95-30527. Wellington Underwriting plc; Notice of Application  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 241 (Friday, December 15, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 64458-64459]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-30527]
    
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    [Release No. IC-21588; 812-9632]
    
    
    Wellington Underwriting plc; Notice of Application
    
    December 8, 1995.
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'').
    
    ACTION: Notice of Application for Exemption under the Investment 
    Company Act of 1940 (``Act'').
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    APPLICANT: Wellington Underwriting plc.
    
    RELEVANT ACT SECTION: Exemption requested under Section 6(c).
    
    SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicant, a United Kingdom company engaged in 
    the business of insurance, seeks an order granting it a conditional 
    exemption from all provisions of the Act. Because of its listing on the 
    London Stock Exchange as an ``investment company,'' Applicant seeks to 
    clarify its status prior to a proposed offer and sale of its American 
    Depositary Shares in the United States to assure that it will not be 
    required to register as an investment company under the Act.
    
    FILING DATES: The application was filed on June 16, 1995, and amended 
    on October 17, 1995. Counsel for Applicant has agreed to file a further 
    amendment during the notice period, the substance of which is 
    incorporated herein.
    
    HEARING OR NOTIFICATION OF HEARING: An order granting the application 
    will be issued unless the SEC orders a hearing. Interested persons may 
    request a hearing by writing to the SEC's Secretary and serving 
    Applicant with a copy of the request, personally or by mail. Hearing 
    requests should be received by the SEC by 5:30 p.m. on January 2, 1996, 
    and should be accompanied by proof of service on the Applicant, 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 may request 
    notification of a hearing by writing to the Secretary of the SEC.
    
    ADDRESSES: Secretary, SEC, 450 Fifth Street NW., Washington, DC 20549. 
    Applicant, 2 Minster Court, Mincing Lane, London, EC3R 7FB, England.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    H.R. Hallock, Jr., Special Counsel, at (202) 942-0564 or C. David 
    Messman, Branch Chief, at (202) 942-0564 (Division of Investment 
    Management, Office of Investment Company Regulation).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the 
    application. The complete application may be obtained for a fee from 
    the SEC's Public Reference Branch.
    
    Applicant's Representations
    
        1. Applicant, a public holding company incorporated under the laws 
    of England and Wales, was formed for the purpose of allowing investors 
    to participate with limited liability in underwriting insurance risks 
    at Lloyd's of London (``Lloyd's''). Applicant underwrites at Lloyd's 
    through five wholly-owned subsidiaries (the ``Subsidiaries''). The 
    Subsidiaries have received approval from Lloyd's as ``Corporate 
    Members,'' i.e., corporations acting as insurance underwriters through 
    syndicates at Lloyd's. The only securities which the Applicant will own 
    are those of the Subsidiaries.
        2. On November 23, 1994, Applicant completed a placement of 
    17,250,000 Ordinary Shares. This included a private placement in the 
    United States of 127,094 American Depository Shares (representing 
    1,270,940 Ordinary Shares) to eleven ``accredited investors'' within 
    the meaning of Regulation D under the Securities Act of 1933 (the 
    ``1933 Act''). The balance of Applicant's Ordinary Shares were placed 
    with 76 holders outside the United States.
        3. Applicant's shares are traded on the London Stock Exchange 
    (``LSE''), where Applicant is listed as an ``investment company.'' To 
    be listed on the LSE, an issuer must have three years of audited 
    financial statements unless it lists as an ``investment company.'' \1\ 
    Applicant sought to be listed under this category in order to 
    facilitate an immediate listing on the LSE which otherwise would not 
    have been possible for a new issuer. Applicant is not otherwise treated 
    as an investment company in the United Kingdom.
    
        \1\ To qualify as an ``investment company'' under LSE rules, no 
    more than 20% of the Applicant's assets on a consolidated basis may 
    be invested in the securities of any one company--including its own 
    subsidiaries, and the Applicant must be a passive investor and not 
    control the companies in which it invests, other than companies 
    through which it invests (i.e., the Subsidiaries).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        4. The Subsidiaries commenced operations on January 1, 1995, 
    engaging exclusively in the insurance business of acting as Corporate 
    Members of syndicates underwriting insurance at Lloyd's. The 
    Subsidiaries underwrite insurance at Lloyd's through syndicates managed 
    by Wellington Underwriting Agencies Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary 
    of Wellington Underwriting Holdings Limited. Pursuant to the LSE 
    Listing Rules and the rules of the Council of Lloyd's (the 
    ``Council''), the central body that regulates the affairs of the 
    Lloyd's market, the Subsidiaries will not transact any other business.
        5. The Subsidiaries are regulated in the U.K. as insurance 
    companies, not investment companies. Because they are Corporate Members 
    of Lloyd's, the Subsidiaries must comply with various provisions of the 
    U.K. Insurance Companies Act 1982 and are subject to oversight by the 
    Secretary of State for Trade and Industry. Most notably, U.K. 
    regulation focuses on solvency, the fundamental principle of insurance 
    regulation, by requiring audited statements and actuarial certificates 
    for Members' accounts, trust funds for premiums, and margins of 
    solvency. The British Department of Trade and Industry also has 
    significant powers to regulate the market and affairs of Members in the 
    event that either Lloyd's underwriters taken as a whole or any Member 
    fails to satisfy regulatory requirements. These powers include, among 
    others, the ability to regulate the investment and custody of assets at 
    Lloyd's, to limit (or terminate) the writing of insurance, and to 
    direct the actions of the Council or other persons at Lloyd's. 
    
    [[Page 64459]]
    
        6. At the present time, the Applicant's shares are beneficially 
    owned by fewer than one hundred persons in the United States, and the 
    Applicant is not making, and does not presently propose to make, a 
    public offering of its securities in the United States. The Applicant 
    intends, however, to raise additional capital, which may include 
    another offering of American Depository Shares to additional United 
    States investors through a further private placement.
    
    Applicant's Legal Analysis
    
        1. Section 3(a)(1) defines ``investment company'' to mean, as here 
    relevant, any issuer that holds itself out as being engaged primarily 
    in the business of investing or trading in securities. Because the 
    Applicant is listed on the LSE as an ``investment company,'' it 
    arguably has held itself out as an investment company within the 
    meaning of section 3(a)(1).\2\
    
        \2\ The Applicant's assets consist entirely of securities of the 
    wholly-owned Subsidiaries, which in turn hold assets in the form of 
    a Lloyd's deposit that is invested in securities. Thus, the 
    Subsidiaries, and consequently the Applicant itself, would be deemed 
    investment companies under section 3(a)(3), except for, as discussed 
    below, the Subsidiaries' status as foreign insurance companies under 
    rule 3a-6.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        2. Applicant requests an exemption from all provisions of the Act 
    pursuant to section 6(c). Section 6(c) provides, as here relevant, that 
    the SEC, by order upon application, may exempt any person from any 
    provisions of the Act or of any rule thereunder, if and to the extent 
    that such exemption is appropriate in the public interest and 
    consistent with the protection of investors and the purposes fairly 
    intended by the policy and provisions of the Act.
        3. Applicant submits that the requested relief meets the exemptive 
    standards established by section 6(c). It asserts primarily that it is 
    engaged through the Subsidiaries in the business of an insurance 
    company, and does not operate as an investment company for purposes of 
    the Act. In this regard, even though the Applicant's memorandum of 
    association gives it the power to carry on the business of both an 
    investment company and an insurance business, it is not treated as an 
    investment company under the U.K. Companies Act or as an investment 
    trust for tax purposes. Similarly, the Applicant is not treated as a 
    collective investment scheme or an authorized unit trust scheme under 
    the U.K. Financial Services Act or as an undertaking for collective 
    investment in transferable securities (``UCITS'') under directives of 
    the European Union. In addition, the daily trading price of the 
    Applicant's shares on the LSE is quoted in the Financial Times under 
    the caption ``Insurance'' and not ``Investment Trusts.'' While the 1994 
    prospectus for the Applicant's shares introduced it as an investment 
    company, the stated purpose of the offering was to enable investors to 
    underwrite insurance with limited liability through Lloyd's syndicates 
    managed by Wellington Underwriting Agencies Limited. Based on the 
    foregoing, Applicant argues that the Act's purpose would not be served 
    by applying it to the Applicant merely because it is listed, for 
    reasons of convenience, as an investment company on the LSE.
        4. Applicant also submits that exemptive relief would be consistent 
    with the purposes intended by specific policies and provisions of the 
    Act. Section 3(c)(3) of the Act excludes from the definition of 
    ``investment company'' domestic insurance companies. Rule 3a-6 provides 
    that foreign insurance companies are also not subject to the provisions 
    of the Act. Applicant represents that its Subsidiaries fall within the 
    requirements of rule 3a-6.\3\ Applicant notes that United States 
    holding companies for insurance companies are excepted from the 
    definition of investment company by section 3(c)(6). Because of its 
    status as a holding company whose only operations are the ownership of 
    the Subsidiaries, the Applicant is a foreign insurance company holding 
    company. The SEC, upon adopting rule 3a-6, made it clear that foreign 
    insurance company holding companies should be treated under the Act on 
    the same basis as United States insurance company holding companies.\4\
    
        \3\ Rule 3a-6 defines ``foreign insurance company'' as an 
    insurance company organized under the laws of another country that 
    is regulated as such by that country's government, that is engaged 
    predominantly in writing or reinsuring insurance agreements of the 
    type specified in section 3(a)(8) of the 1933 Act, and that is not 
    operated for purposes of evading the provisions of the Act. 
    Applicant intends to rely on an opinion of counsel to the effect 
    that its Subsidiaries are exempt from registration under the Act 
    because they are foreign insurance companies within the meaning of 
    the rule. Applicant does not request SEC review or approval of 
    counsel's opinion, and acknowledges that the SEC takes no position 
    as to its availability.
        \4\ See Investment Company Act Release No. 18381 (Oct. 29, 
    1991).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Applicant's Conditions
    
        Applicant agrees that any order of the SEC granting the exemptive 
    relief requested by the application may be made subject to the 
    following conditions:
        1. No Subsidiary will be an ``investment company'' as defined by 
    the Act.
        2. Applicant will continue to operate, either directly or 
    indirectly, only in the business of insurance.
    
        For the SEC, by the Division of Investment Management, under 
    delegated authority.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-30527 Filed 12-14-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
12/15/1995
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Application for Exemption under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (``Act'').
Document Number:
95-30527
Dates:
The application was filed on June 16, 1995, and amended on October 17, 1995. Counsel for Applicant has agreed to file a further amendment during the notice period, the substance of which is incorporated herein.
Pages:
64458-64459 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release No. IC-21588, 812-9632
PDF File:
95-30527.pdf