95-14749. SEI Financial Management Corp. and SEI Financial Services Co.; Notice of Application  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 116 (Friday, June 16, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 31738-31740]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-14749]
    
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    [Investment Company Act Release No. 21128; 812-9486]
    
    
    SEI Financial Management Corp. and SEI Financial Services Co.; 
    Notice of Application
    
    June 9, 1995.
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'').
    
    ACTION: Notice of Application for Exemption under the Investment 
    Company Act of 1940 (the ``Act'').
    
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    APPLICANTS: SEI Financial Management Corporation and SEI Financial 
    Services Company (collectively, ``SEI'').
    
    RELEVANT ACT SECTIONS: Order requested under sections 6(c) and 17(b) of 
    the Act exempting applicants from sections 17(a) of the Act and under 
    section 17(d) of the Act and rule 17d-1 thereunder.
    
    SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicants request an order to permit bank-
    sponsored collective investment funds to transfer their assets to open-
    end management investment companies advised by the bank and 
    administered or distributed by SEI.
    
    FILING DATE: The application was filed on February 16, 1995, and was 
    amended on May 10, 1995.
    
    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 
    applicants with a copy of the request, personally or by mail. Hearing 
    requests should be received by the SEC by 5:30 p.m. on July 6, 1995 and 
    should be accompanied by proof of service on applicants, in the form of 
    an affidavit, or, for lawyers, a certification 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 SEC's Secretary.
    
    ADDRESSES: Secretary, SEC, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 
    20549. Applicants, c/o SEI Financial Services Company, 680 East 
    Swedesford Road, Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087, Attention: Kathryn L. 
    Stanton, Esq.; and Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, 2445 M Street, N.W., 
    Washington, D.C. 20037, Attention: Jeremy N. Rubenstein.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Sarah A. Wagman, Staff Attorney, at (202) 942-0654, or Robert A. 
    Robertson, Branch Chief, at (202) 942-0564 (Division of Investment 
    Management, Office of Investment Company Regulation).
    
    SUMMARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the application. The 
    complete application is available for a fee from the SEC's Public 
    Reference Branch.
    
    Applicant's Representations
    
        1. SEI serves as administrator and distributor for a number of 
    registered open-end management investment companies (the ``Funds''), 
    including Funds that are advised by banks. SEI requests that the relief 
    sought herein apply to any Fund distributed or administered by SEI and 
    any Fund that may in the future be distributed or administered by SEI 
    or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with 
    SEI.
        2. Subject to the supervision of the Funds' respective boards of 
    directors or trustees (the ``Board of Directors''), SEI provides or 
    procures administrative and other services necessary for the operation 
    of the Funds and their portfolios. SEI may provide various services to 
    the Funds, although the precise services provided by SEI to a 
    particular Fund will depend on SEI's contract with that Fund. For any 
    Fund relying on the requested order, however, SEI will perform fund 
    accounting services that will include responsibility for maintaining 
    the Fund's general ledger and the preparation of Fund financial 
    statements, determining the net asset value of both the Fund's assets 
    and of the Fund's shares, calculating Fund expenses and controlling 
    Fund disbursements, preparing and filing semi-annual reports on Form N-
    SAR and notices pursuant to rule 24f-2, coordinating the preparation 
    and filing of the Fund's tax returns, and providing the Fund with 
    individuals reasonably acceptable to the Fund's Board of Directors for 
    nomination, appointment, or election as officers of the Fund.
        3. From time to time, certain Funds participate in the conversion 
    of assets from bank-sponsored collective investment funds (``CIFs'') 
    into mutual fund shares. As part of the conversion, a Fund typically 
    agrees to accept an in-kind transfer of securities from a CIF with 
    substantially similar investment objectives in exchange for shares with 
    an equal net asset value. Frequently, the bank that sponsors the 
    converting CIF (the ``Bank'') also serves as the Fund's investment 
    adviser or is affiliated with such adviser. As a result, the Bank may 
    be deemed to control both the CIF and the Fund, and the CIF and the 
    Fund may be affiliated persons of each other under the Act. In 
    addition, some of the assets in the converting CIF may belong to 
    employee retirement plans established for employees of the Bank or 
    other affiliated persons (the ``Affiliated Plans''). Such employees and 
    other affiliated persons of the Bank might be considered second-tier 
    affiliates of the Fund.
        4. Although the SEC has taken a no-action position with respect to 
    certain CIF conversions, that position is conditioned on affiliated 
    persons, or second-tier affiliates, of the Funds having no beneficial 
    interest in the proposed transactions. Federated Investors (pub. avail. 
    April 21, 1994). A Bank acting as investment adviser to a Fund may be 
    deemed to have a beneficial interest in the proposed transactions 
    because the Bank's Affiliated Plans invest in the converting CIFs. 
    Accordingly, applicants request an exemptive order to permit the Funds 
    to accept in-kind transfers of the assets of the Affiliated Plans (the 
    ``Proposed Transfers'').
        5. Each Fund is or will be registered as an open-end management 
    investment company under the Act. Each Fund's shares are or will be 
    offered and sold pursuant to an effective registration statement under 
    the Securities Act of 
    
    [[Page 31739]]
    1933 (the ``Securities Act''). The overall management of each Fund, 
    including the negotiation of investment advisory and other service 
    contracts, rests with the members of the Board of Directors of the 
    Fund, at least 40% of whom are not interested persons (as defined in 
    section 2(a)(19) of the Act) of the Fund.
        6. The CIFs are sponsored by Banks as investment vehicles for 
    employee retirement plans. The CIFs are excluded from the definition of 
    investment company under section 3(c)(11) of the Act, which excepts 
    CIFs that consist solely of the assets of employee retirement plans 
    qualified under section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code or similar 
    governmental plans described in section 3(a)(2)(C) of the Securities 
    Act (each, a ``Plan''). Some of the assets in the CIFs may belong to 
    Affiliated Plans.
        7. In addition to sponsoring a CIF, a Bank or its affiliate also 
    may serve as the Fund's investment adviser, and may receive investment 
    advisory fees from the Fund. Banks frequently determine that Plan 
    holders would be better served if sponsored CIFs were converted into 
    Funds with substantially similar investment objectives so that Plan 
    holders may enjoy the enhanced disclosure and other protections of the 
    Securities Act and the Act. In addition, investment of Plan assets 
    through the Funds allows the sponsors of, and participants in, the 
    Plans to monitor more easily the performance of their investments daily 
    (since information concerning the investment performance of the Funds 
    generally will be available in daily newspapers of general 
    circulation). Finally, by permitting more active marketing of 
    investment services, conversion also may promote sales of Fund shares 
    and thereby allow better diversification and risk spreading among all 
    shareholders.
        8. The procedures for transferring CIF assets to a Fund include a 
    number of requirements to protect the interests of Plan holders. First, 
    each Affiliated Plan will have an employee benefit review committee 
    (the ``Committee'') or equivalent body that serves as a fiduciary for 
    the Plan. In addition to the Bank, each unaffiliated Plan will have an 
    independent or ``second'' fiduciary, independent of the Bank or its 
    affiliates, that supervises the investment of that Plan's assets. This 
    second fiduciary generally will be the unaffiliated Plan's named 
    fiduciary, trustee, or sponsoring employer and will be subject to 
    fiduciary responsibilities under the Employee Retirement Income 
    Security Act of 1974 (``ERISA''). Under section 404(a) of ERISA, such 
    fiduciaries must ensure that the investment of the Plans' assets is 
    prudent and operates exclusively for the benefit of participating 
    employees of the particular corporation and its subsidiaries and of the 
    participating employees' beneificaries.
        9. Before transferring a CIF's assets to a Fund, a Bank will be 
    required to seek and obtain the approval of the Committee, the Plan's 
    second fiduciary, or both, as the case may be. The Bank will provide 
    the Committee and the second fiduciaries with a current prospectus for 
    the relevant portfolio(s) of the Fund and a written statement given 
    full disclsoure of the fee structure and the terms of the Proposed 
    Transfer. Such disclosure will explain why the Bank believes that the 
    investment of Plan assets in the Fund is appropriate. The disclosure 
    statement also will describe the limitations on the Bank, if any, 
    regarding which Plan assets may be invested in shares of the Fund.
        10. On the basis of such information, the Committee, the second 
    fiduciary, or both, as the case may be, will decide whether to 
    authorize the Bank to invest the relevant Plan's assets in the Fund and 
    to receive fees from the Fund (subject to the Bank's agreement to 
    waiver, credit, or rebate relevant fees). A Bank will not collect fees 
    at both the Plan level and the Fund level for managing the same assets. 
    Depending on the Plan, the Bank either will charge a fee only to the 
    Fund or will rebate or credit its management fees at the Plan level.
        11. Subject to obtaining the approvals discussed above and the 
    order requested herein, SEI will assist a Bank, in SEI's capacity as 
    administrator, to effect the acquisition of Fund shares by a Plan 
    currently invested in a CIF. On the date of each transfer, the 
    converting CIF will deliver to the corresponding Fund securities equal 
    in value to the interest of each participating Plan, in exchange for 
    Fund shares, using market values as of the time that the Fund 
    calculates its net asset value at the close of business on that day. 
    The Fund shares received by the CIF then will be distributed, pro rata, 
    to all Plans who interests were converted as of that date. All 
    securities transferred to a Fund will be securities for which market 
    quotations are readily available, within the meaning of rule 17a-7(a) 
    under the Act, and will be consistent with the investment objectives 
    and fundamental policies of the corresponding Fund.
    
    Applicants' Legal Analysis
    
        1. Section 17(a) of the Act, in relevant part, prohibits an 
    affiliated person of a registered investment company, or an affiliated 
    person of such person, acting as principal, from selling to or 
    purchasing from such investment company any security or other property. 
    Section 2(a)(3) of the Act, in relevant part, defines an ``affiliated 
    person'' to include: (a) any person directly or indirectly owning, 
    controlling, or holding with the power to vote, 5% or more of the 
    outstanding voting securities of such other person; (b) any person 
    directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common 
    control with such other person; and (c) if such other person is an 
    investment company, any investment adviser thereof.
        2. Section 17(d) of the Act prohibits any affiliated person of a 
    registered investment company, or an affiliated person of such person, 
    acting as principal, from effecting any transaction in which such 
    investment company is a joint, or joint and several, participant with 
    such person in contravention of such rules and regulations as the SEC 
    may prescribe. Rule 17d-1 under the Act provides that no joint 
    transaction covered by the rule may be consummated unless the SEC 
    issues an order upon application. In passing upon such applications, 
    the SEC considers whether participation by a registered investment 
    company is consistent with the provision, policies, and purposes of the 
    Act, and is not on a basis less advantageous than that of other 
    participants.
        3. Because a Bank that sponsors a CIF may have legal title to the 
    assets of the CIF and therefore may be viewed as acting as a principal 
    in the Proposed Transfers, and because a CIF and a Fund may be viewed 
    as being under the common control of the Bank within the meaning of 
    section 2(a)(3)(C), the Proposed Transfers may violate section 17(a). 
    For the same reasons, the Proposed Transfers might be deemed to be a 
    joint enterprise or other joint arrangement within the meaning of 
    section 17(d).
        4. Section 17(b) of the Act provides that, notwithstanding section 
    17(a), any person may file an application for an order exempting a 
    proposed transaction from section 17(a) if evidence establishes that 
    the terms of the proposed transaction, including the consideration to 
    be paid or received, are reasonable and fair and do not involve 
    overreaching on the part of any person concerned, and that the proposed 
    transaction is consistent with the policy of each registered investment 
    company concerned and the general policies and purposes of the Act. 
    Under section 6(c) of the Act, the SEC may exempt any person or 
    transaction from any provision of the Act, or any rule thereunder, to 
    the extent that such exemption is necessary or appropriate 
    
    [[Page 31740]]
    in the public interest and consistent with the protection of investors 
    and the purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the 
    Act. Applicants request an order under sections 6(c) and 17(b) 
    exempting them from section 17(a), and pursuant to section 17(d) and 
    rule 17d-1, to permit the Proposed Transfers of CIF assets.
        5. Applicants believe that the terms of the Proposed Transfers will 
    be reasonable and fair to all of the Plans and to the shareholders of 
    the Funds, do not involve overreaching on the part of any person, and 
    will be consistent with the provisions, policies, and purposes of the 
    Act. The Proposed Transfers will comply with rule 17a-7 under the Act 
    in most respects, and also will comply with the policy behind the 
    conditions set forth in rule 17a-8. Rule 17a-7 exempts certain purchase 
    and sale transactions otherwise prohibited by section 17(a) if, among 
    other requirements, the transactions are effected at an ``independent 
    market price'' and the investment company's Board of Directors reviews 
    the transactions for fairness. Rule 17a-8 exempts certain mergers and 
    consolidations from section 17(a) if, among other requirements, the 
    investment company's Board of Directors determines that the 
    transactions are fair.
        6. Applicants will comply with rules 17a-7 and a7a-8 to the extent 
    possible, as stated in the conditions to the requested order. The 
    investment objectives and policies of the Funds and CIFs will be 
    substantially similar. Therefore, it will be consistent with the 
    policies of the Funds to acquire securities that the Bank has 
    previously purchased for the CIFs on the basis of substantially similar 
    objectives and policies. Moreover, the Funds will have the opportunity 
    to purchase the portfolio securities of the CIFs at the current market 
    price and with lower transaction costs than would have been possible 
    purchasing such securities in the open market.
    
    Applicants' Conditions
    
        Applicants agree that any order of the SEC granting the requested 
    relief shall be subject to the following conditions:
        1. The Proposed Transfers will comply with the terms of rule 17a-
    7(b) through (f).
        2. The Proposed Transfers will not occur unless and until: (a) the 
    Board of Directors of the Fund (including a majority of its 
    disinterested directors) and the Committee or the Plans' second 
    fiduciaries, as the case may be, find that the Proposed Transfers are 
    in the best interests of the Fund and the Plans, respectively; and (b) 
    the Board of Directors of the Fund (including a majority of its 
    disinterested directors) finds that the interests of the existing 
    shareholders of the Fund will not be diluted as a result of the 
    Proposed Transfers. These determinations and the basis upon which they 
    are made will be recorded fully in the records of the Fund and the 
    Plans, respectively.
        3. In order to comply with the policies underlying rule 17a-8, any 
    conversion will have to be approved by a Fund's Board of Directors and 
    any unaffiliated Plan's second fiduciaries who would be required to 
    find that the interests of beneficial owners would not be diluted.
    
        For the SEC, by the Division of Investment Management, under 
    delegated authority.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-14749 Filed 6-15-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/16/1995
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Application for Exemption under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the ``Act'').
Document Number:
95-14749
Dates:
The application was filed on February 16, 1995, and was amended on May 10, 1995.
Pages:
31738-31740 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Investment Company Act Release No. 21128, 812-9486
PDF File:
95-14749.pdf