95-20773. CITIC Pacific Limited; Notice of Application  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 162 (Tuesday, August 22, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 43631-43634]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-20773]
    
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    [Investment Company Act Release No. 21282; 812-9572; International 
    Series Release No. 839]
    
    
    CITIC Pacific Limited; Notice of Application
    
    August 15, 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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    APPLICANT: CITIC Pacific Limited.
    
    
    [[Page 43632]]
    
    RELEVANT ACT SECTION: Order requested under section 3(b)(2) of the Act.
    
    SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicant seeks an order declaring that it is 
    engaged primarily in a business other than that of investing, 
    reinvesting, owning, holding, or trading in securities.
    
    FILING DATES: The application was filed on April 14, 1995, and amended 
    on July 31, 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 
    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 September 11, 
    1995, and should be accompanied by proof of service on 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 who wish to 
    be notified of a hearing may request such notification by writing to 
    the SEC's Secretary.
    
    ADDRESSES: Secretary, SEC, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington, DC 20549. 
    Applicant, Level 35, Two Pacific Place, 88 Queensway, Hong Kong.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Mary Kay Frech, Senior Attorney, at (202) 942-0579, 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 is incorporated in Hong Kong and its shares are listed 
    on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. As of December 31, 1994, applicant had 
    market capitalization of approximately US$4.8 billion, making it the 
    fourteenth largest company listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
        2. Applicant's largest shareholder is China International Trust & 
    Investment Corporation Hong Kong (Holdings) Limited (``CITIC HK''), 
    which indirectly owns approximately 43% of applicant's shares. CITIC HK 
    is wholly-owned by China International Trust & Investment Corporation 
    (``CITIC''), a state-owned enterprise in the People's Republic of China 
    (``PRC''), which is one of the primary investment vehicles of the PRC 
    government. CITIC is a ministry-level organization under the direct 
    oversight of the State Council of the PRC.
        3. Applicant came into its current configuration in March, 1990 
    when CITIC HK bought 49% of applicant's (then named Tyfull Company 
    Limited) shares. In August 1991, Tyfull Company Limited changed its 
    name to CITIC Pacific Limited. CITIC HK plays an influential role in 
    the management and policies of applicant through a management contract 
    and a number of common directors and senior officers.
        4. Applicant's long-term objective is to develop as a large 
    diversified business with an emphasis on trade and infrastructure 
    projects similar to the traditional diversified companies based in Hong 
    Kong known as ``hongs.'' Applicant's principal operations are in Hong 
    Kong, Macau, and Mainland China. Applicant is treated as a foreign 
    entity for purposes of most Chinese regulatory schemes and is subject 
    to restrictions on foreign investment and private ownership in certain 
    sectors.
        5. Applicant's consolidated total assets increased from HK$1,525 
    million as of December 31, 1990 to HK$34,240 million as of December 31, 
    1994 (on the basis of audited accounts).\1\ Applicant's growth has 
    occurred primarily through the acquisition of new businesses financed 
    in large part by the issuance of new shares. Applicant has been 
    actively involved in the business affairs of its affiliated companies 
    and has made significant contributions to these companies at both an 
    operational and strategic level.
    
        \1\ As of the date of the application, there were approximately 
    HK$7.73 to each US$1.
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        6. Applicant conducts its diversified business operations either 
    directly or through wholly-owned or majority-owned subsidiaries. 
    Applicant, through wholly-owned subsidiaries, owns 100% of the shares 
    of Dah Chong Hong, one of the largest Hong Kong based traders and 
    distributors. Dah Chong Hong has substantial operations in Hong Kong 
    and Mainland China and business in Japan, Canada, and Singapore. Dah 
    Chong Hong's business includes distribution and servicing of vehicles, 
    and import and distribution of numerous items, including a wide range 
    of foods, building materials, electric appliances, and audio-visual 
    equipment. Applicant nominates the board of directors of Dah Chong Hong 
    and is actively involved in all major decisions regarding its business.
        7. Applicant owns majority interests in Jiangsu Ligang Electric 
    Power (Jiangsu Province) and Zhengzhou Xinli Electric Power (Henan 
    Province). Each of these entities is a Chinese joint venture company 
    established to construct and operate a power station. The partners in 
    these projects are Chinese government-owned entities. Under the 
    relevant joint venture agreements, applicant has primary responsibility 
    for the design and construction of these power stations, and for their 
    operation and maintenance as well as financing. In addition, applicant 
    recently has acquired a 50% interest in a power plant project in Kai 
    Feng, Henan Province, China.
        8. Applicant has a 55% controlling interest in four large 
    manufacturing operations in Mainland China that focus generally upon 
    items related to infrastructure development, including steel, telephone 
    wires and cables, stainless steel pipe, and small and medium range 
    motors.
        9. Applicant has 50% interests in two major real estate development 
    projects in Hong Kong. Applicant acts as co-developer and plays an 
    active role in these projects, which include shopping and office space, 
    and residential, hotel, and school facilities.
        10. Applicant has majority interests in several tunnel development 
    projects and completed tunnel and bridge operating companies. Applicant 
    controls a 50% interest in Western Harbour Tunnel Company Limited 
    (``WHTCL''), the leader of the consortium that will build the Western 
    Harbour Crossing in Hong Kong. An executive director of applicant 
    currently serves as chairman of the board of WHTCL and two other 
    officers of applicant also serve on the board. Applicant also owns a 
    50% interest in Shanghai CITIC Tunnel Development Co. Ltd., a joint 
    venture with Shanghai Huangpu River Tunnel Construction Co. Applicant 
    provides advanced management skills to this project, and is an active 
    participant in all stages of the project, including design and 
    planning, construction, operation and maintenance.
        11. In addition, applicant, through a wholly-owned subsidiary, is a 
    45% joint venture participant in Shanghai Huang Pu River Tunnel and 
    Bridges Development Company Ltd. (``Huang Pu Tunnel & Bridges''), which 
    was granted a 20-year franchise commencing January 1, 1995, for the 
    operation, management, and maintenance of a tunnel and two bridges in 
    Shanghai, China. The other 55% interest in the joint venture company is 
    owned by two PRC companies connected to the Shanghai government. 
    Applicant has contractual rights to participate in control of the joint 
    venture and appoints three of the seven members of the board of 
    directors. These directors actively are engaged in 
    
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    the management and development of Huang Pu Tunnel & Bridges.
        12. Applicant also holds a number of its businesses in the form of 
    strategic alliances through shareholdings in companies in which 
    applicant holds less than 50% of the equity share capital, many of 
    which are controlled companies within the meaning of section 2(a)(9) of 
    the Act. Applicant is the largest single shareholder of Dragonair, a 
    major regional airline that serves 14 cities in Mainland China and 6 
    other cities in Asia from its base in Hong Kong. Applicant, directly 
    and indirectly, owns 46.2% of Dragonair's voting securities and has an 
    economic interest in an additional 3.75%, for a total economic interest 
    of 49.95% Applicant has a controlling influence over the company's 
    management through its control of five of eleven seats on the board of 
    directors of Dragonair, and has played a key role in negotiating and 
    obtaining new routes in Mainland China for Dragonair. Dragonair's 
    operations are subject to air transport service agreements between the 
    United Kingdom and other countries that effectively prohibit any non-
    British company from owning and controlling a 50% or greater interest 
    in an airline company in Hong Kong. This restriction is expected to 
    change once Hong Kong reverts to Chinese sovereignty in 1997.
    
    Applicant's Legal Analysis
    
        1. Applicant would like to offer its securities (or depository 
    receipts representing securities) in the United States, in private 
    placements, offerings to qualified institutional buyers, or possibly a 
    public offering. Applicant seeks an order to clarify that it will not 
    be subject to regulation as an investment company in the United States.
        2. Under section 3(a)(3), an issuer is an investment company if it 
    ``is engaged or proposes to engage in the business of investing, 
    reinvesting, owning, holding, or trading in securities, and owns or 
    proposes to acquire investment securities having a value exceeding 40 
    per centum of the value of such issuer's total assets (exclusive of 
    Government securities and cash items) on an unconsolidated basis.'' 
    Section 3(a) defines ``investment securities'' to include all 
    securities except Government securities, securities issued by 
    employees' securities companies, and securities issued by majority-
    owned subsidiaries of the owner which are not investment companies.
        3. Applicant states that it is engaged primarily in the business of 
    trade and infrastructure development through active participation in 
    all of its majority-owned subsidiaries and controlled companies and is 
    not in the business of investing, reinvesting, or trading in 
    securities. Although applicant owns investment securities within the 
    meaning of section 3(a)(3) of the Act, and these investment securities 
    exceed 40 percent of the value of its total assets on an unconsolidated 
    basis, applicant currently is eligible to rely on rule 3a-1 to exempt 
    it from the definition of investment company. Applicant is concerned, 
    however, that a small change in asset values could deprive applicant of 
    the protection of rule 3a-1.
        4. Rule 3a-1 provides a safe harbor for an issuer that derives no 
    more than 45% of the value of its total assets (excluding government 
    securities and cash items), and no more than 45% of its net income 
    after taxes, from securities other than government securities, 
    securities issued by employees' securities companies, securities issued 
    by majority-owned subsidiaries of the issuer which are not investment 
    companies, and securities issued by the companies which are controlled 
    primarily by such issuer and (a) through which the issuer engages in a 
    business other than that of investing, reinvesting, owning, holding or 
    trading in securities, and (b) which are not investment companies. As 
    of December 31, 1994, approximately 43.77% of applicant's total assets 
    were composed of interests in non-investment company businesses where 
    applicant held 25% or less of the business or where applicant held more 
    than 25% of the business, but another shareholder held a larger control 
    position (thus putting in question whether applicant has the ``primary 
    control'' required by rule 3a-1). These assets accounted for 
    approximately 32.21% of applicant's total investment income (on a 
    dividend basis) for the four fiscal quarters concluded December 31, 
    1994.
        5. Section 3(b)(1) of the Act provides that notwithstanding section 
    3(a)(3), any issuer engaged primarily, directly or through a wholly-
    owned subsidiary or subsidiaries, in a business or businesses other 
    than that of investing, reinvesting, owning, holding, or trading in 
    securities, in not an investment company. Applicant does not fall 
    within this exception because not of its businesses are conducted, not 
    directly or through wholly-owned subsidiaries, but through majority-
    owned subsidiaries, controlled companies, and other companies.
        6. Section 3(b)(2) provides that notwithstanding section 3(a)(3), 
    the Commission may issue an order declaring an issuer to be primarily 
    engaged in a business or businesses other than that of investing, 
    reinvesting, owning, holding, or trading in securities either directly, 
    through majority-owned subsidiaries, or through controlled companies 
    conducting similar types of businesses. To clarify its status under the 
    Act, applicant requests an order exempting it from regulation as an 
    investment company under section 3(b)(2).
        7. In determining whether a company is ``primarily engaged'' in a 
    non-investment company business under section 3(b)(2), the Commission 
    considers the following factors: (a) The company's historical 
    development; (b) its public representations of policy; (c) the activity 
    of its officers and directors; (d) the nature of its present assets, 
    and (e) the sources of its present income.\2\
    
        \2\ Tonapah Mining Company of Nevada, 26 S.E.C. 426, 427 (1947).
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        8. Applicant states that it was not established, nor has it 
    developed, as an investment company. At the time of the acquisition of 
    applicant buy CITIC HK in 1990, applicant was a small company, listed 
    on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, having relatively few assets. Since 
    that time, its has grown to become a diversified company, on the model 
    of the traditional Chinese ``hongs,'' principally by acquisitions of 
    business interests from its largest shareholder, CITIC HK. It is now 
    actively engaged in trade and distribution, consumer credit, aviation, 
    real estate, telecommunications, tunnels and transportation-related 
    facilities, power generation, manufacturing, and environmental 
    projects. Applicant's strategy has been to enter a new line of business 
    by taking a minority position in a consortium led by an experienced 
    industry leader, then, once its has gained sufficient expertise, to 
    assume a controlling or majority position. Applicant asserts than many 
    of its holdings in China are less than majority-owned because of the 
    government limitations on ownership by foreign investors. In addition, 
    the holding structure of applicant's businesses in Hong Kong and Macau 
    also have been largely shaped by local regulatory and business factors. 
    Applicant states that it maintains long-term, substantial positions in 
    even its minority-held companies, and has not looked to asset sales as 
    an important source of revenue.
        9. Applicant has never held itself out as an investment company 
    within the meaning of the Act, and has never been a registered 
    investment company (or subject to any analogous regulatory scheme in 
    another jurisdiction). Applicant has consistently held itself out to 
    its shareholders and the public as a company actively engaged in the 
    businesses of trade, distribution, 
    
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    consumer credit, aviation, telecommunications, power generation, 
    environment, roads and tunnels, industrial manufacturing, and real 
    property. In various circulars issued to shareholders, applicant has 
    stated that it expects growth in earnings from its operating 
    businesses.
        10. Applicant's principal officers and directors are actively 
    engaged in the management and development of applicant's businesses. In 
    many of these companies, applicant's officers play a leading role in 
    management's strategic decision making or in other essential 
    operational functions, such as identifying expansion opportunities or 
    leading financing efforts. Applicant's top officers have extensive 
    backgrounds in banking, shipping, heavy industry, power generation, 
    property development, law, government, accounting, and finance. None of 
    applicant's principal officers has experience as an investment manager 
    or adviser, and none of them holds himself out as an expert in these 
    areas. No principal officer of applicant devotes any of his time to 
    investment management, apart from cash management. Applicant estimates 
    that approximately 80% of management's time is devoted to considering 
    issues related to operating its various businesses, and the remainder 
    of management's time is devoted to the pursuit of new business 
    opportunities, maintaining relations with joint venture and consortium 
    partners, obtaining financing, and administrative matters.
        11. As of December 31, 1994, applicant's majority-owned 
    subsidiaries \3\ accounted for 44.46% of applicant's assets for the 
    prior 12 months. As of December 31, 1994, Dragonair, a company 
    controlled by applicant,\4\ accounted for 6.91% of applicant's assets.
    
        \3\ Section 2(a)(24) of the Act defines a ``majority-owned 
    subsidiary'' of a person as 11a company 50 per centum or more of the 
    outstanding voting securities of which are owned by such person, or 
    by a company which * * * is a majority-owned subsidiary of such 
    person.''
        \4\ ``Control'' is defined in section 2(a)(9) of the Act to mean 
    ``the power to exercise a controlling influence over the management 
    or polices of a company, unless such power is solely the result of 
    an official position within such company. Any person who owns 
    beneficially, either directly or through one or more controlled 
    companies, more than 25% of the voting securities of a company shall 
    be presumed to control such company.''
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        12. Applicant also presumptively controls companies other than 
    Dragonair that are involved in the development of core infrastructure. 
    Applicant asserts that it need not establish that such companies and 
    Dragonair conduct ``similar types of business'' within the meaning of 
    section 3(b)(2) in order to obtain exemptive relief, however. Section 
    3(b)(2) requires similarity of businesses only among those controlled 
    companies which must be added to arrive at a determination of the 
    primary business engagement of the controlling company.\5\ In 
    applicant's case, only Dragonair need be added to applicant's majority-
    owned subsidiaries to demonstrate that applicant is primarily engaged 
    in trade and infrastructure (aviation) businesses through majority-
    owned subsidiaries and controlled companies.
    
        \5\ In the Matter of American Manufacturing Company, Inc., 41 
    S.E.C. 415, 419 (Mar. 11, 1963).
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        13. Accordingly, 51.37% of applicant's assets as of December 31, 
    1994, valued in accordance with section 2(a)(41) of the Act, were 
    comprised of its majority-owned subsidiaries and Dragonair.
        14. Applicant's income derives from dividends paid out of operating 
    returns from the companies through which it does business. As of 
    December 31, 1994, 67.80% of applicant's income for the prior twelve 
    months was produced by its majority-owned subsidiaries and Dragonair.
        15. Applicant asserts that its historical development, its public 
    representations of policy, the activities of its officers and 
    directors, the nature of its assets, and the nature of its income 
    demonstrates that applicant is not engaged primarily in the business of 
    investing in securities. Applicant submits that it is primarily 
    engaged, through controlled companies and majority-owned subsidiaries, 
    in trade, distribution, transportation, power, and other infrastructure 
    industries in the China region.
    
        For the SEC, by the Division of Investment management, under 
    delegated authority.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-20773 Filed 8-21-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/22/1995
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:
95-20773
Dates:
The application was filed on April 14, 1995, and amended on July 31, 1995.
Pages:
43631-43634 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Investment Company Act Release No. 21282, 812-9572, International Series Release No. 839
PDF File:
95-20773.pdf