94-22732. Chubb Life Insurance Company of America, et al.  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 177 (Wednesday, September 14, 1994)]
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    [FR Doc No: 94-22732]
    
    
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    [Federal Register: September 14, 1994]
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    [Release No. IC-20541; File No. 812-9048]
    
     
    
    Chubb Life Insurance Company of America, et al.
    
    September 8, 1994.
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (the ``SEC'' or the 
    ``Commission'').
    
    ACTION: Notice of application for an order under the Investment Company 
    Act of 1940 (the ``1940 Act'').
    
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    applicants: Chubb Life Insurance Company of America (``Chubb Life''), 
    for itself and on behalf of its Chubb Separate Account VA-1 (``Chubb 
    Separate Account''), The Colonial Life Insurance Company of America 
    (``Colonial Life''), for itself and on behalf of its Colonial Separate 
    Account VA-2 (``Colonial Separate Account''), and Chubb Securities 
    Corporation (``Chubb Securities''). (Chubb Life, Chubb Separate 
    Account, Colonial Life, Colonial Separate Account and Chubb Securities 
    shall be referred to herein collectively as the ``Applicants.'')
    
    relevant 1940 act sections: Order requested under Section 6(c) of the 
    1940 Act, for exemptions from Sections 26(a)(2)(C) and 27(c)(2) 
    thereunder.
    
    SUMMARY of application: The Applicants seek an order to the extent 
    necessary to permit the issuance and sale of certain individual 
    flexible payment deferred variable annuity contracts (the 
    ``Contracts'') with the deduction of a mortality risk charge and an 
    expense risk charge.
    
    filing date: The application was filed initially on June 7, 1994. An 
    amended and restated application was filed on September 1, 1994.
    
    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 on the application by writing to the 
    Secretary of the Commission and serving the Applicants with a copy of 
    the request, either personally or by mail. Hearing requests must be 
    received by the Commission by 5:30 p.m. on October 3, 1994, and should 
    be accompanied by proof of service on the Applicants in the form of an 
    affidavit or, for lawyers, by certificate. Hearing requests should 
    state the nature of the interest, the reason for the request, and the 
    issues contested. Persons may request notification of the date of a 
    hearing by writing to the Secretary of the Commission.
    
    addresses: Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth 
    Street NW., Washington, D.C. 20549. Applicants, One Granite Place, 
    Concord, NH, 03301.
    
    for further information contact: Patrice M. Pitts, Attorney, Office of 
    Insurance Products, Division of Investment Management, at (202) 942-
    0670.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the 
    Application. The complete Application is available for a fee from the 
    Commission's Public Reference Branch.
    
    Applicants' Representations
    
        1. Chubb Life is a stock life insurance company chartered in 1903 
    under the laws of Tennessee, and redomesticated under the laws of New 
    Hampshire on July 1, 1991. Chubb Life is a wholly-owned subsidiary of 
    the The Chubb Corporation, a New Jersey corporation, and is licensed to 
    do business in all states except New York, as well as in Puerto Rico, 
    the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam and the District of Columbia. The Chubb 
    Separate Account is a separate account of Chubb Life established under 
    the laws of New Hampshire for the purpose of funding variable annuity 
    contracts.
        2. Colonial Life, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Chubb Life, is a 
    stock life insurance company chartered in New Jersey in 1897. Colonial 
    Life is licensed to do business in all fifty states, as well as in 
    Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the District of Columbia. The 
    Colonial Separate Account is a separate account of Colonial Life 
    established under the laws of New Jersey for the purpose of funding 
    variable annuity contracts.
        3. The Chubb Separate Account and the Colonial Separate Account 
    (collectively, the ``Separate Accounts'') are registered with the 
    Commission as unit investment trust series investment companies under 
    the 1940 Act.\1\ Each of the separate Accounts will maintain a separate 
    series of units for seven subaccounts (the ``Divisions''), each of 
    which will invest its assets, without sales charge, in a corresponding 
    investment series of the UST Master Variable Series, Inc. (the 
    ``Fund'').
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        \1\Contemporaneous with the filing of this application, Chubb 
    Life and Colonial Life each filed a notice of registration of Form 
    N-8A and a registration statement on Form N-4 on behalf of the Chubb 
    Separate Account and the Colonial Separate Account, respectively. 
    The Contracts will be registered under the Securities Act of 1933 by 
    such Forms N-4.
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        4. The Contracts are individual flexible payment deferred variable 
    annuity contracts. The Contracts may be purchased on a nontax-qualified 
    basis or purchased and used in connection with certain plans entitled 
    to special income tax treatment under Section 408 of the Internal 
    Revenue Code. The Contracts will provide for the accumulation of 
    capital on a variable basis only; no fixed account investment option is 
    offered prior to the annuity date. Payment of annuity benefits will be 
    available on a fixed or a variable basis, or a combination of both.
        5. Chubb Life and Colonial Life (collectively, the ``Insurers'') 
    will deduct from the Separate Accounts an Administration Charge which 
    will be an amount computed and deducted daily, and equal on an annual 
    basis to 0.05% of the total assets of the Separate Accounts. The 
    Administration Charge will be imposed prior to the annuity date and, 
    with respect to reserves held for variable annuity payments, on and 
    after the annuity date. The deduction of the Administration Charge is 
    designed to reimburse the Insurers for the cost of administrative and 
    related expenses, and is not expected to be a source of profit. 
    Although administrative expenses may rise in the future, the Insurers 
    guarantee that they will not increase the amount of the Administration 
    Charge for outstanding Contracts.
        6. Although the first twelve transfers in a Contract year will be 
    free of charge, the Insurers will assess a charge of $75 for the 
    thirteenth and each subsequent transfer in a given Contract year. The 
    Insurers reserve the right to reduce to eight the number of free 
    transfers each Contract year.
        7. The transfer charge is designed to compensate the Insurers for 
    the administrative costs associated with processing excessive transfer 
    requests. The transfer charge is guaranteed not to increase for 
    outstanding Contracts. The Insurers reserve the right to modify such 
    charge, however, but such modification shall apply only with respect to 
    Contracts established after the effective date of such modification.
        8. The Applicants proposed to rely on Rules 26a-1 and 6c-8(c) under 
    the 1940 Act for the exemptive relief necessary to permit the 
    assessment of the Administration Charge and the transfer charge. The 
    Insurers do not expect to recover from these charges any amount in 
    excess of the respective Insurer's accumulated expenses in connection 
    with the administrative activities for which the charges will be 
    assessed.
        9. No sales charge will be deducted from the purchase payments as 
    they are made to the Contracts. Instead, a contingent deferred sales 
    charge (the ``Withdrawal Charge'') will be assessed in some 
    circumstances when a partial withdrawal is made from a Contract or when 
    a Contract is surrendered before the annuity date. The Withdrawal 
    Charge is designed as partial compensation to the Insurers for the 
    costs of selling and distributing the Contracts.
        10. For up to four withdrawals per Contract year, the Insurers will 
    waive the Withdrawal Charge, if any, on an amount (the ``Free 
    Withdrawal Amount'') up to 10% of the Contract value as of the 
    valuation date that a partial withdrawal or surrender request is 
    received, less any previous withdrawals during the same Contract year 
    for which Withdrawal Charges are waived. Any unused portion of the Free 
    Withdrawal Amount is noncumulative and will not apply to partial 
    withdrawals or a surrender made in subsequent Contract years.
        11. The Withdrawal Charge will be deducted as a percentage of 
    amounts withdrawn in a Contract year in excess of any Free Withdrawal 
    Amount. The applicable percentage will depend upon when the purchase 
    payments to which the partial withdrawal or surrender is deemed 
    attributable is made, as indicated in the following schedule: 
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 Charge as a
                                                                  percentage
      Number of complete years from date of purchase payment     of purchase
                                                                   payments 
                                                                  withdrawn 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    0 to 1.....................................................          3.0
    1+ to 2....................................................          3.0
    2+ to 3....................................................          2.0
    3+ to 4....................................................          1.0
    4+.........................................................          0.0
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The oldest previously unliquidated purchase payment will be deemed 
    to have been liquidated first, then the next oldest purchase payment, 
    and so forth. Once all purchase payments have been liquidated, 
    additional amounts surrendered or withdrawn will not be subject to a 
    Withdrawal Charge. Withdrawal Charges will never exceed 3.0% of total 
    purchase payments made.
        12. No Withdrawal Charge will be imposed if an annuity option is 
    chosen or for amounts withdrawn in connection with a systematic 
    withdrawal program. The Withdrawal Charge also may be eliminated when 
    the Contracts are issued to an officer, director, employee or retired 
    officer, director or employee of the Insurers, Chubb Securities or 
    United States Trust Company of New York, the investment adviser of the 
    Fund, or affiliates of such companies.
        13. The Applicants propose to rely on Rule 6c-8(b) under the 1940 
    Act for the exemptive relief necessary to permit imposition of the 
    Withdrawal Charge.
        14. The Insurers will deduct any premium taxes or similar state or 
    local tax attributable to a Contract. The Applicants proposed to relay 
    on Rule 26a-2(d) under the 1940 Act to permit deduction of any premium 
    taxes from the assets of the Separate Accounts. The Insurers reserve 
    the right to assess a charge for any effect which the income, assets, 
    or existence of the Contracts, the Separate Accounts, or the Divisions 
    may have upon the Insurers' federal income tax, should such taxes be 
    incurred by the Insurers in connection with the operation of the 
    Separate Accounts.
        15. The Insurers will compute and deduct daily, as part of the net 
    investment factor used to determine that value of the accumulation 
    units and annuity units from one valuation period to the next, a 
    Mortality Risk Charge equal on an annual basis to 0.55% of the total 
    assets of the Separate Accounts. The Mortality Risk Charge will be 
    assessed prior to the annuity date and, with respect to reserves held 
    for variable annuity payment options, on and after the annuity date. 
    The Mortality Risk Charge is guaranteed not to increase.
        16. The mortality risk arises from each Insurer's guarantee that it 
    will make annuity payments in accordance with annuity rate provisions 
    established at the time the Contract is issued, for the life of the 
    Contract owner or annuitant (or in accordance with the annuity option 
    selected), no matter how long the annuitant lives and no matter how 
    long all annuitants as a class live.
        17. The Insurers also will deduct an Expense Risk Charge which is 
    calculated by taking the Contract value (or, on and after the annuity 
    date, the variable annuity reserve amount) as of the first day of each 
    Contract month (or on the next valuation date if the first day of the 
    Contract month is not a valuation date), and multiplying such Contract 
    value (or reserve amount) by a monthly factor equal on an annual basis 
    to the following percentages:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Expense 
                                                                     risk   
           Contract value as of contract month anniversary          charge  
                                                                  percentage
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Less than $250,000..........................................       0.30 
    $250,000 but less than $1,000,000...........................       0.20 
    $1,000,000 or greater.......................................       0.05 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The lower Expense Risk Charge ``breakpoints'' for larger Contract 
    values reflect the less significant expense risks associated with 
    larger Contracts because of lower administrative expenses on a per 
    Contract basis. Before the annuity date, the Expense Risk Charge is 
    deducted by canceling accumulation units (or fractions thereof) from 
    each Division in the same proportion that the value in each Division 
    bears to the total Contract value. On and after the annuity date, the 
    Expense Risk Charge is deducted from any variable annuity payments at 
    the time such payment are made.\2\ The Expense Risk Charge is 
    guaranteed not to increase.
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        \2\Applicants propose to impose the Expense Risk Charge as a 
    monthly redemption of units from individual Contracts and as a 
    deduction from Variable Annuity payments because to reflect the 
    ``breakpoint'' variations described above through the unit value 
    calculation is not administratively feasible. By deducting the 
    Expense Risk Charge as a Contract-level charge the Insurers will 
    avoid having to maintain three sets of unit values for each of the 
    seven Divisions (i.e., one set for each ``breakpoint''). The 
    Insurers' computer systems are not currently capable of 
    administering 21 distinct unit value calculations without extensive 
    modifications, the cost of which would otherwise be passed to the 
    Contract owners.
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        18. The Applicants recognize that deducting an expense risk charge 
    on a monthly basis, at the contract level, as a redemption of units, 
    differs from typical industry practice for variable annuities.\3\ To 
    assure that the less frequent deduction of the Expense Risk Charge does 
    not result in such charges being effectively larger for Contract owners 
    than a solely daily charge at annual rates of 0.30%, 0.20% and 0.05%, 
    these charges will be administered monthly using monthly factors of 
    0.000249656, 0.0001666514 and 0.000041657, respectively, which, when 
    annualized equates to 29.99989%, 19.99999% and 4.99999%, respectively.
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        \3\The Applicants note that the Commission recently granted 
    exemptive relief to a variable annuity issuer proposing to deduct a 
    portion of its mortality and expense risk charge as a monthly, 
    contract-level charge, in a manner similar to that proposed herein 
    by the Applicants. The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company of 
    America, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 20278 (May 5, 
    1994) (order); Investment Company Act Release No. 20202 (Apr. 7, 
    1994) (notice).
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        19. The expense risk assumed by each of the insurers is that the 
    costs of administering the Contracts and the Separate Accounts will 
    exceed the amount received from the Administration Charge.
        20. The Applicants submit that if the Mortality Risk Charge and the 
    Expense Risk Charge are insufficient to cover the actual cost of the 
    mortality and expense risks assumed, the Insurers will bear the loss. 
    Conversely, if the Mortality Risk Charge and the Expense Risk Charge 
    prove more than sufficient, the excess will be profit to the Insurers 
    and will be available for any proper corporate purpose including, among 
    other things, payment of distribution expenses.
    
    Applicants' Legal Analysis and Conditions
    
        1. The Applicants request exemptions from Sections 26(a)(2)(C) and 
    27(c)(2) of the 1940 Act to the extent necessary to permit the issuance 
    and sale of the Contracts with the deduction of a Mortality Risk Charge 
    and an Expense Risk Charge from the assets of the Separate Accounts 
    which serve as funding media for the Contracts.
        2. Sections 26(a)(2)(C) and 27(c)(2) of the 1940 Act, as herein 
    pertinent, require that all payments received under a periodic payment 
    plan certificate sold by a registered unit investment trust, any 
    depositor thereof or underwriter thereof, be held by a qualified bank 
    as trustee or custodian, under arrangements which prohibit any payment 
    to the depositor or principal underwriter expect for the payment of a 
    fee, not exceeding such reasonable amount as the Commission may 
    prescribe, for bookkeeping and other administrative services.
        3. The Applicants submit that the Insurers are entitled to 
    reasonable compensation for their assumption of mortality and expense 
    risks, and represent that the daily Mortality Risk Charge of 0.55% per 
    annum and the maximum monthly Expense Risk Charge of 0.30% per annum is 
    within the range of industry practice for comparable annuity products. 
    The Applicants state that this representation is based upon an analysis 
    of publicly available information about selected comparable variable 
    annuity contracts currently being offered in the insurance industry, 
    taking into consideration such factors as current charge levels, the 
    manner in which the charges are assessed, the presence of charge level 
    or annuity rate guarantees, and the markets in which the Contracts will 
    be offered The Applicants represent that the Insurers will maintain at 
    their respective home offices, and will make available to the 
    Commission upon request, a memorandum outlining the methodology relied 
    upon in their respective analyses.
        4. The Applicants acknowledge that the Withdrawal Charge under the 
    Contracts is expected to be insufficient to cover all costs relating to 
    the distribution of the Contracts. If a profit is realized from the 
    Mortality Risk Charge and from the Expense Risk Charge, all or a 
    portion of such profit may be offset by distribution expenses not 
    reimbursed by the Withdrawal Charge. In such circumstances, a portion 
    of the Mortality Risk Charge and the Expense Risk Charge might be 
    viewed as providing for a portion of the costs relating to distribution 
    of the Contracts. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Insurers have 
    concluded that there is a reasonable likelihood that the proposed 
    distribution financing arrangements made with respect to the Contracts 
    will benefit the Separate Accounts and the Contract Owners. The basis 
    for such conclusion is set forth in a memorandum which will be 
    maintained by each of the Insurers at its respective home office and 
    will be available to the Commission upon request.
        5. The Applicants represent that the Separate Accounts will invest 
    only in underlying mutual funds which have undertaken to have a board 
    of directors/trustees, a majority of the members of which are not 
    ``interested persons'' of such funds, formulate and approve any plan to 
    finance distribution expenses in accordance with Rule 12b-1 under the 
    1940 Act.
        6. The Applicants agree to the following conditions if the 
    requested order is granted: (i) fee tables (including examples) will 
    reflect all applicable charges and will permit comparison with other 
    contracts on the same basis as if the Expense Risk Charge were deducted 
    in the same manner as the Mortality Risk Charge and the Administration 
    Charge; (ii) all advertisements of the performance of the Divisions of 
    the Separate Accounts will reflect the impact of the Expense Risk 
    Charge, and changes in accumulation unit values will not be advertised 
    without so reflecting the maximum Expense Risk Charge; and (iii) if the 
    size of the Expense Risk Charge is discussed in advertisements or sales 
    literature, it will be presented in conjunction with the Mortality Risk 
    Charge and the Administration Charge as a total asset charge, with 
    disclosure that the Expense Risk Charge is deducted monthly as a 
    contract-level charge while the Mortality Risk Charge and the 
    Administration Charge are asset-based charges deducted daily.
    
    Conclusion
    
        The Applicants submit that for the reasons and upon the facts set 
    forth above, the requested exemptions from Sections 26(a)(2)(C) and 
    27(c)(2) of the 1940 Act to permit the deduction of the Mortality Risk 
    Charge and the Expense Risk Charge under the Contracts meet the 
    applicable statutory standards in Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act. The 
    applicants assert that the requested exemptions are necessary or 
    appropriate in the public interest and consistent with the protection 
    of investors and the purposes fairly intended by the policy and 
    provisions of the 1940 Act.
    
        For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management, 
    pursuant to delegated authority.
    Maragaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 94-22732 Filed 9-13-94; 8:45am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
09/14/1994
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice of application for an order under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the ``1940 Act'').
Document Number:
94-22732
Dates:
The application was filed initially on June 7, 1994. An amended and restated application was filed on September 1, 1994.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: September 14, 1994, Release No. IC-20541, File No. 812-9048