97-14209. DLJ LBO Plans Management Corporation and DLJ First ESC L.L.C.; Notice of Application  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 105 (Monday, June 2, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 29751-29755]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-14209]
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    [Release No. IC-22682; 813-156]
    
    
    DLJ LBO Plans Management Corporation and DLJ First ESC L.L.C.; 
    Notice of Application
    
    May 23, 1997.
    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: DLJ LBO Plans Management Corporation (``DLJ Management'') 
    and DLJ First ESC L.L.C. (the ``Initial Company''), on behalf of 
    certain limited liability companies which may be formed in the future 
    (the ``Subsequent Companies'') (together with the Initial Company, the 
    ``Companies'').
    
    RELEVANT ACT SECTIONS: Applicants request an order under sections 6(b) 
    and 6(e) of the Act for an exemption from all provisions of the Act 
    except section 9, certain provisions of sections 17 and 30, sections 36 
    through 53, and the rules and regulations thereunder.
    
    SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicants request an order that would grant 
    the Companies an exemption from most provisions of the Act, and would 
    permit certain affiliated and joint transactions. Each Company will be 
    an employees' securities company within the meaning of section 2(a)(13) 
    of the Act.\1\
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        \1\ The requested order would supersede an existing order. DLJ 
    LBO Plans Management Corporation, Investment Company Act Release 
    Nos. 20053 (Feb. 2, 1994) (notice) and 20103 (Mar. 1, 1994) (order).
    
    FILING DATES: The application was filed on November 1, 1996 and amended 
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    on March 14, 1997 and May 23, 1997.
    
    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 June 17, 1997, 
    and should be 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 interests, 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, 277 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10172.
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David W. Grim, Staff Attorney, at 
    (202) 942-0571, or Elizabeth G. Osterman, Assistant Director, 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.
    
    Applicants' Representations
    
        1. DLJ Management is a Delaware corporation and an indirect wholly-
    owned subsidiary of Donaldson, Lufkin and Jenrette, Inc. (``DLJ Inc.'') 
    (together with any person that is directly or indirectly controlled by 
    DLJ Inc., ``DLJ''). DLJ Inc. is a diversified financial services 
    holding company which, directly and through its subsidiaries, provides 
    investment, financing, and related services. DLJ Inc.'s principal 
    subsidiary, Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation, is a 
    broker-dealer registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the 
    ``Exchange Act'').
        2. DLJ Management is the manager of the Initial Company, and it, or 
    another direct or indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of DLJ formed for 
    such purpose, will be the manager of the Subsequent Companies (the 
    ``Manager''). The Manager is registered as an investment adviser under 
    the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and will continue to maintain such 
    registration.
        3. Each Company is or will be a Delaware limited liability company 
    formed as an ``employees' securities company'' within the meaning of 
    section 2(a)(13) of the Act, and is operating or will operate as a 
    closed-end, non-diversified, management investment company. The Manager 
    intends to form the Companies to enable Eligible Employees of DLJ and 
    their Qualified Participants (in each case, as defined below) to pool 
    their investment resources and to receive the benefit of certain 
    investment opportunities that come to the attention of DLJ without the
    
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    necessity of having each investor identify such opportunities and 
    analyze their investment merit.
        4. Interests in the Companies (``Interests'') will be sold only to 
    Eligible Employees or, at the request of Eligible Employees, Qualified 
    Participants of such Eligible Employees. In order to qualify as an 
    ``Eligible Employee,'' (i) an individual must (a) be a current or 
    former employee, officer, director, or ``Consultant'' \2\ of DLJ and 
    (b) meet the standards of an accredited investor under rule 501(a)(6) 
    of Regulation D (``Regulation D'') under the Securities Act of 1933 
    (the ``Securities Act''), or (ii) an entity must (a) be a current or 
    former Consultant of DLJ and (b) meet the standards of an accredited 
    investor under rule 501(a) of Regulation D. In order to qualify as a 
    ``Qualified Participant,'' an individual or entity must (i) be an 
    Eligible Family Member or Qualified Entity (in each case as defined 
    below), respectively, of an Eligible Employee, and (ii) if such 
    individual or entity is purchasing an Interest from a Member \3\ or 
    directly from the Company, come within one of the categories of an 
    ``accredited investor'' under rule 501(a) of Regulation D. An 
    ``Eligible Family Member'' is a spouse, parent, child, spouse of child, 
    brother, sister, or grandchild of an Eligible Employee. A ``Qualified 
    Entity'' is (i) a trust of which the trustee, grantor, and/or 
    beneficiary is an Eligible Employee; (ii) a partnership, corporation, 
    or other entity controlled by an Eligible Employee; or (iii) a trust or 
    other entity established for the benefit of Eligible Family Members of 
    an Eligible Employee.
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        \2\ A ``Consultant'' is a person or entity whom DLJ has engaged 
    on retainer to provide services and professional expertise on an 
    ongoing basis.
        \3\ ``Member'' means any member of a Company within the meaning 
    of the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act. ``Participant'' means 
    any Member other than the Manager.
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        5. If an Eligible Employee is required to make an investment 
    decision with respect to whether or not to participate, or to request 
    that a related Qualified Participant be permitted to participate, in a 
    Company, such Eligible Employee will be a sophisticated investor 
    capable of understanding and evaluating the risks of participating in 
    such Company without the benefit of regulatory safeguards. 
    Participation in a Company will be voluntary on the part of the 
    Eligible Employee.
        6. DLJ proposes to offer various investment programs for the 
    benefit of its Eligible Employees. These programs may be structured as 
    different Companies, or as separate plans within the same Company, and 
    the terms of these programs are likely to differ from one another. 
    While the terms of a Company will be determined by DLJ in its 
    discretion, these terms will be fully disclosed to each Eligible 
    Employee and, if a Qualified Participant of such Eligible Employee is 
    required to make an investment decision with respect to whether or not 
    to participate in a Company, to such Qualified Participant at the time 
    the eligible Employee is invited to participate in the Company. Among 
    other things, each Eligible Employee and, if a Qualified participant of 
    such Eligible Employee is required to make an investment decision with 
    respect to whether or not to participate in a Company, such Qualified 
    Participant will be furnished with a copy of the Limited Liability 
    Company Agreement for the relevant Company, which will set forth at a 
    minimum the following terms of the proposed investment program, if 
    applicable: (i) Whether DLJ will make a co-investment in the same 
    portfolio company as the Company, and the terms applicable to the 
    Company's investment as compared to that of DLJ's investment; (ii) the 
    maximum amount of capital contributions that a Participant will be 
    required to make to the Company during the term of the relevant 
    investment program, and the manner in which the capital contributions 
    will be applied towards investments made, and expenses incurred, by the 
    Company; (iii) whether the Manager or DLJ will make any loans to a 
    Participant to purchase the Interest in the Company, and, if so, the 
    terms of such loans; (iv) whether the Manager will be entitled to 
    receive any compensation or performance-based fee (``carried 
    interest'') based on the gains and losses of the investment program or 
    of the Company's investment portfolio, and, if so, the terms of such 
    compensation or carried interest; (v) whether the Manager will make any 
    capital contributions to the Company, and, if so, the terms applicable 
    to the Manager's investment in the Company; (vi) the consequences to a 
    Participant who defaults on his obligation to fund required capital 
    contributions to the Company (including whether such defaulting 
    person's Interest in existing and future investments will be affected 
    and, if so, the nature of such effects); and (vii) whether any vesting 
    and forfeiture provisions will apply to a Participant's Interest in the 
    Company and, if so, the terms of such vesting and forfeiture 
    provisions.
        7. In an investment program that provides for vesting provisions, 
    an English Employee's Interest at the commencement of the program will 
    be treated as being entirely ``unvested,'' and ``vesting'' will occur 
    either (i) through the passage of a specified period of time (for 
    example, an Interest might vest over a three year period, \1/3\ for 
    each year) or (ii) upon the occurrences of a specified event (for 
    example, a change of control). To the extent an Eligible Employee's 
    Interest becomes ``vested,'' the termination of such Eligible 
    Employee's employment will not affect the Eligible Employee's rights 
    with respect to the vested portion of the Interest, unless certain 
    specified events described in representation 8 below occur. The portion 
    of an Eligible Employee's Interest that is ``unvested'' at the time of 
    termination of such Eligible Employee's employment may be subject to 
    repurchase by DLJ.
        8. the consequences of the vesting and forfeiture provisions, if 
    any, will not be more onerous than those set forth below. The terms 
    described below as to the vesting and forfeiture of Interests will 
    apply equally to any Qualified Participant of an Eligible Employee 
    under the circumstances where such Eligible Employee has triggered such 
    provisions. Unless (i) an Eligible Employee's relationship with DLJ is 
    terminated for cause or (ii) a former Eligible employee becomes 
    employed by, or a partner in, consultant to, or otherwise joins any 
    firm that the Manager determines, in its reasonable discretion, to be 
    competitive with DLJ's merchant banking or investment banking 
    (including high yield) businesses or any other business of DLJ, his 
    vested Interest in the Company will not be affected in any manner. 
    However, if the events described in clauses (i) or (ii) above occur, 
    the Eligible Employee's entire Interest will be deemed to be unvested 
    and subject to repurchase, as described below. In addition, if an 
    Eligible Employee voluntarily resigns his/her employment with DLJ, any 
    unvested Interest will similarly be subject to repurchase, as described 
    below.
        9. upon any repurchase of a former Eligible Employee's unvested 
    Interest, the Manager will at a minimum pay to the Eligible Employee 
    the lesser of (i) the amount actually paid by the Eligible Employee to 
    acquire the unvested Interest, and (ii) the fair market value, 
    determined at the time of repurchase in good faith by the Manager, of 
    such unvested Interest.
        10. It is possible that an investment program may be structured in 
    which a Company will co-invest in a portfolio company with an 
    investment fund or account, organized for the benefit of investors who 
    are not affiliated with
    
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    DLJ,\4\ over which a DLJ entity (other than the Manager) exercises 
    investment discretion (a ``Third Party Fund'') or DLJ. Side-by-side 
    investments held by a Third party Fund, or by DLJ entity in a 
    transaction in which the DLJ investment was made pursuant to a 
    contractual obligation to a Third Party Fund, will not be subject to 
    the restrictions contained in condition 3 below. All other side-by-side 
    investments held by DLJ entities will be subject to the restrictions 
    contained in condition 3 below.
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        \4\ These unaffiliated investors include institutional investors 
    such as public and private pension funds, foundations, endowments, 
    and corporations, and high net worth individuals, in each case both 
    domestic and foreign.
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        11. Applicant believes that the interests of the Eligible Employees 
    participating in a Company will be adequately protected even in 
    situations where condition 3 does not apply. In structuring a Third 
    Party Fund, it is common for the unaffiliated investors of such fund to 
    require that DLJ invest its own capital in fund investments, either 
    through the fund or on a side-by-side basis, and that such DLJ 
    investments be subject to substantially the same terms as those 
    applicable to the fund's investments. It is important to DLJ that the 
    interests of the Third Party Fund take priority over the interests of 
    the Companies, and that the activities of the Third Party Fund not be 
    burdened or otherwise affected by activities of the Companies. If 
    condition 3 were to apply to DLJ's investment in these situations, the 
    effect of such a requirement would be to indirectly burden the Third 
    Party Fund with the requirements of condition 3. In addition, the 
    relationship of a Company to a Third Party Fund is fundamentally 
    different from such Company's relationship to DLJ. The focus of, and 
    the rationale for, the protections contained in the requested relief 
    are to protect the Companies from any overreaching by DLJ in the 
    employer/employee context, whereas the same concerns are not present 
    with respect to the Companies vis-a-vis the investors of a Third Party 
    Fund.
        12. A Company will not invest more than 15% of its assets of a 
    particular investment program in securities issued by registered 
    investment companies (with the exception of temporary investments in 
    money market funds), and a Company will not acquire any security issued 
    by a registered investment company if immediately after such 
    acquisition any investment program contained in the Company will own 
    more than 3% of the outstanding voting stock of the registered 
    investment company.
    
    Applicants' Legal Analysis
    
        1. Section 6(b) provides that the SEC shall exempt employees' 
    securities companies from the provisions of the Act to the extent that 
    such exemption is consistent with the protection of investors. Section 
    6(e) 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 SEC deems it necessary or 
    appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors.
        2. Applicants request an order under sections 6(b) and 6(e) of the 
    Act for an exemption from all provisions of the Act except section 9, 
    certain provisions of sections 17 and 30, sections 36 through 53, and 
    the rules and regulations thereunder.
        3. Section 17(a) provides, in relevant part, that it is unlawful 
    for any affiliated person of a registered investment company, acting as 
    principal, to sell any security or other property to such registered 
    investment company or to purchase from such registered investment 
    company any security or other such property.
        4. Applicants request an exemption from section 17(a) of the Act to 
    the extent necessary to (i) permit a DLJ entity or a Third Party Fund, 
    acting as principal, to engage in any transaction directly or 
    indirectly with any Company or any company controlled by such Company; 
    (ii) permit any Company to invest in or engage in any transaction with 
    any DLJ entity, acting as principal, (a) in which such Company, any 
    company controlled by such Company, or any DLJ entity or Third Party 
    Fund has invested or will invest, or (b) with which such Company, any 
    company controlled by such Company, or any DLJ entity or Third Party 
    Fund is or will become otherwise affiliated; and (c) permit any partner 
    or other investor in a Third Party Fund (a ``Third Party Investor''), 
    acting as principal, to engage in any transaction directly or 
    indirectly with any Company or any company controlled by the Company.
        5. Applicants state that an exemption from section 17(a) is 
    consistent with the policy of each Company and the protection of 
    investors and necessary to promote the basic purpose of such Company. 
    Applicants state that the Participants in each Company will have been 
    fully informed of the possible extent of such Company's dealings with 
    DLJ, and, as successful professionals employed in the banking and 
    financial services business, or related businesses, will be able to 
    understand and evaluate the attendant risks. Applicants assert that the 
    community of interest among the Participants in each Company, on the 
    one hand, and DLJ, on the other hand, is the best insurance against any 
    risk of abuse.
        6. Section 17(d) makes it unlawful for any affiliated person of a 
    registered investment company, acting as principal, to effect any 
    transaction in which such company, or a company controlled by such 
    company, is a joint or joint and several participant with the 
    affiliated person in contravention of SEC rules. Rule 17d-1 provides 
    that the SEC may approve a transaction subject to section 17(d) after 
    considering whether the participation of such registered company is 
    consistent with the provisions, policies, and purposes of the Act and 
    the extent to which such participation is on a basis different from or 
    less advantageous than that of other participants.
        7. Applicants request an exemption from section 17(d) under the Act 
    and rule 17d-1 thereunder to the extent necessary to permit affiliated 
    persons of each Company (including without limitation the Manager, DLJ, 
    other DLJ entities and a Third Party Fund), or affiliated persons of 
    any of these persons (including without limitation the Third Party 
    Investors) to participate in, or effect any transaction in which such 
    Company or a company controlled by such Company is a participant. 
    Applicants state that the exemption requested would permit, among other 
    things, co-investments by each Company and individual members or 
    employees, officers, directors, or Consultants of DLJ making their own 
    individual investment decisions apart from DLJ.
        8. Applicants assert that the flexibility to structure co-
    investments and joint investments in the manner described above will 
    not involve abuses of the type section 17(d) and rule 17d-1 were 
    designed to prevent. Applicants state that the concern that permitting 
    co-investments by DLJ, on the one hand, and a Company on the other, 
    might lead to less advantageous treatment of such Company, should be 
    mitigated by the fact that (i) DLJ, in addition to its stake through 
    the Manager and its co-investment, will be acutely concerned with its 
    relationship with the personnel who invest in such Company, and (ii) 
    senior officers and directors of DLJ entities will be investing in such 
    Company.
    
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        9. 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 the extent necessary to permit a DLJ 
    entity (including the Manager), acting as an agent or broker, to 
    receive placement fees, advisory fees, or other compensation from a 
    Company in connection with the purchase or sale by the Company of 
    securities. Applicants state that the DLJ entity will be permitted to 
    charge such fees or otherwise receive such compensation in a 
    transaction that is not exempted pursuant to rule 17e-1 only if (i) the 
    Company is purchasing or selling securities alongside other 
    unaffiliated third parties who are also similarly purchasing or selling 
    securities, (ii) the fees or other compensation that are being charged 
    to the Company are also being charged to the unaffiliated third 
    parties, and (iii) the amount of securities being purchased or sold by 
    the Company does not exceed 50% of the total amount of securities being 
    purchased or sold by the Company and the unaffiliated third parties. 
    Applicants assert that compliance with section 17(e) would prevent a 
    Company from participating in a transaction in which DLJ, for other 
    business reasons, does not wish it to appear as if the Company is being 
    treated in a more favorable manner (by being charged lower fees) than 
    unaffiliated third parties also participating in the transaction. 
    Applicants assert that the requirements listed above ensure that the 
    fees or other compensation paid by a Company to a DLJ entity are those 
    negotiated at arm's length with unaffiliated third parties, and that 
    the unaffiliated third parties have as great or greater interest as the 
    Company in the transaction as a whole.
        10. Applicants also request an exemption from rule 17e-1 to the 
    extent necessary to permit each Company to comply with rule 17e-1 
    without the necessity of having a majority of the directors of the 
    Manager who are not ``interested persons'' take such actions and make 
    such approvals as are set forth in rule 17e-1. Applicants state that 
    since all the directors of the Manager will be affiliated persons, 
    without the relief requested, a Company could not comply with rule 17e-
    1. Applicants state that each Company will comply with rule 17e-1 by 
    having a majority of the directors of the Company take such actions and 
    make such approvals as are set forth in rule 17e-1. Applicants assert 
    that each Company will, except for the requirements of such approvals 
    by ``not interested'' persons, otherwise comply with all other 
    requirements of rule 17e-1 for transactions subject to the rule.
        11. Section 17(f) 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 SEC rules. Rule 17f-
    1 under the Act specifies the requirements that must be satisfied for a 
    registered management investment company to use a broker-dealer as 
    custodian. Applicants request an exemption from section 17(f) of the 
    Act and rule 17f-1 thereunder to the extent necessary to permit DLJ to 
    act as custodian without a written contract. Applicants assert that 
    because there is such a close association between the Companies and 
    DLJ, a written contract would cause a burden and expense where none is 
    necessary. An exemption also is requested from the terms of rule 17f-
    1(b)(4), as applicants do not believe the expense of retaining an 
    independent accountant to conduct periodic verifications is warranted 
    given the community of interest of all the parties involved and the 
    existing requirement for an independent annual audit.
        12. Section 17(g) and rule 17g-1 generally require the bonding of 
    officers and employees of a registered investment company who have 
    access to securities or funds of the company. Rule 17g-1 requires a 
    majority of the board of directors of the registered investment company 
    who are not interested persons to approve periodically the bond. 
    Applicants request an exemption from section 17(g) of the Act and rule 
    17g-1 thereunder to permit the Manager's officers and directors, who 
    may be deemed interested persons, to take actions and make the 
    determinations set forth in the rule.
        13. Section 17(j) and rule 17j-1 thereunder require that every 
    registered investment company adopt a written code of ethics requiring 
    that every access person of the investment company report to the 
    investment company with respect to transactions in any security in 
    which the access person has, or by reason of the transaction acquires, 
    any direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the security. Applicants 
    request an exemption from section 17(j) and rule 17j-1 (except rule 
    17j-1(a)) because the requirements contained therein are burdensome and 
    unnecessary in this case. Applicants believe that requiring each 
    Company to adopt a written code of ethics and requiring access persons 
    to report each of their securities transactions would be time consuming 
    and expensive, and would serve little purpose in light of, among other 
    things, the community of interest among the Participants in such 
    Company by virtue of their common association in DLJ, and the 
    substantial and largely overlapping protections afforded by the 
    conditions with which such Company has agreed to comply.
        14. Sections 30(a), 30(b), and 30(e), and the rules thereunder, 
    generally require that registered investment companies prepare and file 
    with the SEC and mail to their shareholders certain periodic reports 
    and financial statements. Applicants believe that the forms prescribed 
    by the SEC for periodic reports have little relevance to a Company and 
    would entail administrative and legal costs that outweigh any benefit 
    to the Participants in such Company. Applicants state that the 
    pertinent information contained in such filings will be furnished to 
    the Participants in a Company, the only class of people truly 
    interested in such material. Applicants state that in view of the 
    community of interest among all parties concerned with a Company and 
    the fact that Interests in such Company are not available to the 
    public, but rather a specific group of people, it would seem that the 
    protection afforded by sections 30(a) and (b) (i.e., public 
    dissemination of information to insure orderly markets and equality of 
    information among the public) is not relevant to such Company or its 
    operations. An exemption is requested to the extent necessary to permit 
    each Company to report annually to its Participants in the manner 
    described above.
        15. Section 30(h) of the Act requires that every officer, director, 
    and member of an advisory board 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 1934 Act. 
    Applicants state that, as a result, the Manager of each Company and 
    others who may be deemed members of an advisory board of such Company 
    may be required to file Forms 3, 4, and 5 with respect to their 
    ownership of Interests in such Partnership. Applicants assert that the 
    purpose intended to be served by section 30(h) is not apparent because 
    there will be no trading market and the transfers of Interests will be 
    severely restricted.
    
    Applicants' Conditions
    
        Applicants agree that the 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) and rule 17d-1 to which
    
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    a Company is a party (the ``Section 17 Transactions'') will be effected 
    only if the Manager determines that: (i) The terms of the transaction, 
    including the consideration to be paid or received, are fair and 
    reasonable to the Members of such Company and do not involve 
    overreaching of such Company or its Members on the part of any person 
    concerned; and (ii) the transaction is consistent with the interests of 
    the Members of such company, such Company's organizational documents, 
    and such Company's reports to its Members. In addition, the Manager of 
    each Company will record and preserve a description of such affiliated 
    transactions, the Manager's findings, the information or materials upon 
    which the Manager's findings are based, and the basis therefor. All 
    records relating to an investment program will be maintained until the 
    termination of such investment program and at least two years 
    thereafter, and will be subject to examination by the SEC and its 
    staff.\5\
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        \5\ Each Company 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. In connection with the Section 17 Transactions, the Manager of 
    each Company will adopt, and periodically review and update, procedures 
    designed to ensure that reasonable inquiry is made, prior to the 
    consummation of any such transaction, with respect to the possible 
    involvement in the transaction of any affiliated person or promoter of 
    or principal underwriter for such Company, or any affiliated person of 
    such a person, promoter, or principal underwriter.
        3. The Manager of each Company will not invest the funds of such 
    Company 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 such 
    Company and the Co-Investor are participants, unless any such Co-
    Investor, prior to disposing of all or part of its investment, (i) 
    gives such Manager sufficient, but not less than one day, notice of its 
    intent to dispose of its investment; and (ii) refrains from disposing 
    of its investment unless such Company has the opportunity to dispose of 
    such Company's investment prior to or concurrently with, on the same 
    terms as, and pro rata with the Co-Investor. The term ``Co-Investor'' 
    with respect to any Company means any person who is: (i) An 
    ``affiliated person'' (as such term is defined in the Act) of such 
    Company (other than a Third Party Fund); (ii) DLJ; (iii) an officer or 
    director of DLJ; or (iv) a company in which the Manager acts as a 
    general partner or has a similar capacity to control the sale or other 
    disposition of the company'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: (i) To its direct or 
    indirect wholly-owned subsidiary, to any company (a ``Parent'') of 
    which such Co-Investor is a direct or indirect wholly-owned subsidiary, 
    or to a direct or indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of its Parent; (ii) 
    to immediate family members of such Co-Investor or a trust or other 
    investment vehicle established for any such family member; (iii) when 
    the investment is comprised of securities that are listed on any 
    exchange registered as a national securities exchange under section 6 
    of the Exchange Act; (iv) when the investment is comprised of 
    securities that are national market system securities pursuant to 
    section 11A(a)(2) of the Exchange Act and rule 11Aa2-1 thereunder; or 
    (v) when the investment is comprised of securities that are listed on 
    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 Company and the Manager will maintain and preserve, for the 
    life of such Company and at least two 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 
    Participants in such Company, and each annual report of such Company 
    required to be sent to such Participants, and agree that all such 
    records will be subject to examination by the SEC and its staff.\6\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \6\ Each Company will preserve the accounts, books and other 
    documents required to be maintained in an easily accessible place 
    for the first two years.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        5. The Manager of each Company will send to each Participant in 
    such Company who had an interest in any capital account of such 
    Company, at any time during the fiscal year then ended, Company 
    financial statements audited by such Company's independent accountants. 
    At the end of each fiscal year, the Manager will make a valuation or 
    have a valuation made of all of the assets of the Company as of such 
    fiscal year end in a manner consistent with customary practice with 
    respect to the valuation of assets of the kind held by the Company. In 
    addition, within 120 days after the end of each fiscal year of each 
    Company or as soon as practicable thereafter, the Manager of such 
    Company will send a report to each person who was a Participant in such 
    Company at any time during the fiscal year then ended, setting forth 
    such tax information as shall be necessary for the preparation by the 
    Participant of his or its federal and state income tax returns and a 
    report of the investment activities of such Company during such year.
        6. In any case where purchases or sales are made by a Company from 
    or to an entity affiliated with such Company by reason of a 5% or more 
    investment in such entity by a DLJ director, officer, or employee, such 
    individual will not participate in such Company's determination of 
    whether or not to effect such purchase or sale.
    
        For the SEC, by the Division of Investment Management, under 
    delegated authority.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 97-14209 Filed 5-30-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/02/1997
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:
97-14209
Dates:
The application was filed on November 1, 1996 and amended
Pages:
29751-29755 (5 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release No. IC-22682, 813-156
PDF File:
97-14209.pdf