[Federal Register Volume 64, Number 225 (Tuesday, November 23, 1999)]
[Notices]
[Pages 65752-65758]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 99-30547]


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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. IC-24139; File No. 812-11572]


Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc., et al.; Notice of Application

November 17, 1999.
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or ``Commission'').

ACTION: Notice of application for an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of 
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the ``1940 Act'') granting relief 
from Sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a) and 15(b) of the 1940 Act and Rules 
6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15) thereunder.

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SUMMARY OF APPLICATION: Applicants seek an order to permit shares of 
any

[[Page 65753]]

current or future series of the Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc. (the 
``Fund'') and shares of any other investment company that is designed 
to fund variable insurance products and for which the Davis Selected 
Advisers, L.P. (the ``Adviser''), or any of its affiliates, may serve 
now or in the future, as investment adviser, administrator, manager, 
principal underwriter or sponsor (the Fund and such other investment 
companies referred to collectively as the ``Insurance Products Funds'') 
to be offered and sold to, and held by variable annuity and variable 
life insurance separate accounts of both affiliated and unaffiliated 
insurance companies (``Participating Insurance Companies''); qualified 
pension and retirement plans outside of the separate account context 
(``Qualified Plans''); and the Adviser or any of its affiliates 
(representing seed money investments in the Insurance Products Funds).

APPLICANTS: Davis Variable Account Fund, Inc. and Davis Selected 
Advisers, L.P.

FILING DATE: The application was filed on April 9, 1999, and was 
amended and restated on June 25, 1999, July 8, 1999 and October 22, 
1999.

HEARING OR NOTIFICATION OF HEARING: An order granting the application 
will be issued unless the Commission orders a hearing. Interested 
persons may request a hearing on this application by writing to the 
Secretary of the SEC and serving Applicants with a copy of the request, 
in person or by mail. Hearing requests must be received by the 
Commission by 5:30 p.m. on December 13, 1999, and accompanied by proof 
of service on the Applicants in the form of an affidavit or, for 
lawyers, a certificate of service. Hearing requests should state the 
nature of the requester's interest, the reason for the request and the 
issues contested. Persons who wish to be notified of a hearing may 
request notification by writing to the Secretary of the SEC.

ADDRESSES: Secretary, SEC, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549-
0609. Applicants, 124 E. Marcy, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501, Attention: 
Thomas Tays, Secretary.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lorna MacLeod, Attorney, or Mark 
Amorosi, Special Counsel, Office of Insurance Products, Division of 
Investment Management, at (202) 942-0670.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Following is a summary of the application. 
The complete application is available for a fee from the Public 
Reference Branch of the SEC, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549 
(202-942-8090).

Applicants' Representations

    1. The Fund is a Maryland corporation that is registered under the 
1940 Act as an open-end management investment company. The Fund 
currently consists of three series. The Fund may in the future issue 
shares of additional series.
    2. The Adviser, a Colorado limited partnership, is registered as an 
investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and serves 
as the investment adviser for the Fund.
    3. Shares of the Fund are offered to separate accounts of 
Participating Insurance Companies to serve as investment vehicles for 
variable annuity and variable life insurance contracts (including 
single premium, scheduled premium, modified single premium and flexible 
premium contracts) (collectively, ``Variable Contracts''). These 
separate accounts either will be registered as investment companies 
under the 1940 Act or will be exempt from such registration.
    4. The Participating Insurance Companies will establish their own 
separate accounts and design their own Variable Contracts. Each 
Participating Insurance Company will have the legal obligation of 
satisfying all applicable requirements under the federal securities 
laws. The role of the Insurance Products Funds will be limited to that 
of offering their shares to separate accounts of Participating 
Insurance Companies and to Qualified Plans and fulfilling the 
conditions set forth in the application and described later in this 
notice. Each Participating Insurance Company will enter into a fund 
participation agreement with the Insurance Products Fund in which the 
Participating Insurance Company invests.

Applicant's Legal Analysis

    1. Applicants request that the Commission issue an order under 
Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act granting exemptions from Sections 9(a), 
13(a), 15(a) and 15(b) thereof and Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 63-3(T)(b)(15) 
thereunder, to the extent necessary to permit shares of the Insurance 
Products Funds to be offered and sold to, and held by (1) variable 
annuity and variable life insurance separate accounts of the same life 
insurance company or of any affiliated life insurance company (``mixed 
funding''); (2) separate accounts of unaffiliated life insurance 
companies (including both variable annuity and variable life separate 
accounts) (``shared funding''); (3) qualified pension and retirement 
plans outside the separate account context; and (4) the Adviser or any 
of its affiliates (representing seed money investments in the Insurance 
Products Funds).
    2. In connection with the funding of scheduled premium variable 
life insurance contracts issued through a separate account registered 
under the 1940 Act as a unit investment trust, Rule 6e-2(b)(15) 
provides partial exemptions from Section 9(a), 13(a), 15(a) and 15(b) 
of the 1940 Act to the extent that those sections have been deemed by 
the Commission to require ``pass-through'' voting with respect to an 
underlying investment company's shares. These exemptions are available 
only where all of the assets of the separate account consist of the 
shares of one or more registered management investment companies which 
offer their shares exclusively to variable life insurance separate 
accounts of the life insurer or any affiliated life insurance company. 
Therefore, the relief granted by Rule 6e-2(b)(15) is not available if 
the scheduled premium variable life insurance separate account owns 
shares of a management investment company that also offers its shares 
to a variable annuity separate account of the same insurance company or 
an affiliated insurance company. The relief granted by Rule 6e-2(b)(15) 
is not available if the scheduled premium variable life insurance 
separate account owns shares of an underlying management investment 
company that also offers its shares to a variable annuity separate 
account of the same insurance company or an affiliated insurance 
company or to separate accounts funding variable contracts of one or 
more unaffiliated life insurance companies. The relief granted by Rule 
6e-2(b)(15) also is not available if the shares of the Insurance 
Products funds also are sold to Qualified Plans.
    3. In connection with the funding of flexible premium variable life 
insurance contracts issued through a separate account registered under 
the 1940 Act as a unit investment trust, Rule 6e-3(T)(b)(15) provides 
partial exemptions from Sections 9(a), 13(a), 15(a) and 15(b) of the 
1940 Act to the extent that those sections have been deemed by the 
Commission to require ``pass-through'' voting with respect to an 
underlying investment company's shares. These exemptions are available 
only where all of the assets of the separate account consist of the 
shares of one or more registered management investment companies which 
offer their shares exclusively to separate accounts of the life 
insurer, or any affiliated life insurance company, offering either 
scheduled premium variable life

[[Page 65754]]

insurance contracts or flexible premium variable life insurance 
contracts, or both; or which also offer their shares to variable 
annuity separate accounts of the life insurer or of an affiliated life 
insurance company. Therefore, the exemptions provided by Rule 6e-
3(T)(b)(15) are available if the underlying fund is engaged in mixed 
funding, but are not available if the fund is engaged in shared funding 
or if the fund sells its shares to Qualified Plans.
    4. Applicants state that the current tax law permits the Insurance 
Products Funds to increase their asset base through the sale of shares 
to Plans. Section 817(h) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as 
amended (the ``Code''), imposes certain diversification standards on 
the underlying assets of Variable Contracts. The Code provides that 
such contracts shall not be treated as an annuity contract or life 
insurance contract for any period (and any subsequent period) during 
which the investments are not adequately diversified in accordance with 
regulations prescribed by the Treasury Department. Treasury regulations 
provide that, to meet the diversification requirements, all of the 
beneficial interests in an investment company must be held by the 
segregated asset accounts of one or more insurance companies. The 
regulations do contain certain exceptions to this requirement, however, 
one of which permits shares of an investment company to be held by the 
trustee of a ``qualified pension or retirement plan'' as defined by 
Revenue Ruling 94-62 without adversely affecting the ability of shares 
in the same investment company also to be held by the separate accounts 
of insurance companies in connection with their variable annuity and 
variable life contracts (Treas. Reg. Sec. 1.817.5(f)(3)(iii)).
    5. Applicants state that the promulgation of Rules 6e-2 and 6e-3(T) 
preceded the issuance of these Treasury regulations. Applicants assert 
that, given the then current tax law, the sale of shares of the same 
underlying fund to separate accounts and to Plans could not have been 
envisioned at the time of the adoption of Rules 64-2(b)(15) and 6e-
3(T)(b)(15).
    6. Applicants request relief for a class or classes of persons and 
transactions consisting of Participating Insurance Companies and their 
scheduled premium variable life insurance separate accounts and 
flexible premium variable life insurance separate accounts (and, to the 
extent necessary, any investment adviser, principal underwriter and 
depositor of such separate accounts) investing in any of the Insurance 
Products Funds.
    7. Section 6(c) authorizes the Commission to grant exemptions from 
the provisions of the 1940 Act, and rules thereunder, if and to the 
extent that an exemption 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 assert that the requested exemptions are 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.

Disqualification

    8. Section 9(a)(3) of the 1940 Act provides that it is unlawful for 
any company to act as investment adviser to or principal underwriter of 
any registered open-end investment company if an affiliated person of 
that company is subject to a disqualification enumerated in Sections 
9(a)(1) or (2). Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(i) and (ii), and 6e-3(T)(b)(15)(i) 
and (ii) provide partial exemptions from Section 9(a) under certain 
circumstances, subject to the limitations on mixed and shared funding. 
These exemptions limit the application of eligibility restrictions to 
affiliated individuals or companies that directly participate in the 
management or administration of the underlying investment company.
    9. Applicants state that the relief from Section 9(a) provided by 
Rules 6e-2(b)(15) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15), in effect, limits the amount of 
monitoring necessary to ensure compliance with Section 9 to that which 
is appropriate in light of the policy and purposes of Section 9. 
Applicants assert that it is not necessary for the protection of 
investors or the purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions 
of the 1940 Act to apply the provisions of Section 9(a) to the many 
individuals who do not directly participate in the administration or 
management of the Insurance Products Funds, who are employed by the 
various unaffiliated insurance companies (or affiliated companies of 
Participating Insurance Companies) that may utilize the Insurance 
Products Funds as the funding medium for Variable Contracts. Applicants 
do not expect the Participating Insurance Companies to play any role in 
the management or administration of the Insurance Products Funds. 
Applicants assert, therefore, that applying the restrictions of Section 
9(a) to individuals employed by Participating Insurance Companies 
serves no regulatory purpose.
    10. Applicants state that the relief requested should not be 
affected by the proposed sale of Insurance Products Funds to Qualified 
Plans because the Plans are not investment companies and will not be 
deemed affiliates solely by virtue of their shareholdings.

Pass-Through Voting

    11. Applicants submit that Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(iii) and 6e-
3(T)(b)(15)(iii) assume the existence of a ``pass-through voting'' 
requirement with respect to management investment company shares held 
by a separate account. Applicants state that Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(iii) and 
6e-3(T)(b)(15)(iii) provide exemptions from the pass-through voting 
requirements in limited situations, assuming the limitations on mixed 
and shared funding imposed by the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder are 
observed. More specifically, Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(iii)(A) and 6e-
3(T)(b)(15)(iii)(A) provide that the insurance company may disregard 
the voting instructions of its contract owners in connection with the 
voting of shares of an underlying investment company if such 
instructions would require such shares to be voted to cause an 
underlying investment company to make, or refrain from making, certain 
investments which would result in changes in the sub-classification or 
investment objectives of such company, or to approve or disapprove any 
contract between an investment company and its investment adviser, when 
required to do so by an insurance regulatory authority. In addition, 
Rules 6e-2(b)(15)(iii)(B) and 6e-3(T)(b)(15)(iii)(B) provide that an 
insurance may disregard contract owners' voting instructions with 
regard to changes initiated by the contract owners in the investment 
company's investment policies, principal underwriter or investment 
adviser, provided that in the case of changes involving investment 
policies or the investment adviser, the Participating Insurance Company 
makes certain good faith determinations.
    12. Shares of the Insurance Products funds sold to Qualified Plans 
will be held by the trustees of such Plans as required by Section 
403(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 
(``ERISA''). Section 403(a) also provides that the trustees must have 
exclusive authority and discretion to manage and control the Plan with 
two exceptions: (a) When the Qualified Plan expressly provides that the 
trustees are subject to the direction of a named fiduciary who is not a 
trustee, in which case the trustees are subject to proper directions 
made in accordance with the terms of the Plan and not contrary to

[[Page 65755]]

ERISA; and (b) when the authority to manage, acquire or dispose of 
assets of the Qualified Plan is delegated to one or more investment 
managers pursuant to Section 402(c)(3) of ERISA. Unless one of the two 
exceptions stated in Section 403(a) applies, the Qualified Plan 
trustees have exclusive authority and responsibility for voting 
proxies. Where a named fiduciary appoints an investment manager, the 
investment manager has the responsibility to vote the shares held 
unless the right to vote such shares is reserved to the trustees or the 
named fiduciary. The Qualified Plans may have their trustees or other 
fiduciaries exercise voting rights attributable to investment 
securities held by the Qualified Plans in their discretion. Where a 
Qualified Plan does not provide Qualified Plan participants with the 
right to give voting instructions, Applicants state that they do not 
see any potential for irreconcilable material conflicts of interest 
between or among Variable Contract holders and Plan participants with 
respect to voting of the respective Insurance Products Funds shares. 
Accordingly, Applicants note that, unlike the case with insurance 
company separate accounts, the issue of the resolution of material 
irreconcilable conflicts with respect to voting is not present with 
respect to Qualified Plans since the Plans are not entitled to pass-
through voting privileges. Even if a Qualified Plan were to hold a 
controlling interest in an Insurance Products Fund, the Applicants do 
not believe that such control would disadvantage other investors in 
such Insurance Products Fund to any greater extent than is the case 
when any institutional shareholder holds a majority of the voting 
securities of any open-end management investment company. In this 
regard, the Applicants submit that investment in an Insurance Products 
Fund by a Qualified Plan will not create any of the voting 
complications occasioned by mixed funding or shared funding.
    13. Applicants state that some of the Qualified Plans may provide 
for the trustee(s), an investment adviser(s) or another named fiduciary 
to exercise voting rights in accordance with instructions from 
Qualified Plan participants. Applicants state that, in such cases, the 
purchase of shares by such Qualified Plans does not present any 
complications not otherwise occasioned by mixed or shared funding.

Conflicts of Interest

    14. Applicants state that no increased conflict of interest would 
be presented by the granting of the requested relief. Applicants submit 
that shared funding does not present any issues that do not already 
exist where a single insurance company is licensed to do business in 
several states. In this regard, Applicants note that when different 
Participating Insurance Companies are domiciled in different states, it 
is possible that the state insurance regulatory body in a state in 
which one Participating Insurance Company is domiciled could require 
action that is inconsistent with the requirements of other insurance 
regulators in one or more other states in which other Participating 
Insurance Companies are domiciled. The possibility, however, is no 
different or greater than exists when a single insurer and its 
affiliates offer their insurance products in several states, as is 
currently permitted.
    15. Applicants state that affiliation does not reduce the 
potential, if any exists, for differences in state regulatory 
requirements. In any event, the conditions set forth in the application 
and later in this notice (which are adapted from the conditions 
included in Rule 6e-3(T)(b)(15)) are designed to safeguard against any 
adverse effects that differences among state regulatory requirements 
may produce. If a particular state insurance regulator's decision 
conflicts with the majority of other state regulators, the affected 
insurer may be required to withdraw its separate account's investment 
in the relevant Insurance Products Funds.
    16. Applicants also assert that affiliation does not eliminate the 
potential, if any exits, for divergent judgments as to when a 
Participating Insurance Company could disregard Variable Contract owner 
voting instructions. The potential for disagreement is limited by the 
requirements that disregarding voting instructions be reasonable and 
based on specified good faith determinations. However, if the 
Participating Insurance Company's decision to disregard Variable 
Contract owner voting instructions represents a minority position or 
would preclude a majority vote approving a particular change, such 
Participating Insurance Company may be required, at the election of the 
relevant Insurance Products Fund, to withdraw its separate account's 
investment in that Insurance Products Fund and no charge or penalty 
will be imposed upon the Variable Contract owners as a result of such 
withdrawal.
    17. Applicants submit that there is no reason why the investment 
policies of an Insurance Products Fund with mixed funding would or 
should be materially different from what those policies would or should 
be if such Insurance Products Fund or series thereof funded only 
variable annuity or variable annuity or variable life insurance 
contracts. In this regard, Applicants note that a fund's adviser is 
legally obligated to manage the fund in accordance with the fund's 
investment objectives, policies and restrictions as well as any 
guidelines established by the fund's Board. Applicants submit that no 
one investment strategy can be identified as appropriate to a 
particular insurance product or to a Plan. Each pool of variable 
annuity and variable life insurance contract owners is composed of 
individuals of diverse financial status, age, insurance and investment 
goals. A fund supporting even one type of insurance product must 
accommodate these diverse factors in order to attract and retain 
purchasers. Applicants submit that permitting mixed and shared funding 
will provide economic support for the continuation of the Insurance 
Products Funds. In addition, permitting mixed and shared funding also 
will facilitate the establishment of additional series of Insurance 
Product Funds serving diverse goals.
    18. As noted above, Section 817(h) of the Code imposes certain 
diversification standards on the underlying assets of variable annuity 
contracts and variable life insurance contracts held in the portfolios 
of management investment companies. Treasury Regulation Sec. 1.817-
5(f)(3)(iii), which established diversification requirements for such 
portfolios, specifically permits, among other things, ``qualified 
pension or retirement plans'' and insurance company separate accounts 
to share the same underlying investment company. Therefore, Applicants 
assert that neither the Code, nor the Treasury regulations, nor the 
revenue rulings thereunder present any inherent conflicts of interest 
if the Qualified Plans, variable annuity separate accounts, and 
variable life insurance separate accounts all invest in the same 
management investment company.
    19. While there are differences in the manner in which 
distributions are taxed for variable annuity contracts, variable life 
insurance contracts and Plans, Applicants state that the tax 
consequences do not raise any conflicts of interest. When distributions 
are to be made, and the separate account of the Participating Insurance 
Company or Qualified Plan cannot net purchase payments to make the 
distributions, the separate account or Qualified Plan will redeem 
shares of the Insurance Products funds at their respective net asset 
values. The Qualified Plan will then make distributions in accordance 
with

[[Page 65756]]

the terms of the Plan and the Participating Insurance Company will make 
distributions in accordance with the terms of the Variable Contract.
    20. Applicants submit that the ability of the Insurance Products 
Funds to sell their respective shares directly to Qualified Plans does 
not create a ``senior security,'' as such term is defined under Section 
18(g) of the 1940 Act, with respect to any Variable Contract owner as 
opposed to a participant under a Qualified Plan. As noted above, 
regardless of the rights and benefits of participants under the 
Qualified Plans, or Variable Contract owners under their Variable 
Contracts, the Qualified Plans and the separate accounts of 
Participating Insurance Companies have rights only with respect to 
their respective shares of the Insurance Products Funds. They can 
redeem such shares at their net asset value. No shareholder of any of 
the Insurance Products Funds has any preference over any other 
shareholder with respect to distribution of assets or payments of 
dividends.
    21. Applicants assert that there are no conflicts between the 
Variable Contract owners and the Plan participants with respect to 
state insurance commissioners' veto powers over investment objective. 
The basic premise of shareholder voting is that not all shareholders 
may agree with a particular proposal. Furthermore, unlike separate 
accounts, which must engage in complex transactions to accomplish 
redemptions and transfers, trustees of Qualified Plans can quickly 
redeem shares from Insurance Products Funds and reinvest in other 
funding vehicles without the same regulatory impediments or, as in the 
case with most Qualified Plans, even hold cash or other liquid assets 
pending suitable alternative investment. Applicants maintain that even 
if there should arise issues where the interests of Variable Contract 
owners and the interests of participants in Plans are in conflict, the 
issues can be almost immediately resolved because the trustees of the 
Plans can, on their own, redeem shares out of the Insurance Products 
Funds.
    22. Applicants submit that mixed and shared funding should provide 
benefits to Variable Contract owners by eliminating a significant 
portion of the costs of establishing and administering separate funds. 
Participating Insurance Companies will benefit not only from the 
investment and administrative expertise of the Adviser and any sub-
advisers, but also from the cost efficiencies and investment 
flexibility afforded by a larger pool of assets. Mixed and shared 
funding also would permit a greater amount of assets available for 
investment by the Insurance Product Funds, thereby promoting economics 
of scale, by permitting increased safety through greater 
diversification and by making the addition of new series more feasible. 
Therefore, making the Insurance Products Funds available for mixed and 
shared funding will encourage more insurance companies to offer 
Variable Contracts, and this should result in increased competition 
with respect to both Variable Contract design and pricing, which can be 
expected to result in more product variation and lower charges.
    23. Applicants assert that there is no significant legal impediment 
to permitting mixed and shared funding. Separate accounts organized as 
unit investment trusts historically have been employed to accumulate 
shares of mutual funds which have not been affiliated with the 
depositor or sponsor of the separate account. Applicants do not believe 
that mixed and shared funding, and sales to Qualified Plans, will have 
any adverse federal income tax consequences.

Applicants' Conditions

    Applicants have consented to the following conditions:
    1. A majority of each Insurance Products Fund's Board of Trustees 
or Directors (each, a ``Board'') shall consist of persons who are not 
``interested persons'' thereof, as defined by Section 2(a)(19) of the 
1940 Act and the rules thereunder and as modified by any applicable 
orders of the Commission, except that if this condition is not met by 
reason of the death, disqualification, or bona fide resignation of any 
Board member, then the operation of this condition shall be suspended: 
(a) For a period of 45 days, if the vacancy or vacancies may be filled 
by the Board; (b) for a period of 60 days, if a vote of shareholder is 
required to fill the vacancy or vacancies; or (c) for such longer 
period as the Commission may prescribe by order upon application.
    2. Each Insurance Products Fund's Board will monitor the fund for 
the existence of any material irreconcilable conflict between and among 
the interests of the Variable Contract owners of all separate accounts 
and of Plan participants and Qualified Plans investing in the Insurance 
Products Funds, and determine what action, if any, should be taken in 
response to such conflicts. A material irreconcilable conflict may 
arise for a variety of reasons, including: (a) An action by any state 
insurance regulatory authority; (b) a change in applicable federal or 
state insurance, tax, or securities laws or regulations, or a public 
ruling, private letter ruling, no-action or interpretive letter, or any 
similar action by insurance, tax, or securities regulatory authorities; 
(c) an administrative or judicial decision in any relevant proceeding; 
(d) the manner in which the investments of the funds are being managed; 
(e) a difference in voting instructions given by variable annuity 
contract owners, variable life insurance contract owners and trustees 
of the Plans; (f) a decision by a Participating Insurance Company to 
disregard the voting instructions of Variable Contract owners; or (g) 
if applicable, a decision by a Qualified Plan to disregard the voting 
instructions of Plan participants.
    3. The Adviser (or any other investment adviser of an Insurance 
Products Fund), and Participating Insurance Company and any Qualified 
Plan that executes a fund participation agreement upon becoming an 
owner of 10% or more of the assets of an Insurance Products Fund 
(collectively, ``Participants'') will report any potential or existing 
conflicts to the Board of any relevant Insurance Products Fund. 
Participants will be obligated to assist the appropriate Board in 
carrying out its responsibilities under these conditions by providing 
the Board will all information reasonably necessary for the Board to 
consider any issues raised. This responsibility includes, but is not 
limited to, an obligation by each Participating Insurance Company to 
inform the Board whenever Variable Contract owner voting instructions 
are disregarded and, if pass-through voting is applicable, an 
obligation by each Qualified Plan to inform the Board whenever it has 
determined to disregard Plan participant voting instructions. The 
responsibility to report such information and conflicts and to assist 
the Boards will be contractual obligations of all Participating 
Insurance Companies and Qualified Plans investing in the Insurance 
Products Funds under their respective agreements governing 
participation in the Insurance Products Funds, and such agreements 
shall provide that these responsibilities will be carried out with a 
view only to the interests of Variable Contract owners and, if 
applicable, Plan participants.
    4. If a majority of an Insurance Products Funds's Board members, or 
a majority of the disinterested Board members, determine that a 
material irreconcilable conflict exists, the relevant Participating 
Insurance Companies and Qualified Plans, at their expense and to the 
extent reasonably practicable (as determined by a majority

[[Page 65757]]

of the disinterested Board members), shall take whatever steps are 
necessary to remedy or eliminate the material irreconcilable conflict, 
including: (a) Withdrawing the assets allocable to some or all of the 
separate accounts from the Insurance Products Fund or any of its series 
and reinvesting such assets in a difference investment medium, which 
may include another series of the Insurance Products Funds; (b) in the 
case of Participating Insurance Companies, submitting the question as 
the whether such segregation should be implemented to a vote of all 
affected Variable Contract owners and, as appropriate, segregating the 
assets of any appropriate group (i.e., variable annuity or variable 
life insurance contract owners of one or more Participating Insurance 
Companies) that votes in favor of such segregation, or offering to the 
affected Variable Contract owners the option of making such a change; 
and (c) establishing a new registered management investment company or 
managed separate account. If a material irreconcilable conflict arises 
because of a decision by a Participating Insurance Company to disregard 
Variable Contract owner voting instructions, and this decision 
represents a minority position or would preclude a majority vote, the 
Participating Insurance Company may be required, at the election of the 
Insurance Products Fund, to withdraw its separate accounts's investment 
in such fund, and no charge or penalty will be imposed as a result of 
such withdrawal. If a material irreconcilable conflict arises because 
of a Qualified Plan's decision to disregard Plan participant voting 
instructions, if applicable, and that decision represents a minority 
position or would preclude a majority vote, the Qualified Plan may be 
required, at the election of the Insurance Products Fund, to withdraw 
its investment in such fund, and no charge or penalty will be imposed 
as a result of such withdrawal. The responsibility to take remedial 
action in the event of a Board determination of a material 
irreconcilable conflict and to bear the cost of such remedial action 
shall be a contractual obligation of all Participating Insurance 
Companies and Qualified Plans under their agreements governing 
participation in the Insurance Products Funds and these 
responsibilities shall be carried out with a view only to the interests 
of the Variable Contract owners and, as applicable, Plan participants.
    5. For purposes of Conditions 4, a majority of the disinterested 
members of the applicable Board shall determine whether or not any 
proposed action adequately remedies any material irreconcilable 
conflict, but in no event will an Insurance Products Fund or the 
Adviser (or any other investment adviser of the Insurance Products 
Funds) be required to establish a new funds medium for any Variable 
Contract. No Participating Insurance Company shall be required by 
Condition 4 to establish a new funding medium for any Variable Contract 
if a majority of Variable Contract owners materially affected by the 
material irreconcilable conflict vote to decline such offer. No 
Qualified Plan shall be required by Condition 4 to establish a new 
funding medium for such Qualified Plan if (a) a majority of Plan 
participants materially and adversely affected by the material 
irreconcilable conflict vote to decline such offer or (b) pursuant to 
governing plan documents and applicable law, the Plan makes such 
decision without Plan participant vote.
    6. Participants will be informed promptly in writing of a Board's 
determination of the existence of an irreconcilable material conflict 
and its implications.
    7. Participating Insurance Companies will provide pass-through 
voting privileges to all Variable Contract owners so long as the 
Commission continues to interpret the 1940 Act as requiring pass-
through voting privileges for Variable Contract owners. Accordingly, 
such Participating Insurance Companies, where applicable, will vote 
shares of the Insurance Products Fund held in their separate accounts 
in a manner consistent with voting instructions timely received from 
Variable Contract owners. In addition, each Participating Insurance 
Company will vote shares of the Insurance Products Fund held in its 
separate accounts for which it has not received timely voting 
instructions from contract owners, as well as shares it owns, in the 
same proportion as those shares for which it has received voting 
instructions. Participating Insurance Companies will be responsible for 
assuring that each of their separate accounts investing in an Insurance 
Products Fund calculates voting privileges in a manner consistent with 
all other Participating Insurance Companies. The obligation to vote an 
Insurance Products Fund's shares and calculate voting privileges in a 
manner consistent with all other separate accounts investing in the 
Insurance Products Fund will be a contractual obligation of all 
Participating Insurance Companies under the agreements governing 
participation in the Insurance Products Fund. Each Plan will vote as 
required by applicable law and governing Plan documents.
    8. As long as the Commission continues to interpret the Act as 
requiring pass-through voting privileges for Variable Contract owners, 
the Adviser (or any of its affiliates) will vote its shares of any 
series of any Insurance Products Fund in the same proportion as all 
Variable Contract owners having voting rights with respect to that 
series; provided, however, that the Adviser (or any of its affiliates) 
shall vote its shares in such other manner as may be required by the 
Commission or its staff.
    9. All reports of potential or existing conflicts received by a 
Board, and all Board action with regard to (a) determining the 
existence of a conflict, (b) notifying Participants of a conflict, and 
(c) determining whether any proposed action adequately remedies a 
conflict, will be properly recorded in the minutes of the meetings of 
the appropriate Board or other appropriate records. Such minutes or 
other records shall be made available to the Commission upon request.
    10. Each Insurance Products Fund will notify all Participating 
Insurance Companies that separate account prospectus disclosure 
regarding potential risks of mixed and shared funding may be 
appropriate. Each Insurance Products Fund shall disclose in its 
prospectus that: (a) Its shares may be offered to insurance company 
separate accounts that fund both variable annuity and variable life 
insurance contracts, and to Qualified Plans; (b) differences in tax 
treatment or other considerations may cause the interests of various 
Variable Contract owners participating in the Insurance Products Fund 
and the interests of Qualified Plans investing in the Insurance 
Products Fund to conflict; and (c) the Board will monitor the Insurance 
Products Fund for any material conflicts and determine what action, if 
any, should be taken.
    11. Each Insurance Products Fund will comply with all provisions of 
the 1940 Act requiring voting by shareholders (for these purposes, the 
persons having a voting interest in the shares of the Insurance 
Products Funds). In particular, each such Insurance Products Fund 
either will provide for annual shareholder meetings (except insofar as 
the Commission may interpret Section 16 of the 1940 Act not to require 
such meetings) or comply with Section 16(c) of the 1940 Act (although 
none of the Insurance Products Funds shall be one of the trusts 
described in Section 16(c) of the 1940 Act), as well as with Section 
16(a) of the 1940 Act and, if and when applicable, Section 16(b) of the

[[Page 65758]]

1940 Act. Further, each Insurance Products Fund will act in accordance 
with the Commission's interpretation of the requirements of Section 
16(a) with respect to periodic elections of Board members and with 
whatever rules the commission may promulgate with respect thereto.
    12. If and to the extent that Rule 6e-2 or Rule 6e-3(T) under the 
1940 Act is amended, or Rule 6e-3 under the 1940 Act is adopted, to 
provide exemptive relief from any provision of the 1940 Act, or the 
rules promulgated thereunder, with respect to mixed or shared funding, 
on terms and conditions materially different from any exemptions 
granted in the order requested in the application, then the Insurance 
Products Funds and/or the Participants, as appropriate, shall take such 
steps as may be necessary to comply with Rule 6e-2 or Rule 6e-3(T), as 
amended, or proposed Rule 6e-3 as adopted, to the extent such Rules are 
applicable.
    13. The Participants, at least annually, shall submit to each Board 
such reports, materials or data as each Board may reasonably request so 
that such Boards may fully carry out the obligations imposed upon them 
by the conditions stated in the application. Such reports, materials 
and data shall be submitted more frequently if deemed appropriate by 
the Boards. The obligations of the Participants to provide these 
reports, materials and data upon reasonable request of a Board shall be 
a contractual obligation of all Participants under the agreements 
governing their participation in the Insurance Products Funds.
    14. If a Qualified Plan or Plan Participant shareholder should 
become an owner of 10% or more of the assets of an Insurance Products 
Fund, such Plan will execute a participation agreement with such fund 
which includes the conditions set forth herein to the extent 
applicable. A Qualified Plan or Plan participant will execute an 
application containing an acknowledgement of this condition upon such 
Plan's initial purchase of the shares of any Insurance Products fund.

Conclusion

    For the reasons summarized above, Applicants assert that the 
requested exemptions are appropriate in the public interest and 
consistent with the protection of investors and the purposes fairly 
intended by the policy and provisions of the 1940 Act.

    For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management, 
pursuant to delegated authority.
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 99-30547 Filed 11-22-99; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010-01-M