95-19717. The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company, et al.  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 154 (Thursday, August 10, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 40873-40875]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-19717]
    
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    [Rel. No. IC-21267; File No. 812-9590]
    
    
    The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company, et al.
    
    August 3, 1995.
    Agency: Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or ``Commission'').
    
    Action: Notice of application for an order under the Investment Company 
    Act of 1940 (``1940 Act'').
    
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    Applicants: The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company (``Lincoln 
    Life''), Lincoln National Variable Annuity Fund A (``Fund A''), and 
    Lincoln National Variable Annuity Fund B (``Fund B'', and together with 
    Fund A, the ``Funds'').
    
    Relevant 1940 Act Provisions: Order requested under Section 17(b) 
    granting an exemption from the provisions of Section 17(a) of the 1940 
    Act.
    
    Summary of Application: Applicants seek an order of exemption to the 
    extent necessary to permit the merger of Fund B into Fund A.
    
    Filing Date: The application was filed on May 5, 1995. Applicants have 
    represented that they will file an amendment to the application during 
    the notice period to include the representations summarized herein.
    
    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 Secretary of the 
    Commission and serving 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 August 28, 1995, 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 requestor'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 Commission.
    
    Addresses: Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 5th 
    Street NW., Washington, DC 20549. Applicants, Jack D. Hunter, Esq., The 
    Lincoln National Life Insurance Company, 1300 South Clinton Street, 
    P.O. Box 1110, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46801.
    
    For Further Information Contact: Mark C. Amorosi, Attorney, or Wendy 
    Finck Friedlander, Deputy Chief, (202) 942-0670, Office of Insurance 
    Products (Division of Investment Management).
    
    Supplementary Information: The following is a summary of the 
    application; the complete application is available for a fee from the 
    Public Reference Branch of the Commission.
    
    Applicants' Representations
    
        1. Lincoln Life, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lincoln National 
    Corporation, is a stock life insurance company organized under the laws 
    of Indiana. Lincoln Life is the sponsoring insurance company, 
    investment adviser and principal underwriter for Fund A and Fund B.
        2. Fund A was established by Lincoln Life pursuant to Indiana law 
    on September 16, 1966, and is registered with the Commission as an 
    open-end, management investment company. Fund A was organized as the 
    investment vehicle for individual and group variable annuity contracts 
    for use with certain tax-qualified retirement plans, annuity purchase 
    plans, individual retirement annuities and government plans. Fund A's 
    principal investment objective is the long-term growth of capital. A 
    secondary investment objective is the production of current income. 
    Fund A seeks to accomplish these objectives by investing in equity 
    securities, principally common stocks. Fund A is managed by a three 
    person Board of Managers elected by Fund A contract owners.
        3. Fund B was established by Lincoln Life pursuant to Indiana law 
    on 
    
    [[Page 40874]]
    December 1, 1966, and is registered with the Commission as an open-end, 
    management investment company. Fund B was organized as the investment 
    vehicle for variable annuity contracts for individual use and for use 
    with plans and trusts on a non-tax qualified basis. Fund B has the same 
    investment objectives and policies of Fund A, and is managed by a three 
    person Board of Managers elected by Fund B contract owners. The 
    membership of the Board of Managers for Fund A and Fund B is identical.
        4. Prior to 1984, federal tax law required that capital gains of 
    Fund B be treated differently from capital gains of Fund A because the 
    contracts for which Fund B serves as the investment vehicle were not 
    for use with tax-qualified plans. In 1984, federal tax law was amended 
    to eliminate this difference. Because of this change in federal tax 
    law, the principal reason for the separate existence and operation of 
    Fund A and Fund B no longer applies.
        5. The Board of Directors of Lincoln Life has determined that the 
    efficiency of the operations of the Funds could be improved by merging 
    Fund B into Fund A. Accordingly, the respective Board of Managers for 
    Fund A and Fund B, none of whom are ``interested persons,'' as defined 
    in Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act, considered and approved an 
    Agreement and Plan of Reorganization (the ``Reorganization 
    Agreement''). Pursuant to the Reorganization Agreement, the assets and 
    liabilities of Fund B will be transferred to Fund A in exchange for 
    accumulation and annuity units of Fund A to be credited to contract 
    owners of Fund B. The aggregate value of the accumulation and annuity 
    units credited by Fund A would correspond to the value of the net 
    assets transferred by Fund B to Fund A. Following the proposed 
    reorganization, each Fund B contract owner will possess a number of 
    Fund A accumulation or annuity units (both full and fractional) that 
    when multiplied by the accumulation unit value of Fund A units, would 
    result in an aggregate accumulation unit value equal to the aggregate 
    accumulation unit value of the accumulation and annuity units the 
    contract owner had in Fund B immediately before the consummation of the 
    proposed reorganization.
        6. Applicants state that the Funds are seeking contract owner 
    approval of the reorganization. The Reorganization Agreement provides 
    that the consummation of the proposed reorganization is conditioned 
    upon approval of the contract owners of Fund A and Fund B. Lincoln Life 
    will pay all of the costs in connection with the proposed 
    reorganization including costs of printing and distributing proxy 
    materials, counting contract owner instructions, legal and auditing 
    fees, and expenses of holding the contract owners' meeting. Applicants 
    state that they do not expect that the proposed reorganization will 
    entail any liquidation expenses because the Funds have identical 
    investment objectives. However, Lincoln Life will pay any liquidation 
    expenses in the event that, as investment adviser to Fund A, it 
    considers any securities held by Fund B to be unsuitable for Fund A. 
    Applicants state that the reorganization will have no tax consequences 
    for contract owners.
    
    Applicants' Legal Analysis
    
        1. Section 17(a) of the 1940 Act provides generally that it is 
    unlawful for any affiliated person of a registered investment company 
    acting as principal knowingly to purchase from or to sell any security 
    or other property to such registered investment company. Section 17(b) 
    of the 1940 Act provides generally that the Commission may grant an 
    order exempting a transaction otherwise prohibited by Section 17(a) of 
    the 1940 Act if evidence establishes that: (1) 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; (2) the proposed transaction is 
    consistent with the policy of each registered investment company 
    concerned, as recited in its registration statement and reports filed 
    under the 1940 Act; and (3) the proposed transaction is consistent with 
    the general purposes of the 1940 Act.
        2. The proposed reorganization may be subject to the provisions of 
    Section 17(a) of the 1940 Act since it could be viewed as one 
    investment company (Fund B) selling its assets to another investment 
    company (Fund A) that is affiliated by reason of having the same 
    sponsoring insurance company, investment adviser and principal 
    underwriter (Lincoln Life) that may be deemed to be in control of both 
    investment companies.
        3. Rule 17a-8 under the 1940 Act exempts mergers of certain 
    affiliated investment companies from the provisions of Section 17(a) of 
    the 1940 Act under certain conditions. However, the exemption provided 
    by Rule 17a-8 may not be available in this case since Rule 17a-8 is 
    limited to mergers of registered investment companies that are 
    affiliated persons solely by reason of having a common investment 
    adviser, common directors, and/or common officers. Fund A and Fund B 
    also may be affiliates of each other because they have a common 
    sponsoring insurance company and common principal underwriter. 
    Applicants maintain, however, that the proposed reorganization falls 
    within the spirit and intent of Rule 17a-8.
        4. Applicants assert that the proposed reorganization is fair and 
    reasonable to the Fund B contract owners and to Fund A because the 
    proposed reorganization will not affect any rights to annuity payments, 
    the annuity options that are offered under any contract of either Fund, 
    the death benefit or the federal income tax treatment during the 
    accumulation or payment periods of any contract of either Fund. There 
    are no material differences between the voting or other rights of 
    contract owners or annuitants of Fund B and the rights such contract 
    owners or annuitants will have as contract owners or annuitants of Fund 
    A. Applicants state that Fund A will pay the same fees to Lincoln Life 
    after the proposed reorganization as Fund B currently pays.
        Applicants state that identical methods and procedures are used to 
    determine the value of the assets and accumulation units of each of 
    Fund A and Fund B, and, at the time of the proposed reorganization, 
    each Fund is expected to have a portfolio similar to that of the other 
    Fund. Thus, Applicants maintain that the interests of Fund A contract 
    owners will not be diluted by the proposed reorganization.
        5. Applicants also maintain that the proposed transaction does not 
    involve overreaching on the part of any party to the transaction 
    because of the similarity of the Funds' portfolios and the use of an 
    objective standard to value the portfolio securities of each of the 
    Funds. Furthermore, the Board of Managers of both Fund A and Fund B, 
    none of whom are interested persons of Fund A, Fund B or Lincoln Life, 
    determined that the terms of the proposed reorganization do not involve 
    overreaching on the part of any persons concerned.
        6. Applicants state that the proposed reorganization is not 
    inconsistent with the investment policy of each Fund as set forth in 
    the registration statements and reports filed under the 1940 Act. Both 
    Funds have identical investment objectives and the same investment 
    adviser.
        7. Applicants also state that the proposed reorganization is 
    necessary or appropriate in the public interest and consistent with the 
    purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the 1940 Act. 
    In particular, Applicants maintain that the proposed reorganization 
    will reduce operating costs due primarily to economies of 
    
    [[Page 40875]]
    scale, compared to the costs of continuing the operation of Fund B 
    separately from Fund A. Applicants assert that enhanced flexibility in 
    the management of Fund B's relatively small investment portfolio, and 
    enhanced opportunities for portfolio diversification, may be obtained 
    through combining the assets of Fund B with those of Fund A.
    
    Conclusion
    
        Applicants submit that, for the reasons and upon the facts set 
    forth above, the requested exemption from Section 17(a) of the 1940 Act 
    to permit the proposed reorganization meets the standards in Section 
    17(b) of the 1940 Act. In this regard, Applicants assert that the 
    proposed reorganization is fair and reasonable, does not involve 
    overreaching on the part of any person concerned, is consistent with 
    the policy of each registered investment company concerned, as recited 
    in its registration statement and reports filed under the 1940 Act, and 
    is consistent with the provisions, policies and purposes of the 1940 
    Act.
    
        For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management, 
    pursuant to delegated authority.
    Jonathan G. Katz,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-19717 Filed 8-9-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/10/1995
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of application for an order under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (``1940 Act'').
Document Number:
95-19717
Dates:
The application was filed on May 5, 1995. Applicants have represented that they will file an amendment to the application during the notice period to include the representations summarized herein.
Pages:
40873-40875 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Rel. No. IC-21267, File No. 812-9590
PDF File:
95-19717.pdf