Two Sigma Investments, LP and Two Sigma Luna, LLC, 14257-14264 [2020-04912]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 11, 2020 / Notices
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) has submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget this
request for extension of the previously
approved collection of information
discussed below.
Form D (17 CFR 239.500) is a notice
of sales filed by issuers making an
offering of securities in reliance on an
exemption under Regulation D (17 CFR
230.501 et seq.) or Section 4(a)(5) of the
Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C.
77d(a)(5)). Regulation D sets forth rules
governing the limited offer and sale of
securities without Securities Act
registration. The purpose of Form D is
to collect empirical data, which
provides a continuing basis for action by
the Commission either in terms of
amending existing rules and regulations
or proposing new ones. In addition, the
Form D allows the Commission to elicit
information necessary in assessing the
effectiveness of Regulation D (17 CFR
230.501 et seq.) and Section 4(6) of the
Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77d(6))
as capital-raising devices for all
businesses. Form D information is
required to obtain or retain benefits
under Regulation D. Approximately
23,571 issuers file Form D and it takes
approximately 4 hours per response. We
estimate that 25% of the 4 hours per
response (1 hour per response) is
prepared by the issuer for an annual
reporting burden of 23,571 hours (1
hour per response × 23,571responses).
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid
control number.
The public may view the background
documentation for this information
collection at the following website,
www.reginfo.gov. Comments should be
directed to: (i) Desk Officer for the
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10102, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503,
or by sending an email to:
Lindsay.M.Abate@omb.eop.gov; and (ii)
David Bottom, Director/Chief
Information Officer, Securities and
Exchange Commission, c/o Cynthia
Roscoe, 100 F Street NE, Washington,
DC 20549 or send an email to: PRA_
Mailbox@sec.gov. Comments must be
submitted to OMB within 30 days of
this notice.
Dated: March 6, 2020.
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–04945 Filed 3–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
Upon Written Request Copies Available
From: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–2736.
Extension:
Rule 147(f)(1)(iii) Written Representation
as to Purchaser Residency, SEC File No.
270–805, OMB Control No. 3235–0756
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) has submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget this
request for extension of the previously
approved collection of information
discussed below.
Rule 147 is a safe harbor under the
Securities Act Section 3(a)(11)(15 U.S.C.
77c(a)(11)) exemption from registration.
To qualify for the safe harbor, Rule
147(f)(1)(iii) (17 CFR 230.147) will
require the issuer to obtain from the
purchaser a written representation as to
the purchaser’s residency. Under Rule
147, the purchaser in the offering must
be a resident of the same state or
territory in which the issuer is a
resident. While the formal
representation of residency by itself is
not sufficient to establish a reasonable
belief that such purchasers are in-state
residents, the representation
requirement, together with the
reasonable belief standard, may result in
better compliance with the rule and
maintaining appropriate investor
protections. The representation of
residency is not provided to the
Commission. Approximately 700
respondents provide the information
required by Rule 147(f)(1)(iii) at an
estimated 2.75 hours per response for a
total annual reporting burden of 1,925
hours (2.75 hours × 700 responses).
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid
control number.
The public may view the background
documentation for this information
collection at the following website,
www.reginfo.gov. Comments should be
directed to: (i) Desk Officer for the
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10102, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503,
or by sending an email to:
Lindsay.M.Abate@omb.eop.gov; and (ii)
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David Bottom, Director/Chief
Information Officer, Securities and
Exchange Commission, c/o Cynthia
Roscoe, 100 F Street NE, Washington,
DC 20549 or send an email to: PRA_
Mailbox@sec.gov. Comments must be
submitted to OMB within 30 days of
this notice.
Dated: March 6, 2020.
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–04948 Filed 3–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Investment Company Act Release No.
33811; 813–00389]
Two Sigma Investments, LP and Two
Sigma Luna, LLC
March 5, 2020.
Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Notice of application for an order
under sections 6(b) and 6(e) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the
‘‘Act’’) granting an exemption from all
provisions of the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder, except sections
9, 17, 30, and 36 through 53 of the Act,
and the rules and regulations
thereunder (the ‘‘Rules and
Regulations’’). With respect to sections
17(a), (d), (e), (f), (g) and (j) and 30(a),
(b), (e), and (h) of the Act, and the Rules
and Regulations, and rule 38a–1 under
the Act, the exemption is limited as set
forth in the application.
Summary of Application: Applicants
request an order to exempt certain
limited liability companies, limited
partnerships, corporations, business
trusts or other entities (‘‘Funds’’)
organized by Two Sigma Investments,
LP (‘‘Two Sigma Investments’’) and its
affiliates from certain provisions of the
Act. Each series of a Fund will be an
‘‘employees’ securities company’’
within the meaning of section 2(a)(13) of
the Act.
Applicants: Two Sigma Investments,
LP and Two Sigma Luna, LLC.
Filing Dates: The application was
filed on June 30, 2017, and was
amended on December 22, 2017, June 4,
2018, November 27, 2018, May 24, 2019,
and December 6, 2019.
Hearing or Notification of Hearing: An
order granting the application will be
issued unless the Commission orders a
hearing. Interested persons may request
a hearing by writing to the
Commission’s Secretary and serving
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 11, 2020 / Notices
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applicants with a copy of the request,
personally or by mail. Hearing requests
should be received by the Commission
by 5:30 p.m. on March 30, 2020, and
should be accompanied by proof of
service on applicants, in the form of an
affidavit or, for lawyers, a certificate of
service. Hearing requests should state
the nature of the writer’s interest, the
reason for the request, and the issues
contested. Persons who wish to be
notified of a hearing may request
notification by writing to the
Commission’s Secretary.
ADDRESSES: Secretary, U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE, Washington, DC 20549–1090;
Applicants: 100 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, New York 10013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jill
Ehrlich, Senior Counsel, at (202) 551–
6819, or Andrea Ottomanelli Magovern,
Branch Chief, at (202) 551–6821
(Division of Investment Management,
Chief Counsel’s Office).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
following is a summary of the
application. The complete application
may be obtained via the Commission’s
website by searching for the file
number, or for an applicant using the
Company name box, at https://
www.sec.gov/search/search.htm or by
calling (202) 551–8090.
Applicants’ Representations
1. Two Sigma Investments (together
with its ‘‘affiliates,’’ as defined in rule
12b–2 under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (the ‘‘Exchange Act’’), ‘‘Two
Sigma,’’ and each, a ‘‘Two Sigma
Entity’’) is a Delaware limited
partnership. Two Sigma Investments
has organized Two Sigma Luna, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company (the
‘‘Initial LLC’’) and will in the future
organize limited liability companies,
limited partnerships, corporations,
business trusts or other entities (each a
‘‘Future Fund’’ and, collectively with
the Initial LLC, the ‘‘Funds’’) as
‘‘employees’ securities companies,’’ as
defined in section 2(a)(13) of the Act.
The Funds are intended to provide
investment opportunities that are
competitive with those at other
investment management and financial
services firms and to facilitate the
recruitment and retention of high
caliber professionals.
2. The Initial LLC was formed on May
3, 2013 as a Delaware limited liability
company. Two Sigma Principals, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company, acts
as managing member to the Initial LLC.
Two Sigma Investments serves as
investment adviser to the Initial LLC.
The Initial LLC seeks to achieve
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absolute U.S. dollar-denominated
returns by investing all or substantially
all of its assets in various private
investment vehicles that are managed by
Two Sigma (the ‘‘Initial LLC’s
Underlying Funds’’). The investment
objective and strategies of the Initial
LLC’s Underlying Funds are set forth in
the offering and/or governing
documents of the applicable Initial
LLC’s Underlying Fund.
3. A Future Fund may be structured
as a domestic or offshore limited or
general partnership, limited liability
company, corporation, business trust or
other entity. Two Sigma may also form
parallel funds organized under the laws
of various jurisdictions in order to
create similar investment opportunities
for Eligible Employees (defined below)
in other jurisdictions. Interests in a
Fund may be issued in one or more
series, each of which corresponds to
particular Fund investments (each, a
‘‘Series’’). Each Series will be an
‘‘employees’ securities company’’
within the meaning of section 2(a)(13) of
the Act. Each Fund will operate as a
closed-end management investment
company, and a particular Fund may
operate as a ‘‘diversified’’ or ‘‘nondiversified’’ vehicle within the meaning
of the Act.
4. Two Sigma will control each Fund
within the meaning of section 2(a)(9) of
the Act. Each Fund has, or will have, a
general partner, managing member or
other such similar entity that manages,
operates and controls such Fund (a
‘‘Managing Member’’). The Managing
Member will be responsible for the
overall management of each Fund, and
will appoint a Two Sigma Entity to
serve as investment adviser
(‘‘Investment Adviser’’) to a Fund and
delegate to the Investment Adviser the
authority to make all decisions
regarding the acquisition, management
and disposition of Fund investments.
5. Each Managing Member and
Investment Adviser is an investment
adviser within the meaning of section 9
and 36 of the Act and is subject to those
sections. The Managing Member or
Investment Adviser may receive a
performance-based fee or allocation (an
‘‘Incentive Allocation’’) based on the net
gains of the Fund’s investments, in
addition to any amount allocable to the
Managing Member’s or Investment
Adviser’s capital contribution.1
1 If a Managing Member or an Investment Adviser
is registered under the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 (‘‘Advisers Act’’), the Incentive Allocation
payable to it by a Fund will be pursuant to an
arrangement that complies with rule 205–3 under
the Advisers Act. All or a portion of the Incentive
Allocation may be paid to individuals who are
officers, employees or stockholders of the Managing
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6. If the Managing Member elects to
recommend that a Fund enter into any
side-by-side investment with an
unaffiliated entity, the Managing
Member will be permitted to engage as
a sub-investment adviser the
unaffiliated entity (an ‘‘Unaffiliated
Subadviser’’), which will be responsible
for the management of such side-by-side
investment.
7. Interests in the Funds will be
offered in a transaction exempt from
registration under section 4(a)(2) of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the
‘‘1933 Act’’), or Regulation D or
Regulation S promulgated thereunder,
and will be sold only to ‘‘Qualified
Participants,’’ which term refers to: (i)
Eligible Employees (as defined below);
(ii) Eligible Family Members (as defined
below); (iii) Eligible Investment
Vehicles (as defined below); and (iv)
Two Sigma. Prior to offering interests in
a Fund to a Qualified Participant, Two
Sigma must reasonably believe that the
Eligible Employee or Eligible Family
Member will be capable of
understanding and evaluating the merits
and risks of participation in a Fund and
that each such individual is able to bear
the economic risk of such participation
and afford a complete loss of his or her
investments in the Fund.
8. The term ‘‘Eligible Employees’’ is
defined as current and former
employees, officers and directors of Two
Sigma (including people in
administration, marketing, and
operations) and current consultants
engaged on retainer to provide services
and professional expertise on an
ongoing basis to Two Sigma.2 The term
Member or Investment Adviser or its affiliates. If
the Managing Member or Investment Adviser is not
required to register under the Advisers Act, the
Incentive Allocation payable to it will comply with
section 205(b)(3) of the Advisers Act (with such
Fund treated as though it were a business
development company solely for the purpose of that
section).
2 Applicants represent that persons or entities
whom Two Sigma has engaged on retainer to
provide services and professional expertise on an
ongoing basis as regular consultants or business or
legal advisers to Two Sigma (‘‘Consultants’’) share
a community of interest with Two Sigma and Two
Sigma’s employees. In order to participate in the
Funds, Consultants must be currently engaged by
Two Sigma and will be required to be sophisticated
investors who qualify as accredited investors
(‘‘Accredited Investors’’) under rule 501(a) of
Regulation D. If a Consultant is an entity (such as,
for example, a law firm or consulting firm), and the
Consultant proposes to invest in the Fund through
a partnership, corporation or other entity that is
controlled by the Consultant, the individual
participants in such partnership, corporation or
other entity will be limited to senior level
employees, members or partners of the Consultant
who are responsible for the activities of the
Consultant or the activities of the Consultant in
relation to Two Sigma and will be required to
qualify as Accredited Investors. In addition, such
entities will be limited to businesses controlled by
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‘‘Eligible Family Members’’ is defined as
spouses, parents, children, spouses of
children, brothers, sisters and
grandchildren of Eligible Employees,
including step and adoptive
relationships.3 The term ‘‘Eligible
Investment Vehicles’’ is defined as: (i) A
trust of which a trustee, grantor and/or
beneficiary is an Eligible Employee; (ii)
a partnership, corporation or other
entity created or controlled 4 by an
Eligible Employee; 5 and (iii) a trust or
other entity established solely for the
benefit of Eligible Employees and/or
Eligible Family Members. Each Eligible
Employee and Eligible Family Member
will be an Accredited Investor under
rule 501(a)(5) or rule 501(a)(6) of
Regulation D under the 1933 Act, except
that a maximum of 35 Eligible
Employees who are sophisticated
individuals who have levels of expertise and
sophistication in the area of investments in
securities that are comparable to other Eligible
Employees who are employees, officers or directors
of Two Sigma and who have an interest in
maintaining an ongoing relationship with Two
Sigma. The individuals participating through such
entities will belong to that class of persons who will
have access to the directors and officers of the
Managing Member and its affiliates and/or the
officers of Two Sigma responsible for making
investments for the Funds similar to the access
afforded other Eligible Employees who are
employees, officers or directors of Two Sigma.
3 In order to ensure that a close nexus between
the Qualified Participants and Two Sigma is
maintained, the terms of each governing document
for a Fund will provide that any Eligible Family
Member participating in such Fund (either through
direct beneficial ownership of an interest or as an
indirect beneficial owner through an Eligible
Investment Vehicle) will not, in any event, be more
than two generations removed from an Eligible
Employee.
4 Any reference to an Eligible Investment Vehicle
which is an entity created by, rather than controlled
by, an Eligible Employee refers only to a corporate
blocker entity created, and continuing to operate,
for the purpose of facilitating (a) the tax efficient
investment of Eligible Employees or other Eligible
Investment Vehicles in a Fund and (b) the
charitable giving of Eligible Employees. The
mandate of an Eligible Investment Vehicle created
by an Eligible Employee is determined by the
relevant Eligible Employee and will be limited to
permitted investments in vehicles managed by Two
Sigma (such as a Fund).
5 The inclusion of partnerships, corporations, or
other entities that are ‘‘created’’ by Eligible
Employees in the definition of Eligible Investment
Vehicle is intended to enable an Eligible Employee
to make tax-efficient investments in the Funds
through a corporate blocker entity created by an
Eligible Employee for the purpose of his/her
charitable giving. Investments in a corporate
blocker entity may be made through Eligible
Investment Vehicles controlled by an Eligible
Employee. No persons or entities other than Eligible
Employees or the Eligible Investment Vehicles they
control will contribute funds to a corporate blocker
entity for investment. The inclusion of
partnerships, corporations, or other entities that are
‘‘controlled’’ by Eligible Employees in the
definition of Eligible Investment Vehicle is
intended to enable Eligible Employees to make
investments in the Funds through personal
investment vehicles for the purpose of personal and
family investment and estate planning objectives.
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investors but who are not Accredited
Investors may become investors in a
Fund, if each of them falls into one of
the following categories: (i) An Eligible
Employee who (a) has a graduate degree
in business, law or accounting, (b) has
a minimum of five years of consulting,
investment management, investment
banking, legal or similar business
experience, and (c) had reportable
income from all sources (including any
profit shares or bonus) of $100,000 in
each of the two most recent years
immediately preceding the Eligible
Employee’s admission as an investor of
the Fund and has a reasonable
expectation of income from all sources
of at least $140,000 in each year in
which the Eligible Employee will be
committed to make investments in the
Fund; 6 or (ii) Eligible Employees who
are ‘‘knowledgeable employees’’ (as
defined in rule 3c–5 under the Act) of
the Fund (with the Fund treated as
though it were a ‘‘covered company’’ for
purposes of the rule).
9. A Qualified Participant may
purchase an interest through an Eligible
Investment Vehicle only if either (i) the
investment vehicle is an Accredited
Investor, as defined in rule 501(a) of
Regulation D under the 1933 Act or (ii)
the Eligible Employee is a settlor 7 and
principal investment decision-maker
with respect to the investment vehicle.
Eligible Investment Vehicles that are not
Accredited Investors will be counted in
accordance with Regulation D toward
the 35 non-Accredited Investor limit
discussed above.
10. The terms of each Fund will be
fully disclosed to each Qualified
Participant (or person making the
investment on behalf of the Qualified
Participant) at the time the Qualified
Participant is invited to participate in
the Fund. A Fund will send its investors
an annual financial statement with
respect to those investments in which
the investor had an interest within 120
days after the end of each fiscal year of
the Fund, or as soon as practicable after
the end of the Fund’s fiscal year. The
financial statement will be audited 8 by
independent certified public
6 An Eligible Employee that is not an Accredited
Investor will only be permitted to invest in a Fund
if such individual represents and warrants that he
or she will not commit in any year more than 10%
of his or her income from all sources for the
immediately preceding year, in the aggregate, in a
Fund and in all other Funds in which that investor
has previously invested.
7 If such investment vehicle is an entity other
than a trust, the term ‘‘settlor’’ will be read to mean
a person who created such vehicle, alone or
together with other eligible individuals, and
contributed funds to such vehicle.
8 ‘‘Audit’’ has the meaning defined in rule 1–
02(d) of Regulation S–X.
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accountants. In addition, as soon as
practicable after the end of each
calendar year, a report will be sent to
each investor setting forth the
information with respect such investor’s
share of income, gains, losses, credits,
and other items for U.S. federal and
state income tax purposes resulting from
the operation of the Fund during that
year.
11. Interests in a Fund will not be
transferable except with the express
consent of the Managing Member, and
then only to a Qualified Participant. No
sales load or similar fee of any kind will
be charged in connection with the sale
of interests in a Future Fund.
12. A Managing Member may have the
right, but not the obligation, to
repurchase, cancel, or transfer to
another Qualified Participant the
interest of (i) an Eligible Employee who
ceases to be an employee, officer,
director or current consultant of any
Two Sigma Entity for any reason or (ii)
any Eligible Family Member of any
person described in clause (i). The
governing documents for each Fund will
describe, if applicable, the amount that
an investor would receive upon
repurchase, cancellation or transfer of
its interest. The investor will, at a
minimum, be paid the lesser of (i) the
amount actually paid by or on behalf of
the investor to acquire the interest (plus
interest, as reasonably determined by
the Managing Member) less any
amounts paid to the investor as
distributions, and (ii) the fair value,
determined at the time of repurchase in
good faith by the Managing Member, of
such interest.
13. A Future Fund may invest in one
or more pooled investment vehicles
(including private funds relying on
sections 3(c)(1) and 3(c)(7) under the
Act and funds relying on section 3(c)(5)
under the Act) and/or registered
investment companies sponsored by
Two Sigma or by third parties (each, an
‘‘Underlying Fund’’).9 One Fund may
also invest in another Fund in a
‘‘master-feeder’’ or similar structure. A
Fund may also be operated as a parallel
fund making investments on a side-byside basis with Two Sigma Entities.
14. A Fund may co-invest in a
portfolio company (or a pooled
investment vehicle) with a Two Sigma
Entity or with an investment fund or
separate account organized primarily for
the benefit of investors who are not
affiliated with Two Sigma (‘‘Third Party
9 Applicants are not requesting any exemption
from any provision of the Act or any rule
thereunder that may govern a Fund’s eligibility to
invest in an Underlying Fund relying on section
3(c)(1) or 3(c)(7) of the Act or an Underlying Fund’s
status under the Act.
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Investors’’) over which a Two Sigma
Entity exercises investment discretion
or which is sponsored by a Two Sigma
Entity (an ‘‘Two Sigma Third Party
Fund’’). Co-investments with a Two
Sigma Entity or with a Two Sigma Third
Party Fund in a transaction in which
Two Sigma’s investment was made
pursuant to a contractual obligation to a
Two Sigma Third Party Fund will not be
subject to Condition 3 below. All other
side-by-side investments held by Two
Sigma Entities involving a joint
enterprise or other joint arrangement
will be subject to Condition 3.
15. If Two Sigma makes loans to a
Fund, the lender will be entitled to
receive interest, provided that the
interest rate will be no less favorable to
the borrower than the rate obtainable on
an arm’s length basis. The possibility of
any such borrowings, as well as the
terms thereof, would be disclosed to
Qualified Participants prior to their
investment in a Fund. Any indebtedness
of the Fund will be the debt of the Fund
and without recourse to the investors. A
Fund will not borrow from any person
if the borrowing would cause any
person not named in section 2(a)(13) of
the Act to own securities of the Fund
(other than short-term paper). A Fund
will not lend any funds to a Two Sigma
Entity.
16. A Fund will not acquire any
security issued by a registered
investment company if immediately
after such acquisition such Fund will
own more than 3% of the outstanding
voting stock of the registered investment
company.
Applicants’ Legal Analysis
1. Section 6(b) of the Act provides
that the Commission shall exempt
employees’ securities companies from
the provisions of the Act if and to the
extent that such exemption is consistent
with the protection of investors. Section
6(b) provides that the Commission will
consider, in determining the provisions
of the Act from which the company
should be exempt, the company’s form
of organization and capital structure, the
persons owning and controlling its
securities, the price of the company’s
securities and the amount of any sales
load, how the company’s funds are
invested, and the relationship between
the company and the issuers of the
securities in which it invests. Section
2(a)(13) defines an employees’ securities
company, in relevant part, as any
investment company all of whose
securities (other than short-term paper)
are beneficially owned (a) by current or
former employees, or persons on
retainer, of one or more affiliated
employers, (b) by immediate family
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members of such persons, or (c) by such
employer or employers together with
any of the persons in (a) or (b).
2. Section 7 of the Act generally
prohibits investment companies that are
not registered under section 8 of the Act
from selling or redeeming their
securities. Section 6(e) of the Act
provides that in connection with any
order exempting an investment
company from any provision of section
7, certain specified provisions of the Act
shall be applicable to such company,
and to other persons in their
transactions and relations with such
company, as though such company were
registered under the Act, if the
Commission deems it necessary and
appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors. Applicants
submit that it would be appropriate in
the public interest and consistent with
the protection of investors and the
purposes fairly intended by the policies
and provisions of the Act for the
Commission to issue an order under
sections 6(b) and 6(e) of the Act
exempting the Funds from all
provisions of the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder, except sections
9, 17, 30, and 36 through 53 of the Act,
and the Rules and Regulations. With
respect to sections 17(a), (d), (e), (f), (g)
and (j) and 30(a), (b), (e), and (h) of the
Act, and the Rules and Regulations, and
rule 38a–1 under the Act, Applicants
request a limited exemption as set forth
in the application.
3. Section 17(a) of the Act generally
prohibits any affiliated person of a
registered investment company, or any
affiliated person of such a person, acting
as principal, from knowingly selling or
purchasing any security or other
property to or from the investment
company. Applicants request an
exemption from section 17(a) to the
extent necessary to (a) permit a Two
Sigma Entity or a Two Sigma Third
Party Fund (or any affiliated person of
such Two Sigma Entity or Two Sigma
Third Party Fund), or any affiliated
person of a Fund (or affiliated persons
of such persons), acting as principal, to
engage in any transaction directly or
indirectly with any Fund or any
company controlled by such Fund; and
(b) permit a Fund to invest in or engage
in any transaction with any Two Sigma
Entity, acting as principal, (i) in which
such Fund, any company controlled by
such Fund or any Two Sigma Entity or
any Two Sigma Third Party Fund has
invested or will invest, or (ii) with
which such Fund, any company
controlled by such Fund or any Two
Sigma Entity or Two Sigma Third Party
Fund is or will become otherwise
affiliated; and (c) permit a Third Party
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Investor, acting as a principal, to engage
in any transaction directly or indirectly
with a Fund or any company controlled
by such Fund. The transactions to
which any Fund is a party will be
effected only after a determination by
the Managing Member that the
requirements of Conditions 1, 2 and 6
(set forth below) have been satisfied.
Applicants, on behalf of the Funds,
represent that any transactions
otherwise subject to section 17(a) of the
Act, for which exemptive relief has not
been requested, would require approval
of the Commission.
4. Applicants submit that an
exemption from section 17(a) is
consistent with the policy of each Fund
and the protection of investors.
Applicants state that the investors in
each Fund will have been fully
informed of the possible extent of such
Fund’s dealings with Two Sigma and of
the potential conflicts of interest that
may exist. Applicants also state that, as
professionals employed in the
investment management and securities
businesses, or in administrative,
financial, accounting, legal, sales,
marketing, risk management or
operational activities related thereto, the
investors will be able to understand and
evaluate the attendant risks. Applicants
assert that the community of interest
among the investors in each Fund, on
the one hand, and Two Sigma, on the
other hand, is the best insurance against
any risk of abuse. Applicants
acknowledge that the requested relief
will not extend to any transactions
between a Fund and an Unaffiliated
Subadviser or any affiliated person of
the Unaffiliated Subadviser, or between
a Fund and any person who is not an
employee, officer or director of Two
Sigma or is an entity outside of Two
Sigma and, in each case, is an affiliated
person of the Fund as defined in section
2(a)(3)(E) of the Act (‘‘Advisory Person’’)
or any affiliated person of such person.
5. Section 17(d) of the Act and rule
17d–1 under the Act prohibit any
affiliated person or principal
underwriter of a registered investment
company, or any affiliated person of
such a person or principal underwriter,
acting as principal, from participating in
any joint arrangement with the company
unless authorized by the Commission.
Applicants request an exemption from
section 17(d) and rule 17d–1 to the
extent necessary to permit affiliated
persons of each Fund, or affiliated
persons of any of such persons to
participate in, or effect any transaction
in connection with, any joint enterprise
or other joint arrangement or profitsharing plan in which such Fund or a
company controlled by such Fund is a
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participant. The exemption would
permit, among other things, coinvestments by each Fund, Two Sigma
Third Party Fund and individual
members or employees, officers,
directors or consultants of Two Sigma
making their own individual investment
decisions apart from Two Sigma.
Applicants acknowledge that the
requested relief will not extend to any
transaction in which an Unaffiliated
Subadviser or Advisory Person or an
affiliated person of either has an
interest.
6. Applicants assert that compliance
with section 17(d) would prevent each
Fund from achieving a principal
purpose, which is to provide a vehicle
for Eligible Employees (and other
permitted investors) to co-invest with
Two Sigma or, to the extent permitted
by the terms of the Fund, with other
employees, officers, directors or
consultants of Two Sigma or Two Sigma
Entities or with a Two Sigma Third
Party Fund. Applicants further contend
that compliance with section 17(d)
would cause a Fund to forego
investment opportunities simply
because an investor in such Fund or
other affiliated person of such Fund (or
any affiliated person of such a person)
also had, or contemplated making, a
similar investment. Applicants submit
that it is likely that suitable investments
will be brought to the attention of a
Fund because of its affiliation with Two
Sigma’s large capital resources and
investment management experience,
and that attractive investment
opportunities of the types considered by
a Fund often require each participant in
the transaction to make funds available
in an amount that may be substantially
greater than those the Fund would
independently be able to provide.
Applicants contend that, as a result, a
Fund’s access to such opportunities may
have to be through co-investment with
other persons, including its affiliates.
Applicants assert that the flexibility to
structure co-investments and joint
investments will not involve abuses of
the type section 17(d) and rule 17d–1
were designed to prevent. In addition,
Applicants represent that any
transactions otherwise subject to section
17(d) of the Act and rule 17d–1
thereunder, for which exemptive relief
has not been requested, would require
approval by the Commission.
7. Co-investments with a Two Sigma
Entity or with a Two Sigma Third Party
Fund in a transaction in which Two
Sigma’s investment was made pursuant
to a contractual obligation to a Two
Sigma Third Party Fund will not be
subject to Condition 3 below.
Applicants believe that the interests of
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the Eligible Employees participating in
a Fund will be adequately protected in
such situations because Two Sigma is
likely to invest a portion of its own
capital in Two Sigma Third Party Fund
investments, either through such Two
Sigma Third Party Fund or on a side-byside basis (which Two Sigma
investments will be subject to
substantially the same terms as those
applicable to such Two Sigma Third
Party Fund, except as otherwise
disclosed in the governing documents of
the relevant Fund). Applicants assert
that if Condition 3 were to apply to Two
Sigma’s investment in these situations,
the Two Sigma Third Party Fund would
be indirectly burdened. Applicants
further assert that the relationship of a
Fund to a Two Sigma Third Party Fund
is fundamentally different from such
Fund’s relationship to Two Sigma.
Applicants contend that the focus of,
and the rationale for, the protections
contained in the requested relief are to
protect the Funds from any
overreaching by Two Sigma in the
employer/employee context, whereas
the same concerns are not present with
respect to the Funds vis-a`-vis the
investors in a Two Sigma Third Party
Fund.
8. Section 17(e) of the Act and rule
17e–1 thereunder limit the
compensation an affiliated person may
receive when acting as agent or broker
for a registered investment company.
Applicants request an exemption from
section 17(e) to permit a Two Sigma
Entity (including the Managing Member
and the Investment Adviser) that acts as
an agent or broker to receive placement
fees, advisory fees, or other
compensation from a Fund in
connection with the purchase or sale by
the Fund of securities, provided that the
fees or other compensation are deemed
‘‘usual and customary.’’ Applicants state
that for purposes of the application, fees
or other compensation that are charged
or received by a Two Sigma Entity will
be deemed to be ‘‘usual and customary’’
only if (i) the Fund is purchasing or
selling securities alongside other
unaffiliated third parties, Two Sigma
Third Party Funds or Third Party
Investors who are also similarly
purchasing or selling securities, (ii) the
fees or other compensation being
charged to the Fund are also being
charged to the unaffiliated third parties,
Two Sigma Third Party Funds or Third
Party Investors and (iii) the amount of
securities being purchased or sold by
the Fund does not exceed 50% of the
total amount of securities being
purchased or sold by the Fund and the
unaffiliated third parties, Two Sigma
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14261
Third Party Funds or Third Party
Investors. Applicants state that
compliance with section 17(e) would
prevent a Fund from participating in a
transaction in which Two Sigma, for
other business reasons, does not wish to
appear as if the Fund is being treated in
a more favorable manner (by being
charged lower fees) than other third
parties also participating in the
transaction. Applicants assert that the
concerns of overreaching and abuse that
section 17(e) and rule 17e–1 were
designed to prevent are alleviated by the
conditions that ensure that (i) the fees
or other compensation paid by a Fund
to a Two Sigma Entity are those
negotiated at arm’s length with
unaffiliated third parties and (ii) the
unaffiliated third parties have as great or
greater interest as the Fund in the
transaction as a whole.
9. Rule 17e–1(b) under the Act
requires that a majority of directors who
are not ‘‘interested persons’’ (as defined
in section 2(a)(19) of the Act) take
actions and make approvals regarding
commissions, fees, or other
remuneration. Rule 17e–1(c) under the
Act requires each Fund to comply with
the fund governance standards defined
in rule 0–1(a)(7) under the Act.
Applicants request an exemption from
rule 17e–1(b) to the extent necessary to
permit each Fund to comply with rule
17e–1(b) without the necessity of having
a majority of the directors (or members
of a comparable body) of the Fund who
are not ‘‘interested persons’’ take such
actions and make such approvals as are
set forth in rule 17e–1(b). Applicants
note that in the event that all the
directors of the Managing Member or
other governing body of the Managing
Member will be affiliated persons, a
Fund could not comply with rule 17e–
1(b) without the relief requested.
Applicants represent that in such event,
the Fund will comply with rule 17e–
1(b) by having a majority of the directors
(or members of a comparable body) of
the Fund or its Managing Member take
such actions and make such approvals
as are set forth in rule 17e–1(b), and that
each Fund will otherwise comply with
all other requirements of rule 17e–1(b).
Applicants further request an exemption
from rule 17(e)–1(c) to the extent
necessary to permit each Fund to
comply with rule 17e–1 without the
necessity of having a majority of the
directors (or members of a comparable
body) of the Fund or its Managing
Member be ‘‘disinterested persons’’ as is
set forth in rule 17e–1(c). Applicants
note that in the event that all the
directors (or members of a comparable
governing body) of the Fund or its
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Managing Member will be affiliated
persons, a Fund could not comply with
rule 17e–1 without the relief requested.
Applicants represent that each Fund
will otherwise comply with all other
requirements of rule 17e–1(c).
10. Section 17(f) of the Act provides
that the securities and similar
investments of a registered management
investment company must be placed in
the custody of a bank, a member of a
national securities exchange or the
company itself in accordance with
Commission rules. Rule 17f–2 under the
Act specifies the requirements that must
be satisfied for a registered management
investment company to act as a
custodian of its own investments.
Applicants request relief from section
17(f) and rule 17f–2 to permit the
following exceptions from the
requirements of rule 17f–2: (a) A Fund’s
investments may be kept in the locked
files of the Managing Member or the
Investment Adviser for purposes of
paragraph (b) of the rule; (b) for
purposes of paragraph (d) of the rule, (i)
employees of Two Sigma or its affiliates
(including the Managing Member) will
be deemed to be employees of the
Funds, (ii) officers or managers of the
Managing Member of a Fund will be
deemed to be officers of the Fund and
(iii) the Managing Member of a Fund or
its board of directors will be deemed to
be the board of directors of the Fund;
and (c) in place of the verification
procedure under rule 17f–2(f),
verification will be effected quarterly by
two employees of the Investment
Adviser who are also employees of Two
Sigma responsible for the
administrative, legal and/or compliance
functions for funds managed or
sponsored by Two Sigma and who have
specific knowledge of custody
requirements, policies and procedures
of the Funds. Applicants expect that,
with respect to certain Funds, many of
their investments will be evidenced
only by partnership agreements,
participation agreements or similar
documents, rather than by negotiable
certificates that could be
misappropriated. Applicants assert that,
for such a Fund, these instruments are
most suitably kept in the files of the
Managing Member or its Investment
Adviser, where they can be referred to
as necessary. Applicants represent that
they will comply with all other
provisions of rule 17f–2, including the
recordkeeping requirements of
paragraph (e).
11. Section 17(g) of the Act and rule
17g–1 thereunder generally require the
bonding of officers and employees of a
registered investment company who
have access to its securities or funds.
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Rule 17g–1 requires that a majority of
directors who are not ‘‘interested
persons’’ of a registered investment
company take certain actions and give
certain approvals relating to fidelity
bonding. Among other things, the rule
also requires that the board of directors
of an investment company relying on
the rule satisfy the fund governance
standards defined in rule 0–1(a)(7).
Applicants request an exemption from
rule 17g–1 to the extent necessary to
permit a Fund to comply with rule
17g–1 by having the Managing Member
of the Fund take such actions and make
such approvals as are set forth in rule
17g–1. Applicants state that in the event
all the directors of the Managing
Member or other governing body of the
Managing Member will be affiliated
persons, a Fund could not comply with
rule 17g–1 without the requested relief.
Applicants also request an exemption
from the requirements of rule 17g–1(g)
and (h) relating to the filing of copies of
fidelity bonds and related information
with the Commission and the provision
of notices to the board of directors and
from the requirements of rule 17g–
1(j)(3). Applicants contend that the
filing requirements are burdensome and
unnecessary as applied to the Funds
and represent that the Managing
Member of each Fund will designate a
person to maintain the records
otherwise required to be filed with the
Commission under rule 17g–1(g).
Applicants further contend that the
notices otherwise required to be given to
the board of directors will be
unnecessary as the Funds will not have
boards of directors. Applicants
represent that each Fund will comply
with all other requirements of rule
17g–1.
12. Section 17(j) of the Act and
paragraph (b) of rule 17j–1 under the
Act make it unlawful for certain
enumerated persons to engage in
fraudulent or deceptive practices in
connection with the purchase or sale of
a security held or to be acquired by a
registered investment company. Rule
17j–1 also requires that every registered
investment company adopt a written
code of ethics and that every access
person of a registered investment
company report personal securities
transactions. Applicants request an
exemption from section 17(j) and the
provisions of rule 17j–1 (except for the
anti-fraud provisions of rule 17j–1(b))
because they assert that these
requirements are burdensome and
unnecessary as applied to the Funds.
The relief requested will extend only to
entities within Two Sigma and is not
requested with respect to any
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Sfmt 4703
Unaffiliated Subadviser or Advisory
Person.
13. Sections 30(a), (b) and (e) of the
Act and the rules thereunder generally
require that registered investment
companies prepare and file with the
Commission and mail to their
shareholders certain periodic reports
and financial statements. Applicants
contend that the forms prescribed by the
Commission for periodic reports have
little relevance to a Fund and would
entail administrative and legal costs that
outweigh any benefit to the investors in
such Fund. Applicants request relief
under sections 30(a), (b) and (e) to the
extent necessary to permit each Fund to
report annually to its investors in the
manner described in the application.
Section 30(h) of the Act requires that
every officer, director, member of an
advisory board, investment adviser or
affiliated person of an investment
adviser of a closed-end investment
company be subject to the same duties
and liabilities as those imposed upon
similar classes of persons under section
16(a) of the Exchange Act. Applicants
request an exemption from section 30(h)
of the Act to the extent necessary to
exempt the Managing Member of each
Fund, directors, and officers of the
Managing Member and any other
persons who may be deemed members
of an advisory board or investment
adviser (and affiliated persons thereof)
of such Fund from filing Forms 3, 4, and
5 under section 16(a) of the Exchange
Act with respect to their ownership of
interests in such Fund under section 16
of the Exchange Act. Applicants assert
that, because there will be no trading
market and the transfers of interests are
severely restricted, these filings are
unnecessary for the protection of
investors and burdensome to those
required to make them.
14. Rule 38a–1 requires registered
investment companies to adopt,
implement and periodically review
written policies reasonably designed to
prevent violation of the federal
securities laws and to appoint a chief
compliance officer. Each Fund will
comply will rule 38a–1(a), (c) and (d),
except that: (i) To the extent the Fund
does not have a board of directors, the
board of directors of the Managing
Member or other governing body of the
Managing Member will fulfill the
responsibilities assigned to the Fund’s
board of directors under the rule; (ii) to
the extent the board of directors or other
governing body of the Managing
Member does not have any disinterested
members, approval by a majority of the
disinterested board members required
by rule 38a–1 will not be obtained; and
(iii) to the extent the board of directors
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or other governing body of the Managing
Member does not have any independent
members, the Funds will comply with
the requirement in rule 38a–1(a)(4)(iv)
that the chief compliance officer meet
with the independent directors by
having the chief compliance officer
meet with the board of directors or other
governing body of the Managing
Member as constituted. Applicants
represent that each Fund has adopted
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent
violations of the terms and conditions of
the application, has appointed a chief
compliance officer and is otherwise in
compliance with the terms and
conditions of the application.
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with NOTICES
Applicants’ Conditions
Applicants agree that any order
granting the requested relief will be
subject to the following conditions:
1. Each proposed transaction
otherwise prohibited by section 17(a) or
section 17(d) of the Act and rule
17d–1 thereunder to which a Fund is a
party (the ‘‘Section 17 Transactions’’)
will be effected only if the Managing
Member determines that: (a) The terms
of the Section 17 Transaction, including
the consideration to be paid or received,
are fair and reasonable to the Fund and
the investors and do not involve
overreaching of such Fund or its
investors on the part of any person
concerned; and (b) the Section 17
Transaction is consistent with the
interests of the Fund and the investors,
such Fund’s organizational documents
and such Fund’s reports to its investors.
In addition, the Managing Member
will record and preserve a description of
all Section 17 Transactions, the
Managing Member’s findings, the
information or materials upon which
the Managing Member’s findings are
based and the basis for such findings.
All such records will be maintained for
the life of the Fund and at least six years
thereafter, and will be subject to
examination by the Commission and its
staff.10
2. The Managing Member will adopt,
and periodically review and update,
procedures designed to ensure that
reasonable inquiry is made, prior to the
consummation of any Section 17
Transaction, with respect to the possible
involvement in the transaction of any
affiliated person or promoter of or
principal underwriter for such Fund, or
any affiliated person of such a person,
promoter or principal underwriter.
10 Each Fund will preserve the accounts, books
and other documents required to be maintained in
an easily accessible place for the first two years.
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3. The Managing Member will not
cause the funds of any Fund to be
invested in any investment in which a
‘‘Co-Investor’’ (as defined below) has
acquired or proposes to acquire the
same class of securities of the same
issuer, where the investment involves a
joint enterprise or other joint
arrangement within the meaning of rule
17d–1 in which the Fund and a CoInvestor are participants, unless prior to
such investment any such Co-Investor
agrees, prior to disposing of all or part
of its investment, to: (a) Give the
Managing Member sufficient, but not
less than one day’s, notice of its intent
to dispose of its investment; and (b)
refrain from disposing of its investment
unless the Fund has the opportunity to
dispose of the Fund’s investment prior
to or concurrently with, on the same
terms as, and on a pro rata basis with,
the Co-Investor. The term ‘‘Co-Investor’’
with respect to any Fund means any
person who is: (a) An ‘‘affiliated
person’’ (as defined in section 2(a)(3) of
the Act) of the Fund (other than a Two
Sigma Third Party Fund); (b) Two Sigma
(except when a Two Sigma Entity coinvests with a Fund and a Two Sigma
Third Party Fund pursuant to a
contractual obligation to the Two Sigma
Third Party Fund); (c) an officer or
director of a Two Sigma Entity; or (d) an
entity (other than a Two Sigma Third
Party Fund) in which Two Sigma acts as
a managing member or has a similar
capacity to control the sale or other
disposition of the entity’s securities.
The restrictions contained in this
condition, however, shall not be
deemed to limit or prevent the
disposition of an investment by a CoInvestor: (a) To its direct or indirect
wholly-owned subsidiary, to any
company (a ‘‘parent’’) of which the CoInvestor is a direct or indirect whollyowned subsidiary or to a direct or
indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of its
parent; (b) to immediate family
members of the Co-Investor, including
step or adoptive relationships, or a trust
or other investment vehicle established
for any Co-Investor or any such family
member; or (c) when the investment is
comprised of securities that are (i) listed
on a national securities exchange
registered under section 6 of the
Exchange Act; (ii) NMS stocks, pursuant
to section 11A(a)(2) of the Exchange Act
and rule 600(b) of Regulation NMS
thereunder; (iii) government securities
as defined in section 2(a)(16) of the Act;
(iv) ‘‘Eligible Securities’’ as defined in
rule 2a–7 under the Act; or (v) listed or
traded on any foreign securities
exchange or board of trade that satisfies
regulatory requirements under the law
PO 00000
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14263
of the jurisdiction in which such foreign
securities exchange or board of trade is
organized similar to those that apply to
a national securities exchange or a
national market system for securities.
4. Each Fund and its Managing
Member will maintain and preserve, for
the life of such Fund and at least six
years thereafter, such accounts, books,
and other documents as constitute the
record forming the basis for the audited
financial statements that are to be
provided to the investors in such Fund,
and each annual report of such Fund
required to be sent to such investors,
and agree that all such records will be
subject to examination by the
Commission and its staff.11
5. Within 120 days after the end of the
fiscal year of each Fund, or as soon as
practicable thereafter, the Managing
Member of each Fund will send to each
investor in such Fund who had an
interest in any capital account of the
Fund, at any time during the fiscal year
then ended, Fund financial statements
audited by the Fund’s independent
accountants, except in the case of a
Fund formed to make a single portfolio
investment. In such cases, financial
statements will be unaudited, but each
investor will receive financial
statements of the single portfolio
investment audited by such entity’s
independent accountants. At the end of
each fiscal year and at other times as
necessary in accordance with customary
practice, the Managing Member will
make a valuation or cause a valuation to
be made of all of the assets of the Fund
as of the fiscal year end. In addition, as
soon as practicable after the end of each
tax year of a Fund, the Managing
Member of such Fund will send a report
to each person who was an investor in
such Fund at any time during the fiscal
year then ended, setting forth such tax
information as shall be necessary for the
preparation by the investor of his, her or
its U.S. federal and state income tax
returns and a report of the investment
activities of the Fund during that fiscal
year.
6. If a Fund makes purchases or sales
from or to an entity affiliated with the
Fund by reason of an officer, director or
employee of Two Sigma (a) serving as
an officer, director, managing member
or investment adviser of the entity, or
(b) having a 5% or more investment in
the entity, such individual will not
participate in the Fund’s determination
of whether or not to effect the purchase
or sale.
11 Each Fund will preserve the accounts, books
and other documents required to be maintained in
an easily accessible place for the first two years.
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For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, under delegated
authority.
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
on the proposed rule change. The
Commission finds that it is appropriate
to designate a longer period within
which to take action on the proposed
rule change so that it has sufficient time
to consider the proposed rule change.
Accordingly, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Act,5 the Commission
designates April 21, 2020, as the date by
which the Commission shall either
approve or disapprove, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to
disapprove, the proposed rule change
(File No. SR–NASDAQ–2020–001).
[FR Doc. 2020–04912 Filed 3–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
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[Release No. 34–88325; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2020–001]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of
Designation of Longer Period for
Commission Action on Proposed Rule
Change To Modify the Delisting
Process for Securities With a Bid Price
Below $0.10 and for Securities That
Have Had One or More Reverse Stock
Splits With a Cumulative Ratio of 250
or More to One Over the Prior TwoYear Period
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.6
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
March 5, 2020.
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
On January 2, 2020, The Nasdaq Stock
Market LLC (‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
modify the delisting process for
securities that are in a bid price
compliance period and have a bid price
below $0.10 and for securities that have
had one or more reverse stock splits
with a cumulative ratio of 250 or more
to one over the prior two-year period.
The proposed rule change was
published for comment in the Federal
Register on January 22, 2020.3 The
Commission has received no comments
on the proposal.
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 4 provides
that within 45 days of the publication of
notice of the filing of a proposed rule
change, or within such longer period up
to 90 days as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or as to which the
self-regulatory organization consents,
the Commission shall either approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule change should be
disapproved. The 45th day for this filing
is March 7, 2020.
The Commission is extending the 45day time period for Commission action
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87982
(January 15, 2020), 85 FR 3736.
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
2 17
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:37 Mar 10, 2020
Jkt 250001
[FR Doc. 2020–04903 Filed 3–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Upon Written Request Copies Available
From: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–2736.
Extension:
Regulation D Rule 504(b)(3)—Felons and
Other Bad Actors Disclosure Statement,
SEC File No. 270–798, OMB Control No.
3235–0746
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) has submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget this
request for extension of the previously
approved collection of information
discussed below.
Regulation D Rule 504(b)(3) provides
that no exemption under Rule 504 shall
be available for the securities of any
issuer if such issuer would be subject to
disqualification under Rule 506(d) of
Regulation D on or after January 20,
2017; provided that disclosure of prior
‘‘bad actor’’ events shall be required in
accordance with Rule 506(e) of
Regulation D. Rule 504(b)(3) requires
the issuer in a Rule 504 offering to
furnish to each purchaser, a reasonable
time prior to sale, a written description
of any disqualifying events that
occurred before effectiveness of the
amendments to Rule 504 (i.e., before
January 20, 2017) and within the time
periods described in the list of
5 15
6 17
PO 00000
disqualification events set forth in Rule
506(d)(1) of Regulation D, for the issuer
or any other ‘‘covered person’’
associated with the offering.
Approximately 800 issuers relying on
Rule 504 of Regulation D will spend on
average one additional hour to conduct
a factual inquiry to determine whether
any covered persons had a disqualifying
event that occurred before the effective
date of the amendments for a total of
800 hours. In addition, approximately
eight issuers (or approximately 1% of
800 issuers) will spend ten hours to
prepare a disclosure statement
describing matters that would have
triggered disqualification under Rule
504(b)(3) of Regulation D had they
occurred on or after the effective date of
the amendments (January 20, 2017) for
total burden 80 hours (8 issuers × 10
hours per response).
For Purposes of the PRA, we estimate
the total paperwork burden for all
affected Rule 504 issuers to comply with
Rule 504(b)(3) requirements would be
approximately 808 issuers and a total of
880 burden hours.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid
control number.
The public may view the background
documentation for this information
collection at the following website,
www.reginfo.gov. Comments should be
directed to: (i) Desk Officer for the
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10102, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503,
or by sending an email to:
Lindsay.M.Abate@omb.eop.gov; and (ii)
David Bottom, Director/Chief
Information Officer, Securities and
Exchange Commission, c/o Cynthia
Roscoe, 100 F Street NE, Washington,
DC 20549 or send an email to: PRA_
Mailbox@sec.gov. Comments must be
submitted to OMB within 30 days of
this notice.
Dated: March 6, 2020.
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–04947 Filed 3–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
CFR 200.30–3(a)(31).
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 48 (Wednesday, March 11, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14257-14264]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-04912]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Investment Company Act Release No. 33811; 813-00389]
Two Sigma Investments, LP and Two Sigma Luna, LLC
March 5, 2020.
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'').
ACTION: Notice.
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Notice of application for an order under sections 6(b) and 6(e) of
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the ``Act'') granting an exemption
from all provisions of the Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder, except sections 9, 17, 30, and 36 through 53 of the Act,
and the rules and regulations thereunder (the ``Rules and
Regulations''). With respect to sections 17(a), (d), (e), (f), (g) and
(j) and 30(a), (b), (e), and (h) of the Act, and the Rules and
Regulations, and rule 38a-1 under the Act, the exemption is limited as
set forth in the application.
Summary of Application: Applicants request an order to exempt
certain limited liability companies, limited partnerships,
corporations, business trusts or other entities (``Funds'') organized
by Two Sigma Investments, LP (``Two Sigma Investments'') and its
affiliates from certain provisions of the Act. Each series of a Fund
will be an ``employees' securities company'' within the meaning of
section 2(a)(13) of the Act.
Applicants: Two Sigma Investments, LP and Two Sigma Luna, LLC.
Filing Dates: The application was filed on June 30, 2017, and was
amended on December 22, 2017, June 4, 2018, November 27, 2018, May 24,
2019, and December 6, 2019.
Hearing or Notification of Hearing: An order granting the
application will be issued unless the Commission orders a hearing.
Interested persons may request a hearing by writing to the Commission's
Secretary and serving
[[Page 14258]]
applicants with a copy of the request, personally or by mail. Hearing
requests should be received by the Commission by 5:30 p.m. on March 30,
2020, and should be accompanied by proof of service on applicants, in
the form of an affidavit or, for lawyers, a certificate of service.
Hearing requests should state the nature of the writer's interest, the
reason for the request, and the issues contested. Persons who wish to
be notified of a hearing may request notification by writing to the
Commission's Secretary.
ADDRESSES: Secretary, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F
Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090; Applicants: 100 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, New York 10013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jill Ehrlich, Senior Counsel, at (202)
551-6819, or Andrea Ottomanelli Magovern, Branch Chief, at (202) 551-
6821 (Division of Investment Management, Chief Counsel's Office).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the
application. The complete application may be obtained via the
Commission's website by searching for the file number, or for an
applicant using the Company name box, at https://www.sec.gov/search/search.htm or by calling (202) 551-8090.
Applicants' Representations
1. Two Sigma Investments (together with its ``affiliates,'' as
defined in rule 12b-2 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
``Exchange Act''), ``Two Sigma,'' and each, a ``Two Sigma Entity'') is
a Delaware limited partnership. Two Sigma Investments has organized Two
Sigma Luna, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (the ``Initial
LLC'') and will in the future organize limited liability companies,
limited partnerships, corporations, business trusts or other entities
(each a ``Future Fund'' and, collectively with the Initial LLC, the
``Funds'') as ``employees' securities companies,'' as defined in
section 2(a)(13) of the Act. The Funds are intended to provide
investment opportunities that are competitive with those at other
investment management and financial services firms and to facilitate
the recruitment and retention of high caliber professionals.
2. The Initial LLC was formed on May 3, 2013 as a Delaware limited
liability company. Two Sigma Principals, LLC, a Delaware limited
liability company, acts as managing member to the Initial LLC. Two
Sigma Investments serves as investment adviser to the Initial LLC. The
Initial LLC seeks to achieve absolute U.S. dollar-denominated returns
by investing all or substantially all of its assets in various private
investment vehicles that are managed by Two Sigma (the ``Initial LLC's
Underlying Funds''). The investment objective and strategies of the
Initial LLC's Underlying Funds are set forth in the offering and/or
governing documents of the applicable Initial LLC's Underlying Fund.
3. A Future Fund may be structured as a domestic or offshore
limited or general partnership, limited liability company, corporation,
business trust or other entity. Two Sigma may also form parallel funds
organized under the laws of various jurisdictions in order to create
similar investment opportunities for Eligible Employees (defined below)
in other jurisdictions. Interests in a Fund may be issued in one or
more series, each of which corresponds to particular Fund investments
(each, a ``Series''). Each Series will be an ``employees' securities
company'' within the meaning of section 2(a)(13) of the Act. Each Fund
will operate as a closed-end management investment company, and a
particular Fund may operate as a ``diversified'' or ``non-diversified''
vehicle within the meaning of the Act.
4. Two Sigma will control each Fund within the meaning of section
2(a)(9) of the Act. Each Fund has, or will have, a general partner,
managing member or other such similar entity that manages, operates and
controls such Fund (a ``Managing Member''). The Managing Member will be
responsible for the overall management of each Fund, and will appoint a
Two Sigma Entity to serve as investment adviser (``Investment
Adviser'') to a Fund and delegate to the Investment Adviser the
authority to make all decisions regarding the acquisition, management
and disposition of Fund investments.
5. Each Managing Member and Investment Adviser is an investment
adviser within the meaning of section 9 and 36 of the Act and is
subject to those sections. The Managing Member or Investment Adviser
may receive a performance-based fee or allocation (an ``Incentive
Allocation'') based on the net gains of the Fund's investments, in
addition to any amount allocable to the Managing Member's or Investment
Adviser's capital contribution.\1\
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\1\ If a Managing Member or an Investment Adviser is registered
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (``Advisers Act''), the
Incentive Allocation payable to it by a Fund will be pursuant to an
arrangement that complies with rule 205-3 under the Advisers Act.
All or a portion of the Incentive Allocation may be paid to
individuals who are officers, employees or stockholders of the
Managing Member or Investment Adviser or its affiliates. If the
Managing Member or Investment Adviser is not required to register
under the Advisers Act, the Incentive Allocation payable to it will
comply with section 205(b)(3) of the Advisers Act (with such Fund
treated as though it were a business development company solely for
the purpose of that section).
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6. If the Managing Member elects to recommend that a Fund enter
into any side-by-side investment with an unaffiliated entity, the
Managing Member will be permitted to engage as a sub-investment adviser
the unaffiliated entity (an ``Unaffiliated Subadviser''), which will be
responsible for the management of such side-by-side investment.
7. Interests in the Funds will be offered in a transaction exempt
from registration under section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended (the ``1933 Act''), or Regulation D or Regulation S
promulgated thereunder, and will be sold only to ``Qualified
Participants,'' which term refers to: (i) Eligible Employees (as
defined below); (ii) Eligible Family Members (as defined below); (iii)
Eligible Investment Vehicles (as defined below); and (iv) Two Sigma.
Prior to offering interests in a Fund to a Qualified Participant, Two
Sigma must reasonably believe that the Eligible Employee or Eligible
Family Member will be capable of understanding and evaluating the
merits and risks of participation in a Fund and that each such
individual is able to bear the economic risk of such participation and
afford a complete loss of his or her investments in the Fund.
8. The term ``Eligible Employees'' is defined as current and former
employees, officers and directors of Two Sigma (including people in
administration, marketing, and operations) and current consultants
engaged on retainer to provide services and professional expertise on
an ongoing basis to Two Sigma.\2\ The term
[[Page 14259]]
``Eligible Family Members'' is defined as spouses, parents, children,
spouses of children, brothers, sisters and grandchildren of Eligible
Employees, including step and adoptive relationships.\3\ The term
``Eligible Investment Vehicles'' is defined as: (i) A trust of which a
trustee, grantor and/or beneficiary is an Eligible Employee; (ii) a
partnership, corporation or other entity created or controlled \4\ by
an Eligible Employee; \5\ and (iii) a trust or other entity established
solely for the benefit of Eligible Employees and/or Eligible Family
Members. Each Eligible Employee and Eligible Family Member will be an
Accredited Investor under rule 501(a)(5) or rule 501(a)(6) of
Regulation D under the 1933 Act, except that a maximum of 35 Eligible
Employees who are sophisticated investors but who are not Accredited
Investors may become investors in a Fund, if each of them falls into
one of the following categories: (i) An Eligible Employee who (a) has a
graduate degree in business, law or accounting, (b) has a minimum of
five years of consulting, investment management, investment banking,
legal or similar business experience, and (c) had reportable income
from all sources (including any profit shares or bonus) of $100,000 in
each of the two most recent years immediately preceding the Eligible
Employee's admission as an investor of the Fund and has a reasonable
expectation of income from all sources of at least $140,000 in each
year in which the Eligible Employee will be committed to make
investments in the Fund; \6\ or (ii) Eligible Employees who are
``knowledgeable employees'' (as defined in rule 3c-5 under the Act) of
the Fund (with the Fund treated as though it were a ``covered company''
for purposes of the rule).
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\2\ Applicants represent that persons or entities whom Two Sigma
has engaged on retainer to provide services and professional
expertise on an ongoing basis as regular consultants or business or
legal advisers to Two Sigma (``Consultants'') share a community of
interest with Two Sigma and Two Sigma's employees. In order to
participate in the Funds, Consultants must be currently engaged by
Two Sigma and will be required to be sophisticated investors who
qualify as accredited investors (``Accredited Investors'') under
rule 501(a) of Regulation D. If a Consultant is an entity (such as,
for example, a law firm or consulting firm), and the Consultant
proposes to invest in the Fund through a partnership, corporation or
other entity that is controlled by the Consultant, the individual
participants in such partnership, corporation or other entity will
be limited to senior level employees, members or partners of the
Consultant who are responsible for the activities of the Consultant
or the activities of the Consultant in relation to Two Sigma and
will be required to qualify as Accredited Investors. In addition,
such entities will be limited to businesses controlled by
individuals who have levels of expertise and sophistication in the
area of investments in securities that are comparable to other
Eligible Employees who are employees, officers or directors of Two
Sigma and who have an interest in maintaining an ongoing
relationship with Two Sigma. The individuals participating through
such entities will belong to that class of persons who will have
access to the directors and officers of the Managing Member and its
affiliates and/or the officers of Two Sigma responsible for making
investments for the Funds similar to the access afforded other
Eligible Employees who are employees, officers or directors of Two
Sigma.
\3\ In order to ensure that a close nexus between the Qualified
Participants and Two Sigma is maintained, the terms of each
governing document for a Fund will provide that any Eligible Family
Member participating in such Fund (either through direct beneficial
ownership of an interest or as an indirect beneficial owner through
an Eligible Investment Vehicle) will not, in any event, be more than
two generations removed from an Eligible Employee.
\4\ Any reference to an Eligible Investment Vehicle which is an
entity created by, rather than controlled by, an Eligible Employee
refers only to a corporate blocker entity created, and continuing to
operate, for the purpose of facilitating (a) the tax efficient
investment of Eligible Employees or other Eligible Investment
Vehicles in a Fund and (b) the charitable giving of Eligible
Employees. The mandate of an Eligible Investment Vehicle created by
an Eligible Employee is determined by the relevant Eligible Employee
and will be limited to permitted investments in vehicles managed by
Two Sigma (such as a Fund).
\5\ The inclusion of partnerships, corporations, or other
entities that are ``created'' by Eligible Employees in the
definition of Eligible Investment Vehicle is intended to enable an
Eligible Employee to make tax-efficient investments in the Funds
through a corporate blocker entity created by an Eligible Employee
for the purpose of his/her charitable giving. Investments in a
corporate blocker entity may be made through Eligible Investment
Vehicles controlled by an Eligible Employee. No persons or entities
other than Eligible Employees or the Eligible Investment Vehicles
they control will contribute funds to a corporate blocker entity for
investment. The inclusion of partnerships, corporations, or other
entities that are ``controlled'' by Eligible Employees in the
definition of Eligible Investment Vehicle is intended to enable
Eligible Employees to make investments in the Funds through personal
investment vehicles for the purpose of personal and family
investment and estate planning objectives.
\6\ An Eligible Employee that is not an Accredited Investor will
only be permitted to invest in a Fund if such individual represents
and warrants that he or she will not commit in any year more than
10% of his or her income from all sources for the immediately
preceding year, in the aggregate, in a Fund and in all other Funds
in which that investor has previously invested.
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9. A Qualified Participant may purchase an interest through an
Eligible Investment Vehicle only if either (i) the investment vehicle
is an Accredited Investor, as defined in rule 501(a) of Regulation D
under the 1933 Act or (ii) the Eligible Employee is a settlor \7\ and
principal investment decision-maker with respect to the investment
vehicle. Eligible Investment Vehicles that are not Accredited Investors
will be counted in accordance with Regulation D toward the 35 non-
Accredited Investor limit discussed above.
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\7\ If such investment vehicle is an entity other than a trust,
the term ``settlor'' will be read to mean a person who created such
vehicle, alone or together with other eligible individuals, and
contributed funds to such vehicle.
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10. The terms of each Fund will be fully disclosed to each
Qualified Participant (or person making the investment on behalf of the
Qualified Participant) at the time the Qualified Participant is invited
to participate in the Fund. A Fund will send its investors an annual
financial statement with respect to those investments in which the
investor had an interest within 120 days after the end of each fiscal
year of the Fund, or as soon as practicable after the end of the Fund's
fiscal year. The financial statement will be audited \8\ by independent
certified public accountants. In addition, as soon as practicable after
the end of each calendar year, a report will be sent to each investor
setting forth the information with respect such investor's share of
income, gains, losses, credits, and other items for U.S. federal and
state income tax purposes resulting from the operation of the Fund
during that year.
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\8\ ``Audit'' has the meaning defined in rule 1-02(d) of
Regulation S-X.
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11. Interests in a Fund will not be transferable except with the
express consent of the Managing Member, and then only to a Qualified
Participant. No sales load or similar fee of any kind will be charged
in connection with the sale of interests in a Future Fund.
12. A Managing Member may have the right, but not the obligation,
to repurchase, cancel, or transfer to another Qualified Participant the
interest of (i) an Eligible Employee who ceases to be an employee,
officer, director or current consultant of any Two Sigma Entity for any
reason or (ii) any Eligible Family Member of any person described in
clause (i). The governing documents for each Fund will describe, if
applicable, the amount that an investor would receive upon repurchase,
cancellation or transfer of its interest. The investor will, at a
minimum, be paid the lesser of (i) the amount actually paid by or on
behalf of the investor to acquire the interest (plus interest, as
reasonably determined by the Managing Member) less any amounts paid to
the investor as distributions, and (ii) the fair value, determined at
the time of repurchase in good faith by the Managing Member, of such
interest.
13. A Future Fund may invest in one or more pooled investment
vehicles (including private funds relying on sections 3(c)(1) and
3(c)(7) under the Act and funds relying on section 3(c)(5) under the
Act) and/or registered investment companies sponsored by Two Sigma or
by third parties (each, an ``Underlying Fund'').\9\ One Fund may also
invest in another Fund in a ``master-feeder'' or similar structure. A
Fund may also be operated as a parallel fund making investments on a
side-by-side basis with Two Sigma Entities.
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\9\ Applicants are not requesting any exemption from any
provision of the Act or any rule thereunder that may govern a Fund's
eligibility to invest in an Underlying Fund relying on section
3(c)(1) or 3(c)(7) of the Act or an Underlying Fund's status under
the Act.
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14. A Fund may co-invest in a portfolio company (or a pooled
investment vehicle) with a Two Sigma Entity or with an investment fund
or separate account organized primarily for the benefit of investors
who are not affiliated with Two Sigma (``Third Party
[[Page 14260]]
Investors'') over which a Two Sigma Entity exercises investment
discretion or which is sponsored by a Two Sigma Entity (an ``Two Sigma
Third Party Fund''). Co-investments with a Two Sigma Entity or with a
Two Sigma Third Party Fund in a transaction in which Two Sigma's
investment was made pursuant to a contractual obligation to a Two Sigma
Third Party Fund will not be subject to Condition 3 below. All other
side-by-side investments held by Two Sigma Entities involving a joint
enterprise or other joint arrangement will be subject to Condition 3.
15. If Two Sigma makes loans to a Fund, the lender will be entitled
to receive interest, provided that the interest rate will be no less
favorable to the borrower than the rate obtainable on an arm's length
basis. The possibility of any such borrowings, as well as the terms
thereof, would be disclosed to Qualified Participants prior to their
investment in a Fund. Any indebtedness of the Fund will be the debt of
the Fund and without recourse to the investors. A Fund will not borrow
from any person if the borrowing would cause any person not named in
section 2(a)(13) of the Act to own securities of the Fund (other than
short-term paper). A Fund will not lend any funds to a Two Sigma
Entity.
16. A Fund will not acquire any security issued by a registered
investment company if immediately after such acquisition such Fund will
own more than 3% of the outstanding voting stock of the registered
investment company.
Applicants' Legal Analysis
1. Section 6(b) of the Act provides that the Commission shall
exempt employees' securities companies from the provisions of the Act
if and to the extent that such exemption is consistent with the
protection of investors. Section 6(b) provides that the Commission will
consider, in determining the provisions of the Act from which the
company should be exempt, the company's form of organization and
capital structure, the persons owning and controlling its securities,
the price of the company's securities and the amount of any sales load,
how the company's funds are invested, and the relationship between the
company and the issuers of the securities in which it invests. Section
2(a)(13) defines an employees' securities company, in relevant part, as
any investment company all of whose securities (other than short-term
paper) are beneficially owned (a) by current or former employees, or
persons on retainer, of one or more affiliated employers, (b) by
immediate family members of such persons, or (c) by such employer or
employers together with any of the persons in (a) or (b).
2. Section 7 of the Act generally prohibits investment companies
that are not registered under section 8 of the Act from selling or
redeeming their securities. Section 6(e) of the Act provides that in
connection with any order exempting an investment company from any
provision of section 7, certain specified provisions of the Act shall
be applicable to such company, and to other persons in their
transactions and relations with such company, as though such company
were registered under the Act, if the Commission deems it necessary and
appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors.
Applicants submit that it would be appropriate in the public interest
and consistent with the protection of investors and the purposes fairly
intended by the policies and provisions of the Act for the Commission
to issue an order under sections 6(b) and 6(e) of the Act exempting the
Funds from all provisions of the Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder, except sections 9, 17, 30, and 36 through 53 of the Act,
and the Rules and Regulations. With respect to sections 17(a), (d),
(e), (f), (g) and (j) and 30(a), (b), (e), and (h) of the Act, and the
Rules and Regulations, and rule 38a-1 under the Act, Applicants request
a limited exemption as set forth in the application.
3. Section 17(a) of the Act generally prohibits any affiliated
person of a registered investment company, or any affiliated person of
such a person, acting as principal, from knowingly selling or
purchasing any security or other property to or from the investment
company. Applicants request an exemption from section 17(a) to the
extent necessary to (a) permit a Two Sigma Entity or a Two Sigma Third
Party Fund (or any affiliated person of such Two Sigma Entity or Two
Sigma Third Party Fund), or any affiliated person of a Fund (or
affiliated persons of such persons), acting as principal, to engage in
any transaction directly or indirectly with any Fund or any company
controlled by such Fund; and (b) permit a Fund to invest in or engage
in any transaction with any Two Sigma Entity, acting as principal, (i)
in which such Fund, any company controlled by such Fund or any Two
Sigma Entity or any Two Sigma Third Party Fund has invested or will
invest, or (ii) with which such Fund, any company controlled by such
Fund or any Two Sigma Entity or Two Sigma Third Party Fund is or will
become otherwise affiliated; and (c) permit a Third Party Investor,
acting as a principal, to engage in any transaction directly or
indirectly with a Fund or any company controlled by such Fund. The
transactions to which any Fund is a party will be effected only after a
determination by the Managing Member that the requirements of
Conditions 1, 2 and 6 (set forth below) have been satisfied.
Applicants, on behalf of the Funds, represent that any transactions
otherwise subject to section 17(a) of the Act, for which exemptive
relief has not been requested, would require approval of the
Commission.
4. Applicants submit that an exemption from section 17(a) is
consistent with the policy of each Fund and the protection of
investors. Applicants state that the investors in each Fund will have
been fully informed of the possible extent of such Fund's dealings with
Two Sigma and of the potential conflicts of interest that may exist.
Applicants also state that, as professionals employed in the investment
management and securities businesses, or in administrative, financial,
accounting, legal, sales, marketing, risk management or operational
activities related thereto, the investors will be able to understand
and evaluate the attendant risks. Applicants assert that the community
of interest among the investors in each Fund, on the one hand, and Two
Sigma, on the other hand, is the best insurance against any risk of
abuse. Applicants acknowledge that the requested relief will not extend
to any transactions between a Fund and an Unaffiliated Subadviser or
any affiliated person of the Unaffiliated Subadviser, or between a Fund
and any person who is not an employee, officer or director of Two Sigma
or is an entity outside of Two Sigma and, in each case, is an
affiliated person of the Fund as defined in section 2(a)(3)(E) of the
Act (``Advisory Person'') or any affiliated person of such person.
5. Section 17(d) of the Act and rule 17d-1 under the Act prohibit
any affiliated person or principal underwriter of a registered
investment company, or any affiliated person of such a person or
principal underwriter, acting as principal, from participating in any
joint arrangement with the company unless authorized by the Commission.
Applicants request an exemption from section 17(d) and rule 17d-1 to
the extent necessary to permit affiliated persons of each Fund, or
affiliated persons of any of such persons to participate in, or effect
any transaction in connection with, any joint enterprise or other joint
arrangement or profit-sharing plan in which such Fund or a company
controlled by such Fund is a
[[Page 14261]]
participant. The exemption would permit, among other things, co-
investments by each Fund, Two Sigma Third Party Fund and individual
members or employees, officers, directors or consultants of Two Sigma
making their own individual investment decisions apart from Two Sigma.
Applicants acknowledge that the requested relief will not extend to any
transaction in which an Unaffiliated Subadviser or Advisory Person or
an affiliated person of either has an interest.
6. Applicants assert that compliance with section 17(d) would
prevent each Fund from achieving a principal purpose, which is to
provide a vehicle for Eligible Employees (and other permitted
investors) to co-invest with Two Sigma or, to the extent permitted by
the terms of the Fund, with other employees, officers, directors or
consultants of Two Sigma or Two Sigma Entities or with a Two Sigma
Third Party Fund. Applicants further contend that compliance with
section 17(d) would cause a Fund to forego investment opportunities
simply because an investor in such Fund or other affiliated person of
such Fund (or any affiliated person of such a person) also had, or
contemplated making, a similar investment. Applicants submit that it is
likely that suitable investments will be brought to the attention of a
Fund because of its affiliation with Two Sigma's large capital
resources and investment management experience, and that attractive
investment opportunities of the types considered by a Fund often
require each participant in the transaction to make funds available in
an amount that may be substantially greater than those the Fund would
independently be able to provide. Applicants contend that, as a result,
a Fund's access to such opportunities may have to be through co-
investment with other persons, including its affiliates. Applicants
assert that the flexibility to structure co-investments and joint
investments will not involve abuses of the type section 17(d) and rule
17d-1 were designed to prevent. In addition, Applicants represent that
any transactions otherwise subject to section 17(d) of the Act and rule
17d-1 thereunder, for which exemptive relief has not been requested,
would require approval by the Commission.
7. Co-investments with a Two Sigma Entity or with a Two Sigma Third
Party Fund in a transaction in which Two Sigma's investment was made
pursuant to a contractual obligation to a Two Sigma Third Party Fund
will not be subject to Condition 3 below. Applicants believe that the
interests of the Eligible Employees participating in a Fund will be
adequately protected in such situations because Two Sigma is likely to
invest a portion of its own capital in Two Sigma Third Party Fund
investments, either through such Two Sigma Third Party Fund or on a
side-by-side basis (which Two Sigma investments will be subject to
substantially the same terms as those applicable to such Two Sigma
Third Party Fund, except as otherwise disclosed in the governing
documents of the relevant Fund). Applicants assert that if Condition 3
were to apply to Two Sigma's investment in these situations, the Two
Sigma Third Party Fund would be indirectly burdened. Applicants further
assert that the relationship of a Fund to a Two Sigma Third Party Fund
is fundamentally different from such Fund's relationship to Two Sigma.
Applicants contend that the focus of, and the rationale for, the
protections contained in the requested relief are to protect the Funds
from any overreaching by Two Sigma in the employer/employee context,
whereas the same concerns are not present with respect to the Funds
vis-[agrave]-vis the investors in a Two Sigma Third Party Fund.
8. Section 17(e) of the Act and rule 17e-1 thereunder limit the
compensation an affiliated person may receive when acting as agent or
broker for a registered investment company. Applicants request an
exemption from section 17(e) to permit a Two Sigma Entity (including
the Managing Member and the Investment Adviser) that acts as an agent
or broker to receive placement fees, advisory fees, or other
compensation from a Fund in connection with the purchase or sale by the
Fund of securities, provided that the fees or other compensation are
deemed ``usual and customary.'' Applicants state that for purposes of
the application, fees or other compensation that are charged or
received by a Two Sigma Entity will be deemed to be ``usual and
customary'' only if (i) the Fund is purchasing or selling securities
alongside other unaffiliated third parties, Two Sigma Third Party Funds
or Third Party Investors who are also similarly purchasing or selling
securities, (ii) the fees or other compensation being charged to the
Fund are also being charged to the unaffiliated third parties, Two
Sigma Third Party Funds or Third Party Investors and (iii) the amount
of securities being purchased or sold by the Fund does not exceed 50%
of the total amount of securities being purchased or sold by the Fund
and the unaffiliated third parties, Two Sigma Third Party Funds or
Third Party Investors. Applicants state that compliance with section
17(e) would prevent a Fund from participating in a transaction in which
Two Sigma, for other business reasons, does not wish to appear as if
the Fund is being treated in a more favorable manner (by being charged
lower fees) than other third parties also participating in the
transaction. Applicants assert that the concerns of overreaching and
abuse that section 17(e) and rule 17e-1 were designed to prevent are
alleviated by the conditions that ensure that (i) the fees or other
compensation paid by a Fund to a Two Sigma Entity are those negotiated
at arm's length with unaffiliated third parties and (ii) the
unaffiliated third parties have as great or greater interest as the
Fund in the transaction as a whole.
9. Rule 17e-1(b) under the Act requires that a majority of
directors who are not ``interested persons'' (as defined in section
2(a)(19) of the Act) take actions and make approvals regarding
commissions, fees, or other remuneration. Rule 17e-1(c) under the Act
requires each Fund to comply with the fund governance standards defined
in rule 0-1(a)(7) under the Act. Applicants request an exemption from
rule 17e-1(b) to the extent necessary to permit each Fund to comply
with rule 17e-1(b) without the necessity of having a majority of the
directors (or members of a comparable body) of the Fund who are not
``interested persons'' take such actions and make such approvals as are
set forth in rule 17e-1(b). Applicants note that in the event that all
the directors of the Managing Member or other governing body of the
Managing Member will be affiliated persons, a Fund could not comply
with rule 17e-1(b) without the relief requested. Applicants represent
that in such event, the Fund will comply with rule 17e-1(b) by having a
majority of the directors (or members of a comparable body) of the Fund
or its Managing Member take such actions and make such approvals as are
set forth in rule 17e-1(b), and that each Fund will otherwise comply
with all other requirements of rule 17e-1(b). Applicants further
request an exemption from rule 17(e)-1(c) to the extent necessary to
permit each Fund to comply with rule 17e-1 without the necessity of
having a majority of the directors (or members of a comparable body) of
the Fund or its Managing Member be ``disinterested persons'' as is set
forth in rule 17e-1(c). Applicants note that in the event that all the
directors (or members of a comparable governing body) of the Fund or
its
[[Page 14262]]
Managing Member will be affiliated persons, a Fund could not comply
with rule 17e-1 without the relief requested. Applicants represent that
each Fund will otherwise comply with all other requirements of rule
17e-1(c).
10. Section 17(f) of the Act provides that the securities and
similar investments of a registered management investment company must
be placed in the custody of a bank, a member of a national securities
exchange or the company itself in accordance with Commission rules.
Rule 17f-2 under the Act specifies the requirements that must be
satisfied for a registered management investment company to act as a
custodian of its own investments. Applicants request relief from
section 17(f) and rule 17f-2 to permit the following exceptions from
the requirements of rule 17f-2: (a) A Fund's investments may be kept in
the locked files of the Managing Member or the Investment Adviser for
purposes of paragraph (b) of the rule; (b) for purposes of paragraph
(d) of the rule, (i) employees of Two Sigma or its affiliates
(including the Managing Member) will be deemed to be employees of the
Funds, (ii) officers or managers of the Managing Member of a Fund will
be deemed to be officers of the Fund and (iii) the Managing Member of a
Fund or its board of directors will be deemed to be the board of
directors of the Fund; and (c) in place of the verification procedure
under rule 17f-2(f), verification will be effected quarterly by two
employees of the Investment Adviser who are also employees of Two Sigma
responsible for the administrative, legal and/or compliance functions
for funds managed or sponsored by Two Sigma and who have specific
knowledge of custody requirements, policies and procedures of the
Funds. Applicants expect that, with respect to certain Funds, many of
their investments will be evidenced only by partnership agreements,
participation agreements or similar documents, rather than by
negotiable certificates that could be misappropriated. Applicants
assert that, for such a Fund, these instruments are most suitably kept
in the files of the Managing Member or its Investment Adviser, where
they can be referred to as necessary. Applicants represent that they
will comply with all other provisions of rule 17f-2, including the
recordkeeping requirements of paragraph (e).
11. Section 17(g) of the Act and rule 17g-1 thereunder generally
require the bonding of officers and employees of a registered
investment company who have access to its securities or funds. Rule
17g-1 requires that a majority of directors who are not ``interested
persons'' of a registered investment company take certain actions and
give certain approvals relating to fidelity bonding. Among other
things, the rule also requires that the board of directors of an
investment company relying on the rule satisfy the fund governance
standards defined in rule 0-1(a)(7). Applicants request an exemption
from rule 17g-1 to the extent necessary to permit a Fund to comply with
rule 17g-1 by having the Managing Member of the Fund take such actions
and make such approvals as are set forth in rule 17g-1. Applicants
state that in the event all the directors of the Managing Member or
other governing body of the Managing Member will be affiliated persons,
a Fund could not comply with rule 17g-1 without the requested relief.
Applicants also request an exemption from the requirements of rule 17g-
1(g) and (h) relating to the filing of copies of fidelity bonds and
related information with the Commission and the provision of notices to
the board of directors and from the requirements of rule 17g-1(j)(3).
Applicants contend that the filing requirements are burdensome and
unnecessary as applied to the Funds and represent that the Managing
Member of each Fund will designate a person to maintain the records
otherwise required to be filed with the Commission under rule 17g-1(g).
Applicants further contend that the notices otherwise required to be
given to the board of directors will be unnecessary as the Funds will
not have boards of directors. Applicants represent that each Fund will
comply with all other requirements of rule 17g-1.
12. Section 17(j) of the Act and paragraph (b) of rule 17j-1 under
the Act make it unlawful for certain enumerated persons to engage in
fraudulent or deceptive practices in connection with the purchase or
sale of a security held or to be acquired by a registered investment
company. Rule 17j-1 also requires that every registered investment
company adopt a written code of ethics and that every access person of
a registered investment company report personal securities
transactions. Applicants request an exemption from section 17(j) and
the provisions of rule 17j-1 (except for the anti-fraud provisions of
rule 17j-1(b)) because they assert that these requirements are
burdensome and unnecessary as applied to the Funds. The relief
requested will extend only to entities within Two Sigma and is not
requested with respect to any Unaffiliated Subadviser or Advisory
Person.
13. Sections 30(a), (b) and (e) of the Act and the rules thereunder
generally require that registered investment companies prepare and file
with the Commission and mail to their shareholders certain periodic
reports and financial statements. Applicants contend that the forms
prescribed by the Commission for periodic reports have little relevance
to a Fund and would entail administrative and legal costs that outweigh
any benefit to the investors in such Fund. Applicants request relief
under sections 30(a), (b) and (e) to the extent necessary to permit
each Fund to report annually to its investors in the manner described
in the application. Section 30(h) of the Act requires that every
officer, director, member of an advisory board, investment adviser or
affiliated person of an investment adviser of a closed-end investment
company be subject to the same duties and liabilities as those imposed
upon similar classes of persons under section 16(a) of the Exchange
Act. Applicants request an exemption from section 30(h) of the Act to
the extent necessary to exempt the Managing Member of each Fund,
directors, and officers of the Managing Member and any other persons
who may be deemed members of an advisory board or investment adviser
(and affiliated persons thereof) of such Fund from filing Forms 3, 4,
and 5 under section 16(a) of the Exchange Act with respect to their
ownership of interests in such Fund under section 16 of the Exchange
Act. Applicants assert that, because there will be no trading market
and the transfers of interests are severely restricted, these filings
are unnecessary for the protection of investors and burdensome to those
required to make them.
14. Rule 38a-1 requires registered investment companies to adopt,
implement and periodically review written policies reasonably designed
to prevent violation of the federal securities laws and to appoint a
chief compliance officer. Each Fund will comply will rule 38a-1(a), (c)
and (d), except that: (i) To the extent the Fund does not have a board
of directors, the board of directors of the Managing Member or other
governing body of the Managing Member will fulfill the responsibilities
assigned to the Fund's board of directors under the rule; (ii) to the
extent the board of directors or other governing body of the Managing
Member does not have any disinterested members, approval by a majority
of the disinterested board members required by rule 38a-1 will not be
obtained; and (iii) to the extent the board of directors
[[Page 14263]]
or other governing body of the Managing Member does not have any
independent members, the Funds will comply with the requirement in rule
38a-1(a)(4)(iv) that the chief compliance officer meet with the
independent directors by having the chief compliance officer meet with
the board of directors or other governing body of the Managing Member
as constituted. Applicants represent that each Fund has adopted written
policies and procedures reasonably designed to prevent violations of
the terms and conditions of the application, has appointed a chief
compliance officer and is otherwise in compliance with the terms and
conditions of the application.
Applicants' Conditions
Applicants agree that any order granting the requested relief will
be subject to the following conditions:
1. Each proposed transaction otherwise prohibited by section 17(a)
or section 17(d) of the Act and rule 17d-1 thereunder to which a Fund
is a party (the ``Section 17 Transactions'') will be effected only if
the Managing Member determines that: (a) The terms of the Section 17
Transaction, including the consideration to be paid or received, are
fair and reasonable to the Fund and the investors and do not involve
overreaching of such Fund or its investors on the part of any person
concerned; and (b) the Section 17 Transaction is consistent with the
interests of the Fund and the investors, such Fund's organizational
documents and such Fund's reports to its investors.
In addition, the Managing Member will record and preserve a
description of all Section 17 Transactions, the Managing Member's
findings, the information or materials upon which the Managing Member's
findings are based and the basis for such findings. All such records
will be maintained for the life of the Fund and at least six years
thereafter, and will be subject to examination by the Commission and
its staff.\10\
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\10\ Each Fund will preserve the accounts, books and other
documents required to be maintained in an easily accessible place
for the first two years.
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2. The Managing Member will adopt, and periodically review and
update, procedures designed to ensure that reasonable inquiry is made,
prior to the consummation of any Section 17 Transaction, with respect
to the possible involvement in the transaction of any affiliated person
or promoter of or principal underwriter for such Fund, or any
affiliated person of such a person, promoter or principal underwriter.
3. The Managing Member will not cause the funds of any Fund to be
invested in any investment in which a ``Co-Investor'' (as defined
below) has acquired or proposes to acquire the same class of securities
of the same issuer, where the investment involves a joint enterprise or
other joint arrangement within the meaning of rule 17d-1 in which the
Fund and a Co-Investor are participants, unless prior to such
investment any such Co-Investor agrees, prior to disposing of all or
part of its investment, to: (a) Give the Managing Member sufficient,
but not less than one day's, notice of its intent to dispose of its
investment; and (b) refrain from disposing of its investment unless the
Fund has the opportunity to dispose of the Fund's investment prior to
or concurrently with, on the same terms as, and on a pro rata basis
with, the Co-Investor. The term ``Co-Investor'' with respect to any
Fund means any person who is: (a) An ``affiliated person'' (as defined
in section 2(a)(3) of the Act) of the Fund (other than a Two Sigma
Third Party Fund); (b) Two Sigma (except when a Two Sigma Entity co-
invests with a Fund and a Two Sigma Third Party Fund pursuant to a
contractual obligation to the Two Sigma Third Party Fund); (c) an
officer or director of a Two Sigma Entity; or (d) an entity (other than
a Two Sigma Third Party Fund) in which Two Sigma acts as a managing
member or has a similar capacity to control the sale or other
disposition of the entity's securities. The restrictions contained in
this condition, however, shall not be deemed to limit or prevent the
disposition of an investment by a Co-Investor: (a) To its direct or
indirect wholly-owned subsidiary, to any company (a ``parent'') of
which the Co-Investor is a direct or indirect wholly-owned subsidiary
or to a direct or indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of its parent; (b)
to immediate family members of the Co-Investor, including step or
adoptive relationships, or a trust or other investment vehicle
established for any Co-Investor or any such family member; or (c) when
the investment is comprised of securities that are (i) listed on a
national securities exchange registered under section 6 of the Exchange
Act; (ii) NMS stocks, pursuant to section 11A(a)(2) of the Exchange Act
and rule 600(b) of Regulation NMS thereunder; (iii) government
securities as defined in section 2(a)(16) of the Act; (iv) ``Eligible
Securities'' as defined in rule 2a-7 under the Act; or (v) listed or
traded on any foreign securities exchange or board of trade that
satisfies regulatory requirements under the law of the jurisdiction in
which such foreign securities exchange or board of trade is organized
similar to those that apply to a national securities exchange or a
national market system for securities.
4. Each Fund and its Managing Member will maintain and preserve,
for the life of such Fund and at least six years thereafter, such
accounts, books, and other documents as constitute the record forming
the basis for the audited financial statements that are to be provided
to the investors in such Fund, and each annual report of such Fund
required to be sent to such investors, and agree that all such records
will be subject to examination by the Commission and its staff.\11\
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\11\ Each Fund will preserve the accounts, books and other
documents required to be maintained in an easily accessible place
for the first two years.
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5. Within 120 days after the end of the fiscal year of each Fund,
or as soon as practicable thereafter, the Managing Member of each Fund
will send to each investor in such Fund who had an interest in any
capital account of the Fund, at any time during the fiscal year then
ended, Fund financial statements audited by the Fund's independent
accountants, except in the case of a Fund formed to make a single
portfolio investment. In such cases, financial statements will be
unaudited, but each investor will receive financial statements of the
single portfolio investment audited by such entity's independent
accountants. At the end of each fiscal year and at other times as
necessary in accordance with customary practice, the Managing Member
will make a valuation or cause a valuation to be made of all of the
assets of the Fund as of the fiscal year end. In addition, as soon as
practicable after the end of each tax year of a Fund, the Managing
Member of such Fund will send a report to each person who was an
investor in such Fund at any time during the fiscal year then ended,
setting forth such tax information as shall be necessary for the
preparation by the investor of his, her or its U.S. federal and state
income tax returns and a report of the investment activities of the
Fund during that fiscal year.
6. If a Fund makes purchases or sales from or to an entity
affiliated with the Fund by reason of an officer, director or employee
of Two Sigma (a) serving as an officer, director, managing member or
investment adviser of the entity, or (b) having a 5% or more investment
in the entity, such individual will not participate in the Fund's
determination of whether or not to effect the purchase or sale.
[[Page 14264]]
For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management,
under delegated authority.
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-04912 Filed 3-10-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P