97-27697. Acacia National Life Insurance Company, Inc., et al.  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 202 (Monday, October 20, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 54481-54484]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-27697]
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    [Rel. No. IC-22855; File No. 812-10622]
    
    
    Acacia National Life Insurance Company, Inc., et al.
    
        October 10, 1997.
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or ``Commission'').
    
    ACTION: Notice of Application for an Order under Section 26(b) of the 
    Investment Company Act of 1940 (the ``Act'') approving proposed 
    substitutions of securities.
    
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    SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicants seek an order to permit the 
    substitution of shares of the Neuberger & Berman Advisors Management 
    Trust Limited Maturity Bond Portfolio (``N&B Bond Portfolio'') for 
    shares of the Strong Advantage Fund II (``Strong Advantage'') and the 
    substitution of shares of Acacia Capital Corporation Calvert 
    Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio (``Calvert Balanced 
    Portfolio'') for shares of the Strong Asset Allocation Fund II 
    (``Strong Asset Allocation'' and, collectively with Strong Advantage, 
    the ``Strong Funds'').
    
    APPLICANTS: Acacia National Life Insurance Company (``Acacia 
    National''), Acacia National Life Insurance Company Variable Life 
    Separate Account I (``Separate Account I''), Acacia National Life 
    Insurance Company Variable Annuity Separate Account II (``Separate 
    Account II'', together with Separate Account I, the ``Separate 
    Accounts'').
    
    FILING DATES: The application was filed on April 17, 1997, and amended 
    on September 25, 1997.
    
    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 on the application by writing to the 
    Secretary of the SEC and serving
    
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    the Applicants with a copy of the request, in person or by mail. 
    Hearing requests must be received by the Commission by 5:30 pm., on 
    November 4, 1997, and accompanied by proof of service on the 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 
    Secretary of the SEC.
    
    ADDRESSES: Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth 
    Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549. Applicants, c/o Ellen Jane 
    Abromson, Esq., Acacia National Life Insurance Company, 7315 Wisconsin 
    Avenue, Bethesda, Maryland 20814.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joyce Merrick Pickholz, Senior 
    Counsel, or Kevin M. Kirchoff, Branch Chief, Office of Insurance 
    Products, Division of Investment Management, at (202) 942-0670.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the 
    application. The complete application is available for a fee from the 
    SEC's Public Reference Branch, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington D.C. 
    (tel. (202) 942-8090).
    
    Applicants' Representations
    
        1. Acacia National is a stock life insurance company organized 
    under the laws of Virginia. Acacia National is a wholly owned 
    subsidiary of Acacia Mutual Life Insurance Company, a mutual life 
    insurance company chartered by special act of Congress and subject to 
    the laws of the District of Columbia. The Separate Accounts were 
    established by Acacia National under the insurance laws of Virginia to 
    fund, in the case of Separate Account I, variable life insurance 
    policies and, in the case of Separate Account II, variable annuity 
    policies (together, the ``Policies''). The Separate Accounts are 
    registered with the Commission under the 1940 Act as unit investment 
    trusts.
        2. Each Separate Account currently consisted of twenty-one sub-
    accounts. Each sub-account invests its assets in the shares of one of 
    twenty-one designated investment portfolios of seven open-end 
    management investment companies. Strong Advantage, Strong Asset 
    Allocation, N&B Bond Portfolio, and Calvert Balanced Portfolio are four 
    of the twenty-one existing portfolios.
        3. Strong Advantage is a series of Strong Variable Insurance Funds, 
    Inc. (``Strong Variable Funds'') for which Strong Capital Management, 
    Inc. (``SCM'') is the investment adviser. Strong Advantage seeks to 
    provide current income with a low degree of share-price fluctuation by 
    investing in ultra short term, investment grade debt obligations; its 
    average effective portfolio maturity is normally less than one year. 
    Strong Advantage is designed for investors who seek higher yields than 
    money market funds and who are willing to accept some modest principal 
    fluctuation in order to achieve that objective. Under normal market 
    conditions, at least 75% of its net assets are invested in investment 
    grade debt obligations. Strong Advantage may also invest up to 25% of 
    its net assets in non-investment grade debt obligations that are rated 
    in the fifth-highest rating category or in unrated securities of 
    comparable quality.
        4. Strong Asset Allocation is also a series of Strong Variable 
    Funds for which SCM is the advisor. Strong Asset Allocation seeks high 
    total return consistent with reasonable risk over the long term by 
    allocating its assets among a diversified portfolio of equity 
    securities, bonds and short-term fixed-income securities with benchmark 
    allocations of 60% stock, 35% bonds and 5% cash.
        5. N&B Bond Portfolio is a portfolio of the Neuberger & Berman 
    Advisors Management Trust. As a feeder fund in a ``master-feeder'' 
    arrangement, the fund invests its assets in a corresponding series, AMT 
    Limited Maturity Bond Investments (``AMT Series''), of Advisors 
    Management Trust, an open-end management investment company registered 
    under the 1940 Act. The investment objective of the N&B Bond Portfolio 
    and the AMT Series is to provide the highest current income consistent 
    with low risk to principal and liquidity and, secondarily, total 
    return. The AMT Series invests in short-to-intermediate term fixed and 
    variable debt securities and seeks to increase income and preserve or 
    enhance total return by actively managing average portfolio duration. 
    The AMT Series invests primarily in investment grade securities but may 
    invest up to 10% of its pet assets, measured at the time of investment, 
    in debt securities rated below investment grade or in unrated 
    securities determined by its adviser to be of comparable quality.
        6. The Calvert Balanced Portfolio, a series of Acacia Capital 
    Corporation, is advised by Calvert Asset Management Company, Inc. It 
    seeks to achieve a total return above the rate of inflation through an 
    actively managed portfolio of common and preferred stocks, bonds, and 
    money market instruments. For its fixed-income investments, the Calvert 
    Balanced Portfolio normally invests in investment grade bonds but may 
    invest up to 20% of its assets in obligations rated lower than B. No 
    more than 10% of assets may be invested in privately placed 
    instruments. Each investment of the Calvert Balanced Portfolio is 
    selected with a concern for its social impact.
        7. On November 1, 1996, SCM notified Acacia National that Strong 
    Variable Funds intended to cease offering shares of the Strong Funds 
    for inclusion in variable polices due to the small amount of assets in 
    the two portfolios and the corresponding absence of economies of scale. 
    New allocations to the Strong Funds are no longer permitted.
        8. Acacia National proposes to provide policyowners with the option 
    to transfer into any of the other portfolios offered under the 
    Policies. However, because some policyowners will not voluntarily 
    transfer from the affected sub-accounts, Acacia National proposes to 
    substitute shares of the N&B Bond Portfolio for shares of Strong 
    Advantage and Calvert Balanced Portfolio shares for shares of Strong 
    Asset Allocation in the sub-accounts.
        9. The Policies give Acacia National the right to eliminate or add 
    sub-accounts, combine two or more sub-accounts, or substitute one or 
    more new underlying mutual funds or portfolios for others in which one 
    or more sub-accounts are invested. These contractual provisions are 
    disclosed in the prospectuses or statements of additional information 
    relating to the Policies.
        10. Acacia National will schedule the substitutions to occur as 
    soon as practicable following the issuance of an exemptive order. As of 
    the effective date of the substitutions, Acacia National will redeem 
    shares of the Strong Funds. Simultaneously, Acacia National will use 
    the proceeds of the redemptions to purchase the appropriate number of 
    shares of N&B Bond Portfolio and Calvert Balanced Portfolio. The 
    substitution will take place at the relative net asset values of the 
    portfolios with no change in the amount of any policyowner's account 
    values.
        11. Acacia National will pay all expenses and transaction costs of 
    the substitutions. SCM may reimburse Acacia National for some or all of 
    those costs but none will be borne by policyowners. Affected 
    policyowners will not incur any fees or charges as a result of the 
    substitutions, nor will the rights or obligations of Acacia National 
    under the Policies be altered in any way.
    
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        12. The substitutions were first described to policyowners in a 
    prospectus supplement dated November 25, 1996, and again in 
    correspondence to policyowners dated May 1, 1997, or May 16, 1997, 
    depending on the state in which the Policy was issued. The prospectus 
    supplement advised policyowners that the Strong Funds would cease 
    offering shares under the Policies effective May 1, 1997, and, 
    consequently, deposits would no longer be accepted into the Strong 
    Funds after that time. Policyowners were also notified that if the 
    substitutions were approved by the SEC, the substitutions would be 
    effected at the net asset value of the relevant portfolios, that 
    policyowners would be given the opportunity to transfer into any other 
    available portfolio, and that no costs for any substitution would be 
    borne by policyowners.
        13. Within five days after the substitutions, Acacia National will 
    send to policyowners written notice stating that the substitutions have 
    occurred. Acacia National will include in the mailing a supplement to 
    the prospectus which discloses the completion of the substitutions. 
    Affected policyowners will be advised that for a period of 30 days from 
    the mailing of the notice, they may transfer all assets, as 
    substituted, to any other available sub-account without limitation and 
    without charge, and no such transfer will be counted as a transfer 
    under any contractual provision that may limit the number of transfer 
    in any year. No transfer charge is currently in effect and none will be 
    imposed prior to the expiration of the 30 day period. Following the 
    substitutions, policyowners will be afforded the same rights, including 
    surrender and other transfer rights with regard to amounts invested 
    under the Policies as they currently have. Thus policyowners may choose 
    simply to withdraw amounts credited to them following the substitutions 
    under the conditions that currently exists, subject to any applicable 
    surrender charge.
        14. The investment advisory fee for Strong Advantage is, on an 
    annual basis, .60% of the average daily net asset value of the 
    portfolio. As a result of an expense limitation agreement, the expense 
    ratio for Strong Advantage for the year ending December 31, 1996, was 
    2.00%. in the absence of this agreement, the expense ratio would have 
    been 2.85%.
        15. The investment advisory fee for Strong Asset Allocation is, on 
    an annual basis, .85% of the average daily net asset value of the 
    portfolio up to a value of $35 million in assets and .80% of the 
    portfolio's assets in excess of $35 million. As a result of an expense 
    limitation agreement, the expense ratio for Strong Asset Allocation for 
    the year ending December 31, 1996, was 2.00%. In the absence of this 
    agreement, the expense ratio would have been 4.29%.
        16. The investment advisory fee for the N&B Bond Portfolio equals a 
    percentage of the average daily net asset value of the portfolio, on an 
    annual basis, as follows: .65% for the first $500 million; .615% for 
    the next $500 million; .60% for the next $500 million; .575 for the 
    next $500 million; and .55% thereafter. The expense ratio for the N&B 
    Bond Portfolio for the year ending December 31, 1996, was .80%.
        17. The investment advisory fee for the Calvert Balanced Portfolio 
    is, on an annual basis, .70% of the average daily net asset value of 
    the portfolio. Its expense ratio for the year ending December 31, 1996, 
    was .81%.
    
    Applicants' Legal Analysis
    
        1. Section 26(b) of the 1940 Act provides in pertinent part that 
    ``[i]t shall be unlawful for any depositor or trustee of a registered 
    unit investment trust holding the security of a single issuer to 
    substitute another security for such security unless the Commission 
    shall have approved such substitution.'' Section 26(b) provides that 
    the Commission will approve a substitution if it is consistent with the 
    protection of investors and the purposes fairly intended by the policy 
    and provisions of the 1940 Act. The purpose of Section 26(b) is to 
    protect the expectation of investors in a unit investment trust that 
    the unit investment trust will accumulate the shares of a particular 
    issuer, and to prevent unscrutinized substitutions which might, in 
    effect, force shareholders dissatisfied with the substituted security 
    to redeem their shares, thereby incurring either a loss of the sales 
    load deducted from initial proceeds, an additional sales load upon 
    reinvestment of the redemption proceeds, or both. Section 26(b) affords 
    protection to investors by preventing a depositor or trustee of a unit 
    investment trust holding shares of one issuer from substituting for 
    those shares the shares of another issuer, unless the Commission 
    approves that substitution.
        2. Applicants submit that the purposes, terms and conditions of the 
    substitutions are consistent with the principals and purposes of 
    Section 26(b) and do not entail any of the abuses that Section 26(b) is 
    designed to prevent. Applicants believe that the N&B Bond and Calvert 
    Balanced portfolios will better serve policyowner interests because the 
    expenses of each portfolio have been significantly lower than, and the 
    performance of each has been essentially equivalent to or better than, 
    the expenses and performance of the funds to be eliminated. Also, 
    Applicants submit that Policyowners may transfer their assets to any of 
    seventeen additional portfolios currently available under the Policies.
        3. Applicants believe that Calvert Balanced is an appropriate 
    replacement for Strong Asset Allocation notwithstanding the fact that 
    Calvert Balanced seeks to invest in organizations that: (a) Deliver 
    safe products and services; (b) are managed with participation 
    throughout the organization in defining and achieving objectives; (c) 
    negotiate fairly with their workers and provide a supportive working 
    environment; and (d) foster awareness of a commitment to human goals 
    within the organization and the word. Applicants submit that each 
    portfolio invests a percentage of its assets in stocks, bonds and money 
    market instruments. Also, Calvert Balanced can be expected to 
    outperform Strong Asset Allocation, were the latter to remain in 
    existence, because Calvert Balanced has much lower expenses than Strong 
    Asset Allocation, and, as Strong Asset Allocation's assets continue to 
    decrease and its expenses remain the same, its performance will 
    necessarily decline. Further, Applicant's assert that even though 
    Strong Asset Allocation has slightly outperformed Calvert Balanced 
    since each portfolio's inception, Calvert Balanced has gone through 
    many market cycles during its more than ten years of existence whereas 
    Strong Asset Allocation, which commenced operations in late 1995, has a 
    briefer history characterized by a rising market. For the past year, 
    the two Portfolios' total returns were identical (20.67%).
        4. Applicants state that Acacia National has reserved the right to 
    substitute securities held by the Sub-Accounts of the Separate Accounts 
    and this right is disclosed in the prospectuses or statements of 
    additional information for the Separate Accounts.
        5. Finally, Applicants represent that the substitutions will not 
    result in the type of costly forced redemption that Section 26(b) was 
    intended to guard against and, for the following reasons, are 
    consistent with the protection of investors and the purposes fairly 
    intended by the Act:
        a. The N&B Bond Portfolio and Calvert Balanced Portfolio have 
    objectives, policies and restrictions that are substantially similar to 
    the objectives, policies and restrictions of the funds being replaced.
        b. The expense ratio of the N&B Bond and Calvert Balanced 
    Portfolios are
    
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    significantly lower than those of the Strong funds.
        c. The performance of the N&B Bond and Calvert Balanced Portfolios 
    has been essentially equivalent to or better than the performance of 
    the portfolios that will be eliminated.
        d. The substitutions will, in all cases, be at the net asset value 
    of the respective portfolios without the imposition of any transfer or 
    similar charge.
        e. The costs of the substitutions will be borne by Acacia National 
    and SCM and will not be borne by policyowners. No charges will be 
    assessed to effect the substitutions.
        f. Within 5 days after the substitutions, Acacia National will send 
    to policyowners written notice of the substitutions that identifies the 
    shares that were substituted and discloses the shares which replaced 
    them. Included in the mailing will be a supplement to the prospectus 
    that discloses completion of the substitutions.
        g. For 30 days following the mailing of the notice of 
    substitutions, policyowners may transfer substituted assets without any 
    charge. No such transfer will be counted as a transfer under any 
    contractual provision which limits the number of transfers in any year.
        h. The substitutions will in no way alter the insurance benefits to 
    policyholders or the contractual obligations of Acacia National.
        i. The substitutions will in no way alter the tax benefits to 
    policyowners. Counsel for Acacia National has advised that the 
    substitutions will not give rise to any tax consequences to the 
    policyowners.
    
    Applicants' Conclusions
    
        Applicants assert that, for the reasons and upon the facts set 
    forth in the application, the requested order approving the proposed 
    substitution meets the standards set forth in Section 26(b) of the 1940 
    Act and should be granted.
    
        For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management, 
    pursuant to delegated authority.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 97-27697 Filed 10-17-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/20/1997
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Application for an Order under Section 26(b) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the ``Act'') approving proposed substitutions of securities.
Document Number:
97-27697
Dates:
The application was filed on April 17, 1997, and amended on September 25, 1997.
Pages:
54481-54484 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Rel. No. IC-22855, File No. 812-10622
PDF File:
97-27697.pdf