Proposed Exemption Involving UBS Assets Management (Americas) Inc.; UBS Realty Investors LLC; UBS Hedge Fund Solutions LLC; UBS O'Connor LLC; and Certain Future Affiliates in UBS's Asset Management and Global Wealth Management U.S. Divisions (collectively, the Applicants or the UBS QPAMs) Located in Chicago, Illinois; Hartford, Connecticut; New York, New York; and Chicago, Illinois, Respectively, 3818-3828 [2019-02218]
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(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract:
Primary: COPS Office hiring grantees
that are selected for in-depth monitoring
of their grant implementation and
equipment grantees that report using
COPS funds to implement a criminal
intelligence system will be required to
respond. The Monitoring Information
Collections include two types of
information collections: The Monitoring
Request for Documentation and the 28
CFR part 23 Monitoring Kit.
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond/reply: It is estimated that 150
respondents annually will complete the
Monitoring Request for Documentation
at 3 hours per respondent.
(6) An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: There are an estimated 450
total annual burden hours associated
with this collection.
If additional information is required
contact: Melody Braswell, Department
Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division, Policy and
Planning Staff, Two Constitution
Square, 145 N Street NE, Washington,
DC 20530.
Dated: February 7, 2019
Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer, PRA, U.S.
Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2019–02097 Filed 2–12–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–AT–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
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[Exemption Application No. D–11988]
Proposed Exemption Involving UBS
Assets Management (Americas) Inc.;
UBS Realty Investors LLC; UBS Hedge
Fund Solutions LLC; UBS O’Connor
LLC; and Certain Future Affiliates in
UBS’s Asset Management and Global
Wealth Management U.S. Divisions
(collectively, the Applicants or the UBS
QPAMs) Located in Chicago, Illinois;
Hartford, Connecticut; New York, New
York; and Chicago, Illinois,
Respectively
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed exemption.
AGENCY:
This document contains
notice of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of
SUMMARY:
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a proposed temporary one-year
individual exemption 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 this proposed
exemption is granted, certain entities
with specified relationships to UBS will
not be precluded from relying on the
exemptive relief provided by Prohibited
Transaction Class Exemption 84–14.
DATES: If there is a judgment in the
French First Instance Court against UBS
and/or UBS France and that judgment
constitutes a conviction under Section
I(g) of PTE 84–14, this exemption will
be in effect for one year from the date
of that judgment.
Written comments and requests for a
public hearing on the proposed
exemption should be submitted to the
Department by February 19, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments should state the
nature of the person’s interest in the
proposed exemption and the manner in
which the person would be adversely
affected by the exemption, if granted. A
request for a hearing can be requested
by any interested person who may be
adversely affected by an exemption. A
request for a hearing must state: (1) The
name, address, telephone number, and
email address of the person making the
request; (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;
and (3) a statement of the issues to be
addressed and a general description of
the evidence to be presented at the
hearing. The Department will grant a
request for a hearing made in
accordance with the requirements above
where a hearing is necessary to fully
explore material factual issues
identified by the person requesting the
hearing. A notice of such hearing shall
be published by the Department in the
Federal Register. The Department may
decline to hold a hearing where: (1) The
request for the hearing does not meet
the requirements above; (2) the only
issues identified for exploration at the
hearing are matters of law; or (3) the
factual issues identified can be fully
explored through the submission of
evidence in written (including
electronic) form.
All written comments and requests for
a hearing (at least three copies) should
be sent to the Employee Benefits
Security Administration (EBSA), Office
of Exemption Determinations, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC
20210. Attention: Application No. D–
11988. Interested persons are also
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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, or by FAX to (202) 693–
8474 by the end of the scheduled
comment period. The application 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 received will
be included in the public record
without change and may be made
available online at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be confidential or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. 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. However, if
EBSA cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EBSA might not be
able to consider your comment.
Additionally, the https://
www.regulations.gov website is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means EBSA will not know your
identity or contact information unless
you provide it in the body of your
comment. If you send an email directly
to EBSA without going through https://
www.regulations.gov, your email
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public record and
made available on the internet.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Brian Mica of the Department at (202)
693–8402. (This is not a toll-free
number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In March
2017, UBS and UBS France were
charged with offenses under French law
arising out of their cross-border banking
business. A trial was held in 2018, and
the French court announced that it
would issue a judgment on February 20,
2019. This judgment (the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France) may be adverse to UBS and/or
UBS France. UBS recently requested
that the Department issue an advisory
opinion that an adverse judgment from
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the French court would not disqualify
UBS asset managers from acting as
QPAMs under PTE 84–14 (described
below) pursuant to the criminal
disqualification set forth in Section I(g)
of PTE 84–14. UBS requested that, if the
Department was not prepared to issue
the opinion, the Department issue a
temporary exemption. The Department
may not issue an Advisory Opinion
before possible conviction and is
proposing this temporary exemption.
Certain UBS affiliates are acting as
QPAMs pursuant to an individual
exemption granted on December 29,
2017, which addresses prior
convictions.1 This proposal uses the
term ‘‘Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France’’ to describe
an adverse judgment issued by a French
court regarding case Number
1105592033. The Department is
proposing this exemption to protect
plans and IRAs that use UBS asset
managers, from the costs and expenses
that may arise in that instance, as
represented by the Applicant. The
temporary nature of this exemption
gives the Department the opportunity to
determine whether a longer term
exemption is necessary and/or
appropriate, including whether
additional conditions are warranted.
Comments received in response to
this proposed one year temporary
exemption will also be considered in
connection with the Department’s
determination whether or not to grant
any subsequent exemption. No relief
from a violation of any other law would
be provided by this exemption.
Furthermore, the Department cautions
that the relief in this exemption would
terminate immediately if, among other
things, an entity within the UBS
corporate structure is convicted of a
crime described in Section I(g) of PTE
84–14 (other than the 2013 Conviction,
2018 Conviction, and the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France) or is convicted in a foreign
jurisdiction for a crime described in
Section I(g) of PTE 84–14, during the
Exemption Period.
While an entity could apply for a new
exemption in that circumstance, the
Department would not be obligated to
grant the exemption. The terms of this
proposed exemption have been
specifically designed to permit Covered
Plans, defined below, to terminate their
relationships in an orderly and costeffective fashion in the event of an
additional conviction or a determination
that it is otherwise prudent for a
Covered Plan to terminate its
1 See
PTE 2017–07, 82 FR 61916 (December 29,
2017).
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relationship with an entity covered by
the proposed exemption.
Summary of Facts and
Representations 2
1. UBS AG (UBS) is a Swiss-based
global financial services company
organized under the laws of
Switzerland. UBS has banking divisions
and subsidiaries throughout the world,
with its United States headquarters
located in New York, New York and
Stamford, Connecticut. UBS itself does
not provide investment management
services to client plans that are subject
to Part 4 of Title I of ERISA (ERISA
plans) or section 4975 of the Code
(IRAs), or otherwise exercise
discretionary control over ERISA assets.
All ERISA assets are managed by U.S.
affiliates of UBS.
2. UBS Asset Management (Americas)
Inc., UBS Realty Investors LLC, UBS
Hedge Fund Solutions LLC, and UBS
O’Connor LLC 3 are currently the four
UBS affiliates that rely on PTE 84–14.
Collectively, these UBS QPAMs have
total ERISA assets under management of
approximately $11.5 billion as of June
30, 2018, excluding ERISA assets
invested in pooled funds that are not
plan asset funds.
3. UBS Securities Japan was
previously convicted of a crime that
violated PTE 84–14’s Section I(g), the
anti-criminal provision.4 This crime was
described in detail in PTE 2013–09
(September 13, 2013). UBS itself was
previously convicted of a crime that
violated PTE 84–14’s Section I(g). That
crime was described in detail in PTE
2017–07 (December 29, 2017). Those
individual exemptions allowed UBS
QPAMs to continue to rely on PTE 84–
14, notwithstanding the convictions, as
long as a number of conditions were
met.
One of those conditions requires that
UBS or any of its affiliates may not be
further convicted of a crime described
in Section I(g) of PTE 84–14.5 In the
2 The Summary of Facts and Representations is
based on the Applicants’ representations, unless
indicated otherwise.
3 UBS Asset Management (Americas) Inc. and
UBS Realty Investors LLC are wholly owned by
UBS Americas, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of
UBS AG. UBS Hedge Fund Solutions LLC (formerly
UBS Alternative and Quantitative Investments,
LLC) and UBS O’Connor LLC are wholly owned by
UBS Americas Holding LLC, a wholly owned
subsidiary of UBS AG.
4 Section I(g) of PTE 84–14 generally provides
that ‘‘[n]either the QPAM nor any affiliate thereof
. . . nor any owner . . . of a 5 percent or more
interest in the QPAM is a person who within the
10 years immediately preceding the transaction has
been either convicted or released from
imprisonment, whichever is later, as a result of’’
certain criminal activity therein described.
5 The Department notes that Section I(g) was
included in PTE 84–14, in part, based on the
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event of such a conviction, the
Applicants would no longer be able to
rely on PTE 2017–07, which permits
them to avail themselves of PTE 84–14.
This exemption, if granted, would
provide relief for the UBS QPAMs to
rely on PTE 84–14, notwithstanding the
2013 Conviction, the 2018 Conviction,
and the Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France for a one-year
period while the Department decides
what, if any, additional action is
appropriate.
4. Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France. In 2013,
France opened an investigation into
UBS, UBS France, and certain former
employees of UBS France S.A. The
investigation centered on the
maintenance of foreign (‘‘cross-border’’)
UBS bank accounts held for private
citizens. The investigating judges closed
the investigation in February 2016. UBS
and UBS France received the National
Financial Prosecutor’s recommendation
(‘‘requisitoire’’) in July 2016 that charges
be filed. The investigating judges issued
the trial order (‘‘Ordonnance de renvoi’’)
in March 2017 that set out the precise
charges against UBS, UBS France, and
the individual former employees. UBS
was charged with (1) ‘‘illicit
solicitation,’’ based on the alleged
solicitation of French clients within
French territory from 2004–2011 by
Swiss-based UBS client advisors
without authorization to conduct such
business in France; and (2) money
laundering, based on UBS’s alleged
assistance from 2004 to 2012 to French
taxpayers in opening bank accounts
outside of France to conceal their
identities from relevant authorities for
the purposes of alleged tax evasion. UBS
disputes the charges.
5. The UBS QPAMs represent they are
separate entities from the entities
involved in alleged misconduct that
may lead to the Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France and
none of the UBS QPAMs (including
their officers, directors, agents other
than UBS, and employees) knew of, had
reason to know of, or participated in the
alleged conduct that is the subject of the
French charges. The UBS QPAMs
represent that no UBS QPAMs
(including their officers, directors,
agents other than UBS, and employees)
received direct compensation, or
knowingly received indirect
compensation, in connection with the
alleged conduct underlying the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France. Additionally, the UBS
expectation that a QPAM, and those who may be
in a position to influence its policies, maintain a
high standard of integrity.
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QPAMs represent that no UBS QPAM
exercised authority over the assets of
any plan in a manner that it knew or
should have known would further the
alleged conduct underlying the French
charges or otherwise cause any UBS
QPAMs, their affiliates, or related
parties to directly or indirectly profit
from the alleged conduct underlying the
French charges.
6. The Department notes that the rules
set forth in section 406 of ERISA and
section 4975(c) of the Code proscribe
certain ‘‘prohibited transactions’’
between plans and related parties with
respect to those plans, known as
‘‘parties in interest.’’ 6 Under section
3(14) of ERISA, parties in interest with
respect to a plan include, among others,
the plan fiduciary, a sponsoring
employer of the plan, service providers
with respect to the plan, and certain of
their affiliates. The prohibited
transaction provisions under section
406(a) of ERISA prohibit, in relevant
part, sales, leases, loans or the provision
of services between a party in interest
and a plan (or an entity whose assets are
deemed to constitute the assets of a
plan), as well as the use of plan assets
by or for the benefit of, or a transfer of
plan assets to, a party in interest.7
Under section 408(a) of ERISA and
section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, the
Department has the authority to grant
exemptions from such ‘‘prohibited
transactions’’ in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 29 CFR part
2570, subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644,
October 27, 2011).
7. PTE 84–14 8 exempts certain
prohibited transactions between a party
in interest and an ‘‘investment fund’’ (as
defined in Section VI (b) of PTE 84–14) 9
in which a plan has an interest, if the
investment manager satisfies the
definition of ‘‘qualified professional
asset manager’’ (QPAM) and satisfies
additional conditions for the exemption.
PTE 84–14 was developed and granted
6 For purposes of the Summary of Facts and
Representations, references to specific provisions of
Title I of ERISA, unless otherwise specified, refer
also to the corresponding provisions of the Code.
7 The prohibited transaction provisions also
include certain fiduciary prohibited transactions
under section 406(b) of ERISA. These include
transactions involving fiduciary self-dealing,
fiduciary conflicts of interest, and kickbacks to
fiduciaries.
8 49 FR 9494 (March 13, 1984), as corrected at 50
FR 41430 (October 10, 1985), as amended at 70 FR
49305 (August 23, 2005), and as amended at 75 FR
38837 (July 6, 2010).
9 An ‘‘investment fund’’ includes single customer
and pooled separate accounts maintained by an
insurance company, individual trusts and common,
collective or group trusts maintained by a bank, and
any other account or fund to the extent that the
disposition of its assets (whether or not in the
custody of the QPAM) is subject to the discretionary
authority of the QPAM.
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based on the essential premise that
broad relief could be afforded for all
types of transactions in which a plan
engages only if the commitments and
the investments of plan assets and the
negotiations leading thereto are the sole
responsibility of an independent,
discretionary, manager.10 Section I(g) of
PTE 84–14 generally provides that
‘‘[n]either the QPAM nor any affiliate
thereof . . . nor any owner . . . of a 5
percent or more interest in the QPAM is
a person who within the 10 years
immediately preceding the transaction
has been either convicted or released
from imprisonment, whichever is later,
as a result of’’ certain criminal activity
therein described, such as felonies
arising out of the conduct of the
business of a broker, dealer, investment
adviser or bank, or income tax evasion.
8. Section 408(a) of ERISA provides,
in part, that the Department may not
grant an exemption unless the
Department finds that such exemption
is administratively feasible, in the
interest of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries.
9. In the interest of. The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interests
of the participants and beneficiaries of
each affected ERISA plan and IRA. It is
the Department’s understanding, based
on representations from the UBS
QPAMs, that if the requested exemption
were denied, the UBS QPAMs may be
unable to effectively manage plan assets
subject to ERISA or the prohibited
transaction provisions of the Code. The
UBS QPAMs state that this would cause
client ERISA plans to question the
prudence of retaining the UBS QPAMs
as a manager of choice and client ERISA
plans who otherwise want to retain the
UBS QPAMs could feel compelled to
find other managers who could manage
their assets without having to either
forgo transactions or rely on other more
complex prohibited transaction
exemptions.
The UBS QPAMs have represented
that if client ERISA plans were to move
to new asset managers they could incur
transition costs including the costs
associated with identifying an asset
manager (such as the costs and
management time required in a Request
for Proposal process, consultant fees
and other due diligence expenses),
brokerage and other transaction costs
associated with the sale of portfolio
investments to accommodate the
investment policies and strategy of the
new asset manager, the opportunity
10 See
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75 FR 38837, 38839 (July 6, 2010).
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costs of holding cash pending
investment by the new asset manager,
and lost investment opportunities in
connection with a change of asset
managers. The UBS QPAMs claim that
losing the ability to use PTE 84–14
would make it difficult, costly, and
impracticable to enter into many
transactions that are in the best interests
of client plans, reducing plan choices,
especially among large institutional
financial banks.
The UBS QPAMs represent further
that if the requested exemption is not
granted, ERISA plan clients may be
effectively prohibited from entering into
certain transactions, either because no
other exemption is available or the
counterparty is not willing to enter into
the transaction without the protections
provided by PTE 84–14. The UBS
QPAMS state that these transactions
would include those not covered by
other exemptions such as a purchase or
sale from a party in interest of a security
without a readily ascertainable fair
market value. The UBS QPAMs claim
that the loss of the ability to utilize PTE
84–14 could significantly delay or even
make impossible transactions that
would be beneficial for the ERISA plans
because other statutory and class
prohibited transaction exemptions are
not broad enough to cover such routine
transactions entered at the direction of
the UBS QPAMs. The UBS QPAMs also
represent that counterparties could seek
to terminate contracts for certain
outstanding transactions (including
swaps) that require the UBS QPAMs to
represent that they are QPAMs and/or
utilize PTE 84–14 and additionally,
pursuant to these contracts, swap
transactions with certain counterparties
could automatically and immediately be
terminated without any notice or action
of such counterparties, even if other
prohibited transaction exemptions are
available. The UBS QPAMs further
claim that such a termination could
result in significant losses for the client
ERISA plans that would be avoided if
the exemption were granted.
10. Protective of. The Department has
tentatively determined that the
exemption, as proposed, will be
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of affected plans. The
proposal is for one year, and has
essentially the same conditions as PTE
2017–07.11 However, the Department
has determined to revise certain of those
conditions so that it can make its
required finding that the proposed oneyear exemption will be protective of the
rights of participants and beneficiaries
11 If longer term relief is warranted, the
exemption may contain additional conditions.
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of affected plans and IRAs and are
sufficient to protect plans subject to Part
4 of Title I of ERISA (an ERISA-covered
plan) or plans subject to section 4975 of
the Code (an IRA), in each case, with
respect to which a UBS QPAM relies on
PTE 84–14, or with respect to which a
UBS QPAM (or any UBS affiliate) has
expressly represented that the manager
qualifies as a QPAM or relies on the
QPAM class exemption (PTE 84–14)
(Covered Plans).12
This proposed exemption, if granted,
is effective for period of one year from
a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS
France by the French First Instance
Court in case Number 1105592033. As
noted above, relief is necessary to the
extent the judgment in the French First
Instance Court constitutes a conviction
under Section I(g) of PTE 84–14. If the
Applicant submits an exemption request
for longer term relief, and the
Department subsequently determines
that longer term relief is warranted, the
effective period of this exemption will
end on the earlier of one year from the
date of judgment by the French First
Instance Court or the effective date of
the subsequent exemption. Several of
the conditions are aimed at ensuring
that the UBS QPAMs were not involved
in the conduct that gave rise to any of
the Convictions and the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France. Accordingly, the proposal
generally precludes relief to the extent
the UBS QPAMs and any other party
engaged on behalf of such QPAMs who
had responsibility for, or exercised
authority in connection with the
management of plan assets, were aware
of, participated in, approved of,
furthered, benefitted, or profited from,
FX misconduct, the misconduct that is
the subject of the 2013 and 2018
Convictions and the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France.13 Further, the UBS QPAMs may
not employ or knowingly engage any of
the individuals that participated in the
conduct attributable to the Convictions
or the Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France.
The proposal further provides that no
UBS QPAM will use its authority or
influence to direct an ‘‘investment
fund’’ that is subject to ERISA or the
Code and managed by such UBS QPAM
12 For purposes of this exemption, a Covered Plan
does not include an ERISA-covered plan or IRA to
the extent the UBS QPAM has expressly disclaimed
reliance on QPAM status or PTE 84–14 in entering
into a contract, arrangement, or agreement with the
ERISA-covered plan or IRA.
13 For clarity, references to the UBS QPAMs
include any individual employed by or engaged to
work on behalf of these QPAMs during or after the
period of misconduct.
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with respect to one of more Covered
Plans, to enter into any transaction with
UBS, UBS Securities Japan, or UBS
France, or engage UBS, UBS Securities
Japan, or UBS France to provide any
service to such investment fund, for a
direct or indirect fee borne by such
investment fund, regardless of whether
such transaction or service may
otherwise be within the scope of relief
provided by an administrative or
statutory exemption.
If granted, the exemption will
terminate if UBS or any of its affiliates
are convicted of any additional crimes
described in Section I(g) of PTE 84–14,
or if any of the other conditions of PTE
84–14 have not been met. Also, with
very limited exceptions, UBS, UBS
Securities Japan, and UBS France may
not act as a fiduciary within the
meaning of section 3(21)(A)(i) or (iii) of
ERISA, or section 4975(e)(3)(A) and (C)
of the Code, with respect to ERISAcovered plan and IRA assets.
The proposal requires each UBS
QPAM to update, implement and follow
certain written policies and procedures
(the Policies). These Policies are similar
to the policies and procedures
mandated by PTE 2017–07. In general
terms, the Policies must require, and
must be reasonably designed to ensure
that, among other things: The asset
management decisions of the UBS
QPAMs are conducted independently of
the corporate management and business
activities of UBS, UBS Securities Japan,
and UBS France; the UBS QPAMs fully
comply with ERISA’s fiduciary duties,
and with ERISA and the Code’s
prohibited transaction provisions; the
UBS QPAMs do not knowingly
participate in any other person’s
violation of ERISA or the Code with
respect to Covered Plans; any filings or
statements made by the UBS QPAMs to
regulators, on behalf of or in relation to
Covered Plans, are materially accurate
and complete; the UBS QPAMs do not
make material misrepresentations or
omit material information in its
communications with such regulators
with respect to Covered Plans; or make
material misrepresentations or omit
material information in its
communications with Covered Plans;
the UBS QPAMs comply with the terms
of this exemption; and any violation of,
or failure to comply with any of these
items, is corrected as soon as reasonably
possible upon discovery, or as soon after
the UBS QPAM reasonably should have
known of the noncompliance
(whichever is earlier). Any such
violation or compliance failure not so
corrected must be reported, upon the
discovery of such failure to so correct,
in writing, to appropriate corporate
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3821
officers, the head of compliance and the
General Counsel (or their functional
equivalent), and the independent
auditor responsible for reviewing
compliance with the Policies and a
fiduciary of any affected Covered Plan
where such fiduciary is independent of
UBS.
This proposal mandates training
(Training), which is similar to the
training required under PTE 2017–07. In
this regard, all relevant UBS QPAM
asset/portfolio management, trading,
legal, compliance, and internal audit
personnel must be trained during the
Exemption Period. Among other things,
the Training must, at a minimum, cover
the Policies, ERISA and Code
compliance, ethical conduct, the
consequences for not complying with
the conditions of this exemption
(including any loss of exemptive relief
provided herein), and the requirement
for prompt reporting of wrongdoing.
The Training must be conducted by a
professional who has been prudently
selected and who has appropriate
technical training and proficiency with
ERISA and the Code.
Under this proposal, as in PTE 2017–
07, each UBS QPAM must submit to an
audit conducted by an independent
auditor.14 Among other things, the
auditor must test a sample of each UBS
QPAM’s transactions involving Covered
Plans, sufficient in size and nature to
afford the auditor a reasonable basis to
determine such QPAM’s operational
compliance with the Policies and
Training. The auditor’s conclusions
cannot be based solely on the
Exemption Report created by the
Compliance Officer, described below, in
lieu of independent determinations and
testing performed by the auditor.
The Audit Report must be certified by
the General Counsel or one of the three
most senior executive officers of the
UBS QPAM to which the Audit Report
applies. A copy of the Audit Report
must be provided to the Risk Committee
of UBS’s Board of Directors. Among
other things, UBS must submit to the
Office of Exemption Determinations
(OED), any engagement agreement with
an auditor to perform the audit required
under the terms of this exemption that
14 Audits covering time periods prior to the date
of a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France
by the French First Instance Court must be
completed in accordance with the requirements of
PTE 2017–07, as applicable. Accordingly, the last
audit performed pursuant to PTE 2017–07 will
cover the period beginning January 10, 2018 and
ending on the date a judgment, if any, is issued
against UBS or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court. The corresponding Audit Report
must be completed within six months of the date
of any such judgment and submitted to the
Department within 45 days of completion.
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is entered subsequent to the Potential
2019 French Judgment Against UBS/
UBS France, no later than two (2)
months after the execution of such
agreement;
This proposal requires that, as of the
date of a judgment, if any, against UBS
or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court, and throughout the
Exemption Period, with respect to any
arrangement, agreement, or contract
between a UBS QPAM and a Covered
Plan, the UBS QPAM must agree and
warrant: (i) To comply with ERISA and
the Code, as applicable with respect to
such Covered Plan; and (ii) to refrain
from engaging in prohibited transactions
that are not otherwise exempt (and to
promptly correct any inadvertent
prohibited transactions). The UBS
QPAMs must further agree and warrant
to comply with the standards of
prudence and loyalty set forth in section
404 of ERISA with respect to each such
ERISA-covered plan. Each UBS QPAM
must also agree and warrant to
indemnify and hold harmless such
Covered Plan for any actual losses
resulting directly from any of the
following: (a) A UBS QPAM’s violation
of ERISA’s fiduciary duties, as
applicable, and/or the prohibited
transaction provisions of ERISA and the
Code, as applicable; (b) a breach of
contract by the UBS QPAM; or (c) any
claim arising out of the failure of such
UBS QPAM to qualify for the exemptive
relief provided by PTE 84–14 as a result
of a violation of Section I(g) of PTE 84–
14 other than the Conviction. This
condition applies only to actual losses
caused by the UBS QPAM. As noted
above, the Applicant has identified a
wide range of potential harm and costs
that may be incurred by plans and IRAs
if the UBS QPAMs were no longer able
to rely on PTE 84–14. The Department
views actual losses arising from
unwinding transactions with third
parties, and from transitioning Covered
Plan assets to third parties, to be
‘‘direct’’ results of violating the terms of
this provision.
This exemption contains specific
notice requirements. In this regard, by
60 days after the date of a judgment, if
any, against UBS or UBS France by the
French First Instance Court, each UBS
QPAM will provide a notice of the
exemption, along with a separate
summary describing the facts that led to
the Conviction (the Summary), which
have been submitted to the Department,
and a prominently displayed statement
(the Statement) (collectively, Initial
Notice) that the Convictions and the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France each separately result
in a failure to meet a condition in PTE
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84–14 and/or PTE 2017–07, to each
sponsor and beneficial owner of a
Covered Plan, or the sponsor of an
investment fund in any case where a
UBS QPAM acts as a sub-advisor to the
investment fund in which such ERISAcovered plan and IRA invests. All
prospective Covered Plans that enter
into a written asset or investment
management agreement with a UBS
QPAM on or after the date of the Initial
Notice must receive a copy of the
exemption, the Summary, and the
Statement prior to, or
contemporaneously with, the Covered
Plan’s receipt of a written asset
management agreement from the UBS
QPAM. The notice requirements shall
operate in tandem to ensure that all
Covered Plan clients receive either the
Initial Notice or a subsequent notice.
Disclosures may be delivered
electronically.
The proposal requires that each UBS
QPAM maintain records necessary to
demonstrate that the conditions of this
exemption have been met, for six (6)
years following the date of any
transaction for which such UBS QPAM
relies upon the relief in the exemption.
The proposal mandates that UBS
continue to designate a senior
compliance officer (the Compliance
Officer) who will be responsible for
compliance with the Policies and
Training requirements described herein.
The Compliance Officer must conduct
an exemption review (the Exemption
Review) for the period beginning on the
date of a judgment, if any, against UBS
or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court 15 to determine the
adequacy and effectiveness of the
implementation of the Policies and
Training. The Compliance Officer must
be a professional with extensive
relevant experience with a reporting
line within UBS’s Compliance and
Operational Risk Control function to the
Head of Compliance and Operational
Rick Control, Asset Management. At a
minimum, the Exemption Review must
include review of the following items:
(i) Any compliance matter related to the
Policies or Training that was identified
by, or reported to, the Compliance
15 Pursuant to PTE 2017–07 the Compliance
Officer must conduct and exemption review
(annual review) for each period corresponding to
the audit periods set forth in Section I(i)(1) of PTE
2017–07 and the Compliance officer’s written report
submitted to the Department within three (3)
months of the end of the period to which it relates.
Accordingly, the final exemption review pursuant
to PTE 2017–07 must cover the period January 10,
2018 through the date of a judgment, if any, against
UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance
Court, and the corresponding Compliance Officer’s
written report must be submitted within three (3)
months of the date of such a judgment.
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Officer during the previous year; (ii) any
material change in the relevant business
activities of the UBS QPAMs; and (iii)
any change to ERISA, the Code, or
regulations that may be applicable to the
activities of the UBS QPAMs.
The Compliance Officer must prepare
a written report (an Exemption Report)
that summarizes his or her material
activities during the Exemption Period
and sets forth any instance of
noncompliance discovered during the
Exemption Period, and any related
corrective action. In each Exemption
Report, the Compliance Officer must
certify in writing that to his or her
knowledge the report is accurate and the
UBS QPAMs have complied with the
Policies and Training, and/or corrected
(or are correcting) any instances of
noncompliance.
The Exemption Report must be
provided to the appropriate corporate
officers of UBS and each UBS QPAM to
which such report relates and to the
head of compliance and the General
Counsel (or their functional equivalent)
of the relevant UBS QPAM. The
Exemption Report must be made
unconditionally available to the
independent auditor. The Exemption
Review, including the Compliance
Officer’s written Exemption Report,
must be completed within three (3)
months following the end of the period
to which it relates.
UBS must also immediately disclose
to the Department any Deferred
Prosecution Agreement (a DPA) or NonProsecution Agreement (an NPA) with
the U.S. Department of Justice, entered
into by UBS or any of its affiliates (as
defined in Section VI(d) of PTE 84–14)
in connection with conduct described in
Section I(g) of PTE 84–14 or section 411
of ERISA. UBS must also immediately
provide the Department with any
information requested by the
Department, as permitted by law,
regarding the agreement and/or conduct
and allegations that led to the
agreement.
The proposal mandates that, among
other things, each UBS QPAM clearly
and prominently informs Covered Plan
clients of their right to obtain a copy of
the Policies or a description (Summary
Policies) which accurately summarizes
key components of the UBS QPAM’s
written Policies developed in
connection with this exemption. If the
Policies are thereafter changed, each
Covered Plan client must receive a new
disclosure within six (6) months
following the end of the calendar year
during which the Policies were
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changed.16 With respect to this
requirement, the description may be
continuously maintained on a website,
provided that such website link to the
Policies or Summary Policies is clearly
and prominently disclosed to each
Covered Plan.
The proposal requires that UBS
QPAMs must comply with each
condition of PTE 84–14, as amended,
with the sole exception of the violations
of Section I(g) of PTE 84–14 that are
attributable to the Convictions and the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France. If, during the
Exemption Period, an entity within the
UBS corporate structure is convicted of
a crime described in Section I(g) of PTE
84–14, (other than the 2013 Conviction,
2018 Conviction, and the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France), or is convicted in a foreign
jurisdiction for a crime described in
Section I(g) of PTE 84–14, relief in this
proposed exemption would terminate
immediately.
11. Administratively Feasible. The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposal is administratively
feasible since, among other things, a
qualified independent auditor will be
required to perform an in-depth audit
covering, among other things, each UBS
QPAM’s compliance with the
exemption, and a corresponding written
audit report will be provided to the
Department and available to the public.
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Notice to Interested Persons
Notice to interested persons is by
publication of this notice of proposed
temporary one-year exemption in the
Federal Register. All written comments
and/or requests for a hearing must be
received by the Department within three
days of the date of 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 a 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.
16 In the event Applicant meets this disclosure
requirement through Summary Policies, changes to
the Policies shall not result in the requirement for
a new disclosure unless the Summary Policies are
no longer accurate because of the changes.
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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 exemption, 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 exemption, 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.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting a one-year temporary
exemption under the authority of
section 408(a) of the Act (or ERISA) and
section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code (or Code), and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76
FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).17
17 For purposes of this proposed one year
temporary exemption, references to section 406 of
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3823
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, this notice of proposed
exemption is issued solely by the
Department.
Section I. Covered Transactions
If the proposed one year temporary
exemption is granted, certain entities
with specified relationships to UBS
(hereinafter, the UBS QPAMs, as
defined in Sections II(e)) will not be
precluded from relying on the
exemptive relief provided by Prohibited
Transaction Class Exemption 84–14
(PTE 84–14 or the QPAM Exemption),18
notwithstanding the 2013 Conviction of
UBS Securities Japan Co., Ltd., the 2018
Conviction of UBS (collectively the
Convictions, as defined in Section II(a)),
and the Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France (as defined in
Section II(b)) during the Exemption
Period, provided that the following
conditions are satisfied: 19
(a) The UBS QPAMs (including their
officers, directors, agents other than
UBS, UBS Securities Japan, and UBS
France), and employees of such UBS
QPAMs and any other party engaged on
behalf of such UBS QPAMs who had
responsibility for, or exercised authority
in connection with the management of
plan assets did not know of, did not
have reason to know of, or participate
in: (1) The FX Misconduct; (2) the
criminal conduct of UBS Securities
Japan and UBS that is the subject of the
Convictions; or (3) the alleged criminal
conduct of UBS and UBS France that is
the subject of the Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France. For
purposes of this exemption, ‘‘participate
in’’ refers not only to active
participation in the FX Misconduct, the
misconduct underlying the Convictions,
and the alleged misconduct underlying
the Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France, but also to
knowing approval of that misconduct,
or knowledge of such misconduct
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.
18 49 FR 9494 (March 13, 1984), as corrected at
50 FR 41430, (October 10, 1985), as amended at 70
FR 49305(August 23, 2005), and as amended at 75
FR 38837 (July 6, 2010), hereinafter referred to as
‘‘PTE 84–14’’ or the ‘‘QPAM Exemption.’’
19 Section I(g) of PTE 84–14 generally provides
that ‘‘[n]either the QPAM nor any affiliate thereof
. . . nor any owner . . . of a 5 percent or more
interest in the QPAM is a person who within the
10 years immediately preceding the transaction has
been either convicted or released from
imprisonment, whichever is later, as a result of’’
certain criminal activity therein described.
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without taking active steps to prohibit
such conduct, such as reporting the
conduct to supervisors, including the
Board of Directors;
(b) The UBS QPAMs (including their
officers, directors, agents other than
UBS, UBS Securities Japan, and UBS
France, and employees of such UBS
QPAMs and any other parties engaged
on behalf of such UBS QPAMs) did not
receive direct compensation, or
knowingly receive indirect
compensation, in connection with the
(1) the FX Misconduct; (2) the criminal
conduct of UBS Securities Japan and
UBS that is the subject of the
Convictions; or (3) the alleged criminal
conduct of UBS and UBS France that is
the subject of the Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France;
(c) The UBS QPAMs will not employ
or knowingly engage any of the
individuals that participated in: (1) The
FX Misconduct; (2) the criminal
conduct of UBS Securities Japan and
UBS that is the subject of the
Convictions; or (3) the alleged criminal
conduct of UBS and UBS France that is
the subject of the Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France;
(d) At all times during the Exemption
Period, no UBS QPAM will use its
authority or influence to direct an
‘‘investment fund’’ (as defined in
Section VI(b) of PTE 84–14) that is
subject to ERISA or the Code and
managed by such UBS QPAM with
respect to one or more Covered Plans (as
defined in Section II(c)) to enter into
any transaction with UBS, UBS
Securities Japan, or UBS France or to
engage UBS, UBS Securities Japan, or
UBS France to provide any service to
such investment fund, for a direct or
indirect fee borne by such investment
fund, regardless of whether such
transaction or service may otherwise be
within the scope of relief provided by
an administrative or statutory
exemption;
(e) Any failure of the UBS QPAMs to
satisfy Section I(g) of PTE 84–14 arose
solely from the Convictions and the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France;
(f) A UBS QPAM did not exercise
authority over the assets of any plan
subject to Part 4 of Title I of ERISA (an
ERISA-covered plan) or section 4975 of
the Code (an IRA) in a manner that it
knew or should have known would:
Further the FX Misconduct, the criminal
conduct that is the subject of the
Convictions, or the alleged criminal
conduct that is the subject of the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France; or cause the UBS
QPAM or its affiliates to directly or
indirectly profit from the FX
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Misconduct, the criminal conduct that
is the subject of the Convictions, or the
alleged criminal conduct that is the
subject of the Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France;
(g) Other than with respect to
employee benefit plans maintained or
sponsored for its own employees or the
employees of an affiliate, UBS, UBS
Securities Japan, and UBS France will
not act as fiduciaries within the
meaning of section 3(21)(A)(i) or (iii) of
ERISA, or section 4975(e)(3)(A) and (C)
of the Code, with respect to ERISAcovered plan and IRA assets; provided,
however, that UBS, UBS Securities
Japan, and UBS France will not be
treated as violating the conditions of
this exemption solely because it acted as
an investment advice fiduciary within
the meaning of section 3(21)(A)(ii) of
ERISA or section 4975(e)(3)(B) of the
Code;
(h)(1) Each UBS QPAM must continue
to maintain, adjust (to the extent
necessary), implement, and follow
written policies and procedures (the
Policies). The Policies must require, and
must be reasonably designed to ensure
that:
(i) The asset management decisions of
the UBS QPAM are conducted
independently of UBS’s corporate
management and business activities,
including the corporate management
and business activities of the Investment
Bank division, UBS Securities Japan,
and UBS France; this condition does not
preclude a UBS QPAM from receiving
publicly available research and other
widely available information from a
UBS affiliate;
(ii) The UBS QPAM fully complies
with ERISA’s fiduciary duties, and with
ERISA and the Code’s prohibited
transaction provisions, in each case as
applicable with respect to each Covered
Plan, and does not knowingly
participate in any violation of these
duties and provisions with respect to
Covered Plans;
(iii) The UBS QPAM does not
knowingly participate in any other
person’s violation of ERISA or the Code
with respect to Covered Plans;
(iv) Any filings or statements made by
the UBS QPAM to regulators, including,
but not limited to, the Department, the
Department of the Treasury, the
Department of Justice, and the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation, on behalf
of or in relation to Covered Plans, are
materially accurate and complete, to the
best of such QPAM’s knowledge at that
time;
(v) To the best of the UBS QPAM’s
knowledge at that time, the UBS QPAM
does not make material
misrepresentations or omit material
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Frm 00078
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
information in its communications with
such regulators with respect to Covered
Plans, or make material
misrepresentations or omit material
information in its communications with
Covered Plans;
(vi) The UBS QPAM complies with
the terms of this exemption;
(2) Any violation of, or failure to
comply with an item in subparagraphs
(h)(1)(ii) through (h)(1)(vi), is corrected
as soon as reasonably possible upon
discovery, or as soon after the QPAM
reasonably should have known of the
noncompliance (whichever is earlier),
and any such violation or compliance
failure not so corrected is reported,
upon the discovery of such failure to so
correct, in writing. Such report shall be
made to the head of compliance and the
General Counsel (or their functional
equivalent) of the relevant UBS QPAM
that engaged in the violation or failure,
and, the independent auditor
responsible for reviewing compliance
with the Policies, and a fiduciary of any
affected Covered Plan where such
fiduciary is independent of UBS.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, with
respect to any Covered Plan sponsored
by an ‘‘affiliate’’ (as defined in Section
VI(d) of PTE 84–14) of UBS or
beneficially owned by an employee of
UBS or its affiliates, such fiduciary does
not need to be independent of UBS. A
UBS QPAM will not be treated as
having failed to develop, implement,
maintain, or follow the Policies,
provided that it corrects any instance of
noncompliance as soon as reasonably
possible upon discovery, or as soon as
reasonably possible after the QPAM
reasonably should have known of the
noncompliance (whichever is earlier),
and provided that it adheres to the
reporting requirements set forth in this
subparagraph (vii);
(3) Each UBS QPAM will maintain,
adjust (to the extent necessary) and
implement a program of training during
the Exemption Period, to be conducted
during the Exemption Period, for all
relevant UBS QPAM asset/portfolio
management, trading, legal, compliance,
and internal audit personnel. The
Training must:
(i) At a minimum, cover the Policies,
ERISA and Code compliance (including
applicable fiduciary duties and the
prohibited transaction provisions),
ethical conduct, the consequences for
not complying with the conditions of
this exemption (including any loss of
exemptive relief provided herein), and
prompt reporting of wrongdoing; and
(ii) Be conducted by a professional
who has been prudently selected and
who has appropriate technical training
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and proficiency with ERISA and the
Code;
(i)(1) Each UBS QPAM submits to an
audit conducted by an independent
auditor, who has been prudently
selected and who has appropriate
technical training and proficiency with
ERISA and the Code, to evaluate the
adequacy of, and each UBS QPAM’s
compliance with, the Policies and
Training described herein. The audit
requirement must be incorporated in the
Policies. The audit must cover the
Exemption Period and must be
completed no later than six (6) months
after the end of the exemption period.
For time periods ending prior to a
judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS
France by the French First Instance
Court and covered by the audit required
pursuant to PTE 2017–07,20 the audit
requirements in Section I(i) of PTE
2017–07 will remain in effect. The audit
under PTE 2017–07 covering the time
period from January 10, 2018 until the
date of a judgment, if any, against UBS
or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court must be completed
within six (6) months of the date of any
such judgment, and the corresponding
certified Audit Report must be
submitted to the Department no later
than 45 days following the completion
of such audit; 21
(2) Within the scope of the audit and
to the extent necessary for the auditor,
in its sole opinion, to complete its audit
and comply with the conditions for
relief described herein, and only to the
extent such disclosure is not prevented
by state or federal statute, or involves
communications subject to attorney
client privilege, each UBS QPAM and,
if applicable, UBS, will grant the auditor
unconditional access to its business,
including, but not limited to: Its
computer systems; business records;
transactional data; workplace locations;
training materials; and personnel. Such
access is limited to information relevant
to the auditor’s objectives as specified
by the terms of this exemption;
20 82 FR 61903 (December 29, 2017). PTE 2017–
07 is an exemption that permits UBS QPAMs to rely
on the exemptive relief provided by PTE 84–14,
notwithstanding the 2013 and 2018 Convictions.
21 Pursuant to PTE 2017–07, the initial audit
period begins on January 10, 2018 and ends on
March 9, 2019, and the corresponding Audit Report
must be completed by September 9, 2019 and the
Audit Report submitted to the Department within
45 days after completion. Accordingly, the last
audit performed pursuant to PTE 2017–07 will
cover the period beginning January 10, 2018 and
ending on the date of judgment, if any, against UBS
or UBS France by the French First Instance Court.
The corresponding Audit Report must be completed
within six months of any such judgment and
submitted to the Department within 45 days of
completion.
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(3) The auditor’s engagement must
specifically require the auditor to
determine whether each UBS QPAM has
developed, implemented, maintained,
and followed the Policies in accordance
with the conditions of this exemption,
and has developed and implemented
the Training, as required herein;
(4) The auditor’s engagement must
specifically require the auditor to test
each UBS QPAM’s operational
compliance with the Policies and
Training. In this regard, the auditor
must test, for each UBS QPAM, a
sample of such UBS QPAM’s
transactions involving Covered Plans,
sufficient in size and nature to afford
the auditor a reasonable basis to
determine such UBS QPAM’s
operational compliance with the
Policies and Training;
(5) For the audit, on or before the end
of the relevant period described in
Section I(i)(1) for completing the audit,
the auditor must issue a written report
(the Audit Report) to UBS and the UBS
QPAM to which the audit applies that
describes the procedures performed by
the auditor in connection with its
examination. The auditor, at its
discretion, may issue a single
consolidated Audit Report that covers
all the UBS QPAMs. The Audit Report
must include the auditor’s specific
determinations regarding:
(i) The adequacy of each UBS QPAM’s
Policies and Training; each UBS
QPAM’s compliance with the Policies
and Training; the need, if any, to
strengthen such Policies and Training;
and any instance of the respective UBS
QPAM’s noncompliance with the
written Policies and Training described
in Section I(h) above. The UBS QPAM
must promptly address any
noncompliance. The UBS QPAM must
promptly address or prepare a written
plan of action to address any
determination as to the adequacy of the
Policies and Training and the auditor’s
recommendations (if any) with respect
to strengthening the Policies and
Training of the respective UBS QPAM.
Any action taken or the plan of action
to be taken by the respective UBS
QPAM must be included in an
addendum to the Audit Report (such
addendum must be completed prior to
the certification described in Section
I(i)(7) below). In the event such a plan
of action to address the auditor’s
recommendation regarding the
adequacy of the Policies and Training is
not completed by the time of
submission of the Audit Report, the
following period’s Audit Report must
state whether the plan was satisfactorily
completed. Any determination by the
auditor that a UBS QPAM has
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3825
implemented, maintained, and followed
sufficient Policies and Training must
not be based solely or in substantial part
on an absence of evidence indicating
noncompliance. In this last regard, any
finding that a UBS QPAM has complied
with the requirements under this
subparagraph must be based on
evidence that the particular UBS QPAM
has actually implemented, maintained,
and followed the Policies and Training
required by this exemption.
Furthermore, the auditor must not
solely rely on the Exemption Report
created by the compliance officer (the
Compliance Officer), as described in
Section I(m) below, as the basis for the
auditor’s conclusions in lieu of
independent determinations and testing
performed by the auditor as required by
Section I(i)(3) and (4) above; and
(ii) The adequacy of the Exemption
Review described in Section I(m);
(6) The auditor must notify the
respective UBS QPAM of any instance
of noncompliance identified by the
auditor within five (5) business days
after such noncompliance is identified
by the auditor, regardless of whether the
audit has been completed as of that
date;
(7) With respect to the Audit Report,
the General Counsel, or one of the three
most senior executive officers of the
UBS QPAM to which the Audit Report
applies, must certify in writing, under
penalty of perjury, that the officer has
reviewed the Audit Report and this
exemption; that, to the best of such
officer’s knowledge at the time, such
UBS QPAM has addressed, corrected,
remedied any noncompliance and
inadequacy or has an appropriate
written plan to address any inadequacy
regarding the Policies and Training
identified in the Audit Report. Such
certification must also include the
signatory’s determination, that, to the
best of such officer’s knowledge at the
time, the Policies and Training in effect
at the time of signing are adequate to
ensure compliance with the conditions
of this exemption and with the
applicable provisions of ERISA and the
Code;
(8) The Risk Committee of UBS’s
Board of Directors is provided a copy of
the Audit Report; and a senior executive
officer of UBS’s Compliance and
Operational Risk Control function must
review the Audit Report for each UBS
QPAM and must certify in writing,
under penalty of perjury, that such
officer has reviewed the Audit Report;
(9) Each UBS QPAM provides its
certified Audit Report, by regular mail
to: Office of Exemption Determinations
(OED), 200 Constitution Avenue NW,
Suite 400, Washington, DC 20210; or by
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private carrier to: 122 C Street NW,
Suite 400, Washington, DC 20001–2109.
This delivery must take place no later
than 45 days following completion of
the Audit Report. The Audit Report will
be made part of the public record
regarding this exemption. Furthermore,
each UBS QPAM must make its Audit
Report unconditionally available,
electronically or otherwise, for
examination upon request by any duly
authorized employee or representative
of the Department, other relevant
regulators, and any fiduciary of a
Covered Plan;
(10) Any engagement agreement with
an auditor to perform the audit required
under the terms of this exemption that
is entered subsequent to the date of a
judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS
France by the French First Instance
Court must be submitted to OED no later
than two (2) months after the execution
of such agreement;
(11) The auditor must provide the
Department, upon request, for
inspection and review, access to all the
workpapers created and utilized in
connection with the audit, provided
such access and inspection is otherwise
permitted by law; and
(12) UBS must notify the Department
of a change in the independent auditor
no later than two (2) months after the
engagement of a substitute or
subsequent auditor and must provide an
explanation for the substitution or
change including a description of any
material disputes between the
terminated auditor and UBS;
(j) As of the date of a judgment, if any,
against UBS or UBS France by the
French First Instance and throughout
the Exemption Period, with respect to
any arrangement, agreement, or contract
between a UBS QPAM and a Covered
Plan, the UBS QPAM agrees and
warrants to Covered Plans:
(1) To comply with ERISA and the
Code, as applicable with respect to such
Covered Plan; to refrain from engaging
in prohibited transactions that are not
otherwise exempt (and to promptly
correct any inadvertent prohibited
transactions); and to comply with the
standards of prudence and loyalty set
forth in section 404 of ERISA with
respect to each such ERISA-covered
plan and IRA to the extent that section
404 is applicable;
(2) To indemnify and hold harmless
the Covered Plan for any actual losses
resulting directly from: A UBS QPAM’s
violation of ERISA’s fiduciary duties, as
applicable, and of the prohibited
transaction provisions of ERISA and the
Code, as applicable; a breach of contract
by the QPAM; or any claim arising out
of the failure of such UBS QPAM to
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qualify for the exemptive relief provided
by PTE 84–14 as a result of a violation
of Section I(g) of PTE 84–14 other than
the Convictions and the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France. This condition applies only to
actual losses caused by the UBS
QPAM’s violations.
(3) Not to require (or otherwise cause)
the Covered Plan to waive, limit, or
qualify the liability of the UBS QPAM
for violating ERISA or the Code or
engaging in prohibited transactions;
(4) Not to restrict the ability of such
Covered Plan to terminate or withdraw
from its arrangement with the UBS
QPAM with respect to any investment
in a separately managed account or
pooled fund subject to ERISA and
managed by such QPAM, with the
exception of reasonable restrictions,
appropriately disclosed in advance, that
are specifically designed to ensure
equitable treatment of all investors in a
pooled fund in the event such
withdrawal or termination may have
adverse consequences for all other
investors. In connection with any such
arrangements involving investments in
pooled funds subject to ERISA entered
into after the effective date of PTE 2017–
07, the adverse consequences must
relate to a lack of liquidity of the
underlying assets, valuation issues, or
regulatory reasons that prevent the fund
from promptly redeeming an ERISAcovered plan’s or IRA’s investment, and
such restrictions must be applicable to
all such investors and be effective no
longer than reasonably necessary to
avoid the adverse consequences;
(5) Not to impose any fees, penalties,
or charges for such termination or
withdrawal with the exception of
reasonable fees, appropriately disclosed
in advance, that are specifically
designed to prevent generally
recognized abusive investment practices
or specifically designed to ensure
equitable treatment of all investors in a
pooled fund in the event such
withdrawal or termination may have
adverse consequences for all other
investors, provided that such fees are
applied consistently and in like manner
to all such investors; and
(6) Not to include exculpatory
provisions disclaiming or otherwise
limiting liability of the UBS QPAM for
a violation of such agreement’s terms.
To the extent consistent with Section
410 of ERISA, however, this provision
does not prohibit disclaimers for
liability caused by an error,
misrepresentation, or misconduct of a
plan fiduciary or other party hired by
the plan fiduciary who is independent
of UBS and its affiliates, or damages
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
arising from acts outside the control of
the UBS QPAM;
(7) Within six months of the date of
a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS
France by the French First Instance
Court, each UBS QPAM must provide a
notice of its obligations under this
Section I(j) to each Covered Plan. For
prospective Covered Plans that enter
into a written asset or investment
management agreement with a UBS
QPAM on or after the date of such a
judgment, the UBS QPAM will agree to
its obligations under this Section I(j) in
an updated investment management
agreement between the UBS QPAM and
such clients or other written contractual
agreement. This condition will be
deemed met for each Covered Plan that
received a notice pursuant to PTE 2016–
17 and/or PTE 2017–07 that meets the
terms of this condition.
Notwithstanding the above, a UBS
QPAM will not violate the condition
solely because a Plan or IRA refuses to
sign an updated investment
management agreement.
(k) Within 60 days of a judgment, if
any, against UBS or UBS France by the
French First Instance Court, each UBS
QPAM will provide a notice of the
exemption, along with a separate
summary describing the facts that led to
the Convictions and the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France (the Summary), which have been
submitted to the Department, and a
prominently displayed statement (the
Statement) (collectively, Initial Notice)
that the Convictions and the Potential
2019 French Judgment Against UBS/
UBS France, each separately result in a
failure to meet a condition in PTE 84–
14 and PTE 2017–07, to each sponsor
and beneficial owner of a Covered Plan,
or the sponsor of an investment fund in
any case where a UBS QPAM acts as a
sub-advisor to the investment fund in
which such ERISA-covered plan and
IRA invests. Effective as of the date that
is 60 days after the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France Date, all Covered Plan clients
that enter into a written asset or
investment management agreement with
a UBS QPAM after that date must
receive a copy of the exemption, the
Summary, and the Statement prior to, or
contemporaneously with, the Covered
Plan’s receipt of a written asset
management agreement from the UBS
QPAM. Disclosures may be delivered
electronically;
(l) The UBS QPAMs must comply
with each condition of PTE 84–14, as
amended, with the sole exception of the
violations of Section I(g) of PTE 84–14
that are attributable to the Convictions
and the Potential 2019 French Judgment
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Against UBS/UBS France. If, during the
Exemption Period, an entity within the
UBS corporate structure is convicted of
a crime described in Section I(g) of PTE
84–14, (other than the 2013 Conviction,
2018 Conviction, and the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France), or is convicted in a foreign
jurisdiction for a crime described in
Section I(g) of PTE 84–14, relief in this
proposed exemption would terminate
immediately;
(m)(1) UBS continues to designate a
senior compliance officer (the
Compliance Officer) who will be
responsible for compliance with the
Policies and Training requirements
described herein. The Compliance
Officer must conduct a review for the
Exemption Period (the Exemption
Review),22 to determine the adequacy
and effectiveness of the implementation
of the Policies and Training. With
respect to the Compliance Officer, the
following conditions must be met:
(i) The Compliance Officer must be a
professional who has extensive
experience with, and knowledge of, the
regulation of financial services and
products, including under ERISA and
the Code; and
(ii) The Compliance Officer must have
a reporting line within UBS’s
Compliance and Operational Risk
Control (C&ORC) function to the Head
of Compliance and Operational Risk
Control, Asset Management. The
C&ORC function is organizationally
independent of UBS’s business
divisions—including Asset
Management, the Investment Bank, and
Global Wealth Management—and is led
by the Global Head of C&ORC, who will
report directly to UBS’s Chief Risk
Officer, the head of Group Compliance,
Regulatory and Governance, or another
appropriate member of the Group
Executive Board;
(2) With respect to the Exemption
Review, the following conditions must
be met:
(i) The Exemption Review includes a
review of the UBS QPAMs’ compliance
with and effectiveness of the Policies
and Training and of the following: Any
compliance matter related to the
22 Pursuant to PTE 2017–07 the Compliance
Officer must conduct an exemption review (annual
review) for each period corresponding to the audit
periods set forth in Section I(i)(1) of PTE 2017–07
and the Compliance officer’s written report
submitted to the Department within three (3)
months of the end of the period to which it relates.
Accordingly, the final exemption review pursuant
to PTE 2017–07 must cover the period January 10,
2018 through the date of a judgment, if any, against
UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance
Court, and the corresponding Compliance Officer’s
written report must be submitted within three (3)
months of any such judgment.
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17:22 Feb 12, 2019
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Policies or Training that was identified
by, or reported to, the Compliance
Officer or others within the C&ORC
function during the previous year; the
most recent Audit Report issued
pursuant to this exemption or PTE
2017–07; any material change in the
relevant business activities of the UBS
QPAMs; and any change to ERISA, the
Code, or regulations related to fiduciary
duties and the prohibited transaction
provisions that may be applicable to the
activities of the UBS QPAMs;
(ii) The Compliance Officer prepares
a written report for the Exemption
Review (an Exemption Report) that (A)
summarizes his or her material activities
during the Exemption Period; (B) sets
forth any instance of noncompliance
discovered during the Exemption
Period, and any related corrective
action; (C) details any change to the
Policies or Training to guard against any
similar instance of noncompliance
occurring again; and (D) makes
recommendations, as necessary, for
additional training, procedures,
monitoring, or additional and/or
changed processes or systems, and
management’s actions on such
recommendations;
(iii) In the Exemption Report, the
Compliance Officer must certify in
writing that to the best of his or her
knowledge at the time: (A) The report is
accurate; (B) the Policies and Training
are working in a manner which is
reasonably designed to ensure that the
Policies and Training requirements
described herein are met; (C) any known
instance of noncompliance during the
Exemption Period and any related
correction taken to date have been
identified in the Exemption Report; and
(D) the UBS QPAMs have complied
with the Policies and Training, and/or
corrected (or are correcting) any known
instances of noncompliance in
accordance with Section I(h) above;
(iv) The Exemption Report must be
provided to appropriate corporate
officers of UBS and each UBS QPAM to
which such report relates, and to the
head of compliance and the General
Counsel (or their functional equivalent)
of the relevant UBS QPAM; and the
report must be made unconditionally
available to the independent auditor
described in Section I(i) above;
(v) The Exemption Review, including
the Compliance Officer’s written
Exemption Report, must be completed
within three (3) months following the
end of the period to which it relates;
(n) UBS imposes its internal
procedures, controls, and protocols on
UBS Securities Japan to: (1) Reduce the
likelihood of any recurrence of conduct
that that is the subject of the 2013
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
3827
Conviction, and (2) comply in all
material respects with the Business
Improvement Order, dated December
16, 2011, issued by the Japanese
Financial Services Authority;
(o) UBS complies in all material
respects with the audit and monitoring
procedures imposed on UBS by the U.S.
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission Order, dated December 19,
2012;
(p) Each UBS QPAM will maintain
records necessary to demonstrate that
the conditions of this exemption have
been met, for six (6) years following the
date of any transaction for which such
UBS QPAM relies upon the relief in the
exemption;
(q) During the Exemption Period, UBS
must: (1) Immediately disclose to the
Department any Deferred Prosecution
Agreement (a DPA) or Non-Prosecution
Agreement (an NPA) with the U.S.
Department of Justice, entered into by
UBS or any of its affiliates (as defined
in Section VI(d) of PTE 84–14) in
connection with conduct described in
Section I(g) of PTE 84–14 or section 411
of ERISA; and (2) immediately provides
the Department any information
requested by the Department, as
permitted by law, regarding the
agreement and/or conduct and
allegations that led to the agreement;
(r) Within six months from the date of
a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS
France by the French First Instance
Court, each UBS QPAM, in its
agreements with, or in other written
disclosures provided to Covered Plans,
will clearly and prominently inform
Covered Plan clients of their right to
obtain a copy of the Policies or a
description (Summary Policies) which
accurately summarizes key components
of the UBS QPAM’s written Policies
developed in connection with this
exemption. If the Policies are thereafter
changed, each Covered Plan client must
receive a new disclosure within six (6)
months following the end of the
calendar year during which the Policies
were changed.23 With respect to this
requirement, the description may be
continuously maintained on a website,
provided that such website link to the
Policies or Summary Policies is clearly
and prominently disclosed to each
Covered Plan; and
(s) A UBS QPAM will not fail to meet
the terms of this exemption, solely
because a different UBS QPAM fails to
satisfy a condition for relief described in
23 In the event the Applicant meets this disclosure
requirement through Summary Policies, changes to
the Policies shall not result in the requirement for
a new disclosure unless, as a result of changes to
the Policies, the Summary Policies are no longer
accurate.
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Sections I(c), (d), (h), (i), (j), (k), (l), (p),
or (r); or if the independent auditor
described in Section I(i) fails a provision
of the exemption other than the
requirement described in Section
I(i)(11), provided that such failure did
not result from any actions or inactions
of UBS or its affiliates.
Section II. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Convictions’’ means the
2013 Conviction and the 2017
Conviction. The term ‘‘2013
Conviction’’ means the judgment of
conviction against UBS Securities Japan
Co. Ltd. in case number 3:12–cr–00268–
RNC in the U.S. District Court for the
District of Connecticut for one count of
wire fraud in violation of Title 18,
United States Code, sections 1343 and 2
in connection with submission of YEN
London Interbank Offered Rates and
other benchmark interest rates. The term
‘‘2018 Conviction’’ means the judgment
of conviction against UBS in case
number 3:15–cr–00076–RNC in the U.S.
District Court for the District of
Connecticut for one count of wire fraud
in violation of Title 18, United States
Code, Sections 1343 and 2 in
connection with UBS’s submission of
Yen London Interbank Offered Rates
and other benchmark interest rates
between 2001 and 2010. For all
purposes under this exemption,
‘‘conduct’’ of any person or entity that
is the ‘‘subject of the Convictions’’
encompasses any conduct of UBS and/
or their personnel, that is described in
(i) Exhibit 3 to the Plea Agreement
entered into between UBS and the
Department of Justice Criminal Division,
on May 20, 2015, in connection with
case number 3:15–cr–00076–RNC, and
(ii) Exhibits 3 and 4 to the Plea
Agreement entered into between UBS
Securities Japan and the Department of
Justice Criminal Division, on December
19, 2012, in connection with case
number 3:12–cr–00268–RNC;
(b) The term ‘‘Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France’’
includes any adverse judgment against
UBS or UBS France regarding case
Number 1105592033. For all purposes
under this exemption, ‘‘conduct’’ of any
person or entity that is the ‘‘subject of
the alleged criminal conduct that may
be the subject of the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France’’ encompasses any conduct of
UBS, its affiliates, or UBS France and/
or their personnel that is described in
any such judgment.
(c) The term ‘‘Covered Plan’’ means a
plan subject to Part IV of Title I of
ERISA (an ‘‘ERISA-covered plan’’) or a
plan subject to section 4975 of the Code
(an ‘‘IRA’’), in each case, with respect to
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which a UBS QPAM relies on PTE 84–
14, or with respect to which a UBS
QPAM (or any UBS affiliate) has
expressly represented that the manager
qualifies as a QPAM or relies on the
QPAM class exemption (PTE 84–14). A
Covered Plan does not include an
ERISA-covered plan or IRA to the extent
the UBS QPAM has expressly
disclaimed reliance on QPAM status or
PTE 84–14 in entering into a contract,
arrangement, or agreement with the
ERISA-covered plan or IRA.
(d) The term ‘‘FX Misconduct’’ means
the conduct engaged in by UBS
personnel described in Exhibit 1 of the
Plea Agreement (Factual Basis for
Breach) entered into between UBS and
the Department of Justice Criminal
Division, on May 20, 2015 in connection
with Case Number 3:15–cr–00076–RNC
filed in the US District Court for the
District of Connecticut.
(e) The term ‘‘UBS QPAM’’ means
UBS Asset Management (Americas) Inc.,
UBS Realty Investors LLC, UBS Hedge
Fund Solutions LLC, UBS O’Connor
LLC, and any future entity within the
Asset Management or the Global Wealth
Management Americas U.S. divisions of
UBS that qualifies as a ‘‘qualified
professional asset manager’’ (as defined
in Section VI(a) of PTE 84–14) 24 and
that relies on the relief provided by PTE
84–14, and with respect to which UBS
is an ‘‘affiliate’’ (as defined in Part VI(d)
of PTE 84–14). The term ‘‘UBS QPAM’’
excludes UBS securities Japan, the
entity implicated in the criminal
conduct that is the subject of the 2013
Conviction, UBS, the entity implicated
in the criminal conduct that is the
subject of the 2018 Conviction and
implicated in the alleged criminal
conduct that is the subject of the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France, and UBS France, the
entity implicated in the alleged criminal
conduct that is the subject of the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France.
(f) The term ‘‘UBS’’ means UBS AG.
(g) The term ‘‘UBS France’’ means
‘‘UBS (France) S.A.,’’ a wholly-owned
subsidiary of UBS incorporated under
the laws of France.
(h) The term ‘‘UBS Securities Japan’’
means UBS Securities Japan Co. Ltd, a
wholly-owned subsidiary of UBS
incorporated under the laws of Japan.
24 In general terms, a QPAM is an independent
fiduciary that is a bank, savings and loan
association, insurance company, or investment
adviser that meets certain equity or net worth
requirements and other licensure requirements and
that has acknowledged in a written management
agreement that it is a fiduciary with respect to each
plan that has retained the QPAM.
PO 00000
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(i) All references to ‘‘the date of a
judgment, if any, by the French First
Instance Court’’ refer to any judgment
against UBS or UBS France in case
number 1105592033;
(j) The term ‘‘Exemption Period’’
means one year beginning on the date
an adverse French judgment against
UBS or UBS France regarding case
Number 1105592033;
(k) The term ‘‘Plea Agreement’’ means
the Plea Agreement (including Exhibits
1 and 3 attached thereto) entered into
between UBS and the Department of
Justice Criminal Division, on May 20,
2015 in connection with Case Number
3:15–cr–00076–RNC filed in the US
District Court for the District of
Connecticut.
Effective Date: If granted, the
exemption discussed in this notice will
be effective for one year from the date
of judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS
France by the French First Instance
Court in case Number 1105592033.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 8th day of
February, 2019.
Lyssa Hall,
Director, Office of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2019–02218 Filed 2–11–19; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Comment Request; Grantee
Reporting Requirements for the
Graduate Research Fellowship
Program
National Science Foundation.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The National Science
Foundation (NSF) is announcing plans
to reinstate this collection. In
accordance with the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we
are providing opportunity for public
comment on this action. After obtaining
and considering public comment, NSF
will prepare the submission requesting
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) clearance of this collection for no
longer than 3 years.
DATES: Written comments on this notice
must be received by April 15, 2019 to
be assured consideration. Comments
received after that date will be
considered to the extent practicable.
Send comments to address below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Suzanne H. Plimpton, Reports Clearance
Officer, National Science Foundation,
2415 Eisenhower Avenue, Suite
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 30 (Wednesday, February 13, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3818-3828]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-02218]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
[Exemption Application No. D-11988]
Proposed Exemption Involving UBS Assets Management (Americas)
Inc.; UBS Realty Investors LLC; UBS Hedge Fund Solutions LLC; UBS
O'Connor LLC; and Certain Future Affiliates in UBS's Asset Management
and Global Wealth Management U.S. Divisions (collectively, the
Applicants or the UBS QPAMs) Located in Chicago, Illinois; Hartford,
Connecticut; New York, New York; and Chicago, Illinois, Respectively
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed exemption.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains notice of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of a proposed temporary one-year
individual exemption 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 this proposed exemption is granted, certain entities with specified
relationships to UBS will not be precluded from relying on the
exemptive relief provided by Prohibited Transaction Class Exemption 84-
14.
DATES: If there is a judgment in the French First Instance Court
against UBS and/or UBS France and that judgment constitutes a
conviction under Section I(g) of PTE 84-14, this exemption will be in
effect for one year from the date of that judgment.
Written comments and requests for a public hearing on the proposed
exemption should be submitted to the Department by February 19, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments should state the nature of the person's interest in
the proposed exemption and the manner in which the person would be
adversely affected by the exemption, if granted. A request for a
hearing can be requested by any interested person who may be adversely
affected by an exemption. A request for a hearing must state: (1) The
name, address, telephone number, and email address of the person making
the request; (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; and (3) a statement of the issues to be addressed and a
general description of the evidence to be presented at the hearing. The
Department will grant a request for a hearing made in accordance with
the requirements above where a hearing is necessary to fully explore
material factual issues identified by the person requesting the
hearing. A notice of such hearing shall be published by the Department
in the Federal Register. The Department may decline to hold a hearing
where: (1) The request for the hearing does not meet the requirements
above; (2) the only issues identified for exploration at the hearing
are matters of law; or (3) the factual issues identified can be fully
explored through the submission of evidence in written (including
electronic) form.
All written comments and requests for a hearing (at least three
copies) should be sent to the Employee Benefits Security Administration
(EBSA), Office of Exemption Determinations, U.S. Department of Labor,
200 Constitution Avenue NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20210. Attention:
Application No. D-11988. 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,
or by FAX to (202) 693-8474 by the end of the scheduled comment period.
The application 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 received will be included in the public
record without change and may be made available online at https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided,
unless the comment includes information claimed to be confidential or
other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. 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. However, if EBSA cannot read your comment due to technical
difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EBSA might not
be able to consider your comment. Additionally, the https://www.regulations.gov website is an ``anonymous access'' system, which
means EBSA will not know your identity or contact information unless
you provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an email
directly to EBSA without going through https://www.regulations.gov, your
email address will be automatically captured and included as part of
the comment that is placed in the public record and made available on
the internet.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Brian Mica of the Department at
(202) 693-8402. (This is not a toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In March 2017, UBS and UBS France were
charged with offenses under French law arising out of their cross-
border banking business. A trial was held in 2018, and the French court
announced that it would issue a judgment on February 20, 2019. This
judgment (the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France)
may be adverse to UBS and/or UBS France. UBS recently requested that
the Department issue an advisory opinion that an adverse judgment from
[[Page 3819]]
the French court would not disqualify UBS asset managers from acting as
QPAMs under PTE 84-14 (described below) pursuant to the criminal
disqualification set forth in Section I(g) of PTE 84-14. UBS requested
that, if the Department was not prepared to issue the opinion, the
Department issue a temporary exemption. The Department may not issue an
Advisory Opinion before possible conviction and is proposing this
temporary exemption.
Certain UBS affiliates are acting as QPAMs pursuant to an
individual exemption granted on December 29, 2017, which addresses
prior convictions.\1\ This proposal uses the term ``Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France'' to describe an adverse
judgment issued by a French court regarding case Number 1105592033. The
Department is proposing this exemption to protect plans and IRAs that
use UBS asset managers, from the costs and expenses that may arise in
that instance, as represented by the Applicant. The temporary nature of
this exemption gives the Department the opportunity to determine
whether a longer term exemption is necessary and/or appropriate,
including whether additional conditions are warranted.
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\1\ See PTE 2017-07, 82 FR 61916 (December 29, 2017).
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Comments received in response to this proposed one year temporary
exemption will also be considered in connection with the Department's
determination whether or not to grant any subsequent exemption. No
relief from a violation of any other law would be provided by this
exemption. Furthermore, the Department cautions that the relief in this
exemption would terminate immediately if, among other things, an entity
within the UBS corporate structure is convicted of a crime described in
Section I(g) of PTE 84-14 (other than the 2013 Conviction, 2018
Conviction, and the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France) or is convicted in a foreign jurisdiction for a crime described
in Section I(g) of PTE 84-14, during the Exemption Period.
While an entity could apply for a new exemption in that
circumstance, the Department would not be obligated to grant the
exemption. The terms of this proposed exemption have been specifically
designed to permit Covered Plans, defined below, to terminate their
relationships in an orderly and cost-effective fashion in the event of
an additional conviction or a determination that it is otherwise
prudent for a Covered Plan to terminate its relationship with an entity
covered by the proposed exemption.
Summary of Facts and Representations 2
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\2\ The Summary of Facts and Representations is based on the
Applicants' representations, unless indicated otherwise.
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1. UBS AG (UBS) is a Swiss-based global financial services company
organized under the laws of Switzerland. UBS has banking divisions and
subsidiaries throughout the world, with its United States headquarters
located in New York, New York and Stamford, Connecticut. UBS itself
does not provide investment management services to client plans that
are subject to Part 4 of Title I of ERISA (ERISA plans) or section 4975
of the Code (IRAs), or otherwise exercise discretionary control over
ERISA assets. All ERISA assets are managed by U.S. affiliates of UBS.
2. UBS Asset Management (Americas) Inc., UBS Realty Investors LLC,
UBS Hedge Fund Solutions LLC, and UBS O'Connor LLC \3\ are currently
the four UBS affiliates that rely on PTE 84-14. Collectively, these UBS
QPAMs have total ERISA assets under management of approximately $11.5
billion as of June 30, 2018, excluding ERISA assets invested in pooled
funds that are not plan asset funds.
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\3\ UBS Asset Management (Americas) Inc. and UBS Realty
Investors LLC are wholly owned by UBS Americas, Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary of UBS AG. UBS Hedge Fund Solutions LLC (formerly UBS
Alternative and Quantitative Investments, LLC) and UBS O'Connor LLC
are wholly owned by UBS Americas Holding LLC, a wholly owned
subsidiary of UBS AG.
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3. UBS Securities Japan was previously convicted of a crime that
violated PTE 84-14's Section I(g), the anti-criminal provision.\4\ This
crime was described in detail in PTE 2013-09 (September 13, 2013). UBS
itself was previously convicted of a crime that violated PTE 84-14's
Section I(g). That crime was described in detail in PTE 2017-07
(December 29, 2017). Those individual exemptions allowed UBS QPAMs to
continue to rely on PTE 84-14, notwithstanding the convictions, as long
as a number of conditions were met.
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\4\ Section I(g) of PTE 84-14 generally provides that
``[n]either the QPAM nor any affiliate thereof . . . nor any owner .
. . of a 5 percent or more interest in the QPAM is a person who
within the 10 years immediately preceding the transaction has been
either convicted or released from imprisonment, whichever is later,
as a result of'' certain criminal activity therein described.
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One of those conditions requires that UBS or any of its affiliates
may not be further convicted of a crime described in Section I(g) of
PTE 84-14.\5\ In the event of such a conviction, the Applicants would
no longer be able to rely on PTE 2017-07, which permits them to avail
themselves of PTE 84-14. This exemption, if granted, would provide
relief for the UBS QPAMs to rely on PTE 84-14, notwithstanding the 2013
Conviction, the 2018 Conviction, and the Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France for a one-year period while the Department
decides what, if any, additional action is appropriate.
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\5\ The Department notes that Section I(g) was included in PTE
84-14, in part, based on the expectation that a QPAM, and those who
may be in a position to influence its policies, maintain a high
standard of integrity.
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4. Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France. In 2013,
France opened an investigation into UBS, UBS France, and certain former
employees of UBS France S.A. The investigation centered on the
maintenance of foreign (``cross-border'') UBS bank accounts held for
private citizens. The investigating judges closed the investigation in
February 2016. UBS and UBS France received the National Financial
Prosecutor's recommendation (``requisitoire'') in July 2016 that
charges be filed. The investigating judges issued the trial order
(``Ordonnance de renvoi'') in March 2017 that set out the precise
charges against UBS, UBS France, and the individual former employees.
UBS was charged with (1) ``illicit solicitation,'' based on the alleged
solicitation of French clients within French territory from 2004-2011
by Swiss-based UBS client advisors without authorization to conduct
such business in France; and (2) money laundering, based on UBS's
alleged assistance from 2004 to 2012 to French taxpayers in opening
bank accounts outside of France to conceal their identities from
relevant authorities for the purposes of alleged tax evasion. UBS
disputes the charges.
5. The UBS QPAMs represent they are separate entities from the
entities involved in alleged misconduct that may lead to the Potential
2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France and none of the UBS QPAMs
(including their officers, directors, agents other than UBS, and
employees) knew of, had reason to know of, or participated in the
alleged conduct that is the subject of the French charges. The UBS
QPAMs represent that no UBS QPAMs (including their officers, directors,
agents other than UBS, and employees) received direct compensation, or
knowingly received indirect compensation, in connection with the
alleged conduct underlying the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France. Additionally, the UBS
[[Page 3820]]
QPAMs represent that no UBS QPAM exercised authority over the assets of
any plan in a manner that it knew or should have known would further
the alleged conduct underlying the French charges or otherwise cause
any UBS QPAMs, their affiliates, or related parties to directly or
indirectly profit from the alleged conduct underlying the French
charges.
6. The Department notes that the rules set forth in section 406 of
ERISA and section 4975(c) of the Code proscribe certain ``prohibited
transactions'' between plans and related parties with respect to those
plans, known as ``parties in interest.'' \6\ Under section 3(14) of
ERISA, parties in interest with respect to a plan include, among
others, the plan fiduciary, a sponsoring employer of the plan, service
providers with respect to the plan, and certain of their affiliates.
The prohibited transaction provisions under section 406(a) of ERISA
prohibit, in relevant part, sales, leases, loans or the provision of
services between a party in interest and a plan (or an entity whose
assets are deemed to constitute the assets of a plan), as well as the
use of plan assets by or for the benefit of, or a transfer of plan
assets to, a party in interest.\7\ Under section 408(a) of ERISA and
section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, the Department has the authority to
grant exemptions from such ``prohibited transactions'' in accordance
with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76 FR
66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).
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\6\ For purposes of the Summary of Facts and Representations,
references to specific provisions of Title I of ERISA, unless
otherwise specified, refer also to the corresponding provisions of
the Code.
\7\ The prohibited transaction provisions also include certain
fiduciary prohibited transactions under section 406(b) of ERISA.
These include transactions involving fiduciary self-dealing,
fiduciary conflicts of interest, and kickbacks to fiduciaries.
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7. PTE 84-14 \8\ exempts certain prohibited transactions between a
party in interest and an ``investment fund'' (as defined in Section VI
(b) of PTE 84-14) \9\ in which a plan has an interest, if the
investment manager satisfies the definition of ``qualified professional
asset manager'' (QPAM) and satisfies additional conditions for the
exemption. PTE 84-14 was developed and granted based on the essential
premise that broad relief could be afforded for all types of
transactions in which a plan engages only if the commitments and the
investments of plan assets and the negotiations leading thereto are the
sole responsibility of an independent, discretionary, manager.\10\
Section I(g) of PTE 84-14 generally provides that ``[n]either the QPAM
nor any affiliate thereof . . . nor any owner . . . of a 5 percent or
more interest in the QPAM is a person who within the 10 years
immediately preceding the transaction has been either convicted or
released from imprisonment, whichever is later, as a result of''
certain criminal activity therein described, such as felonies arising
out of the conduct of the business of a broker, dealer, investment
adviser or bank, or income tax evasion.
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\8\ 49 FR 9494 (March 13, 1984), as corrected at 50 FR 41430
(October 10, 1985), as amended at 70 FR 49305 (August 23, 2005), and
as amended at 75 FR 38837 (July 6, 2010).
\9\ An ``investment fund'' includes single customer and pooled
separate accounts maintained by an insurance company, individual
trusts and common, collective or group trusts maintained by a bank,
and any other account or fund to the extent that the disposition of
its assets (whether or not in the custody of the QPAM) is subject to
the discretionary authority of the QPAM.
\10\ See 75 FR 38837, 38839 (July 6, 2010).
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8. Section 408(a) of ERISA provides, in part, that the Department
may not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that such
exemption is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected
plans and of their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of
the rights of such participants and beneficiaries.
9. In the interest of. The Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is in the interests of the participants and
beneficiaries of each affected ERISA plan and IRA. It is the
Department's understanding, based on representations from the UBS
QPAMs, that if the requested exemption were denied, the UBS QPAMs may
be unable to effectively manage plan assets subject to ERISA or the
prohibited transaction provisions of the Code. The UBS QPAMs state that
this would cause client ERISA plans to question the prudence of
retaining the UBS QPAMs as a manager of choice and client ERISA plans
who otherwise want to retain the UBS QPAMs could feel compelled to find
other managers who could manage their assets without having to either
forgo transactions or rely on other more complex prohibited transaction
exemptions.
The UBS QPAMs have represented that if client ERISA plans were to
move to new asset managers they could incur transition costs including
the costs associated with identifying an asset manager (such as the
costs and management time required in a Request for Proposal process,
consultant fees and other due diligence expenses), brokerage and other
transaction costs associated with the sale of portfolio investments to
accommodate the investment policies and strategy of the new asset
manager, the opportunity costs of holding cash pending investment by
the new asset manager, and lost investment opportunities in connection
with a change of asset managers. The UBS QPAMs claim that losing the
ability to use PTE 84-14 would make it difficult, costly, and
impracticable to enter into many transactions that are in the best
interests of client plans, reducing plan choices, especially among
large institutional financial banks.
The UBS QPAMs represent further that if the requested exemption is
not granted, ERISA plan clients may be effectively prohibited from
entering into certain transactions, either because no other exemption
is available or the counterparty is not willing to enter into the
transaction without the protections provided by PTE 84-14. The UBS
QPAMS state that these transactions would include those not covered by
other exemptions such as a purchase or sale from a party in interest of
a security without a readily ascertainable fair market value. The UBS
QPAMs claim that the loss of the ability to utilize PTE 84-14 could
significantly delay or even make impossible transactions that would be
beneficial for the ERISA plans because other statutory and class
prohibited transaction exemptions are not broad enough to cover such
routine transactions entered at the direction of the UBS QPAMs. The UBS
QPAMs also represent that counterparties could seek to terminate
contracts for certain outstanding transactions (including swaps) that
require the UBS QPAMs to represent that they are QPAMs and/or utilize
PTE 84-14 and additionally, pursuant to these contracts, swap
transactions with certain counterparties could automatically and
immediately be terminated without any notice or action of such
counterparties, even if other prohibited transaction exemptions are
available. The UBS QPAMs further claim that such a termination could
result in significant losses for the client ERISA plans that would be
avoided if the exemption were granted.
10. Protective of. The Department has tentatively determined that
the exemption, as proposed, will be protective of the rights of
participants and beneficiaries of affected plans. The proposal is for
one year, and has essentially the same conditions as PTE 2017-07.\11\
However, the Department has determined to revise certain of those
conditions so that it can make its required finding that the proposed
one-year exemption will be protective of the rights of participants and
beneficiaries
[[Page 3821]]
of affected plans and IRAs and are sufficient to protect plans subject
to Part 4 of Title I of ERISA (an ERISA-covered plan) or plans subject
to section 4975 of the Code (an IRA), in each case, with respect to
which a UBS QPAM relies on PTE 84-14, or with respect to which a UBS
QPAM (or any UBS affiliate) has expressly represented that the manager
qualifies as a QPAM or relies on the QPAM class exemption (PTE 84-14)
(Covered Plans).\12\
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\11\ If longer term relief is warranted, the exemption may
contain additional conditions.
\12\ For purposes of this exemption, a Covered Plan does not
include an ERISA-covered plan or IRA to the extent the UBS QPAM has
expressly disclaimed reliance on QPAM status or PTE 84-14 in
entering into a contract, arrangement, or agreement with the ERISA-
covered plan or IRA.
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This proposed exemption, if granted, is effective for period of one
year from a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France by the French
First Instance Court in case Number 1105592033. As noted above, relief
is necessary to the extent the judgment in the French First Instance
Court constitutes a conviction under Section I(g) of PTE 84-14. If the
Applicant submits an exemption request for longer term relief, and the
Department subsequently determines that longer term relief is
warranted, the effective period of this exemption will end on the
earlier of one year from the date of judgment by the French First
Instance Court or the effective date of the subsequent exemption.
Several of the conditions are aimed at ensuring that the UBS QPAMs were
not involved in the conduct that gave rise to any of the Convictions
and the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France.
Accordingly, the proposal generally precludes relief to the extent the
UBS QPAMs and any other party engaged on behalf of such QPAMs who had
responsibility for, or exercised authority in connection with the
management of plan assets, were aware of, participated in, approved of,
furthered, benefitted, or profited from, FX misconduct, the misconduct
that is the subject of the 2013 and 2018 Convictions and the Potential
2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France.\13\ Further, the UBS QPAMs
may not employ or knowingly engage any of the individuals that
participated in the conduct attributable to the Convictions or the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France.
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\13\ For clarity, references to the UBS QPAMs include any
individual employed by or engaged to work on behalf of these QPAMs
during or after the period of misconduct.
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The proposal further provides that no UBS QPAM will use its
authority or influence to direct an ``investment fund'' that is subject
to ERISA or the Code and managed by such UBS QPAM with respect to one
of more Covered Plans, to enter into any transaction with UBS, UBS
Securities Japan, or UBS France, or engage UBS, UBS Securities Japan,
or UBS France to provide any service to such investment fund, for a
direct or indirect fee borne by such investment fund, regardless of
whether such transaction or service may otherwise be within the scope
of relief provided by an administrative or statutory exemption.
If granted, the exemption will terminate if UBS or any of its
affiliates are convicted of any additional crimes described in Section
I(g) of PTE 84-14, or if any of the other conditions of PTE 84-14 have
not been met. Also, with very limited exceptions, UBS, UBS Securities
Japan, and UBS France may not act as a fiduciary within the meaning of
section 3(21)(A)(i) or (iii) of ERISA, or section 4975(e)(3)(A) and (C)
of the Code, with respect to ERISA-covered plan and IRA assets.
The proposal requires each UBS QPAM to update, implement and follow
certain written policies and procedures (the Policies). These Policies
are similar to the policies and procedures mandated by PTE 2017-07. In
general terms, the Policies must require, and must be reasonably
designed to ensure that, among other things: The asset management
decisions of the UBS QPAMs are conducted independently of the corporate
management and business activities of UBS, UBS Securities Japan, and
UBS France; the UBS QPAMs fully comply with ERISA's fiduciary duties,
and with ERISA and the Code's prohibited transaction provisions; the
UBS QPAMs do not knowingly participate in any other person's violation
of ERISA or the Code with respect to Covered Plans; any filings or
statements made by the UBS QPAMs to regulators, on behalf of or in
relation to Covered Plans, are materially accurate and complete; the
UBS QPAMs do not make material misrepresentations or omit material
information in its communications with such regulators with respect to
Covered Plans; or make material misrepresentations or omit material
information in its communications with Covered Plans; the UBS QPAMs
comply with the terms of this exemption; and any violation of, or
failure to comply with any of these items, is corrected as soon as
reasonably possible upon discovery, or as soon after the UBS QPAM
reasonably should have known of the noncompliance (whichever is
earlier). Any such violation or compliance failure not so corrected
must be reported, upon the discovery of such failure to so correct, in
writing, to appropriate corporate officers, the head of compliance and
the General Counsel (or their functional equivalent), and the
independent auditor responsible for reviewing compliance with the
Policies and a fiduciary of any affected Covered Plan where such
fiduciary is independent of UBS.
This proposal mandates training (Training), which is similar to the
training required under PTE 2017-07. In this regard, all relevant UBS
QPAM asset/portfolio management, trading, legal, compliance, and
internal audit personnel must be trained during the Exemption Period.
Among other things, the Training must, at a minimum, cover the
Policies, ERISA and Code compliance, ethical conduct, the consequences
for not complying with the conditions of this exemption (including any
loss of exemptive relief provided herein), and the requirement for
prompt reporting of wrongdoing. The Training must be conducted by a
professional who has been prudently selected and who has appropriate
technical training and proficiency with ERISA and the Code.
Under this proposal, as in PTE 2017-07, each UBS QPAM must submit
to an audit conducted by an independent auditor.\14\ Among other
things, the auditor must test a sample of each UBS QPAM's transactions
involving Covered Plans, sufficient in size and nature to afford the
auditor a reasonable basis to determine such QPAM's operational
compliance with the Policies and Training. The auditor's conclusions
cannot be based solely on the Exemption Report created by the
Compliance Officer, described below, in lieu of independent
determinations and testing performed by the auditor.
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\14\ Audits covering time periods prior to the date of a
judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court must be completed in accordance with the requirements
of PTE 2017-07, as applicable. Accordingly, the last audit performed
pursuant to PTE 2017-07 will cover the period beginning January 10,
2018 and ending on the date a judgment, if any, is issued against
UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance Court. The
corresponding Audit Report must be completed within six months of
the date of any such judgment and submitted to the Department within
45 days of completion.
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The Audit Report must be certified by the General Counsel or one of
the three most senior executive officers of the UBS QPAM to which the
Audit Report applies. A copy of the Audit Report must be provided to
the Risk Committee of UBS's Board of Directors. Among other things, UBS
must submit to the Office of Exemption Determinations (OED), any
engagement agreement with an auditor to perform the audit required
under the terms of this exemption that
[[Page 3822]]
is entered subsequent to the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against
UBS/UBS France, no later than two (2) months after the execution of
such agreement;
This proposal requires that, as of the date of a judgment, if any,
against UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance Court, and
throughout the Exemption Period, with respect to any arrangement,
agreement, or contract between a UBS QPAM and a Covered Plan, the UBS
QPAM must agree and warrant: (i) To comply with ERISA and the Code, as
applicable with respect to such Covered Plan; and (ii) to refrain from
engaging in prohibited transactions that are not otherwise exempt (and
to promptly correct any inadvertent prohibited transactions). The UBS
QPAMs must further agree and warrant to comply with the standards of
prudence and loyalty set forth in section 404 of ERISA with respect to
each such ERISA-covered plan. Each UBS QPAM must also agree and warrant
to indemnify and hold harmless such Covered Plan for any actual losses
resulting directly from any of the following: (a) A UBS QPAM's
violation of ERISA's fiduciary duties, as applicable, and/or the
prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and the Code, as applicable;
(b) a breach of contract by the UBS QPAM; or (c) any claim arising out
of the failure of such UBS QPAM to qualify for the exemptive relief
provided by PTE 84-14 as a result of a violation of Section I(g) of PTE
84-14 other than the Conviction. This condition applies only to actual
losses caused by the UBS QPAM. As noted above, the Applicant has
identified a wide range of potential harm and costs that may be
incurred by plans and IRAs if the UBS QPAMs were no longer able to rely
on PTE 84-14. The Department views actual losses arising from unwinding
transactions with third parties, and from transitioning Covered Plan
assets to third parties, to be ``direct'' results of violating the
terms of this provision.
This exemption contains specific notice requirements. In this
regard, by 60 days after the date of a judgment, if any, against UBS or
UBS France by the French First Instance Court, each UBS QPAM will
provide a notice of the exemption, along with a separate summary
describing the facts that led to the Conviction (the Summary), which
have been submitted to the Department, and a prominently displayed
statement (the Statement) (collectively, Initial Notice) that the
Convictions and the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France each separately result in a failure to meet a condition in PTE
84-14 and/or PTE 2017-07, to each sponsor and beneficial owner of a
Covered Plan, or the sponsor of an investment fund in any case where a
UBS QPAM acts as a sub-advisor to the investment fund in which such
ERISA-covered plan and IRA invests. All prospective Covered Plans that
enter into a written asset or investment management agreement with a
UBS QPAM on or after the date of the Initial Notice must receive a copy
of the exemption, the Summary, and the Statement prior to, or
contemporaneously with, the Covered Plan's receipt of a written asset
management agreement from the UBS QPAM. The notice requirements shall
operate in tandem to ensure that all Covered Plan clients receive
either the Initial Notice or a subsequent notice. Disclosures may be
delivered electronically.
The proposal requires that each UBS QPAM maintain records necessary
to demonstrate that the conditions of this exemption have been met, for
six (6) years following the date of any transaction for which such UBS
QPAM relies upon the relief in the exemption. The proposal mandates
that UBS continue to designate a senior compliance officer (the
Compliance Officer) who will be responsible for compliance with the
Policies and Training requirements described herein. The Compliance
Officer must conduct an exemption review (the Exemption Review) for the
period beginning on the date of a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS
France by the French First Instance Court \15\ to determine the
adequacy and effectiveness of the implementation of the Policies and
Training. The Compliance Officer must be a professional with extensive
relevant experience with a reporting line within UBS's Compliance and
Operational Risk Control function to the Head of Compliance and
Operational Rick Control, Asset Management. At a minimum, the Exemption
Review must include review of the following items: (i) Any compliance
matter related to the Policies or Training that was identified by, or
reported to, the Compliance Officer during the previous year; (ii) any
material change in the relevant business activities of the UBS QPAMs;
and (iii) any change to ERISA, the Code, or regulations that may be
applicable to the activities of the UBS QPAMs.
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\15\ Pursuant to PTE 2017-07 the Compliance Officer must conduct
and exemption review (annual review) for each period corresponding
to the audit periods set forth in Section I(i)(1) of PTE 2017-07 and
the Compliance officer's written report submitted to the Department
within three (3) months of the end of the period to which it
relates. Accordingly, the final exemption review pursuant to PTE
2017-07 must cover the period January 10, 2018 through the date of a
judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court, and the corresponding Compliance Officer's written
report must be submitted within three (3) months of the date of such
a judgment.
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The Compliance Officer must prepare a written report (an Exemption
Report) that summarizes his or her material activities during the
Exemption Period and sets forth any instance of noncompliance
discovered during the Exemption Period, and any related corrective
action. In each Exemption Report, the Compliance Officer must certify
in writing that to his or her knowledge the report is accurate and the
UBS QPAMs have complied with the Policies and Training, and/or
corrected (or are correcting) any instances of noncompliance.
The Exemption Report must be provided to the appropriate corporate
officers of UBS and each UBS QPAM to which such report relates and to
the head of compliance and the General Counsel (or their functional
equivalent) of the relevant UBS QPAM. The Exemption Report must be made
unconditionally available to the independent auditor. The Exemption
Review, including the Compliance Officer's written Exemption Report,
must be completed within three (3) months following the end of the
period to which it relates.
UBS must also immediately disclose to the Department any Deferred
Prosecution Agreement (a DPA) or Non-Prosecution Agreement (an NPA)
with the U.S. Department of Justice, entered into by UBS or any of its
affiliates (as defined in Section VI(d) of PTE 84-14) in connection
with conduct described in Section I(g) of PTE 84-14 or section 411 of
ERISA. UBS must also immediately provide the Department with any
information requested by the Department, as permitted by law, regarding
the agreement and/or conduct and allegations that led to the agreement.
The proposal mandates that, among other things, each UBS QPAM
clearly and prominently informs Covered Plan clients of their right to
obtain a copy of the Policies or a description (Summary Policies) which
accurately summarizes key components of the UBS QPAM's written Policies
developed in connection with this exemption. If the Policies are
thereafter changed, each Covered Plan client must receive a new
disclosure within six (6) months following the end of the calendar year
during which the Policies were
[[Page 3823]]
changed.\16\ With respect to this requirement, the description may be
continuously maintained on a website, provided that such website link
to the Policies or Summary Policies is clearly and prominently
disclosed to each Covered Plan.
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\16\ In the event Applicant meets this disclosure requirement
through Summary Policies, changes to the Policies shall not result
in the requirement for a new disclosure unless the Summary Policies
are no longer accurate because of the changes.
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The proposal requires that UBS QPAMs must comply with each
condition of PTE 84-14, as amended, with the sole exception of the
violations of Section I(g) of PTE 84-14 that are attributable to the
Convictions and the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France. If, during the Exemption Period, an entity within the UBS
corporate structure is convicted of a crime described in Section I(g)
of PTE 84-14, (other than the 2013 Conviction, 2018 Conviction, and the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France), or is convicted
in a foreign jurisdiction for a crime described in Section I(g) of PTE
84-14, relief in this proposed exemption would terminate immediately.
11. Administratively Feasible. The Department has tentatively
determined that the proposal is administratively feasible since, among
other things, a qualified independent auditor will be required to
perform an in-depth audit covering, among other things, each UBS QPAM's
compliance with the exemption, and a corresponding written audit report
will be provided to the Department and available to the public.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice to interested persons is by publication of this notice of
proposed temporary one-year exemption in the Federal Register. All
written comments and/or requests for a hearing must be received by the
Department within three days of the date of 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 a 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.
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 exemption, 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 exemption, 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.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting a one-year temporary
exemption under the authority of section 408(a) of the Act (or ERISA)
and section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code (or Code), and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B
(76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).\17\ 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, this notice of proposed exemption is issued solely by the
Department.
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\17\ For purposes of this proposed one year temporary exemption,
references to 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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Section I. Covered Transactions
If the proposed one year temporary exemption is granted, certain
entities with specified relationships to UBS (hereinafter, the UBS
QPAMs, as defined in Sections II(e)) will not be precluded from relying
on the exemptive relief provided by Prohibited Transaction Class
Exemption 84-14 (PTE 84-14 or the QPAM Exemption),\18\ notwithstanding
the 2013 Conviction of UBS Securities Japan Co., Ltd., the 2018
Conviction of UBS (collectively the Convictions, as defined in Section
II(a)), and the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France
(as defined in Section II(b)) during the Exemption Period, provided
that the following conditions are satisfied: \19\
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\18\ 49 FR 9494 (March 13, 1984), as corrected at 50 FR 41430,
(October 10, 1985), as amended at 70 FR 49305(August 23, 2005), and
as amended at 75 FR 38837 (July 6, 2010), hereinafter referred to as
``PTE 84-14'' or the ``QPAM Exemption.''
\19\ Section I(g) of PTE 84-14 generally provides that
``[n]either the QPAM nor any affiliate thereof . . . nor any owner .
. . of a 5 percent or more interest in the QPAM is a person who
within the 10 years immediately preceding the transaction has been
either convicted or released from imprisonment, whichever is later,
as a result of'' certain criminal activity therein described.
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(a) The UBS QPAMs (including their officers, directors, agents
other than UBS, UBS Securities Japan, and UBS France), and employees of
such UBS QPAMs and any other party engaged on behalf of such UBS QPAMs
who had responsibility for, or exercised authority in connection with
the management of plan assets did not know of, did not have reason to
know of, or participate in: (1) The FX Misconduct; (2) the criminal
conduct of UBS Securities Japan and UBS that is the subject of the
Convictions; or (3) the alleged criminal conduct of UBS and UBS France
that is the subject of the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/
UBS France. For purposes of this exemption, ``participate in'' refers
not only to active participation in the FX Misconduct, the misconduct
underlying the Convictions, and the alleged misconduct underlying the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France, but also to
knowing approval of that misconduct, or knowledge of such misconduct
[[Page 3824]]
without taking active steps to prohibit such conduct, such as reporting
the conduct to supervisors, including the Board of Directors;
(b) The UBS QPAMs (including their officers, directors, agents
other than UBS, UBS Securities Japan, and UBS France, and employees of
such UBS QPAMs and any other parties engaged on behalf of such UBS
QPAMs) did not receive direct compensation, or knowingly receive
indirect compensation, in connection with the (1) the FX Misconduct;
(2) the criminal conduct of UBS Securities Japan and UBS that is the
subject of the Convictions; or (3) the alleged criminal conduct of UBS
and UBS France that is the subject of the Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France;
(c) The UBS QPAMs will not employ or knowingly engage any of the
individuals that participated in: (1) The FX Misconduct; (2) the
criminal conduct of UBS Securities Japan and UBS that is the subject of
the Convictions; or (3) the alleged criminal conduct of UBS and UBS
France that is the subject of the Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France;
(d) At all times during the Exemption Period, no UBS QPAM will use
its authority or influence to direct an ``investment fund'' (as defined
in Section VI(b) of PTE 84-14) that is subject to ERISA or the Code and
managed by such UBS QPAM with respect to one or more Covered Plans (as
defined in Section II(c)) to enter into any transaction with UBS, UBS
Securities Japan, or UBS France or to engage UBS, UBS Securities Japan,
or UBS France to provide any service to such investment fund, for a
direct or indirect fee borne by such investment fund, regardless of
whether such transaction or service may otherwise be within the scope
of relief provided by an administrative or statutory exemption;
(e) Any failure of the UBS QPAMs to satisfy Section I(g) of PTE 84-
14 arose solely from the Convictions and the Potential 2019 French
Judgment Against UBS/UBS France;
(f) A UBS QPAM did not exercise authority over the assets of any
plan subject to Part 4 of Title I of ERISA (an ERISA-covered plan) or
section 4975 of the Code (an IRA) in a manner that it knew or should
have known would: Further the FX Misconduct, the criminal conduct that
is the subject of the Convictions, or the alleged criminal conduct that
is the subject of the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France; or cause the UBS QPAM or its affiliates to directly or
indirectly profit from the FX Misconduct, the criminal conduct that is
the subject of the Convictions, or the alleged criminal conduct that is
the subject of the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France;
(g) Other than with respect to employee benefit plans maintained or
sponsored for its own employees or the employees of an affiliate, UBS,
UBS Securities Japan, and UBS France will not act as fiduciaries within
the meaning of section 3(21)(A)(i) or (iii) of ERISA, or section
4975(e)(3)(A) and (C) of the Code, with respect to ERISA-covered plan
and IRA assets; provided, however, that UBS, UBS Securities Japan, and
UBS France will not be treated as violating the conditions of this
exemption solely because it acted as an investment advice fiduciary
within the meaning of section 3(21)(A)(ii) of ERISA or section
4975(e)(3)(B) of the Code;
(h)(1) Each UBS QPAM must continue to maintain, adjust (to the
extent necessary), implement, and follow written policies and
procedures (the Policies). The Policies must require, and must be
reasonably designed to ensure that:
(i) The asset management decisions of the UBS QPAM are conducted
independently of UBS's corporate management and business activities,
including the corporate management and business activities of the
Investment Bank division, UBS Securities Japan, and UBS France; this
condition does not preclude a UBS QPAM from receiving publicly
available research and other widely available information from a UBS
affiliate;
(ii) The UBS QPAM fully complies with ERISA's fiduciary duties, and
with ERISA and the Code's prohibited transaction provisions, in each
case as applicable with respect to each Covered Plan, and does not
knowingly participate in any violation of these duties and provisions
with respect to Covered Plans;
(iii) The UBS QPAM does not knowingly participate in any other
person's violation of ERISA or the Code with respect to Covered Plans;
(iv) Any filings or statements made by the UBS QPAM to regulators,
including, but not limited to, the Department, the Department of the
Treasury, the Department of Justice, and the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation, on behalf of or in relation to Covered Plans, are
materially accurate and complete, to the best of such QPAM's knowledge
at that time;
(v) To the best of the UBS QPAM's knowledge at that time, the UBS
QPAM does not make material misrepresentations or omit material
information in its communications with such regulators with respect to
Covered Plans, or make material misrepresentations or omit material
information in its communications with Covered Plans;
(vi) The UBS QPAM complies with the terms of this exemption;
(2) Any violation of, or failure to comply with an item in
subparagraphs (h)(1)(ii) through (h)(1)(vi), is corrected as soon as
reasonably possible upon discovery, or as soon after the QPAM
reasonably should have known of the noncompliance (whichever is
earlier), and any such violation or compliance failure not so corrected
is reported, upon the discovery of such failure to so correct, in
writing. Such report shall be made to the head of compliance and the
General Counsel (or their functional equivalent) of the relevant UBS
QPAM that engaged in the violation or failure, and, the independent
auditor responsible for reviewing compliance with the Policies, and a
fiduciary of any affected Covered Plan where such fiduciary is
independent of UBS. Notwithstanding the foregoing, with respect to any
Covered Plan sponsored by an ``affiliate'' (as defined in Section VI(d)
of PTE 84-14) of UBS or beneficially owned by an employee of UBS or its
affiliates, such fiduciary does not need to be independent of UBS. A
UBS QPAM will not be treated as having failed to develop, implement,
maintain, or follow the Policies, provided that it corrects any
instance of noncompliance as soon as reasonably possible upon
discovery, or as soon as reasonably possible after the QPAM reasonably
should have known of the noncompliance (whichever is earlier), and
provided that it adheres to the reporting requirements set forth in
this subparagraph (vii);
(3) Each UBS QPAM will maintain, adjust (to the extent necessary)
and implement a program of training during the Exemption Period, to be
conducted during the Exemption Period, for all relevant UBS QPAM asset/
portfolio management, trading, legal, compliance, and internal audit
personnel. The Training must:
(i) At a minimum, cover the Policies, ERISA and Code compliance
(including applicable fiduciary duties and the prohibited transaction
provisions), ethical conduct, the consequences for not complying with
the conditions of this exemption (including any loss of exemptive
relief provided herein), and prompt reporting of wrongdoing; and
(ii) Be conducted by a professional who has been prudently selected
and who has appropriate technical training
[[Page 3825]]
and proficiency with ERISA and the Code;
(i)(1) Each UBS QPAM submits to an audit conducted by an
independent auditor, who has been prudently selected and who has
appropriate technical training and proficiency with ERISA and the Code,
to evaluate the adequacy of, and each UBS QPAM's compliance with, the
Policies and Training described herein. The audit requirement must be
incorporated in the Policies. The audit must cover the Exemption Period
and must be completed no later than six (6) months after the end of the
exemption period. For time periods ending prior to a judgment, if any,
against UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance Court and
covered by the audit required pursuant to PTE 2017-07,\20\ the audit
requirements in Section I(i) of PTE 2017-07 will remain in effect. The
audit under PTE 2017-07 covering the time period from January 10, 2018
until the date of a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France by the
French First Instance Court must be completed within six (6) months of
the date of any such judgment, and the corresponding certified Audit
Report must be submitted to the Department no later than 45 days
following the completion of such audit; \21\
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\20\ 82 FR 61903 (December 29, 2017). PTE 2017-07 is an
exemption that permits UBS QPAMs to rely on the exemptive relief
provided by PTE 84-14, notwithstanding the 2013 and 2018
Convictions.
\21\ Pursuant to PTE 2017-07, the initial audit period begins on
January 10, 2018 and ends on March 9, 2019, and the corresponding
Audit Report must be completed by September 9, 2019 and the Audit
Report submitted to the Department within 45 days after completion.
Accordingly, the last audit performed pursuant to PTE 2017-07 will
cover the period beginning January 10, 2018 and ending on the date
of judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court. The corresponding Audit Report must be completed
within six months of any such judgment and submitted to the
Department within 45 days of completion.
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(2) Within the scope of the audit and to the extent necessary for
the auditor, in its sole opinion, to complete its audit and comply with
the conditions for relief described herein, and only to the extent such
disclosure is not prevented by state or federal statute, or involves
communications subject to attorney client privilege, each UBS QPAM and,
if applicable, UBS, will grant the auditor unconditional access to its
business, including, but not limited to: Its computer systems; business
records; transactional data; workplace locations; training materials;
and personnel. Such access is limited to information relevant to the
auditor's objectives as specified by the terms of this exemption;
(3) The auditor's engagement must specifically require the auditor
to determine whether each UBS QPAM has developed, implemented,
maintained, and followed the Policies in accordance with the conditions
of this exemption, and has developed and implemented the Training, as
required herein;
(4) The auditor's engagement must specifically require the auditor
to test each UBS QPAM's operational compliance with the Policies and
Training. In this regard, the auditor must test, for each UBS QPAM, a
sample of such UBS QPAM's transactions involving Covered Plans,
sufficient in size and nature to afford the auditor a reasonable basis
to determine such UBS QPAM's operational compliance with the Policies
and Training;
(5) For the audit, on or before the end of the relevant period
described in Section I(i)(1) for completing the audit, the auditor must
issue a written report (the Audit Report) to UBS and the UBS QPAM to
which the audit applies that describes the procedures performed by the
auditor in connection with its examination. The auditor, at its
discretion, may issue a single consolidated Audit Report that covers
all the UBS QPAMs. The Audit Report must include the auditor's specific
determinations regarding:
(i) The adequacy of each UBS QPAM's Policies and Training; each UBS
QPAM's compliance with the Policies and Training; the need, if any, to
strengthen such Policies and Training; and any instance of the
respective UBS QPAM's noncompliance with the written Policies and
Training described in Section I(h) above. The UBS QPAM must promptly
address any noncompliance. The UBS QPAM must promptly address or
prepare a written plan of action to address any determination as to the
adequacy of the Policies and Training and the auditor's recommendations
(if any) with respect to strengthening the Policies and Training of the
respective UBS QPAM. Any action taken or the plan of action to be taken
by the respective UBS QPAM must be included in an addendum to the Audit
Report (such addendum must be completed prior to the certification
described in Section I(i)(7) below). In the event such a plan of action
to address the auditor's recommendation regarding the adequacy of the
Policies and Training is not completed by the time of submission of the
Audit Report, the following period's Audit Report must state whether
the plan was satisfactorily completed. Any determination by the auditor
that a UBS QPAM has implemented, maintained, and followed sufficient
Policies and Training must not be based solely or in substantial part
on an absence of evidence indicating noncompliance. In this last
regard, any finding that a UBS QPAM has complied with the requirements
under this subparagraph must be based on evidence that the particular
UBS QPAM has actually implemented, maintained, and followed the
Policies and Training required by this exemption. Furthermore, the
auditor must not solely rely on the Exemption Report created by the
compliance officer (the Compliance Officer), as described in Section
I(m) below, as the basis for the auditor's conclusions in lieu of
independent determinations and testing performed by the auditor as
required by Section I(i)(3) and (4) above; and
(ii) The adequacy of the Exemption Review described in Section
I(m);
(6) The auditor must notify the respective UBS QPAM of any instance
of noncompliance identified by the auditor within five (5) business
days after such noncompliance is identified by the auditor, regardless
of whether the audit has been completed as of that date;
(7) With respect to the Audit Report, the General Counsel, or one
of the three most senior executive officers of the UBS QPAM to which
the Audit Report applies, must certify in writing, under penalty of
perjury, that the officer has reviewed the Audit Report and this
exemption; that, to the best of such officer's knowledge at the time,
such UBS QPAM has addressed, corrected, remedied any noncompliance and
inadequacy or has an appropriate written plan to address any inadequacy
regarding the Policies and Training identified in the Audit Report.
Such certification must also include the signatory's determination,
that, to the best of such officer's knowledge at the time, the Policies
and Training in effect at the time of signing are adequate to ensure
compliance with the conditions of this exemption and with the
applicable provisions of ERISA and the Code;
(8) The Risk Committee of UBS's Board of Directors is provided a
copy of the Audit Report; and a senior executive officer of UBS's
Compliance and Operational Risk Control function must review the Audit
Report for each UBS QPAM and must certify in writing, under penalty of
perjury, that such officer has reviewed the Audit Report;
(9) Each UBS QPAM provides its certified Audit Report, by regular
mail to: Office of Exemption Determinations (OED), 200 Constitution
Avenue NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20210; or by
[[Page 3826]]
private carrier to: 122 C Street NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20001-
2109. This delivery must take place no later than 45 days following
completion of the Audit Report. The Audit Report will be made part of
the public record regarding this exemption. Furthermore, each UBS QPAM
must make its Audit Report unconditionally available, electronically or
otherwise, for examination upon request by any duly authorized employee
or representative of the Department, other relevant regulators, and any
fiduciary of a Covered Plan;
(10) Any engagement agreement with an auditor to perform the audit
required under the terms of this exemption that is entered subsequent
to the date of a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France by the
French First Instance Court must be submitted to OED no later than two
(2) months after the execution of such agreement;
(11) The auditor must provide the Department, upon request, for
inspection and review, access to all the workpapers created and
utilized in connection with the audit, provided such access and
inspection is otherwise permitted by law; and
(12) UBS must notify the Department of a change in the independent
auditor no later than two (2) months after the engagement of a
substitute or subsequent auditor and must provide an explanation for
the substitution or change including a description of any material
disputes between the terminated auditor and UBS;
(j) As of the date of a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France
by the French First Instance and throughout the Exemption Period, with
respect to any arrangement, agreement, or contract between a UBS QPAM
and a Covered Plan, the UBS QPAM agrees and warrants to Covered Plans:
(1) To comply with ERISA and the Code, as applicable with respect
to such Covered Plan; to refrain from engaging in prohibited
transactions that are not otherwise exempt (and to promptly correct any
inadvertent prohibited transactions); and to comply with the standards
of prudence and loyalty set forth in section 404 of ERISA with respect
to each such ERISA-covered plan and IRA to the extent that section 404
is applicable;
(2) To indemnify and hold harmless the Covered Plan for any actual
losses resulting directly from: A UBS QPAM's violation of ERISA's
fiduciary duties, as applicable, and of the prohibited transaction
provisions of ERISA and the Code, as applicable; a breach of contract
by the QPAM; or any claim arising out of the failure of such UBS QPAM
to qualify for the exemptive relief provided by PTE 84-14 as a result
of a violation of Section I(g) of PTE 84-14 other than the Convictions
and the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France. This
condition applies only to actual losses caused by the UBS QPAM's
violations.
(3) Not to require (or otherwise cause) the Covered Plan to waive,
limit, or qualify the liability of the UBS QPAM for violating ERISA or
the Code or engaging in prohibited transactions;
(4) Not to restrict the ability of such Covered Plan to terminate
or withdraw from its arrangement with the UBS QPAM with respect to any
investment in a separately managed account or pooled fund subject to
ERISA and managed by such QPAM, with the exception of reasonable
restrictions, appropriately disclosed in advance, that are specifically
designed to ensure equitable treatment of all investors in a pooled
fund in the event such withdrawal or termination may have adverse
consequences for all other investors. In connection with any such
arrangements involving investments in pooled funds subject to ERISA
entered into after the effective date of PTE 2017-07, the adverse
consequences must relate to a lack of liquidity of the underlying
assets, valuation issues, or regulatory reasons that prevent the fund
from promptly redeeming an ERISA-covered plan's or IRA's investment,
and such restrictions must be applicable to all such investors and be
effective no longer than reasonably necessary to avoid the adverse
consequences;
(5) Not to impose any fees, penalties, or charges for such
termination or withdrawal with the exception of reasonable fees,
appropriately disclosed in advance, that are specifically designed to
prevent generally recognized abusive investment practices or
specifically designed to ensure equitable treatment of all investors in
a pooled fund in the event such withdrawal or termination may have
adverse consequences for all other investors, provided that such fees
are applied consistently and in like manner to all such investors; and
(6) Not to include exculpatory provisions disclaiming or otherwise
limiting liability of the UBS QPAM for a violation of such agreement's
terms. To the extent consistent with Section 410 of ERISA, however,
this provision does not prohibit disclaimers for liability caused by an
error, misrepresentation, or misconduct of a plan fiduciary or other
party hired by the plan fiduciary who is independent of UBS and its
affiliates, or damages arising from acts outside the control of the UBS
QPAM;
(7) Within six months of the date of a judgment, if any, against
UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance Court, each UBS QPAM
must provide a notice of its obligations under this Section I(j) to
each Covered Plan. For prospective Covered Plans that enter into a
written asset or investment management agreement with a UBS QPAM on or
after the date of such a judgment, the UBS QPAM will agree to its
obligations under this Section I(j) in an updated investment management
agreement between the UBS QPAM and such clients or other written
contractual agreement. This condition will be deemed met for each
Covered Plan that received a notice pursuant to PTE 2016-17 and/or PTE
2017-07 that meets the terms of this condition. Notwithstanding the
above, a UBS QPAM will not violate the condition solely because a Plan
or IRA refuses to sign an updated investment management agreement.
(k) Within 60 days of a judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France
by the French First Instance Court, each UBS QPAM will provide a notice
of the exemption, along with a separate summary describing the facts
that led to the Convictions and the Potential 2019 French Judgment
Against UBS/UBS France (the Summary), which have been submitted to the
Department, and a prominently displayed statement (the Statement)
(collectively, Initial Notice) that the Convictions and the Potential
2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France, each separately result in
a failure to meet a condition in PTE 84-14 and PTE 2017-07, to each
sponsor and beneficial owner of a Covered Plan, or the sponsor of an
investment fund in any case where a UBS QPAM acts as a sub-advisor to
the investment fund in which such ERISA-covered plan and IRA invests.
Effective as of the date that is 60 days after the Potential 2019
French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France Date, all Covered Plan clients
that enter into a written asset or investment management agreement with
a UBS QPAM after that date must receive a copy of the exemption, the
Summary, and the Statement prior to, or contemporaneously with, the
Covered Plan's receipt of a written asset management agreement from the
UBS QPAM. Disclosures may be delivered electronically;
(l) The UBS QPAMs must comply with each condition of PTE 84-14, as
amended, with the sole exception of the violations of Section I(g) of
PTE 84-14 that are attributable to the Convictions and the Potential
2019 French Judgment
[[Page 3827]]
Against UBS/UBS France. If, during the Exemption Period, an entity
within the UBS corporate structure is convicted of a crime described in
Section I(g) of PTE 84-14, (other than the 2013 Conviction, 2018
Conviction, and the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France), or is convicted in a foreign jurisdiction for a crime
described in Section I(g) of PTE 84-14, relief in this proposed
exemption would terminate immediately;
(m)(1) UBS continues to designate a senior compliance officer (the
Compliance Officer) who will be responsible for compliance with the
Policies and Training requirements described herein. The Compliance
Officer must conduct a review for the Exemption Period (the Exemption
Review),\22\ to determine the adequacy and effectiveness of the
implementation of the Policies and Training. With respect to the
Compliance Officer, the following conditions must be met:
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\22\ Pursuant to PTE 2017-07 the Compliance Officer must conduct
an exemption review (annual review) for each period corresponding to
the audit periods set forth in Section I(i)(1) of PTE 2017-07 and
the Compliance officer's written report submitted to the Department
within three (3) months of the end of the period to which it
relates. Accordingly, the final exemption review pursuant to PTE
2017-07 must cover the period January 10, 2018 through the date of a
judgment, if any, against UBS or UBS France by the French First
Instance Court, and the corresponding Compliance Officer's written
report must be submitted within three (3) months of any such
judgment.
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(i) The Compliance Officer must be a professional who has extensive
experience with, and knowledge of, the regulation of financial services
and products, including under ERISA and the Code; and
(ii) The Compliance Officer must have a reporting line within UBS's
Compliance and Operational Risk Control (C&ORC) function to the Head of
Compliance and Operational Risk Control, Asset Management. The C&ORC
function is organizationally independent of UBS's business divisions--
including Asset Management, the Investment Bank, and Global Wealth
Management--and is led by the Global Head of C&ORC, who will report
directly to UBS's Chief Risk Officer, the head of Group Compliance,
Regulatory and Governance, or another appropriate member of the Group
Executive Board;
(2) With respect to the Exemption Review, the following conditions
must be met:
(i) The Exemption Review includes a review of the UBS QPAMs'
compliance with and effectiveness of the Policies and Training and of
the following: Any compliance matter related to the Policies or
Training that was identified by, or reported to, the Compliance Officer
or others within the C&ORC function during the previous year; the most
recent Audit Report issued pursuant to this exemption or PTE 2017-07;
any material change in the relevant business activities of the UBS
QPAMs; and any change to ERISA, the Code, or regulations related to
fiduciary duties and the prohibited transaction provisions that may be
applicable to the activities of the UBS QPAMs;
(ii) The Compliance Officer prepares a written report for the
Exemption Review (an Exemption Report) that (A) summarizes his or her
material activities during the Exemption Period; (B) sets forth any
instance of noncompliance discovered during the Exemption Period, and
any related corrective action; (C) details any change to the Policies
or Training to guard against any similar instance of noncompliance
occurring again; and (D) makes recommendations, as necessary, for
additional training, procedures, monitoring, or additional and/or
changed processes or systems, and management's actions on such
recommendations;
(iii) In the Exemption Report, the Compliance Officer must certify
in writing that to the best of his or her knowledge at the time: (A)
The report is accurate; (B) the Policies and Training are working in a
manner which is reasonably designed to ensure that the Policies and
Training requirements described herein are met; (C) any known instance
of noncompliance during the Exemption Period and any related correction
taken to date have been identified in the Exemption Report; and (D) the
UBS QPAMs have complied with the Policies and Training, and/or
corrected (or are correcting) any known instances of noncompliance in
accordance with Section I(h) above;
(iv) The Exemption Report must be provided to appropriate corporate
officers of UBS and each UBS QPAM to which such report relates, and to
the head of compliance and the General Counsel (or their functional
equivalent) of the relevant UBS QPAM; and the report must be made
unconditionally available to the independent auditor described in
Section I(i) above;
(v) The Exemption Review, including the Compliance Officer's
written Exemption Report, must be completed within three (3) months
following the end of the period to which it relates;
(n) UBS imposes its internal procedures, controls, and protocols on
UBS Securities Japan to: (1) Reduce the likelihood of any recurrence of
conduct that that is the subject of the 2013 Conviction, and (2) comply
in all material respects with the Business Improvement Order, dated
December 16, 2011, issued by the Japanese Financial Services Authority;
(o) UBS complies in all material respects with the audit and
monitoring procedures imposed on UBS by the U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission Order, dated December 19, 2012;
(p) Each UBS QPAM will maintain records necessary to demonstrate
that the conditions of this exemption have been met, for six (6) years
following the date of any transaction for which such UBS QPAM relies
upon the relief in the exemption;
(q) During the Exemption Period, UBS must: (1) Immediately disclose
to the Department any Deferred Prosecution Agreement (a DPA) or Non-
Prosecution Agreement (an NPA) with the U.S. Department of Justice,
entered into by UBS or any of its affiliates (as defined in Section
VI(d) of PTE 84-14) in connection with conduct described in Section
I(g) of PTE 84-14 or section 411 of ERISA; and (2) immediately provides
the Department any information requested by the Department, as
permitted by law, regarding the agreement and/or conduct and
allegations that led to the agreement;
(r) Within six months from the date of a judgment, if any, against
UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance Court, each UBS QPAM, in
its agreements with, or in other written disclosures provided to
Covered Plans, will clearly and prominently inform Covered Plan clients
of their right to obtain a copy of the Policies or a description
(Summary Policies) which accurately summarizes key components of the
UBS QPAM's written Policies developed in connection with this
exemption. If the Policies are thereafter changed, each Covered Plan
client must receive a new disclosure within six (6) months following
the end of the calendar year during which the Policies were
changed.\23\ With respect to this requirement, the description may be
continuously maintained on a website, provided that such website link
to the Policies or Summary Policies is clearly and prominently
disclosed to each Covered Plan; and
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\23\ In the event the Applicant meets this disclosure
requirement through Summary Policies, changes to the Policies shall
not result in the requirement for a new disclosure unless, as a
result of changes to the Policies, the Summary Policies are no
longer accurate.
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(s) A UBS QPAM will not fail to meet the terms of this exemption,
solely because a different UBS QPAM fails to satisfy a condition for
relief described in
[[Page 3828]]
Sections I(c), (d), (h), (i), (j), (k), (l), (p), or (r); or if the
independent auditor described in Section I(i) fails a provision of the
exemption other than the requirement described in Section I(i)(11),
provided that such failure did not result from any actions or inactions
of UBS or its affiliates.
Section II. Definitions
(a) The term ``Convictions'' means the 2013 Conviction and the 2017
Conviction. The term ``2013 Conviction'' means the judgment of
conviction against UBS Securities Japan Co. Ltd. in case number 3:12-
cr-00268-RNC in the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut
for one count of wire fraud in violation of Title 18, United States
Code, sections 1343 and 2 in connection with submission of YEN London
Interbank Offered Rates and other benchmark interest rates. The term
``2018 Conviction'' means the judgment of conviction against UBS in
case number 3:15-cr-00076-RNC in the U.S. District Court for the
District of Connecticut for one count of wire fraud in violation of
Title 18, United States Code, Sections 1343 and 2 in connection with
UBS's submission of Yen London Interbank Offered Rates and other
benchmark interest rates between 2001 and 2010. For all purposes under
this exemption, ``conduct'' of any person or entity that is the
``subject of the Convictions'' encompasses any conduct of UBS and/or
their personnel, that is described in (i) Exhibit 3 to the Plea
Agreement entered into between UBS and the Department of Justice
Criminal Division, on May 20, 2015, in connection with case number
3:15-cr-00076-RNC, and (ii) Exhibits 3 and 4 to the Plea Agreement
entered into between UBS Securities Japan and the Department of Justice
Criminal Division, on December 19, 2012, in connection with case number
3:12-cr-00268-RNC;
(b) The term ``Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS
France'' includes any adverse judgment against UBS or UBS France
regarding case Number 1105592033. For all purposes under this
exemption, ``conduct'' of any person or entity that is the ``subject of
the alleged criminal conduct that may be the subject of the Potential
2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France'' encompasses any conduct
of UBS, its affiliates, or UBS France and/or their personnel that is
described in any such judgment.
(c) The term ``Covered Plan'' means a plan subject to Part IV of
Title I of ERISA (an ``ERISA-covered plan'') or a plan subject to
section 4975 of the Code (an ``IRA''), in each case, with respect to
which a UBS QPAM relies on PTE 84-14, or with respect to which a UBS
QPAM (or any UBS affiliate) has expressly represented that the manager
qualifies as a QPAM or relies on the QPAM class exemption (PTE 84-14).
A Covered Plan does not include an ERISA-covered plan or IRA to the
extent the UBS QPAM has expressly disclaimed reliance on QPAM status or
PTE 84-14 in entering into a contract, arrangement, or agreement with
the ERISA-covered plan or IRA.
(d) The term ``FX Misconduct'' means the conduct engaged in by UBS
personnel described in Exhibit 1 of the Plea Agreement (Factual Basis
for Breach) entered into between UBS and the Department of Justice
Criminal Division, on May 20, 2015 in connection with Case Number 3:15-
cr-00076-RNC filed in the US District Court for the District of
Connecticut.
(e) The term ``UBS QPAM'' means UBS Asset Management (Americas)
Inc., UBS Realty Investors LLC, UBS Hedge Fund Solutions LLC, UBS
O'Connor LLC, and any future entity within the Asset Management or the
Global Wealth Management Americas U.S. divisions of UBS that qualifies
as a ``qualified professional asset manager'' (as defined in Section
VI(a) of PTE 84-14) \24\ and that relies on the relief provided by PTE
84-14, and with respect to which UBS is an ``affiliate'' (as defined in
Part VI(d) of PTE 84-14). The term ``UBS QPAM'' excludes UBS securities
Japan, the entity implicated in the criminal conduct that is the
subject of the 2013 Conviction, UBS, the entity implicated in the
criminal conduct that is the subject of the 2018 Conviction and
implicated in the alleged criminal conduct that is the subject of the
Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France, and UBS France,
the entity implicated in the alleged criminal conduct that is the
subject of the Potential 2019 French Judgment Against UBS/UBS France.
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\24\ In general terms, a QPAM is an independent fiduciary that
is a bank, savings and loan association, insurance company, or
investment adviser that meets certain equity or net worth
requirements and other licensure requirements and that has
acknowledged in a written management agreement that it is a
fiduciary with respect to each plan that has retained the QPAM.
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(f) The term ``UBS'' means UBS AG.
(g) The term ``UBS France'' means ``UBS (France) S.A.,'' a wholly-
owned subsidiary of UBS incorporated under the laws of France.
(h) The term ``UBS Securities Japan'' means UBS Securities Japan
Co. Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of UBS incorporated under the laws
of Japan.
(i) All references to ``the date of a judgment, if any, by the
French First Instance Court'' refer to any judgment against UBS or UBS
France in case number 1105592033;
(j) The term ``Exemption Period'' means one year beginning on the
date an adverse French judgment against UBS or UBS France regarding
case Number 1105592033;
(k) The term ``Plea Agreement'' means the Plea Agreement (including
Exhibits 1 and 3 attached thereto) entered into between UBS and the
Department of Justice Criminal Division, on May 20, 2015 in connection
with Case Number 3:15-cr-00076-RNC filed in the US District Court for
the District of Connecticut.
Effective Date: If granted, the exemption discussed in this notice
will be effective for one year from the date of judgment, if any,
against UBS or UBS France by the French First Instance Court in case
Number 1105592033.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 8th day of February, 2019.
Lyssa Hall,
Director, Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2019-02218 Filed 2-11-19; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P