Expedited Review Requested under 17 CFR 270.0-5(d)
File No. [ ]
As
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 12, 2023
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington, D.C. 20549
Application
for an Order of Exemption
Pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as Amended
(the “1940 Act”), from: (1) Certain Provisions of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act and
(2) Certain Disclosure Requirements under Various Rules and Forms
In the Matter of
IndexIQ
Active ETF Trust
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010
and
IndexIQ
Advisors LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010
Please direct all communications regarding this Application to:
Matthew V. Curtin, Esq.
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New
York, New York 10010
(212) 576-7634 / mcurtin@indexiq.com.
with a copy to:
Barry
I. Pershkow
Chapman and Cutler LLP
1717 Rhode Island Avenue NW
Washington,
DC 20036
(202) 478-6492 / pershkow@chapman.com
This Application (including Cover Sheet and Exhibits) contains 99 pages.
United
States of America
Before the
Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington, D.C. 20549
In the Matter of | |
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust 51 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10010
and
IndexIQ Advisors LLC 51 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10010 |
Application for an Order of Exemption Pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as Amended (the “1940 Act”), from Certain Provisions of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act and from Certain Disclosure Requirements under Various Rules and Forms |
Investment Company Act of 1940 File No. [ ] |
I. | Introduction |
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust (the “Trust”), a registered open-end management investment company that offers one or more series of shares, on its own behalf, and on behalf of each series (each, a “Fund” and collectively, the “Funds”), and IndexIQ Advisors LLC, the investment adviser to the Funds (the “Adviser” and together with the Trust, the “Applicants”)1 hereby submit this application (the “Application”) to the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”) for an order of exemption pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”).
Applicants request an order exempting them from Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act to permit the Adviser, subject to the approval of the board of trustees of the Trust (the “Board” or “Trustees”)2, including a majority of those who are not “interested persons” of the Trust or the Adviser, as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act (the “Independent Trustees”), to take certain actions without obtaining shareholder approval as follows: (i) select investment subadvisers (each a “Subadviser” and collectively, the “Subadvisers”) for all or a portion of the assets of the Funds pursuant to an investment subadvisory agreement with each Subadviser (each a “Subadvisory Agreement” and collectively, the “Subadvisory Agreements”); and (ii) materially amend Subadvisory Agreements with the Subadvisers.
1 | The term “Adviser” means (i) the Adviser, (ii) its successors, and (iii) any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, the Adviser or its successors that serves as the primary adviser to a Subadvised Fund (as defined below). For the purposes of the requested order, “successor” is limited to an entity that results from a reorganization into another jurisdiction or a change in the type of business organization. |
2 | The term “Board” also includes the board of trustees or directors of a future Subadvised Fund (as defined below), if different from the board of trustees of the Trust. |
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As used herein, a “Subadviser” for a Fund is any investment adviser that enters into a Subadvisory Agreement with respect to a Fund. Applicants also apply for an order of the Commission under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act exempting the Funds from certain disclosure obligations under the following rules and forms: (i) Item 19(a)(3) of Form N-1A; (ii) Items 22(c)(1)(ii), 22(c)(1)(iii), 22(c)(8), and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”); and (iii) Sections 6-07(2)(a), (b), and (c) of Regulation S-X under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”). Similar to the order the Commission recently granted to Carillon Series Trust, et al.,3 in addition to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers (both as defined below), the relief described in this Application would extend to any Subadviser that is an “affiliated person” (as such term is defined in Section 2(a)(3) of the 1940 Act) of a Fund or the Adviser for reasons other than serving as investment subadviser to one or more Funds (an “Affiliated Subadviser”).4
3 | The Commission issued an order granting the expanded relief requested by the Application. Carillon Series Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 33464 (May 2, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33494 (May 29, 2019) (Order) (the “Carillon Order”). Total Fund Solution and Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34901 (April 26, 2023) (Notice) and No. 34921 (May 23, 2023) (Order) (the “Total Fund Solution Order”). See also Two Roads Shared Trust and Hypatia Capital Management LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34892 (April 20, 2023) (Notice) and No. 34918 (May 16, 2923) (Order) (the “Two Roads Order”). See also Touchstone Strategic Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34790 (December 22, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34809 (January 18, 2023) (Order) (the “Touchstone Order”). See also Advisors Series Trust and Semper Capital Management, L.P., Investment Company Act Release No. 34500 (February 9, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34528 (March 8, 2022) (Order) (the “Semper Order”). See also New Age Alpha Trust and New Age Alpha Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34322 (July 6, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34348 (August 3, 2021) (Order) (the “New Age Alpha Trust Order”). See also Listed Funds Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34293 (June 2, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34321 (June 29, 2021) (Order) (“LFT Order”). See also Azzad Funds, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34241 (April 5, 2021) and No. 34261 (April 30, 2021) (“Azzad Order”). See also ETF Series Solutions and Distillate Capital Partners LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34169 (January 11, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34190 (February 8, 2021) (Order) (the “Distillate Capital Order”); Esoterica Thematic Trust and Esoterica Capital LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34161 (January 4, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34185 (February 1, 2021) (Order) (the “Esoterica Order”); ETF Series Solutions and Clearshares LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34144 (December 21, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34174 (January 19, 2021) (Order) (the “Clearshares Order”); OSI ETF Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 33678 (October 29, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33705 (November 26, 2019) (Order) (the “OSI ETF Order”); and Investment Managers Series Trust II, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34075 (October 27, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34104 (November 23, 2020) (Order) (the “Investment Managers Order”). |
4 | Section 2(a)(3) of the 1940 Act defines “affiliated person” as follows: “Affiliated person” of another person means (A) any person directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or holding with power to vote, 5 per centum or more of the outstanding voting securities of such other person; (B) any person 5 per centum or more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly owned, controlled, or held with power to vote, by such other person; (C) any person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, such other person; (D) any officer, director, partner, co-partner, or employee of such other person; (E) if such other person is an investment company, any investment adviser thereof or any member of an advisory board thereof; and (F) if such other person is an unincorporated investment company not having a board of directors, the depositor thereof. |
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Applicants request that the relief sought herein apply to Applicants, as well as to any existing or future registered open-end management investment company or series thereof that intends to rely on the requested order in the future and (i) is advised by the Adviser; (ii) uses the multi-manager structure described in this Application; and (iii) complies with the terms and conditions set forth herein (each, together with any Fund that currently uses the multi-manager structure described in this Application, a “Subadvised Fund” and collectively, the “Subadvised Funds”).5
Applicants are seeking this exemption primarily to enhance the ability of the Adviser and the Board to obtain for a Subadvised Fund the services of one or more Subadvisers believed by the Adviser and the Board to be particularly well suited for all or a portion of the assets of the Subadvised Fund, and to make material amendments to Subadvisory Agreements believed by the Adviser and the Board to be appropriate, without the delay and expense of convening special meetings of shareholders to approve the Subadvisory Agreements. Under this structure, the Adviser, in its capacity as investment adviser, would evaluate, allocate assets to and oversee the Subadvisers, and make recommendations about their hiring, termination and replacement to the Board, at all times subject to the authority of the Board. This structure is commonly referred to as a “multi-manager” structure. In addition, Applicants are seeking relief from certain disclosure requirements concerning fees paid to Subadvisers.
For the reasons discussed below, Applicants believe that the requested relief is 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. Applicants believe that the Subadvised Funds would be negatively impacted without the requested relief because of delays in hiring or replacing Subadvisers and costs associated with the proxy solicitation to approve new or amended Subadvisory Agreements.
II. | Background |
A. The Trust
The Trust is registered under the 1940 Act as an open-end management investment company organized as a Delaware statutory trust. The Adviser serves as “investment adviser,” as defined in Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act, to each Fund. The Trust intends to operate the Funds under a multi-manager structure and which will be offered and sold pursuant to a registration statement on Form N-1A. The Board consists of one (1) interested trustee and four (4) Independent Trustees.
The Trust offers shares of multiple series, each with its own distinct investment objectives, policies, and restrictions. The Adviser has retained a Subadviser to provide investment advisory services to each Fund.6 Each Fund will operate from its inception under a multi-manager structure.
5 | All registered open-end investment companies that currently intend to rely on the requested order are named as Applicants. The Funds that currently are, or that currently intend to be, a Subadvised Fund are identified in this Application. Any entity that relies on the requested order will do so only in accordance with the terms and conditions contained in this Application. |
6 | Each Subadvised Fund will disclose in its registration statement that it intends to operate pursuant to the order as requested in this Application, if granted. The prospectus for a Subadvised Fund will continue to include the disclosure required by Condition 2 below at all times subsequent to the approval required by Condition 1 below. If a Subadvised Fund has obtained shareholder approval to operate under the multi-manager structure described herein prior to the issuance of an order as requested in this Application, the prospectus for the Subadvised Fund will at all times following such shareholder approval contain appropriate disclosure that the Subadvised Fund has applied for exemptive relief to operate under the multi-manager structure described herein, including the ability to hire new Subadvisers and materially amend an existing Subadvisory Agreement without soliciting further shareholder vote. |
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B. | The Adviser |
IndexIQ Advisors LLC with its business address at 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010, is a Delaware limited liability company (LLC) registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the “Advisers Act”), and serves as investment adviser to the Funds. The Adviser has been operating since July 2007, and has been registered as an investment adviser with the Commission since August 9, 2007. The Adviser serves as investment adviser to the Funds pursuant to investment advisory agreements with each Fund (each, an “Investment Advisory Agreement” and, together, the “Investment Advisory Agreements”). Any future Adviser also will be registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Advisers Act.
Consistent with the terms of a Subadvised Fund’s Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser may, subject to the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and the shareholders of the applicable Subadvised Fund (if required by applicable law), delegate portfolio management responsibilities of all or a portion of the assets of a Subadvised Fund to a Subadviser. The Adviser retains overall responsibility for the management and investment of the assets of the Subadvised Funds. With respect to each Subadvised Fund, the Adviser’s responsibilities include, for example, recommending the removal or replacement of Subadvisers, and allocating the portion of that Subadvised Fund’s assets to any given Subadviser and reallocating those assets as necessary from time to time. The Adviser evaluates, selects and recommends Subadvisers for the Subadvised Funds, and monitors and reviews each Subadviser and its performance and its compliance with the applicable Subadvised Fund’s investment policies and restrictions.
Each Investment Advisory Agreement has been or will be approved by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and by the shareholders of the relevant Fund in the manner required by Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act. The terms of the Investment Advisory Agreements comply or will comply with Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Applicants are not seeking an exemption from the provisions of the 1940 Act with respect to the Investment Advisory Agreements. Pursuant to the terms of each Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser, subject to the oversight of the Board, has agreed or will agree to (i) provide continuous investment management for each Fund; (ii) determine the securities and other investments to be purchased, retained, sold or loaned by each Fund and the portion of such assets to be invested or held uninvested as cash; and (iii) exercise full discretion and act for each Fund in the same manner and with the same force and effect as such Fund itself might or could do with respect to purchases, sales, or other transactions and with respect to all other things necessary or incidental to the furtherance or conduct of such purchases, sales or other transactions. The Adviser also is or will be responsible for effecting transactions for each Fund and selecting brokers or dealers to execute such transactions for each Fund. The Adviser will periodically review each Fund’s investment policies and strategies and, based on the need of a particular Fund, may recommend changes to the investment policies and strategies of the Fund for consideration by the Board.
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Each Investment Advisory Agreement permits or will permit the Adviser to enter into Subadvisory Agreements with one or more Subadvisers. Pursuant to its authority under the Investment Advisory Agreements, the Adviser has entered or will enter into Subadvisory Agreements as described below under “The Subadvisers and the Subadvised Funds.” If the name of any Subadvised Fund contains the name of a subadviser, the name of the Adviser that serves as the primary adviser to the Subadvised Fund, or a trademark or trade name that is owned by or publicly used to identify that Adviser, will precede the name of the subadviser.
For its services to each Fund, the Adviser receives or will receive an investment advisory fee from that Fund as specified in the applicable Investment Advisory Agreement. The investment advisory fees are calculated based on the average daily net assets of the particular Fund, calculated daily as of the close of business on each business day during the month.
C. | The Subadvisers and the Subadvised Funds |
Pursuant to the authority under the Investment Advisory Agreements, the Adviser may enter into Subadvisory Agreements with various Subadvisers on behalf of a Fund. The Adviser has entered into Subadvisory Agreements with (1) NYL Investors LLC (“NYL Investors”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ Ultra Short Duration ETF; (2) MacKay Shields LLC (“MacKay Shields”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ MacKay ESG Core Plus Bond ETF, IQ MacKay ESG High Income ETF, IQ MacKay Multi-Sector Income ETF, IQ MacKay Municipal Insured ETF, IQ MacKay Municipal Intermediate ETF, and IQ MacKay California Municipal Intermediate ETF; (3) Winslow Capital Management, LLC (“Winslow”), which services as the Subadviser for the IQ Winslow Large Cap Growth ETF and IQ Winslow Focused Large Cap Growth ETF; and (4) CBRE Investment Management Listed Real Assets LLC (“CBRE”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ CBRE Real Assets ETF. NYL Investors and MacKay Shields are considered an Affiliated Subadviser (as defined above). Winslow and CBRE each is considered a Non-Affiliated Subadviser (as defined below).
The Adviser also may, in the future, enter into Subadvisory Agreements with other Subadvisers on behalf of a Fund and other Subadvised Funds.
With respect to any future Subadviser that is wholly owned by the Adviser or the Adviser’s parent company, the Adviser will have overall responsibility for the affairs of such Subadviser, and generally will approve certain actions by that Subadviser that could materially affect the operations of the Adviser and its subsidiaries as a group. Each Subadviser has, and any future Subadviser will have, their own employees who would provide investment services to a Subadvised Fund.
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Each Subadviser is, and any future Subadvisers will be, “investment advisers” to the Subadvised Funds within the meaning of Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act and provide, or will provide, investment management services to the Subadvised Funds subject to, without limitation, the requirements of Sections 15(c) and 36(b) of the 1940 Act. In addition, each Subadviser is, and any future Subadvisers will be, registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Advisers Act or not subject to such registration. The Adviser selects Subadvisers based on the Adviser’s evaluation of the Subadvisers’ skills in managing assets pursuant to particular investment styles, and recommends their hiring to the Board. In the future, the Adviser may employ multiple Subadvisers for one or more of the Subadvised Funds. In those instances, the Adviser would allocate and, as appropriate, reallocate a Subadvised Fund’s assets among the Subadvisers.
The Adviser engages or will engage in an ongoing analysis of the continued advisability of retaining a Subadviser and makes recommendations to the Board as needed. The Adviser also negotiates and renegotiates the terms of the Subadvisory Agreements with a Subadviser, including the fees paid to the Subadvisers, and makes recommendations to the Board as needed.
The Subadvisers, subject to the oversight of the Adviser and the Board, determine or will determine the securities and other instruments to be purchased, sold or entered into by a Subadvised Fund’s portfolio or a portion thereof, and place orders with brokers or dealers that they select.7 The Subadvisers keep or will keep certain records required by the 1940 Act and the Advisers Act to be maintained on behalf of the relevant Subadvised Fund, and assist or will assist the Adviser to maintain the Subadvised Funds’ compliance with the relevant requirements of the 1940 Act. The Subadvisers monitor or will monitor the respective Subadvised Funds’ investments and provide or will provide periodic reports to the Board and the Adviser. The Subadvisers also make or will make their officers and employees available to the Adviser and the Board to review the investment performance and investment policies of the Subadvised Funds.
The Subadvisory Agreements were or will be approved by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, in accordance with Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act.
The terms of each Subadvisory Agreement comply or will comply fully with the requirements of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Each Subadvisory Agreement will set forth the duties of the Subadviser and precisely describe the compensation paid to the Subadviser.
7 | For the purposes of this Application, a “Subadviser” also includes an investment subadviser that will provide the Adviser with a model portfolio reflecting a specific strategy, style or focus with respect to the investment of all or a portion of a Subadvised Fund’s assets. The Adviser may use the model portfolio to determine the securities and other instruments to be purchased, sold, or entered into by a Subadvised Fund’s portfolio or a portion thereof, and place orders with brokers or dealers that it selects. |
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After an initial two-year period, the terms of the Subadvisory Agreements are reviewed and renewed on an annual basis by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees in accordance with Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act. The Board dedicates substantial time to review contract matters, including matters relating to Investment Advisory Agreements and Subadvisory Agreements. With respect to each Subadvised Fund, the Board reviews comprehensive materials received from the Adviser, the Subadviser, independent third parties and independent counsel. Applicants will continue this annual review and renewal process for Subadvisory Agreements in accordance with the 1940 Act if the relief requested herein is granted by the Commission.
The Board reviews information provided by the Adviser and Subadvisers when it is asked to approve or renew Subadvisory Agreements. A Subadvised Fund discloses in its statutory prospectus that a discussion regarding the basis for the Board’s approval and renewal of the Investment Advisory Agreements and any applicable Subadvisory Agreements is available in the Subadvised Funds’ annual or semi-annual report to shareholders for the relevant period in accordance with Item 10(a)(1)(iii) of Form N-1A. The information provided to the Board is maintained as part of the records of the respective Subadvised Fund pursuant to Rule 31a-1(b)(4) and Rule 31a-2 under the 1940 Act.
Pursuant to each Subadvisory Agreement, the Adviser has agreed or will agree to pay each Subadviser a fee, based on the percentage of the assets of a Subadvised Fund, from the fee received by the Adviser from a Subadvised Fund under the Investment Advisory Agreement.8 Each Subadviser will bear its own expenses of providing investment management services to a Subadvised Fund.
III. | Request for Exemptive Relief |
Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act provides that the Commission may exempt any person, security, or transaction or any class or classes of persons, securities, or transactions from any provisions of the 1940 Act, or any rule thereunder, if such relief is 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. Applicants believe that the requested relief described in this Application meets this standard.
IV. | Applicable Law and Discussion |
A. Shareholder Vote
1. | Regulatory Background |
Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act states, in part, that it is unlawful for any person to act as an investment adviser to a registered investment company “except pursuant to a written contract, which contract, whether with such registered company or with an investment adviser of such registered company, has been approved by the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of such registered company.”
8 | A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser. |
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Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act defines an “investment adviser” as any person who, pursuant to an agreement with such registered investment company or with an investment adviser of such registered investment company, is empowered to determine what securities or other property shall be purchased or sold by such registered investment company. Consequently, the Subadvisers are deemed to be within the definition of an “investment adviser” and, therefore, the Subadvisory Agreements are each subject to Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act to the same extent as the Investment Advisory Agreements.
Therefore, Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act requires a majority of the outstanding voting securities of a Subadvised Fund to approve Subadvisory Agreements whenever the Adviser proposes to the Board to hire new Subadvisers for a Subadvised Fund. This provision would also require shareholder approval by a majority vote for any material amendment to Subadvisory Agreements.
The Subadvisory Agreements are required to terminate automatically and immediately upon their “assignment,” which could occur upon a change in control of the Subadvisers.9
Rule 2a-6 under the 1940 Act provides that certain transactions that do not result in a “change in actual control or management of the investment adviser” to a registered investment company are not assignments for purposes of Section 15(a)(4) of the 1940 Act, thereby effectively providing an exemption from the shareholder voting requirements in Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Applicants do not believe that Rule 2a-6 under the 1940 Act provides a safe harbor to recommend, hire and terminate Subadvisers. Each Subadviser is expected to run its own day-to-day operations and each will have its own investment personnel. Therefore, in certain instances appointing certain Subadvisers could be viewed as a change in management and, as a result, an “assignment” within the meaning of the 1940 Act.
2. | Requested Relief |
Applicants seek relief to (i) select Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers, for all or a portion of the assets of a Subadvised Fund and enter into Subadvisory Agreements and (ii) materially amend Subadvisory Agreements with such Subadvisers, each subject to the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, without obtaining shareholder approval required under Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Such relief would include, without limitation, the replacement or reinstatement of any Subadviser with respect to which a Subadvisory Agreement has automatically terminated as a result of an “assignment,” within the meaning of Section 2(a)(4) of the 1940 Act. Applicants believe that the relief sought should be granted by the Commission because (1) the Adviser either will operate a Subadvised Fund, or may operate the Subadvised Fund, in a manner that is different from conventional investment companies; (2) the relief will benefit shareholders by enabling the Subadvised Funds to operate in a less costly and more efficient manner; and (3) Applicants will consent to a number of conditions that adequately address the policy concerns of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act, including conditions designed to ensure that shareholder interests are adequately protected through Board oversight.
9 | See Section 15(a)(4) of the 1940 Act. Section 2(a)(4) of the 1940 Act defines “assignment” as any direct or indirect transfer or hypothecation of a contract. |
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(a) Operations of the Trust. Section 15(a) was designed to protect the interests and expectations of a registered investment company’s shareholders by requiring they approve investment advisory contracts, including subadvisory contracts.10 Section 15(a) is predicated on the belief that if a registered investment company is to be managed by an investment adviser different from the investment adviser selected by shareholders at the time of the investment, the new investment adviser should be approved by shareholders.11 The relief sought in this Application is consistent with this public policy.
In the case of a traditional investment company, the investment adviser is a single entity that employs one or more individuals as portfolio managers to make the day-to-day investment decisions. The investment adviser may terminate or hire portfolio managers without board or shareholder approval and has sole discretion to set the compensation it pays to the portfolio managers. Alternatively, for subadvised funds, the investment adviser is not normally responsible for the day-to-day investment decisions and instead, the investment adviser selects, oversees, and evaluates subadvisers who ultimately are responsible for the day-to-day investment decisions.
Primary responsibility for management of a Subadvised Fund’s assets, including the selection and oversight of the Subadvisers, is vested in the Adviser, subject to the oversight of the Board.
Applicants believe that it is consistent with the protection of investors to vest the selection and oversight of the Subadvisers in the Adviser in light of Applicants’ multi-manager structure, as well as the shareholders’ expectation that the Adviser is in possession of information necessary to select the most capable Subadvisers. The Adviser has the requisite expertise to evaluate, select and oversee the Subadvisers. The Adviser will not normally make day-to-day investment decisions for a Subadvised Fund.12
From the perspective of the shareholder, the role of the Subadvisers is substantially equivalent to the role of the individual portfolio managers employed by an investment adviser to a traditional investment company. The individual portfolio managers and the Subadvisers are each charged with the selection of portfolio investments in accordance with a Subadvised Fund’s investment objectives and policies and have no broad supervisory, management or administrative responsibilities with respect to a Subadvised Fund. Shareholders expect the Adviser, subject to review and approval of the Board, to select a Subadviser who is in the best position to achieve a Subadvised Fund’s investment objective. Shareholders also rely on the Adviser for the overall management of a Subadvised Fund and a Subadvised Fund’s total investment performance.
10 | See Section 1(b)(6) of the 1940 Act. |
11 | Hearings on S. 3580 before a Subcomm. of the Senate Comm. on Banking and Currency, 76th Cong., 3d Sess. 253 (1940) (statement of David Schenker). |
12 | Although the Adviser will not normally make such day-to-day investment decisions, it may manage all or a portion of a Subadvised Fund. |
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Whenever required by Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, the Board will request and the Adviser and each Subadviser will furnish such information as may be reasonably necessary for the Board to evaluate the terms of the Investment Advisory Agreements and the Subadvisory Agreements. The information that is provided to the Board will be maintained as part of the records of the Subadvised Funds in accordance with the applicable recordkeeping requirements under the 1940 Act and made available to the Commission in the manner prescribed by the 1940 Act.
In addition, the Adviser and the Board will consider the reasonableness of the Subadviser’s compensation with respect to each Subadvised Fund for which the Subadviser will provide portfolio management services. Although only the Adviser’s fee is payable directly by a Subadvised Fund, and the Subadviser’s fee is payable by the Adviser,13 the Subadviser’s fee directly bears on the amount and reasonableness of the Adviser’s fee payable by a Subadvised Fund. Accordingly, the Adviser and the Board will analyze the fees paid to Subadvisers in evaluating the reasonableness of the overall arrangements.
With respect to oversight, Applicants note that the Adviser performs and will perform substantially identical oversight of all Subadvisers, regardless of whether they are affiliated with the Adviser. Such oversight is similar in many respects to how the Adviser would oversee its own internal portfolio management teams.
(b) Lack of Economic Incentives. In allocating the management of Subadvised Fund assets between itself and one or more Subadvisers, Applicants acknowledge that the Adviser has an incentive to consider the benefit it will receive, directly or indirectly, from the fee paid for the management of those assets. However, Applicants believe that the protections afforded by the conditions set forth in this Application would prevent the Adviser from acting to the detriment of a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders. Applicants assert that the proposed conditions are designed to provide the Board with sufficient independence and the resources and information it needs to monitor and address conflicts of interest. In particular, the Adviser will provide the Board with any information that may be relevant to the Board’s evaluation of material conflicts of interest present in any subadvisory arrangement when the Board is considering, with respect to a Subadvised Fund, a change in Subadviser or an existing Subadvisory Agreement as part of its annual review process. The Board will also have to make a separate finding, reflected in the Board minutes, that any change in Subadvisers or any renewal of an existing Subadvisory Agreement is in the best interests of the Subadvised Fund and its shareholders and, based on the information provided to it, does not involve a conflict of interest from which the Adviser, a Subadviser, or any officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund or any officer or board member of the Adviser derives an inappropriate advantage.
13 | A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser. |
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Applicants note that the relief they are requesting would not be subject to two conditions that have been customary in previous exemptive orders for similar relief, including (i) restrictions on the ownership of interest in Subadvisers by trustees and officers of Subadvised Funds and the Adviser, and (ii) a requirement that the Adviser provide the Board with profitability reports each quarter. Applicants believe eliminating these conditions is appropriate with respect to the requested relief. As to the condition on ownership, Applicants assert that restricting ownership of interests in a Subadviser by trustees and officers would not be meaningful where the Adviser may itself own an interest in the Subadviser and the Subadviser may be selected for a Subadvised Fund under the requested relief.14 As to the condition requiring quarterly profitability reports, Applicants note that the Board reviews and will continue to review profitability information at the time of any proposed Subadviser change (see condition 7) and as part of its annual review of each Subadvisory Agreement pursuant to Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act.
Until the Carillon Order, the Commission has granted the requested relief solely with respect to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief has been premised on the fact that such a Subadviser serves in the same limited capacity as an individual portfolio manager. Applicants believe this same rationale supports extending the requested relief to Affiliated Subadvisers. Moreover, Applicants note that, while the Adviser’s judgment in recommending a Subadviser can be affected by certain conflicts of interest or economic incentives, they do not warrant denying the extension of the requested relief to Affiliated Subadvisers. For one, the Adviser faces those conflicts and incentives in allocating fund assets between itself and a Subadviser, and across Subadvisers, as it has an interest in considering the benefit it will receive, directly or indirectly, from the fee the fund pays for the management of those assets. Moreover, the Adviser has employed and will continue to employ the same methodology to evaluate potential conflicts of interest, regardless of the affiliation between the Adviser and Subadviser. While the selection and retention of Affiliated Subadvisers by the Adviser potentially presents different or additional conflicts of interest than may be the case with Non-Affiliated or Wholly-Owned Subadvisers, the proposed terms and conditions of the requested relief are designed to address the potential conflicts of interest with respect to both those common to all types of Subadvisers and specific to Affiliated Subadvisers. In particular, Applicants believe that the proposed conditions are protective of shareholder interests by ensuring the Board’s independence and providing the Board with the appropriate resources and information to monitor and address conflicts.
(c) Benefits to Shareholders. Without the requested relief, when a new Affiliated Subadviser is retained by the Adviser on behalf of a Subadvised Fund, the shareholders of the Subadvised Fund are required to approve the Subadvisory Agreement. Similarly, if an existing Subadvisory Agreement with an Affiliated Subadviser is amended in any material respect, approval by the shareholders of the affected Subadvised Fund is required. Moreover, if a Subadvisory Agreement with an Affiliated Subadviser is “assigned” as a result of a change in control of the Subadviser, the shareholders of the affected Subadvised Fund will be required to approve retaining the existing Subadviser. In all these instances the need for shareholder approval requires a Subadvised Fund to call and hold a shareholder meeting, create and distribute proxy materials, and solicit votes from shareholders on behalf of the Subadvised Fund, and generally necessitates the retention of a proxy solicitor. This process is time-intensive, expensive and slow, and, in the case of a poorly performing Subadviser or one whose management team has parted ways with the Subadviser, potentially harmful to a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders.
14 | Any Trustee of the Board that has an ownership interest in a Subadviser would not be deemed an Independent Trustee under Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act. |
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As noted above, shareholders investing in a Fund that has a Subadviser are effectively hiring the Adviser to manage a Subadvised Fund’s assets by overseeing, monitoring and evaluating the Subadviser rather than by the Adviser hiring its own employees to oversee the Subadvised Fund. Applicants believe that permitting the Adviser to perform the duties for which the shareholders of a Subadvised Fund are paying the Adviser — the selection, oversight and evaluation of Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers — without incurring unnecessary delays or expenses is appropriate and in the interest of a Subadvised Fund’s shareholders and will allow such Subadvised Fund to operate more efficiently. Within this structure, the Adviser is in the better position to make an informed selection and evaluation of a Subadviser than are individual shareholders. Without the delay inherent in holding shareholder meetings (and the attendant difficulty in obtaining the necessary quorums), a Subadvised Fund will be able to hire or replace Affiliated Subadvisers more quickly and at less cost, when the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and the Adviser believe that a change would benefit a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders.
Until the Carillon Order, the Commission has previously granted the requested relief solely with respect to certain Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief has permitted Subadvised Funds to avoid the time-intensive and expensive shareholder solicitation process with respect to hiring or making a material amendment to a Subadvisory Agreement with respect to such subadvisers. As discussed above, Applicants believe the same rationale supports extending the requested relief to Affiliated Subadvisers as well, and while Affiliated Subadvisers may give rise to different or additional conflicts of interests, the proposed terms and conditions, including the enhanced oversight by the Board, address such potential conflicts. Moreover, treating all Subadvisers equally under the requested relief might help avoid the selection of Subadvisers potentially being influenced by considerations regarding the applicable regulatory requirements (i.e., whether a shareholder vote is required) and the associated costs and delays.15
If the relief requested is granted, each Investment Advisory Agreement will continue to be fully subject to Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Moreover, the relevant Board will consider the Investment Advisory Agreements and Subadvisory Agreements in connection with its annual contract renewal process under Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, and the standards of Section 36(b) of the 1940 Act will be applied to the fees paid to each Subadviser.
15 | The Adviser is responsible for selecting Subadvisers in the best interests of the Subadvised Funds, regardless of the costs or timing constraints that may be associated with the process of seeking shareholder approval of Subadvisory Agreements and material amendments thereto. |
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3. | Shareholder Notification |
With the exception of the relief requested in connection with Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below), the prospectus and statement of additional information for each Subadvised Fund will include all information required by Form N-1A concerning the Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers, if the requested relief is granted. If a new Subadviser is retained, an existing Subadviser is terminated, or a Subadvisory Agreement is materially amended, a Subadvised Fund’s prospectus and statement of additional information will be supplemented promptly pursuant to Rule 497(e) under the Securities Act.
If new Subadvisers are hired, the Subadvised Funds will inform shareholders of the hiring of a new Subadviser pursuant to the following procedures (“Modified Notice and Access Procedures”): (a) within 90 days after a new Subadviser is hired for any Subadvised Fund, that Subadvised Fund will send its shareholders either a Multi-manager Notice or a Multi-manager Notice and Multi-manager Information Statement;16 and (b) a Subadvised Fund will make the Multi-manager Information Statement available on the website identified in the Multi-manager Notice no later than when the Multi-manager Notice (or Multi-manager Notice and Multi-manager Information Statement) is first sent to shareholders, and will maintain it on that website for at least 90 days. Under the requested relief, a Subadvised Fund would not furnish a Multi-manager Information Statement to shareholders when an existing Subadvisory Agreement is materially modified. In the circumstances described in this Application, a proxy solicitation to approve the appointment of new Subadvisers provides no more meaningful information to shareholders than the proposed Multi-manager Information Statement. Moreover, as indicated above, the Board would comply with the requirements of Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act before entering into or amending Subadvisory Agreements.
Prior to any Subadvised Fund relying on the requested relief in this Application, the Board, including its Independent Trustees, will have approved its operations as described herein. Additionally, the shareholders of the applicable Subadvised Fund have approved, or will approve, its operation as described herein by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities, within the meaning of the 1940 Act, or by the sole shareholder prior to a Subadvised Fund offering its shares.17
16 | A “Multi-manager Notice” will be modeled on a Notice of Internet Availability as defined in Rule 14a-16 under the Exchange Act, and specifically will, among other things: (a) summarize the relevant information regarding the new Subadviser (except as modified to permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure as defined in this Application); (b) inform shareholders that the Multi-manager Information Statement is available on a website; (c) provide the website address; (d) state the time period during which the Multi-manager Information Statement will remain available on that website; (e) provide instructions for accessing and printing the Multi-manager Information Statement; and (f) instruct the shareholder that a paper or email copy of the Multi-manager Information Statement may be obtained, without charge, by contacting a Subadvised Fund. |
A “Multi-manager Information Statement” will meet the requirements of Regulation 14C, Schedule 14C and Item 22 of Schedule 14A under the Exchange Act for an information statement, except as modified by the requested order to permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure. Multi-manager Information Statements will be filed with the Commission via the EDGAR system.
17 | If a Subadvised Fund has obtained shareholder approval to operate pursuant to an exemptive order that would permit it to operate in a multi-manager structure where the Adviser would enter into or amend Subadvisory Agreements only with respect to Wholly-owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers subject to Board approval but without obtaining shareholder approval and has met all other terms and conditions of the requested order, the Subadvised Fund may rely on the applicable part of the order requested in this Application (i.e., hiring, amending Subadvisory Agreements with, and including Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below)) in response to the disclosure requirements discussed herein with respect to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Sub-Advisers. |
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B. Fee Disclosure
1. | Regulatory Background |
Form N-1A is the registration statement used by open-end investment companies. Item 19(a)(3) of Form N-1A requires a registered investment company to disclose in its statement of additional information the method of computing the “advisory fee payable” by the investment company with respect to each investment adviser, including the total dollar amounts that the investment company “paid to the adviser (aggregated with amounts paid to affiliated advisers, if any), and any advisers who are not affiliated persons of the adviser, under the investment advisory contract for the last three fiscal years.”
Rule 20a-1 under the 1940 Act requires proxies solicited with respect to a registered investment company to comply with Schedule 14A under the Exchange Act. Item 22 of Schedule 14A sets forth the information that must be included in a registered investment company’s proxy statement. Item 22(c)(1)(ii) requires a proxy statement for a shareholder meeting at which action will be taken on an investment advisory agreement to describe the terms of the advisory contract, “including the rate of compensation of the investment adviser.” Item 22(c)(1)(iii) requires a description of the “aggregate amount of the investment adviser’s fees and the amount and purpose of any other material payments” by the investment company to the investment adviser, or any affiliated person of the investment adviser during the fiscal year. Item 22(c)(8) requires a description of “the terms of the contract to be acted upon, and, if the action is an amendment to, or a replacement of, an investment advisory contract, the material differences between the current and proposed contract.” Finally, Item 22(c)(9) requires a proxy statement for a shareholder meeting at which a change in the advisory fee will be sought to state (i) the aggregate amount of the investment adviser’s fee during the last year; (ii) the amount that the adviser would have received had the proposed fee been in effect; and (iii) the difference between (i) and (ii) stated as a percentage of the amount in (i). Together, these provisions may require a Subadvised Fund to disclose the fees paid to a Subadviser in connection with shareholder action with respect to entering into, or materially amending, an advisory agreement or establishing, or increasing, advisory fees.
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Regulation S-X sets forth the requirements for financial statements required to be included as part of a registered investment company’s registration statement and shareholder reports filed with the Commission. Sections 6-07(2)(a), (b) and (c) of Regulation S-X require a registered investment company to include in its financial statement information about the investment advisory fees. These provisions could require a Subadvised Fund’s financial statements to disclose information concerning fees paid to a Subadviser. The exemption from Regulation S-X requested below would permit a Subadvised Fund to include only the Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below); all other items required by Sections 6-07(2)(a), (b) and (c) of Regulation S-X will be disclosed.
2. | Requested Relief |
Applicants seek relief to permit each Subadvised Fund to disclose (as a dollar amount and a percentage of a Subadvised Fund’s net assets) (a) the aggregate fees paid to the Adviser and any Wholly-Owned Subadvisers; and (b) the aggregate fees paid to Affiliated and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers (collectively, the “Aggregate Fee Disclosure”) in lieu of disclosing the fees that may be required by Item 19(a)(3) of Form N-1A, Items 22(c)(1)(ii), 22(c)(2)(iii), 22(c)(8) and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A, and Section 6-07(2)(a), (b) and (c) of Regulation S-X.18 The Aggregate Fee Disclosure would be presented as both a dollar amount and as a percentage of a Subadvised Funds’ net assets. Applicants believe that the relief sought in this Application should be granted because the Adviser intends to operate Subadvised Funds under a multi-manager structure. As a result, disclosure of the individual fees that the Adviser pays to the Subadvisers would not serve any meaningful purpose.
As noted above, the Adviser may operate Subadvised Funds in a manner different from a traditional investment company. By investing in a Subadvised Fund, shareholders are hiring the Adviser to manage the Subadvised Fund’s assets by overseeing, evaluating, monitoring, and recommending Subadvisers rather than by hiring its own employees to manage the assets directly. The Adviser, under the oversight of the Board, is responsible for overseeing the Subadvisers and recommending their hiring and replacement. In return, the Adviser receives an advisory fee from each Subadvised Fund. Pursuant to each Subadvisory Agreement, the Adviser has agreed or will agree to pay each Subadviser a fee, based on the percentage of the assets of a Subadvised Fund, from the fee received by the Adviser from a Subadvised Fund under the Investment Advisory Agreement. Each Subadviser will bear its own expenses of providing investment management services to a Subadvised Fund.19 Disclosure of the individual fees that the Adviser would pay to the Subadvisers does not serve any meaningful purpose since investors pay the Adviser to oversee, monitor, evaluate and compensate the Subadvisers. Applicants contend that the primary reasons for requiring disclosure of individual fees paid to Subadvisers are to inform shareholders of expenses to be charged by a particular Subadvised Fund and to enable shareholders to compare the fees to those of other comparable investment companies. Applicants believe that the requested relief satisfies these objectives because the Subadvised Fund’s overall advisory fee will be fully disclosed and, therefore, shareholders will know what a Subadvised Fund’s fees and expenses are and will be able to compare the advisory fees a Subadvised Fund is charged to those of other investment companies.
18 | As used herein, a “Wholly-Owned Subadviser” is any investment adviser that is (1) an indirect or direct “wholly-owned subsidiary” (as such term is defined in Section 2(a)(43) of the 1940 Act) of the Adviser, (2) a “sister company” of the Adviser that is an indirect or direct “wholly-owned subsidiary” of the same company that indirectly or directly wholly owns the Adviser (the Adviser’s “parent company”), or (3) a parent company of the Adviser. A “Non-Affiliated Subadviser” is any investment adviser that is not an “affiliated person” (as defined in the 1940 Act) of a Fund or the Adviser, except to the extent that an affiliation arises solely because the Subadviser serves as a subadviser to one or more Funds. Section 2(a)(43) of the 1940 Act defines “wholly-owned subsidiary” of a person as a company 95 per centum or more of the outstanding voting securities of which are, directly or indirectly, owned by such a person. |
19 | A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser. |
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Indeed, in a more conventional arrangement, requiring the Subadvised Funds to disclose the fees negotiated between the Adviser and the Subadvisers would be the functional equivalent of requiring single adviser investment companies to disclose the salaries of individual portfolio managers employed by that investment adviser. In the case of a traditional investment company, disclosure is made of the compensation paid to the investment adviser, but shareholders are not told or asked to vote on the salary paid by the investment adviser to individual portfolio managers. Similarly, in the case of the Subadvised Funds, the shareholders will have chosen to employ the Adviser and to rely upon the Adviser’s expertise in monitoring the Subadvisers, recommending the Subadvisers’ selection and termination (if necessary), and negotiating the compensation of the Subadvisers. There are no policy reasons that require shareholders of the Subadvised Funds to be informed of the individual Subadviser’s fees any more than shareholders of a traditional investment company (single investment adviser) would be informed of the particular investment adviser’s portfolio managers’ salaries.20
The requested relief would benefit shareholders of the Subadvised Funds because it would improve the Adviser’s ability to negotiate the fees paid to Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers. The Adviser’s ability to negotiate with the various Subadvisers would be adversely affected by public disclosure of fees paid to each Subadviser. If the Adviser is not required to disclose the Subadvisers’ fees to the public, the Adviser may be able to negotiate rates that are below a Subadviser’s “posted” amounts as the rate would not be disclosed to the Subadviser’s other clients. Moreover, if one Subadviser is aware of the advisory fee paid to another Subadviser, the Subadviser would likely take it into account in negotiating its own fee.
20 | The relief would be consistent with the Commission’s disclosure requirements applicable to fund portfolio managers that were previously adopted. See Investment Company Act Release No. 26533 (Aug. 23, 2004). Under these disclosure requirements, a fund is required to include in its statement of additional information, among other matters, a description of the structure of and the method used to determine the compensation structure of its “portfolio managers.” Applicants state that with respect to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe the structure of, and method used to determine, the compensation received by each portfolio manager employed by any Subadviser. In addition to this disclosure with respect to portfolio managers, Applicants state that with respect to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe the structure of, and method used to determine, the compensation received by each Subadviser. |
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Until the Carillon Order, the Commission has previously granted the requested relief solely with respect to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief only permitted the disclosure of aggregate fees paid to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers and required disclosure of individual fees paid to Affiliated Subadvisers. If the requested relief under Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act is granted to extend to Affiliated Subadvisers, Applicants believe it is appropriate to permit each Subadvised Fund to disclose only aggregate fees paid to Affiliated Subadvisers for the same reasons that similar relief has been granted to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers, as discussed above.
C. Precedent
Applicants note that substantially identical relief was granted by the Commission in the Carillon Order, the Total Fund Solution Order, the Two Roads Order, the Touchstone Order, the Semper Order, the New Age Alpha Trust Order, the LFT Order, the Azzad Order, the Distillate Capital Order, the Esoterica Order, the Clearshares Order, the OSI ETF Order, and the Investment Managers Order. Applicants note that substantially the same exemptions requested herein with respect to relief from Section 15(a) and relief from the disclosure requirements of the rules and forms discussed herein for Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers, have been granted previously by the Commission with respect to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers. See, e.g., Natixis Funds Trust I, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33265 (October 5, 2018) (notice) and 33287 (October 31, 2018) (order); Advisors Asset Management, Inc. and ETF Series Solutions, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33169 (July 24, 2018) (notice) and 33207 (August 21, 2018) (order); TriLine Index Solutions, LLC and ETF Series Solutions, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33159 (July 11, 2018) (notice) and 33192 (August 6, 2018) (order); SL Advisors, LLC and ETF Series Solutions, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33158 (July 11, 2018) (notice) and 33193 (August 6, 2018) (order); DMS ETF Trust I, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33156 (July 10, 2018) (notice) and 33196 (August 7, 2018) (order).
For the reasons set forth above, Applicants believe that the relief sought would be 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.
V. | Conditions |
Applicants agree that any order of the Commission granting the requested relief will be subject to the following conditions:
1. Before a Subadvised Fund may rely on the order requested herein, the operation of the Subadvised Fund in the manner described in this Application will be, or has been, approved by a majority of the Subadvised Fund’s outstanding voting securities as defined in the 1940 Act, or, in the case of a Subadvised Fund whose public shareholders purchase shares on the basis of a prospectus containing the disclosure contemplated by condition 2 below, by the initial shareholder before such Subadvised Fund’s shares are offered to the public.
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2. The prospectus for each Subadvised Fund will disclose the existence, substance and effect of any order granted pursuant to the Application. In addition, each Subadvised Fund will hold itself out to the public as employing the multi-manager structure described in this Application. The prospectus will prominently disclose that the Adviser has the ultimate responsibility, subject to oversight by the Board, to oversee the Subadvisers and recommend their hiring, termination, and replacement.
3. The Adviser will provide general management services to each Subadvised Fund, including overall supervisory responsibility for the general management and investment of the Subadvised Fund’s assets, and subject to review and oversight of the Board, will (i) set the Subadvised Fund’s overall investment strategies, (ii) evaluate, select, and recommend Subadvisers for all or a portion of the Subadvised Fund’s assets, (iii) allocate and, when appropriate, reallocate the Subadvised Fund’s assets among Subadvisers, (iv) monitor and evaluate the Subadvisers’ performance, and (v) implement procedures reasonably designed to ensure that Subadvisers comply with the Subadvised Fund’s investment objective, policies and restrictions.
4. Subadvised Funds will inform shareholders of the hiring of a new Subadviser within 90 days after the hiring of the new Subadviser pursuant to the Modified Notice and Access Procedures.
5. At all times, at least a majority of the Board will be Independent Trustees, and the selection and nomination of new or additional Independent Trustees will be placed within the discretion of the then-existing Independent Trustees.
6. Independent Legal Counsel, as defined in Rule 0-1(a)(6) under the 1940 Act, will be engaged to represent the Independent Trustees. The selection of such counsel will be within the discretion of the then-existing Independent Trustees.
7. Whenever a Subadviser is hired or terminated, the Adviser will provide the Board with information showing the expected impact on the profitability of the Adviser.
8. The Board must evaluate any material conflicts that may be present in a subadvisory arrangement. Specifically, whenever a subadviser change is proposed for a Subadvised Fund (“Subadviser Change”) or the Board considers an existing Subadvisory Agreement as part of its annual review process (“Subadviser Review”):
(a) the Adviser will provide the Board, to the extent not already being provided pursuant to Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, with all relevant information concerning:
(i) any material interest in the proposed new Subadviser, in the case of a Subadviser Change, or the Subadviser in the case of a Subadviser Review, held directly or indirectly by the Adviser or a parent or sister company of the Adviser, and any material impact the proposed Subadvisory Agreement may have on that interest;
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(ii) any arrangement or understanding in which the Adviser or any parent or sister company of the Adviser is a participant that (A) may have had a material effect on the proposed Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review, or (B) may be materially affected by the proposed Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review;
(iii) any material interest in a Subadviser held directly or indirectly by an officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund, or an officer or board member of the Adviser (other than through a pooled investment vehicle not controlled by such person); and
(iv) any other information that may be relevant to the Board in evaluating any potential material conflicts of interest in the proposed Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review.
(b) the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, will make a separate finding, reflected in the Board minutes, that the Subadviser Change or continuation after Subadviser Review is in the best interests of the Subadvised Fund and its shareholders and, based on the information provided to the Board, does not involve a conflict of interest from which the Adviser, a Subadviser, any officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund, or any officer or board member of the Adviser derives an inappropriate advantage.
9. Each Subadvised Fund will disclose in its registration statement the Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
10. In the event that the Commission adopts a rule under the 1940 Act providing substantially similar relief to that in the order requested in the Application, the requested order will expire on the effective date of that rule.
11. Any new Subadvisory Agreement or any amendment to an existing Investment Advisory Agreement or Subadvisory Agreement that directly or indirectly results in an increase in the aggregate advisory fee rate payable by the Subadvised Fund will be submitted to the Subadvised Fund’s shareholders for approval.
VI. | Procedural Matters |
All of the requirements for execution and filing of this Application on behalf of Applicants have been complied with in accordance with the applicable organizational documents of Applicants, and the undersigned officers of Applicants are fully authorized to execute this Application. The resolutions of the Board are attached as Exhibits A-1 through A-2 to this Application in accordance with the requirements of Rule 0-2(c)(1) under the 1940 Act and the verifications required by Rule 0-2(d) under the 1940 Act are attached as Exhibits B-1 through B-2 to this Application. In accordance with the requirements for a request for expedited review of this Application, marked copies of two recent applications seeking the same relief as Applicants that are substantially identical as required by Rule 0-5(e) of the 1940 Act are attached as Exhibits C-1 through C-2.
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Pursuant to the requirements of Rule 0-2(f) under the 1940 Act, the Trust states that its address is IndexIQ Active ETF Trust, c/o IndexIQ Advisors LLC, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010, and the Adviser states that its address is IndexIQ Advisors LLC, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010, and that all written communications regarding this Application should be directed to the individuals and addresses indicated on the first page of this Application.
Applicants desire that the Commission issue the requested order pursuant to Rule 0-5 under the 1940 Act without conducting a hearing.
VII. | Conclusion |
For the foregoing reasons, Applicants respectfully request that the Commission issue an order under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act granting the relief requested in the Application. Applicants submit that the requested exemption is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, consistent with the protection of investors and consistent with the purpose fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the 1940 Act.
[Signature Page Follows]
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each Applicant has caused this Application to be duly executed as of the date set forth below:
Respectfully submitted, | |||
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust | |||
By: | /s/ Kirk C. Lehneis | ||
Name: | Kirk C. Lehneis | ||
Title: | President |
IndexIQ Advisors LLC | |||
By: | /s/ Jack R. Benintende | ||
Name: | Jack R. Benintende | ||
Title: | Chief Operating Officer |
October 12, 2023
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Exhibit Index
Sequential Page Number | ||
A-1 | Secretary’s Authorization – Authorizing Resolutions of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust | 24 |
A-2 | Officer’s Authorization | 26 |
B-1 | Verification of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) | 27 |
B-2 | Verification of IndexIQ Advisors LLC pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) | 28 |
C-1 | Marked copy of 40-APP/A against Total Fund Solution and Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC (File No. 812-15425) | 29 |
C-2 | Marked copy of 40-APP/A against Two Roads Shared Trust and Hypatia Capital Management LLC (File No. 812-15428) | 65 |
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Exhibit A-1
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust
Authorization
to File Exemptive Order
Application Relating to the Fund
Secretary’s Authorization
The undersigned, Matthew V. Curtin, hereby certifies that he is the duly appointed Secretary of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust (the “Trust”); that, with respect to the attached application for exemption from the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”), the rules and forms thereunder and any amendments thereto (such application along with any amendments, the “Application”), all actions necessary to authorize the execution and filing of the Application under the Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust and Bylaws of the Trust have been taken and the person signing and filing the Application on behalf of the Trust is fully authorized to do so; and that the following is a complete, true and correct copy of the resolutions adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Trust at a meeting held on September 21, 2023, in accordance with the Bylaws of the Trust and that such resolutions have not been revoked, modified, rescinded, or amended and are in full force and effect:
RESOLVED, that the filing by IndexIQ ETF Trust and IndexIQ Active ETF Trust (the “Trusts”) of an application for an order (described below) from the United States Securities and Exchange Commission under Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”), exempting the Trusts and their series (the “Funds”) from certain provisions of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act and certain disclosure requirements under various rules and forms, be, and it hereby is, authorized and approved:
The order would permit, among other things:
(1) | The Trusts, on behalf of the Funds, and IndexIQ Advisors LLC (the “Advisor”) to enter into or make material amendments to an agreement with one or more subadvisors of a Fund (each, a “Subadvisory Agreement”) believed by the Advisor and the Board of Trustees of a Trust to be appropriate, without the delay and expense of convening a special meeting of Fund shareholders to approve the Subadvisory Agreement; |
(2) | such other relief as the officers of the Trusts, in consultation with Trust counsel, deem necessary, desirable or appropriate; and it is further |
RESOLVED, that a Trustee or the proper officers of the Trusts, with the assistance of Trust counsel or others as may be required, are hereby authorized to prepare, execute and file any and all amendments to such application as may be necessary or appropriate; and it is further
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RESOLVED, that such application shall be executed by or on behalf of the Trusts by a Trustee or one or more officers, and that the proper officers or a Trustee of the Trusts, now or hereafter appointed, are hereby authorized to take any and all further actions that may be necessary or appropriate to effectuate the foregoing resolutions with respect to the application and the matters described therein.
By: | /s/ Matthew V. Curtin | ||
Name: | Matthew V. Curtin | ||
Title: | Secretary IndexIQ Active ETF Trust |
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Exhibit A-2
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
Authorization
to File Exemptive Order
Application Relating to the Fund
Officer’s Authorization
The undersigned, Jack R. Benintende, hereby certifies that he is the duly elected Chief Operating Officer of IndexIQ Advisors LLC (“IndexIQ”); that, with respect to the attached application for exemption from the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940, rules and forms thereunder and any amendments thereto (such application along with any amendments, the “Application”), all actions necessary to authorize the execution and filing of the Application under the charter documents of IndexIQ have been taken; and that the person signing and filing the Application by IndexIQ is fully authorized to do so.
By: | /s/ Jack R. Benintende | ||
Name: | Jack R. Benintende | ||
Title: | Chief
Operating Officer IndexIQ Advisors LLC |
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Exhibit B-1
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust
Verification Pursuant to Rule 0-2(D)
The undersigned states he has duly executed the attached Application for an Exemptive Order dated October 12, 2023, for and on behalf of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust; in his capacity as President of such entity; and that all action by shareholders, trustees and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument has been taken. The undersigned further says that he is familiar with such instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information and belief.
By: | /s/ Kirk C. Lehneis | ||
Name: | Kirk C. Lehneis | ||
Title: | President |
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Exhibit B-2
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
Verification Pursuant to Rule 0-2(D)
The undersigned states he has duly executed the attached Application for an Exemptive Order dated October 12, 2023, for and on behalf of IndexIQ Advisors LLC; in his capacity as Chief Operating Officer Officer of such entity; and that all action by officers, directors and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument has been taken. The undersigned further says that he is familiar with such instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information and belief.
IndexIQ Advisors LLC | |||
By: | /s/ Jack R. Benintende | ||
Name: | Jack R. Benintende | ||
Title: | Vice President |
-28-
Exhibit C-1
Marked
copy of 40 APP/A against
Total Fund Solution and Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC
(File No. 812-15425)
-29-
40-APP/A
1 cromwelltfsexemptiveapplic.htm 40-APP/A
EXPEDITED
REVIEW REQUESTED UNDER 17 CFR 270.0-5270.0-5(dD)
File
No. 812-15425[ ]
As
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on AprilOctober 1712,
2023
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington, D.C. 20549
SECOND
AMENDED AND RESTATED
APPLICATION
FOR AN ORDER OF EXEMPTION
PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(cC) OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS AMENDED
(THE “1940 ACT”), FROM: (1) CERTAIN PROVISIONS
OF SECTION 15(aA) OF THE 1940 ACT AND(2)
(2) CERTAIN DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS UNDER VARIOUS RULES AND FORMS
In the Matter of
TOTAL
FUND SOLUTION
c/o
U.S. Bank Global Fund Services 615 East Michigan Street, 2nd Floor Milwaukee, WI 53202
INDEXIQ
ACTIVE ETF TRUST
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010
and
CROMWELL
INVESTMENTINDEXIQ ADVISORS,
LLC
51 Madison Avenue
810
Gleneagles Court, Suite 106 Baltimore, Maryland 21286New
York, New York 10010
Please direct all communications regarding this Application to:
Fabio
Battaglia, IIIMatthew
V. Curtin, Esq.
Stradley
Ronon Stevens & Young, LLP 2005 Market Street, Suite 2600 Philadelphia, PA 19103-7018 (215) 564-8077 / fbattaglia@stradley
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New
York, New York 10010
(212) 576-7634 / mcurtin@indexiq.com.
with a copy to:
Elaine
E. RichardsBarry
I. Pershkow
Chapman
and Cutler LLP
1717
Rhode Island Avenue NW
U.S.
Bank Global Fund Services 615 East
Michigan Street, 2nd Floor
Milwaukee,
WI 53202 (626) 914-7363 / Washington,
DC 20036
elaine.richards@usbank
(202) 478-6492 / pershkow@chapman.com
This
Application (including Exhibits) contains 135111 pages.
*
This application is being filed solely for the purpose of including both co-applicants in the EDGAR submission. There are no other
changes in this Amendment from the First Amended application filed on March 31, 2023.
1
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UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA
BEFORE THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
|
||
|
In the Matter of
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust
51 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010
and
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New
York, New York 10010 APPLICATION
FOR AN ORDER OF EXEMPTION PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(cC)
OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS AMENDED (THE “1940 ACT”), FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF SECTION 15(aA)
OF THE 1940 ACT AND FROM CERTAIN DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS UNDER VARIOUS RULES AND FORMS
I.
Introduction
Total
Fund Solution
I. | Investment Company Act of 1940 File No. [ ] INTRODUCTION |
IndexIQ
Active ETF Trust (the “Trust”),
a registered open--end
management investment company that offers one or more series of shares, on its own behalf, and on behalf of each series (each,
and Cromwell Investmenta
“Fund” and collectively, the “Funds”),
and IndexIQ Advisors, LLC,
the investment adviser to the Funds (the “Initial
Adviser” or the "Adviser" and
together with the Trust, the "“Applicants"”)2,
the investment adviser to the Cromwell Marketfield L/S Fund,1
the Cromwell CenterSquare Real Estate Fund, the Cromwell Tran Sustainable Focus Fund, and
the Cromwell Foresight Global Sustainable Infrastructure Fund (each a “Fund”
and collectively the “Funds”), hereby submit this
application (the “Application”) to the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”)
for an order of exemption pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”).
Applicants
request an order exempting them from Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act to permit the Adviser, subject to the approval of the board
of trustees of the Trust (the “Board” or “Trustees”)32,
including a majority of those who are not “interested persons” of the Trust or the Adviser, as defined in Section
2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act (the “Independent Trustees”), to take certain actions without obtaining shareholder
approval as follows: (i) select investment subadvisers (each a “Subadviser” and collectively, the “Subadvisers”)
for all or a portion of the assets of the Funds pursuant to an investment subadvisory agreement with each Subadviser (each a “Subadvisory
Agreement” and collectively, the “Subadvisory Agreements”); and (ii) materially amend Subadvisory
Agreements with the Subadvisers.
2
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2
The term “Adviser” means (i) the Initial Adviser, (ii) its successors, and (iii) any entity controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with, the Initial Adviser or its successors that serves as the primary adviser to a Subadvised Fund
(as defined below).
For the purposes of the requested order, “successor” is limited to an entity that results from a reorganization into
another jurisdiction or a change in the type of business organization.
1
The Applicants are seeking relief for the Cromwell Marketfield L/S Fund, Cromwell CenterSquare Real Estate Fund, Cromwell Tran
Sustainable Focus Fund, Cromwell Foresight Global Sustainable Infrastructure Fund, and future subadvised funds. The Cromwell Marketfield
L/S Fund became effective and commenced operations on March 7, 2022; the Cromwell CenterSquare Real Estate Fund became effective
and commenced operations on March 14, 2022; the Cromwell Tran Sustainable Focus Fund became effective and commenced operations
on August 8, 2022; the Cromwell Foresight Global Sustainable Infrastructure Fund was registered on October 18, 2022 and is not
yet effective.
1 The term “Adviser” means (i) the Adviser, (ii) its successors, and (iii) any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, the Adviser or its successors that serves as the primary adviser to a Subadvised Fund (as defined below). For the purposes of the requested order, “successor” is limited to an entity that results from a reorganization into another jurisdiction or a change in the type of business organization.
3
2 The term “Board” also includes the board of trustees or directors of a future Subadvised Fund (as defined below), if different from the board of trustees of the Trust.
3
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As
used herein, a “Subadviser” for a Fund is any investment adviser that enters into a Subadvisory Agreement with respect
to a Fund. Applicants also apply for an order
of the Commission under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act exempting the Funds from certain disclosure obligations under the following
rules and forms: (i) Item 19(a)(3) of Form N--1A;
(ii) Items 22(c)(1)(ii), 22(c)(1)(iii), 22(c)(8), and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
(the “Exchange Act”); and (iii) Sections 6-07(26-07(2) (a), (b), and (c) of Regulation S--X
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”).
Similar to the order the Commission recently granted to Carillon Series Trust, et al.4,3
in addition to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers (both as defined below), the relief described in this Application would extend to any Subadviser that is an “affiliated
person” (as such term is defined in Section 2(a)(3) of the 1940 Act) of a Fund or the Adviser for reasons other than serving
as investment subadviser to one or more Funds (an “Affiliated Subadviser”).54
4
The Commission issued an order granting the expanded relief requested by the Application. Carillon Series Trust, et al., Investment
Company Act Release No 33464 (May 2, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33494 (May 29, 2019) (Order) (the “Carillon Order”).
See also Touchstone Strategic Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34790 (December 22, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34809
(January 18, 2023) (Order) (the "Touchstone Order"). See also Advisors Series Trust and Semper Capital Management,
L.P., Investment Company Act Release No. 34500 (February 9, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34528 (March 8, 2022) (Order) (the “Semper
Order”). See also New Age Alpha Trust and New Age Alpha Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34322
(July 6, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34348 (August 3, 2021) (Order) (the "New Age Alpha Trust Order"). See also Listed
Funds Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34293 (June 2, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34321 (June 29, 2021) (Order)
(“LFT Order”). See also Azzad Funds, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34241 (April 5, 2021) and
No. 34261 (April 30, 2021) ("Azzad Order"). See also ETF Series Solutions and Distillate Capital Partners
LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34169 (January 11, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34190 (February 8, 2021) (Order) (the “Distillate
Capital Order”); Esoterica Thematic Trust and Esoterica Capital LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34161
(January 4, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34185 (February 1, 2021) (Order) (the “Esoterica Order”); ETF Series
Solutions and Clearshares LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34144 (December 21, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34174 (January
19, 2021) (Order) (the “Clearshares Order”); OSI ETF Trust, et. al., Investment Company Act Release
No. 33678 (October 29, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33705 (November 26, 2019) (Order) (the “OSI ETF Order”); and
Investment Managers Series Trust II, et. al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34075 (October 27, 2020) (Notice) and
No. 34104 (November 23, 2020) (Order) (the “Investment Managers Order”).
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Applicants
request that the relief sought herein apply to Applicants, as well as to any existing or future registered open--end
management investment company or series thereof that intends to rely on the requested order in the future and (i) is advised by
the Adviser; (ii) uses the multi--manager
structure described in this Application; and (iii) complies with the terms and conditions set forth herein (each, together with
any Fund that currently uses the multi--manager
structure described in this Application, a “Subadvised Fund” and collectively, the “Subadvised Funds”).65
3 The Commission issued an order granting the expanded relief requested by the Application. Carillon Series Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 33464 (May 2, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33494 (May 29, 2019) (Order) (the “Carillon Order”). Total Fund Solution and Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34901 (April 26, 2023) (Notice) and No. 34921 (May 23, 2023) (Order) (the “Total Fund Solution Order”). See also Two Roads Shared Trust and Hypatia Capital Management LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34892 (April 20, 2023) (Notice) and No. 34918 (May 16, 2923) (Order) (the “Two Roads Order”). See also Touchstone Strategic Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34790 (December 22, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34809 (January 18, 2023) (Order) (the “Touchstone Order”). See also Advisors Series Trust and Semper Capital Management, L.P., Investment Company Act Release No. 34500 (February 9, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34528 (March 8, 2022) (Order) (the “Semper Order”). See also New Age Alpha Trust and New Age Alpha Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34322 (July 6, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34348 (August 3, 2021) (Order) (the “New Age Alpha Trust Order”). See also Listed Funds Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34293 (June 2, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34321 (June 29, 2021) (Order) (“LFT Order”). See also Azzad Funds, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34241 (April 5, 2021) and No. 34261 (April 30, 2021) (“Azzad Order”). See also ETF Series Solutions and Distillate Capital Partners LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34169 (January 11, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34190 (February 8, 2021) (Order) (the “Distillate Capital Order”); Esoterica Thematic Trust and Esoterica Capital LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34161 (January 4, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34185 (February 1, 2021) (Order) (the “Esoterica Order”); ETF Series Solutions and Clearshares LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34144 (December 21, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34174 (January 19, 2021) (Order) (the “Clearshares Order”); OSI ETF Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 33678 (October 29, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33705 (November 26, 2019) (Order) (the “OSI ETF Order”); and Investment Managers Series Trust II, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34075 (October 27, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34104 (November 23, 2020) (Order) (the “Investment Managers Order”).
-4-
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5
4 Section 2(a)(3) of the 1940 Act defines “affiliated person” as follows: “Affiliated person” of another person means (A) any person directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or holding with power to vote, 5 per centum or more of the outstanding voting securities of such other person; (B) any person 5 per centum or more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly owned, controlled, or held with power to vote, by such other person; (C) any person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, such other person; (D) any officer, director, partner, co--partner, or employee of such other person; (E) if such other person is an investment company, any investment adviser thereof or any member of an advisory board thereof; and (F) if such other person is an unincorporated investment company not having a board of directors, the depositor thereof.
6
5 All
registered open--end
investment companies that currently intend to rely on the requested order are named as Applicants.
The Funds that currently are, or that currently intendsintend
to be, a Subadvised Fund are identified in this Application. Any entity that relies on the requested order will do
so only in accordance with the terms and conditions contained in this Application.
4
-5-
-35-
Applicants
are seeking this exemption primarily to enhance the ability of the Adviser and the Board to obtain for a Subadvised Fund the services
of one or more Subadvisers believed by the Adviser and the Board to be particularly well suited for all or a portion of the assets
of the Subadvised Fund, and to make material amendments to Subadvisory Agreements believed by the Adviser and the Board to be
appropriate, without the delay and expense of convening special meetings of shareholders to approve the Subadvisory Agreements.
Under this structure, the Adviser, in its capacity as investment adviser, would evaluate, allocate assets to and oversee the Subadvisers,
and make recommendations about their hiring, termination and replacement to the Board, at all times subject to the authority of
the Board. This structure is commonly referred to as a “multi--manager”
structure. In addition, Applicants are seeking relief from certain disclosure requirements concerning fees paid to Subadvisers.
For the reasons discussed below, Applicants believe that the requested relief is 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. Applicants believe that the Subadvised Funds would be negatively impacted without the requested relief because of delays in hiring or replacing Subadvisers and costs associated with the proxy solicitation to approve new or amended Subadvisory Agreements.
II.B
ackground
II. | BACKGROUND |
A.
A.
The Trust
The
Trust is registered under the 1940 Act as an open--end
management investment company organized as a Delaware statutory trust. The Adviser serves as “investment adviser,”
as defined in Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act, to each Fund. The Trust intends to operate the Funds under a multi--manager
structure and which will be offered and sold pursuant to a registration statement on Form N--1A.
The Board currently consists of one (1)
interested trustee and threefour
(4) Independent Trustees.
The
Trust intends to offeroffers
shares of multiple series, each with its own distinct investment objectives, policies, and restrictions. The Adviser
has retained a Subadviser to provide investment advisory services to theeach
Fund.76 Each Fund will operate from its inception
under a multi--manager
structure.
7
6 Each Subadvised Fund discloseswill disclose in its registration statement that it intends to operate pursuant to the order as requested in this Application, if granted. The prospectus for a Subadvised Fund will continue to include the disclosure required by Condition 2 below at all times subsequent to the approval required by Condition 1 below. If a Subadvised Fund has obtained shareholder approval to operate under the multi--manager structure described herein prior to the issuance of an order as requested in this Application, the prospectus for the Subadvised Fund will at all times following such shareholder approval contain appropriate disclosure that the Subadvised Fund has applied for exemptive relief to operate under the multi- -manager structure described herein, including the ability to hire new Subadvisers and materially amend an existing Subadvisory Agreement without soliciting further shareholder vote.
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B.
B.
The Adviser
Cromwell
InvestmentIndexIQ Advisors, LLC with its business address at 810 Gleneagles Court, Suite 106, Baltimore,
Maryland 2128651 Madison Avenue, New York, New York
10010, is a MarylandDelaware
limited liability company (LLC) registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940, as amended (the “Advisers Act”), and serves as investment adviser to the FundFunds.
The Adviser was formed in August 2020 and it is dedicated to managing mutual fundshas
been operating since July 2007, and has been registered as an investment adviser with the Commission since August 9, 2007.
The Adviser serves as investment adviser to the Funds pursuant to investment advisory agreements with each Fund (each, an “Investment
Advisory Agreement” and, together, the “Investment Advisory Agreements”). Any future Adviser also
will be registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Advisers Act.
Consistent
with the terms of a Subadvised Fund’s Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser may, subject to the approval of the Board,
including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and the shareholders of the applicable Subadvised Fund (if required by applicable
law), delegate portfolio management responsibilities of all or a portion of the assets of a Subadvised Fund to a Subadviser. The
Adviser retains overall responsibility for the management and investment of the assets of allthe
Subadvised Funds. With respect to each Subadvised Fund, the Adviser’s responsibilities include, for example,
recommending the removal or replacement of Subadvisers, and allocating the portion of that Subadvised Fund’s assets to any
given Subadviser and reallocating those assets as necessary from time to time. The Adviser evaluates, selects and recommends Subadvisers
for the Subadvised Funds, and monitors and reviews each Subadviser and its performance and its compliance with the applicable
Subadvised Fund’s investment policies and restrictions.
Each
Investment Advisory Agreement has been or will be approved by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and
by the shareholders of the relevant Fund in the manner required by Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act. The terms of the
Investment Advisory Agreements comply or will comply with Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Applicants are not seeking an exemption
from the provisions of the 1940 Act with respect to the Investment Advisory Agreements. Pursuant to the terms of each Investment
Advisory Agreement, the Adviser, subject to the oversight of the Board, has agreed or will agree to (i) provide continuous investment
management for each Fund;(ii) (ii)
determine the securities and other investments to be purchased, retained, sold or loaned by each Fund and the portion
of such assets to be invested or held uninvested as cash; and (iii) exercise full discretion and act for each Fund in the same
manner and with the same force and effect as such Fund itself might or could do with respect to purchases, sales, or other transactions
and with respect to all other things necessary or incidental to the furtherance or conduct of such purchases, sales or other transactions.
The Adviser also is or will be responsible for effecting transactions for each Fund and selecting brokers or dealers to execute
such transactions for each Fund. The Adviser will periodically review each Fund’s investment policies and strategies and,
based on the need of a particular Fund, may recommend changes to the investment policies and strategies of the Fund for consideration
by the Board.
6
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Each Investment Advisory Agreement permits or will permit the Adviser to enter into Subadvisory Agreements with one or more Subadvisers. Pursuant to its authority under the Investment Advisory Agreements, the Adviser has entered or will enter into Subadvisory Agreements as described below under “The Subadvisers and the Subadvised Funds.” If the name of any Subadvised Fund contains the name of a subadviser, the name of the Adviser that serves as the primary adviser to the Subadvised Fund, or a trademark or trade name that is owned by or publicly used to identify that Adviser, will precede the name of the subadviser.
For its services to each Fund, the Adviser receives or will receive an investment advisory fee from that Fund as specified in the applicable Investment Advisory Agreement. The investment advisory fees are calculated based on the average daily net assets of the particular Fund, calculated daily as of the close of business on each business day during the month.
C.
C.
The Subadvisers and the Subadvised Funds
Pursuant
to the authority under the Investment Advisory Agreements, the Adviser may enter into Subadvisory Agreements with various Subadvisers
on behalf of thea
Fund. The Initial Adviser has entered into a
Subadvisory AgreementAgreements
with Marketfield Asset(1)
NYL Investors LLC (“NYL Investors”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ Ultra Short Duration ETF; (2)
MacKay Shields LLC (“MacKay Shields”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ MacKay ESG Core Plus Bond
ETF, IQ MacKay ESG High Income ETF, IQ MacKay Multi-Sector Income ETF, IQ MacKay Municipal Insured ETF, IQ MacKay Municipal Intermediate
ETF, and IQ MacKay California Municipal Intermediate ETF; (3) Winslow Capital Management, LLC (“Winslow”),
which services as the Subadviser for the IQ Winslow Large Cap Growth ETF and IQ Winslow Focused Large Cap Growth ETF; and (4)
CBRE Investment Management, Listed
Real Assets LLC (“Marketfield”). MarketfieldCBRE”),
which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ CBRE Real Assets ETF. NYL Investors and MacKay Shields are considered an Affiliated
Subadviser (as defined above). Winslow and CBRE each is considered a Non-Affiliated Subadviser (as defined below).
The
Adviser also may, in the future, enter into Subadvisory Agreements with other Subadvisers on behalf of thea Fund and other Subadvised Funds.
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With
respect to any future Subadviser that is wholly owned by the Adviser or the Adviser’s parent company, the Adviser will have
overall responsibility for the affairs of such Subadviser, and generally will approve certain actions by that Subadviser that
could materially affect the operations of the Adviser and its subsidiaries as a group. Marketfield
Each Subadviser has, and any future Subadviser
will have, their own employees who would provide investment services to a Subadvised Fund.
TheEach Subadviser is, and any future Subadvisers
will be, “investment advisers” to the Subadvised Funds within the meaning of Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act and
provide, or will provide, investment management services
to the Subadvised Funds subject to, without limitation, the requirements of Sections 15(c) and 36(b) of the 1940 Act. In addition,
theeach Subadviser
is, and any future Subadvisers will be, registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Advisers Act or not
subject to such registration. The Adviser selects Subadvisers based on the Adviser’s evaluation of the Subadvisers’
skills in managing assets pursuant to particular investment styles, and recommends their hiring to the Board. In the future, the
Adviser may employ multiple Subadvisers for one or more of the Subadvised Funds. In those instances, the Adviser would allocate
and, as appropriate, reallocate a Subadvised Fund’s assets among the Subadvisers.
The Adviser engages or will engage in an ongoing analysis of the continued advisability of retaining a Subadviser and makes recommendations to the Board as needed. The Adviser also negotiates and renegotiates the terms of the Subadvisory Agreements with a Subadviser, including the fees paid to the Subadvisers, and makes recommendations to the Board as needed.
The
Subadvisers, subject to the oversight of the Adviser and the Board, determine or will determine the securities and other instruments
to be purchased, sold or entered into by a Subadvised Fund’s portfolio or a portion thereof, and place orders with brokers
or dealers that they select.87 The Subadvisers keep or
will keep certain records required by the 1940 Act and the Advisers Act to be maintained on behalf of the relevant Subadvised
Fund, and assist or will assist the Adviser to maintain the Subadvised Funds’ compliance with the relevant requirements
of the 1940 Act. The Subadvisers monitor or will monitor the respective Subadvised Funds’ investments and provide or will
provide periodic reports to the Board and the Adviser. The Subadvisers also make or will make their officers and employees available
to the Adviser and the Board to review the investment performance and investment policies of the Subadvised Funds.
8
7 For the purposes of this Application, a “Subadviser” also includes an investment subadviser that will provide the Adviser with a model portfolio reflecting a specific strategy, style or focus with respect to the investment of all or a portion of a Subadvised Fund’s assets. The Adviser may use the model portfolio to determine the securities and other instruments to be purchased, sold, or entered into by a Subadvised Fund’s portfolio or a portion thereof, and place orders with brokers or dealers that it selects.
-9-
-39-
The Subadvisory Agreements were or will be approved by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, in accordance with Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act.
The terms of each Subadvisory Agreement comply or will comply fully with the requirements of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Each Subadvisory Agreement will set forth the duties of the Subadviser and precisely describe the compensation paid to the Subadviser.
After
an initial two--year
period, the terms of the Subadvisory Agreements are reviewed and renewed on an annual basis by the Board, including a majority
of the Independent Trustees in accordance with Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act. The Board dedicates substantial time to review contract
matters, including matters relating to Investment Advisory Agreements and Subadvisory Agreements. With respect to each Subadvised
Fund, the Board reviews comprehensive materials received from the Adviser, the Subadviser, independent third parties and independent
counsel. Applicants will continue this annual review and renewal process for Subadvisory Agreements in accordance with the 1940
Act if the relief requested herein is granted by the Commission.
7
-10-
-40-
The
Board reviews information provided by the Adviser and Subadvisers when it is asked to approve or renew Subadvisory Agreements.
A Subadvised Fund discloses in its statutory prospectus that a discussion regarding the basis for the Board’s approval and
renewal of the Investment Advisory Agreements and any applicable Subadvisory Agreements is available in the Subadvised Funds’
annual or semi--annual
report to shareholders for the relevant period in accordance with Item 10(a)(1)(iii) of Form N--1A.
The information provided to the Board is maintained as part of the records of the respective Subadvised Fund pursuant to Rule
31a--1(b)(4)
and Rule 31a--2
under the 1940 Act.
Pursuant
to each Subadvisory Agreement, the Adviser has agreed or
will agree to pay each Subadviser a fee, based on the percentage of the assets of a Subadvised Fund, from the fee received by
the Adviser from a Subadvised Fund under the Investment Advisory Agreement.98 Each Subadviser will bear its own expenses of providing investment management services to a Subadvised Fund.
III.R
equest for Exemptive Relief
III. | REQUEST FOR EXEMPTIVE RELIEF |
Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act provides that the Commission may exempt any person, security, or transaction or any class or classes of persons, securities, or transactions from any provisions of the 1940 Act, or any rule thereunder, if such relief is 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. Applicants believe that the requested relief described in this Application meets this standard.
IV. | APPLICABLE LAW AND DISCUSSION |
IV.A pplicable Law and Discussion
A.
A.
Shareholder Vote
1.R
egulatory1. Regulatory Background
Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act states, in part, that it is unlawful for any person to act as an investment adviser to a registered investment company “except pursuant to a written contract, which contract, whether with such registered company or with an investment adviser of such registered company, has been approved by the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of such registered company.”
Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act defines an “investment adviser” as any person who, pursuant to an agreement with such registered investment company or with an investment adviser of such registered investment company, is empowered to determine what securities or other property shall be purchased or sold by such registered investment company. Consequently, the Subadvisers are deemed to be within the definition of an “investment adviser” and, therefore, the Subadvisory Agreements are each subject to Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act to the same extent as the Investment Advisory Agreements.
9
8 A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser.
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Therefore, Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act requires a majority of the outstanding voting securities of a Subadvised Fund to approve Subadvisory Agreements whenever the Adviser proposes to the Board to hire new Subadvisers for a Subadvised Fund. This provision would also require shareholder approval by a majority vote for any material amendment to Subadvisory Agreements.
The
Subadvisory Agreements are required to terminate automatically and immediately upon their “assignment,” which could
occur upon a change in control of the Subadvisers.190
10
9 See Section 15(a)(4) of the 1940 Act. Section 2(a)(4) of the 1940 Act defines “assignment” as any direct or indirect transfer or hypothecation of a contract.
8
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Rule
2a--6 under
the 1940 Act provides that certain transactions that do not result in a “change in actual control or management of the investment
adviser” to a registered investment company are not assignments for purposes of Section 15(a)(4) of the 1940 Act, thereby
effectively providing an exemption from the shareholder voting requirements in Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Applicants do not
believe that Rule 2a--6
under the 1940 Act provides a safe harbor to recommend, hire and terminate Subadvisers. Each Subadviser is expected to run its
own day--to--day
operations and each will have its own investment personnel. Therefore, in certain instances appointing certain Subadvisers could
be viewed as a change in management and, as a result, an “assignment” within the meaning of the 1940 Act.
2.R
equested2. Requested
Relief
Applicants seek relief to (i) select Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers, for all or a portion of the assets of a Subadvised Fund and enter into Subadvisory Agreements and (ii) materially amend Subadvisory Agreements with such Subadvisers, each subject to the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, without obtaining shareholder approval required under Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Such relief would include, without limitation, the replacement or reinstatement of any Subadviser with respect to which a Subadvisory Agreement has automatically terminated as a result of an “assignment,” within the meaning of Section 2(a)(4) of the 1940 Act. Applicants believe that the relief sought should be granted by the Commission because (1) the Adviser either will operate a Subadvised Fund, or may operate the Subadvised Fund, in a manner that is different from conventional investment companies; (2) the relief will benefit shareholders by enabling the Subadvised Funds to operate in a less costly and more efficient manner; and (3) Applicants will consent to a number of conditions that adequately address the policy concerns of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act, including conditions designed to ensure that shareholder interests are adequately protected through Board oversight.
(a)O
perations (a) Operations of the Trust . Section 15(a) was designed to protect the interests and
expectations of a registered investment company’s shareholders by requiring they approve investment advisory contracts,
including subadvisory contracts.1101 Section 15(a) is predicated on the belief that if a registered investment company is to be managed by an
investment adviser different from the investment adviser selected by shareholders at the time of the investment, the new investment
adviser should be approved by shareholders.12 1 The
relief sought in this Application is consistent with this public policy.
11
10 | See Section 1(b)(6) of the 1940 Act. |
12
11 | Hearings on S. 3580 before a Subcomm. of the Senate Comm. on Banking and Currency, 76th Cong., 3d Sess. 253 (1940) (statement of David Schenker). |
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In
the case of a traditional investment company, the investment adviser is a single entity that employs one or more individuals as
portfolio managers to make the day--to--day
investment decisions. The investment adviser may terminate or hire portfolio managers without board or shareholder approval and
has sole discretion to set the compensation it pays to the portfolio managers. Alternatively, for subadvised funds, the investment
adviser is not normally responsible for the day--to-
-day investment decisions and instead, the
investment adviser selects, oversees, and evaluates subadvisers who ultimately are responsible for the day--to--day
investment decisions.
Primary responsibility for management of a Subadvised Fund’s assets, including the selection and oversight of the Subadvisers, is vested in the Adviser, subject to the oversight of the Board.
Applicants
believe that it is consistent with the protection of investors to vest the selection and oversight of the Subadvisers in the Adviser
in light of Applicants’ multi- -manager
structure, as well as the shareholders’ expectation that the Adviser is in possession of information necessary to select
the most capable Subadvisers. The Adviser has
the requisite expertise to evaluate, select and oversee the Subadvisers.
The Adviser will not normally make day--to--day
investment decisions for a Subadvised Fund.1312
From the perspective of the shareholder, the role of the Subadvisers is substantially equivalent to the role of the individual portfolio managers employed by an investment adviser to a traditional investment company. The individual portfolio managers and the Subadvisers are each charged with the selection of portfolio investments in accordance with a Subadvised Fund’s investment objectives and policies and have no broad supervisory, management or administrative responsibilities with respect to a Subadvised Fund. Shareholders expect the Adviser, subject to review and approval of the Board, to select a Subadviser who is in the best position to achieve a Subadvised Fund’s investment objective. Shareholders also rely on the Adviser for the overall management of a Subadvised Fund and a Subadvised Fund’s total investment performance.
Whenever required by Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, the Board will request and the Adviser and each Subadviser will furnish such information as may be reasonably necessary for the Board to evaluate the terms of the Investment Advisory Agreements and the Subadvisory Agreements. The information that is provided to the Board will be maintained as part of the records of the Subadvised Funds in accordance with the applicable recordkeeping requirements under the 1940 Act and made available to the Commission in the manner prescribed by the 1940 Act.
13
Although the Adviser will not normally make such day-to-day investment decisions, it may manage all or a portion of a Subadvised
Fund.
9
12 | Although the Adviser will not normally make such day-to-day investment decisions, it may manage all or a portion of a Subadvised Fund. |
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In
addition, the Adviser and the Board will consider the reasonableness of the Subadviser’s compensation with respect to
each Subadvised Fund for which the Subadviser will provide portfolio management services. Although
only the Adviser’s fee is payable directly by a Subadvised Fund, and the Subadviser’s fee is payable by the
Adviser,143
the Subadviser’s fee directly bears on the amount and reasonableness of the Adviser’s fee payable by a Subadvised
Fund. Accordingly, the Adviser and the
Board will analyze the fees paid to Subadvisers in evaluating the reasonableness of the overall arrangements.
With respect to oversight, Applicants note that the Adviser performs and will perform substantially identical oversight of all Subadvisers, regardless of whether they are affiliated with the Adviser. Such oversight is similar in many respects to how the Adviser would oversee its own internal portfolio management teams.
(b)
(b)
Lack of Economic Incentives.
In allocating the management of Subadvised Fund assets between itself and one or more Subadvisers, Applicants acknowledge
that the Adviser has an incentive to consider the benefit it will receive, directly or indirectly, from the fee paid for the management
of those assets. However, Applicants believe that the protections afforded by the conditions set forth in this Application would
prevent the Adviser from acting to the detriment of a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders. Applicants assert that the proposed
conditions are designed to provide the Board with sufficient independence and the resources and information it needs to monitor
and address conflicts of interest. In particular, the Adviser will provide the Board with any information that may be relevant
to the Board’s evaluation of material conflicts of interest present in any subadvisory arrangement when the Board is considering,
with respect to a Subadvised Fund, a change in Subadviser or an existing Subadvisory Agreement as
part of its annual review process. The Board will also have to make a separate finding, reflected in the Board minutes, that any change in Subadvisers or any renewal of an existing Subadvisory Agreement is in the best interests of the Subadvised Fund and its shareholders and, based on the information provided to it, does not involve a conflict of interest from which the Adviser, a Subadviser, or any officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund or any officer or board member of the Adviser derives an inappropriate advantage.
Applicants
note that the relief they are requesting would not be subject to two conditions that have been customary in previous exemptive
orders for similar relief, including (i) restrictions on the ownership of interest in Subadvisers by trustees and officers of
Subadvised Funds and the Adviser, and (ii) a requirement that the Adviser provide the Board with profitability reports each quarter.
Applicants believe eliminating these conditions is appropriate with respect to the requested relief. As to the condition on ownership,
Applicants assert that restricting ownership of interests in a Subadviser by trustees and officers would not be meaningful where
the Adviser may itself own an interest in the Subadviser and the Subadviser may be selected for a Subadvised Fund under the requested
relief.15 4 As to the condition requiring quarterly
profitability reports, Applicants note that the Board reviews and will continue to review profitability information at the time
of any proposed Subadviser change (see condition 7) and as part of its annual review of each Subadvisory Agreement pursuant to
Section 15(ec)
of the 1940 Act.
14
13 | A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser. |
10
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Until
the Carillon Order, the Commission has granted the requested relief solely with respect to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief has been premised on the fact that such a Subadviser serves in the
same limited capacity as an individual portfolio manager. Applicants believe this same rationale supports extending the requested
relief to Affiliated Subadvisers. Moreover, Applicants note that, while the Adviser’s judgment in recommending a Subadviser
can be affected by certain conflicts of interest or economic incentives, they do not warrant denying the extension of the requested
relief to Affiliated Subadvisers. For one, the Adviser faces those conflicts and incentives in allocating fund assets between
itself and a Subadviser, and across Subadvisers, as it has an interest in considering the benefit it will receive, directly or
indirectly, from the fee the fund pays for the management of those assets. Moreover, the Adviser has employed and will continue
to employ the same methodology to evaluate potential conflicts of interest, regardless of the affiliation between the Adviser
and Subadviser. While the selection and retention of Affiliated Subadvisers by the Adviser potentially presents different or additional
conflicts of interest than may be the case with Non--Affiliated
or Wholly--Owned
Subadvisers, the proposed terms and conditions of the requested relief are designed to address the potential conflicts of interest
with respect to both those common to all types of Subadvisers and specific to Affiliated Subadvisers. In particular, Applicants
believe that the proposed conditions are protective of shareholder interests by ensuring the Board’s independence and providing
the Board with the appropriate resources and information to monitor and address conflicts.
(c) (c) Benefits
to Shareholders. Without the requested relief,
when a new Affiliated Subadviser is retained by the Adviser on behalf of a Subadvised Fund, the shareholders of the
Subadvised Fund are required to approve the Subadvisory Agreement. Similarly, if an existing Subadvisory Agreement with an
Affiliated Subadviser is amended in any material respect, approval by the shareholders of the affected Subadvised Fund is
required. Moreover, if a Subadvisory Agreement with an Affiliated Subadviser is “assigned” as a result of a
change in control of the Subadviser, the shareholders of the affected Subadvised Fund will be required to approve retaining
the existing Subadviser. In all these instances the need for shareholder approval requires a Subadvised Fund to call and hold
a shareholder meeting, create and distribute proxy materials, and solicit votes from shareholders on behalf of the Subadvised
Fund, and generally necessitates the retention of a proxy solicitor. This process is time--intensive,
expensive and slow, and, in the case of a poorly performing Subadviser or one whose management team has parted ways with the
Subadviser, potentially harmful to a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders.
15
14 | Any Trustee of the Board that has an ownership interest in a Subadviser would not be deemed an Independent Trustee under Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act. |
11
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As noted above, shareholders investing in a Fund that has a Subadviser are effectively hiring the Adviser to manage a Subadvised Fund’s assets by overseeing, monitoring and evaluating the Subadviser rather than by the Adviser hiring its own employees to oversee the Subadvised Fund. Applicants believe that permitting the Adviser to perform the duties for which the shareholders of a Subadvised Fund are paying the Adviser — the selection, oversight and evaluation of Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers — without incurring unnecessary delays or expenses is appropriate and in the interest of a Subadvised Fund’s shareholders and will allow such Subadvised Fund to operate more efficiently. Within this structure, the Adviser is in the better position to make an informed selection and evaluation of a Subadviser than are individual shareholders. Without the delay inherent in holding shareholder meetings (and the attendant difficulty in obtaining the necessary quorums), a Subadvised Fund will be able to hire or replace Affiliated Subadvisers more quickly and at less cost, when the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and the Adviser believe that a change would benefit a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders.
Until
the Carillon Order, the Commission has previously granted the requested relief solely with respect to certain Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief has permitted Subadvised Funds to avoid the time--intensive
and expensive shareholder solicitation process with respect to hiring or making a material amendment to a Subadvisory Agreement
with respect to such subadvisers. As discussed above, Applicants believe the same rationale supports extending the requested relief
to Affiliated Subadvisers as well, and while Affiliated Subadvisers may give rise to different or additional conflicts of interests,
the proposed terms and conditions, including the enhanced oversight by the Board, address such potential conflicts. Moreover,
treating all Subadvisers equally under the requested relief might help avoid the selection of Subadvisers potentially being influenced
by considerations regarding the applicable regulatory requirements (i.e., whether a shareholder vote is required) and the
associated costs and delays.165
If the relief requested is granted, each Investment Advisory Agreement will continue to be fully subject to Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Moreover, the relevant Board will consider the Investment Advisory Agreements and Subadvisory Agreements in connection with its annual contract renewal process under Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, and the standards of Section 36(b) of the 1940 Act will be applied to the fees paid to each Subadviser.
3.
3.
Shareholder Notification
With
the exception of the relief requested in connection with Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below), the prospectus and statement
of additional information for each Subadvised Fund will include all information required by Form N--1A
concerning the Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers,
if the requested relief is granted. If a new Subadviser is retained, an existing Subadviser is terminated, or a Subadvisory Agreement
is materially amended, a Subadvised Fund’s prospectus and statement of additional information will be supplemented promptly
pursuant to Rule 497(e) under the Securities Act.
16
15 | The Adviser is responsible for selecting Subadvisers in the best interests of the Subadvised Funds, regardless of the costs or timing constraints that may be associated with the process of seeking shareholder approval of Subadvisory Agreements and material amendments thereto. |
12
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If
new Subadvisers are hired, the Subadvised Funds will inform shareholders of the hiring of a new Subadviser pursuant to the following
procedures (“Modified Notice and Access Procedures”): (a) within 90 days after a new Subadviser is hired for
any Subadvised Fund, that Subadvised Fund will send its shareholders either a Multi--manager
Notice or a Multi--manager
Notice and Multi--manager
Information Statement;1167 and
(b) a Subadvised Fund will make the Multi--manager
Information Statement available on the website identified in the Multi--manager
Notice no later than when the Multi--manager
Notice (or Multi--manager
Notice and Multi--manager
Information Statement) is first sent to shareholders, and will maintain it on that website for at least 90 days.
Under the requested relief, a Subadvised Fund would not furnish a Multi--manager
Information Statement to shareholders when an existing Subadvisory Agreement is materially modified.
In the circumstances described in this Application, a proxy solicitation to approve the appointment of new Subadvisers
provides no more meaningful information to shareholders than the proposed Multi--manager
Information Statement. Moreover, as indicated
above, the Board would comply with the requirements of Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act before entering into or amending
Subadvisory Agreements.
Prior
to any Subadvised Fund relying on the requested relief in this Application, the Board, including its Independent Trustees, will
have approved its operations as described herein. Additionally, the shareholders of the applicable Subadvised Fund have approved,
or will approve, its operation as described herein by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities, within the meaning
of the 1940 Act, or by the sole shareholder prior to a Subadvised Fund offering its shares.187
B.
B.
Fee Disclosure
1.R
egulatory1. Regulatory
Background
Form
N--1A is
the registration statement used by open--end
investment companies. Item 19(a)(3) of Form N--1A
requires a registered investment company to disclose in its statement of additional information the method of computing the “advisory
fee payable” by the investment company with respect to each investment adviser, including the total dollar amounts that
the investment company “paid to the adviser (aggregated with amounts paid to affiliated advisers, if any), and any advisers
who are not affiliated persons of the adviser, under the investment advisory contract for the last three fiscal years.”
17
16 | A
“Multi |
A
“Multi--manager
Information Statement” will meet the requirements of Regulation 14C, Schedule 14C and Item 22 of Schedule 14A under the
Exchange Act for an information statement, except as modified by the requested order to permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure. Multi--manager
Information Statements will be filed with the Commission via the EDGAR system.
18
17 | If
a Subadvised Fund has obtained shareholder approval to operate pursuant to an exemptive
order that would permit it to operate in a multi |
13
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Rule
20a--1
under the 1940 Act requires proxies solicited with respect to a registered investment company to comply with Schedule 14A under
the Exchange Act. Item 22 of Schedule 14A sets forth the information that must be included in a registered investment company’s
proxy statement. Item 22(c)(1)(ii) requires a proxy statement for a shareholder meeting at which action will be taken on an investment
advisory agreement to describe the terms of the advisory contract, “including the rate of compensation of the investment
adviser.” Item 22(c)(1)(iii) requires a description of the “aggregate amount of the investment adviser’s fees
and the amount and purpose of any other material payments” by the investment company to the investment adviser, or any affiliated
person of the investment adviser during the fiscal year. Item 22(c)(8) requires a description of “the terms of the contract
to be acted upon, and, if the action is an amendment to, or a replacement of, an investment advisory contract, the material differences
between the current and proposed contract.” Finally, Item 22(c)(9) requires a proxy statement for a shareholder meeting
at which a change in the advisory fee will be sought to state (i) the aggregate amount of the investment adviser’s fee during
the last year; (ii) the amount that the adviser would have received had the proposed fee been in effect; and (iii) the difference
between (i) and (ii) stated as a percentage of the amount in (i). Together, these provisions may require a Subadvised Fund to
disclose the fees paid to a Subadviser in connection with shareholder action with respect to entering into, or materially amending,
an advisory agreement or establishing, or increasing, advisory fees.
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Regulation
S--X sets
forth the requirements for financial statements required to be included as part of a registered investment company’s registration
statement and shareholder reports filed with the Commission. Sections 6- -07(2)(a),
(b) and (c) of Regulation S--X
require a registered investment company to include in its financial statement information about the investment advisory fees.
These provisions could require a Subadvised Fund’s financial statements to disclose information concerning fees paid to
a Subadviser. The exemption from Regulation S--X
requested below would permit a Subadvised Fund to include only the Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below); all other items
required by Sections 6-07(26-07(2)(a),
(b) and (c) of Regulation S--X
will be disclosed.
2.R
equested2. Requested Relief
Applicants
seek relief to permit each Subadvised Fund to disclose (as a dollar amount and a percentage of a Subadvised Fund’s net assets)
(a) the aggregate fees paid to the Adviser and any Wholly--Owned
Subadvisers; and (b) the aggregate fees paid to Affiliated and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers (collectively, the “Aggregate Fee Disclosure”) in lieu of disclosing the fees that may be required
by Item 19(a)(3) of Form N--1A,
Items 22(c)(1)(ii), 22(c)(2)(iii), 22(c)(8) and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A, and Section 6-07(26-07(2)(a),
(b) and (c) of Regulation S--X.1189 The Aggregate Fee Disclosure would be presented as both a dollar amount and as a percentage of a Subadvised
Funds’ net assets. Applicants believe
that the relief sought in this Application should be granted because the Adviser intends to operate Subadvised Funds under a multi--manager
structure. As a result, disclosure of the individual
fees that the Adviser pays to the Subadvisers would not serve any meaningful purpose.
19
18 | As
used herein, a “Wholly |
14
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As
noted above, the Adviser may operate Subadvised Funds in a manner different from a traditional investment company. By investing
in a Subadvised Fund, shareholders are hiring the Adviser to manage the Subadvised Fund’s assets by overseeing, evaluating,
monitoring, and recommending Subadvisers rather than by hiring its own employees to manage the assets directly. The Adviser, under
the oversight of the Board, is responsible for overseeing the Subadvisers and recommending their hiring and replacement. In return,
the Adviser receives an advisory fee from each Subadvised Fund. Pursuant to each Subadvisory Agreement, the Adviser has
agreed or will agree to pay each Subadviser a fee, based on the percentage of the assets of a Subadvised Fund, from
the fee received by the Adviser from a Subadvised Fund under the Investment Advisory Agreement. Each Subadviser will bear its
own expenses of providing investment management services to a Subadvised Fund.210
9 Disclosure of the individual fees
that the Adviser would pay to the Subadvisers does not serve any meaningful purpose since investors pay the Adviser to oversee,
monitor, evaluate and compensate the Subadvisers. Applicants contend that the primary reasons for requiring disclosure of individual
fees paid to Subadvisers are to inform shareholders of expenses to be charged by a particular Subadvised Fund and to enable shareholders
to compare the fees to those of other comparable investment companies. Applicants believe that the requested relief satisfies
these objectives because the Subadvised Fund’s overall advisory fee will be fully disclosed and, therefore, shareholders
will know what a Subadvised Fund’s fees and expenses are and will be able to compare the advisory fees a Subadvised Fund
is charged to those of other investment companies.
Indeed,
in a more conventional arrangement, requiring the Subadvised Funds to disclose the fees negotiated between the Adviser and the
Subadvisers would be the functional equivalent of requiring single adviser investment companies to disclose the salaries of individual
portfolio managers employed by that investment adviser.
In the case of a traditional investment company, disclosure is made of the compensation paid to the investment adviser,
but shareholders are not told or asked to vote on the salary paid by the investment adviser to individual portfolio managers.
Similarly, in the case of the Subadvised Funds, the shareholders will have chosen to employ the Adviser and to rely upon the Adviser’s
expertise in monitoring the Subadvisers, recommending the Subadvisers’ selection and termination (if necessary), and negotiating
the compensation of the Subadvisers. There
are no policy reasons that require shareholders of the Subadvised Funds to be informed of the individual Subadviser’s fees
any more than shareholders of a traditional investment company (single investment adviser) would be informed of the particular
investment adviser’s portfolio managers’ salaries.210
20
19 | A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser. |
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The requested relief would benefit shareholders of the Subadvised Funds because it would improve the Adviser’s ability to negotiate the fees paid to Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers. The Adviser’s ability to negotiate with the various Subadvisers would be adversely affected by public disclosure of fees paid to each Subadviser. If the Adviser is not required to disclose the Subadvisers’ fees to the public, the Adviser may be able to negotiate rates that are below a Subadviser’s “posted” amounts as the rate would not be disclosed to the Subadviser’s other clients. Moreover, if one Subadviser is aware of the advisory fee paid to another Subadviser, the Subadviser would likely take it into account in negotiating its own fee.
21
20 | The relief would be consistent with the Commission’s disclosure requirements applicable to fund portfolio managers that were previously adopted. See Investment Company Act Release No. 26533 (Aug. 23, 2004). Under these disclosure requirements, a fund is required to include in its statement of additional information, among other matters, a description of the structure of and the method used to determine the compensation structure of its “portfolio managers.” Applicants state that with respect to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe the structure of, and method used to determine, the compensation received by each portfolio manager employed by any Subadviser. In addition to this disclosure with respect to portfolio managers, Applicants state that with respect to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe the structure of, and method used to determine, the compensation received by each Subadviser. |
15
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Until
the Carillon Order, the Commission has previously granted the requested relief solely with respect to Wholly-
-Owned and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief only permitted the disclosure of aggregate fees paid to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers and required disclosure of individual fees paid to Affiliated Subadvisers. If the requested relief under Section 15(a)
of the 1940 Act is granted to extend to Affiliated Subadvisers, Applicants believe it is appropriate to permit each Subadvised
Fund to disclose only aggregate fees paid to Affiliated Subadvisers for the same reasons that similar relief has been granted
to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers, as discussed above.
C.
C.
Precedent
Applicants
note that substantially identical relief was granted by the Commission in the Carillon Order, the
Total Fund Solution Order, the Two Roads Order, the Touchstone Order, the Semper Order, the New Age Alpha Trust Order,
the LFT Order, the Azzad Order, the Distillate Capital Order, the Esoterica Order, the Clearshares Order, the OSI ETF Order, and
the Investment Managers Order. Applicants note that substantially the same exemptions requested herein with respect to relief
from Section 15(a) and relief from the disclosure requirements of the rules and forms discussed herein for Subadvisers, including
Affiliated Subadvisers, have been granted previously by the Commission with respect to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers. See, e.g., Natixis Funds Trust I, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33265 (October 5, 2018) (notice)
and 33287 (October 31, 2018) (order); Advisors Asset Management, Inc. and ETF Series Solutions, Investment Company Act
Release Nos. 33169 (July 24, 2018) (notice) and 33207 (August 21, 2018) (order); TriLine Index Solutions, LLC and ETF Series
Solutions, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33159 (July 11, 2018) (notice) and 33192 (August 6, 2018) (order); SL Advisors,
LLC and ETF Series Solutions, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33158 (July 11, 2018) (notice) and 33193 (August 6, 2018)
(order); DMS ETF Trust I, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33156 (July 10, 2018) (notice) and 33196 (August
7, 2018) (order).
For the reasons set forth above, Applicants believe that the relief sought would be 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.
V.
Conditions
V. | CONDITIONS |
Applicants agree that any order of the Commission granting the requested relief will be subject to the following conditions:
1.
1.
Before a Subadvised Fund may rely on the
order requested herein, the operation of the Subadvised Fund in the manner described in this Application will be, or has been,
approved by a majority of the Subadvised Fund’s outstanding voting securities as defined in the 1940 Act, or, in the case
of a Subadvised Fund whose public shareholders purchase shares on the basis of a prospectus containing the disclosure contemplated
by condition 2 below, by the initial shareholder before such Subadvised Fund’s shares are offered to the public.
16
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2.
2.
The prospectus for each Subadvised Fund will
disclose the existence, substance and effect of any order granted pursuant to the Application. In addition, each Subadvised Fund
will hold itself out to the public as employing the multi--manager
structure described in this Application. The prospectus will prominently disclose that the Adviser has the ultimate responsibility,
subject to oversight by the Board, to oversee the Subadvisers and recommend their hiring, termination, and replacement.
3.
3.
The Adviser will provide general management
services to each Subadvised Fund, including overall supervisory responsibility for the general management and investment of the
Subadvised Fund’s assets, and subject to review and oversight of the Board, will (i) set the Subadvised Fund’s overall
investment strategies, (ii) evaluate, select, and recommend Subadvisers for all or a portion of the Subadvised Fund’s assets,
(iii) allocate and, when appropriate, reallocate the Subadvised Fund’s assets among Subadvisers, (iv) monitor and evaluate
the Subadvisers’ performance, and (v) implement procedures reasonably designed to ensure that Subadvisers comply with the
Subadvised Fund’s investment objective, policies and restrictions.
4.
4.
Subadvised Funds will inform shareholders
of the hiring of a new Subadviser within 90 days after the hiring of the new Subadviser pursuant to the Modified Notice and Access
Procedures.
5.
5.
At all times, at least a majority of the
Board will be Independent Trustees, and the selection and nomination of new or additional Independent Trustees will be placed
within the discretion of the then- -existing
Independent Trustees.
6.
6.
Independent Legal Counsel, as defined in
Rule 0-l-1(a)(6)
under the 1940 Act, will be engaged to represent the Independent Trustees. The selection of such counsel will be within the discretion
of the then--existing
Independent Trustees.
7.
7.
Whenever a Subadviser is hired or terminated,
the Adviser will provide the Board with information showing the expected impact on the profitability of the Adviser.
8.
8.
The Board must evaluate any material conflicts
that may be present in a subadvisory arrangement. Specifically, whenever a subadviser change is proposed for a Subadvised Fund
(“Subadviser Change”) or the Board considers an existing Subadvisory Agreement as part of its annual review
process (“Subadviser Review”):
(a)
(a)
the Adviser will provide the Board, to the
extent not already being provided pursuant to Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, with all relevant information concerning:
(i)
(i)
any material interest in the proposed new
Subadviser, in the case of a Subadviser Change, or the Subadviser in the case of a Subadviser Review, held directly or indirectly
by the Adviser or a parent or sister company of the Adviser, and any material impact the proposed Subadvisory Agreement may have
on that interest;
(ii)
(ii)
any arrangement or understanding in which
the Adviser or any parent or sister company of the Adviser is a participant that (A) may have had a material effect on the proposed
Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review, or (B) may be materially affected by the proposed Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review;
(iii)
(iii)
any material interest in a Subadviser held
directly or indirectly by an officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund, or an officer or board member of the Adviser (other than
through a pooled investment vehicle not controlled by such person); and
17
-24-
-54-
(iv)
(iv)
any other information that may be relevant
to the Board in evaluating any potential material conflicts of interest in the proposed Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review.
(b)
(b)
the Board, including a majority of the Independent
Trustees, will make a separate finding, reflected in the Board minutes, that the Subadviser Change or continuation after Subadviser
Review is in the best interests of the Subadvised Fund and its shareholders and, based on the information provided to the Board,
does not involve a conflict of interest from which the Adviser, a Subadviser, any officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund, or
any officer or board member of the Adviser derives an inappropriate advantage.
9.
9.
Each Subadvised Fund will disclose in its
registration statement the Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
10.
10.
In the event that the Commission adopts a
rule under the 1940 Act providing substantially similar relief to that in the order requested in the Application, the requested
order will expire on the effective date of that rule.
11.
11.
Any new Subadvisory Agreement or any amendment
to an existing Investment Advisory Agreement or Subadvisory Agreement that directly or indirectly results in an increase in the
aggregate advisory fee rate payable by the Subadvised Fund will be submitted to the Subadvised Fund’s shareholders for approval.
VI.
Procedural Matters
VI. | PROCEDURAL MATTERS |
All
of the requirements for execution and filing of this Application on behalf of Applicants have been complied with in accordance
with the applicable organizational documents of Applicants, and the undersigned officers of Applicants are fully authorized to
execute this Application and any amendments hereto. The resolutions of the Board
are attached as Exhibits A and B-1
through A-2 to this Application in accordance with the requirements of Rule 0-20-2(c)(1)
under the 1940 Act and the verifications required by Rule 0-20-2(d)
under the 1940 Act are attached as Exhibits C and DB-1
through B-2 to this Application. In accordance with the
requirements for a request for expedited review of this Application, marked copies of two recent applications seeking the same
relief as Applicants that are substantially identical as required by Rule 0-5(e) of the 1940 Act are attached as Exhibits C-1
through C-2.
Pursuant
to the requirements of Rule 0-20-2(f)
under the 1940 Act, the Trust states that its address is Total Fund Solution c/o U.S. Bank Global
Fund Services, 615 East Michigan Street, Milwaukee, WI 53202IndexIQ
Active ETF Trust, c/o IndexIQ Advisors LLC, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010, and the Adviser states that
its address is 810 Gleneagles Court, Suite 106, Baltimore, Maryland 21286IndexIQ
Advisors LLC, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010, and that all written communications regarding this Application
should be directed to the individuals and addresses indicated on the first page of this Application.
Applicants
desire that the Commission issue the requested order pursuant to Rule 0-50-5 under the 1940 Act without conducting a hearing.
VII.
Conclusion
VII. | CONCLUSION |
For the foregoing reasons, Applicants respectfully request that the Commission issue an order under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act granting the relief requested in the Application. Applicants submit that the requested exemption is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, consistent with the protection of investors and consistent with the purpose fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the 1940 Act.
[Signature Page Follows]
18
-25-
-55-
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each Applicant has caused this Application to be duly executed as of the date set forth below:
Respectfully
submitted, | ||
INDEXIQ ACTIVE ETF TRUST | ||
By: |
/s/
| |
Name:
| ||
Title: President | ||
INDEXIQ ADVISORS LLC | ||
By: |
/s/ Jack R. Benintende | |
Name: Jack R. Benintende | ||
Title:
|
| |
| |
| |
|
April
17
October 12, 2023
19
-26-
-56-
EXHIBIT INDEX
Sequential
Page Number
A-1 Secretary's Authorization - Authorizing Resolutions of Total Fund Solution 20
A-2 Officer's
Authorization 21
B-1Verification
of Total Fund Solution Pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) 22
B-2Verification
of Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC Pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) 23
SEQUENTIAL PAGE NUMBER | ||
A-1 | Secretary’s Authorization – Authorizing Resolutions of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust | 24 |
A-2 | Officer’s Authorization | 26 |
B-1 | Verification of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) | 27 |
B-2 | Verification of IndexIQ Advisors LLC pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) | 28 |
C-1 | Marked copy of 40-APP/A against Total Fund Solution and Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC (File No. 812-15425) | 29 |
C-2 | Marked copy of 40-APP/A against Two Roads Shared Trust and Hypatia Capital Management LLC (File No. 812-15428) | 65 |
C-1
23
-57-
Marked
copy of 40-APP/A against Advisors Series Trust and Semper Capital Management, L.P. (File No. 812-15231) 26
Marked
copy of 40-APP/A against Touchstone Strategic Trust, et al. (File C-2 No. 812-15408) 61
C-3 Marked
copy of the updated filing on 40-APP/A against the original Application 101
19
-58-
EXHIBIT
A--1
TOTAL
FUND SOLUTION
INDEXIQ ACTIVE ETF TRUST
AUTHORIZATION
TO FILE EXEMPTIVE ORDER
APPLICATION RELATING TO THE FUND
SECRETARY’S AUTHORIZATION
Authorization
to File Exemptive Order Application Relating to the Fund Secretary's Authorization
The
undersigned, ElaineMatthew EV.
RichardsCurtin,
hereby certifies that shehe is the duly appointed Secretary of Total Fund SolutionIndexIQ
Active ETF Trust (the “Trust”); that, with respect to the attached application for exemption from
the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”), the rules and forms thereunder and any
amendments thereto (such application along with any amendments, the “Application”), all actions necessary to
authorize the execution and filing of the Application under the AgreementAmended and Restated Declaration of Trust and By-laws
of the Trust have been taken and the person signing and filing the Application on behalf of the Trust is fully authorized to do
so; and that the following is a complete, true and correct copy of the resolutionresolutions adopted by the then Sole Initial TrusteeBoard of Trustees of the Trust on
July 29, 2021 and ratified by all Trusteesat a meeting
held on September 1721,
20212023,
in accordance with the By-laws of the Trust and that such resolutions have not
been revoked, modified, rescinded, or amended and are in full force and effect:
24
-59-
Sole
Initial Trustee Resolution
RESOLVED,
that the filing with the SEC by the officers of the Trust, in the name and on behalf of the Trust, of an
Application for an Order (the “Multi-Manager Application”) regarding exemptive relief for multi-managed funds with
aggregate fee disclosure, in conjunction with Cromwell Investments Advisors, LLC, is approved; and it isRESOLVED,
that the filing by IndexIQ ETF Trust and IndexIQ Active ETF Trust (the “Trusts”) of an application for an order (described
below) from the United States Securities and Exchange Commission under Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the
“1940 Act”), exempting the Trusts and their series (the “Funds”) from certain provisions of Section 15(a)
of the 1940 Act and certain disclosure requirements under various rules and forms, be, and it hereby is, authorized and approved:
The order would permit, among other things:
(1) | The Trusts, on behalf of the Funds, and IndexIQ Advisors LLC (the “Advisor”) to enter into or make material amendments to an agreement with one or more subadvisors of a Fund (each, a “Subadvisory Agreement”) believed by the Advisor and the Board of Trustees of a Trust to be appropriate, without the delay and expense of convening a special meeting of Fund shareholders to approve the Subadvisory Agreement; |
(2) | such other relief as the officers of the Trusts, in consultation with Trust counsel, deem necessary, desirable or appropriate; and it is further |
RESOLVED, that a Trustee or the proper officers of the Trusts, with the assistance of Trust counsel or others as may be required, are hereby authorized to prepare, execute and file any and all amendments to such application as may be necessary or appropriate; and it is further
FURTHER
RESOLVED,
that the filing with the SEC by the officers of the Trust, in the name andsuch
application shall be executed by or on behalf of the Trust, ofTrusts
by a Trustee or one or more amendments to the Application or Multi-Manager Application
in response to comments from the SEC staff, counsel or the officers of the Trust
is approved.
Full
Board Ratification
RESOLVED, and that the Multi-Manager
Exemptive Application for the Trust and the Adviser substantially in the form presented at this Meeting be, and it is hereby,
approved, ratifiedproper officers or a Trustee of the
Trusts, now or hereafter appointed, are hereby authorized to take any and accepted
in all respects and for filing with the SEC with such changes as Trust counsel
deems necessaryfurther actions that may be necessary
or appropriate to effectuate the foregoing resolutions with respect to the application and the matters described therein.
| |
Name: Matthew V. Curtin | |
Title:
|
20
25
-60-
EXHIBIT
A--2
TOTAL
FUND SOLUTION
INDEXIQ ADVISORS LLC
AUTHORIZATION
TO FILE EXEMPTIVE ORDER
APPLICATION RELATING TO THE FUND
OFFICER’S AUTHORIZATION
Authorization
to File Exemptive Order Application Relating to the Fund Officer's Authorization
The
undersigned, BrianJack
CR.
NelsonBenintende,
hereby certifies that he is the duly elected President of Cromwell InvestmentChief
Operating Officer of IndexIQ Advisors, LLC (“CromwellIndexIQ”);
that, with respect to the attached application for exemption from the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940, rules
and forms thereunder and any amendments thereto (such application along with any amendments, the “Application”),
all actions necessary to authorize the execution and filing of the Application under the charter documents of CromwellIndexIQ have been taken; and that the person signing and filing the Application by CromwellIndexIQ is fully authorized to do so.
| |
Name: Jack R. Benintende | |
Title:
|
21
26
-61-
EXHIBIT
B--1
TOTAL
FUND SOLUTION
INDEXIQ ACTIVE ETF TRUST
VERIFICATION
PURSUANT TO RULE 0-20-2(dD)
The
undersigned states he has duly executed the attached Application for an Exemptive Order dated April
17, 2023, for and on behalf of Total Fund
Solution; that he is the Chairperson and Interested Trustee of such trust; and that all action
by shareholders, trustees and other bodies necessary to authorize
the undersigned to execute and file such instrument has been taken. The undersigned further says that he is familiar with such
instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information
and belief.
| |
| |
|
22
27
-62-
EXHIBIT
B-2
CROMWELL
INVESTMENT ADVISORS, LLC
VERIFICATION
PURSUANT TO RULE 0-2(d)
The
undersigned states he has duly executed the attached Application for an Exemptive Order dated April
17October
12, 2023, for and on behalf of Cromwell
Investment Advisors, LLC; that he is an Officer of such company; and that
all action by officers, directors and other bodies necessary
to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument has been taken. The undersigned further says that he is familiar
with such instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information
and belief.IndexIQ Active ETF Trust; in his capacity
as President of such entity;
and that all action by shareholders,
trustees and
other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument has been taken. The undersigned further
says that he is familiar with such instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the facts therein set forth are true to the
best of his knowledge, information and belief.
| ||||
By: | /s/ Kirk C. Lehneis | |||
Name: | Kirk C. Lehneis | |||
Title: | President |
28
-63-
EXHIBIT B-2
INDEXIQ ADVISORS LLC
VERIFICATION PURSUANT TO RULE 0-2(D)
The undersigned states he has duly executed the attached Application for an Exemptive Order dated October 12, 2023, for and on behalf of IndexIQ Advisors LLC; in his capacity as Chief Operating Officer Officer of such entity; and that all action by officers, directors and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument has been taken. The undersigned further says that he is familiar with such instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information and belief.
INDEXIQ ADVISORS | |||
By: | /s/ | ||
Name: |
| ||
Title: | Vice President |
29
-64-
Exhibit C-2
Marked
copy of 40 APP/A against
Two Roads Shared Trust and Hypatia Capital Management LLC
(File No. 812 15428)
-65-
40-APP/A
1 hypatiacapmgmt_40appa.htm 40-APP/A
EXPEDITED
REVIEW REQUESTED UNDER 17 CFR 270.0-5270.0-5(dD)
File
No. 812-15428[ ]
U.S.
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION As
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 12, 2023
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington, D.C. 20549
APPLICATION
FOR AN ORDER OF EXEMPTION
PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(C) OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS AMENDED
(THE “1940 ACT”), FROM: (1) CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF SECTION
15(A) OF THE 1940 ACT AND
(2) CERTAIN DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS UNDER VARIOUS RULES AND FORMS
In the Matter of
TWO
ROADS SHAREDINDEXIQ
ACTIVE ETF TRUST
225
Pictoria Drive, Suite 450 Cincinnati, OH 45246
AND
HYPATIA
CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
IndexIQ
Advisors LLC
43051 ParkMadison Avenue,
19th Floor
New
York, NY 10022New
York 10010
AMENDMENT
NO. 2 TO AN APPLICATION FOR AN ORDER OF EXEMPTION
PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(c) OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS
AMENDED (THE
“1940 ACT”), FROM: (1) CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF SECTION 15(a) OF
THE 1940 ACT AND (2) CERTAIN DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS
UNDER VARIOUS
RULES AND FORMS
and
-66-
INDEXIQ
ADVISORS LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010
Please direct all communications regarding this Application to:
Stacy
H. Louizos Blank Rome, LLP 1271Matthew V. Curtin,
Esq.
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
51
Madison Avenue of
the Americas
New
York, NY 10020 stacy.louizos@blankromeNew
York 10010
(212) 576-7634 / mcurtin@indexiq.com.
Withwith
a copy to:
Timothy
Burdick Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC 80 Arkay Drive, Suite 110 Hauppauge,
NY 11788 tburdick@ultimusfundsolutions
Barry
I. Pershkow
Chapman and Cutler
LLP
1717 Rhode Island Avenue
NW
Washington,
DC 20036
(202)
478-6492 / pershkow@chapman.com
Page
1 of 27 sequentially numbered pages (including exhibits) As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 14, 2023
*
Explanatory note: This amendment is being filed to include both applicants as filers on the electronic filing. The only changes
to the prior amendment which was filed on March 21, 2023 (accession number 0001580642- 23-001632) are to the amendment number
and dates of the amendment and the filing.This
Application (including Exhibits) contains 111 pages.
-67-
UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA
BEFORE THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington
WASHINGTON,
D.C. 20549
In the Matter of
TWO
ROADS SHARED TRUST 225 Pictoria Drive, Suite 450 Cincinnati, OH 45246
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust
51 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010
HYPATIA
CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC 430 Park Avenue, 19th Floor New York, NY 10022
and
IndexIQ Advisors LLC
51 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010 APPLICATION FOR AN ORDER OF EXEMPTION PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(C) OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS AMENDED (THE “1940 ACT”), FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF SECTION 15(A) OF THE 1940 ACT AND FROM CERTAIN DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS UNDER VARIOUS RULES AND FORMS
Investment
Company Act of 1940 File No. 812-15428
-68-
)[ ] AMENDMENT
NO. 2 TO AN
) APPLICATION
FOR AN ORDER
) OF
EXEMPTION PURSUANT TO
) SECTION
6(c) OF THE
) INVESTMENT
COMPANY ACT OF
) 1940,
AS AMENDED (THE “1940
) ACT”),
FROM: (1) CERTAIN
) PROVISIONS
OF SECTION 15(a)
) OF
THE 1940 ACT AND (2)
) CERTAIN
DISCLOSURE
) REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
) VARIOUS
RULES AND FORMS
I. | INTRODUCTION |
Two
Roads SharedIndexIQ
Active ETF Trust (the “Trust”),
a registered open--end
management investment company that offers one or more series of shares, on its own behalf, and on behalf of each series (each,
a “Fund” and Hypatia
Capital Management LLCcollectively, the “Funds”),
and IndexIQ Advisors LLC, the
investment adviser to the Funds (the “Initial
Adviser” or the “Adviser” and, together
with the Trust, the “Applicants”),[1] the investment adviser to the Hypatia Women CEO ETF (the
“Fund”), hereby submit this application (the “Application”) to the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the “Commission”) for an order of exemption pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended (the “1940 Act”).
Applicants
request an order exempting them from Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act to permit the Adviser, subject to the approval of the board of trustees
of the Trust (the “Board” or “Trustees”)[2] ,
including a majority of those who are not “interested persons” of the Trust or the Adviser, as defined in Section 2(a)(19)
of the 1940 Act (the “Independent Trustees”), to take certain actions without obtaining shareholder approval as follows:
(i) select investment 2 subadvisers
(each a “Subadviser” and collectively, the “Subadvisers”) for all or a portion of the assets of
the FundFunds pursuant
to an investment subadvisory agreement with each Subadviser (each a “Subadvisory Agreement” and collectively, the
“Subadvisory Agreements”); and (ii) materially amend Subadvisory Agreements with the Subadvisers.
[1]The
term “Adviser” means (i) the Initial Adviser, (ii) its successors, and (iii) any entity controlling, controlled by,
or under common control with, the Initial Adviser or its successors that serves as the primary adviser to a Subadvised Fund (as
defined below). For the purposes of the requested order, “successor” is limited to an entity that results from a reorganization
into another jurisdiction or a change in the type of business organization.
1 The term “Adviser” means (i) the Adviser, (ii) its successors, and (iii) any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, the Adviser or its successors that serves as the primary adviser to a Subadvised Fund (as defined below). For the purposes of the requested order, “successor” is limited to an entity that results from a reorganization into another jurisdiction or a change in the type of business organization.
2 The term “Board” also includes the board of trustees or directors of a future Subadvised Fund (as defined below), if different from the board of trustees of the Trust.
-2-
-69-
[2]The
term “Board” also includes the board of trustees or directors of a future Subadvised Fund (as defined below), if different
from the board of trustees of the Trust.
As
used herein, a “Subadviser” for a Fund is any investment adviser that enters into a Subadvisory Agreement with respect
to a Fund. Applicants also apply for an order of the Commission under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act exempting the FundFunds from certain disclosure obligations under the following rules and forms: (i) Item 19(a)(3) of Form N-1A;
(ii) Items 22(c)(1)(ii), 22(c)(1)(iii), 22(c)(8), and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
(the “Exchange Act”); and (iii) Sections 6-07(26-07(2) (a), (b), and(c)(c) of Regulation S--X
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”). Similar to the order the Commission recently
granted to Carillon Series Trust, et al.[,3] , in addition to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers (both as defined below), the relief described in this Application would extend to any Subadviser that is an “affiliated
person” (as such term is defined in Section 2(a)(3) of the 1940 Act) of thea Fund or the Adviser for reasons other than serving as investment subadviser to one or more Funds (an “Affiliated
Subadviser”).[4]
3 The Commission issued an order granting the expanded relief requested by the Application. Carillon Series Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 33464 (May 2, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33494 (May 29, 2019) (Order) (the “Carillon Order”). Total Fund Solution and Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34901 (April 26, 2023) (Notice) and No. 34921 (May 23, 2023) (Order) (the “Total Fund Solution Order”). See also Two Roads Shared Trust and Hypatia Capital Management LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34892 (April 20, 2023) (Notice) and No. 34918 (May 16, 2923) (Order) (the “Two Roads Order”). See also Touchstone Strategic Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34790 (December 22, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34809 (January 18, 2023) (Order) (the “Touchstone Order”). See also Advisors Series Trust and Semper Capital Management, L.P., Investment Company Act Release No. 34500 (February 9, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34528 (March 8, 2022) (Order) (the “Semper Order”). See also New Age Alpha Trust and New Age Alpha Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34322 (July 6, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34348 (August 3, 2021) (Order) (the “New Age Alpha Trust Order”). See also Listed Funds Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34293 (June 2, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34321 (June 29, 2021) (Order) (“LFT Order”). See also Azzad Funds, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34241 (April 5, 2021) and No. 34261 (April 30, 2021) (“Azzad Order”). See also ETF Series Solutions and Distillate Capital Partners LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34169 (January 11, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34190 (February 8, 2021) (Order) (the “Distillate Capital Order”); Esoterica Thematic Trust and Esoterica Capital LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34161 (January 4, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34185 (February 1, 2021) (Order) (the “Esoterica Order”); ETF Series Solutions and Clearshares LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34144 (December 21, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34174 (January 19, 2021) (Order) (the “Clearshares Order”); OSI ETF Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 33678 (October 29, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33705 (November 26, 2019) (Order) (the “OSI ETF Order”); and Investment Managers Series Trust II, et al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34075 (October 27, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34104 (November 23, 2020) (Order) (the “Investment Managers Order”).
-3-
-70-
[3]The
Commission issued an order granting the expanded relief requested by the Application. Carillon Series Trust, et al., Investment
Company Act Release No. 33464 (May 2, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33494 (May 29, 2019) (Order) (the “Carillon Order”).
See also Touchstone Strategic Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34790 (December 22, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34809
(January 18, 2023) (Order) (the “Touchstone Order”). See also Advisors Series Trust and Semper Capital Management,
L.P., Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34500 (February 9, 2022) (Notice) and No. 34528 (March 8, 2022) (Order) (the “Semper
Capital Management Order”). See also Investment Managers Series Trust and Hamilton Lane Advisors, L.L.C., Investment Company
Act Rel. No. 34370 (September 1, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34385 (September 27, 2021) (Order) (the “Hamilton Lane Order”).
See also Uncommon Investment Funds Trust and Uncommon Investment Advisors LLC, Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34331 (July 15,
2021) (Notice) and No. 34354 (August 11, 2021) (Order) (the “Uncommon Investment Funds Order”). See also New Age Alpha
Trust and New Age Alpha Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Rel. No. 34322 (July 6, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34348 (August 3,
2021) (Order) (the “New Age Alpha Trust Order”). See also Listed Funds Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Rel. No.
34293 (June 2, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34321 (June 29, 2021) (Order) (“LFT Order”). See also Azzad Funds, et al., Investment
Company Act Rel. No. 34241 (April 5, 2021) and No. 34261 (April 30, 2021) (“Azzad Order”). See also ETF Series Solutions
and Distillate Capital Partners LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34169 (January 11, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34190 (February
8, 2021) (Order) (the “Distillate Capital Order”); Esoterica Thematic Trust and Esoterica Capital LLC, Investment
Company Act Release No. 34161 (January 4, 2021) (Notice) and No. 34185 (February 1, 2021) (Order) (the “Esoterica Order”);
ETF Series Solutions and Clearshares LLC, Investment Company Act Release No. 34144 (December 21, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34174
(January 19, 2021) (Order) (the “Clearshares Order”); OSI ETF Trust, et. al., Investment Company Act Release No. 33678
(October 29, 2019) (Notice) and No. 33705 (November 26, 2019) (Order) (the “OSI ETF Order”); and Investment Managers
Series Trust II, et. al., Investment Company Act Release No. 34075 (October 27, 2020) (Notice) and No. 34104 (November 23, 2020)
(Order) (the “Investment Managers Order”).
[4]Section
2(a)(3) of the 1940 Act defines “affiliated person” as follows: “Affiliated person” of another person
means (A) any person directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or holding with power to vote, 5 per centum or more of the outstanding
voting securities of such other person; (B) any person 5 per centum
3
4 Section 2(a)(3) of the 1940 Act defines “affiliated person” as follows: “Affiliated person” of another person means (A) any person directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or holding with power to vote, 5 per centum or more of the outstanding voting securities of such other person; (B) any person 5 per centum or more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly owned, controlled, or held with power to vote, by such other person; (C) any person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, such other person; (D) any officer, director, partner, co-partner, or employee of such other person; (E) if such other person is an investment company, any investment adviser thereof or any member of an advisory board thereof; and (F) if such other person is an unincorporated investment company not having a board of directors, the depositor thereof.
-4-
-71-
Applicants
request that the relief sought herein apply to Applicants, as well as to any existing or future registered open--end
management investment company or series thereof that intends to rely on the requested order in the future and (i) is advised by
the Adviser; (ii) uses the multi--manager
structure described in this Application; and (iii) complies with the terms and conditions set forth herein (each, together with
any Fund that currently uses the multi--manager
structure described in this Application, a “Subadvised Fund” and collectively, the “Subadvised Funds”).[5]
Applicants
are seeking this exemption primarily to enhance the ability of the Adviser and the Board to obtain for a Subadvised Fund the services
of one or more Subadvisers believed by the Adviser and the Board to be particularly well suited for all or a portion of the assets
of the Subadvised Fund, and to make material amendments to Subadvisory Agreements believed by the Adviser and the Board to be
appropriate, without the delay and expense of convening special meetings of shareholders to approve the Subadvisory Agreements. Under this structure, the Adviser, in its capacity as investment adviser, would evaluate, allocate assets to and oversee the Subadvisers,
and make recommendations about their hiring, termination and replacement to the Board, at all times subject to the authority of
the Board. This structure is commonly referred to as a “multi- -manager”
structure. In addition, Applicants are seeking relief from certain disclosure requirements concerning fees paid to Subadvisers.
For
the reasons discussed below, Applicants believe that the requested relief is 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. Applicants believe
that the Subadvised FundFunds would be negatively impacted without the requested relief because of delays in hiring or replacing Subadvisers and
costs associated with the proxy solicitation to approve new or amended Subadvisory Agreements.
II. | BACKGROUND |
A.
A. The
Trust
or
more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly owned, controlled, or held with power to vote, by such
other person; (C) any person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, such other person;
(D) any officer, director, partner, copartner, or employee of such other person; (E) if such other person is an investment company,
any investment adviser thereof or any member of an advisory board thereof; and (F) if such other person is an unincorporated investment
company not having a board of directors, the depositor thereof.
5 All registered open-end investment companies that currently intend to rely on the requested order are named as Applicants. The Funds that currently are, or that currently intend to be, a Subadvised Fund are identified in this Application. Any entity that relies on the requested order will do so only in accordance with the terms and conditions contained in this Application.
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[5]All
registered open-end investment companies that currently intend to rely on the requested order are named as Applicants. The Fund
that currently is, or that currently intends to be, a Subadvised Fund is identified in this Application. Any entity that relies
on the requested order will do so only in accordance with the terms and conditions contained in this Application.
4
The
Trust is registered under the 1940 Act as an open--end
management investment company organized as a Delaware statutory trust. The Adviser serves as “investment adviser,”
as defined in Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act, to theeach Fund. The Trust intends to operate the FundFunds under a multi--manager
structure and which will be offered and sold pursuant to a registration statement on Form N--1A. The Board consists of one (1) interested trustee and four
(4) trustees, each of whom serves as an Independent TrusteeTrustees.
The
Trust offers shares of multiple series, each with its own distinct investment objectives, policies, and restrictions.[6]
The Adviser has retained a Subadviser to provide investment advisory services to theeach Fund. The6 Each Fund will operate from its inception under a multi--manager
structure.
B.
B.
The Adviser
Hypatia
Capital ManagementIndexIQ Advisors LLC, with its business address at 430 Park51
Madison Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, NY
10022New York 10010, is a Delaware limited
liability company (LLC) registered with the Commission
as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the “Advisers Act”), and serves
as investment adviser to the FundFunds. The Adviser has been operating since July 2007, and has been registered
as an investment adviser with the Commission since August 9, 2007. The Adviser serves as investment adviser to the
FundFunds
pursuant to an investment advisory agreementagreements with theeach Fund (each, an “Investment Advisory Agreement” and, together, the “Investment Advisory
Agreements”). Any future Adviser also will be registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Advisers
Act.
Consistent
with the terms of a Subadvised Fund’s Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser may, subject
to the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and the shareholders of the applicable
Subadvised Fund (if required by applicable law), delegate portfolio management responsibilities of all or a portion of the
assets of a Subadvised Fund to a Subadviser. The
Adviser retains overall responsibility for the management and investment of the assets of the Subadvised FundFunds. With
respect to each Subadvised Fund, the Adviser’s responsibilities include, for example, recommending the removal or
replacement of Subadvisers, and allocating the portion of that Subadvised Fund’s assets to any given Subadviser and
reallocating those assets as necessary from time to time.
The Adviser evaluates, selects and recommends Subadvisers for the Subadvised FundFunds,
and monitors and reviews each Subadviser 5 and
its performance and its compliance with the applicable Subadvised Fund’s investment policies and
restrictions.
[6]Each
Subadvised Fund discloses in its registration statement that it intends to operate pursuant to the order as requested in
this Application, if granted. The prospectus for a Subadvised Fund will continue to include the disclosure required by
Condition 2 below at all times subsequent to the approval required by Condition 1 below. If a Subadvised Fund has obtained
shareholder approval to operate under the multi-manager structure described herein prior to the issuance of an order as
requested in this Application, the prospectus for the Subadvised Fund will at all times following such shareholder approval
contain appropriate disclosure that the Subadvised Fund has applied for exemptive relief to operate under the multi-manager
structure described herein, including the ability to hire new Subadvisers and materially amend an existing Subadvisory
Agreement without soliciting further shareholder vote.
6 Each Subadvised Fund will disclose in its registration statement that it intends to operate pursuant to the order as requested in this Application, if granted. The prospectus for a Subadvised Fund will continue to include the disclosure required by Condition 2 below at all times subsequent to the approval required by Condition 1 below. If a Subadvised Fund has obtained shareholder approval to operate under the multi-manager structure described herein prior to the issuance of an order as requested in this Application, the prospectus for the Subadvised Fund will at all times following such shareholder approval contain appropriate disclosure that the Subadvised Fund has applied for exemptive relief to operate under the multi-manager structure described herein, including the ability to hire new Subadvisers and materially amend an existing Subadvisory Agreement without soliciting further shareholder vote.
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Each Investment Advisory Agreement has been or will be approved by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and by the shareholders of the relevant Fund in the manner required by Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act. The terms of the Investment Advisory Agreements comply or will comply with Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Applicants are not seeking an exemption from the provisions of the 1940 Act with respect to the Investment Advisory Agreements. Pursuant to the terms of each Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser, subject to the oversight of the Board, has agreed or will agree to (i) provide continuous investment management for each Fund; (ii) determine the securities and other investments to be purchased, retained, sold or loaned by each Fund and the portion of such assets to be invested or held uninvested as cash; and (iii) exercise full discretion and act for each Fund in the same manner and with the same force and effect as such Fund itself might or could do with respect to purchases, sales, or other transactions and with respect to all other things necessary or incidental to the furtherance or conduct of such purchases, sales or other transactions. The Adviser also is or will be responsible for effecting transactions for each Fund and selecting brokers or dealers to execute such transactions for each Fund. The Adviser will periodically review each Fund’s investment policies and strategies and, based on the need of a particular Fund, may recommend changes to the investment policies and strategies of the Fund for consideration by the Board.
Each
Investment Advisory Agreement permits or will permit the Adviser to enter into Subadvisory Agreements with one or more Subadvisers. Pursuant to its authority under the Investment Advisory Agreements, the Adviser has entered or will enter into Subadvisory Agreements
as described below under “The Subadvisers and the Subadvised FundFunds.” If the name of any Subadvised Fund contains the name of a subadviser, the name of the Adviser that serves as the primary adviser
to the Subadvised Fund, or a trademark or trade name that is owned by or publicly used to identify that Adviser, will precede
the name of the subadviser.
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For its services to each Fund, the Adviser receives or will receive an investment advisory fee from that Fund as specified in the applicable Investment Advisory Agreement. The investment advisory fees are calculated based on the average daily net assets of the particular Fund, calculated daily as of the close of business on each business day during the month.
C.
C.
The Subadvisers and the Subadvised FundFunds
Pursuant
to the authority under the Investment Advisory Agreements, the Adviser may enter into Subadvisory Agreements with various Subadvisers
on behalf of thea Fund. The Initial Adviser has entered into a Subadvisory AgreementAgreements with Vident(1)
NYL Investors LLC (“NYL Investors”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ Ultra Short Duration ETF; (2)
MacKay Shields LLC (“MacKay Shields”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ MacKay ESG Core Plus Bond
ETF, IQ MacKay ESG High Income ETF, IQ MacKay Multi-Sector Income ETF, IQ MacKay Municipal Insured ETF, IQ MacKay Municipal Intermediate
ETF, and IQ MacKay California Municipal Intermediate ETF; (3) Winslow Capital Management, LLC (“Winslow”),
which services as the Subadviser for the IQ Winslow Large Cap Growth ETF and IQ Winslow Focused Large Cap Growth ETF; and (4)CBRE Investment Advisory, LLC (“Vident”). VidentManagement
Listed Real Assets LLC (“CBRE”), which serves as the Subadviser for the IQ CBRE Real Assets ETF. NYL Investors
and MacKay Shields are considered an Affiliated Subadviser (as defined above). Winslow and CBRE each is considered
a Non- Affiliated Subadviser (as defined below).
The
Adviser also may, in the future, enter into Subadvisory Agreements with other Subadvisers on behalf of thea Fund and other Subadvised Funds.
6
With
respect to any future Subadviser that is wholly owned by the Adviser or the Adviser’s parent company, the Adviser will have
overall responsibility for the affairs of such Subadviser, and generally will approve certain actions by that Subadviser that
could materially affect the operations of the Adviser and its subsidiaries as a group. Vident Each Subadviser has, and any future Subadviser
will have, their own employees who would provide investment services to a Subadvised Fund.
TheEach Subadviser is, and any future Subadvisers
will be, “investment advisers” to the Subadvised FundFunds within the meaning of Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act and provide, or will provide, investment management services
to the Subadvised FundFunds subject to, without limitation, the requirements of Sections 15(c) and 36(b) of the 1940 Act. In addition, theeach Subadviser is, and any future Subadvisers will be, registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the
Advisers Act or not subject to such registration. The Adviser selects Subadvisers based on the Adviser’s evaluation of the
Subadvisers’ skills in managing assets pursuant to particular investment styles, and recommends their hiring to the Board. In the future, the Adviser may employ multiple Subadvisers for one or more of anythe Subadvised FundFunds.
In those instances, the Adviser would allocate and, as appropriate, reallocate a Subadvised Fund’s assets among the Subadvisers.
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The Adviser engages or will engage in an ongoing analysis of the continued advisability of retaining a Subadviser and makes recommendations to the Board as needed. The Adviser also negotiates and renegotiates the terms of the Subadvisory Agreements with a Subadviser, including the fees paid to the Subadvisers, and makes recommendations to the Board as needed.
The
Subadvisers, subject to the oversight of the Adviser and the Board, determine or will determine the securities and other instruments
to be purchased, sold or entered into by a Subadvised Fund’s portfolio or a portion thereof, and place orders with brokers
or dealers that they select.[7] The Subadvisers keep or will keep
certain records required by the 1940 Act and the Advisers Act to be maintained on behalf of the relevant Subadvised Fund, and
assist or will assist the Adviser to maintain the Subadvised FundFunds’s compliance with the relevant requirements of the 1940 Act. The Subadvisers monitor or will monitor the respective
Subadvised FundFunds’s investments and provide or will provide periodic reports to the Board and the Adviser. The Subadvisers also make
or will make their officers and employees available to the Adviser and the Board to review the investment performance and investment
policies of the Subadvised FundFunds.
The Subadvisory Agreements were or will be approved by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, in accordance with Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act.
[7]For
the purposes of this Application, a “Subadviser” also includes an investment subadviser that provides or will provide
the Adviser with a model portfolio reflecting a specific strategy, style or focus with respect to the investment of all or a portion
of a Subadvised Fund’s assets. The Adviser may use the model portfolio to determine the securities and other instruments
to be purchased, sold, or entered into by a Subadvised Fund’s portfolio or a portion thereof, and place orders with brokers
or dealers that it selects.
7
The terms of each Subadvisory Agreement comply or will comply fully with the requirements of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Each Subadvisory Agreement will set forth the duties of the Subadviser and precisely describe the compensation paid to the Subadviser.
After
an initial two--year
period, the terms of the Subadvisory Agreements are reviewed and renewed on an annual basis by the Board, including a majority
of the Independent Trustees in accordance with Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act. The Board dedicates substantial time to review contract
matters, including matters relating to Investment Advisory Agreements and Subadvisory Agreements. With respect to theeach Subadvised Fund, the Board reviews comprehensive materials received from the Adviser, the Subadviser, independent third
parties and independent counsel. Applicants will continue this annual review and renewal process for Subadvisory Agreements in
accordance with the 1940 Act if the relief requested herein is granted by the Commission.
7 For the purposes of this Application, a “Subadviser” also includes an investment subadviser that will provide the Adviser with a model portfolio reflecting a specific strategy, style or focus with respect to the investment of all or a portion of a Subadvised Fund’s assets. The Adviser may use the model portfolio to determine the securities and other instruments to be purchased, sold, or entered into by a Subadvised Fund’s portfolio or a portion thereof, and place orders with brokers or dealers that it selects.
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The
Board reviews information provided by the Adviser and Subadvisers when it is asked to approve or renew Subadvisory Agreements.
The A Subadvised
Fund discloses in its statutory prospectus that a discussion regarding the basis for the Board’s approval and renewal of
the Investment Advisory Agreements and any applicable Subadvisory Agreements is available in the Subadvised FundFunds’s annual or semi--annual
report to shareholders for the relevant period in accordance with Item 10(a)(1)(iii) of Form N--1A. The information provided to the Board is maintained as part of the records of the respective Subadvised Fund pursuant to Rule
31a--1(b)(4)
and Rule 31a--2
under the 1940 Act.
Pursuant
to each Subadvisory Agreement, the Adviser has agreed or will agree to pay each Subadviser a fee, based on the percentage of the
assets of a Subadvised Fund, from the fee received by the Adviser from a Subadvised Fund under the Investment Advisory Agreement.[8] Each Subadviser will bear its own expenses of providing investment management services to a Subadvised Fund.
III. | REQUEST FOR EXEMPTIVE RELIEF |
Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act provides that the Commission may exempt any person, security, or transaction or any class or classes of persons, securities, or transactions from any provisions of the 1940 Act, or any rule thereunder, if such relief is 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. Applicants believe that the requested relief described in this Application meets this standard.
[8]A
Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser.
8
1.R egulatory1. Regulatory Background
‘
8 A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser.
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IV. | APPLICABLE LAW AND DISCUSSION |
A.
A. Shareholder
Vote
Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act states, in part, that it is unlawful for any person to act as an investment adviser to a registered investment company “except pursuant to a written contract, which contract, whether with such registered company or with an investment adviser of such registered company, has been approved by the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of such registered company.”
Section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act defines an “investment adviser” as any person who, pursuant to an agreement with such registered investment company or with an investment adviser of such registered investment company, is empowered to determine what securities or other property shall be purchased or sold by such registered investment company. Consequently, the Subadvisers are deemed to be within the definition of an “investment adviser” and, therefore, the Subadvisory Agreements are each subject to Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act to the same extent as the Investment Advisory Agreements.
Therefore, Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act requires a majority of the outstanding voting securities of a Subadvised Fund to approve Subadvisory Agreements whenever the Adviser proposes to the Board to hire new Subadvisers for a Subadvised Fund. This provision would also require shareholder approval by a majority vote for any material amendment to Subadvisory Agreements.
The
Subadvisory Agreements are required to terminate automatically and immediately upon their “assignment,” which could
occur upon a change in control of the Subadvisers.[9]
Rule
2a--6 under
the 1940 Act provides that certain transactions that do not result in a “change in actual control or management of the investment
adviser” to a registered investment company are not assignments for purposes of Section 15(a)(4) of the 1940 Act, thereby
effectively providing an exemption from the shareholder voting requirements in Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Applicants do not
believe that Rule 2a--6
under the 1940 Act provides a safe harbor to recommend, hire and terminate Subadvisers. Each Subadviser is expected to run its
own day- -to--day
operations and each will have its own investment personnel. Therefore, in certain instances appointing certain Subadvisers could
be viewed as a change in management and, as a result, an “assignment” within the meaning of the 1940 Act.
2.R equested2. Requested Relief
Applicants
seek relief to (i) select Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers, for all or a portion of the assets of a Subadvised Fund
and enter into Subadvisory Agreements and (ii) materially amend Subadvisory Agreements with such Subadvisers, each subject to
the approval approval required under Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act.
Such relief would include, without limitation, the replacement or reinstatement of any Subadviser with respect to which
a Subadvisory Agreement has automatically terminated as a result of an “assignment,” within the meaning of Section
2(a)(4) of the 1940 Act. Applicants believe that
the relief sought should be granted by the Commission because (1) the Adviser either will operate a Subadvised Fund, or may operate
the Subadvised Fund, in a manner that is different from conventional investment companies; (2) the relief will benefit shareholders
by enabling the Subadvised FundFunds to operate in a less costly and more efficient manner; and (3) Applicants will consent to a number of conditions that
adequately address the policy concerns of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act, including conditions designed to ensure that shareholder
interests are adequately protected through Board oversight.
[9]See
Section 15(a)(4) of the 1940 Act. Section 2(a)(4) of the 1940 Act defines “assignment” as any direct or indirect transfer
or hypothecation of a contract.
9 of the Board, including a majority of the
Independent Trustees, without obtaining shareholder
9 See Section 15(a)(4) of the 1940 Act. Section 2(a)(4) of the 1940 Act defines “assignment” as any direct or indirect transfer or hypothecation of a contract.
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(a)O perations (a) Operations of
the Trust. Section 15(a) was designed to
protect the interests and expectations of a registered investment company’s shareholders by requiring they approve investment
advisory contracts, including subadvisory contracts.[10]
Section 15(a) is predicated on the belief that if a registered investment company is to be managed by an investment
adviser different from the investment adviser selected by shareholders at the time of the investment, the new investment adviser
should be approved by shareholders.[11] 11 The relief
sought in this Application is consistent with this public policy.
In
the case of a traditional investment company, the investment adviser is a single entity that employs one or more individuals as
portfolio managers to make the day--to--day
investment decisions. The investment adviser may terminate or hire portfolio managers without board or shareholder approval and
has sole discretion to set the compensation it pays to the portfolio managers. Alternatively, for subadvised funds, the investment
adviser is not normally responsible for the day--to-
-day investment decisions and instead, the
investment adviser selects, oversees, and evaluates subadvisers who ultimately are responsible for the day--to--day
investment decisions.
Primary responsibility for management of a Subadvised Fund’s assets, including the selection and oversight of the Subadvisers, is vested in the Adviser, subject to the oversight of the Board.
Applicants
believe that it is consistent with the protection of investors to vest the selection and oversight of the Subadvisers in the Adviser
in light of Applicants’ multi- -manager
structure, as well as the shareholders’ expectation that the Adviser is in possession of information necessary to select
the most capable Subadvisers. The Adviser has the
requisite 10 expertise to evaluate, select and oversee the Subadvisers. The Adviser will not normally make day--to--day
investment decisions for a Subadvised Fund.[12]12
[10]See
Section 1(b)(6) of the 1940 Act.
10 See Section 1(b)(6) of the 1940 Act.
11 Hearings on S. 3580 before a Subcomm. of the Senate Comm. on Banking and Currency, 76th Cong., 3d Sess. 253 (1940) (statement of David Schenker).
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[11]Hearings
on S. 3580 before a Subcomm. of the Senate Comm. on Banking and Currency, 76th Cong., 3d Sess. 253 (1940) (statement of David
Schenker).
From the perspective of the shareholder, the role of the Subadvisers is substantially equivalent to the role of the individual portfolio managers employed by an investment adviser to a traditional investment company. The individual portfolio managers and the Subadvisers are each charged with the selection of portfolio investments in accordance with a Subadvised Fund’s investment objectives and policies and have no broad supervisory, management or administrative responsibilities with respect to a Subadvised Fund. Shareholders expect the Adviser, subject to review and approval of the Board, to select a Subadviser who is in the best position to achieve a Subadvised Fund’s investment objective. Shareholders also rely on the Adviser for the overall management of a Subadvised Fund and a Subadvised Fund’s total investment performance.
Whenever
required by Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, the Board will request and the Adviser and each Subadviser will furnish such information
as may be reasonably necessary for the Board to evaluate the terms of the Investment Advisory Agreements and the Subadvisory Agreements. The information that is provided to the Board will be maintained as part of the records of the Subadvised FundFunds in accordance with the applicable recordkeeping requirements under the 1940 Act and made available to the Commission
in the manner prescribed by the 1940 Act.
In
addition, the Adviser and the Board will consider the reasonableness of the Subadviser’s compensation with respect to each
Subadvised Fund for which the Subadviser will provide portfolio management services. Although
only the Adviser’s fee is payable directly by a Subadvised Fund, and the Subadviser’s fee is payable by the Adviser,[13]13
the Subadviser’s fee directly bears on the amount and reasonableness of the Adviser’s fee payable by a Subadvised
Fund. Accordingly, the Adviser and the Board will analyze the fees paid to Subadvisers in evaluating the reasonableness of the
overall arrangements.
With respect to oversight, Applicants note that the Adviser performs and will perform substantially identical oversight of all Subadvisers, regardless of whether they are affiliated with the Adviser. Such oversight is similar in many respects to how the Adviser would oversee its own internal portfolio management teams.
(b) (b) Lack of Economic Incentives. In allocating the management of Subadvised Fund assets between itself and one or more Subadvisers, Applicants acknowledge
that the Adviser has an incentive to consider the benefit it will receive, directly or indirectly, from the fee paid for the management
of those assets.
12 Although the Adviser will not normally make such day-to-day investment decisions, it may manage all or a portion of a Subadvised Fund.
13 A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser.
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[12]Although
the Adviser will not normally make such day-to-day investment decisions, it may manage all or a portion of a Subadvised Fund.
[13]A
Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser.
11 However, Applicants believe that the protections
afforded by the conditions set forth in this Application would prevent the Adviser from acting to the detriment of a Subadvised
Fund and its shareholders. Applicants assert that the proposed conditions are designed to provide the Board with sufficient independence
and the resources and information it needs to monitor and address conflicts of interest. In particular, the Adviser will provide
the Board with any information that may be relevant to the Board’s evaluation of material conflicts of interest present
in any subadvisory arrangement when the Board is considering, with respect to a Subadvised Fund, a change in Subadviser or an
existing Subadvisory Agreement as part of its annual review process. The Board will also have to make a separate finding, reflected
in the Board minutes, that any change in Subadvisers or any renewal of an existing Subadvisory Agreement is in the best interests
of the Subadvised Fund and its shareholders and, based on the information provided to it, does not involve a conflict of interest
from which the Adviser, a Subadviser, or any officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund or any officer or board member of the Adviser
derives an inappropriate advantage.
Applicants
note that the relief they are requesting would not be subject to two conditions that have been customary in previous exemptive
orders for similar relief, including (i) restrictions on the ownership of interest in Subadvisers by trustees and officers of
the Subadvised FundFunds and the Adviser, and (ii) a requirement that the Adviser provide the Board with profitability reports each quarter.
Applicants believe eliminating these conditions is appropriate with respect to the requested relief.
As to the condition on ownership, Applicants assert that restricting ownership of interests in a Subadviser by trustees
and officers would not be meaningful where the Adviser may itself own an interest in the Subadviser and the Subadviser may be
selected for a Subadvised Fund under the requested relief. [14] 14 As to the condition requiring quarterly profitability reports, Applicants note that the Board reviews and will continue
to review profitability information at the time of any proposed Subadviser change (see condition 7) and as part of its annual
review of each Subadvisory Agreement pursuant to Section 15(ec)
of the 1940 Act.
Until
the Carillon Order, the Commission has granted the requested relief solely with respect to Wholly-
-Owned and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief has been premised on the fact that such a Subadviser serves in the
same limited capacity as an individual portfolio manager.
Applicants believe this same rationale supports extending the requested relief to Affiliated Subadvisers.
Moreover, Applicants note that, while the Adviser’s judgment in recommending a Subadviser can be affected by
certain conflicts of interest or economic incentives, they do not warrant denying the extension of the requested relief to Affiliated
Subadvisers. For one, the Adviser faces those conflicts
and incentives in allocating fund assets between itself and a Subadviser, and across Subadvisers, as it has an interest in considering
the benefit it will receive, directly or indirectly, from the fee the fund pays for the management of those assets.
Moreover, the Adviser has employed and will continue to employ 12 the
same methodology to evaluate potential conflicts of interest, regardless of the affiliation between the Adviser and Subadviser. While the selection and retention of Affiliated Subadvisers by the Adviser potentially presents different or additional conflicts
of interest than may be the case with Non--Affiliated
or Wholly--Owned
Subadvisers, the proposed terms and conditions of the requested relief are designed to address the potential conflicts of interest
with respect to both those common to all types of Subadvisers and specific to Affiliated Subadvisers. In particular, Applicants
believe that the proposed conditions are protective of shareholder interests by ensuring the Board’s independence and providing
the Board with the appropriate resources and information to monitor and address conflicts.
14 Any Trustee of the Board that has an ownership interest in a Subadviser would not be deemed an Independent Trustee under Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act.
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[14]Any
Trustee of the Board that has an ownership interest in a Subadviser would not be deemed an Independent Trustee under Section 2(a)(19)
of the 1940 Act. (c)
(c) Benefits
to Shareholders. Without the requested relief, when
a new Affiliated Subadviser is retained by the Adviser on behalf of a Subadvised Fund, the shareholders of the Subadvised Fund
are required to approve the Subadvisory Agreement. Similarly, if an existing Subadvisory Agreement with an Affiliated Subadviser
is amended in any material respect, approval by the shareholders of the affected Subadvised Fund is required. Moreover, if a Subadvisory
Agreement with an Affiliated Subadviser is “assigned” as a result of a change in control of the Subadviser, the shareholders
of the affected Subadvised Fund will be required to approve retaining the existing Subadviser. In all these instances the need
for shareholder approval requires a Subadvised Fund to call and hold a shareholder meeting, create and distribute proxy materials,
and solicit votes from shareholders on behalf of the Subadvised Fund, and generally necessitates the retention of a proxy solicitor. This process is time--intensive,
expensive and slow, and, in the case of a poorly performing Subadviser or one whose management team has parted ways with the Subadviser,
potentially harmful to a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders.
As noted above, shareholders investing in a Fund that has a Subadviser are effectively hiring the Adviser to manage a Subadvised Fund’s assets by overseeing, monitoring and evaluating the Subadviser rather than by the Adviser hiring its own employees to oversee the Subadvised Fund. Applicants believe that permitting the Adviser to perform the duties for which the shareholders of a Subadvised Fund are paying the Adviser — the selection, oversight and evaluation of Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers — without incurring unnecessary delays or expenses is appropriate and in the interest of a Subadvised Fund’s shareholders and will allow such Subadvised Fund to operate more efficiently. Within this structure, the Adviser is in the better position to make an informed selection and evaluation of a Subadviser than are individual shareholders. Without the delay inherent in holding shareholder meetings (and the attendant difficulty in obtaining the necessary quorums), a Subadvised Fund will be able to hire or replace Affiliated Subadvisers more quickly and at less cost, when the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, and the Adviser believe that a change would benefit a Subadvised Fund and its shareholders.
-15-
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Until
the Carillon Order, the Commission has previously granted the requested relief solely with respect to certain Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers through numerous 13 exemptive orders.
That relief has permitted Subadvised Funds to avoid the time--intensive
and expensive shareholder solicitation process with respect to hiring or making a material amendment to a Subadvisory Agreement
with respect to such subadvisers. As discussed above,
Applicants believe the same rationale supports extending the requested relief to Affiliated Subadvisers as well, and while Affiliated
Subadvisers may give rise to different or additional conflicts of interests, the proposed terms and conditions, including the
enhanced oversight by the Board, address such potential conflicts.
Moreover, treating all Subadvisers equally under the requested relief might help avoid the selection of Subadvisers
potentially being influenced by considerations regarding the applicable regulatory requirements (i.e., whether a shareholder
vote is required) and the associated costs and delays.[15]15
If the relief requested is granted, each Investment Advisory Agreement will continue to be fully subject to Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act. Moreover, the relevant Board will consider the Investment Advisory Agreements and Subadvisory Agreements in connection with its annual contract renewal process under Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, and the standards of Section 36(b) of the 1940 Act will be applied to the fees paid to each Subadviser.
3. Shareholder Notification
With
the exception of the relief requested in connection with Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below), the prospectus and statement
of additional information for each Subadvised Fund will include all information required by Form N--1A
concerning the Subadvisers, including Affiliated Subadvisers, if the requested relief is granted. If a new Subadviser is retained,
an existing Subadviser is terminated, or a Subadvisory Agreement is materially amended, a Subadvised Fund’s prospectus and
statement of additional information will be supplemented promptly pursuant to Rule 497(e) under the Securities Act.
If
new Subadvisers are hired, the Subadvised FundFunds will inform shareholders of the hiring of a new Subadviser pursuant to the following procedures (“Modified
Notice and Access Procedures”): (a) within 90 days after a new Subadviser is hired for any Subadvised Fund, that Subadvised
Fund will send its shareholders either a Multi--manager
Notice or a Multi--manager
Notice and Multi--manager
Information Statement;[16] and (b) a Subadvised Fund will
make the Multi- Multi-manager
Information Statement available on the website identified in the Multi--manager
Notice no later than when the Multi--manager
Notice (or Multi--manager
Notice and Multi--manager
Information Statement) is first sent to shareholders, and will maintain it on that website for at least 90 days.
Under the requested relief, a Subadvised Fund would not furnish a Multi--manager
Information Statement to shareholders when an existing Subadvisory Agreement is materially modified.
In the circumstances described in this Application, a proxy solicitation to approve the appointment of new Subadvisers
provides no more meaningful information to shareholders than the proposed Multi--manager
Information Statement. Moreover, as indicated above,
the Board would comply with the requirements of Sections 15(a) and 15(c) of the 1940 Act before entering into or amending Subadvisory
Agreements.
15 The Adviser is responsible for selecting Subadvisers in the best interests of the Subadvised Funds, regardless of the costs or timing constraints that may be associated with the process of seeking shareholder approval of Subadvisory Agreements and material amendments thereto.
16 A “Multi-manager Notice” will be modeled on a Notice of Internet Availability as defined in Rule 14a-16 under the Exchange Act, and specifically will, among other things: (a) summarize the relevant information regarding the new Subadviser (except as modified to permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure as defined in this Application); (b) inform shareholders that the Multi-manager Information Statement is available on a website; (c) provide the website address; (d) state the time period during which the Multi-manager Information Statement will remain available on that website; (e) provide instructions for accessing and printing the Multi-manager Information Statement; and (f) instruct the shareholder that a paper or email copy of the Multi-manager Information Statement may be obtained, without charge, by contacting a Subadvised Fund.
A “Multi-manager Information Statement” will meet the requirements of Regulation 14C, Schedule 14C and Item 22 of Schedule 14A under the Exchange Act for an information statement, except as modified by the requested order to permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure. Multi-manager Information Statements will be filed with the Commission via the EDGAR system.
-16-
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[15]The
Adviser is responsible for selecting Subadvisers in the best interests of the Subadvised Fund, regardless of the costs or timing
constraints that may be associated with the process of seeking shareholder approval of Subadvisory Agreements and material amendments
thereto.
[16]A“Multi-manager
Notice” will be modeled on a Notice of Internet Availability as defined in Rule 14a-16 under the Exchange Act, and specifically
will, among other things: (a) summarize the relevant information regarding the new Subadviser (except as modified to permit Aggregate
Fee Disclosure as defined in this Application); (b) inform shareholders that the Multi-manager Information Statement is available
on a website; (c) provide the website address; (d) state the time period during which the Multi-manager Information Statement
will remain available on that website; (e) provide instructions for accessing and printing the Multi-manager Information Statement;
and (f) instruct the shareholder that a
14
Prior
to any Subadvised Fund relying on the requested relief in this Application, the Board, including its Independent Trustees, will
have approved its operations as described herein. Additionally, the shareholders of the applicable Subadvised Fund have approved,
or will approve, its operation as described herein by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities, within the meaning
of the 1940 Act, or by the sole shareholder prior to a Subadvised Fund offering its shares.[17]17
17 If a Subadvised Fund has obtained shareholder approval to operate pursuant to an exemptive order that would permit it to operate in a multi-manager structure where the Adviser would enter into or amend Subadvisory Agreements only with respect to Wholly-owned and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers subject to Board approval but without obtaining shareholder approval and has met all other terms and conditions of the requested order, the Subadvised Fund may rely on the applicable part of the order requested in this Application (i.e., hiring, amending Subadvisory Agreements with, and including Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below)) in response to the disclosure requirements discussed herein with respect to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Sub-Advisers.
-17-
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B.
B.
Fee Disclosure
1.R egulatory1. Regulatory Background
Form
N--1A
is the registration statement used by open--end
investment companies. Item 19(a)(3) of Form N--1A
requires a registered investment company to disclose in its statement of additional information the method of computing the “advisory
fee payable” by the investment company with respect to each investment adviser, including the total dollar amounts that
the investment company “paid to the adviser (aggregated with amounts paid to affiliated advisers, if any), and any advisers
who are not affiliated persons of the adviser, under the investment advisory contract for the last three fiscal years.”
paper
or email copy of the Multi-manager Information Statement may be obtained, without charge, by contacting a Subadvised Fund.
A
“Multi-manager Information Statement” will meet the requirements of Regulation 14C, Schedule 14C and Item 22 of Schedule
14A under the Exchange Act for an information statement, except as modified by the requested order to permit Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
Multi-manager Information Statements will be filed with the Commission via the EDGAR system.
[17]If
a Subadvised Fund has obtained shareholder approval to operate pursuant to an exemptive order that would permit it to operate
in a multi-manager structure where the Adviser would enter into or amend Subadvisory Agreements only with respect to Wholly-owned
and Non-Affiliated Subadvisers subject to Board approval but without obtaining shareholder approval and has met all other terms
and conditions of the requested order, the Subadvised Fund may rely on the applicable part of the order requested in this Application
(i.e., hiring, amending Subadvisory Agreements with, and including Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below) in response to
the disclosure requirements discussed herein with respect to Wholly-Owned and Non-Affiliated Sub-Advisers.
15
Rule
20a--1
under the 1940 Act requires proxies solicited with respect to a registered investment company to comply with Schedule 14A under
the Exchange Act. Item 22 of Schedule 14A sets forth the information that must be included in a registered investment company’s
proxy statement. Item 22(c)(1)(ii) requires a proxy statement for a shareholder meeting at which action will be taken on an investment
advisory agreement to describe the terms of the advisory contract, “including the rate of compensation of the investment
adviser.” Item 22(c)(1)(iii) requires a description of the “aggregate amount of the investment adviser’s fees
and the amount and purpose of any other material payments” by the investment company to the investment adviser, or any affiliated
person of the investment adviser during the fiscal year. Item 22(c)(8) requires a description of “the terms of the contract
to be acted upon, and, if the action is an amendment to, or a replacement of, an investment advisory contract, the material differences
between the current and proposed contract.” Finally, Item 22(c)(9) requires a proxy statement for a shareholder meeting
at which a change in the advisory fee will be sought to state (i) the aggregate amount of the investment adviser’s fee during
the last year; (ii) the amount that the adviser would have received had the proposed fee been in effect; and (iii) the difference
between (i) and (ii) stated as a percentage of the amount in (i). Together, these provisions may require a Subadvised Fund to
disclose the fees paid to a Subadviser in connection with shareholder action with respect to entering into, or materially amending,
an advisory agreement or establishing, or increasing, advisory fees.
-18-
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Regulation
S--X sets
forth the requirements for financial statements required to be included as part of a registered investment company’s registration
statement and shareholder reports filed with the Commission. Sections 6- -07(2)(a),
(b) and (c) of Regulation S--X
require a registered investment company to include in its financial statement information about the investment advisory fees. These provisions could require a Subadvised Fund’s financial statements to disclose information concerning fees paid to
a Subadviser. The exemption from Regulation S--X
requested below would permit a Subadvised Fund to include only the Aggregate Fee Disclosure (as defined below); all other items
required by Sections 6-07(26-07(2)(a),
(b) and (c) of Regulation S--X
will be disclosed.
2.R equested2. Requested Relief
Applicants
seek relief to permit theeach Subadvised Fund to disclose (as a dollar amount and a percentage of thea Subadvised Fund’s net assets) (a) the aggregate fees paid to the Adviser and any Wholly--Owned
Subadvisers; and (b) the aggregate fees paid to Affiliated and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers (collectively, the “Aggregate Fee Disclosure”) in lieu of disclosing the fees that may be required
by Item 19(a)(3) of Form N--1A,
Items 22(c)(1) (ii), 22(c)(2)(iii), 22(c)(8) and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A,
and Section 6-07(26-07(2)(a),
(b) and (c) of Regulation S--X.[18]18 The 16 Aggregate Fee Disclosure would be presented
as both a dollar amount and as a percentage of thea Subadvised FundFunds’s net assets. Applicants believe that the relief sought in this Application should be granted because the Adviser
intends to operate the Subadvised FundFunds under a multi--manager
structure. As a result, disclosure of the individual fees that the Adviser pays to the Subadvisers would not serve any meaningful
purpose.
[18]As
used herein, a “Wholly-Owned Subadviser” is any investment adviser that is (1) an indirect or direct “wholly-
owned subsidiary” (as such term is defined in Section 2(a)(43) of the 1940 Act) of the Adviser, (2) a “sister company”
of the Adviser that is an indirect or direct “wholly-owned subsidiary” of the same company that indirectly or directly
wholly owns the Adviser (the Adviser’s “parent company”), or (3) a
18 As used herein, a “Wholly-Owned Subadviser” is any investment adviser that is (1) an indirect or direct “wholly-owned subsidiary” (as such term is defined in Section 2(a)(43) of the 1940 Act) of the Adviser, (2) a “sister company” of the Adviser that is an indirect or direct “wholly-owned subsidiary” of the same company that indirectly or directly wholly owns the Adviser (the Adviser’s “parent company”), or (3) a parent company of the Adviser. A “Non-Affiliated Subadviser” is any investment adviser that is not an “affiliated person” (as defined in the 1940 Act) of a Fund or the Adviser, except to the extent that an affiliation arises solely because the Subadviser serves as a subadviser to one or more Funds. Section 2(a)(43) of the 1940 Act defines “wholly-owned subsidiary” of a person as a company 95 per centum or more of the outstanding voting securities of which are, directly or indirectly, owned by such a person.
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As
noted above, the Adviser may operate the Subadvised FundFunds in a manner different from a traditional investment company.
By investing in a Subadvised Fund, shareholders are hiring the Adviser to manage the Subadvised Fund’s assets
by overseeing, evaluating, monitoring, and recommending Subadvisers rather than by hiring its own employees to manage the assets
directly. The Adviser, under the oversight of the
Board, is responsible for overseeing the Subadvisers and recommending their hiring and replacement.
In return, the Adviser receives an advisory fee from each Subadvised Fund.
Pursuant to each Subadvisory Agreement, the Adviser has agreed or will agree to pay each Subadviser a fee, based on
the percentage of the assets of a Subadvised Fund, from the fee received by the Adviser from a Subadvised Fund under the Investment
Advisory Agreement. Each Subadviser will bear its
own expenses of providing investment management services to a Subadvised Fund.[19] 19 Disclosure of the individual fees that the Adviser would pay to the Subadvisers does not serve any meaningful purpose since
investors pay the Adviser to oversee, monitor, evaluate and compensate the Subadvisers. Applicants contend that the primary reasons
for requiring disclosure of individual fees paid to Subadvisers are to inform shareholders of expenses to be charged by a particular
Subadvised Fund and to enable shareholders to compare the fees to those of other comparable investment companies. Applicants believe
that the requested relief satisfies these objectives because the Subadvised Fund’s overall advisory fee will be fully disclosed
and, therefore, shareholders will know what a Subadvised Fund’s fees and expenses are and will be able to compare the advisory
fees a Subadvised Fund is charged to those of other investment companies.
Indeed,
in a more conventional arrangement, requiring the Subadvised FundFunds
to disclose the fees negotiated between the
Adviser and the Subadvisers would be the functional equivalent of requiring single adviser investment companies to disclose the salaries
of individual portfolio managers employed by that investment adviser. In
the case of a traditional investment company, disclosure is made of the compensation paid to the investment adviser, but shareholders
are not told or asked to vote on the salary paid by the investment adviser
to individual portfolio managers. Similarly,
in the case of the Subadvised FundFunds,
the shareholders will have chosen to employ the Adviser and to rely upon the Adviser’s expertise in monitoring the Subadvisers,
17 recommending
the Subadvisers’ selection and termination (if necessary), and negotiating the compensation of the Subadvisers. There
are no policy reasons that require shareholders of the Subadvised FundFunds to
be informed of the individual Subadviser’s fees any more than shareholders of a traditional investment company (single investment
adviser) would be informed of the particular investment adviser’s portfolio managers’ salaries.[20]20
parent
company of the Adviser. A “Non-Affiliated Subadviser” is any investment adviser that is not an “affiliated person”
(as defined in the 1940 Act) of a Fund or the Adviser, except to the extent that an affiliation arises solely because the Subadviser
serves as a subadviser to one or more Funds. Section 2(a)(43) of the 1940 Act defines “wholly-owned subsidiary” of
a person as a company 95 per centum or more of the outstanding voting securities of which are, directly or indirectly, owned by
such a person.
[19]A
Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser.
19 A Subadvised Fund also may pay advisory fees directly to a Subadviser.
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The
requested relief would benefit shareholders of the Subadvised FundFunds because it would improve the Adviser’s ability to negotiate the fees paid to Subadvisers, including Affiliated
Subadvisers. The Adviser’s ability to negotiate with the various Subadvisers would be adversely affected by public disclosure
of fees paid to each Subadviser. If the Adviser is not required to disclose the Subadvisers’ fees to the public, the Adviser
may be able to negotiate rates that are below a Subadviser’s “posted” amounts as the rate would not be disclosed
to the Subadviser’s other clients. Moreover, if one Subadviser is aware of the advisory fee paid to another Subadviser,
the Subadviser would likely take it into account in negotiating its own fee.
Until
the Carillon Order, the Commission has previously granted the requested relief solely with respect to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers through numerous exemptive orders. That relief only permitted the disclosure of aggregate fees paid to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers and required disclosure of individual fees paid to Affiliated Subadvisers. If the requested relief under Section 15(a)
of the 1940 Act is granted to extend to Affiliated Subadvisers, Applicants believe it is appropriate to permit each Subadvised
Fund to disclose only aggregate fees paid to Affiliated Subadvisers for the same reasons that similar relief has been granted
to Wholly--Owned
and NonAffiliatedNon-Affiliated Subadvisers, as discussed above.
C.
C.
Precedent
Applicants
note that substantially identical relief was granted by the Commission in the Carillon Order, the
Total Fund Solution Order, the Two Roads Order, the Touchstone Order, the Semper Capital
Management Order, the Hamilton Lane Order, the Uncommon Investment Funds Order, New Age Alpha Trust Order, the LFT Order, the Azzad Order, the Distillate Capital Order, the Esoterica Order,
the Clearshares Order, the OSI ETF Order, and the Investment Managers Order. Applicants
note that substantially the same exemptions requested herein with respect to relief from Section 15(a) and relief from the disclosure
requirements of the rules and forms discussed herein for Subadvisers, including 18 Affiliated
Subadvisers, have been granted previously by the Commission with respect to Wholly--Owned
and Non--Affiliated
Subadvisers. See, e.g., Natixis Funds Trust I, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33265 (October 5, 2018) (notice)
and 33287 (October 31, 2018) (order); Advisors Asset Management, Inc. and ETF Series Solutions, Investment Company Act
Release Nos. 33169 (July 24, 2018) (notice) and 33207 (August 21, 2018) (order); TriLine Index Solutions, LLC and ETF Series
Solutions, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33159 (July 11, 2018) (notice) and 33192 (August 6, 2018) (order); SL Advisors,
LLC and ETF Series Solutions, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33158 (July 11, 2018) (notice) and 33193 (August 6, 2018)
(order); DMS ETF Trust I, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33156 (July 10, 2018) (notice) and 33196 (August
7, 2018) (order).
20 The relief would be consistent with the Commission’s disclosure requirements applicable to fund portfolio managers that were previously adopted. See Investment Company Act Release No. 26533 (Aug. 23, 2004). Under these disclosure requirements, a fund is required to include in its statement of additional information, among other matters, a description of the structure of and the method used to determine the compensation structure of its “portfolio managers.” Applicants state that with respect to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe the structure of, and method used to determine, the compensation received by each portfolio manager employed by any Subadviser. In addition to this disclosure with respect to portfolio managers, Applicants state that with respect to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe the structure of, and method used to determine, the compensation received by each Subadviser.
-21-
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[20]The
relief would be consistent with the Commission’s disclosure requirements applicable to fund portfolio managers that were
previously adopted. See Investment Company Act Release No. 26533 (Aug. 23, 2004). Under these disclosure requirements, a fund
is required to include in its statement of additional information, among other matters, a description of the structure of and
the method used to determine the compensation structure of its “portfolio managers.” Applicants state that with respect
to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe the structure of, and method used to determine,
the compensation received by each portfolio manager employed by any Subadviser. In addition to this disclosure with respect to
portfolio managers, Applicants state that with respect to each Subadvised Fund, the statement of additional information will describe
the structure of, and method used to determine, the compensation received by each Subadviser.
For the reasons set forth above, Applicants believe that the relief sought would be 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.
V.Conditions
V. | CONDITIONS |
Applicants agree that any order of the Commission granting the requested relief will be subject to the following conditions:
1. 1. Before a Subadvised Fund may rely on the
order requested herein, the operation of the Subadvised Fund in the manner described in this Application will be, or has been,
approved by a majority of the Subadvised Fund’s outstanding voting securities as defined in the 1940 Act, or, in the case
of a Subadvised Fund whose public shareholders purchase shares on the basis of a prospectus containing the disclosure contemplated
by condition 2 below, by the initial shareholder before such Subadvised Fund’s shares are offered to the public.
2. 2. The prospectus for each Subadvised Fund will
disclose the existence, substance and effect of any order granted pursuant to the Application. In addition, each Subadvised Fund
will hold itself out to the public as employing the multi--manager
structure described in this Application. The prospectus will prominently disclose that the Adviser has the ultimate responsibility,
subject to oversight by the Board, to oversee the Subadvisers and recommend their hiring, termination, and replacement.
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3. 3. The Adviser will provide general management
services to each Subadvised Fund, including overall supervisory responsibility for the general management and investment of the
Subadvised Fund’s assets, and subject to review and oversight of the Board, will (i) set the Subadvised Fund’s overall
investment strategies, (ii) evaluate, select, and recommend Subadvisers for all or a portion of the Subadvised Fund’s assets,
(iii) allocate and, when appropriate, reallocate the Subadvised Fund’s assets among Subadvisers, (iv) monitor and evaluate
the Subadvisers’ performance, and (v) implement procedures reasonably designed to ensure that Subadvisers comply with the
Subadvised Fund’s investment objective, policies and restrictions.
19 4. 4. Subadvised FundFunds will inform shareholders of the hiring of a new Subadviser within 90 days after the hiring of the new Subadviser pursuant
to the Modified Notice and Access Procedures.
5. 5. At all times, at least a majority of the
Board will be Independent Trustees, and the selection and nomination of new or additional Independent Trustees will be placed
within the discretion of the then- -existing
Independent Trustees.
6. 6. Independent Legal Counsel, as defined in
Rule 0-l-1(a)(6)
under the 1940 Act, will be engaged to represent the Independent Trustees. The selection of such counsel will be within the discretion
of the then--existing
Independent Trustees.
7. 7. Whenever a Subadviser is hired or terminated,
the Adviser will provide the Board with information showing the expected impact on the profitability of the Adviser.
8. 8. The Board must evaluate any material conflicts
that may be present in a subadvisory arrangement. Specifically, whenever a subadviser change is proposed for a Subadvised Fund
(“Subadviser Change”) or the Board considers an existing Subadvisory Agreement as part of its annual review
process (“Subadviser Review”):
(a) (a) the Adviser will provide the Board, to the
extent not already being provided pursuant to Section 15(c) of the 1940 Act, with all relevant information concerning:
(i)
(i) any material interest in the proposed new
Subadviser, in the case of a Subadviser Change, or the Subadviser in the case of a Subadviser Review, held directly or indirectly
by the Adviser or a parent or sister company of the Adviser, and any material impact the proposed Subadvisory Agreement may have
on that interest;
(ii)
(ii)
any arrangement or understanding in which
the Adviser or any parent or sister company of the Adviser is a participant that (A) may have had a material effect on the proposed
Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review, or (B) may be materially affected by the proposed Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review;
-23-
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(iii)
(iii) any material interest in a Subadviser held
directly or indirectly by an officer or Trustee of the Subadvised Fund, or an officer or board member of the Adviser (other than
through a pooled investment vehicle not controlled by such person); and
(iv)
(iv) any other information that may be relevant
to the Board in evaluating any potential material conflicts of interest in the proposed Subadviser Change or Subadviser Review.
(b) (b) the Board, including a majority of the Independent
Trustees, will make a separate finding, reflected in the Board minutes, that the Subadviser Change or continuation after Subadviser
Review is in the best interests of the Subadvised Fund and its shareholders and, based on the information provided to the Board,
does not involve a conflict of interest from which the Adviser, a Subadviser, any officer or Trustee of the 20 Subadvised Fund, or any officer or board member of the Adviser derives an inappropriate advantage.
9. 9. Each Subadvised Fund will disclose in its
registration statement the Aggregate Fee Disclosure.
10. 10. In the event that the Commission adopts a
rule under the 1940 Act providing substantially similar relief to that in the order requested in the Application, the requested
order will expire on the effective date of that rule.
11. 11. Any new Subadvisory Agreement or any amendment
to an existing Investment Advisory Agreement or Subadvisory Agreement that directly or indirectly results in an increase in the
aggregate advisory fee rate payable by the Subadvised Fund will be submitted to the Subadvised Fund’s shareholders for approval.
VI. | PROCEDURAL MATTERS |
All
of the requirements for execution and filing of this Application on behalf of Applicants have been complied with in accordance
with the applicable organizational documents of Applicants, and the undersigned officers of Applicants are fully authorized to
execute this Application. The resolutions of the Board are attached as Exhibits A-1 through A-2 to this Application in accordance
with the requirements of Rule 0-20-2(c)(1)
under the 1940 Act and the verifications required by Rule 0-20-2(d)
under the 1940 Act are attached as Exhibits B-1 through B-2 to this Application. In accordance with the requirements for a request
for expedited review of this applicationApplication,
marked copies of two recent applications seeking the same relief as Applicants that are substantially identical as required by
Rule 0-5(e) of the 1940 Act are attached as Exhibits C-1
through C-2.
-24-
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Pursuant
to the requirements of Rule 0-20-2(f)
under the 1940 Act, each Applicant herebythe
Trust states that its address is: Two Roads Shared IndexIQ
Active ETF Trust 225 Pictoria Drive, Suite 450 Cincinnati, OH 45246 Hypatia
Capital Management LLC 430 Park, c/o IndexIQ Advisors
LLC, 51 Madison Avenue, 19th
Floor New York, NY 10022 Copies
ofNew
York 10010, and the Adviser states that its address is IndexIQ Advisors LLC, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010, and
that all notices,
orders, oral or written communications or questions regarding
this Application should be directed to: 1271
Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10020 stacy.louizos@blankrome.com Phone: 212.885.5147 the
individuals and addresses indicated on the first page of this Application.
Stacy
H. Louizos Blank Rome, LLP
21
Applicants
requestdesire
that the Commission issue anthe
requested order without a hearing pursuant to Rule 0-50-5 under the 1940 Act without conducting a hearing.
VII. | CONCLUSION |
For
the foregoing reasons, Applicants respectfully request that
the Commission issue an order under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act granting the relief soughtrequested in thisthe Application. Applicants submit that the requested exemption is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, consistent with the protection of investors,
and consistent with the purposespurpose fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the 1940 Act.
[Signature Page Follows]
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each Applicant has caused this Application to be duly executed as of the date set forth below:
TWO
ROADS SHARED TRUST HYPATIA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC
Respectfully submitted, | ||
INDEXIQ ACTIVE ETF TRUST | ||
By: | /s/ | |
Title: | ||
INDEXIQ ADVISORS LLC | ||
By: /s/ Jack R. Benintende | ||
Name: Jack R. Benintende | ||
Title: |
Date:
April 14October
12, 2023 Date:
April 14, 2023
22
EXHIBITS
-26-
-93-
EXHIBIT INDEX
SEQUENTIAL PAGE NUMBER | ||
A-1 | Secretary’s Authorization – Authorizing Resolutions of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust | 24 |
A-2 | Officer’s Authorization | 26 |
B-1 | Verification of IndexIQ Active ETF Trust pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) | 27 |
B-2 | Verification of IndexIQ Advisors LLC pursuant to Rule 0-2(d) | 28 |
C-1 | Marked copy of 40-APP/A against Total Fund Solution and Cromwell Investment Advisors, LLC (File No. 812-15425) | 29 |
C-2 | Marked copy of 40-APP/A against Two Roads Shared Trust and Hypatia Capital Management LLC (File No. 812-15428) | 65 |
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EXHIBIT A-1
INDEXIQ ACTIVE ETF TRUST
AUTHORIZATION
TO FILE
EXEMPTIVE ORDER
APPLICATION
The
following materials are made a part of the Application and are attached hereto:
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EXHIBIT
A-1 RELATING
TO THE FUND
SECRETARY’S AUTHORIZATION OF
TWO ROADS SHARED TRUST
The
undersigned, Timothy BurdickMatthew
V. Curtin, hereby certifies that he is the duly electedappointed Secretary of Two Roads SharedIndexIQ
Active ETF Trust (the “Trust”); that, with respect to the attached application for exemption from
the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”), the rules and forms thereunder and any
amendments thereto (such application along with any amendments, the “Application”), all actions necessary to
authorize the execution and filing of the Application under the Amended Agreement andand
Restated Declaration of Trust and Amended and Restated By-LawsBylaws of the Trust have been taken and the person signing and filing the Application on behalf of the Trust is fully authorized
to do so; and that the following is a complete, true and correct copy of the resolutions duly
adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Trust at a meeting held on DecemberSeptember
20–21, 20222023,
in accordance with the Amended and Restated By-LawsBylaws of the Trust and that such resolutions have not been revoked, modified, rescinded, or amended and are in full force
and effect:
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RESOLVED,
that the appropriate officers of the Trust are authorized to file on behalf of thefiling
by IndexIQ ETF Trust and IndexIQ Active ETF Trust (the “Trusts”)
of an application, in a form satisfactory to such officers and counsel to the Trust,
and any subsequent amendments as required, with the for
an order (described below) from the United States Securities and Exchange Commission for
an order pursuant tounder Section 6(c) of
the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), exempting the TrustTrusts and Hypatia Capital Management LLCtheir
series (the “AdviserFunds”)
from thecertain provisions of Section 15(a) of the 1940 Act”), as well as from and certain disclosure requirements in rule 20a-1 under the 1940 Act, Item 19(a)(3) of
Form N-1A, Items 22(c)(1)(ii), 22(c)(1)(iii), 22(c)(8) and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(“1934 Act”), and sections 6-07(2)(a), (b),under
various rules and forms, be, and it hereby is, authorized and approved:
The order would permit, among other things:
(1) | The
Trusts, on behalf of the Funds, and IndexIQ Advisors LLC (the “Advisor”)
to enter into or make material amendments to an agreement with one or more subadvisors
of a Fund (each, a “Subadvisory Agreement”) believed by the Advisor and the
Board of Trustees of a Trust to be appropriate, without the delay and
|
(2) | such other
|
RESOLVED,
that a Trustee or the adviceproper
officers of counsel to the Trust
to permit the Adviser, subject to the supervision of the Trust’s Board of Trustees and certain conditions required by the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission”) and set forth in the application for exemptive relief, to enter
into and materially amend, for any series of the Trust managed by the Adviser now or hereafter existing that operates consistentTrusts,
with the assistance of Trust counsel or others as may be required, are hereby authorized to prepare, execute and file any and
all amendments to such application as may be necessary or appropriate; and it is further
RESOLVED,
that such application shall be executed by or on behalf of the Trusts by a Trustee or one or more officers, and that the proper
officers or a Trustee of the Trusts, now or hereafter appointed, are hereby authorized to take any and all further actions that
may be necessary or appropriate to effectuate the foregoing resolutions with
the terms ofrespect
to the exemptive application,
investment sub-advisory agreements with subadvisers, including non-affiliated subadvisers, wholly-owned subadvisers, and affiliated
subadvisers, with the approval of the Board, but without obtaining shareholder approval of the applicable series
and the matters described therein.
Name: Matthew V. Curtin | ||
Title: | ||
IndexIQ Active ETF Trust |
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EXHIBIT
A--2
AUTHORIZATION OF HYPATIA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
INDEXIQ ADVISORS LLC
I,
John Grenawalt
AUTHORIZATION
TO FILE EXEMPTIVE ORDER
APPLICATION RELATING TO THE FUND
OFFICER’S AUTHORIZATION
The
undersigned, Jack R. Benintende, do hereby certifycertifies that Ihe
amis
the duly appointedelected Chief Operating Officer of Hypatia Capital ManagementIndexIQ
Advisors LLC (the “AdviserIndexIQ”);
that, with respect to the attached application for exemptive reliefexemption from certainthe provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940, rules
and forms thereunder and any amendments thereto (such application along with any amendments, the “Application”),
all actions necessary to authorize the execution and filing of the Application under the Adviser’s
organizationalcharter documents of
IndexIQ have been taken; and that I
amthe person signing and filing the Application by
IndexIQ is fully authorized to sign and file the Application on behalf of the Adviser;
and that the Adviser has adopted the following resolution on December 20, 2022, in accordance with its organizational documents:
RESOLVED,
that that the appropriate officers of the Adviser be, and hereby are, authorized to file on behalf of the Adviser an application
with the Securities and Exchange Commission for an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended
(“1940 Act”), exempting Two Roads Shared Trust (“Trust”) and the Adviser from: (i) the provisions of Section
15(a) of the 1940 Act to permit the Adviser, subject to the supervision of the Trust’s Board of Trustees, to appoint new
subadvisers to a Trust series for which the Adviser serves as investment adviser (each a “Subadvised Fund”) and to
make material changes to the subadvisory agreements with subadvisers to the Subadvised Fund without obtaining shareholder approval
of the applicable Subadvised Series; and (ii) the disclosures required pursuant to Item 19(a)(3) of Form N-IA, Items 22(c)(1)(ii),
22(c)(1)(iii), 22(c)(8) and 22(c)(9) of Schedule 14A of Schedule 14A, and Sections 6-07(2) (a)-(c) of Regulation S-X relating
to subadviser compensationdo
so.
HYPATIA
CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC
Name: Jack R. Benintende | ||
Title: | ||
IndexIQ Advisors LLC |
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EXHIBIT
B--1
INDEXIQ ACTIVE ETF TRUST
VERIFICATION
TWO ROADS SHARED TRUSTPURSUANT
TO RULE 0-2(D)
The
undersigned states he has duly executed the attached Application dated April 14, 2023
for an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”),Exemptive
Order dated October 12, 2023, for and on behalf of Two Roads SharedIndexIQ
Active ETF Trust (the “Trust”); that he is;
in his capacity as President of the Trust and is authorized to sign the Application
on behalf of the Trustsuch entity; and that
all action by shareholders, trustees and the
Trust’s Board of Trusteesother bodies
necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file the applicationsuch
instrument has been taken. The undersigned further statessays that he is familiar with the Applicationsuch
instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the
facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information, and
belief.
TWO
ROADS SHARED TRUST
By: /s/ | ||
Name: Kirk C. Lehneis | ||
Title: |
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-98-
EXHIBIT
B--2
INDEXIQ ADVISORS LLC
VERIFICATION
HYPATIA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPURSUANT
TO RULE 0-2(D)
The
undersigned states that he has duly executed the attached applicationApplication
for an Exemptive Order dated AprilOctober
1412,
2023, for an order pursuant
to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”),and on behalf of Hypatia Capital ManagementIndexIQ
Advisors LLC; that he isin
his capacity as Chief Operating Officer of Hypatia Capital Management LLC and is authorized
to sign the application on behalf of Hypatia Capital Management LLCOfficer
of such entity; and that all action by the officers,
directors and other personsbodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file the applicationsuch
instrument has been taken. The undersigned
further statessays
that he is familiar with the applicationsuch
instrument, and the contents thereof, and that the
facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information, and
belief.
Title: Chief Operating Officer Date: April 14, 2023 By: /s/ Jack R. Benintende | ||
Name: Jack R. Benintende | ||
Title: Vice President |
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