) Purchases are at a price that is not
higher than the lowest current
independent offer quotation,
determined on the basis of reasonable
inquiry from non-affiliated brokers;
(5) Aggregate daily purchases do not
exceed, on any particular day, the
greater of: (i) Fifteen (15) percent of the
aggregate average daily trading volume
for the security occurring on the
applicable exchange and automated
trading system for the previous five
business days, or (ii) fifteen (15) percent
of the trading volume for the security
occurring on the applicable exchange
and automated trading system on the
date of the transaction, as determined by
the best available information for the
trades occurring on that date;
(6) All purchases and sales of
Principal Stock occur either: (i) On a
recognized U.S. securities exchange (as
defined in Section IV(j) below), (ii)
through an automated trading system (as
defined in Section IV(b) below) operated
by a broker-dealer independent of
Principal that is registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
1934 Act), and thereby subject to
regulation by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the SEC), which
provides a mechanism for customer
orders to be matched on an anonymous
basis without the participation of a
broker-dealer, or (iii) through an
automated trading system that is
operated by a recognized U.S. securities
exchange, pursuant to the applicable
securities laws, and provides a
mechanism for customer orders to be
matched on an anonymous basis
without the participation of a brokerdealer; and
(7) If the necessary number of shares
of Principal Stock cannot be acquired
within ten (10) business days from the
date of the event which causes the
particular Fund to require Principal
Stock, Principal appoints a fiduciary,
which is independent of Principal (the
Independent Fiduciary), to design
acquisition procedures and monitor
compliance with these procedures;
(c) For transactions subsequent to a
Buy-Up, all aggregate daily purchases of
Principal Stock by the Funds do not
exceed on any particular day the greater
of:
(1) Fifteen (15) percent of the average
daily trading volume for Principal Stock
occurring on the applicable exchange
and automated trading system for the
previous five (5) business days, or
(2) Fifteen (15) percent of the trading
volume for Principal Stock occurring on
the applicable exchange and automated
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trading system on the date of the
transaction, as determined by the best
available information for the trades that
occurred on this date;
(d) All transactions in Principal Stock
not otherwise described above in
Section II(b) are either:
(1) Entered into on a principal basis
in a direct, arm’s length transaction with
a broker-dealer, in the ordinary course
of its business, where the broker-dealer
is independent of Principal and is
registered under the 1934 Act, and
thereby subject to regulation by the SEC;
(2) Effected on an automated trading
system operated by a broker-dealer
independent of Principal that is subject
to regulation by either the SEC or
another applicable regulatory authority,
or an automated trading system, as
defined in Section IV(b), operated by a
recognized U.S. securities exchange
which, in either case, provides a
mechanism for customer orders to be
matched on an anonymous basis
without the participation of a brokerdealer; or
(3) Effected through a recognized U.S.
securities exchange, as defined in
Section IV(j), so long as the broker is
acting on an agency basis;
(e) No purchases or sales of Principal
Stock by a Fund involve purchases
from, or sales to, Principal (including
officers, directors, or employees
thereof), or any party in interest that is
a fiduciary with discretion to invest
plan assets into the Fund (unless the
transaction by the Fund with the party
in interest would otherwise be subject to
an exemption). However, this condition
would not apply to purchases or sales
on an exchange or through an
automated trading system (described in
paragraphs (on a blind basis where the
identity of the counterparty is not
known);
(f) No more than five (5) percent of the
total amount of Principal Stock, that is
issued and outstanding at any time, is
held in the aggregate by Index and
Model-Driven Funds managed by
Principal;
(g) Principal Stock constitutes no
more than five (5) percent of any
independent third-party Index on which
the investments of an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund are based;
(h) A fiduciary of a plan which is
independent of Principal (the
Independent Plan Fiduciary, as defined
in Section IV(k)) authorizes the
investment of the plan’s assets in an
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
which directly or indirectly purchases
and/or holds Principal Stock. With
respect to any plan holding an interest
in an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
that intends to start investing in
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Principal Stock, before Principal Stock
is purchased directly or indirectly by
the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund,
Principal will provide the Independent
Plan Fiduciary with a notice through
email stating that if the plan fiduciary
does not indicate disapproval of
investments in Principal Stock within
sixty (60) days, then the Independent
Plan Fiduciary will be deemed to have
consented to the investment in Principal
Stock. In this regard: (1) Principal must
obtain from such Independent Plan
Fiduciary prior consent in writing to the
receipt by such Independent Plan
Fiduciary of such disclosure via
electronic email; (2) Such Independent
Plan Fiduciary must have provided to
Principal a valid email address; and (3)
The delivery of such electronic email to
such Independent Plan Fiduciary is
provided by Principal in a manner
consistent with the relevant provisions
of the Department’s regulations at 29
CFR 2520.104b–1(c) (substituting the
word ‘‘Principal’’ for the word
‘‘administrator’’ as set forth therein, and
substituting the phrase ‘‘Independent
Plan Fiduciary’’ for the phrase ‘‘the
participant, beneficiary or other
individual’’ as set forth therein). In the
event that the Independent Plan
Fiduciary disapproves of the
investment, plan assets invested in the
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund will
be withdrawn and the proceeds
processed, as directed by the
Independent Plan Fiduciary. For new
plan investors in an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund, Independent Plan
Fiduciaries for the plans will consent to
the investment in Principal Stock
through execution of a subscription or
similar agreement for the Index Funds
or Model-Driven Fund that contains the
appropriate approval language; and
(i) On any matter for which
shareholders of Principal Stock are
required or permitted to vote, Principal
will cause the Principal Stock held by
an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund to
be voted, as determined by the
Independent Fiduciary.
Section III. General Conditions
(a) Principal maintains or causes to be
maintained for a period of six (6) years
from the date of the transactions, the
records necessary to enable the persons
described in paragraph (b) of this
Section III to determine whether the
conditions of this exemption have been
met, except that: (1) A prohibited
transaction will not be considered to
have occurred if, due to circumstances
beyond the control of Principal, the
records are lost or destroyed prior to the
end of the six year period, and (2) no
party in interest, other than Principal,
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shall be subject to the civil penalty that
may be assessed under section 502(i) of
the Act or to the taxes imposed by
section 4975(a) and (b) of the Code if the
records are not maintained or are not
available for examination as required by
paragraph (b) below.
(b)(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(b)(2) of this Section III and
notwithstanding any provisions of
section 504(a)(2) and (b) of the Act, the
records referred to in paragraph (a) of
this Section III are unconditionally
available at their customary location for
examination during normal business
hours by:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or
representative of the Department, the
Internal Revenue Service or the SEC;
(B) Any fiduciary of a plan
participating in an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund, who has authority
to acquire or dispose of the interests of
the plan, or any duly authorized
employee or representative of the
fiduciary;
(C) Any contributing employer to any
plan participating in an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund or any duly
authorized employee or representative
of the employer; and
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of
any plan participating in an Index Fund
or Model-Driven Fund, or a
representative of the participant or
beneficiary; and
(2) None of the persons described in
subparagraphs (B) through (D) of this
Section III(b)(1) shall be authorized to
examine trade secrets of Principal or
commercial or financial information
which are considered confidential.
Section IV. Definitions
(a) An ‘‘affiliate’’ of Principal
includes:
(1) Any person, directly or indirectly,
through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by or under
common control with the person;
(2) Any officer, director, employee or
relative of the person, or partner of any
the person; and
(3) Any corporation or partnership of
which the person is an officer, director,
partner or employee;
(b) The term ‘‘automated trading
system’’ means an electronic trading
system that functions in a manner
intended to simulate a securities
exchange by electronically matching
orders on an agency basis from multiple
buyers and sellers, such as an
‘‘alternative trading system’’ within the
meaning of the SEC’s Reg. ATS (17 CFR
part 242.300), as this definition may be
amended from time to time, or an
‘‘automated quotation system’’ as
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described in Section 3(a)(5l)(A)(ii) of the
1934 Act (15 U.S.C. 8c(a)(5 l)(A)(ii));
(c) The term ‘‘Buy-up’’ means an
initial acquisition of Principal Stock by
an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
which is necessary to bring the Fund’s
holdings of Principal Stock either to its
capitalization-weighted or other
specified composition in the relevant
index (the Index), as determined by the
independent organization maintaining
the Index, or to its correct weighting as
determined by the model which has
been used to transform the Index;
(d) The term ‘‘control’’ means the
power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or
policies of a person other than an
individual;
(e) The term ‘‘Fund’’ means an Index
Fund (as described in Section IV(a)) or
a Model-Driven Fund (as described in
Section III(b))
(f) The term ‘‘Index’’ means a
securities index that represents the
investment performance of a specific
segment of the public market for equity
or debt securities, but only if:
(1) The organization creating and
maintaining the Index is:
(A) Engaged in the business of
providing financial information,
evaluation, advice, or securities
brokerage services to institutional
clients; or
(B) A publisher of financial news or
information; or
(C) A public stock exchange or
association of securities dealers; and
(2) The Index is created and
maintained by an organization
independent of Principal; and
(3) The Index is a generally-accepted
standardized index of securities which
is not specifically tailored for the use of
Principal;
(g) The term ‘‘Index Fund’’ means any
investment fund, trust, insurance
company separate account, separately
managed account, or portfolio,
sponsored, maintained, trusteed, or
managed by Principal, in which one or
more investors invest, and:
(1) Which is designed to track the rate
of return, risk profile and other
characteristics of an independentlymaintained securities index, as
described in Section IV(c) below, by
either: (i) Investing directly in the same
combination of securities which
compose the Index or in a sampling of
the securities, based on objective criteria
and data, or (ii) investing in one or more
other Index Funds to indirectly invest in
the same combination of securities
which compose the Index, or in a
sampling of the securities based on
objective criteria and data;
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(2) For which all assets held outside
of any liquidity buffer are invested
without Principal using its discretion, or
data within its control, to affect the
identity or amount of securities to be
purchased or sold, and the liquidity
buffer, if any, does not hold any
Principal Stock;
(3) That contains ‘‘plan assets’’ subject
to the Act;
(4) That involves no agreement,
arrangement, or understanding
regarding the design or operation of the
Fund, which is intended to benefit
Principal or any party in which
Principal may have an interest.
(h) The term ‘‘Model-Driven Fund’’
means any investment fund, trust,
insurance company separate account,
separately managed account, or
portfolio, sponsored, maintained,
trusteed, or managed by Principal, in
which one or more investors invest,
and:
(1) For which all assets held outside
of any liquidity buffer consist of
securities the identity of which and the
amount of which are selected by a
computer model that is based on
prescribed objective criteria using
independent third-party data, not
within the control of Principal, to
transform an independently-maintained
Index, as defined in Section IV(c) below,
and the liquidity buffer, if any, does not
hold any Principal Stock;
(2) That contains ‘‘plan assets’’ subject
to the Act; and
(3) That involves no agreement,
arrangement, or understanding
regarding the design or operation of the
Fund or the utilization of any specific
objective criteria which is intended to
benefit Principal or any party in which
Principal may have an interest;
(i) The term ‘‘Principal’’ refers to
Principal Life Insurance Company, its
indirect parent and holding company,
Principal Financial Group, Inc., and any
current or future affiliate, as defined
above in Section IV(a);
(j) The term ‘‘recognized U.S.
securities exchange’’ means a U.S.
securities exchange that is registered as
a ‘‘national securities exchange’’ under
Section 6 of the 1934 Act (15 U.S.C.
78f), as this definition may be amended
from time to time, which performs with
respect to securities the functions
commonly performed by a stock
exchange within the meaning of
definitions under the applicable
securities laws (e.g., 17 CFR part
240.3b–16); and
(k) The term ‘‘Independent Plan
Fiduciary’’ means a fiduciary of a plan,
where such fiduciary is independent of
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and unrelated to Principal. The
Independent Plan Fiduciary will not be
deemed to be independent of and
unrelated to Principal if:
(1) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary,
directly or indirectly, through one or
more intermediaries, controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with Principal;
(2) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary,
or any officer, director, partner,
employee, or relative of such
Independent Plan Fiduciary, is an
officer, director, partner, or employee of
Principal (or is a relative of such
person); or
(3) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary,
directly or indirectly, receives any
compensation or other consideration for
his or her personal account in
connection with any transaction
described in this proposed exemption.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemption
will be given to all fiduciaries of plans
invested in the Index Funds within 30
days of the publication of the notice of
proposed exemption in the Federal
Register, by electronic mail to the last
known email address of all fiduciaries.
Principal will also publish the notice on
a website through which plan
fiduciaries communicate with Principal.
The notice will contain a copy of the
notice of proposed exemption, as
published in the Federal Register, and
a supplemental statement, as required
pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform
interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption.
Written comments are due within 45
days of the publication of the notice of
proposed exemption in the Federal
Register.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Scott Ness of the Department, telephone
(202) 693–8561. (This is not a toll-free
number.)
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General Information
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or
disqualified person from certain other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction
provisions to which the exemption does
not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404
of the Act, which, among other things,
require a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting the plan solely in the
interest of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan and in a
prudent fashion in accordance with
section 404(a)(1)(b) of the Act; nor does
it affect the requirement of section
401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining
the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be
granted under section 408(a) of the Act
and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code,
the Department must find that the
exemption is administratively feasible,
in the interests of the plan and of its
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of the plan;
(3) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be supplemental to, and
not in derogation of, any other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transitional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be subject to the express
condition that the material facts and
representations contained in each
application are true and complete, and
that each application accurately
describes all material terms of the
transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 20th day of
December, 2018.
Lyssa Hall,
Director, Office of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2018–28091 Filed 12–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
E:\FR\FM\28DEN2.SGM
28DEN2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 248 (Friday, December 28, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 67654-67676]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-28091]
[[Page 67653]]
Vol. 83
Friday,
No. 248
December 28, 2018
Part IV
Department of Labor
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Employee Benefits Security Administration
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Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction Restrictions;
Notices
Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2018 /
Notices
[[Page 67654]]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction
Restrictions
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Exemptions.
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SUMMARY: This document contains notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of proposed exemptions from
certain of the prohibited transaction restrictions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code). If granted, these proposed
exemptions allow designated parties to engage in transactions that
would otherwise be prohibited provided the conditions stated there in
are met. This notice includes the following proposed exemptions: D-
11924, The Les Schwab Tire Centers of Washington, Inc., the Les Schwab
Tire Centers of Boise, Inc., and the Les Schwab Tire Centers of
Portland, Inc.; D-11918, Seventy Seven Energy Inc. Retirement & Savings
Plan; D-11940, Tidewater Savings and Retirement Plan; and D-11947,
Principal Life Insurance Company (PLIC) and its Affiliates.
DATES: All interested persons are invited to submit written comments or
requests for a hearing on the pending exemptions, unless otherwise
stated in the Notice of Proposed Exemption, by February 11, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments and requests for a hearing should state: (1) The
name, address, and telephone number of the person making the comment or
request, and (2) the nature of the person's interest in the exemption
and the manner in which the person would be adversely affected by the
exemption. A request for a hearing must also state the issues to be
addressed and include a general description of the evidence to be
presented at the hearing.
All written comments and requests for a hearing (at least three
copies) should be sent via mail to the Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), Office of Exemption Determinations, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW, Suite 400, Washington,
DC 20210. Attention: Application No._ stated in each Notice of Proposed
Exemption or via private delivery service or courier to the Employee
Benefits Security Administration (EBSA), Office of Exemption
Determinations, U.S. Department of Labor, 122 C St. NW, Suite 400,
Washington, DC 20001. Attention: Application No._ stated in each Notice
of Proposed Exemption. Interested persons are also invited to submit
comments and/or hearing requests to EBSA via email or FAX. Any such
comments or requests should be sent either by email to: e-OED@dol.gov,
by FAX to (202) 693-8474, or online through https://www.regulations.gov
by the end of the scheduled comment period. The applications for
exemption and the comments received will be available for public
inspection in the Public Documents Room of the Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, Room N-1515, 200
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210.
WARNING: All comments will be made available to the public. Do not
include any personally identifiable information (such as Social
Security number, name, address, or other contact information) or
confidential business information that you do not want publicly
disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can be
retrieved by most internet search engines.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions will be provided to all
interested persons in the manner agreed upon by the applicant and the
Department, unless otherwise stated in the Notice of Proposed
Exemption, within 15 days of the date of publication in the Federal
Register. Such notice shall include a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal Register and shall inform
interested persons of their right to comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate).
The proposed exemptions were requested in applications filed
pursuant to section 408(a) of the Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570,
subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).\1\ Effective December
31, 1978, section 102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C.
App. 1 (1996), transferred the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type requested to the Secretary of
Labor. Therefore, these notices of proposed exemption are issued solely
by the Department.
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\1\ The Department has considered exemption applications
received prior to December 27, 2011 under the exemption procedures
set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August
10, 1990).
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The applications contain representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are summarized below. Interested persons are
referred to the applications on file with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and representations.
The Les Schwab Tire Centers of Washington, Inc. (Les Schwab
Washington), the Les Schwab Tire Centers of Boise, Inc. (Les Schwab
Boise), and the Les Schwab Tire Centers of Portland, Inc. (Les Schwab
Portland), (collectively, with their Affiliates, Les Schwab or the
Applicant) Located in Aloha, Oregon; Boise, Idaho; Centralia,
Washington; and Other Locations [Application No. D-11924].
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act (or ERISA), and section
4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in accordance with the procedures set forth
in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27,
2011).\2\ If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of
sections 406(a)(1)(A), 406(a)(1)(D), 406(b)(1) and 406(b)(2) of the
Act, and the sanctions resulting from the application of section 4975
of the Code, by reason of sections 4975(c)(1)(A), 4975(c)(1)(D) and
4975(c)(1)(E) of the Code, shall not apply to the sales (each a
``Sale'' or collectively, the ``Sales'') by the Les Schwab Profit
Sharing Retirement Plan (the Plan) of the parcels of real property
described herein (each, a ``Parcel'' or collectively, the ``Parcels'')
to the Applicant, where the Applicant is a party in interest with
respect to the Plan, provided that certain conditions are satisfied.
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\2\ For purposes of this proposed exemption, references to the
provisions of Title I of the Act, unless otherwise specified, should
be read to refer as well to the corresponding provisions of the
Code.
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Summary of Facts and Representations \3\
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\3\ The Summary of Facts and Representations is based solely on
the representations of the Applicant and does not reflect the views
of the Department, unless indicated otherwise.
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Background
1. Les Schwab Tire Centers (together with its affiliates, Les
Schwab) was founded by its namesake in 1952 in Prineville, Oregon, in
order to sell tires, batteries and other automotive equipment, and
provide vehicle maintenance services. There are now approximately 482
Les Schwab tire and automotive service centers located primarily in the
Northwest and with over $1.7 billion in annual sales. Their
[[Page 67655]]
facilities are located in Alaska, Washington, Oregon, Montana, Nevada,
Utah, California, Colorado, and Idaho.
2. Les Schwab is comprised of 13 distinct legal entities. Certain
entities are ``S'' corporations. The 13 entities constitute various
controlled groups but do not constitute a single controlled group. The
Form 5500 Annual Report for the Plan is filed as a multiple employer
plan. The thirteen entities do include Les Schwab Washington, Les
Schwab Idaho, Les Schwab Portland, and Les Schwab Warehouse Center,
Inc. (the Warehouse Center).
3. All entities within the Les Schwab controlled groups are owned
by Alan Schwab, Diana Tomseth, Julie Waibel, and Leslie Tuftin (or by
trusts for the benefit of such individuals and/or their children). Mr.
Schwab and Ms. Tomseth are siblings, and Ms. Waibel and Ms. Tuftin are
siblings. These four individuals are the grandchildren of Les Schwab
and they are also currently employees of the Warehouse Center and board
members of Les Schwab. The Applicant states that each of these four
individuals is a Plan participant, as well as an owner-employee because
they each own more than 5 percent of the stock of Les Schwab.\4\
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\4\ The term ``owner-employee'' is defined under section 408(d)
of the Act to include persons as defined in section 401(c)(3) of the
Code, such as an employee who owns the entire interest in an
unincorporated trade or business, or in the case of a partnership, a
partner who owns more than 10 percent of either the capital interest
or profits interest of such partnership. The term ``owner-employee''
also includes, in relevant part, (a) a shareholder-employee, which
is an employee or officer of an S corporation who owns more than 5
percent of the outstanding stock of such corporation; (b) a member
of the family of such owner-employee; or (c) a corporation in which
such shareholder-employee owns, directly or indirectly, 50% or more
of the total combined voting power of all classes of voting stock of
a corporation or 50% or more of the total value of all classes of
stock of such corporation.
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4. The Plan is a qualified multiple-employer, defined contribution
profit-sharing plan located in Bend, Oregon. The Plan is sponsored by
the Warehouse Center. Thirteen employers, including Les Schwab
Washington, Les Schwab Idaho, and Les Schwab Portland participate in
the Plan. As of December 31, 2017, the Plan had 7,444 participants and
beneficiaries. Also, as of December 31, 2017, the Plan had total assets
of $730,454,671. The Applicant states that the Plan is the sole
retirement plan available for Les Schwab employees.
5. The Administrative and Investment Committee of the Plan (the
Committee) has the sole discretionary investment authority over the
Plan and is a named fiduciary. The Committee has the exclusive right
and discretionary authority to control, manage and operate the Plan.
This includes the authority to direct the investment of the Plan's
assets and to appoint and remove the Plan's Trustees and investment
managers.
The Committee consists of seven trustees (the Trustees), who
include executives and officers of Les Schwab. The Trustees are
appointed by the Chief Executive Officer of the Warehouse Center. All
of the Trustees are employees of the Warehouse Center, and some are
officers of the Warehouse Center and Les Schwab Washington, Les Schwab
Idaho and Les Schwab Portland.
Parcel Purchases
6. Over time, the Plan purchased twenty-six parcels of real
property (collectively, the Parcels). As described below, following the
purchases, the Plan entered into leases with various Les Schwab
entities.\5\ These Parcels of real property were then improved by the
construction of buildings that were paid for by the Les Schwab entities
or the Plan. Under the terms of the leases, the Les Schwab entities or
the Plan retained title to these buildings.
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\5\ The Applicant represents that these leases are exempt under
section 408(e) of the Act. Section 408(e) of the Act provides, in
pertinent part, that the restrictions of sections 406 and 407 of the
Act shall not apply to the acquisition, sale or lease by a plan of
qualifying employer real property if--(a) such acquisition, sale, or
lease is for adequate consideration; (b) no commission is charged
with respect thereto; and (c) the plan is an eligible individual
account plan.
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The Applicant asserts that the Plan was initially motivated to
purchase and lease the Parcels to Les Schwab as a means to provide a
secure return on the Plan's investments. In this regard, the Plan had
intimate knowledge of Les Schwab's business success and
creditworthiness, and determined that leasing the Parcels to Les Schwab
was a prudent investment decision.
7. On October 6, 2015, the Department issued a notice of final
exemption in connection with the sale by the Plan to the Applicant of
five Parcels of real property.\6\ The Applicant seeks a similar
individual exemption for the Sales of 19 Parcels on which Les Schwab
leases the Parcels from the Plan and operates tire centers through an
affiliate.\7\ Given that Les Schwab has retained title to the buildings
that have been constructed on some of the Parcels, pursuant to the
terms of the relevant leases, in some instances, the purchases do not
involve the buildings themselves. Each Parcel that is the subject of
the proposed Sales is described below in further detail.
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\6\ See PTE 2015-18, 80 FR 60503 (October 6, 2015).
\7\ Les Schwab represents that, in addition to the five parcels
covered by PTE 2015-18 and the 19 parcels covered by this proposed
exemption, the Plan owns a parcel in Aberdeen, Washington (the
Aberdeen Parcel) and a parcel in Moscow, Idaho (the Moscow Parcel).
With respect to the Aberdeen Parcel, Les Schwab represents that the
Applicant has not made a business decision on whether Les Schwab
Washington will purchase the property. Les Schwab represents that,
with respect to the Moscow Parcel, the option to purchase the
property from the Plan is not yet exercisable.
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The Aloha Parcel
8. The Plan purchased a 1.97-acre parcel of property, located at
19100 SW Shaw Street in Aloha, Oregon (the Aloha Parcel), from an
unrelated party in October 1986, for a total purchase price of
$300,194.
The Plan and Les Schwab Portland entered into a lease of the Aloha
Parcel (the Aloha Parcel Lease), on January 1, 1987, with the Plan as
landlord, and Les Schwab Portland, as tenant. Effective as of its
renewal term commencing January 1, 2014, the monthly rent is $14,453
per month.
In March 1988, the Plan completed the construction of two general
automotive buildings and the canopy, for a total cost of $614,824. Les
Schwab Portland then constructed a third general automotive building
for a cost of $171,968.
The Aloha Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Portland has the right to purchase the Aloha Parcel. Pursuant to
the terms of the Aloha Parcel Lease, the applicable option price is
based on the greater of $300,194 plus the landlord's total cost of
improvements, or the fair market value of the Aloha Parcel, as
determined by the corresponding independent appraisal discussed in
paragraph 31 (the Independent Appraisal). Les Schwab Portland now seeks
to exercise its option to purchase the Aloha Parcel from the Plan.
The Boise Broadway Parcel
9. On February 13, 1990, the Plan purchased 1.66 acres of land,
located at 2045 Broadway Avenue in Boise, Idaho (the Boise Broadway
Parcel), from an unrelated party, for a total purchase price, including
closing costs, of $398,085.
On June 1, 1990, the Plan and Les Schwab Tire Centers of Boise,
Idaho (Les Schwab Boise) entered into a ground lease of the Boise
Broadway Parcel (the Boise Broadway Parcel Lease), with the Plan, as
landlord, and Les Schwab Boise, as tenant. On May 1, 1991, Les Schwab
Boise opened a retail tire store facility on the Boise Broadway
Property in a building that it had constructed for $437,061. Effective
as of
[[Page 67656]]
the lease renewal term of January 1, 2016, the monthly rent is $6,163
per month.
The Boise Broadway Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under
which Les Schwab Boise has the right to purchase the Boise Broadway
Parcel. Pursuant to the terms of the Boise Broadway Parcel Lease, the
applicable option price is based on the greater of $398,085, plus the
landlord's total cost of improvements, or the fair market value of the
Boise Broadway Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les
Schwab Boise now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the Boise
Broadway Parcel from the Plan.
The Boise State Street Parcel
10. On May 12, 1978, the Plan purchased 1.41 acres of real property
located at 6520 West State Street in Boise, Idaho (the Boise State
Street Parcel) from an unrelated party. The total purchase price for
the Boise State Street Parcel was $238,600. The Boise State Street
Parcel is comprised of: (a) Two buildings: A 7,000 square foot retail
store building, and a 6,400 square foot building housing a shop
warehouse; and (b) two canopy areas, of 1,920 square feet and 1,400
square feet, that are attached to the retail store building.
On April 1, 1981, the Plan and Les Schwab Boise entered into a
ground lease of a portion of the Boise State Street Parcel, with the
Plan as landlord, and Les Schwab Boise, as tenant (the Boise State
Street Parcel Lease). The Plan purchased additional land in 1988, which
was added to the leased premises. The additional land was used for the
construction of a brake and alignment center to expand Les Schwab
Boise's business. The cost of the additional land was $42,185. The Plan
in 1988 constructed a brake and alignment building on recently-
purchased land for $137,198. The Plan made improvements to the roof
system in 1989, for which the Plan paid $10,807. Effective as of its
lease renewal term of August 1, 2017, the monthly rent for the Boise
State Street Parcel is $11,977.
The Boise State Street Parcel Lease includes a purchase option
under which Les Schwab Boise has the right to purchase the Boise State
Street Parcel. Pursuant to the terms of the Boise State Street Parcel
Lease, the applicable option price is based on the greater of $103,900
plus the landlord's total cost of improvements, or the fair market
value of the Boise State Street Parcel, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab Boise now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase the Boise State Street Parcel from the Plan.
The Centralia Parcel
11. On June 18, 1987, the Plan purchased a 1.06 acre parcel of real
property consisting of vacant land located at 1211 Harrison Avenue in
Centralia, Washington (the Centralia Parcel) from an unrelated party,
for a total purchase price, including closing costs of $139,909.
On October 1, 1987, the Plan, as landlord, leased the Centralia
Parcel to Les Schwab Washington, as tenant, under the provisions of a
ground lease (the Centralia Parcel Lease). In 1988, Les Schwab
Washington completed the construction of a building and improvements
that were suitable for the operation of a retail tire store and other
commercial purposes, at its own expense, for a total cost of $347,378.
Since January 1, 2014, Les Schwab Washington has been paying the Plan
$1,860 per month under the Centralia Parcel Lease.
The Centralia Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Centralia Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Centralia Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $139,909, or the fair market
value of the Centralia Parcel, as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now seeks to exercise its option to
purchase the Centralia Parcel from the Plan.
The Chehalis Parcel
12. On April 21, 1980, the Plan purchased a 44,615 square foot
parcel of real property located at 36 N Market Boulevard in Chehalis,
Washington, including the land and a building (the Chehalis Parcel),
from an unrelated party, for a total purchase price of $200,000.
On June 1, 1980, the Plan, as landlord, entered into a lease of the
Chehalis Parcel (the Chehalis Parcel Lease) with Les Schwab Washington,
as tenant, which commenced on September 1, 1980. Pursuant to the
current Chehalis Parcel Lease, since August 1, 2017, Les Schwab
Washington pays the Plan monthly rent of $10,487.
The Plan constructed, at its own expense, two buildings and related
improvements on the Chehalis Parcel that were suitable for the
operation of a retail tire store and other purposes by Les Schwab
Washington. The cost of the building and improvements was $286,947.
The Chehalis Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Chehalis Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Chehalis Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on: The greater of (a) $120,000 plus the Plan's
total cost of improvements made on the Chehalis Parcel, or (b) the fair
market value of Chehalis Parcel, as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now seeks to exercise its option to
purchase the Chehalis Parcel from the Plan.
The Ellensburg Parcels
13. In August 1977, Les Schwab Washington purchased approximately
71,438 square feet of land located at 1206 South Canyon Road,
Ellensburg, Washington from unrelated parties for $80,000. Les Schwab
Washington then subdivided the land into three parcels: Ellensburg
Parcel #1, Ellensburg Parcel #2, and Ellensburg Parcel #3. Because Les
Schwab Washington retained Ellensburg Parcel #3, and subsequently sold
it to an unrelated party, the property and lease descriptions below
pertain solely to Ellensburg Parcels #1 and #2, which are together
referred to herein as the ``Ellensburg Parcels.''
In December 1979, Les Schwab Washington and the Plan entered into a
sale and leaseback arrangement, whereby Les Schwab Washington sold
Ellensburg Parcel #1 to the Plan for $108,600. Effective January 1,
1980, the Plan entered into a lease with Les Schwab Washington (the
Ellensburg Parcel #1 Lease). The Plan paid $214,567 to construct a
building and related improvements suitable for the retail tire store
and other purposes. Les Schwab Washington has been paying the Plan
$7,503 per month since January 1, 2016.
With respect to Ellensburg Parcel #2, which shares the same street
address as Ellensburg Parcel #1, the Applicant represents that Les
Schwab Washington constructed a small general purpose commercial
building (an alignment center) thereon for $85,834. The building was
subsequently incorporated into the Ellensburg Parcel #1 Leases.
The Ellensburg Parcel #1 Lease includes a purchase option under
which Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Ellensburg
Parcels. Under the terms of the Ellensburg Parcel #1 Lease, the option
price will be the greater of $425,232 plus the landlord's total cost of
improvements, or the fair market value of the Ellensburg Parcels, as
determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now
seeks to exercise the option to purchase the Ellensburg Parcels from
the Plan.
The Independence Parcel
14. In December 1979, the Plan purchased a 53,000-square foot
parcel of
[[Page 67657]]
property located at 1710 Monmouth Avenue, Independence, Oregon (the
Independence Parcel), consisting of land and a building from Les Schwab
Portland for $301,149.
On January 1, 1980, the Plan began leasing the Independence Parcel
to Les Schwab Portland, under the provisions of a written lease (the
Independence Parcel Lease). Les Schwab Portland has been paying the
Plan $6,984 per month since January 1, 2016.
The Independence Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under
which Les Schwab Portland has the right to purchase the Independence
Parcel. Pursuant to the terms of the Independence Parcel Lease, the
applicable option price is based on the greater of $329,197 plus the
landlord's total cost of improvements, or the fair market value of the
Independence Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les
Schwab Washington now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the
Independence Parcel from the Plan.
The Lakewood Parcel
15. On May 31, 1988, the Plan purchased two parcels of land,
located at 3809 Steilacoom Boulevard SW, Tacoma, Washington (with the
additions described below, the Lakewood Parcel), and totaling 43,050
square feet, from unrelated parties, for $200,388. On June 1, 1988, the
Plan entered into a ground lease of one of the parcels with Les Schwab
Washington, for an initial monthly rent of $1,336 (the Lakewood Parcel
Lease).
In January 1989, the Plan purchased an additional 11,760 square
foot parcel of land, from unrelated parties, for $59,033. Furthermore,
in 2002, the Plan purchased a 12,000 square foot tract of land on the
Lakewood Parcel, from unrelated parties, for $85,596. In 2005, the Plan
purchased 7,730 square feet of land from unrelated parties, for
$126,480. Since January 1, 2014, the monthly rent for the Lakewood
Parcel has been $5,429.
The Lakewood Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Lakewood Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Lakewood Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $200,388, plus the landlord's
total cost of improvements, or the fair market value of the Lakewood
Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the Lakewood
Parcel from the Plan.
The Longview Parcel
16. On December 18, 1979, Les Schwab Washington purchased 1.89
acres of land located at 1420 Industrial Way in Longview, Washington
(the Longview Parcel) from an unrelated party for $86,350. On May 14,
1981, Les Schwab Washington sold the Longview Parcel to the Plan for
$90,704.
On May 14, 1981, the Plan and Les Schwab Washington entered into a
commercial lease of the land comprising the Longview Parcel, with the
Plan as landlord, and Les Schwab Washington, as tenant (the Longview
Parcel Lease). Since August 1, 2017, the monthly rent has been $13,979.
In 1981, the Plan completed improvements on the Longview Parcel
that included a 14,830 square foot retail tire store costing $267,902.
Other improvements were funded and constructed by the Plan in 1983, at
an expense of $70,174, and in 1986, at an expense of $88,773, for a
3,600 square foot warehouse building.
The Longview Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Longview Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Longview Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $90,704 plus the landlord's
total cost of improvements, or the fair market value of the Longview
Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the Longview
Parcel from the Plan.
The Marysville Parcels
17. On July 24, 1984, the Plan purchased 61,346 square feet of land
located at 8405 State Avenue, Marysville, Washington (Marysville Parcel
A) from an unrelated party, for a total contract price of $235,287.
Pursuant to a ground lease dated August 1, 1984, the Plan began leasing
the land ``as is'' to Les Schwab Washington (the Marysville Parcel
Lease). Les Schwab Washington subsequently completed construction of a
retail store at its own cost in 1985.
The Plan acquired 26,136 square feet of additional land (Marysville
Parcel B) \8\ in March 1999 for a price of $160,125. Marysville Parcel
B was added to the Marysville Parcel Lease, effective June 15, 1999.
Since August 1, 2014, the monthly rent charged by the Plan to Les
Schwab Washington was $6,229.
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\8\ Marysville Parcel A and Marysville Parcel B are together
referred to herein as the ``Marysville Parcels.''
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The Marysville Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Marysville Parcels.
Pursuant to the terms of the Marysville Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $398,564, or the fair market
value of the Marysville Parcels, as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now seeks to exercise its option to
purchase the Marysville Parcels from the Plan.
The North Bend Parcel
18. On June 3, 1988, the Plan purchased land located at 610 E North
Bend Way, North Bend, Washington (the North Bend Parcel) from an
unrelated party for $200,364. On September 1, 1988, the Plan and Les
Schwab Washington entered into a ground lease of the land comprising
the North Bend Parcel, with the Plan as landlord, and Les Schwab
Washington, as tenant (the North Bend Parcel Lease).
In 1991, Les Schwab Washington opened a 3,500-square-foot retail
tire store facility on the North Bend Parcel that it had constructed
for $878,000. Since January 1, 2014, the monthly rent charged to Les
Schwab Washington has been $2,578.
The North Bend Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the North Bend Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the North Bend Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $200,364 plus Landlord's total
cost of improvements, or the fair market value of the North Bend
Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the North Bend
Parcel from the Plan.
The Oregon City Parcels
19. In October 1980, the Plan purchased two parcels of land. The
first parcel comprised of 41,951 square feet of land (Oregon City
Parcel #1), and the second parcel comprised of 42,757 square feet of
land (Oregon City Parcel #2), located at 1625 Beavercreek Road, Oregon
City, Oregon, from an unrelated third party for $250,000. In July 1984,
the Plan sold Oregon City Parcel #2 to Les Schwab Portland for
$151,000.
On November 1, 1981, the Plan and Les Schwab Portland entered into
a ground lease of the land comprising Oregon City Parcel #1, with the
Plan, as landlord, and Les Schwab Portland, as tenant (the Oregon City
Parcel #1 Lease).
In 1982, Les Schwab Portland opened a 7,850-square-foot retail tire
store facility on Oregon City Parcel #1 that it
[[Page 67658]]
had constructed for $366,000. Since August 1, 2017, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Portland increased to $4,470.
The Oregon City Parcel #1 Lease includes a purchase option under
which Les Schwab Portland has the right to purchase Oregon City Parcel
#1. Pursuant to the terms of the Oregon City Parcel #1 Lease, the
applicable option price is based on the greater of $136,500, or the
fair market value of Oregon City Parcel #1, as determined by the
Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab Portland now seeks to exercise its
option to purchase Oregon City Parcel #1 from the Plan.
The Pullman Parcel
20. In November 1981, the Plan purchased 0.77 acres of land,
located at 160 SE Bishop Boulevard in Pullman, Washington (the Pullman
Parcel), from an unrelated party for a total purchase price of $75,704.
On November 10, 1981, the Plan and Les Schwab Washington entered
into a ground lease of the land comprising the Pullman Parcel, with the
Plan, as landlord, and Les Schwab Washington, as tenant (the Pullman
Parcel Lease). In 1987, Les Schwab Washington opened a 7,300-square-
foot retail tire store facility on the Pullman Parcel that it had
constructed for $345,000. Since August 1, 2017, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Washington has been $3,356.
The Pullman Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Pullman Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Pullman Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $80,704, or the fair market
value of the Pullman Parcel, as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now seeks to exercise its option to
purchase the Pullman Parcel from the Plan.
The Silverton Parcel
21. In November 1986, the Plan purchased 1.18 acres of land,
located at 911 North 1st Street in Silverton, Oregon (the Silverton
Parcel), from an unrelated party for a total purchase price of $50,739.
On March 1, 1987, the Plan and Les Schwab Portland entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising the Silverton Parcel, with the
Plan, as landlord, and Les Schwab Portland, as tenant (the Silverton
Parcel Lease).
As agreed upon under the Silverton Parcel Lease, in 1987, the Plan
constructed a tire store facility on the Silverton Parcel, for a total
cost of $307,725. In 1992 the Plan funded additional improvements on
the Silverton Parcel at a cost of $153,276. Since January 1, 2013, the
monthly rent charged to Les Schwab Portland has been $7,900.
The Silverton Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Portland has the right to purchase the Silverton Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Silverton Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $50,730 plus the landlord's
total cost of improvements, or the fair market value of the Silverton
Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab Portland
now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the Silverton Parcel from
the Plan.
The Snohomish Parcel
22. In March 1992, the Plan purchased 1.01 acres of land located at
711 Avenue D, Snohomish, Washington, from an unrelated party for an
aggregate purchase price of $614,534. In January 1993, the Plan
purchased approximately 0.07 acres of land adjacent to the initial
tract for $46,800, also from an unrelated party. For purposes of this
proposed exemption, both tracts of land are referred to herein as the
``Snohomish Parcel.''
On July 1, 1992, the Plan and Les Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease with the Plan of the initial tract of land comprising the
Snohomish Parcel (the Snohomish Parcel), with the Plan as landlord, and
Les Schwab Washington, as tenant.
In 1993, Les Schwab Washington opened a 14,300-square-foot retail
tire store facility on the Snohomish Parcel that it had constructed for
$825,000. Since January 1, 2013, the monthly rent charged to Les Schwab
Washington has been $7,283.
The Snohomish Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Snohomish Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Snohomish Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $614,534, plus the landlord's
total cost of improvements, or the fair market value of the Snohomish
Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the Snohomish
Parcel from the Plan.
The Spanaway Parcel
23. In January 1985, the Plan purchased 0.97 acres of land located
at 16819 Pacific Avenue South, Spanaway, Washington (the Spanaway
Parcel) from an unrelated third party for an aggregate purchase price
of $283,340. In July 1990, the Plan purchased a 14,100 square foot
parcel next to the initial parcel from an unrelated third party for
$45,743. In May 1999, the Plan purchased an additional 8,000 square
foot parcel from an unrelated third party for $58,000. The three land
parcels totaling 1.48 acres comprise the Spanaway property (the
Spanaway Parcel). On February 1, 1985, the Plan and Les Schwab
Washington entered into a ground lease of the land comprising the
initial parcel (the Spanaway Parcel Lease), with the Plan, as landlord,
and Les Schwab Washington, as tenant.
In late 1985, Les Schwab Washington opened a 15,000-spare-foot
retail tire store facility on the Spanaway Parcel that it had
constructed for $406,000. Since August 1, 2015, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Washington has been $6,615.
The Spanaway Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which
Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Spanaway Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Spanaway Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $329,083, or the fair market
value of the Spanaway Parcel, as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now seeks to exercise its option to
purchase the Spanaway Parcel from the Plan.
The Spokane Parcel
24. In November 1981, the Plan purchased 0.88 acres of land,
located at 8103 North Division Street, Spokane, Washington (the Spokane
Parcel), from an unrelated third party for an aggregate purchase price
of $205,000.
On November 10, 1981, the Plan and Les Schwab Washington entered
into a ground lease of the land comprising the Spokane Parcel, with the
Plan, as landlord, and Les Schwab Washington, as tenant (the Spokane
Parcel Lease).
In 1982, Les Schwab Washington opened a 7,400-square-foot retail
tire store facility on the Spokane Parcel that it had constructed for
$263,000. Since August 1, 2012, the monthly rent to Les Schwab
Washington has been $5,175.
The Spokane Parcel Lease includes a purchase option under which Les
Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the Spokane Parcel.
Pursuant to the terms of the Spokane Parcel Lease, the applicable
option price is based on the greater of $205,172, or the fair market
value of the Spokane Parcel, as determined by the Independent
Appraisal. Les Schwab Washington now seeks to exercise its option to
purchase the Spokane Parcel from the Plan.
[[Page 67659]]
The Vancouver Andresen Parcel
25. On October 12, 1989, the Plan purchased 0.78 acres of land
located at 2420 NE Andresen Road, Vancouver, Washington (the Vancouver
Andresen Parcel), from an unrelated third party for an aggregate
purchase price of $245,265.
On January 1, 1990, the Plan and Les Schwab Washington entered into
a ground lease of the land comprising the Vancouver Andresen Parcel
(the Vancouver Andresen Parcel Lease), with the Plan, as landlord, and
Les Schwab Washington, as tenant.
In 1991, Les Schwab Washington opened a 10,300-square-foot retail
tire store facility on the Vancouver Andresen Parcel that it had
constructed for $557,000. Since January 1, 2015, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Washington has been $3,671.
The Vancouver Andresen Parcel Lease includes a purchase option
under which Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the
Vancouver Andresen Parcel. Pursuant to the terms of the Vancouver
Andresen Parcel Lease, the applicable option price is based on the
greater of $245,264, or the fair market value of the Vancouver Andresen
Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the Vancouver
Andresen Parcel from the Plan.
The Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel
26. On August 26, 1981, the Plan purchased 0.69 acres of land
located at 216 SE 118th Avenue, Vancouver, Washington (the Vancouver
Cascade Park Parcel), from an unrelated third party for an aggregate
purchase price of $156,300.
On July 1, 1983, the Plan and Les Schwab Washington entered into a
ground lease of the land comprising the Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel
(the Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel Lease), with the Plan, as landlord,
and Les Schwab Washington, as tenant.
In late 1983, Les Schwab Washington opened a 13,000-square-foot
retail tire store facility on the Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel that it
had constructed for $304,000. Since January 1, 2015, the monthly rent
charged to Les Schwab Washington has been $3,765.
The Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel Lease includes a purchase option
under which Les Schwab Washington has the right to purchase the
Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel. Pursuant to the terms of the Vancouver
Cascade Park Parcel Lease, the applicable option price is based on the
greater of $156,300, or the fair market value of the Vancouver Cascade
Park Parcel, as determined by the Independent Appraisal. Les Schwab
Washington now seeks to exercise its option to purchase the Vancouver
Cascade Park Parcel from the Plan.
Terms of the Sales
27. Each Sale must be a one-time transaction for cash. At the time
of the Sales, the Plan will receive no less than the fair market value
of each Parcel, as determined by the Appraisers, whose current
Appraisals will be updated on the date of the Sales. In this regard, to
the extent the terms of any lease allow a Sale price that is greater
than a Parcel's fair market value, then the price received by the Plan
for such Parcel will equal such greater Sale price. In addition, the
Applicant represents that the Plan will not pay any costs, including
brokerage commissions, fees, appraisal costs, or any other expenses
associated with the Sales. Further, the terms and conditions of each
Sale will be at least as favorable to the Plan as those obtainable in
an arm's-length transaction with an unrelated party. Finally, a
qualified independent fiduciary will represent the interests of the
Plan with respect to each Sale. Among other things, such independent
fiduciary will monitor each sale throughout its duration, review and
approve the methodology and ultimate valuation determination of the
qualified independent appraiser (the Independent Appraiser), and
determine, on behalf of the Plan, whether it is prudent to proceed with
the transaction.
The Independent Fiduciary
28. Les Schwab represents that American Realty Advisors (ARA) of
Glendale, California was retained to serve as a qualified independent
fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary) to the Plan for purposes of
evaluating and approving the Sales. ARA represents that it is an
investment manager of institutional quality commercial real estate
portfolios with 529 investors and over $8.7 billion in assets under
management as of June 30, 2018. ARA is one of the largest privately-
held real estate investment management firms in the United States and
has been providing real estate investment management for over 28 years.
ARA represents that it qualifies as an independent fiduciary under
the Department's Prohibited Transaction Exemption Procedures (see 29
CFR 2570, October 27, 2011, at 29 CFR 2570.34(d)).\9\ ARA states that
it acknowledges, understands, and accepts its duties under ERISA and is
acting as the Independent Fiduciary to the Plan in relation to the
exemption application. Further, ARA represents that it is authorized by
the Plan to take all appropriate actions to safeguard the interests of
the Plan and will, during the pendency of the Sales: (a) Monitor the
Sales on behalf of the Plan; (b) ensure that the Sales remain in the
interests of the Plan and, if not, take any appropriate actions
available under the particular circumstances; and (c) enforce
compliance with all conditions and obligations imposed on any party
dealing with the Plan with respect to each transaction.
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\9\ 29 CFR 2570.34(d) requires that an Independent Fiduciary
provide to the Department, under penalty of perjury: (1) A summary
of the Independent Fiduciary's qualifications to serve in such
capacity; (2) a description of any relationship between the
Independent Fiduciary and a party in interest with respect to the
transaction or its affiliates; (3) an acknowledgement by the
Independent Fiduciary of its duties and responsibilities under ERISA
in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the plan; and (4) the
percentage of the Independent Fiduciary's current revenue that is
derived from any party in interest involved in the transaction or
its affiliates.
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ARA represents that it does not have any relationship with the
parties involved in the proposed transaction, beyond its role as the
Independent Fiduciary.
As part of its Independent Fiduciary duties and responsibilities,
ARA completed the following tasks: (a) Toured each of the Parcels and
inspected comparable land sales, as outlined in each of the appraisals
CBRE, Inc. (CBRE) completed for each Parcel (the Independent
Appraisals); (b) engaged the Independent Appraisers and instructed them
with respect to the objectives of each Independent Appraisal, the
specific nuances of the Parcel leases between Les Schwab and the Plan
(the Leases), and the valuation process, taking into account the
questions posed by the Department during its review of the exemption
application in connection with its granting of PTE 2015-18; (c)
reviewed the Independent Appraisals; (d) reviewed the annual audited
financial statements for the Plan from 1980 to the present to assess
the treatment of the Leases by the auditor and obtained additional
documentation from Les Schwab in support of the rental payments made
under the Leases; (e) reviewed and summarized the terms and conditions
of the Leases and relevant amendments; (f) researched additional
questions posed by the Department; and (g) reviewed the composition of
the existing real estate portfolio of the Plan and the Plan's Statement
of Investment Policy dated September 1, 2015. Further, the Independent
Fiduciary examined
[[Page 67660]]
whether the Plan received rental income on a timely basis under the
Leases, and reviewed audited financial statements for the Plan prepared
by PriceWaterhouse Coopers and Roberts, McMains, Sellman & Co. for the
years 1981-2015.
The Independent Fiduciary represents that it will represent the
interests of the Plan in the proposed Sales. In so doing, the
Independent Fiduciary will: (a) Determine whether it is prudent to go
forward with each Sale; (b) negotiate, review, and approve the terms
and conditions of each Sale; (c) monitor and manage the Sales on behalf
of the Plan throughout their duration, taking any appropriate actions
it deems necessary to safeguard the interests of the Plan.
The Independent Fiduciary Reports
29. ARA submitted to the Department its reports, dated September 8,
2016 (the Independent Fiduciary Reports), that document ARA's analysis
of the proposed Sale for each Parcel and ARA's recommendations for the
Plan.
In the Independent Fiduciary Reports, ARA represents that the Sales
are the most favorable option for the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, because the improvements have significant age and
limited future value (in addition to the current value of the
underlying land), to anyone other than Les Schwab.
ARA concludes that the Leases between the Plan and the applicable
Les Schwab affiliates with their rental rates and Consumer Price Index
(CPI) adjustments are consistent with market terms and conditions at
the time the Leases were negotiated and are consistent of similar
transactions between unrelated parties. ARA also concludes that the
appraised values of the Parcels as presented within the Independent
Appraisals are accurate reflections of current market conditions and
form the basis for establishing fair market prices for the Sales.
Further, ARA notes that the Plan's real estate holdings as outlined
by the 2015 audited statement are approximately 14.7% of the total
assets of the Plan and are just below the parameters of the Plan's
Statement of Investment Policy dated January 1, 2015. The proposed
Sales of the Parcels, in addition to the recent January 2016 sale of
the Lacey, Renton, Bothell, Sandy and Twin Falls Parcels, would reduce
the real estate holdings of the Plan to approximately 10.8% of the
total assets of the Plan. This falls below the investment threshold but
would modestly increase the liquidity of the Plan. The Investment
Policy Statement establishes the policy range for real estate and other
real assets within a range of 15% and 25% of the portfolio. The Sales
results in a real estate allocation that is under the policy range but
would allow the Plan to continue its diversification strategy away from
directly owned real estate toward real estate assets with greater
liquidity, increased diversification and decreased liability risk.
ARA also represents, in the Independent Fiduciary Reports, that it
has reviewed audited financial statements of the Plan, as noted above,
for the years 1981 through 2015, unaudited financial statements to the
end of February 2016, the Plan records of rental income received from
the present back to 1995, and the scheduled rent for all of the leases
individually from inception to the present. ARA states that there is no
reason to conclude that the lessees owe the Plan any additional rent
related the failure of either party to comply with the terms and
conditions of the Leases.
Further, ARA concludes, in the Independent Fiduciary Reports, that
the Sales are administratively feasible and would be fairly routine
executions for an experienced real estate investment manager. ARA
represents that it will: (a) Monitor and manage the proposed
transactions on behalf of the Plan; (b) take any appropriate actions to
safeguard the interests of the Plan; (c) represent the interests of the
Plan in the proposed Sales; and (d) negotiate, review, and approve the
terms and conditions of the proposed Sales.
The Independent Appraisers
30. The Applicant represents that the appraisals of the Parcels
were conducted by Whitney Haucke, David Adamson, Jeff Grose, Katriina
White, and Kevin Nguyen of CBRE. (Ms. Haucke, Mr. Adamson, Mr. Grose,
Ms. White, and Mr. Nguyen are referred to herein as the ``Independent
Appraisers.'') Ms. Haucke, Mr. Adamson, Mr. Grose, and Mr. Nguyen are
Certified General Real Estate Appraisers in the areas where the Parcels
are located, and they are all Members of the Appraisal Institute. Ms.
White is a Registered Real Estate Appraiser Trainee in the State of
Washington. The Independent Appraisers also have experience in
appraising residential properties, vacant land, and commercial
properties.
Pursuant to its Appraisal Engagement Letter, CBRE was retained to
perform, among other things, the following tasks, on behalf of the
Plan: (a) Provide a fair market valuation of the Parcels using
commercially acceptable methods of valuation for unrelated third party
transactions; (b) explain whether or not, in the Independent
Appraisers' opinion, the Plan has received adequate consideration from
the Leases; and (c) opine on whether the proper CPI was used for the
rent increases for each Parcel. The Applicant represents that the
appraisal work completed by CBRE produced fees from Les Schwab to CBRE
of $98,250 in 2016 and $0.00 in 2017. According to CBRE's 2017 10K
filing, its 2016 gross revenue was $13.09 billion and its 2017 gross
revenue was $14.21 billion. As such, CBRE's revenue from the Les Schwab
appraisal work was less than 2% of its revenue for 2016 and 2017.
The Independent Appraisals
31. In valuing the Parcels, the Independent Appraisers applied the
Sales Comparison Approach and the Income Capitalization Approach to
valuation. As represented by the Independent Appraisers, the Sales
Comparison Approach is typically used for retail sites that are
feasible for either immediate or near-term development. The Income
Capitalization Approach, according to the Independent Appraisers,
reflects the property's income-producing capabilities, and is based on
the assumption that value is created by the expectation of benefits to
be derived in the future. The Independent Appraisers did not use the
Cost Approach to valuation because they did not consider this
methodology to be applicable in the estimation of market value due to
age of the improvements and lack of depreciation data for the Parcels.
a. The Aloha Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers used the
Sales Comparison Approach and the Income Capitalization Approach
methodologies in determining the fair market value of the Aloha Parcel.
Based on the Sales Comparison Approach, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated eight properties, which included fee simple or leased fee
sales or listings of comparable properties. The Independent Appraisers
determined that the fee simple sales comparables indicated an adjusted
range of $131 per square foot to $149 per square foot, at an average of
$136 per square foot. According to the Independent Appraisers, the
Sales Comparison Approach yielded a value of $135 per square foot,
which when multiplied by the actual square footage of the Aloha Parcel
(16,700 square feet), equaled a fair market value of $2,250,000 for the
Aloha Parcel as of April 1, 2016.
In employing the Income Capitalization Approach, the Independent
Appraisers noted that there
[[Page 67661]]
were no rents of buildings or facilities similar to the subject
property. Therefore, the Independent Appraisers expanded their search
for comparable rental properties, regionally, and they evaluated six
rental property comparables. After reviewing the rental incomes and
operating expenses of these properties, the Independent Appraisers
determined that, under the Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers concluded that the fair market value of the
Aloha Parcel was $129 per square foot, or $2,150,721, rounded to
$2,150,000 as of April 1, 2016.
The Independent Appraisers determined that the Sales Comparison
Approach should be given primary consideration in the reconciliation
process. As such, the Independent Appraisers determined the fair market
value of the Aloha Parcel as of April 1, 2016, was $2,250,000.
b. The Boise Broadway Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
used the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Boise Broadway Parcel.
The Independent Appraisers evaluated six prior sales and one pending
sale. Based on the Sales Comparison Approach and evaluating land sale
comparables, the Independent Appraisers derived a fair market value for
the Boise Broadway Parcel of $13 per square foot, which when multiplied
by the actual square footage of the Boise Broadway Parcel (72,310
square feet) equaled a fair market value of $940,000 as of April 1,
2016.
c. The Boise State Street Parcel Appraisal. The Boise State Street
Appraisal provides that the Independent Appraisers employed the Sales
Comparison Approach and Income Capitalization Approach to value the
Boise State Street Parcel. In using the Sales Comparison Approach, the
Independent Appraisers evaluated two prior fee simple sales, two
pending fee simple sales, two prior leased fee sales, and two pending
leased fee sales. The Independent Appraisers determined that, based on
the Sales Comparison Approach, evaluating the land sale comparables
derived a fair market value for the Boise State Street Parcel of
$2,100,000 as of April 1, 2016.
In using the Income Capitalization Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated five lease comparables and one comparable listing
for a lease. After reviewing the rental incomes and operating expenses
of the six comparables, the Appraiser determined that, under the Income
Capitalization Approach, the fair market value of the Boise State
Street Parcel is $2,060,000 as of April 1, 2016.
The Independent Appraisers determined that both methodologies
should be given equal emphasis, and determined the fair market value of
the Boise State Street Parcel as of April 1, 2016, to be $2,090,000.
d. The Centralia Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers used
the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Centralia Parcel. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated three prior sales and one listing. The
Independent Appraisers determined that, based on the Sales Comparison
Approach, evaluating the land sale comparables derived a fair market
value for the Centralia Parcel of $8.01 per square foot, which when
multiplied by the actual square footage of the Centralia Parcel (46,200
square feet) equaled a fair market value of $370,000, as of April 1,
2016.
e. The Chehalis Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
employed the Sales Comparison Approach and Income Capitalization
Approach to value the Chehalis Parcel. In using the Sales Comparison
Approach, the Independent Appraisers evaluated five prior sales and one
pending sale, and determined the fair market value of the Chehalis
Parcel to be $1,150,000, as of April 1, 2016.
In using the Income Capitalization Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated five lease comparables. After reviewing the rental
incomes and operating expenses of the five comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined the fair market value of the Chehalis Parcel to
be $1,100,000 as of April 1, 2016.
The Independent Appraisers noted that market participants are
analyzing properties based on their income generating capability. As
such, the income capitalization approach was given primary emphasis in
the final value estimate. Thus, based on the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers determined the fair market value
of the Chehalis Parcel was $1,100,000 as of April 1, 2016.
f. The Ellensburg Parcels Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
employed the Sales Comparison Approach and Income Capitalization
Approach to value the Ellensburg Parcels. In using the Sales Comparison
Approach, the Independent Appraisers evaluated five prior sales and one
sale listing. The Independent Appraisers determined that evaluating the
land sale comparables derived a fair market value after adjustments for
the Ellensburg Parcels of $1,080,000 as of April 1, 2016.
In using the Income Capitalization Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated six lease comparables. After reviewing the rental
incomes and operating expenses of the six comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that, under the Income Capitalization Approach,
the fair market value of the Ellensburg Parcels was $1,096,990, rounded
to $1,100,000, as of April 1, 2016.
The Independent Appraisers noted that market participants were
analyzing properties based on their income-generating capability. As
such, the Income Capitalization Approach was given primary emphasis in
the final value estimate. Thus, based on the Income Capitalization
Approach, the Independent Appraisers determined the fair market value
of the Ellensburg Parcels was $1,100,000 as of April 1, 2016.
g. The Independence Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
employed the Sales Comparison Approach and Income Capitalization
Approach to value the Independence Parcel. In using the Sales
Comparison Approach, the Independent Appraisers evaluated four prior
fee simple sales and four prior leased fee sales of comparable parcels.
The Independent Appraisers calculated the value of the Independence
Parcel to be $990,000, as of April 1, 2016.
In using the Income Capitalization Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated six lease comparables. After reviewing the rental
incomes and operating expenses of the six comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that, under the Income Capitalization Approach,
the fair market value of the Independence Parcel was $918,034 as of
April 1, 2016 ($920,000, if rounded).
After giving more weight to the Sales Comparison Approach, the
Independent Appraisers concluded that the Independence Parcel had a
fair market value of $990,000 as of April 1, 2016.
h. The Lakewood Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
employed the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Lakewood Parcel.
They valued Parcels A and B and Parcels C and D, comprising the
Lakewood Parcel, using different comparables. With respect to Parcels A
and B, the Independent Appraisers evaluated four comparable land sales
and one land sale listing that was current at the time of the
valuation. The Independent Appraisers determined that the fair market
value for Parcels A and B was $600,000 as of April 1, 2016.
With respect to the valuation of Parcels C and D, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated four comparable land sales and one land sale
listing that
[[Page 67662]]
was current at the time of the valuation. The Independent Appraisers
determined that the fair market values of Parcel C and Parcel D were
$21,000 and $44,000, respectively, as of April 1, 2016.
i. The Longview Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers used
the Sales Comparison Approach and Income Capitalization Approach to
value the Longview Parcel. In using the Sales Comparison Approach, the
Independent Appraisers evaluated sales of eight comparable properties,
four representing fee simple sales, and four representing leased fee
sales, and determined that the fair market value of the Longview Parcel
was $2,385,000, rounded to $2,400,000, as of April 1, 2016.
Using the Income Capitalization Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated six lease comparables. After reviewing the rental
incomes and operating expenses of the six comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that, under the Income Capitalization Approach,
the fair market value of the Longview Parcel was $2,373,521, rounded to
$2,370,000, as of April 1, 2016.
After giving more weight to the Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers concluded that the Independence Parcel had a
fair market value of $2,385,000 as of April 1, 2016.
j. The Marysville Parcels Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
valued the Marysville Parcel using the Sales Comparison Approach. With
respect to both Marysville Parcels A and B, the Independent Appraisers
evaluated four similar sale-listings in the area and determined that
the fair market values of Marysville Parcel A and Parcel B were
$740,000 and $265,000, respectively, as of April 1, 2016.
k. The North Bend Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
valued the North Bend Parcel using the Sales Comparison Approach. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated four prior sales. The Appraisers
determined that the fair market value of the North Bend Parcel was
$1,220,000, as of April 1, 2016.
l. The Oregon City Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
used the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Oregon City Parcel. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated two prior sales, one pending sale of a
single parcel, and one pending sale of two adjacent parcels. The
Appraisers determined that the fair market value of the Oregon City
Parcel was $600,000 as of April 1, 2016.
m. The Pullman Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers used
the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Pullman Parcel. The
Independent Appraiser evaluated six prior land sales of similar
parcels, based on zoning and intended uses. The Independent determined
that the fair market value of the Pullman Parcel was $575,000 as of
April 1, 2016.
n. The Silverton Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers
valued the Silverton Parcel using the Sales Comparison Approach and the
Income Capitalization Approach. In using the Sales Comparison Approach,
the Independent Appraisers evaluated sales of eight comparable
properties, four representing fee simple sales, and four representing
leased fee sales. The Independent Appraisers determined the fair market
value of the Silverton Parcel was $1,451,000, rounded to $1,450,000, as
of April 1, 2016.
Using the Income Capitalization Approach, the Independent
Appraisers evaluated six lease comparables. After reviewing the rental
incomes and operating expenses of the six comparables, the Independent
Appraisers determined that the fair market value of the Silverton
Parcel was $1,375,895, rounded to $1,380,000, as of April 1, 2016.
After giving more weight to the Income Capitalization Approach, the
Independent Appraisers concluded that the Silverton Parcel had a fair
market value of $1,415,000 as of April 1, 2016.
o. The Snohomish Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers used
the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Snohomish Parcel. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated four prior land sales of similar
parcels, based on zoning and intended uses. The Independent Appraisers
determined that the fair market value of the Snohomish Parcel was
$590,000, rounded, as of April 1, 2016.
p. The Spanaway Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers valued
the Spanaway Parcel using the Sales Comparison Approach. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated five similar sale-listings in the
area. The Independent Appraisers determined the fair market value of
the Spanaway Parcel to be approximately $540,000, rounded, as of April
1, 2016.
q. The Spokane Parcel Appraisal. The Independent Appraisers used
the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Spokane Parcel. The
Independent Appraisers evaluated five prior land sales of similar
parcels, based on zoning and intended uses. The Independent Appraisers
determined the fair market value of the Spokane Parcel to be $725,000,
rounded, as of April 1, 2016.
r. The Vancouver Andresen Parcel Appraisal. The Independent
Appraisers valued the Vancouver Andresen Parcel using the Sales
Comparison Approach. The Independent Appraisers evaluated five similar
sale-listings in the area, which included two under contract/offer
sales. The Independent Appraisers determined the fair market value of
the Vancouver Andresen Parcel to be $450,000, rounded, as of April 1,
2016.
s. The Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel Appraisal. The Independent
Appraisers used the Sales Comparison Approach to value the Vancouver
Cascade Park Parcel. The Independent Appraisers evaluated three prior
sales and two pending sales. The Independent Appraisers determined the
fair market value of the Vancouver Cascade Park Parcel to be $390,000
as of April 1, 2016.
Analysis
31. The Applicant represents that the statutory exemption under
ERISA section 408(e) is not available for the proposed transactions due
to the application of section 408(d)(l)(C) of the Act, which provides
that the statutory exemption under section 408(e) of the Act will not
apply to a transaction in which a plan sells any property to a
corporation in which an owner-employee with respect to the plan owns,
directly or indirectly, 50% or more of the total combined voting power
of all classes of stock entitled to vote or 50% or more of the total
value of shares of all classes of stock of the corporation.
The Applicant notes that section 408(d)(2)(A) of the Act provides
that a ``shareholder-employee'' will be treated as an owner-employee.
Further, the Applicant states that section 408(d)(3) of the Act
provides that a ``shareholder-employee'' is an employee or officer of
an ``S'' corporation who owns more than 5% of the outstanding stock of
the corporation on any day during the taxable year of such corporation.
According to the Applicant, both Julie Waibel and Leslie Tuftin own
more than 5% of S corporations that are within the various controlled
groups with employees that participate in the Plan. As such, due to
their ownership interest in these S corporations, the Applicant asserts
that Ms. Waibel and Ms. Tuftin are owner-employees with respect to the
Plan.
The Applicant represents that because Ms. Waibel and Ms. Tuftin are
owner-employees, and each is deemed to own 50% or more of the total
combined voting power of all classes of the S corporations' stock
entitled to vote,
[[Page 67663]]
section 408(d)(l)(C) of the Act precludes the reliance upon section
408(e) of the Act with respect to the Sales.
Section 406(a)(l)(A) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary with respect
to a plan from causing the plan to engage in a transaction if he or she
knows or should know that such transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect sale, exchange, or lease of any property between the plan and
a party in interest. Therefore, the proposed transactions would
constitute prohibited transactions under section 406(a)(l)(A) of the
Act because the Plan would be selling real property to parties in
interest and disqualified persons with respect to the Plan.
Section 406(a)(l)(D) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary with respect
to a plan to cause the plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that such transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the benefit of, a party in
interest, of any asset of the plan. The Applicant represents that the
proposed transactions would violate section 406(a)(l)(D) of the Act
because the Plan will transfer Plan assets to parties in interest and
disqualified persons with respect to the Plan.
In addition, section 406(b)(1) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary
from dealing with the assets of a plan in his own interest or for his
own account. Section 406(b)(2) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary, with
respect to a plan, from acting in a transaction involving the plan on
behalf of a party whose interests are adverse to those of the plan or
of its participants and beneficiaries. As described above, the Trustees
and the Committee are fiduciaries of the Plan. The Trustees are also
comprised of certain executive officers of Les Schwab, including
officers of the Warehouse Center, Les Schwab Washington, Les Schwab
Idaho, and Les Schwab Portland, and are appointed by the Chief
Executive Officer of the Warehouse Center, the Plan sponsor.
The proposed Sales of the Parcels by the Plan to Les Schwab would
involve a violation of section 406(b)(1) of the Act because Les Schwab,
as a Plan fiduciary, would be dealing with the assets of the Plan for
its own interest or own account. Les Schwab, as a Plan fiduciary, in
effecting the Sales to itself, is acting on behalf of itself and of the
Plan in violation of section 406(b)(2) of the Act.
Statutory Findings
32. The Department has tentatively determined that the requested
exemption is administratively feasible because: (a) The Sales are one-
time transactions for cash; and (b) the price paid by Les Schwab to the
Plan for each Parcel will be no less than the fair market value of each
Parcel (exclusive of the buildings or other improvements paid for by
Les Schwab, to which Les Schwab retains title), as determined by the
Independent Appraisers in separate Independent Appraisals that are
updated on the date of each Sale.
The Department has tentatively determined that the proposed
exemption is in the interest of the Plan because: (a) The Sales will
allow the Plan to diversify its holdings and invest the proceeds from
the Sales in more productive investments; (b) the Plan will not incur
any transaction costs in connection with such Sales; (c) the Sales will
not be subject to any financing contingencies because Les Schwab will
make a one-time, lump-sum, cash payment on the closing date for each
respective Parcel; and (d) the Sales will eliminate ongoing appraisal
fees, administrative costs, and legal responsibilities that are
associated with the Plan's continuing ownership of the Parcels.
The Department has tentatively determined that the proposed
exemption is protective of the participants and beneficiaries because
the Independent Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan's
participants and beneficiaries with respect to: (a) The decision to
sell the Parcels to the Applicant; (b) the terms and execution of the
Sales; and (c) the selection of the Independent Appraiser. In addition,
the Applicant states that the Independent Fiduciary will determine
whether the transactions are prudent and in the best interest of the
participants and beneficiaries, including whether or not the terms and
conditions of the Sales are equivalent to an arm's-length transaction
with an unrelated party. Finally, the Applicant states that the
Independent Appraisers will appraise the fair market value of the
Parcels as of the transaction date and ensure that the Plan receives
adequate consideration, based on appropriate appraisal methodologies
used by the Independent Appraisers in Independent Appraisals that will
be updated on the date of each Sale.
Summary
33. In summary, the Department has tentatively determined that the
relief sought by the Applicant satisfies the statutory requirements for
an exemption under section 408(a) of ERISA, provided that the
conditions described below are satisfied.
Proposed Exemption
Section I. Covered Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of sections
406(a)(1)(A), 406(a)(1)(D), 406(b)(1) and 406(b)(2) of the Act, and the
sanctions resulting from the application of section 4975 of the Code,
by reason of sections 4975(c)(1)(A), 4975(c)(1)(D) and 4975(c)(1)(E) of
the Code, shall not apply to the sales (the Sales) by the Les Schwab
Profit Sharing Retirement Plan (the Plan) of the following parcels of
real property (each, a ``Parcel'' and collectively, the ``Parcels'') to
the Applicant:
(a) The Parcel located at 19100 SW Shaw Street, Aloha, Oregon;
(b) The Parcel located at 2045 Broadway Avenue, Boise, Idaho;
(c) The Parcel located at 6520 W State Street, Boise, Idaho;
(d) The Parcel located at 1211 Harrison Avenue, Centralia,
Washington;
(e) The Parcel located at 36 N Market Boulevard, Chehalis,
Washington;
(f) The Parcels located at 1206 Canyon Road, Ellensburg,
Washington;
(g) The Parcel located at 1710 Monmouth Avenue, Independence,
Oregon;
(h) The Parcel located at 3809 Steilacoom Boulevard SW, Lakewood,
Washington;
(i) The Parcel located at 1420 Industrial Way, Longview,
Washington;
(j) The Parcel located at 8405 State Avenue, Marysville,
Washington;
(k) The Parcel located at 610 E. North Bend Way, North Bend,
Washington;
(l) The Parcel located at 1625 Beavercreek Road, Oregon City,
Oregon;
(m) The Parcel located at 160 SE Bishop Boulevard, Pullman,
Washington;
(n) The Parcel located at 911 N 1st Street, Silverton, Oregon;
(o) The Parcel located at 711 Avenue D, Snohomish, Washington;
(p) The Parcel located at 16819 Pacific Avenue S, Spanaway,
Washington;
(q) The Parcel located at 8103 N Division Street, Spokane,
Washington;
(r) The Parcel located at 2420 NE Andresen Road, Vancouver,
Washington; and
(s) The Parcel located at 216 SE 118th Avenue, Vancouver,
Washington; where the Applicant is a party in interest with respect to
the Plan, provided that the conditions set forth in Section II of this
proposed exemption are met.
Section II. General Conditions
(a) The price paid by Les Schwab to the Plan for each Parcel is no
less than the fair market value of each Parcel
[[Page 67664]]
(exclusive of the buildings or other improvements paid for by Les
Schwab, to which Les Schwab retains title), as determined by qualified
independent appraisers (the Independent Appraisers), working for CBRE,
Inc., in separate appraisal reports (the Independent Appraisals) that
are updated on the date of each Sale.
(b) Each Sale is a one-time transaction for cash.
(c) The Plan does not pay any costs, including brokerage
commissions, fees, appraisal costs, or any other expenses associated
with each Sale.
(d) The Independent Appraisers determine the fair market value of
their assigned Parcel, on the date of the Sale, using commercially
accepted methods of valuation for unrelated third-party transactions,
taking into account the following considerations:
(1) The fact that a lease between Les Schwab and the Plan is a
ground lease and not a standard commercial lease;
(2) The assemblage value of the Parcel, where applicable;
(3) Any special or unique value the Parcel holds for Les Schwab;
and
(4) Any instructions from the qualified independent fiduciary (the
Independent Fiduciary) regarding the terms of the Sale, including the
extent to which the Independent Appraiser should consider the effect
that Les Schwab's option to purchase a Parcel would have on the fair
market value of the Parcel.
(e) The Independent Fiduciary represents the interests of the Plan
with respect to each Sale, and in doing so:
(1) Determines that it is prudent to go forward with each Sale;
(2) Approves the terms and conditions of each Sale;
(3) Reviews and approves the methodology used by the Independent
Appraiser and ensures that such methodology is properly applied in
determining the Parcel's fair market value on the date of each Sale;
(4) Reviews and approves the determination of the purchase price;
and
(5) Monitors each Sale throughout its duration on behalf of the
Plan for compliance with the general terms of the transaction and with
the conditions of this exemption, if granted, and takes any appropriate
actions to safeguard the interests of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries.
(f) The terms and conditions of each Sale are at least as favorable
to the Plan as those obtainable in an arm's length transaction with an
unrelated party.
Notice to Interested Parties
The persons who may be interested in the publication in the Federal
Register of the Notice of Proposed Exemption (the Notice) include all
individuals who are participants and beneficiaries in the Plan. It is
represented that all such interested persons will be notified of the
publication of the Notice by first class mail to each such interested
person's last known address within fifteen (15) days of publication of
the Notice in the Federal Register. Such mailing will contain a copy of
the Notice, as it appears in the Federal Register on the date of
publication, plus a copy of the Supplemental Statement, as required,
pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2), which will advise all interested
persons of their right to comment on and/or to request a hearing. All
written comments or hearing requests must be received by the Department
from interested persons within forty-five (45) days of the publication
of this proposed exemption in the Federal Register.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Scott Ness of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8561. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Seventy Seven Energy Inc. Retirement & Savings Plan, (the Plan or the
Applicant), Located in Oklahoma City, OK, [Application No. D-11918].
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act (or ERISA) and section
4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in accordance with the procedures set forth
in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76 FR 46637, 66644, October 27, 2011).
If the exemption is granted, the restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(E),
406(a)(2),and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act shall not apply, effective August
1, 2016 through April 20, 2017, to: (1) The acquisition by participant
accounts in the Plan (the Plan Accounts) of warrants (the Warrants)
issued by Seventy Seven Energy, Inc. (SSE), the Plan sponsor, in
connection with SSE's bankruptcy; and (2) the holding of the Warrants
by the Plan, provided that certain conditions set forth below are met.
Summary of Facts and Representations
Background
1. SSE (or the Applicant) is an Oklahoma-based company that offers
drilling, pressure-pumping, oilfield rental tools and trucking
services. On June 30, 2014, SSE became an independent, publicly-traded
company by separating from Chesapeake Energy Corporation (CHK) in a
series of transactions (the Spin-Off). Prior to the Spin-Off, SSE was
an Oklahoma limited liability company operating under the name
``Chesapeake Oilfield Operating, L.L.C.'' (COO), and an indirect,
wholly-owned subsidiary of CHK. As a result of the Spin-Off,
approximately 5,200 employees of COO and its subsidiaries became
employees of SSE.
2. The Plan, which provides for participant-directed investments,
is a defined contribution plan that was created by SSE for the
exclusive benefit of SSE employee-participants and their beneficiaries,
as well as for SSE affiliates that have adopted the Plan. The Plan is
intended to qualify under sections 401(a), 401(k) and 4975(e)(7) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The trust created
under the Plan is intended to be exempt under section 501(a) of the
Code.
The Plan was established, effective July 1, 2014, as the result of
a spin-off from the Chesapeake Energy Corporation Savings and Incentive
Stock Bonus Plan (the CHK Plan.) At that time, $196,210,229 in assets
was transferred from the CHK Plan to the Plan. As of August 1, 2016,
the Plan had total assets of approximately $72,786,235 and 2,450
participants. On July 31, 2016, the Plan held 3,571,255 shares of SSE
common stock (Old SSE Common Stock) that was valued at $393,012.66, and
represented approximately 0.54% of the fair market value of the assets
of the Plan. The shares of Old SSE Common Stock were allocated to the
individual accounts (Plan Accounts) of 2,228 participants and held in a
stock fund (the Stock Fund) within the Plan.\10\
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\10\ The Applicant represents that after 2015, SSE ceased making
employer matching contributions to the Plan of Old SSE Common Stock
due to the financial condition of SSE.
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The Plan's directed trustee (the Trustee) and recordkeeper is
Delaware Charter Guarantee & Trust Company of Wilmington, Delaware,
which conducts business under the trade name ``Principal Trust
Company.''
3. SSE's Administrative Committee formerly served as the
administrator and
[[Page 67665]]
named fiduciary for the Plan. However, in connection with the merger
(the Merger) of SSE with Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc. (Patterson-UTI) and
Pyramid Merger Sub, Inc. (Merger Sub), effective as of April 20, 2017,
the Plan administrator and named fiduciary was changed to the Seventy
Seven Energy LLC 401(k) Plan Committee (the Committee).
The Reorganization Plan
4. On May 9, 2016, SSE and all of its wholly-owned subsidiaries
entered into an Amended and Restated Restructuring Support Agreement
with certain lenders, which set forth a ``pre-packaged'' or pre-
negotiated plan of reorganization (the Reorganization Plan). Also, on
this date, SSE started soliciting creditors.
On May 12, 2016, the Reorganization Plan was revised and executed
to add certain noteholders as signatories and to provide the
noteholders with nominal concessions. On June 7, 2016, the revised
Reorganization Plan, was filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District Court of Delaware (the Bankruptcy Court), under Chapter 11 of
Title I of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (the Bankruptcy Code).\11\ After
the Reorganization Plan was accepted by a sufficient number of
creditors and was confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court during the Chapter
11 cases, a reorganized SSE emerged from bankruptcy on August 1, 2016
(the Emergence Date).\12\
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\11\ The Applicant represents that none of the changes between
the May 9, 2016 and May 12, 2016 versions of the Reorganization Plan
had any effect on the terms of the Warrants.
\12\ The Applicant represents that the Old SSE Common Stock was
able to be traded until the Emergence Date. In addition, the
Applicant confirms that the Trustee and Plan participants were able
to trade the Old SSE Common Stock in their accounts up until the
Emergence Date when the stock was replaced by the Warrants.
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The Warrants
5. On the Emergence Date, the Warrants were issued to SSE
shareholders, including the Plan Accounts, in accordance with the
Reorganization Plan by Computershare Inc. (Computershare), a Delaware
corporation, and its wholly-owned subsidiary, Computershare Trust
Company, N.A., a federally-chartered trust company (CTS), both of which
served in the capacity as the ``Warrant Agent.'' (Neither Computershare
nor CTS is affiliated with SSE.)
The Warrants were: (a) Registered pursuant to Section 12(g) the
U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act), and the rules
and regulations promulgated thereunder; and (b) exempt from
registration under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
pursuant to Section 1145 of the Bankruptcy Code.
Neither the Trustee nor SSE's Administrative Committee had any
involvement with the bankruptcy proceedings or the decision to issue
the 5-year Warrants (the Series B Warrants) and the 7-year warrants
(the Series C Warrants) to shareholders in connection with the
emergence of SSE from bankruptcy. The Plan was in the same position as
the other holders of Old SSE Common Stock. Thus the Warrants were
issued to the Plan Accounts on the same basis that they were issued to
all other shareholders of Old SSE Common Stock.
6. Each shareholder of Old SSE Common Stock received 0.05004 5-Year
Warrants (the Series B Warrants) and 0.05560 7-Year Warrants (the
Series C Warrants), to replace their shares of Old SSE Common Stock.
Accordingly, 2,875,814 Series B Warrants and 3,195,352 Series C
Warrants were distributed to all shareholders of Old SSE Common Stock
as of the Emergence Date, with 178,703 of the Series B Warrants and
198,560 of the Series C Warrants received by the Plan with respect to
2,230 Plan participants. The Trustee allocated the Warrants to the Plan
Accounts based upon the share positions held by the Accounts of Old SSE
Common Stock within the Stock Fund. The Applicant states that Plan
participants were not allowed by the Trustee to purchase additional
Warrants, as there was no market for the Warrants.
Under the Warrant Agreement, each shareholder of Old SSE Common
Stock, including the Plan's Stock Fund, received a pro rata share of
Series B Warrants and Series C Warrants to replace Old SSE Common Stock
prior to the Emergence Date. The Warrants could be exercised for post-
emergence common stock of SSE (New SSE Common Stock). Based on the
number of Warrants issued by the reorganized SSE, each Series B Warrant
and each Series C Warrant could be exercised for one share of New SSE
Common Stock, having a par value $0.01 per share, at an exercise price
of $69.08 per share for each Series B Warrant, and $86.93 per share for
each Series C Warrant. The Warrants could be exercised during the
period beginning on the date of the Warrant Agreement and ending on the
five-year or seven-year anniversary of the date of the Warrant
Agreement.
7. Upon the exercise of a Warrant, SSE would not be required to
issue any fractional shares of New SSE Common Stock. Instead, SSE would
be required to round up to the nearest whole share the number of shares
of New SSE Common Stock designated in the applicable Exercise Notice.
The Warrant Agreement provided that payment of the exercise price could
be made at the option of the holder of the Warrants either: (a) Through
a net share settlement; or (b) by paying or submitting payment for the
exercise price.\13\
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\13\ Following the Emergence Date, the Applicant states that SSE
and the Trustee were working together to set up a system and
procedures to facilitate the exercise or sale of the Warrants.
However, the Applicant states that these procedures were not
finalized prior to the Merger of SSE with Patterson-UTI. The
Applicant states that upon the closing of the Merger on April 20,
2017 (the Merger Date), all of the Warrants were cancelled,
rendering the completion of the system and procedures for exercising
and/or selling the Warrants moot. However, the Applicant states that
it is its understanding that at all times during the period that the
Warrants were held by the Plan (from the Emergence Date to the
Merger Date), both classes of Warrants (the Series B Warrants and
the Series C Warrants) held by the Plan were underwater. Thus, the
Applicant states that none of the Warrants would have been exercised
from a practical standpoint.
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8. According to the Applicant, the Warrants could be sold,
assigned, transferred, pledged, encumbered, or in any other manner
transferred or disposed of, in whole or in party in accordance with the
terms of the Warrant Agreement and all applicable laws. In this regard,
the Applicant represents that the Plan had the right to sell the
Warrants allocated to the Plan Accounts at any time prior to the
Warrants' expiration date, in the same manner as other holders of the
Warrants.
All decisions regarding the exercise or sale of the Warrants
acquired by the Plan Accounts in connection with the Reorganization
Plan could be made only by the individual Plan participants in whose
Accounts the Warrants were allocated, in accordance with the terms of
the Warrant Agreement, as well as in accordance with the respective
provisions of the Plan and the regulations pertaining to the
individually-directed investment of such accounts. According to the
Applicant, if no action was taken by a Plan participant to exercise or
sell the Warrants, then the Warrants would expire at the end of their
respective term.
9. The Warrants were described to Plan participants in frequently-
asked questions (FAQs) regarding the Reorganization Plan, which the
Applicant states were posted to SSE's website on or about May 18, 2016,
and taken down from the website on or before October 1, 2016. The
Applicant represents that SSE's CEO sent an initial
[[Page 67666]]
email to all employees with a link to the FAQs on or about May 18,
2016, followed by a second email with a link to updated FAQs on or
about August 1, 2016.
According to the Applicant, as of October 17, 2016, New SSE Common
Stock was not traded on a national securities exchange, but was instead
traded over-the-counter. Although the Bankruptcy Court authorized
22,000,000 shares of New SSE Common Stock to be issued under the
Reorganization Plan, former shareholders of Old SSE Common Stock
received Warrants, but they did not receive any shares of New SSE
Common Stock.
The Applicant also represents that the value of SSE as of the
Emergence Date was anticipated to be $345,000,000. However, based on
this projected market value, the Applicant states that the imputed fair
market value per share of New SSE Common Stock was only approximately
$15.68 per share.\14\ Therefore, the Applicant represents that as of
October 17, 2016, the Warrants were ``underwater.''
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\14\ The Applicant states that New SSE Common Stock was not
traded on an exchange on October 17, 2016 and so the Applicant has
no market price for the stock on that date. The Applicant is not
aware that a specific value was calculated for SSE as of the
Emergence Date. As a result, the Applicant provided an imputed value
based on the anticipated value of SSE as of the Emergence Date,
which was intended to show that the warrants were underwater.
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The Merger
10. On December 12, 2016, SSE entered into an Agreement and Plan of
Merger (the Merger Agreement) with Patterson-UTI and Merger Sub. The
Merger was effective on April 20, 2017 (the Merger Date). Pursuant to
the Merger Agreement, the Warrants were treated in accordance with the
terms of the Warrant Agreement. Holders of the Warrants were provided a
notice of the merger at least fifteen days prior to the effective time
of the Merger. Any Warrants that were not exercised immediately prior
to the effective time of the Merger expired, and all rights of the
Warrant holders ceased.
The Merger's Effect on the Warrants
11. Because the Warrants were underwater, all Warrants expired
(unexercised) immediately prior to the Merger Date. The Applicant
represents that when the Committee decided to keep New SSE Common Stock
as an investment option under the Plan, knowing that New SSE Common
Stock would be converted into Warrants, the Committee was of the view
that this was in the participants' interest as it potentially allowed
the participants to participate in the appreciation of New SSE Common
Stock. While ultimately this potential was not realized, the Applicant
does not believe that this result should be considered in hindsight.
In this regard, the Applicant represents that SSE and the Trustee
set up a system and procedures to facilitate the exercise of the
Warrants or the sale of the Warrants (if the Warrants had become listed
on a market, which they were not). However, these plans were not
finalized prior to the announcement of the Merger with Patterson-UTI
because, upon closing of the Merger on April 20, 2017, the Warrants
were cancelled.
Merger-Related Litigation
12. According to the Applicant, several SSE shareholder and Warrant
holder plaintiffs filed class action lawsuits against SSE in connection
with the Merger.\15\
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\15\ See Maria Comeaux et al. v. Seventy Seven Energy, Inc. et
al., Case No. CIV-5:17-191M, U.S. District Court for the Western
District of Oklahoma; Garud Sudarsan et al. v. Seventy Seven Energy,
Inc. et al. Case No. 1:17-cv-02342, U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York; Mainard Gael et al. v. Seventy Seven
Energy, Inc. et al., Case No. 2017-0266, Court of Chancery of the
State of Delaware; Louis Scarantino et al. v. Seventy Seven Energy,
Inc. et al., Case No. 2017-0278, Court of Chancery of the State of
Delaware; and, Kathleen J. Myers v. Administrative Committee,
Seventy Seven Energy, Inc. Retirement and Savings Plan, et al., Case
No. CIV-17-200-D, United States District Court for the Western
District of Oklahoma.
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In this regard,
On February 22, 2017, an SSE shareholder challenged the
disclosures made in connection with the Merger against SSE and the
members of SSE's Board of Directors (the Board) in the United States
District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma (the Oklahoma
District Court), and alleged inadequacies in the Merger price, the
process leading up to it, and claimed that the Joint Proxy
Statement/Prospectus filed in connection with the merger failed to
disclose certain material information. Based on these allegations,
the shareholder sought to enjoin the shareholder vote on the Merger
unless and until SSE disclosed the allegedly omitted material
information summarized above. On February 26, 2018, the Oklahoma
District Court entered an order awarding the shareholder's counsel
$128,354.50 in attorneys' fees and expenses. The parties
subsequently settled for an amount less than the Oklahoma District
Court's award.
On March 31, 2017, a shareholder of Series B and Series
C Warrants, filed a class action lawsuit against SSE, Patterson-UTI
and Merger Sub in the U. S. District Court for the Southern District
of New York (the New York District Court), alleging: (a) That SSE
had breached the Warrant Agreement; and (b) tortious interference
with the Warrant Agreement by Patterson-UTI and Merger Sub. Based on
these allegations, the Warrant holder sought to enjoin the
cancelation of SSE's Series A, Series B, and Series C Warrants in
connection with the proposed Merger on February 6, 2018. The New
York District Court dismissed the Warrant holder's complaint and
struck the Warrant holder's amended complaint. On March 6, 2018,
Warrant holder filed a notice of appeal of the dismissal. According
to the Applicant, the parties have reached an agreement to resolve
the matter and are working to prepare and finalize a formal
settlement agreement.
On April 7, 2017, an SSE shareholder filed a class
action lawsuit challenging the disclosures made in connection with
the Merger against SSE and the members of SSE's Board. The lawsuit
in was filed in the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware (the
Delaware Chancery Court), and alleged that SSE's Board had breached
its fiduciary duties by failing to disclose in the Joint Proxy
Statement/Prospectus filed in connection with the merger certain
material information. Based on these allegations, the Warrant holder
sought to enjoin damages if the Merger was consummated. On July 20,
2017, the Warrant holder filed a notice and proposed order
voluntarily dismissing the action, and on July 21, 2017, the
Delaware Chancery Court signed the order dismissing the action.
On April 10, 2017, an SSE shareholder filed a class
action lawsuit, challenging the disclosures made in connection with
the Merger against SSE, the members of SSE's Board, Patterson-UTI,
and Merger Sub in the Delaware Chancery Court. On July 20, 2017, the
shareholder filed a notice and proposed order voluntarily dismissing
the action, and on July 21, 2017, the Delaware Chancery Court
dismissed the action.
On February 24, 2017, an SSE shareholder filed a class
action lawsuit on behalf of herself and others, alleging that the
Plan's investment in, or retention of, a stock fund invested in CHK
stock amounted to a breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. On June
26, 2017, defendants, representing SSE's Administrative Committee
and the Trustee filed respective motions to dismiss the
shareholder's complaint for failure to state a claim and the motions
have been fully briefed. As of this time, the parties are awaiting
the Court's decision on the defendants' motions to dismiss.
Analysis
13. The Applicant has requested retroactive exemptive relief that
is effective for the period, August 1, 2016 through April 20, 2017,
from sections 406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act.\16\
Section 406(a)(1)(E) of the Act prohibits the acquisition, on behalf of
a plan, of any ``employer security in violation of section 407(a) of
the Act.''
[[Page 67667]]
Section 406(a)(2) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary who has authority or
discretion to control or manage the assets of a plan to permit the plan
to hold any ``employer security'' that violates section 407(a) of the
Act. Section 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act provides that a plan may not
acquire or hold an ``employer security'' which is not a ``qualifying
employer security.'' Therefore, the acquisition and holding by the Plan
Accounts of the Warrants constitute prohibited transactions in
violation of the Act.
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\16\ The Applicant states that, although the Warrants constitute
``employer securities,'' as defined under section 407(d)(1) of the
Act, they do not satisfy the definition of ``qualifying employer
securities'' as defined under section 407(d)(5) of the Act because
they are not ``stock,'' ``marketable securities,'' or ``interests in
a publicly-traded partnership.''
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Statutory Findings
14. SSE represents the proposed exemption is administratively
feasible because Old SSE Common Stock held by the Plan was
automatically converted into the Warrants. In addition, SSE represents
that the proposed exemption is in the interests of the Plan and
participants because the Plan held shares of Old SSE Common Stock on
the date the Warrants were issued pursuant to the Reorganization Plan.
Therefore, SSE represents that the Plan acquired the Warrants
automatically in the same manner as all other shareholders of Old SSE
Common Stock. SSE also states that neither the Plan nor the Plan's
fiduciaries took any action to cause the shares of Old SSE Common Stock
to be replaced with the Warrants and were not part of, and did not
participate in, the bankruptcy process or the Reorganization Plan.
SSE represents that the exemption is protective of the rights of
the Plan participants because: (a) The issuance of the Warrants, which
was the result of the Reorganization Plan, occurred without any
participation on the part of the Plan; (b) Plan participants were
treated similarly to all other holders of Old SSE Common Stock under
the Reorganization Plan; (c) the Trustee did not allow Plan
participants to exercise the Warrants held by their Plan Accounts
because the fair market value of New SSE Common Stock did not, at any
time prior to the date that the Warrants expired, exceed the exercise
price of the Warrants; and (d) the Plan did not pay any fees or
commissions with respect to the acquisition or holding of the Warrants.
Summary
15. Given the conditions described below, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements for an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act.
Proposed Exemption Operative Language
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Act (or ERISA) and section
4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in accordance with the procedures set forth
in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76 FR 46637, 66644, October 27, 2011).
If the exemption is granted, the restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(E),
406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act shall not apply, effective
August 1, 2016 through April 20, 2017, to: (1) The acquisition by
participant-directed accounts (the Accounts) in the Plan of certain
warrants (the Warrants), issued by Seventy Seven Energy, Inc. (SSE),
the Plan sponsor, in connection with SSE's bankruptcy; and (2) the
holding of the Warrants by the Plan, provided that the following
conditions were or would have been met:
(a) The Plan acquired the Warrants automatically in connection with
the Reorganization Plan, under which all holders of Old SSE Common
Stock, including the Plan, were treated in the same manner;
(b) The Plan acquired the Warrants without any unilateral action on
its part;
(c) The Plan did not pay any fees or commissions in connection with
the acquisition or holding of the Warrants;
(d) Had the Warrants not expired unexercised, all decisions
regarding the exercise or sale of the Warrants acquired by the Plan
would have been made by the Plan participants in whose Plan Accounts
the Warrants were allocated, in accordance with the terms of the
Warrant Agreement and in accordance with the Plan provisions and
regulations pertaining to the individually-directed investment of the
Plan Accounts; and
(e) The Plan trustee did not allow Plan participants to exercise
the Warrants held by their Plan Accounts because the fair market value
of New SSE Common Stock did not, at any time prior to the date that the
Warrants expired, exceed the exercise price of the Warrants.
Effective Date: If granted, this proposed exemption will be
effective as of August 1, 2016 through April 20, 2017.
Notice to Interested Persons
SSE will provide notice of the proposed exemption to all interested
persons, including all participants in the Plan, former employees with
vested account balances in the Plan, all retirees and beneficiaries
currently receiving benefits from the Plan, all employers with
employees participating in the Plan, all unions with members
participating in the Plan (of which there are none), and all Plan
fiduciaries, by first class mail, within 10 days of the date of
publication of the notice of proposed exemption in the Federal
Register. The notice will include a copy of the proposed exemption, as
published in the Federal Register, and a supplemental statement, as
required pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(b)(2), which will inform interested
persons of their right to comment with respect to the proposed
exemption. Comments regarding the proposed exemption are due within 40
days of the date of publication of the notice of pendency in the
Federal Register. All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but do not submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as social security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Anna Mpras Vaughan of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8565. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Tidewater Savings and Retirement Plan (the Plan), Located in New
Orleans, LA, [Application No. D-11940].
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended, (ERISA or the Act) and section 4975(c)(2) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B
(76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011). If the proposed exemption is
granted, the restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and
407(a)(1)(A) of the Act will not apply, effective July 31, 2017, to:
(1) The acquisition, by certain participant-directed accounts (the
Accounts) in the Plan, of Series A Warrants and Series B Warrants
(together, the Equity Warrants), issued by Tidewater Inc., the Plan
sponsor and a party in interest with respect to the Plan; and (2) the
holding of the Equity Warrants by the Accounts, provided the conditions
set forth below in Section I are met.
[[Page 67668]]
Summary of Facts and Representations \17\
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\17\ The Summary of Facts and Representations is based on the
Applicant's representations, unless indicated otherwise.
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Background
1. Tidewater (the Applicant) is a publicly-traded international
petroleum service company headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Tidewater operates a fleet of ships, providing vessels and marine
services to the offshore petroleum industry.
2. Tidewater sponsors the Plan, a defined contribution profit-
sharing plan with approximately 565 participants and $89,496,494 total
assets, as of March 31, 2018. Generally, all employees are eligible to
make employee pre-tax contributions to the Plan and receive matching
contributions. Prior to January 1, 2016, the matching contributions
were in Tidewater common stock.
3. Bank of America, N.A. serves as the directed trustee of the
Plan. The Plan is administered by the Employee Benefits Committee (the
Committee), whose eight members are appointed by Tidewater. The
Committee members are also Tidewater officers.
Tidewater's Bankruptcy and Plan of Reorganization
4. On May 11, 2017, Tidewater reached an agreement with certain of
its creditors to support a restructuring under the terms of a
prepackaged plan of reorganization. On May 12, 2017, Tidewater provided
notice to Plan participants and employees in the form of memoranda
explaining Tidewater's Restructuring Support Agreement with lenders and
noteholders.
On May 17, 2017, Tidewater and certain subsidiaries filed voluntary
petitions for reorganization in the United States Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Delaware (the Bankruptcy Court) seeking relief under
the provisions of Chapter 11 of Title 11 of the United States Code (the
Bankruptcy Cases).
On July 17, 2017, the Bankruptcy Court issued a written order (the
Confirmation Order) confirming the Second Amended Joint Prepackaged
Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization of the Affiliated Debtors (the
Prepackaged Plan). On July 31, 2017 (the Effective Date), the
Prepackaged Plan became effective in accordance with its terms and
Tidewater emerged from the Bankruptcy Cases.
5. As of the Effective Date, all shares of Tidewater's pre-
bankruptcy common stock (the Old Common Stock) were cancelled, and
those stockholders of Tidewater received, in the aggregate, 1.5 million
shares of the New Common Stock, which represented 5% of the pro forma
common equity in the reorganized Tidewater. In addition, holders of the
Old Common Stock received approximately: 0.0516 Series A Warrants for
each share of the Old Common Stock the shareholder previously owned,
and 0.0558 Series B Warrants for each share of the Old Common Stock the
shareholder previously owned. Further, the Series A Warrants and the
Series B Warrants entitled each shareholder to purchase one share of
the New Common Stock for $57.06 and $62.28, respectively. Unless
terminated earlier, each Equity Warrant has a six year duration.
Effect of the Prepackaged Plan on the Plan
6. The Applicant represents that on June 30, 2017, Plan
participants held approximately 277,716 shares of the Old Common Stock.
On July 31, 2017, when Tidewater emerged from bankruptcy, these shares
were cancelled and, in consideration, Plan participants received
approximately 8,800 shares of the New Common Stock and approximately
29,800 Equity Warrants to purchase additional shares of the New Common
Stock. The New Common Stock and the Equity Warrants, which are traded
on the New York Stock Exchange (the NYSE), were held in the Plan's
trust (the Trust), and managed by Bank of America Merrill Lynch
(Merrill Lynch), an unrelated party.
Sale of the Equity Warrants
7. The Applicant represents that the Committee met on multiple
occasions to monitor the Equity Warrants. On November 1, 2017,
Committee members proposed that it would be prudent to direct Merrill
Lynch to liquidate the Equity Warrants held by the Plan. Each sale
transaction would be for cash, and no sale would enrich the Plan
fiduciaries. As structured by the Committee, the sale of the Equity
Warrants would be for no less than the fair market value of the Equity
Warrants as traded on the NYSE. Also, Plan participants would not be
charged a commission or fee in connection with the sales. Further, the
Committee would authorize the sale of the Equity Warrants through the
Merrill Lynch trading desk.\18\
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\18\ The Applicant represents that the services provided by
Merrill Lynch in connection with the sale of the Equity Warrants
would be exempt under section 408(b)(2) of the Act. However, the
Department is not opining on whether the conditions, as set forth in
section 408(b)(2) of the Act and the Department's regulations,
pursuant to 29 CFR 2550.408(b)(2) were satisfied. In addition, the
Department is not providing exemptive relief in connection with the
sale of the Equity Warrants in blind transactions to unrelated
parties in open market transactions on the NYSE beyond that provided
under section 408(b)(2) and 29 CFR 2550.408(b)(2).
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8. The Applicant represents that Plan participants received notice,
dated November 7, 2017, regarding the Committee's decision to sell the
Equity Warrants. Plan participants were informed that: (a) Derivative
investments, like the Equity Warrants, were not typically part of a
retirement plan's holdings; and (b) these investments only had a value
for a specified period of time (i.e., six years in the case of the
Equity Warrants). Plan participants were also informed that the
Committee had elected to sell the Equity Warrants on the NYSE in three
tranches over a six month period to minimize the impact on the market
price of these securities. Plan participants were told that the sale
proceeds would be reinvested in their individual accounts under the
Plan (the Plan Accounts), with the cash invested in accordance with the
Plan participant's current investment allocation.
With the exception of those Plan participants who were reporting
persons under SEC Rule 16(b), Plan participants could elect to sell
their Equity Warrants at any time by contacting a Merrill Lynch
representative or direct the investment change at the Plan's website.
The sale of Equity Warrants was not restricted to the six month period
(November 9, 2017 to May 9, 2018), but participants were told that the
positions would be liquidated in lots by the end of the six month time
frame. According to the Applicant, twenty Plan participants sold a
total of 116.001 Equity Warrants between August 24, 2017 and April 25,
2018, for an aggregate sales price of $323.81 and $240.88,
respectively. The final tranche of the Equity Warrants was sold on May
11, 14, and 15, 2018.
Exemptive Relief Requested/Analysis
9. The Applicant has requested retroactive exemptive relief that is
effective as of July 31, 2017, the date the Plan Accounts acquired the
Equity Warrants, and requests exemptive relief from sections
406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and 407(a)(1)(A) of the Act.\19\ Section
406(a)(1)(E) of the Act prohibits the
[[Page 67669]]
acquisition, on behalf of a plan, of any ``employer security in
violation of section 407(a) of the Act.'' Section 406(a)(2) of the Act
prohibits a fiduciary who has authority or discretion to control or
manage the assets of a plan to permit the plan to hold any ``employer
security'' that violates section 407(a) of the Act. Section
407(a)(1)(A) of the Act provides that a plan may not acquire or hold an
``employer security'' which is not a ``qualifying employer security.''
Therefore, the acquisition and holding by the Plan Accounts of the
Equity Warrants constitute prohibited transactions in violation of the
Act.\20\
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\19\ The Applicant states that, although the Equity Warrants
constitute ``employer securities,'' as defined under section
407(d)(1) of the Act, they do not satisfy the definition of
``qualifying employer securities'' as defined under section
407(d)(5) of the Act because they are not ``stock,'' ``marketable
securities,'' or ``interests in a publicly-traded partnership.''
\20\ The Applicant represents that the receipt, by the Plan
Accounts, of the New Common Stock from Tidewater as the result of
the cancellation of the Plan's shares of the Old Common Stock is
covered by the statutory exemption under section 408(e) of the Act.
The Department is not expressing an opinion herein on whether the
acquisition by the Plan Accounts of New Common Stock is statutorily
exempt under section 408(e) of the Act.
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Statutory Findings
10. The Applicant represents that the proposed exemption with
respect to the Equity Warrants is administratively feasible because all
shareholders of Tidewater, Inc., including the Plan, were, and will be
treated in the same manner with respect to any acquisition, holding and
exercise or other disposition of the Equity Warrants.
11. The Applicant represents that the proposed exemption is in the
interests of the Plan and participants because: (a) Plan participants
were treated in the same manner as other stockholders; (b) Plan
participants could acquire shares of the New Common Stock for their
Plan Accounts by exercising their purchase rights under the Equity
Warrants; (c) Plan participants could direct Merrill Lynch to sell the
Equity Warrants, at any time on the NYSE; and (d) Plan participants
were notified when the Committee approved the sale of the Equity
Warrants.
12. The Applicant represents that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of Plan participants and beneficiaries because
the Equity Warrants could be sold by Merrill Lynch on the NYSE, at the
direction of either the Plan participants or the Committee. Further,
the Applicant represents that the Plan did not pay any fees or
commissions with respect to the acquisition or holding of the Equity
Warrants.
Summary
13. Given the conditions described below, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements for an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act.
Proposed Exemption Operative Language
Section I. Covered Transactions
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended, (ERISA or the Act) and section 4975(c)(2) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B
(76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011). If the proposed exemption is
granted, the restrictions of sections 406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2), and
407(a)(1)(A) of the Act will not apply, effective July 31, 2017, to:
(1) The acquisition in the Tidewater Savings and Retirement Plan (the
Plan), by the participant-directed accounts (the Accounts) of certain
participants, of Series A Warrants and Series B Warrants (collectively,
the Equity Warrants) of Tidewater, Inc. (Tidewater), the Plan sponsor
and a party in interest with respect to the Plan; and (2) the holding
of the Equity Warrants by the Accounts, provided that the conditions
set forth in Section II below are or were satisfied.
Section II. Conditions for Relief
(a) The acquisition of the Equity Warrants by the Accounts of Plan
participants occurred in connection with Tidewater's bankruptcy
proceeding;
(b) The Equity Warrants were acquired pursuant to, and in
accordance with, provisions under the Plan for individually-directed
investments of the Accounts by the individual participants in the Plan,
a portion of whose Accounts in the Plan held shares of old Tidewater
common stock (the Old Common Stock);
(c) Each shareholder of the Old Common Stock, including each
Account of an affected Plan participant, was issued the same
proportionate shares of the Equity Warrants based on the number of
shares of the Old Common Stock held by the shareholder as of July 31,
2017;
(d) All holders of the Equity Warrants, including the Accounts,
were treated in a like manner;
(e) The decisions with regard to the acquisition, holding or
disposition of the Equity Warrants by an Account were made by each Plan
participant whose Account received the Equity Warrants;
(f) The Accounts did not pay any brokerage fees, commissions, or
other fees or expenses to any related broker in connection with the
acquisition and holding of the Equity Warrants, nor did the Accounts
pay any brokerage fees or commissions in connection with the sale of
the Equity Warrants;
(g) Each sale transaction involving the Equity Warrants was for
cash, and no sale would enrich the Plan fiduciaries;
(h) Plan participants could: (1) Acquire shares of the New Common
Stock for their Plan Accounts by exercising their purchase rights under
the Equity Warrants; or (2) direct Merrill Lynch to sell the Equity
Warrants held in their Accounts, at any time; and
(i) Plan participants were notified when the Committee approved the
sale of the Equity Warrants.
Effective Date: This proposed exemption, if granted, will be
effective for the period beginning July 31, 2017, and ending whenever
the Equity Warrants are exercised by Plan participants or they expire.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemption (the Notice) will be provided by
Tidewater to interested persons within fifteen (15) days of publication
in the Federal Register. Tidewater will provide the Notice to Plan
participants who are affected by the cancellation of the Old Common
Stock and the issuance of the New Common Stock and the Equity Warrants.
The Notice will be provided to Plan participants by: (1) First class
U.S. mail to the last known address of these individuals, or (2)
electronic delivery to each shipping vessel Tidewater operates and
posting on bulletin boards. The Notice will contain a copy of the
Notice, as published in the Federal Register, and a supplemental
statement, as required pursuant to 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on and to request a hearing with respect to the pending
exemption. Written comments and hearing requests are due within forty-
five (45) days of the publication of the Notice in the Federal
Register. All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: Do not include any personally identifiable information
(such as name, address, or other contact information) or confidential
business information that you do not want publicly disclosed. All
comments may be posted on the internet and can be retrieved by most
internet search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8567. (This is not a toll-free number.)
[[Page 67670]]
Principal Life Insurance Company (PLIC) and its Affiliates
(collectively, Principal or the Applicant), Located in Des Moines, IA,
[Application No. D-11947].
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA or the Act) and section 4975(c)(2) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B
(76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).\21\ If the proposed exemption
is granted, the restrictions of sections 406(a)(l)(D), 406(b)(l), and
section 406(b)(2) of the Act and the sanctions resulting from the
application of section 4975 of the Code by reason of section
4975(c)(l)(D) and (E) of the Code, shall not apply, to the direct or
indirect acquisition, holding, and disposition of common stock issued
by Principal Financial Group, Inc. (PFG), and/or common stock issued by
an affiliate of PFG (together, the Principal Stock), by index funds
(Index Funds) and model-driven funds (Model-Driven Funds) that are
managed by PLIC, an indirectly wholly-owned subsidiary of PFG, or an
affiliate of PLIC (collectively, Principal), in which client plans of
Principal invest, provided that the conditions in Sections II and III
are met.
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\21\ For purposes of this proposed exemption, references to the
provisions of section 406 of Title I of the Act, unless otherwise
specified, should be read to refer as well to the corresponding
provisions of section 4975 of the Code.
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Summary of Facts and Representations
The Parties
1. PLIC is an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of PFG. As a stock
life insurance company domiciled in Iowa, PLIC provides recordkeeping,
administrative, and investment management services to plans.
2. PFG is a publicly-traded company that is incorporated in
Delaware. PFG offers businesses, individuals, and institutional clients
a wide range of financial products and services, including retirement,
asset management, and insurance through a diverse family of financial
services companies. As of December 31, 2017, PFG had $669 billion in
total assets under management and 22.8 million customers, worldwide.
The Funds
3. Principal maintains, or may in the future maintain, insurance
company separate accounts, separately-managed accounts, collective
trusts, or other investment funds, accounts, or portfolios that: (a)
Will hold plan assets, as defined in section 3(42) of the Act and 29
CFR 2510.3-101; and (b) are designed to track a Standard & Poor's (S&P)
or other third-party index (the Index Funds). Principal manages, or
will manage, the Index Funds' assets as a fiduciary under the Act.
The Index Funds currently managed by Principal include three pooled
insurance company separate accounts that directly invest in equity
securities that mirror, and replicate the investment performance of,
Indexes maintained by S&P. The Index Funds presently consist of: (a)
The Principal LargeCap S&P 500 Index Separate Account (the LargeCap
Separate Account); (b) the Principal MidCap S&P 400 Index Separate
Account (the MidCap Separate Account); and (c) the Principal SmallCap
S&P 600 Index Separate Account (the SmallCap Separate Account). The
Index Funds also include the Principal Total Market Stock Index
Separate Account (the Total Market Separate Account), a pooled
insurance company separate account that mirrors and replicates the
investment performance of the S&P Supercomposite 1500 Index by
investing in the LargeCap Separate Account, the Mid-Cap Separate
Account, and the SmallCap Separate Account.
As of July 31, 2017, 20,632 plans participated in the Large Cap
Separate Account; 14,839 plans participated in the Mid-Cap Separate
Account; 15,901 plans participated in the SmallCap Separate Account;
and 522 plans participated in the Total Market Separate Account. Also,
as of July 31, 2017, the total plan assets invested in the Index Funds
were as follows: The Large Cap Separate Account--$20,016,535,718; the
Mid-Cap Separate Account--$5,559,742,215; the SmallCap Separate
Account--$4,293,584,718; and the Total Market Separate Account--
$122,178,926.
The Index Funds are managed by PLIC. The LargeCap Separate Account,
the MidCap Separate Account and the SmallCap Separate Account are
subadvised by Principal Global Investors LLC, an affiliate. The Total
Market Separate Account is subadvised by Principal Financial Advisors,
Inc., another affiliate.
4. According to the Applicant, Principal may, in the future,
maintain insurance company separate accounts, separately-managed
accounts, collective trusts, or other investment funds, accounts, or
portfolios that hold plan assets. These investment vehicles are
designed to invest in securities, of which the identity and the amount
would be determined by a computer model that is based on prescribed,
objective criteria using independent, third-party data to transform an
independently-maintained index that would not be within Principal's
control (the Model-Driven Funds). The Applicant represents that
Principal would manage the assets of the Model-Driven Funds as a
fiduciary under the Act.\22\
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\22\ Unless otherwise noted, the Index Funds and the Model-
Driven Funds are collectively referred to herein as ``the Funds.''
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Investing in Principal Stock
5. Although PFG Stock is included in the S&P 500 Index, the
LargeCap Separate Account does not currently hold any PFG Stock.
However, the Applicant represents that it intends to invest the
LargeCap Separate Account in PFG Stock to track the performance of the
S&P 500 Index more closely. The Applicant states that, if the S&P were
to remove PFG Stock from the S&P 500 Index and include it in the S&P
400 Index or the S&P 600 Index, PLIC would invest the corresponding
Index Fund in PFG Stock.
6. The Applicant represents that the Total Market Separate Account
does not indirectly hold any PFG Stock through the Total Market
Account's investments in the three underlying separate accounts: The
LargeCap Separate Account, the MidCap Separate Account, and the
SmallCap Separate Account. However, the Applicant states, if one of the
underlying Index Funds were to hold PFG Stock, the Total Market
Separate Account would indirectly hold PFG Stock.
In addition, the Applicant represents that if Principal establishes
a new Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund, and if PFG Stock or the stock of
an affiliate of PFG (collectively, Principal Stock) is included in the
relevant Index, Principal intends to invest the assets of the Index
Fund or the Model-Driven Fund in Principal Stock. The Applicant states
that, similar to the Total Market Separate Account, a newly-established
Index Fund may indirectly invest in Principal Stock through another
Index Fund. Although only PFG Stock is currently publicly-traded, the
Applicant represents that Principal intends to invest both Index Funds
and Model-Driven Funds in the common stock of an affiliate of PFG, if
due to a corporate reorganization or other action, the common stock is
included in the relevant Index.
[[Page 67671]]
7. The Applicant represents that the acquisition or disposition of
Principal Stock will be for the sole purpose of maintaining strict
quantitative conformity with the Index upon which the Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund is based and not for the purpose of benefitting
Principal. Each Index must be, among other things, created and
maintained by an organization independent of Principal.
8. The Applicant represents that it intends to invest the LargeCap
Separate Account in PFG Stock in order to track more closely the
performance of the S&P 500 Index. The Applicant states that, if S&P
were to remove PFG Stock from the S&P 500 Index and include it in the
S&P 400 Index or the S&P 600 Index, PLIC would invest the corresponding
Index Fund in PFG Stock. The Applicant also states that the Total
Market Separate Account will indirectly invest in PFG Stock if one of
the Index Funds, in which the Total Market Account invests, were to
invest in PFG Stock. The Applicant further represents that, even though
currently the only Index Funds or Model-Driven Funds in existence are
those referenced above, and the only Principal Stock is PFG Stock, the
proposed exemption would cover: (a) Any future Index Fund that directly
or indirectly invests in any Principal Stock; and (b) any future Model-
Driven Fund that invests in any Principal Stock.
9. The Applicant represents that the proposed exemption is
necessary to allow Funds holding ``plan assets'' to purchase and hold
Principal Stock in order to replicate the capitalization-weighted or
other specified composition of Principal Stock in an independently-
maintained third-party index used by an Index Fund, or to achieve the
transformation of an Index used to create a portfolio for a Model-
Driven Fund.\23\ The Applicant represents that the inclusion or
exclusion of Principal Stock from an Index and the weighting or changes
to the weighting of Principal Stock in an Index are based on data,
criteria, and methodology determined by the organization that creates
and maintains the Index, which cannot be varied by PLIC. The Applicant
represents that changes in the weighting of Principal Stock in an Index
Fund or Model-Driven Fund would occur when there is a change in factors
underlying the applicable weighting methodology. Changes in Index
weightings are, for the most part, triggered by corporate actions, such
as buying back shares, issuing more shares or acquiring another company
for stock.
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\23\ The Applicant is not requesting any relief from sections
406 or 407(a) of the Act in connection of the acquisition and
holding of Principal Stock by any employee benefit plans established
and maintained by the Applicant or its affiliates for its own
employees that invest in Index Funds or Model-Driven Funds. In this
regard, these transactions are covered by the statutory exemption
under section 408(e) of the Act, if the conditions of this statutory
exemption are met.
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In addition, the Applicant represents that there will be instances,
once the proposed exemption is granted, when Principal Stock will be
added to an Index on which a Fund is based, or will be added to a Fund
portfolio which seeks to track an Index that includes Principal Stock.
In these instances, acquisitions of Principal Stock will be necessary
to bring the Fund's holdings of Principal Stock either to its
capitalization-weighted or other specified composition in the Index, as
determined by an independent organization maintaining the Index, or to
the correct weighting for the Stock, as determined by a computer model
that has been used to transform the Index. If the Index Fund or Model-
Driven Fund holds ``plan assets,'' all acquisitions of Principal Stock
by the Fund must comply with the ``Buy-up'' condition set forth in
Section II(b) of this proposed exemption.\24\
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\24\ The Applicant anticipates that, generally, acquisitions of
Principal Stock by an Index Fund or a Model-Driven Fund in a ``Buy-
up'' will occur within ten (10) business days from the date of the
event that causes the particular Fund to require the addition of
Principal Stock. The Applicant does not anticipate that the amounts
of Principal Stock acquired by any Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
in a ``Buy-up'' will be significant.
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Independent Fiduciary (Independent Fiduciary) Appointment
10. The Applicant states that, in the case of a Buy-up, if the
necessary number of shares of Principal Stock cannot be acquired within
ten (10) business days from the date of the event that causes the
particular Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund to require Principal Stock,
PLIC, or another affiliated fund manager (the Affiliated Fund Manager)
will appoint an Independent Fiduciary to design acquisition procedures
and monitor PLIC's, or the Affiliated Fund Manager's compliance with
these procedures. The Applicant represents that Institutional
Shareholder Services, Inc. (ISS) is expected to serve as the
Independent Fiduciary with respect to the transactions.
The Applicant represents that the Independent Fiduciary and its
principals will be completely independent from PLIC and its affiliates.
The Applicant represents that the Independent Fiduciary will be
experienced in developing and operating investment strategies for
individual and collective investment vehicles that track third-party
indices. Furthermore, the Applicant states that the Independent
Fiduciary will not act as the broker for any purchases or sales of
Principal Stock and will not receive any commissions as a result of
this initial acquisition program. The Applicant notes that the
Independent Fiduciary will have, as its primary goal, the development
of trading procedures that minimize the market impact of purchases made
pursuant to the initial acquisition program by the Index Funds or
Model-Driven Funds.
The Applicant represents that under the trading procedures
established by the Independent Fiduciary, the trading activities will
be conducted in a low-profile, mechanical, non-discretionary manner and
would involve a number of small purchases over the course of each day,
randomly timed. The Applicant also represents that this program will
allow PLIC, or other Affiliated Fund Manager, to acquire the necessary
shares of Principal Stock for the Index Funds or Model-Driven Funds
with minimum impact on the market, and in a manner that will be in the
best interests of any employee benefit plans that participate in these
Funds.
The Applicant represents that the Independent Fiduciary will also
be required to monitor PLIC's or other Affiliated Fund Manager's
compliance with the trading program and procedures developed for the
initial acquisition of Principal Stock.
The Applicant represents that, during the course of any initial
acquisition program, the Independent Fiduciary will be required to
review the activities weekly to determine compliance with the trading
procedures and notify PLIC, or other Affiliated Fund Manager, should
any non-compliance be detected. The Applicant represents that the
Independent Fiduciary must consult with PLIC, or other Affiliated Fund
Manager, and must approve in advance any alteration of the trading
procedures should the trading procedures need modifications due to
unforeseen events or consequences.
Future Fund Transactions
11. The Applicant represents that subsequent to initial
acquisitions pursuant to a Buy-up, all aggregate daily purchases of
Principal Stock by the Index Funds and Model-Driven Funds will not
exceed, on any particular day, the greater of: (a) Fifteen (15) percent
of the average daily trading volume for the Principal Stock occurring
on the applicable exchange and automated trading system for the
previous five (5)
[[Page 67672]]
business days; \25\ or (b) fifteen (15) percent of the trading volume
for Principal Stock occurring on the applicable exchange and automated
trading system on the date of the transaction, as determined by the
best available information for the trades that occurred on this date.
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\25\ The Department notes that ERISA's fiduciary responsibility
provisions would apply to the manager's selection of a trading
venue, including an automated trading system, to effect purchases
and sales of Principal Stock on behalf of its managed Index and
Model-Driven Funds.
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12. The Applicant represents that all future transactions by the
Index Funds and Model-Driven Funds involving Principal Stock, which do
not occur in connection with a Buy-up of the Stock by an Index Fund or
a Model-Driven Fund will be either: (a) Entered into on a principal
basis with a broker-dealer that is registered under the 1934 Act, and
thereby subject to regulation by the SEC; (b) effected on an automated
trading system operated by a broker-dealer independent of PLIC subject
to regulation by the SEC, or on an automated trading system operated by
a recognized securities exchange which, in either case, provides a
mechanism for customer orders to be matched on an anonymous basis
without the participation of a broker-dealer; or (c) effected through a
recognized securities exchange (as defined in Section III(i) of this
proposed exemption, so long as the broker is acting on an agency
basis.\26\
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\26\ PTE 86-128, 51 FR 41686 (November 18, 1986), as amended at
67 FR 64137 (October 17, 2002), provides a class exemption, under
certain conditions, permitting persons who serve as fiduciaries for
employee benefit plans to effect or execute securities transactions
on behalf of the plans. The Department expresses no opinion on
whether the conditions of this class exemption would be satisfied.
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13. All future acquisitions and dispositions of Principal Stock by
Index Funds or Model-Driven Funds maintained by PLIC or its affiliates
also will not involve any purchases from or sales to PLIC (including
officers, directors, or employees thereof), or any party in interest
that is a fiduciary with discretion to invest plan assets in the fund
(unless the transaction by the fund with this party in interest would
otherwise be subject to an exemption), other than on a blind basis
through an exchange or automated trading system, where the identity of
each counterparty is not known to the other.
14. The Applicant represents that, for purposes of future
acquisitions and holdings of Principal Stock by Index Funds and Model-
Driven Funds, if the proposed exemption is granted, Principal Stock
will constitute no more than five (5) percent of any independent third-
party index on which the investments of an Index Fund or Model-Driven
Fund are based. The Applicant represents that, with respect to an
Index's specified composition of particular stocks in its portfolio,
future Index Funds or Model-Driven Funds may track an Index where the
appropriate weighting for stocks listed in the Index is not
capitalization-weighted.
As such, the Applicant states that Index Funds and Model-Driven
Funds maintained by PLIC and its affiliates may track Indexes where the
selection of a particular stock by the Index, and the amount of stock
to be included in the Index, is not established based on the market
capitalization of the corporation issuing the stock.
The Applicant also represents that since an independent
organization may choose to create an Index where there are other Index
weightings for stocks comprising the Index, the proposed exemption
should allow for Principal Stock to be acquired by an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund in the amounts that are specified by the particular
Index, subject to the other restrictions imposed by this proposed
exemption.
The Applicant represents that in all instances, acquisitions or
dispositions of Principal Stock by an Index Fund or a Model-Driven Fund
will be for the sole purpose of maintaining strict quantitative
conformity with the relevant Index upon which the Index Fund is based
or, in the case of a Model-Driven Fund, a modified version of the
Index, as created by a computer model based on prescribed objective
criteria and third-party data.
Plan Fiduciary Consent To Fund Investments
15. With respect to any plan holding an interest in an Index Fund
or Model-Driven Fund that intends to start investing in Principal
Stock, the Applicant represents that before Principal Stock is
purchased directly or indirectly by the Index Fund or Model-Driven
Fund, Principal will provide the independent plan fiduciary (the
Independent Plan Fiduciary) with a notice through email. The email will
state that if the Independent Plan Fiduciary does not indicate
disapproval of investments in Principal Stock within sixty (60) days
from the date of the email, then the Independent Plan Fiduciary will be
deemed to have consented to the investment in Principal Stock. The
Department is adding requirements regarding Principal's delivery of the
email, as described in paragraph 19.
In addition, the Applicant represents that in the event the
Independent Plan Fiduciary disapproves of the investment, plan assets
invested in the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund will be withdrawn, and
the proceeds will be processed, as directed by the Independent Plan
Fiduciary. The timing of the withdrawal will be as follows:
With respect to a plan that is not an individual
account plan within the meaning of section 3(34) of the Act, the
plan's assets will be withdrawn within five (5) days from when the
Independent Plan Fiduciary notifies the Applicant of its disapproval
of investment in Principal Stock.
With respect to an individual account plan within the
meaning of section 3(34) of the Act, the Applicant will work with
the Independent Plan Fiduciary to ensure the timing of withdrawal of
the plan's assets from an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund complies
with any participant notification requirement that may be applicable
to the plan under the Department's regulation at 29 CFR 2550.404a-5.
This regulation generally requires that plan participants be
notified at least thirty (30) days in advance of a change in any
designated investment alternative available under the plan. (See 29
CFR 2550.404a-5(c)(ii). The Applicant anticipates that the plan's
assets will be withdrawn from the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
within sixty (60) days from the time the Independent Plan Fiduciary
notifies Principal of its disapproval of investment in Principal
Stock.
For new plan investors in an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund, the
Applicant represents that the Independent Plan Fiduciary will
affirmatively consent to the investment in Principal Stock by executing
a written subscription or similar agreement for the Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund that contains the appropriate approval language.
However, if the Independent Plan Fiduciary does not specifically
approve language in the agreement allowing the investment of plan
assets in Funds which hold or may hold Principal Stock, then no
investment will be made.
Voting of Principal Stock
17. The Applicant will appoint an independent fiduciary that will
direct the voting of Principal Stock held by the Funds. The Applicant
expects that ISS, the Independent Fiduciary, will serve in this
capacity. The Applicant will provide the Independent Fiduciary with all
necessary information regarding the Funds that hold Principal Stock,
the amount of Principal Stock held by the Funds on the record date for
shareholder meetings of the Applicant, and all proxy and consent
materials with respect to Principal Stock. The Independent Fiduciary
will maintain records with respect to its activities as an Independent
Fiduciary on behalf of
[[Page 67673]]
the Funds, including the number of shares of Principal Stock voted, the
manner in which they were voted, and the rationale for the vote. The
Independent Fiduciary will supply the Applicant with this information
after each shareholder meeting. The Independent Fiduciary will be
required to acknowledge that it will be acting as a fiduciary with
respect to the plans that invest in the Funds that own Principal Stock,
when voting Principal Stock.
Request for Exemptive Relief
18. The Applicant requests an administrative exemption from the
Department with respect to the direct or indirect acquisition, holding,
and disposition of Principal Stock by Index and Model-Driven Funds that
are managed by Principal, in which client plans invest. Section
406(a)(l)(D) of the Act prohibits the use by, or for the benefit of, a
party in interest of any assets of a plan, including plan assets held
by an Index Fund or a Model-Driven Fund.
The Applicant represents that as the current or future Fund Manager
of an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund, PLIC or an affiliate is (or will
become) a party in interest with respect to plans investing in the
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund under sections 3(14)(A) and 3(14)(B) of
the Act. The Applicant also represents that the issuer of Principal
Stock, such as PFG, is a party in interest with respect to a plan,
under section 3(14)(E) of the Act, as the direct or indirect corporate
parent of the Fund Manager. According to the Applicant, the
acquisition, holding, or disposition of Principal Stock by an Index
Fund or a Model-Driven Fund (including an indirect acquisition,
holding, or disposition of Principal Stock by an Index Fund through its
investment in another Index Fund) would involve the Fund Manager's use
of plan assets by or for the benefit of its own interest and/or the
interest of another Principal entity, in violation of section
406(a)(l)(D) of the Act.
18. In addition, section 406(b)(l) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary
from dealing with the assets of the plan in its own interest or for its
own account. Section 406(b)(2) of the Act prohibits a fiduciary from
acting in any transaction involving a plan on behalf of a party whose
interests are adverse to the interests of the plan. The Applicant
represents that a Fund Manager's direct or indirect acquisition,
holding, or disposition of Principal Stock as an Index Fund or Model-
Driven Fund investment would violate section 406(b)(l) and section
406(b)(2) of the Act due to the Fund Manager's affiliation with the
issuer of the Principal Stock. Therefore, the Applicant requests
exemptive relief from section 406(b)(1) and section 406(b)(2) of the
Act.
Statutory Findings
19. The Department has tentatively determined that the proposed
exemption is administratively feasible. Among other things, an
Independent Plan Fiduciary must authorize the investment of the plan's
assets in an Index Fund or a Model-Driven Fund which directly or
indirectly purchases and/or holds Principal Stock. Also, prior to the
direct or indirect purchase of Principal Stock by an Index Fund or a
Model-Driven Fund, Principal must provide the Independent Plan
Fiduciary with an email notice stating that if the Independent Plan
Fiduciary does not indicate disapproval of investments in Principal
Stock within sixty (60) days of the email, the Independent Plan
Fiduciary will be deemed to have consented to the investment in
Principal Stock. The Department is requiring that: (1) Principal
obtains from such Independent Plan Fiduciary prior consent in writing
to the receipt by such Independent Plan Fiduciary of such disclosure
via electronic email; (2) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary has provided
to Principal a valid email address; and (3) The delivery of such
electronic email to such Independent Plan Fiduciary is provided by
Principal in a manner consistent with the relevant provisions of the
Department's regulations at 29 CFR 2520.104b-1(c) (substituting the
word ``Principal'' for the word ``administrator'' as set forth therein,
and substituting the phrase ``Independent Plan Fiduciary'' for the
phrase ``the participant, beneficiary or other individual'' as set
forth therein).
Furthermore, in the event the Independent Plan Fiduciary
disapproves of the investment, plan assets invested in the Index Fund
or Model-Driven Fund will be withdrawn and the proceeds processed as
directed by the Independent Plan Fiduciary.
For new plan investors in an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund,
Independent Plan Fiduciaries must consent to the investment in
Principal Stock through execution of a subscription or similar
agreement for the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund that contains the
appropriate approval language.
20. The Department has tentatively determined that the proposed
exemption is in the interests of plans invested in the Index Funds and
Model-Driven Funds. The exemption is intended to allow Index Funds to
track the performance of independently-maintained, third-party Indexes
more closely. Furthermore, with respect to Model-Driven Fund plan
investors, the investment in Principal Stock by Model-Driven Funds will
allow the Funds to match, more closely, the performance of portfolios
selected by computer models that are based on prescribed objective
criteria and use independent third-party data to transform an
independently-maintained third-party Index.
21. The Department has tentatively determined that the proposed
exemption is protective of the rights of the plans investing in Index
Funds and Model-Driven Funds, and their participants and beneficiaries.
In this regard: (a) Each Index Fund and Model-Driven Fund will be based
on a securities index that is created and maintained by an organization
independent of Principal; (b) the acquisition or disposition of
Principal Stock will be for the sole purpose of maintaining strict
quantitative conformity with the relevant index upon which the Index
Fund or Model-Driven Fund is based; (c) all initial purchases of
Principal Stock will occur through a recognized U.S. securities
exchange or through an automated trading system operated by a broker-
dealer independent of Principal or by a recognized U.S. securities
exchange; and (d) subsequent purchases of Principal Stock will also
occur as direct, arm's length transactions with broker-dealers
independent of Principal, thereby ensuring that the purchases of
Principal Stock occur at market price.
The requested exemption contains conditions on the timing and size
of purchase transactions designed to preclude possible market price
manipulations. Specifically, the proposed exemption requires that no
more than five (5) percent of the total amount of Principal Stock, that
is issued and outstanding at any time, is held in the aggregate by
Index and Model-Driven Funds managed by PLIC or a Principal affiliate.
Furthermore, Principal Stock must constitute no more than five (5)
percent of any independent, third-party Index on which the investments
of an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund are based.
22. Finally, an Independent Plan Fiduciary must authorize the
investment of the plan's assets in an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
which will directly or indirectly purchase and/or hold Principal Stock.
Further, on any matter for which shareholders of Principal Stock are
required or permitted to vote, PLIC or the respective Principal
affiliate will cause the Principal Stock held by an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund to be
[[Page 67674]]
voted as determined by an Independent Fiduciary.
Summary
23. Given the conditions described below, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements for an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act.
Proposed Exemption
Section I. Covered Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of sections
406(a)(l)(D), 406(b)(l), and section 406(b)(2) of the Act and the
sanctions resulting from the application of section 4975 of the Code by
reason of section 4975(c)(l)(D) and (E) of the Code, shall not apply to
the direct or indirect acquisition, holding, and disposition of common
stock issued by Principal Financial Group, Inc. (PFG), and/or common
stock issued by an affiliate of PFG (together, the Principal Stock), by
index funds (Index Funds) and model-driven funds (Model-Driven Funds)
that are managed by Principal Life Insurance Company (PLIC), an
indirectly wholly-owned subsidiary of PFG, or an affiliate of PLIC
(collectively, Principal), in which client plans of Principal invest,
provided that the conditions of Sections II and III are met.
Section II. Exemption for the Acquisition, Holding and Disposition of
Principal Stock
(a) The acquisition or disposition of Principal Stock is for the
sole purpose of maintaining strict quantitative conformity with the
relevant Index upon which the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund is based,
and does not involve any agreement, arrangement or understanding
regarding the design or operation of the Fund acquiring Principal Stock
that is intended to benefit Principal or any party in which Principal
may have an interest;
(b) Whenever Principal Stock is initially added to an Index on
which an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund is based, or initially added
to the portfolio of an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund (or added to the
portfolio of an underlying Index Fund in which another Index Fund
invests), all purchases of Principal Stock pursuant to a Buy-up (as
defined in Section III(d)) occur in the following manner:
(1) Purchases are from one or more brokers or dealers;
(2) Based on the best available information, purchases are not the
opening transaction for the trading day;
(3) Purchases are not effected in the last half hour before the
scheduled close of the trading day;
(4) Purchases are at a price that is not higher than the lowest
current independent offer quotation, determined on the basis of
reasonable inquiry from non-affiliated brokers;
(5) Aggregate daily purchases do not exceed, on any particular day,
the greater of: (i) Fifteen (15) percent of the aggregate average daily
trading volume for the security occurring on the applicable exchange
and automated trading system for the previous five business days, or
(ii) fifteen (15) percent of the trading volume for the security
occurring on the applicable exchange and automated trading system on
the date of the transaction, as determined by the best available
information for the trades occurring on that date;
(6) All purchases and sales of Principal Stock occur either: (i) On
a recognized U.S. securities exchange (as defined in Section IV(j)
below), (ii) through an automated trading system (as defined in Section
IV(b) below) operated by a broker-dealer independent of Principal that
is registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the 1934 Act),
and thereby subject to regulation by the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the SEC), which provides a mechanism for customer orders to
be matched on an anonymous basis without the participation of a broker-
dealer, or (iii) through an automated trading system that is operated
by a recognized U.S. securities exchange, pursuant to the applicable
securities laws, and provides a mechanism for customer orders to be
matched on an anonymous basis without the participation of a broker-
dealer; and
(7) If the necessary number of shares of Principal Stock cannot be
acquired within ten (10) business days from the date of the event which
causes the particular Fund to require Principal Stock, Principal
appoints a fiduciary, which is independent of Principal (the
Independent Fiduciary), to design acquisition procedures and monitor
compliance with these procedures;
(c) For transactions subsequent to a Buy-Up, all aggregate daily
purchases of Principal Stock by the Funds do not exceed on any
particular day the greater of:
(1) Fifteen (15) percent of the average daily trading volume for
Principal Stock occurring on the applicable exchange and automated
trading system for the previous five (5) business days, or
(2) Fifteen (15) percent of the trading volume for Principal Stock
occurring on the applicable exchange and automated trading system on
the date of the transaction, as determined by the best available
information for the trades that occurred on this date;
(d) All transactions in Principal Stock not otherwise described
above in Section II(b) are either:
(1) Entered into on a principal basis in a direct, arm's length
transaction with a broker-dealer, in the ordinary course of its
business, where the broker-dealer is independent of Principal and is
registered under the 1934 Act, and thereby subject to regulation by the
SEC;
(2) Effected on an automated trading system operated by a broker-
dealer independent of Principal that is subject to regulation by either
the SEC or another applicable regulatory authority, or an automated
trading system, as defined in Section IV(b), operated by a recognized
U.S. securities exchange which, in either case, provides a mechanism
for customer orders to be matched on an anonymous basis without the
participation of a broker-dealer; or
(3) Effected through a recognized U.S. securities exchange, as
defined in Section IV(j), so long as the broker is acting on an agency
basis;
(e) No purchases or sales of Principal Stock by a Fund involve
purchases from, or sales to, Principal (including officers, directors,
or employees thereof), or any party in interest that is a fiduciary
with discretion to invest plan assets into the Fund (unless the
transaction by the Fund with the party in interest would otherwise be
subject to an exemption). However, this condition would not apply to
purchases or sales on an exchange or through an automated trading
system (described in paragraphs (on a blind basis where the identity of
the counterparty is not known);
(f) No more than five (5) percent of the total amount of Principal
Stock, that is issued and outstanding at any time, is held in the
aggregate by Index and Model-Driven Funds managed by Principal;
(g) Principal Stock constitutes no more than five (5) percent of
any independent third-party Index on which the investments of an Index
Fund or Model-Driven Fund are based;
(h) A fiduciary of a plan which is independent of Principal (the
Independent Plan Fiduciary, as defined in Section IV(k)) authorizes the
investment of the plan's assets in an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund
which directly or indirectly purchases and/or holds Principal Stock.
With respect to any plan holding an interest in an Index Fund or Model-
Driven Fund that intends to start investing in
[[Page 67675]]
Principal Stock, before Principal Stock is purchased directly or
indirectly by the Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund, Principal will
provide the Independent Plan Fiduciary with a notice through email
stating that if the plan fiduciary does not indicate disapproval of
investments in Principal Stock within sixty (60) days, then the
Independent Plan Fiduciary will be deemed to have consented to the
investment in Principal Stock. In this regard: (1) Principal must
obtain from such Independent Plan Fiduciary prior consent in writing to
the receipt by such Independent Plan Fiduciary of such disclosure via
electronic email; (2) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary must have
provided to Principal a valid email address; and (3) The delivery of
such electronic email to such Independent Plan Fiduciary is provided by
Principal in a manner consistent with the relevant provisions of the
Department's regulations at 29 CFR 2520.104b-1(c) (substituting the
word ``Principal'' for the word ``administrator'' as set forth therein,
and substituting the phrase ``Independent Plan Fiduciary'' for the
phrase ``the participant, beneficiary or other individual'' as set
forth therein). In the event that the Independent Plan Fiduciary
disapproves of the investment, plan assets invested in the Index Fund
or Model-Driven Fund will be withdrawn and the proceeds processed, as
directed by the Independent Plan Fiduciary. For new plan investors in
an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund, Independent Plan Fiduciaries for
the plans will consent to the investment in Principal Stock through
execution of a subscription or similar agreement for the Index Funds or
Model-Driven Fund that contains the appropriate approval language; and
(i) On any matter for which shareholders of Principal Stock are
required or permitted to vote, Principal will cause the Principal Stock
held by an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund to be voted, as determined
by the Independent Fiduciary.
Section III. General Conditions
(a) Principal maintains or causes to be maintained for a period of
six (6) years from the date of the transactions, the records necessary
to enable the persons described in paragraph (b) of this Section III to
determine whether the conditions of this exemption have been met,
except that: (1) A prohibited transaction will not be considered to
have occurred if, due to circumstances beyond the control of Principal,
the records are lost or destroyed prior to the end of the six year
period, and (2) no party in interest, other than Principal, shall be
subject to the civil penalty that may be assessed under section 502(i)
of the Act or to the taxes imposed by section 4975(a) and (b) of the
Code if the records are not maintained or are not available for
examination as required by paragraph (b) below.
(b)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this Section III
and notwithstanding any provisions of section 504(a)(2) and (b) of the
Act, the records referred to in paragraph (a) of this Section III are
unconditionally available at their customary location for examination
during normal business hours by:
(A) Any duly authorized employee or representative of the
Department, the Internal Revenue Service or the SEC;
(B) Any fiduciary of a plan participating in an Index Fund or
Model-Driven Fund, who has authority to acquire or dispose of the
interests of the plan, or any duly authorized employee or
representative of the fiduciary;
(C) Any contributing employer to any plan participating in an Index
Fund or Model-Driven Fund or any duly authorized employee or
representative of the employer; and
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of any plan participating in an
Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund, or a representative of the participant
or beneficiary; and
(2) None of the persons described in subparagraphs (B) through (D)
of this Section III(b)(1) shall be authorized to examine trade secrets
of Principal or commercial or financial information which are
considered confidential.
Section IV. Definitions
(a) An ``affiliate'' of Principal includes:
(1) Any person, directly or indirectly, through one or more
intermediaries, controlling, controlled by or under common control with
the person;
(2) Any officer, director, employee or relative of the person, or
partner of any the person; and
(3) Any corporation or partnership of which the person is an
officer, director, partner or employee;
(b) The term ``automated trading system'' means an electronic
trading system that functions in a manner intended to simulate a
securities exchange by electronically matching orders on an agency
basis from multiple buyers and sellers, such as an ``alternative
trading system'' within the meaning of the SEC's Reg. ATS (17 CFR part
242.300), as this definition may be amended from time to time, or an
``automated quotation system'' as described in Section 3(a)(5l)(A)(ii)
of the 1934 Act (15 U.S.C. 8c(a)(5 l)(A)(ii));
(c) The term ``Buy-up'' means an initial acquisition of Principal
Stock by an Index Fund or Model-Driven Fund which is necessary to bring
the Fund's holdings of Principal Stock either to its capitalization-
weighted or other specified composition in the relevant index (the
Index), as determined by the independent organization maintaining the
Index, or to its correct weighting as determined by the model which has
been used to transform the Index;
(d) The term ``control'' means the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of a person other than an
individual;
(e) The term ``Fund'' means an Index Fund (as described in Section
IV(a)) or a Model-Driven Fund (as described in Section III(b))
(f) The term ``Index'' means a securities index that represents the
investment performance of a specific segment of the public market for
equity or debt securities, but only if:
(1) The organization creating and maintaining the Index is:
(A) Engaged in the business of providing financial information,
evaluation, advice, or securities brokerage services to institutional
clients; or
(B) A publisher of financial news or information; or
(C) A public stock exchange or association of securities dealers;
and
(2) The Index is created and maintained by an organization
independent of Principal; and
(3) The Index is a generally-accepted standardized index of
securities which is not specifically tailored for the use of Principal;
(g) The term ``Index Fund'' means any investment fund, trust,
insurance company separate account, separately managed account, or
portfolio, sponsored, maintained, trusteed, or managed by Principal, in
which one or more investors invest, and:
(1) Which is designed to track the rate of return, risk profile and
other characteristics of an independently-maintained securities index,
as described in Section IV(c) below, by either: (i) Investing directly
in the same combination of securities which compose the Index or in a
sampling of the securities, based on objective criteria and data, or
(ii) investing in one or more other Index Funds to indirectly invest in
the same combination of securities which compose the Index, or in a
sampling of the securities based on objective criteria and data;
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(2) For which all assets held outside of any liquidity buffer are
invested without Principal using its discretion, or data within its
control, to affect the identity or amount of securities to be purchased
or sold, and the liquidity buffer, if any, does not hold any Principal
Stock;
(3) That contains ``plan assets'' subject to the Act;
(4) That involves no agreement, arrangement, or understanding
regarding the design or operation of the Fund, which is intended to
benefit Principal or any party in which Principal may have an interest.
(h) The term ``Model-Driven Fund'' means any investment fund,
trust, insurance company separate account, separately managed account,
or portfolio, sponsored, maintained, trusteed, or managed by Principal,
in which one or more investors invest, and:
(1) For which all assets held outside of any liquidity buffer
consist of securities the identity of which and the amount of which are
selected by a computer model that is based on prescribed objective
criteria using independent third-party data, not within the control of
Principal, to transform an independently-maintained Index, as defined
in Section IV(c) below, and the liquidity buffer, if any, does not hold
any Principal Stock;
(2) That contains ``plan assets'' subject to the Act; and
(3) That involves no agreement, arrangement, or understanding
regarding the design or operation of the Fund or the utilization of any
specific objective criteria which is intended to benefit Principal or
any party in which Principal may have an interest;
(i) The term ``Principal'' refers to Principal Life Insurance
Company, its indirect parent and holding company, Principal Financial
Group, Inc., and any current or future affiliate, as defined above in
Section IV(a);
(j) The term ``recognized U.S. securities exchange'' means a U.S.
securities exchange that is registered as a ``national securities
exchange'' under Section 6 of the 1934 Act (15 U.S.C. 78f), as this
definition may be amended from time to time, which performs with
respect to securities the functions commonly performed by a stock
exchange within the meaning of definitions under the applicable
securities laws (e.g., 17 CFR part 240.3b-16); and
(k) The term ``Independent Plan Fiduciary'' means a fiduciary of a
plan, where such fiduciary is independent of and unrelated to
Principal. The Independent Plan Fiduciary will not be deemed to be
independent of and unrelated to Principal if:
(1) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary, directly or indirectly,
through one or more intermediaries, controls, is controlled by, or is
under common control with Principal;
(2) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary, or any officer, director,
partner, employee, or relative of such Independent Plan Fiduciary, is
an officer, director, partner, or employee of Principal (or is a
relative of such person); or
(3) Such Independent Plan Fiduciary, directly or indirectly,
receives any compensation or other consideration for his or her
personal account in connection with any transaction described in this
proposed exemption.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemption will be given to all fiduciaries
of plans invested in the Index Funds within 30 days of the publication
of the notice of proposed exemption in the Federal Register, by
electronic mail to the last known email address of all fiduciaries.
Principal will also publish the notice on a website through which plan
fiduciaries communicate with Principal. The notice will contain a copy
of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to 29 CFR
2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental statement will inform interested
persons of their right to comment on the pending exemption. Written
comments are due within 45 days of the publication of the notice of
proposed exemption in the Federal Register.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Scott Ness of the Department,
telephone (202) 693-8561. (This is not a toll-free number.)
General Information
The attention of interested persons is directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the subject of an exemption
under section 408(a) of the Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code
does not relieve a fiduciary or other party in interest or disqualified
person from certain other provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction provisions to which the exemption
does not apply and the general fiduciary responsibility provisions of
section 404 of the Act, which, among other things, require a fiduciary
to discharge his duties respecting the plan solely in the interest of
the participants and beneficiaries of the plan and in a prudent fashion
in accordance with section 404(a)(1)(b) of the Act; nor does it affect
the requirement of section 401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the employees of the employer
maintaining the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be granted under section 408(a) of the
Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, the Department must find
that the exemption is administratively feasible, in the interests of
the plan and of its participants and beneficiaries, and protective of
the rights of participants and beneficiaries of the plan;
(3) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be supplemental to,
and not in derogation of, any other provisions of the Act and/or the
Code, including statutory or administrative exemptions and transitional
rules. Furthermore, the fact that a transaction is subject to an
administrative or statutory exemption is not dispositive of whether the
transaction is in fact a prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be subject to the
express condition that the material facts and representations contained
in each application are true and complete, and that each application
accurately describes all material terms of the transaction which is the
subject of the exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 20th day of December, 2018.
Lyssa Hall,
Director, Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2018-28091 Filed 12-27-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P