SEC Form 40-APP/A filed by Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II Shares of Benefici (Amendment)
EXPEDITED REVIEW REQUESTED UNDER 17 CFR 270.0-5(d)
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BEFORE THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
IN THE MATTER OF: Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund ii AND SABA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, L.P. |
AMENDED AND RESTATED APPLICATION PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(c) OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS AMENDED (THE “ACT”) FOR AN ORDER GRANTING EXEMPTIONS FROM SECTION 19(b) OF THE ACT AND RULE 19b-1 THEREUNDER
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Investment Company Act of 1940 File No. 812-[ ]
PLEASE SEND ALL COMMUNICATIONS AND ORDERS TO:
Michael S. Didiuk
Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP
919 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10022
(212) 756-2405, [email protected]
WITH A COPY TO:
Michael D’Angelo
Saba Capital Management, L.P.
405 Lexington Avenue, 58th Floor
New York, NY 10174
This Amended and Restated Application (including Exhibits) consists of 51 pages
The Exhibit Index is on page 14
As filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on May 29, 2024
Page 1 of 51 Pages |
I. | INTRODUCTION |
Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II (the “Fund”) and Saba Capital Management, L.P. (“Saba” and together with the Fund (the “Applicants”) hereby submit this amended and restated application for an order (the “Order”) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”) pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), providing the Fund, and each other closed-end management investment company registered under the 1940 Act advised or to be advised in the future by Saba, or by an entity controlling, controlled by or under common control (within the meaning of Section 2(a)(9) of the 1940 Act) with Saba (including any successor in interest1) (each such entity, including Saba, the “Adviser”) that in the future seeks to rely on the Order (such investment companies, together with the Fund, are collectively referred to herein as the “Funds” and each separately as a “Future Fund”), an exemption from the provisions of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder, as more fully set forth below (the “Application”).2 The Fund and the Future Funds are hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Funds” and separately as a “Fund.”
II. THE APPLICANTS
The Fund (formerly, Templeton Global Income Fund) is organized as a Delaware statutory trust, which is registered under the 1940 Act as a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company and commenced operations on January 28, 1988. Effective January 1, 2024, the Fund changed its name to Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II. The Fund’s common shares are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”), a national securities exchange as defined in Section 2(a)(26) of the 1940 Act. Although the Fund does not currently intend to issue preferred shares, the board of trustees of the Fund may authorize the issuance of preferred shares in the future.
The Fund’s investment objective is to provide investors with high current income, with a secondary goal of capital appreciation. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing globally in debt and equity securities of public and private companies, which includes, among other things, investments in closed-end funds, special purpose acquisition companies, reinsurance, public and private debt instruments. The Fund may also utilize derivatives, including but not limited to total return swaps, credit default swaps, options (including but not limited to index options) and futures, in seeking to enhance returns and/or to reduce portfolio risk. In addition, on an opportunistic basis, the Fund may also invest up to 15% of its total assets in private funds that focus on debt, equity or other investments consistent with the Fund’s investment objective.
Saba, with offices at 405 Lexington Avenue, 58th Floor, New York, NY 10174, serves as the investment adviser to the Fund. Saba is registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended. Subject to the oversight of the board of trustees of the Fund, Saba is responsible for managing the investment activities of the Fund and the Fund’s business affairs.
On October 15, 2023 shareholders of the Fund voted to approve a new investment management agreement between the Fund and Saba (such new investment management agreement, the “New Management Agreement”). The New Management Agreement, which was effective January 1, 2024, replaced the previously effective amended and restated investment management agreement, dated June 1, 2014, as amended on May 13, 2020, between the Fund and Franklin Advisers, Inc. (“Franklin”), the Fund’s previous investment adviser.
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1 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 only registered closed-end investment company that currently intends to rely on the Order has been named as an Applicant. Any Fund that may rely on the Order in the future will comply with the terms and conditions of the Application.
Page 2 of 51 Pages |
Franklin and the Fund have previously relied on an exemptive order (IC Rel. No. 30499) granting an exemption from Section 19(b) to allow the Fund to make periodic distributions of long-term capital gains (“Existing Order”). As Saba has succeeded in the role of investment adviser of the Fund, replacing Franklin, the Fund and Saba cannot rely on the Existing Order.
III. | REQUEST FOR EXEMPTIVE RELIEF |
Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act provides that it shall be unlawful in contravention of such rules, regulations, or orders as the Commission may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors for any registered investment company to distribute long-term capital gains, as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), more often than once every twelve months. Rule 19b-1 under the 1940 Act provides that no registered investment company which is a “regulated investment company” as defined in Section 851 of the Code may make more than (i) one “capital gain dividend,” as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code, in any one taxable year of the company, (ii) one additional capital gain distribution made in whole or in part to avoid payment of excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code plus (iii) one supplemental capital gain dividend pursuant to Section 855 of the Code (provided that it does not exceed 10% of the total amount distributed for the taxable year).
Applicants believe that Rule 19b-1 should be interpreted to permit a Fund to pay an unlimited number of distributions on its common and preferred shares (if any) so long as it makes the designation necessary under the Code and Rule 19b-1 to characterize those distributions as “capital gain dividends” restricted by Rule 19b-1 only as often as is permitted by Rule 19b-1, even if the Code would then require retroactively spreading the capital gain resulting from that designation over more than the permissible number of distributions. However, to obtain certainty for a Fund’s proposed distribution policies (each, a “Distribution Policy”), in the absence of such an interpretation, Applicants hereby request an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act granting an exemption from Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder. The Order would permit each Fund to make periodic capital gain dividends (as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code) that include long-term capital gains as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year in respect of its shares of beneficial interest (“common shares”) and as often as specified by, or determined in accordance with the terms of, any preferred shares issued by the Fund.
IV. | REPRESENTATIONS OF APPLICANTS |
Prior to a Fund’s implementing a Distribution Policy in reliance on the Order, the board of directors or trustees (the “Board”) of each Fund seeking to rely on the Order, including a majority of the directors or trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund, as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act (the “Independent Board Members”), will request, and the Adviser will provide, such information as is reasonably necessary to make an informed determination of whether the Board should adopt a proposed Distribution Policy. In particular, the Board and the Independent Board Members will review information regarding (i) the purpose and terms of the proposed Distribution Policy; (ii) the likely effects of the proposed Distribution Policy on the Fund’s long-term total return (in relation to market price and net asset value per share of common shares (“NAV”)); (iii) the expected relationship between the Fund’s distribution rate on its common shares under the proposed Distribution Policy and the Fund’s total return (in relation to NAV); (iv) whether the rate of distribution is anticipated to exceed the Fund’s expected total return in relation to its NAV; and (v) any foreseeable material effects of the proposed Distribution Policy on the Fund’s long-term total return (in relation to market price and NAV).
The Independent Board Members will also consider what conflicts of interest the Adviser and the affiliated persons of the Adviser and the Fund might have with respect to the adoption or implementation of the proposed Distribution Policy.
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3 In reliance on the Commission staff no-action letter issued to Innovator Capital Management, LLC, et al. (pub. avail. October 6, 2017) and oral discussions with the Commission staff, the Applicants intend to rely on the Existing Order as if the Existing Order extended to the Adviser until the earlier of the receipt of the Order or 150 days from January 1, 2024, the date of the New Management Agreement between the Fund and the Adviser. During such time, the Adviser will comply with the terms and conditions in the Existing Order imposed on Franklin as though such terms and conditions were imposed directly on the Adviser. When and if the Order is granted by the Commission, the Applicants would then rely on the Order, rather than continuing to rely on the Existing Order.
Page 3 of 51 Pages |
Following this review, the Board, including the Independent Board Members, of each Fund will, before adopting or implementing any proposed Distribution Policy, make a determination that the proposed Distribution Policy is consistent with the Fund’s investment objective(s) and in the best interests of the holders of the Fund’s common shares. The Distribution Policy will be consistent with the Fund’s policies and procedures and will be described in the Fund’s registration statement.
In addition, prior to implementation of a Distribution Policy for any Fund pursuant to the Order requested by this Application, the Board of the Fund shall have adopted policies and procedures (the “Section 19 Compliance Policies”) pursuant to Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act that:
1. are reasonably designed to ensure that all notices required to be sent to the Fund’s shareholders pursuant to Section 19(a) of the 1940 Act, Rule 19a-1 thereunder and by condition 4 below (each, a “19(a) Notice”) include the disclosure required by Rule 19a-1 and by condition 2(a) below, and that all other written communications by the Fund or its agents regarding distributions under the Distribution Policy include the disclosure required by condition 3(a) below; and
2. require the Fund to keep records that demonstrate its compliance with all of the conditions of the Order and that are necessary for the Fund to form the basis for, or demonstrate the calculation of, the amounts disclosed in its 19(a) Notices.
The records of the actions of the Board of each Fund will summarize the basis for the Board’s approval of the Distribution Policy, including its consideration of the factors described above. These records will be maintained for a period of at least six years from the date of the applicable meeting, the first two years in an easily accessible place, or for such longer period as may otherwise be required by law.
Generally, the purpose of a Distribution Policy would be to permit a Fund to distribute periodically, over the course of each year, an amount closely approximating the total taxable income of the Fund during the year through distributions in relatively equal amounts (plus any required special distributions) that are composed of payments received from portfolio companies, supplemental amounts generally representing realized capital gains or, possibly, returns of capital that may represent unrealized capital gains. The Fund seeks to establish a distribution rate that approximates the Fund’s projected total return that can reasonably be expected to be generated by the Fund over an extended period of time, although the distribution rate will not be solely dependent on the amount of income earned or capital gains realized by the Fund for the year. Under the Distribution Policy of a Fund, the Fund would distribute periodically (as frequently as twelve times in any taxable year) to its respective common shareholders a fixed percentage of the market price of the Fund’s common shares at a particular point in time or a fixed percentage of NAV at a particular time or a fixed amount per share of common shares, any of which may be adjusted from time to time. It is anticipated that under a Distribution Policy, the minimum annual distribution rate with respect to the Fund’s common shares would be independent of the Fund’s performance during any particular period but would be expected to correlate with the Fund’s performance over time. Except for extraordinary distributions and potential increases or decreases in the final dividend periods in light of the Fund’s performance for an entire calendar year and to enable the Fund to comply with the distribution requirements of Subchapter M of the Code for the calendar year, each distribution on the Fund’s common shares would be at the stated rate then in effect. The Board will periodically review the amount of potential distributions in light of the investment experience of the Fund, and may modify or terminate a Distribution Policy at any time.
Page 4 of 51 Pages |
V. | JUSTIFICATION FOR REQUESTED RELIEF |
Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act provides that the Commission may exempt any person, security or transaction from any provision of the 1940 Act or of any rule or regulation thereunder, if and to the extent that the 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. For the reasons set forth below, Applicants submit that the requested exemption from Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder would be consistent with the standards set forth in Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act and in the best interests of the Funds and their respective shareholders.
A. | Receipt of the Order would serve shareholder interests |
Applicants believe that closed-end fund investors may prefer an investment vehicle that provides regular current income through fixed distribution policies that would be available through a Distribution Policy. Allowing a Distribution Policy to operate in the manner described in this Application would help fill current investor demand and foster competition in the registered fund market.
An exemption from Rule 19b-1 would benefit shareholders in another way. Common shares of closed-end funds often trade in the marketplace at a discount to their NAV. Applicants believe that this discount may be reduced if a Fund is permitted to pay relatively frequent dividends on its common shares at a consistent rate, whether or not those dividends contain an element of long-term capital gains. Any reduction in the discount at which the Fund’s common shares trade in the market would benefit the holders of the Fund’s common shares along with the Fund.
B. | The Fund’s shareholders would receive information sufficient to clearly inform them of the nature of the distributions they are receiving |
One of the concerns leading to the enactment of Section 19(b) and adoption of Rule 19b-1 was that shareholders might be unable to distinguish between frequent distributions of capital gains and dividends from investment income.4 However, Rule 19a-1 under the 1940 Act effectively addresses this concern by requiring that distributions (or the confirmation of the reinvestment thereof) estimated to be sourced in part from capital gains or capital be accompanied by a separate statement showing the sources of the distribution (e.g., estimated net income, net short-term capital gains, net long-term capital gains and/or return of capital). The same information will be included in each Fund’s annual report to shareholders and on its Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) Form 1099-DIV, which will be sent to each common and preferred shareholder who received distributions during a particular year (including shareholders who have sold shares during the year).
In addition, each of the Funds will make the additional disclosures required by the conditions set forth in Part VI below, and each of them will adopt compliance policies and procedures in accordance with Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act to ensure that all required notices and disclosures are sent to shareholders.
The information required by Section 19(a), Rule 19a-1, the Distribution Policy, the Section 19 Compliance Policies and the conditions listed below will help to ensure that each Fund’s shareholders are provided sufficient information to understand that their periodic distributions are not tied to the Fund’s net investment income (which for this purpose is the Fund’s taxable income other than from capital gains) and realized capital gains to date, and may not represent yield or investment return. Accordingly, subjecting the Funds to Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 would afford shareholders no extra protection. In addition, the Funds will undertake to request intermediaries, or their agent(s), to forward 19(a) Notices to their customers and to reimburse them for the costs of forwarding. Such forwarding may occur in any manner permitted by statute, rule or order or by the staff of the Commission.
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4 See Securities and Exchange Commission 1966 Report to Congress on Investment Company Growth (H.R. Rep. No. 2337, 89th Cong. 2d Sess. 190-95 (1966)); S. Rep. No. 91-184, 91st Cong., 1st Sess. 29 (1969); H.R. Rep. No. 91-1382, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 29 (1970).
Page 5 of 51 Pages |
C. | Under certain circumstances, Rule 19b-1 gives rise to improper influence on portfolio management decisions, with no offsetting benefit to shareholders |
Rule 19b-1, when applied to a Distribution Policy, actually gives rise to one of the concerns that Rule 19b-1 was intended to avoid: inappropriate influence on portfolio management decisions. Funds that pay long-term capital gains distributions only once per year in accordance with Rule 19b-1 impose no pressure on management to realize capital gains at any time when purely investment considerations do not dictate doing so. In the absence of an exemption from Rule 19b-1, the adoption of a periodic distribution plan imposes pressure on management (i) not to realize any net long-term capital gains until the point in the year that the fund can pay all of its remaining distributions in accordance with Rule 19b-1 and (ii) not to realize any long-term capital gains during any particular year in excess of the amount of the aggregate pay-out for the year (since as a practical matter excess gains must be distributed and accordingly would not be available to satisfy pay-out requirements in following years), notwithstanding that purely investment considerations might favor realization of long-term gains at different times or in different amounts.
No purpose is served by the distortion in the normal operation of a periodic distribution plan required in order to comply with Rule 19b-1. There is no benefit in requiring any fund that adopts a periodic distribution plan either to retain (and pay taxes on) long-term capital gains (with the resulting additional tax return complexities for the fund’s shareholders) or to avoid designating its distributions of long-term gains as capital gains dividends for tax purposes (thereby avoiding a Rule 19b-1 problem but providing distributions taxable at ordinary income rates rather than the much lower long-term capital gains rates). The desirability of avoiding these anomalous results creates pressure to limit the realization of long-term capital gains that otherwise would be taken for purely investment considerations.
The Order requested by Applicants would minimize these anomalous effects of Rule 19b-1 by enabling the Funds to realize long-term capital gains as often as investment considerations dictate without fear of violating Rule 19b-1.
D. | Other concerns leading to adoption of Rule 19b-1 are not applicable |
Another concern that led to the enactment of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and adoption of Rule 19b-1 was that frequent capital gains distributions could facilitate improper fund share sales practices, including, in particular, the practice of urging an investor to purchase shares of a fund on the basis of an upcoming capital gains dividend (“selling the dividend”), where the dividend would result in an immediate corresponding reduction in NAV and would be in effect a taxable return of the investor’s capital. Applicants submit that this concern should not apply to closed-end investment companies, such as the Funds, that do not continuously distribute shares. Furthermore, if the underlying concern extends to secondary market purchases of shares of closed-end funds that are subject to a large upcoming capital gains dividend, adoption of a periodic distribution plan may help minimize the concern by avoiding, through periodic distributions, any buildup of large end-of-the-year distributions.
Applicants also submit that the “selling the dividend” concern is not applicable to preferred shares, which entitles a holder to no more than a specified periodic dividend and, like a debt security, is initially sold at a price based upon its liquidation preference, credit quality, dividend rate and frequency of payment. Investors buy preferred shares for the purpose of receiving specific payments at the frequency bargained for, and any application of Rule 19b-1 to preferred shares would be contrary to the expectation of investors. There is also currently a tax rule that provides that any loss realized by a shareholder upon sale of shares of a regulated investment company that were held for six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital loss, to the extent of any long-term capital gains paid on such shares, to avoid the selling of dividends.
E. | Further limitations of Rule 19b-1 |
Subparagraphs (a) and (f) of Rule 19b-1 limit the number of capital gains dividends, as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code, that a fund may make with respect to any one taxable year to one, plus a supplemental distribution made pursuant to Section 855 of the Code not exceeding 10% of the total amount distributed for the year, plus one additional capital gain dividend made in whole or in part to avoid the excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code.
Page 6 of 51 Pages |
Applicants assert that by limiting the number of capital gain dividends that a Fund may make with respect to any one year, Rule 19b-1 may prevent the normal and efficient operation of a periodic distribution plan whenever that Fund’s realized net long-term capital gains in any year exceed the total of the periodic distributions that may include such capital gains under the rule. Rule 19b-1 thus may force the fixed regular periodic distributions to be funded with returns of capital5 (to the extent net investment income and realized short term capital gains are insufficient to fund the distribution), even though realized net long-term capital gains otherwise would be available. To distribute all of a Fund’s long-term capital gains within the limits in Rule 19b-1, a Fund may be required to make total distributions in excess of the annual amount called for by its periodic distribution plan or to retain and pay taxes on the excess amount. Applicants believe that the application of Rule 19b-1 to a Fund’s periodic distribution plan may create pressure to limit the realization of long-term capital gains based on considerations unrelated to investment goals.
Revenue Ruling 89-816 under the Code requires that a fund that seeks to qualify as a regulated investment company under the Code and that has both common shares and preferred shares outstanding designate the types of income, e.g., investment income and capital gains, in the same proportion as the total distributions distributed to each class for the tax year. To satisfy the proportionate designation requirements of Revenue Ruling 89-81, whenever a fund has realized a long-term capital gain with respect to a given tax year, the fund must designate the required proportionate share of such capital gain to be included in common and preferred shares dividends. Although Rule 19b-1 allows a fund some flexibility with respect to the frequency of capital gains distributions, a fund might use all of the exceptions available under Rule 19b-1 for a tax year and still need to distribute additional capital gains allocated to the preferred shares to comply with Revenue Ruling 89-81.
The potential abuses addressed by Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 do not arise with respect to preferred shares issued by a closed-end fund. Such distributions generally are either fixed or are determined in periodic auctions or remarketings or are periodically reset by reference to short-term interest rates rather than by reference to performance of the issuer, and Revenue Ruling 89-81 determines the proportion of such distributions that are comprised of the long-term capital gains. The Applicants also submit that the “selling the dividend” concern is not applicable to preferred shares, which entitles a holder to no more than a periodic dividend at a fixed rate or the rate determined by the market, and, like a debt security, is priced based upon its liquidation value, dividend rate, credit quality, and frequency of payment. Investors buy preferred shares for the purpose of receiving payments at the frequency bargained for and do not expect the liquidation value of their shares to change.
The proposed Order will assist the Funds in avoiding these Rule 19b-1 problems.
F. | General |
The relief requested is that the Commission permit the Funds to make periodic distributions in respect of their common shares as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year and in respect of their preferred shares as specified by or determined in accordance with the terms thereof. Granting this relief would provide the Funds with flexibility in meeting investor interest in receiving more frequent distributions. Implementation of the relief would actually ameliorate the concerns that gave rise to Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 and help avoid the “selling of dividends” problem, which Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 are not effective in preventing.
The potential issues under Rule 19b-1 are not relevant to distributions on preferred shares . Not only are such distributions fixed or determined by the market rather than by reference to the performance of the issuer but also the long-term capital gain component is mandated by the IRS to be the same proportion as the proportion of long-term gain dividends bears to the total distributions in respect of the common shares and consequently the long-term gain component cannot even be known until the end of the fund’s fiscal year. In these circumstances it would be very difficult for any of the potential abuses reflected in Rule 19b-1’s restrictions to occur.
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5 These would be returns of capital for financial accounting purposes and not for tax accounting purposes.
6 1989-1 C.B. 226.
Page 7 of 51 Pages |
In summary, Rule 19b-1, in the circumstances referred to above, is likely to distort the effective and proper functioning of a Fund’s Distribution Policy and gives rise to the very pressures on portfolio management decisions that Rule 19b-1 was intended to avoid. These distortions forced by Rule 19b-1 serve no purpose and are not in the best interests of shareholders.
VI. APPLICANTS’ CONDITIONS
Applicants agree that, with respect to each Fund seeking to rely on the Order, the Order will be subject to each of the following conditions:
1. | Compliance Review and Reporting |
The Fund’s chief compliance officer will: (a) report to the Fund’s Board, no less frequently than once every three months or at the next regularly scheduled quarterly Board meeting, whether (i) the Fund and its Adviser have complied with the conditions of the Order and (ii) a material compliance matter (as defined in Rule 38a-1(e)(2) under the 1940 Act) has occurred with respect to such conditions; and (b) review the adequacy of the policies and procedures adopted by the Board no less frequently than annually.
2. | Disclosures to Fund Shareholders |
(a) Each 19(a) Notice disseminated to the holders of the Fund’s common shares, in addition to the information required by Section 19(a) and Rule 19a-1:
(i) | will provide, in a tabular or graphical format: |
(1) the amount of the distribution, on a per share of common shares basis, together with the amounts of such distribution amount, on a per share of common shares basis and as a percentage of such distribution amount, from estimated: (A) net investment income; (B) net realized short-term capital gains; (C) net realized long-term capital gains; and (D) return of capital or other capital source;
(2) the fiscal year-to-date cumulative amount of distributions, on a per share of common shares basis, together with the amounts of such cumulative amount, on a per share of common shares basis and as a percentage of such cumulative amount of distributions, from estimated: (A) net investment income; (B) net realized short-term capital gains; (C) net realized long-term capital gains; and (D) return of capital or other capital source;
(3) the average annual total return in relation to the change in NAV for the 5-year period (or, if the Fund’s history of operations is less than five years, the time period commencing immediately following the Fund’s first public offering) ending on the last day of the month ended immediately prior to the most recent distribution record date compared to the current fiscal period’s annualized distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date; and
(4) the cumulative total return in relation to the change in NAV from the last completed fiscal year to the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date compared to the fiscal year-to-date cumulative distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date.
Such disclosure shall be made in a type size at least as large and as prominent as the estimate of the sources of the current distribution; and
(ii) | will include the following disclosure: |
Page 8 of 51 Pages |
(1) “You should not draw any conclusions about the Fund’s investment performance from the amount of this distribution or from the terms of the Fund’s Distribution Policy.”;
(2) “The Fund estimates that it has distributed more than its income and net realized capital gains; therefore, a portion of your distribution may be a return of capital. A return of capital may occur, for example, when some or all of the money that you invested in the Fund is paid back to you. A return of capital distribution does not necessarily reflect the Fund’s investment performance and should not be confused with ‘yield’ or ‘income’”;7 and
(3) “The amounts and sources of distributions reported in this 19(a) Notice are only estimates and are not being provided for tax reporting purposes. The actual amounts and sources of the amounts for tax reporting purposes will depend upon the Fund’s investment experience during the remainder of its fiscal year and may be subject to changes based on tax regulations. The Fund will send you a Form 1099-DIV for the calendar year that will tell you how to report these distributions for federal income tax purposes.”
Such disclosure shall be made in a type size at least as large as and as prominent as any other information in the 19(a) Notice and placed on the same page in close proximity to the amount and the sources of the distribution.
(b) | On the inside front cover of each report to shareholders under Rule 30e-1 under the 1940 Act, the Fund will: |
(i) | describe the terms of the Distribution Policy (including the fixed amount or fixed percentage of the distributions and the frequency of the distributions); | |
(ii) | include the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii)(1) above; | |
(iii) | state, if applicable, that the Distribution Policy provides that the Board may amend or terminate the Distribution Policy at any time without prior notice to Fund shareholders; and | |
(iv) | describe any reasonably foreseeable circumstances that might cause the Fund to terminate the Distribution Policy and any reasonably foreseeable consequences of such termination. |
(c) Each report provided to shareholders of a Fund under Rule 30e-1 under the 1940 Act and each prospectus filed with the Commission on Form N-2 under the 1940 Act, will provide the Fund’s total return in relation to changes in NAV in the financial highlights table and in any discussion about the Fund’s total return.
3. | Disclosure to Shareholders, Prospective Shareholders and Third Parties |
(a) The Fund will include the information contained in the relevant 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, in any written communication (other than a communication on Form 1099) about the Distribution Policy or distributions under the Distribution Policy by the Fund, or agents that the Fund has authorized to make such communication on the Fund’s behalf, to any Fund shareholder, prospective shareholder or third-party information provider;
(b) The Fund will issue, contemporaneously with the issuance of any 19(a) Notice, a press release containing the information in the 19(a) Notice and will file with the Commission the information contained in such 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, as an exhibit to its next filed Form N-CSR; and
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7 The disclosure in this condition 2(a)(ii)(2) will be included only if the current distribution or the fiscal year-to-date cumulative distributions are estimated to include a return of capital.
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(c) The Fund will post prominently a statement on its (or the Adviser’s) website containing the information in each 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, and maintain such information on such website for at least 24 months.
4. | Delivery of 19(a) Notices to Beneficial Owners |
If a broker, dealer, bank or other person (“financial intermediary”) holds common shares issued by the Fund in nominee name, or otherwise, on behalf of a beneficial owner, the Fund:
(a) will request that the financial intermediary, or its agent, forward the 19(a) Notice to all beneficial owners of the Fund’s shares held through such financial intermediary;
(b) will provide, in a timely manner, to the financial intermediary, or its agent, enough copies of the 19(a) Notice assembled in the form and at the place that the financial intermediary, or its agent, reasonably requests to facilitate the financial intermediary’s sending of the 19(a) Notice to each beneficial owner of the Fund’s shares; and
(c) upon the request of any financial intermediary, or its agent, that receives copies of the 19(a) Notice, will pay the financial intermediary, or its agent, the reasonable expenses of sending the 19(a) Notice to such beneficial owners.
5. | Additional Board Determinations for Funds Whose Common Shares Trade at a Premium |
If :
(a) The Fund’s common shares have traded on the stock exchange that they primarily trade on at the time in question at an average premium to NAV equal to or greater than 10%, as determined on the basis of the average of the discount or premium to NAV of the Fund’s common shares as of the close of each trading day over a 12-week rolling period (each such 12-week rolling period ending on the last trading day of each week); and
(b) The Fund’s annualized distribution rate for such 12-week rolling period, expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the ending date of such 12-week rolling period, is greater than the Fund’s average annual total return in relation to the change in NAV over the 2-year period ending on the last day of such 12-week rolling period;
then:
(i) | At the earlier of the next regularly scheduled meeting or within four months of the last day of such 12-week rolling period, the Board, including a majority of its Independent Board Members: |
(1) | will request and evaluate, and the Fund’s Adviser will furnish, such information as may be reasonably necessary to make an informed determination of whether the Distribution Policy should be continued or continued after amendment; |
(2) | will determine whether continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy is consistent with the Fund’s investment objective(s) and policies and is in the best interests of the Fund and its shareholders, after considering the information in condition 5(b)(i)(1) above; including, without limitation: |
(A) | whether the Distribution Policy is accomplishing its purpose(s); |
(B) | the reasonably foreseeable material effects of the Distribution Policy on the Fund’s long-term total return in relation to the market price and NAV of the Fund’s common shares; and |
(C) | the Fund’s current distribution rate, as described in condition 5(b) above, compared with the Fund’s average annual taxable income or total return over the 2-year period, as described in condition 5(b), or such longer period as the Board deems appropriate; and |
Page 10 of 51 Pages |
(3) | based upon that determination, will approve or disapprove the continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy; and |
(ii) | The Board will record the information considered by it, including its consideration of the factors listed in condition 5(b)(i)(2) above, and the basis for its approval or disapproval of the continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy in its meeting minutes, which must be made and preserved for a period of not less than six years from the date of such meeting, the first two years in an easily accessible place. |
6. | Public Offerings |
The Fund will not make a public offering of the Fund’s common shares other than:
(a) | a rights offering below NAV to holders of the Fund’s common shares; | |
(b) | an offering in connection with a dividend reinvestment plan, merger, consolidation, acquisition, spin off or reorganization of the Fund; or | |
(c) | an offering other than an offering described in conditions 6(a) and 6(b) above, provided that, with respect to such other offering: |
(i) the Fund’s annualized distribution rate for the six months ending on the last day of the month ended immediately prior to the most recent distribution record date8, expressed as a percentage of NAV as of such date, is no more than one percentage point greater than the Fund’s average annual total return for the 5-year period ending on such date;9 and
(ii) the transmittal letter accompanying any registration statement filed with the Commission in connection with such offering discloses that the Fund has received an order under Section 19(b) to permit it to make periodic distributions of long- term capital gains with respect to its common shares as frequently as twelve times each year, and as frequently as distributions are specified by or determined in accordance with the terms of any outstanding shares of preferred shares as the Fund may issue.
7. | Amendments to Rule 19b-1 |
The requested Order will expire on the effective date of any amendment to Rule 19b-1 that provides relief permitting certain closed-end investment companies to make periodic distributions of long-term capital gains with respect to their outstanding common shares as frequently as twelve times each year.
_____________________
8 If the Fund has been in operation fewer than six months, the measured period will begin immediately following the Fund’s first public offering.
9 If the Fund has been in operation fewer than five years, the measured period will begin immediately following the Fund’s first public offering.
Page 11 of 51 Pages |
VII. | APPLICABLE PRECEDENT |
The Commission has recently granted substantially the same relief as that sought herein in High Income Securities Fund, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34373 (September 9, 2021) (notice) and 34395 (October 5, 2021) (order); First Eagle Global Opportunities Fund and First Eagle Investment Management, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34397 (October 12, 2021) (notice) and 34416 (November 9, 2021) (order); Mainstay CBRE Global Infrastructure Megatrends Fund, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34372 (September 3, 2021) (notice) and 34390 (September 29, 2021) (order); DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34328 (July 13, 2021) (notice) and 34353 (August 9, 2021) (order); Vertical Capital Income Fund and Oakline Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33505 (June 12, 2019) (notice) and 33548 (July 9, 2019) (order); Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33449 (April 17, 2019) (notice) and 33474 (May 14, 2019) (order); Macquarie Global Infrastructure Total Return Fund Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33389 (March 5, 2019) (notice) and 33436 (April 2, 2019) (order); Special Opportunities Fund, Inc. and Bulldog Investors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33367 (February 4, 2019) and 33386 (March 4, 2019); Vivaldi Opportunities Fund and Vivaldi Asset Management, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33147 (July 3, 2018)(notice) and 33185 (July 31, 2018) (order); The Swiss Helvetia Fund, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33075 (April 23, 2018)(notice) and 33099 (May 21, 2018)(order); The Mexico Equity& Income Fund, Inc. and Pichardo Asset Management, S.A. de C.V., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 32640 (May 18, 2017)(notice) and 32676 (June 13, 2017)(order); RiverNorth DoubleLine Strategic Opportunity Fund, Inc. and RiverNorth Capital Management LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 32635 (May 12, 2017)(notice) and 32673 (June 7, 2017)(order); Brookfield Global Listed Infrastructure Income Fund Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 31802 (September 1, 2015) (notice) and 31855 (September 30, 2015)(order); and Ares Dynamic Credit Allocation Fund, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 31665 (June 9, 2015) (notice) and 31708 (July 7, 2015)(order).
VIII. | PROCEDURAL MATTERS |
All of the requirements for execution and filing of this Application on behalf of the Applicants have been complied with in accordance with the applicable organizational documents of the Applicants, and the undersigned officers of the Applicants are fully authorized to execute this Application. The resolutions of the Board of Trustees of the Fund, authorizing the filing of this Application, required by Rule 0-2(c) under the 1940 Act, are included as Exhibit A to this Application. The verifications required by Rule 0-2(d) under the 1940 Act are included as Exhibit B to this Application.
Pursuant to Rule 0-2(f) under the 1940 Act, Applicants state that their address is 405 Lexington Avenue, 58th Floor, New York, NY 10174 and that all written communications regarding this Application should be directed to the individuals and addresses indicated on the cover 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.
IX. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Applicants respectfully request that the Commission issue an order under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act exempting the Funds from the provisions of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder to permit each Fund to make distributions on its common shares consisting in whole or in part of capital gain dividends as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year so long as it complies with the conditions of the Order and maintains in effect a Distribution Policy with respect to its common shares as described in this Application. In addition, Applicants request that the Order permit each Fund to make distributions on its preferred shares (if any) that it has issued or may issue in the future consisting in whole or in part of capital gain dividends as frequently as specified by or determined in accordance with the terms thereof. Applicants submit that the requested exemption is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, consistent with the protection of investors and consistent with the purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the 1940 Act.
Page 12 of 51 Pages |
Dated: May 29, 2024 | Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II | |
By: | /s/ Pierre Weinstein | |
Name: Pierre Weinstein | ||
Title: Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees | ||
Dated: May 29, 2024 | Saba Capital Management, L.P. | |
By: | /s/ Michael D’ Angelo | |
Name: Michael D’Angelo | ||
Title: General Counsel |
Page 13 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBITS TO APPLICATION
The following materials are made a part of the Application and are attached hereto:
DESIGNATION | DOCUMENT |
Exhibit A | Resolutions of the Board of Trustees of Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II |
Exhibit B | Verifications |
Exhibit C |
Marked copy of the Applicants’ application showing changes from the application of First Eagle Global Opportunities Fund, et al. (File No. 812-15260), an application identified by the Applicants as substantially identical under Rule 0-5(e)(3). Marked copy of the Applicants’ application showing changes from the application of DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit, et al. (File No. 812-15240), an application identified by the Applicants as substantially identical under Rule 0-5(e)(3) |
Page 14 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT A
Resolutions of the Board of Trustees of
Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II
Exemptive Application
RESOLVED, that the officers of Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II (the “Fund”) be, and each hereby is, authorized to prepare, execute and submit, on behalf of the Fund, an exemptive application to the Securities and Exchange Commission for an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Act”), for an exemption from Section 19(b) of the Act and Rule 19b-1 under the Act to permit the Fund to make periodic capital gain dividends (as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended) that include long-term capital gains as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year in respect of its common shares of beneficial interest and as often as specified by, or determined in accordance with the terms of, any preferred shares of beneficial interest issued by the Fund; and be it further
RESOLVED, that the appropriate officers of the Fund be, and each hereby is, empowered and directed to prepare, execute and file such documents, including any amendments thereof, and to take such other actions as he or she may deem necessary, appropriate or convenient to carry out the intent and purpose of the foregoing resolution, such determination to be conclusively evidenced by the doing of such acts and the preparation, execution, and filing of such documents.
General Authorization
RESOLVED, that all actions taken by the appropriate officers of the Fund in furtherance of the actions authorized by the foregoing resolutions hereby are expressly ratified, adopted and approved.
Page 15 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT B
Verifications of Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II and Saba Capital Management, L.P.
The undersigned states that he has duly executed the attached amended and restated application dated May 29, 2024 for and on behalf of Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II in his capacity as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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/ Pierre Weinstein | |
Name: Pierre Weinstein | ||
Title: Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees | ||
The undersigned states that he has duly executed the attached amended and restated application dated May 29, 2024 for and on behalf of Saba Capital Management, L.P. in his capacity as General Counsel of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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/ Michael D’ Angelo | |
Name: Michael D’Angelo | ||
Title: General Counsel | ||
Page 16 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT C
Marked copies of the Application showing changes from the final versions of the two applications identified as substantially identical under Rule 0-5(e)(3).
Page 17 of 51 Pages |
EXPEDITED REVIEW REQUESTED UNDER 17 CFR 270.0-5(d)
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BEFORE THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
IN THE MATTER OF:
|
AMENDED AND RESTATED APPLICATION PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(c) OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS AMENDED (THE “ACT”) FOR AN ORDER GRANTING EXEMPTIONS FROM SECTION 19(b) OF THE ACT AND RULE 19b-1 THEREUNDER
|
Investment Company Act of 1940
File No. 812-[ ]
PLEASE SEND ALL COMMUNICATIONS AND ORDERS TO:
Michael WS.
Mundt, Esq.Didiuk
Stradley Ronon Stevens &
Young, LLP
2000 K Street, N.W. Suite
700
Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP
919 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10022
(212) 756-2405, [email protected]
Washington, DC 20006
(202) 419-8403, [email protected]
WITH A COPY TO:
Michael D’Angelo
David
Saba Capital Management, L.P. O'Connor
First Eagle Investment Management,
LLC
1345405
Lexington Avenue of the Americas,
58th Floor
New York, NY 1010510174
This Amended
and Restated Application (including Exhibits) consists of 5851
pages
The Exhibit Index is on page 14
As filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission on September 10May
29, 20214
Page 18 of 51 Pages |
I. |
First
Eagle GlobalSaba Capital Income & Opportunities
Fund II (the “Fund”) and First
Eagle InvestmentSaba Capital Management, LLCL.P.
(“FEIMSaba”
and together with the Fund (the “Applicants”) hereby submit this amended
and restated application for an order (the “Order”) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”)
pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), providing the
Fund, and each other closed-end management investment company registered under the 1940 Act advised or to be advised in the future by
FEIMSaba, or by
an entity controlling, controlled by or under common control (within the meaning of Section 2(a)(9)
of the 1940 Act) with FEIMSaba
(including any successor in interest1)
(each such entity, including FEIMSaba,
anthe “Adviser”)
that in the future seeks to rely on the Order (such investment companies, together with the Fund, are collectively referred to herein
as the “Funds” and each separately as a “Future Fund”), an exemption from the provisions
of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder, as more fully set forth below (the “Application”).2
The Fund and the Future Funds are hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Funds” and separately as a “Fund.”
II. | THE APPLICANTS |
The
Fund (formerly, Templeton Global Income Fund) is organized as a Delaware
statutory trust, which is registered under the 1940 Act as a non-diversified,
limited term closed-end management investment company,
and has nocommenced
operatingons history.on
January 28, 1988. Effective January 1, 2024, the Fund anticipates that itschanged
its name to Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II. The Fund’s common shares will
beare listed on the New York Stock Exchange,
subject to notice of issuance. (“NYSE”),
a national securities exchange as defined in Section 2(a)(26) of the 1940 Act. Although the Fund
does not currently intend to issue preferred shares, the board of trustees of the Fund may authorize the issuance of preferred shares
in the future.
The
Fund’s investment objective is to provide total return through a combination ofinvestors
with high current income, current gains and long-term growthwith
a secondary goal of capital appreciation. The Fund will
typically seeks to achieve its investment objective
by investing, under normal circumstances, primarily in globally
in debt and equity securities of U.S. and foreign companies that FEIM believes are undervalued
based upon its bottom-up, fundamental investment approach. The Fund will be actively managed and may invest in any size company, including
large, medium and smaller companies. The Fund may also invest in debt instruments (such as notes and bonds) without regard to credit rating
or time to maturity, short-term debt instruments, gold and other precious metals, and futures contracts related to precious metals. Under
normal circumstances, the Fund anticipates it will allocate a substantial amount of its assets to foreign investments (including American
Depositary Receipts, Global Depositary Receipts and European Depositary Receipts).public
and private companies, which includes, among other things, investments in closed-end funds, special purpose acquisition companies, reinsurance,
public and private debt instruments. The Fund may also utilize derivatives, including but not limited to total return swaps, credit default
swaps, options (including but not limited to index options) and futures, in seeking to enhance returns and/or to reduce portfolio risk.
In addition, on an opportunistic basis, the Fund may also invest up to 15% of its total assets in private funds that focus on debt, equity
or other investments consistent with the Fund’s investment objective.
FEIMSaba,
with offices at 1345405
Lexington Avenue of the Americas,
58th Floor, New York, New York 10105NY
10174, serves as the investment adviser to the Fund. FEIMSaba
is registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended.
Subject to the oversight of the board of trustees, FEIM of
the Fund, Saba is responsible for managing, either directly or through others selected by it,
the investment activities of the Fund and the Fund’s business affairs.
___________________________
1 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 only registered closed-end investment company that currently intends to rely on the Order has been named as an Applicant. Any Fund that may rely on the Order in the future will comply with the terms and conditions of the Application.
Page 19 of 51 Pages |
On October 15, 2023 shareholders of the Fund voted to approve a new investment management agreement between the Fund and Saba (such new investment management agreement, the “New Management Agreement”). The New Management Agreement, which was effective January 1, 2024, replaced the previously effective amended and restated investment management agreement, dated June 1, 2014, as amended on May 13, 2020, between the Fund and Franklin Advisers, Inc. (“Franklin”), the Fund’s previous investment adviser.
The
Fund will enter into an investment management agreement pursuant to which FEIM, in accordance with the Fund's stated investment objective,
policies and limitations, and subject to the supervision of the Fund's Board of Trustees, provides investment management services for
the Fund's portfolio and supervises and oversees the investment and reinvestment of the Fund's assets. The portfolio of a Fund may be
managed by one or more investment sub-advisers (each, a "Future Sub-Adviser"). A Future Sub-Adviser may be an affiliate
of FEIM. Any Future Sub-Adviser will be registered under the Advisers Act.
Franklin and the Fund have previously relied on an exemptive order (IC Rel. No. 30499) granting an exemption from Section 19(b) to allow the Fund to make periodic distributions of long-term capital gains (“Existing Order”). As Saba has succeeded in the role of investment adviser of the Fund, replacing Franklin, the Fund and Saba cannot rely on the Existing Order.3
III. | REQUEST FOR EXEMPTIVE RELIEF |
Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act provides that it shall be unlawful in contravention of such rules, regulations, or orders as the Commission may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors for any registered investment company to distribute long-term capital gains, as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), more often than once every twelve months. Rule 19b-1 under the 1940 Act provides that no registered investment company which is a “regulated investment company” as defined in Section 851 of the Code may make more than (i) one “capital gain dividend,” as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code, in any one taxable year of the company, (ii) one additional capital gain distribution made in whole or in part to avoid payment of excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code plus (iii) one supplemental capital gain dividend pursuant to Section 855 of the Code (provided that it does not exceed 10% of the total amount distributed for the taxable year).
Applicants
believe that Rule 19b-1 should be interpreted to permit a Fund to pay an unlimited number of distributions on its common and preferred
stockshares (if
any) so long as it makes the designation necessary under the Code and Rule 19b-1 to characterize those distributions as “capital
gain dividends” restricted by Rule 19b-1 only as often as is permitted by Rule 19b-1, even if the Code would then require retroactively
spreading the capital gain resulting from that designation over more than the permissible number of distributions. However, to obtain
certainty for a Fund’s proposed distribution policies (each, a “Distribution Policy”), in the absence
of such an interpretation, Applicants hereby request an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act granting an exemption from Section
19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder. The Order would permit each Fund to make periodic
capital gain dividends (as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code) that include long-term capital gains as frequently as twelve
times in any one taxable year in respect of its shares of beneficial interest (“common stockshares”)
and as often as specified by, or determined in accordance with the terms of, any preferred stockshares
issued by the Fund.
IV. | REPRESENTATIONS OF APPLICANTS |
Prior to
a Fund’s implementing a Distribution Policy in reliance on the Order, the board of directors or trustees (the “Board”)
of each Fund seeking to rely on the Order, including a majority of the directors or trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund,
as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act (the “Independent Board Members”), will request, and the Adviser will
provide, such information as is reasonably necessary to make an informed determination of whether the Board should adopt a proposed Distribution
Policy. In particular, the Board and the Independent Board Members will review information regarding
(i) the purpose and terms of the proposed Distribution Policy; (ii) the likely effects of the proposed Distribution Policy on the Fund’s
long-term total return (in relation to market price and net asset value per share of common stockshares
(“NAV”)); (iii) the expected relationship between the Fund’s distribution rate on its common
shares of common stock under the proposed Distribution Policy and the Fund’s
total return (in relation to NAV); (iv) whether the rate of distribution is anticipated to exceed the Fund’s expected total return
in relation to its NAV; and (v) any foreseeable material effects of the proposed Distribution Policy on the Fund’s long-term total
return (in relation to market price and NAV).
___________________________
3 | In reliance on the Commission staff no-action letter issued to Innovator Capital Management, LLC, et al. (pub. avail. October 6, 2017) and oral discussions with the Commission staff, the Applicants intend to rely on the Existing Order as if the Existing Order extended to the Adviser until the earlier of the receipt of the Order or 150 days from January 1, 2024, the date of the New Management Agreement between the Fund and the Adviser. During such time, the Adviser will comply with the terms and conditions in the Existing Order imposed on Franklin as though such terms and conditions were imposed directly on the Adviser. When and if the Order is granted by the Commission, the Applicants would then rely on the Order, rather than continuing to rely on the Existing Order. |
Page 20 of 51 Pages |
The Independent Board Members will also consider what conflicts of interest the Adviser and the affiliated persons of the Adviser and the Fund might have with respect to the adoption or implementation of the proposed Distribution Policy.
Following
this review, the Board, including the Independent Board Members, of each Fund will, before adopting or implementing any proposed Distribution
Policy, make a determination that the proposed Distribution Policy is consistent with the Fund’s investment objective(s) and in
the best interests of the holders of the Fund’s common stockshares.
The Distribution Policy will be consistent with the Fund’s policies and procedures and will be described in the Fund’s registration
statement.
In addition, prior to implementation of a Distribution Policy for any Fund pursuant to the Order requested by this Application, the Board of the Fund shall have adopted policies and procedures (the “Section 19 Compliance Policies”) pursuant to Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act that:
1.
are reasonably designed to ensure that all notices required to be sent to the Fund’s stockshareholders
pursuant to Section 19(a) of the 1940 Act, Rule 19a-1 thereunder and by condition 4 below (each, a “19(a)
Notice”) include the disclosure required by Rule 19a-1 and by condition 2(a) below, and that all other written
communications by the Fund or its agents regarding distributions under the Distribution Policy include the disclosure required by condition
3(a) below; and
2. require the Fund to keep records that demonstrate its compliance with all of the conditions of the Order and that are necessary for the Fund to form the basis for, or demonstrate the calculation of, the amounts disclosed in its 19(a) Notices.
The records of the actions of the Board of each Fund will summarize the basis for the Board’s approval of the Distribution Policy, including its consideration of the factors described above. These records will be maintained for a period of at least six years from the date of the applicable meeting, the first two years in an easily accessible place, or for such longer period as may otherwise be required by law.
Generally,
the purpose of a Distribution Policy would be to permit a Fund to distribute periodically, over the course of each year, an amount closely
approximating the total taxable income of the Fund during the year through distributions in relatively equal amounts (plus any required
special distributions) that are composed of payments received from portfolio companies, supplemental amounts generally representing realized
capital gains or, possibly, returns of capital that may represent unrealized capital gains. The Fund
seeks to establish a distribution rate that approximates the Fund’s projected total return that can reasonably be expected to be
generated by the Fund over an extended period of time, although the distribution rate will not be solely dependent on the amount of income
earned or capital gains realized by the Fund for the year. Under the Distribution Policy of a Fund, the Fund would distribute periodically
(as frequently as twelve times in any taxable year) to its respective common stockshareholders
a fixed percentage of the market price of the Fund’s common shares
of common stock at a particular point in time or a fixed percentage of NAV at a particular
time or a fixed amount per share of common stockshares,
any of which may be adjusted from time to time. It is anticipated that under a Distribution Policy, the minimum annual distribution rate
with respect to the Fund’s common shares of
common stock would be independent of the Fund’s performance during any particular period but would be expected to
correlate with the Fund’s performance over time. Except for extraordinary distributions and
potential increases or decreases in the final dividend periods in light of the Fund’s performance for an entire calendar year and
to enable the Fund to comply with the distribution requirements of Subchapter M of the Code for the calendar year, each distribution on
the Fund’s common stockshares
would be at the stated rate then in effect. The Board will periodically review the amount of potential distributions in light of the investment
experience of the Fund, and may modify or terminate a Distribution Policy at any time.
Page 21 of 51 Pages |
V. | JUSTIFICATION FOR REQUESTED RELIEF |
Section
6(c) of the 1940 Act provides that the Commission may exempt any person, security or transaction from any provision of the 1940 Act or
of any rule or regulation thereunder, if and to the extent that the 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. For the reasons
set forth below, Applicants submit that the requested exemption from Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder would be
consistent with the standards set forth in Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act and in the best interests of the Funds and their respective stockshareholders.
A. | Receipt of the Order would serve |
Applicants believe that closed-end fund investors may prefer an investment vehicle that provides regular current income through fixed distribution policies that would be available through a Distribution Policy. Allowing a Distribution Policy to operate in the manner described in this Application would help fill current investor demand and foster competition in the registered fund market.
An
exemption from Rule 19b-1 would benefit stockshareholders
in another way. Common shares
of common stock of closed-end funds often trade in
the marketplace at a discount to their NAV. Applicants believe that this discount may be reduced if a Fund is permitted to pay relatively
frequent dividends on its common stockshares
at a consistent rate, whether or not those dividends contain an element of long-term capital gains.
Any reduction in the discount at which the
Fund’s common shares
of common stock trade in the market would benefit
the holders of the Fund’s common stockshares
along with the Fund.
B. | The Fund’s |
One
of the concerns leading to the enactment of Section 19(b) and adoption of Rule 19b-1 was that stockshareholders
might be unable to distinguish between frequent distributions of capital gains and dividends from investment income.34
However, Rule 19a-1 under the 1940 Act effectively addresses this concern by requiring
that distributions (or the confirmation of the reinvestment thereof) estimated to be sourced in part from capital gains or capital be
accompanied by a separate statement showing the sources of the distribution (e.g., estimated net
income, net short-term capital gains, net long-term capital gains
and/or return of capital). The same information will be included in each Fund’s annual report
to stockshareholders
and on its Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) Form 1099-DIV, which will be sent
to each common and preferred stockholdershareholder
who received distributions during a particular year (including stockshareholders
who have sold shares during the year).
In
addition, each of the Funds will make the additional disclosures required by the conditions set forth in Part VI below,
and each of them will adopt compliance policies and procedures in accordance with Rule 38a-1 under
the 1940 Act to ensure that all required notices and disclosures are sent to stockshareholders.
The information
required by Section 19(a), Rule 19a-1, the Distribution Policy, the Section 19 Compliance Policies and the conditions listed below will
help to ensure that each Fund’s stockshareholders
are provided sufficient information to understand that their periodic distributions are not tied to the Fund’s net investment income
(which for this purpose is the Fund’s taxable income other than from capital gains) and realized capital gains to date, and may
not represent yield or investment return. Accordingly, subjecting the Funds to Section 19(b) and Rule
19b-1 would afford stockshareholders
no extra protection. In addition, the Funds will undertake to request intermediaries, or their agent(s),
to forward 19(a) Notices to their customers and to reimburse them for the costs of forwarding. Such
forwarding may occur in any manner permitted by statute, rule or order or by the staff of the Commission.
C. | Under certain circumstances, Rule 19b-1 gives
rise to improper influence on portfolio management decisions, with no offsetting benefit to |
Rule 19b-1, when applied to a Distribution Policy, actually gives rise to one of the concerns that Rule 19b-1 was intended to avoid: inappropriate influence on portfolio management decisions. Funds that pay long-term capital gains distributions only once per year in accordance with Rule 19b-1 impose no pressure on management to realize capital gains at any time when purely investment considerations do not dictate doing so. In the absence of an exemption from Rule 19b-1, the adoption of a periodic distribution plan imposes pressure on management (i) not to realize any net long-term capital gains until the point in the year that the fund can pay all of its remaining distributions in accordance with Rule 19b-1 and (ii) not to realize any long-term capital gains during any particular year in excess of the amount of the aggregate pay-out for the year (since as a practical matter excess gains must be distributed and accordingly would not be available to satisfy pay-out requirements in following years), notwithstanding that purely investment considerations might favor realization of long-term gains at different times or in different amounts.
____________________
3
4
See Securities and Exchange Commission 1966 Report to Congress on Investment
Company Growth (H.R. Rep. No. 2337, 89th Cong. 2d Sess. 190-95 (1966)); S. Rep. No. 91-184, 91st Cong., 1st Sess. 29 (1969); H.R. Rep.
No. 91-1382, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 29 (1970).
Page 22 of 51 Pages |
No purpose
is served by the distortion in the normal operation of a periodic distribution plan required in order to comply with Rule 19b-1. There
is no benefit in requiring any fund that adopts a periodic distribution plan either to retain (and pay taxes on) long-
termlong-term capital gains (with the resulting additional
tax return complexities for the fund’s stockshareholders)
or to avoid designating its distributions of long-term gains as capital gains dividends for tax purposes
(thereby avoiding a Rule 19b-1 problem but providing distributions taxable at ordinary income rates rather than the much lower long-term
capital gains rates). The desirability of avoiding these anomalous results creates pressure to limit
the realization of long-term capital gains that otherwise would be taken for purely investment considerations.
The Order requested by Applicants would minimize these anomalous effects of Rule 19b-1 by enabling the Funds to realize long-term capital gains as often as investment considerations dictate without fear of violating Rule 19b-1.
D. | Other concerns leading to adoption of Rule 19b-1 are not applicable |
Another concern that led to the enactment of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and adoption of Rule 19b-1 was that frequent capital gains distributions could facilitate improper fund share sales practices, including, in particular, the practice of urging an investor to purchase shares of a fund on the basis of an upcoming capital gains dividend (“selling the dividend”), where the dividend would result in an immediate corresponding reduction in NAV and would be in effect a taxable return of the investor’s capital. Applicants submit that this concern should not apply to closed-end investment companies, such as the Funds, that do not continuously distribute shares. Furthermore, if the underlying concern extends to secondary market purchases of shares of closed-end funds that are subject to a large upcoming capital gains dividend, adoption of a periodic distribution plan may help minimize the concern by avoiding, through periodic distributions, any buildup of large end-of-the-year distributions.
Applicants
also submit that the “selling the dividend” concern is not applicable to preferred stockshares,
which entitles a holder to no more than a specified periodic dividend and, like a debt security, is initially sold at a price based upon
its liquidation preference, credit quality, dividend rate and frequency of payment. Investors buy
preferred stockshares
for the purpose of receiving specific payments at the frequency bargained for, and any application of Rule 19b-1 to preferred stockshares
would be contrary to the expectation of investors. There is also currently a tax rule that
provides that any loss realized by a stockholdershareholder
upon sale of shares of a regulated investment company that were held for six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital
loss, to the extent of any long-term capital gains paid on such shares, to avoid the selling of dividends.
E. | Further limitations of Rule 19b-1 |
Subparagraphs (a) and (f) of Rule 19b-1 limit the number of capital gains dividends, as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code, that a fund may make with respect to any one taxable year to one, plus a supplemental distribution made pursuant to Section 855 of the Code not exceeding 10% of the total amount distributed for the year, plus one additional capital gain dividend made in whole or in part to avoid the excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code.
Page 23 of 51 Pages |
Applicants
assert that by limiting the number of capital gain dividends that a Fund may make with respect to any one year, Rule 19b-1 may prevent
the normal and efficient operation of a periodic distribution plan whenever that Fund’s realized net long-term capital gains in
any year exceed the total of the periodic distributions that may include such capital gains under the rule. Rule 19b-1 thus may force
the fixed regular periodic distributions to be funded with returns of capital45
(to the extent net investment income and realized short term capital gains are insufficient to fund the distribution), even
though realized net long-term capital gains otherwise would be available. To distribute all of a Fund’s long-term capital gains
within the limits in Rule 19b-1, a Fund may be required to make total distributions in excess of the annual amount called for by its
periodic distribution plan or to retain and pay taxes on the excess amount. Applicants believe that the application of Rule 19b-1 to
a Fund’s periodic distribution plan may create pressure to limit the realization of long-term capital gains based on considerations
unrelated to investment goals.
Revenue
Ruling 89-8156
under the Code requires that a fund that seeks to qualify as a regulated investment company under the Code and that has
both common stockshares
and preferred stockshares
outstanding designate the types of income, e.g., investment income and capital gains,
in the same proportion as the total distributions distributed to each class for the tax year. To satisfy the proportionate designation
requirements of Revenue Ruling 89-81, whenever a fund has realized a long-term capital gain with
respect to a given tax year, the fund must designate the required proportionate share of such capital gain to be included in common and
preferred stockshares dividends.
Although Rule 19b-1 allows a fund some flexibility with respect to the frequency of capital gains distributions, a fund might
use all of the exceptions available under Rule 19b-1 for a tax year and still need to distribute additional capital gains allocated to
the preferred stockshares
to comply with Revenue Ruling 89-81.
The potential
abuses addressed by Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 do not arise with respect to preferred stockshares
issued by a closed-end fund. Such distributions generally are either fixed or are determined in periodic
auctions or remarketings or are periodically reset by reference to short-term
term interest rates rather than by reference to performance of the issuer, and Revenue
Ruling 89-81 determines the proportion of such distributions that are comprised of the long-term capital gains.
The Applicants also submit that the “selling the dividend” concern is not applicable to preferred stockshares,
which entitles a holder to no more than a periodic dividend at a fixed rate or the rate determined by the market, and, like a debt security,
is priced based upon its liquidation value, dividend rate, credit quality, and frequency of payment. Investors buy preferred stockshares
for the purpose of receiving payments at the frequency bargained for and do not expect the liquidation value of their shares to change.
The proposed Order will assist the Funds in avoiding these Rule 19b-1 problems.
F. | General |
The
relief requested is that the Commission permit the Funds to make periodic distributions in respect of their common stockshares
as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year and in respect of their preferred stockshares
as specified by or determined in accordance with the terms thereof. Granting this relief would provide the Funds with flexibility
in meeting investor interest in receiving more frequent distributions. Implementation of the relief would actually ameliorate the concerns
that gave rise to Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 and help avoid the “selling of dividends” problem, which Section 19(b) and
Rule 19b-1 are not effective in preventing.
The
potential issues under Rule 19b-1 are not relevant to distributions on preferred stockshares
. Not only are such distributions fixed or determined by the market rather than by reference to the performance of the issuer
but also the long-term capital gain component is mandated by the IRS to be the same proportion as the proportion of long-term gain dividends
bears to the total distributions in respect of the common stockshares
and consequently the long-term gain component cannot even be known until the end of the fund’s fiscal year. In these circumstances
it would be very difficult for any of the potential abuses reflected in Rule 19b-1’s restrictions to occur.
In summary,
Rule 19b-1, in the circumstances referred to above, is likely to distort the effective and proper functioning of a Fund’s Distribution
Policy and gives rise to the very pressures on portfolio management decisions that Rule 19b-1 was intended to avoid. These distortions
forced by Rule 19b-1 serve no purpose and are not in the best interests of stockshareholders.
____________________
45
These would be returns of capital for financial accounting purposes and not for tax accounting purposes.
56
1989-1 C.B. 226.
Page 24 of 51 Pages |
VI. | APPLICANTS’ CONDITIONS |
Applicants agree that, with respect to each Fund seeking to rely on the Order, the Order will be subject to each of the following conditions:
1. | Compliance Review and Reporting |
The Fund’s chief compliance officer will: (a) report to the Fund’s Board, no less frequently than once every three months or at the next regularly scheduled quarterly Board meeting, whether (i) the Fund and its Adviser have complied with the conditions of the Order and (ii) a material compliance matter (as defined in Rule 38a-1(e)(2) under the 1940 Act) has occurred with respect to such conditions; and (b) review the adequacy of the policies and procedures adopted by the Board no less frequently than annually.
2. | Disclosures to Fund |
(a) Each
19(a) Notice disseminated to the holders of the Fund’s common stockshares,
in addition to the information required by Section 19(a) and Rule 19a-1:
(i) | will provide, in a tabular or graphical format: |
(1) | the amount of the distribution, on a per share of common
| ||
(2) | the fiscal year-to-date cumulative amount
of distributions, on a per share of common | ||
(3) | the average annual total return in relation to the change in NAV for the 5-year period (or, if the Fund’s history of operations is less than five years, the time period commencing immediately following the Fund’s first public offering) ending on the last day of the month ended immediately prior to the most recent distribution record date compared to the current fiscal period’s annualized distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date; and | ||
(4) | the cumulative total return in relation to the change in NAV from the last completed fiscal year to the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date compared to the fiscal year-to-date cumulative distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date. | ||
Such disclosure shall be made in a type size at least as large and as prominent as the estimate of the sources of the current distribution; and
(ii) | will include the following disclosure: |
(1) | “You should not draw any conclusions about the Fund’s investment performance from the amount of this distribution or from the terms of the Fund’s Distribution Policy.”; | |
(2) | “The Fund estimates that it has distributed more than its income
and net realized capital gains; therefore, a portion of your distribution may be a return of capital. A return of
capital may occur, for example, when some or all of the money that you invested in the Fund is paid back to you. A return of capital
distribution does not necessarily reflect the Fund’s investment performance and should not be confused with ‘yield’
or ‘income’”; | |
(3) | “The amounts and sources of distributions reported in this 19(a) Notice are only estimates and are not being provided for tax reporting purposes. The actual amounts and sources of the amounts for tax reporting purposes will depend upon the Fund’s investment experience during the remainder of its fiscal year and may be subject to changes based on tax regulations. The Fund will send you a Form 1099-DIV for the calendar year that will tell you how to report these distributions for federal income tax purposes.” |
____________________
67
The disclosure in this condition 2(a)(ii)(2) will be included only if the current distribution or the fiscal year-to-date
cumulative distributions are estimated to include a return of capital.
Page 25 of 51 Pages |
Such disclosure shall be made in a type size at least as large as and as prominent as any other information in the 19(a) Notice and placed on the same page in close proximity to the amount and the sources of the distribution.
(b) | On the inside front cover of each report to |
(i) | describe the terms of the Distribution Policy (including the fixed amount or fixed percentage of the distributions and the frequency of the distributions); | |
(ii) | include the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii)(1) above; | |
(iii) | state,
if applicable, that the Distribution Policy provides that the Board may amend or terminate
the Distribution Policy at any time without prior notice to Fund | |
(iv) | describe any reasonably foreseeable circumstances that might cause the Fund to terminate the Distribution Policy and any reasonably foreseeable consequences of such termination. |
(c) Each
report provided to stockshareholders
of a Fund under Rule 30e-1 under the 1940 Act and each prospectus filed with the Commission on Form N-2 under the 1940 Act, will provide
the Fund’s total return in relation to changes in NAV in the financial highlights table and in any discussion about the Fund’s
total return.
3. | Disclosure to |
(a)
The Fund will include the information contained in the relevant 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure
required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, in any written communication (other than a communication on Form 1099) about the Distribution Policy
or distributions under the Distribution Policy by the Fund, or agents that the Fund has authorized to make such communication on the
Fund’s behalf, to any Fund stockholdershareholder,
prospective stockholdershareholder
or third-party information provider;
(b) The Fund will issue, contemporaneously with the issuance of any 19(a) Notice, a press release containing the information in the 19(a) Notice and will file with the Commission the information contained in such 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, as an exhibit to its next filed Form N-CSR; and
(c) The Fund will post prominently a statement on its (or the Adviser’s) website containing the information in each 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, and maintain such information on such website for at least 24 months.
4. | Delivery of 19(a) Notices to Beneficial Owners |
If a broker, dealer, bank or other person (“financial
intermediary”) holds common stockshares
issued by the Fund in nominee name, or otherwise, on behalf of a beneficial owner, the Fund:
(a)
will request that the financial intermediary, or its agent, forward the 19(a) Notice to all beneficial
owners of the Fund’s stockshares
held through such financial intermediary;
(b)
will provide, in a timely manner, to the financial intermediary, or its agent, enough copies of
the 19(a) Notice assembled in the form and at the place that the financial intermediary, or its agent, reasonably requests to facilitate
the financial intermediary’s sending of the 19(a) Notice to each beneficial owner of the Fund’s stockshares;
and
(c) upon the request of any financial intermediary, or its agent, that receives copies of the 19(a) Notice, will pay the financial intermediary, or its agent, the reasonable expenses of sending the 19(a) Notice to such beneficial owners.
Page 26 of 51 Pages |
5. | Additional Board Determinations for Funds Whose Common |
If:
(a)
The Fund’s common stock
hasshares have
traded on the stock exchange that they primarily trade on at the time in question at an average
premium to NAV equal to or greater than 10%, as determined on the basis of the average of the discount or premium to NAV of the Fund’s
common shares of common stock as
of the close of each trading day over a 12-week rolling period (each such 12-week rolling period ending on the last trading day of each
week); and
(b) The Fund’s annualized distribution rate for such 12-week rolling period, expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the ending date of such 12-week rolling period, is greater than the Fund’s average annual total return in relation to the change in NAV over the 2-year period ending on the last day of such 12-week rolling period;
then:
(i) | At the earlier of the next regularly scheduled meeting or within four months of the last day of such 12-week rolling period, the Board, including a majority of its Independent Board Members: |
(1) | will request and evaluate, and the Fund’s Adviser will furnish, such information as may be reasonably necessary to make an informed determination of whether the Distribution Policy should be continued or continued after amendment; |
(2) | will determine
whether continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy is consistent with the
Fund’s investment objective(s) and policies and is in the best interests of the Fund and its |
(A) | whether the Distribution Policy is accomplishing its purpose(s); | |
(B) | the reasonably foreseeable
material effects of the Distribution Policy on the Fund’s long-term total return in
relation to the market price and NAV of the Fund’s common | |
(C) | the Fund’s current distribution rate, as described in condition 5(b) above, compared with the Fund’s average annual taxable income or total return over the 2-year period, as described in condition 5(b), or such longer period as the Board deems appropriate; and |
(3) | based upon that determination, will approve or disapprove the continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy; and |
(ii) | The Board will record the information considered by it, including its consideration of the factors listed in condition 5(b)(i)(2) above, and the basis for its approval or disapproval of the continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy in its meeting minutes, which must be made and preserved for a period of not less than six years from the date of such meeting, the first two years in an easily accessible place. |
6. | Public Offerings |
The Fund will not make a public offering
of the Fund’s common stockshares
other than:
(a) | a rights offering below NAV to holders of the Fund’s common | |
(b) | an offering in connection with a dividend reinvestment plan, merger, consolidation, acquisition, spin off or reorganization of the Fund; or | |
(c) | an offering other than an offering described in conditions 6(a) and 6(b) above, provided that, with respect to such other offering: |
(i)
the Fund’s annualized distribution rate for the six months ending on the last day of the month
ended immediately prior to the most recent distribution record date78,
expressed as a percentage of NAV as of such date, is no more than 1one
percentage point greater than the Fund’s average annual total return for the 5-year period ending on such date;89
and
(ii)
the transmittal letter accompanying any registration statement filed with the Commission in connection
with such offering discloses that the Fund has received an order under Section 19(b) to permit it to make periodic distributions of long-termlong-
term capital gains with respect to its common
shares of common stock as frequently as twelve times each year, and as frequently
as distributions are specified by or determined in accordance with the terms of any outstanding shares of preferred stockshares
as the Fund may issue.
____________________
78 If the Fund has been in operation fewer than six months, the measured period
will begin immediately following the Fund’s first public offering.
89
If the Fund has been in operation fewer than five years, the measured period will begin immediately following the Fund’s
first public offering.
Page 27 of 51 Pages |
7. | Amendments to Rule 19b-1 |
The requested Order
will expire on the effective date of any amendment to Rule 19b-1 that provides relief permitting certain closed-end investment companies
to make periodic distributions of long-term capital gains with respect to their outstanding common stockshares
as frequently as twelve times each year.
VII. | APPLICABLE PRECEDENT |
The Commission has recently granted substantially the same relief as that sought herein in High Income Securities Fund, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34373 (September 9, 2021) (notice) and 34395 (October 5, 2021) (order); First Eagle Global Opportunities Fund and First Eagle Investment Management, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34397 (October 12, 2021) (notice) and 34416 (November 9, 2021) (order); Mainstay CBRE Global Infrastructure Megatrends Fund, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34372 (September 3, 2021) (notice) and 34390 (September 29, 2021) (order); DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34328 (July 13, 2021) (notice) and 34353 (August 9, 2021) (order); Vertical Capital Income Fund and Oakline Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33505 (June 12, 2019) (notice) and 33548 (July 9, 2019) (order); Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33449 (April 17, 2019) (notice) and 33474 (May 14, 2019) (order); Macquarie Global Infrastructure Total Return Fund Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33389 (March 5, 2019) (notice) and 33436 (April 2, 2019) (order); Special Opportunities Fund, Inc. and Bulldog Investors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33367 (February 4, 2019) and 33386 (March 4, 2019); Vivaldi Opportunities Fund and Vivaldi Asset Management, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33147 (July 3, 2018)(notice) and 33185 (July 31, 2018) (order); The Swiss Helvetia Fund, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33075 (April 23, 2018)(notice) and 33099 (May 21, 2018)(order); The Mexico Equity& Income Fund, Inc. and Pichardo Asset Management, S.A. de C.V., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 32640 (May 18, 2017)(notice) and 32676 (June 13, 2017)(order); RiverNorth DoubleLine Strategic Opportunity Fund, Inc. and RiverNorth Capital Management LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 32635 (May 12, 2017)(notice) and 32673 (June 7, 2017)(order); Brookfield Global Listed Infrastructure Income Fund Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 31802 (September 1, 2015) (notice) and 31855 (September 30, 2015)(order); and Ares Dynamic Credit Allocation Fund, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 31665 (June 9, 2015) (notice) and 31708 (July 7, 2015)(order).
VIII. | PROCEDURAL MATTERS |
All of the requirements for execution and filing of this Application on behalf of the Applicants have been complied with in accordance with the applicable organizational documents of the Applicants, and the undersigned officers of the Applicants are fully authorized to execute this Application. The resolutions of the Board of Trustees of the Fund, authorizing the filing of this Application, required by Rule 0-2(c) under the 1940 Act, are included as Exhibit A to this Application. The verifications required by Rule 0-2(d) under the 1940 Act are included as Exhibit B to this Application.
Pursuant to
Rule 0-2(f) under the 1940 Act, Applicants state that their address is 1345405
Lexington Avenue of the Americas,
58th Floor, New York, New York 10105NY
10174 and that all written communications regarding this Application should be directed to the individuals and addresses indicated
on the cover 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.
IX. | CONCLUSION |
For the foregoing
reasons, Applicants respectfully request that the Commission issue an order under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act exempting the Funds from
the provisions of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder to permit each Fund to make distributions on its common stockshares
consisting in whole or in part of capital gain dividends as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year so long as it complies
with the conditions of the Order and maintains in effect a Distribution Policy with respect to its common stockshares
as described in this Application. In addition, Applicants request that the Order permit each Fund to make distributions on its preferred
stockshares (if any)
that it has issued or may issue in the future consisting in whole or in part of capital gain dividends as frequently as specified by or
determined in accordance with the terms thereof. Applicants submit that the requested exemption is necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, consistent with the protection of investors and consistent with the purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions of
the 1940 Act.
Page 28 of 51 Pages |
Dated: |
By: /s/ Name: Title: |
Dated: |
By: /s/ Name: Title: General Counsel |
Page 29 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBITS TO APPLICATION
The following materials are made a part of the Application and are attached hereto:
DESIGNATION | DOCUMENT |
Exhibit A | Resolutions of the Board of Trustees of |
Exhibit B | Verifications |
Exhibit C |
Marked copy of the Applicants’ application
showing changes from the application of Marked copy of the Applicants’ application showing
changes from the application of |
Page 30 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT A
Resolutions of the Board
of Trustees of First Eagle Global
Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II
Exemptive Application
RESOLVED,
that the officers of First Eagle GlobalSaba
Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II (the “Fund”)
be, and each hereby is, authorized to prepare, execute and submit, on behalf of the Fund, an exemptive application to the Securities
and Exchange Commission for an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Act”),
for an exemption from Section 19(b) of the Act and Rule 19b-1 under the Act to permit the Fund to make periodic capital gain dividends
(as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended) that include long-term capital gains as frequently
as twelve times in any one taxable year in respect of its common shares of beneficial interest and as often as specified by, or determined
in accordance with the terms of, any preferred shares of beneficial interest issued by the Fund; and be it further
RESOLVED, that the appropriate officers of the Fund be, and each hereby is, empowered and directed to prepare, execute and file such documents, including any amendments thereof, and to take such other actions as he or she may deem necessary, appropriate or convenient to carry out the intent and purpose of the foregoing resolution, such determination to be conclusively evidenced by the doing of such acts and the preparation, execution, and filing of such documents.
General Authorization
RESOLVED, that all actions taken by the appropriate officers of the Fund in furtherance of the actions authorized by the foregoing resolutions hereby are expressly ratified, adopted and approved.
Page 31 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT B
Verifications of First
Eagle GlobalSaba Capital Income & Opportunities
Fund II and First Eagle InvestmentSaba
Capital Management, LLCL.P.
The undersigned
states that he has duly executed the attached amended and restated application
dated September 10May 29,
20214 for and on
behalf of First Eagle GlobalSaba
Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II in his capacity
as PresidentChief
Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary
to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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/ Pierre Weinstein
Name: Pierre Weinstein
Title: Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees
The undersigned
states that he has duly executed the attached amended and restated application
dated September 10May 29,
20214 for and on
behalf of First Eagle InvestmentSaba
Capital Management, LLCL.P.
in his capacity as General Counsel of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned
to execute and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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/ Michael D’Angelo
Name: Michael D’Angelo
Title: General Counsel
Page 32 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT C
Marked copies of the Application showing changes from the final versions of the two applications identified as substantially identical under Rule 0-5(e)(3).
Page 33 of 51 Pages |
EXPEDITED REVIEW REQUESTED UNDER 17 CFR 270.0-5(d)
UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA BEFORE THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
IN THE MATTER OF:
IN THE MATTER OF:
|
AMENDED AND RESTATED APPLICATION PURSUANT TO SECTION 6(c) OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, AS AMENDED (THE “ACT”) FOR AN ORDER GRANTING EXEMPTIONS FROM SECTION 19(b) OF THE ACT AND RULE 19b-1 THEREUNDER
|
Investment Company Act of 1940
File No. 812-[ ]
PLEASE SEND ALL COMMUNICATIONS AND ORDERS TO:
Michael S. Didiuk
Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP
919 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10022
(212) 756-2405, [email protected]
Jeremy C. Smith
Ropes & Gray LLP
1211 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
WITH A COPY TO:
Ronald R. Redell
Michael D’Angelo
c/o
DoubleLineSaba Capital LPManagement,
L.P.
333
South Grand405 Lexington Avenue, Suite
180058th Floor
Los Angeles, California 90071
New York, NY 10174
Jeffrey J. Sherman
c/o DoubleLine Alternatives LP
333 South Grand Avenue, Suite 1800
Los Angeles, California
90071
This Amended
and Restated Application (including Exhibits) consists of 6251
pages
The Exhibit Index is on page
14.
As filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on May 29, 2024
Page 34 of 51 Pages |
I. | INTRODUCTION |
DoubleLine
Opportunistic Credit Fund (“DBL”), DoubleLine Income Solutions Fund (“DSL”), DoubleLine YieldSaba
Capital Income & Opportunities Fund (“DLY”), DoubleLine Shiller CAPE®
Enhanced Income Fund (“DSC”), DoubleLine Capital LP (“DoubleLine Capital”), and DoubleLine Alternatives
LP (“DoubleLine AlternativesII (the “Fund”)
and Saba Capital Management, L.P. (“Saba” and together with DoubleLine
Capital, “DoubleLine” and together with each of the aforementionedthe
Fund (the “Applicants”) hereby submit this amended
and restated application for an order (the “Order”) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”)
pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), providing DBL,
DSL, DLY, DSCthe Fund, and each other closed-end
management investment company registered under the 1940 Act advised or to be advised in the future by DoubleLineSaba,
or by an entity controlling, controlled by or under common control (within the meaning of Section 2(a)(9)
of the 1940 Act) with DoubleLine Capital or DoubleLine AlternativesSaba
(including any successor in interest1)
(each such entity, including DoubleLine Capital and DoubleLine Alternatives, anSaba,
the “Adviser”) that in the future seeks to rely on the Order (such investment companies, together with DBL,
DSL, DLY, and DSCthe Fund, are collectively referred
to herein as the “Funds” and each separately as a “Future
Fund”), an exemption from the provisions of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder, as more
fully set forth below (the “Application”).2
The Fund and the Future Funds are hereinafter collectively
referred to as the “Funds” and separately as a “Fund.”
II. THE APPLICANTS
DBL
is organized as a Massachusetts business trust, which is registered under the 1940 Act as a diversified, closed-end management investment
company, and commenced operations on January 27, 2012. Shares of common stock of DBL are currently listed and traded on the New York Stock
Exchange, a national securities exchange as defined in Section 2(a)(26) of the 1940 Act, under the symbol “DBL.” As of March
31, 2021, DBL has total net assets of $291,591,508. DBL’s investment objective is to seek high total investment return by providing
a high level of current income and the potential for capital appreciation. DBL intends to achieve its objective by investing in a portfolio
of investments selected for their potential to provide high current income, growth of capital, or both. DBL has not issued any preferred
shares.
DSL is organized as a Massachusetts business
trust, which is registered under the 1940 Act as a diversified, closed-end management investment company, and commenced operations on
April 26, 2013. Shares of common stock of DSL are currently listed and traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “DSL.”
As of March 31, 2021, DSL has total net assets of $1,860,231,504. DSL’s investment objective is to seek high current income; its
secondary objective is to seek capital appreciation. It pursues these objectives by investing in a portfolio of investments selected for
their potential to provide high current income, growth of capital, or both. DSL has not issued any preferred shares.
The Fund (formerly, Templeton Global Income Fund) is organized as a Delaware statutory trust, which is registered under the 1940 Act as a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company and commenced operations on January 28, 1988. Effective January 1, 2024, the Fund changed its name to Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II. The Fund’s common shares are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”), a national securities exchange as defined in Section 2(a)(26) of the 1940 Act. Although the Fund does not currently intend to issue preferred shares, the board of trustees of the Fund may authorize the issuance of preferred shares in the future.
The Fund’s investment objective is to provide investors with high current income, with a secondary goal of capital appreciation. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing globally in debt and equity securities of public and private companies, which includes, among other things, investments in closed-end funds, special purpose acquisition companies, reinsurance, public and private debt instruments. The Fund may also utilize derivatives, including but not limited to total return swaps, credit default swaps, options (including but not limited to index options) and futures, in seeking to enhance returns and/or to reduce portfolio risk. In addition, on an opportunistic basis, the Fund may also invest up to 15% of its total assets in private funds that focus on debt, equity or other investments consistent with the Fund’s investment objective.
_____________________
1 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 only registered closed-end investment companiesy
that currently intends to
rely on the Order havehas
been named as an Applicants.
Any Fund that may rely on the Order in the future will comply with the terms and conditions of the Application.
Page 35 of 51 Pages |
DLY
is organized as a Massachusetts business trust, which is registered under the 1940 Act as a non-diversified, limited term closed-end management
investment company, and commenced operations on February 26, 2020. Shares of common stock of DLY are currently listed and traded on the
New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “DLY.” As of March 31, 2021, DLY has total net assets of $975,205,534. DLY’s
investment objective is to seek a high level of total return, with an emphasis on current income. DLY intends to achieve its objective
by investing in a portfolio of investments selected for its potential to provide a high level of total return, with an emphasis on current
income. DLY has not issued any preferred shares.
DSC
is organized as a Massachusetts business trust, which is registered under the 1940 Act as a non-diversified, limited term closed-end management
investment company, and has no operating history. DSC anticipates that its common shares will be listed on the New York Stock Exchange,
subject to notice of issuance. DSC’s investment objective is to seek total return and income through a combination of current income,
current gains and long-term capital appreciation. DSC will typically seek to achieve its investment objective by using a variety of strategies,
including investing a portion of its assets in derivatives, or a combination of derivatives and direct investments, to provide a return
(before fees and expenses) that approximates the return of the Shiller Barclays CAPE® US Sector TR USD Index; by actively allocating
direct investments in debt instruments across the global fixed income universe; and by generating current gains from option premiums earned
by writing (selling) call options on the S&P 500® Index DSC has not issued any preferred shares.
DoubleLine
CapitalSaba, with offices at 333
South Grand405 Lexington Avenue, Suite
1800, Los Angeles, California 9007158th Floor,
New York, NY 10174, serves as the investment adviser to each of the Funds
other than DSC and as investment sub-adviser to DSC. DoubleLine Alternatives, also with offices at 333 South Grand Avenue, Suite 1800,
Los Angeles, California 90071, serves as the investment adviser to DSC. Each of DoubleLine Capital and DoubleLine Alternatives.
Saba is registered with the Commission as an investment adviser
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended. Subject to the oversight of the board of trustees,
DoubleLine of the Fund, Saba is responsible for managing,
either directly or through others selected by it, the investment activities of the Funds
and the Fund’s’
business affairs. Jeffrey E. Gundlach serves as the Chief Executive
Officer and Chief Investment Officer of DoubleLine Capital. Jeffrey Sherman serves as the President of DoubleLine Alternatives. As of
December 31, 2020, DoubleLine Capital had approximately $135 billion of assets under management and DoubleLine Alternatives had approximately
$613 million of assets under management.
On October 15, 2023 shareholders of the Fund voted to approve a new investment management agreement between the Fund and Saba (such new investment management agreement, the “New Management Agreement”). The New Management Agreement, which was effective January 1, 2024, replaced the previously effective amended and restated investment management agreement, dated June 1, 2014, as amended on May 13, 2020, between the Fund and Franklin Advisers, Inc. (“Franklin”), the Fund’s previous investment adviser.
DBL,
DSL, and DLY have each, and DSC will enter into an investment management agreement pursuant to which DoubleLine, in accordance with the
Fund’s stated investment objective, policies and limitations, and subject to the supervision of the Fund’s Board of Trustees,
provides investment management services for the Fund’s portfolio and supervises and oversees the investment and reinvestment of
the Fund’s assets. The portfolio of a Fund may be managed by one or more investment sub-advisers (each, a “Future Sub-Adviser”).
A Future Sub-Adviser may be an affiliate of DoubleLine. Any Future Sub-Adviser will be registered under the Advisers Act.
Franklin and the Fund have previously relied on an exemptive order (IC Rel. No. 30499) granting an exemption from Section 19(b) to allow the Fund to make periodic distributions of long-term capital gains (“Existing Order”). As Saba has succeeded in the role of investment adviser of the Fund, replacing Franklin, the Fund and Saba cannot rely on the Existing Order.3
____________________
3 | In reliance on the Commission staff no-action letter issued to Innovator Capital Management, LLC, et al. (pub. avail. October 6, 2017) and oral discussions with the Commission staff, the Applicants intend to rely on the Existing Order as if the Existing Order extended to the Adviser until the earlier of the receipt of the Order or 150 days from January 1, 2024, the date of the New Management Agreement between the Fund and the Adviser. During such time, the Adviser will comply with the terms and conditions in the Existing Order imposed on Franklin as though such terms and conditions were imposed directly on the Adviser. When and if the Order is granted by the Commission, the Applicants would then rely on the Order, rather than continuing to rely on the Existing Order. |
Page 36 of 51 Pages |
III. | REQUEST FOR EXEMPTIVE RELIEF |
Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act provides that it shall be unlawful in contravention of such rules, regulations, or orders as the Commission may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors for any registered investment company to distribute long-term capital gains, as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), more often than once every twelve months. Rule 19b-1 under the 1940 Act provides that no registered investment company which is a “regulated investment company” as defined in Section 851 of the Code may make more than (i) one “capital gain dividend,” as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code, in any one taxable year of the company, (ii) one additional capital gain distribution made in whole or in part to avoid payment of excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code plus (iii) one supplemental capital gain dividend pursuant to Section 855 of the Code (provided that it does not exceed 10% of the total amount distributed for the taxable year).
Applicants
believe that Rule 19b-1 should be interpreted to permit a Fund to pay an unlimited number of distributions on its common and preferred
stockshares (if any)
so long as it makes the designation necessary under the Code and Rule 19b-1 to characterize those distributions as “capital gain
dividends” restricted by Rule 19b-1 only as often as is permitted by Rule 19b-1, even if the Code would then require retroactively
spreading the capital gain resulting from that designation over more than the permissible number of distributions. However, to obtain
certainty for a Fund’s proposed distribution policies (each, a “Distribution Policy”), in the absence
of such an interpretation, Applicants hereby request an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act granting an exemption from Section
19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder. The Order would permit each Fund to make periodic
capital gain dividends (as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code) that include long-term capital gains as frequently as twelve times
in any one taxable year in respect of its shares of beneficial interest (“common stockshares”)
and as often as specified by, or determined in accordance with the terms of, any preferred stockshares
issued by the Fund.
IV. | REPRESENTATIONS OF APPLICANTS |
Prior to
a Fund’s implementing a Distribution Policy in reliance on the Order, the board of directors or trustees (the “Board”)
of each Fund seeking to rely on the Order, including a majority of the directors or trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund,
as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act (the “Independent Board Members”), will request, and the Adviser will
provide, such information as is reasonably necessary to make an informed determination of whether the Board should adopt a proposed Distribution
Policy. In particular, the Board and the Independent Board Members will review information regarding
(i) the purpose and terms of the proposed Distribution Policy; (ii) the likely effects of the proposed Distribution Policy on the Fund’s
long-term total return (in relation to market price and net asset value per share of common stockshares
(“NAV”)); (iii) the expected relationship between the Fund’s distribution rate on its common
shares of common stock under the proposed Distribution Policy and the Fund’s
total return (in relation to NAV); (iv) whether the rate of distribution is anticipated to exceed the Fund’s expected total return
in relation to its NAV; and (v) any foreseeable material effects of the proposed Distribution Policy on the Fund’s long-term total
return (in relation to market price and NAV).
The Independent Board Members will also consider what conflicts of interest the Adviser and the affiliated persons of the Adviser and the Fund might have with respect to the adoption or implementation of the proposed Distribution Policy.
Following this
review, the Board, including the Independent Board Members, of each Fund will, before adopting or implementing any proposed Distribution
Policy, make a determination that the proposed Distribution Policy is consistent with the Fund’s investment objective(s) and in
the best interests of the holders of the Fund’s common stockshares.
The Distribution Policy will be consistent with the Fund’s policies and procedures and will be described in the Fund’s registration
statement.
Page 37 of 51 Pages |
In addition, prior to implementation of a Distribution Policy for any Fund pursuant to the Order requested by this Application, the Board of the Fund shall have adopted policies and procedures (the “Section 19 Compliance Policies”) pursuant to Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act that:
1.
are reasonably designed to ensure that all notices required to be sent to the Fund’s stockshareholders
pursuant to Section 19(a) of the 1940 Act, Rule 19a-1 thereunder and by condition 4 below (each, a “19(a)
Notice”) include the disclosure required by Rule 19a-1 and by condition 2(a) below, and that all other written
communications by the Fund or its agents regarding distributions under the Distribution Policy include the disclosure required by condition
3(a) below; and
2. require the Fund to keep records that demonstrate its compliance with all of the conditions of the Order and that are necessary for the Fund to form the basis for, or demonstrate the calculation of, the amounts disclosed in its 19(a) Notices.
The records of the actions of the Board of each Fund will summarize the basis for the Board’s approval of the Distribution Policy, including its consideration of the factors described above. These records will be maintained for a period of at least six years from the date of the applicable meeting, the first two years in an easily accessible place, or for such longer period as may otherwise be required by law.
Generally,
the purpose of a Distribution Policy would be to permit a Fund to distribute periodically, over the course of each year, an amount closely
approximating the total taxable income of the Fund during the year through distributions in relatively equal amounts (plus any required
special distributions) that are composed of payments received from portfolio companies, supplemental amounts generally representing realized
capital gains or, possibly, returns of capital that may represent unrealized capital gains. The Fund
seeks to establish a distribution rate that approximates the Fund’s projected total return that can reasonably be expected to be
generated by the Fund over an extended period of time, although the distribution rate will not be solely dependent on the amount of income
earned or capital gains realized by the Fund for the year. Under the Distribution Policy of a Fund, the Fund would distribute periodically
(as frequently as twelve times in any taxable year) to its respective common stockshareholders
a fixed percentage of the market price of the Fund’s common shares
of common stock at a particular point in time or a fixed percentage of NAV at a particular
time or a fixed amount per share of common stockshares,
any of which may be adjusted from time to time. It is anticipated that under a Distribution Policy, the minimum annual distribution rate
with respect to the Fund’s common shares of
common stock would be independent of the Fund’s performance during any particular period but would be expected to
correlate with the Fund’s performance over time. Except for extraordinary distributions and
potential increases or decreases in the final dividend periods in light of the Fund’s performance for an entire calendar year and
to enable the Fund to comply with the distribution requirements of Subchapter M of the Code for the calendar year, each distribution on
the Fund’s common stockshares
would be at the stated rate then in effect. The Board will periodically review the amount of potential distributions in light of the investment
experience of the Fund, and may modify or terminate a Distribution Policy at any time.
V. | JUSTIFICATION FOR REQUESTED RELIEF |
Section
6(c) of the 1940 Act provides that the Commission may exempt any person, security or transaction from any provision of the 1940 Act or
of any rule or regulation thereunder, if and to the extent that the 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. For the reasons set forth
below, Applicants submit that the requested exemption from Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder would be consistent
with the standards set forth in Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act and in the best interests of the Funds and their respective stockshareholders.
Page 38 of 51 Pages |
A. | Receipt of the Order would serve |
Applicants believe that closed-end fund investors may prefer an investment vehicle that provides regular current income through fixed distribution policies that would be available through a Distribution Policy. Allowing a Distribution Policy to operate in the manner described in this Application would help fill current investor demand and foster competition in the registered fund market.
An
exemption from Rule 19b-1 would benefit stockshareholders
in another way. Common shares
of common stock of closed-end funds often trade in
the marketplace at a discount to their NAV. Applicants believe that this discount may be reduced if a Fund is permitted to pay relatively
frequent dividends on its common stockshares
at a consistent rate, whether or not those dividends contain an element of long-term capital gains.
Any reduction in the discount at which the
Fund’s common shares
of common stock trade in the market would benefit
the holders of the Fund’s common stockshares
along with the Fund.
B. | The Fund’s |
One of
the concerns leading to the enactment of Section 19(b) and adoption of Rule 19b-1 was that stockshareholders
might be unable to distinguish between frequent distributions of capital gains and dividends from investment income.34
However, Rule 19a-1 under the 1940 Act effectively addresses this concern by requiring that
distributions (or the confirmation of the reinvestment thereof) estimated to be sourced in part from capital gains or capital be accompanied
by a separate statement showing the sources of the distribution (e.g., estimated net income, net
short-term capital gains, net long-term capital gains and/or
return of capital). The same information will be included in each Fund’s annual report to stockshareholders
and on its Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) Form 1099-DIV, which will be sent
to each common and preferred stockholdershareholder
who received distributions during a particular year (including stockshareholders
who have sold shares during the year).
In
addition, each of the Funds will make the additional disclosures required by the conditions set forth in Part VI below,
and each of them will adopt compliance policies and procedures in accordance with Rule 38a-1 under
the 1940 Act to ensure that all required notices and disclosures are sent to stockshareholders.
The information
required by Section 19(a), Rule 19a-1, the Distribution Policy, the Section 19 Compliance Policies and the conditions listed below will
help to ensure that each Fund’s stockshareholders
are provided sufficient information to understand that their periodic distributions are not tied to the Fund’s net investment income
(which for this purpose is the Fund’s taxable income other than from capital gains) and realized capital gains to date, and may
not represent yield or investment return. Accordingly, subjecting the Funds to Section 19(b) and Rule
19b-1 would afford stockshareholders
no extra protection. In addition, the Funds will undertake to request intermediaries, or their agent(s),
to forward 19(a) Notices to their customers and to reimburse them for the costs of forwarding. Such
forwarding may occur in any manner permitted by statute, rule or order or by the staff of the Commission.
C. | Under certain circumstances, Rule 19b-1 gives
rise to improper influence on portfolio management decisions, with no offsetting benefit to |
Rule 19b-1, when applied to a Distribution Policy, actually gives rise to one of the concerns that Rule 19b-1 was intended to avoid: inappropriate influence on portfolio management decisions. Funds that pay long-term capital gains distributions only once per year in accordance with Rule 19b-1 impose no pressure on management to realize capital gains at any time when purely investment considerations do not dictate doing so. In the absence of an exemption from Rule 19b-1, the adoption of a periodic distribution plan imposes pressure on management (i) not to realize any net long-term capital gains until the point in the year that the fund can pay all of its remaining distributions in accordance with Rule 19b-1 and (ii) not to realize any long-term capital gains during any particular year in excess of the amount of the aggregate pay-out for the year (since as a practical matter excess gains must be distributed and accordingly would not be available to satisfy pay-out requirements in following years), notwithstanding that purely investment considerations might favor realization of long-term gains at different times or in different amounts.
____________________
34
See Securities and Exchange Commission 1966 Report to Congress on Investment Company Growth (H.R. Rep. No. 2337, 89th Cong.
2d Sess. 190-95 (1966)); S. Rep. No. 91-184, 91st Cong., 1st Sess. 29 (1969); H.R. Rep. No. 91-1382, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 29 (1970).
Page 39 of 51 Pages |
No purpose
is served by the distortion in the normal operation of a periodic distribution plan required in order to comply with Rule 19b-1. There
is no benefit in requiring any fund that adopts a periodic distribution plan either to retain (and pay taxes on) long-term
capital gains (with the resulting additional tax return complexities for the fund’s stockshareholders)
or to avoid designating its distributions of long-term gains as capital gains dividends for tax purposes
(thereby avoiding a Rule 19b-1 problem but providing distributions taxable at ordinary income rates rather than the much lower long-term
capital gains rates). The desirability of avoiding these anomalous results creates pressure to limit
the realization of long-term capital gains that otherwise would be taken for purely investment considerations.
The Order requested by Applicants would minimize these anomalous effects of Rule 19b-1 by enabling the Funds to realize long-term capital gains as often as investment considerations dictate without fear of violating Rule 19b-1.
D. | Other concerns leading to adoption of Rule 19b-1 are not applicable |
Another
concern that led to the enactment of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and adoption of Rule 19b-1 was that frequent capital gains distributions
could facilitate improper fund share sales practices, including, in particular, the practice of urging an investor to purchase shares
of a fund on the basis of an upcoming capital gains dividend (“selling the dividend”),
where the dividend would result in an immediate corresponding reduction in NAV and would be in effect a taxable return of the investor’s
capital. Applicants submit that this concern should not apply to closed-end investment companies, such as the Funds, that do not continuously
distribute shares.4 Furthermore, if the
underlying concern extends to secondary market purchases of shares of closed-end funds that are subject to a large upcoming capital gains
dividend, adoption of a periodic distribution plan may help minimize the concern by avoiding, through periodic distributions, any buildup
of large end-of-the-year distributions.
Applicants
also submit that the “selling the dividend” concern is not applicable to preferred stockshares,
which entitles a holder to no more than a specified periodic dividend and, like a debt security, is initially sold at a price based upon
its liquidation preference, credit quality, dividend rate and frequency of payment. Investors buy
preferred stockshares
for the purpose of receiving specific payments at the frequency bargained for, and any application of Rule 19b-1 to preferred stockshares
would be contrary to the expectation of investors. There is also currently a tax rule that provides
that any loss realized by a stockholdershareholder
upon sale of shares of a regulated investment company that were held for six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital loss,
to the extent of any long-term capital gains paid on such shares, to avoid the selling of dividends.
E. | Further limitations of Rule 19b-1 |
Subparagraphs (a) and (f) of Rule 19b-1 limit the number of capital gains dividends, as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Code, that a fund may make with respect to any one taxable year to one, plus a supplemental distribution made pursuant to Section 855 of the Code not exceeding 10% of the total amount distributed for the year, plus one additional capital gain dividend made in whole or in part to avoid the excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code.
Applicants assert that by limiting the number of capital gain dividends that a Fund may make with respect to any one year, Rule 19b-1 may prevent the normal and efficient operation of a periodic distribution plan whenever that Fund’s realized net long-term capital gains in any year exceed the total of the periodic distributions that may include such capital gains under the rule. Rule 19b-1 thus may force the fixed regular periodic distributions to be funded with returns of capital5 (to the extent net investment income and realized short term capital gains are insufficient to fund the distribution), even though realized net long-term capital gains otherwise would be available. To distribute all of a Fund’s long-term capital gains within the limits in Rule 19b-1, a Fund may be required to make total distributions in excess of the annual amount called for by its periodic distribution plan or to retain and pay taxes on the excess amount. Applicants believe that the application of Rule 19b-1 to a Fund’s periodic distribution plan may create pressure to limit the realization of long-term capital gains based on considerations unrelated to investment goals.
____________________
4
DBL and DSL have effective registration statements and their common shares
may be offered on a delayed or continuous basis in reliance on Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933 subject to Condition 6 of Section
VI below.
5 These would be returns of capital for financial accounting purposes and not for tax accounting purposes.
Page 40 of 51 Pages |
Revenue
Ruling 89-816 under the Code requires that
a fund that seeks to qualify as a regulated investment company under the Code and that has both common stockshares
and preferred stockshares
outstanding designate the types of income, e.g., investment income and capital gains,
in the same proportion as the total distributions distributed to each class for the tax year. To satisfy the proportionate designation
requirements of Revenue Ruling 89-81, whenever a fund has realized a long-term capital gain with
respect to a given tax year, the fund must designate the required proportionate share of such capital gain to be included in common and
preferred stockshares
dividends. Although Rule 19b-1 allows a fund some flexibility with respect to the frequency of capital
gains distributions, a fund might use all of the exceptions available under Rule 19b-1 for a tax year and still need to distribute additional
capital gains allocated to the preferred stockshares
to comply with Revenue Ruling 89-81.
The potential
abuses addressed by Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 do not arise with respect to preferred stockshares
issued by a closed-end fund. Such distributions generally are either fixed or are determined in periodic
auctions or remarketings or are periodically reset by reference to short-term
term interest rates rather than by reference to performance of the issuer, and Revenue
Ruling 89-81 determines the proportion of such distributions that are comprised of the long-term capital gains.
The Applicants also submit that the “selling the dividend” concern is not applicable to preferred stockshares,
which entitles a holder to no more than a periodic dividend at a fixed rate or the rate determined by the market, and, like a debt security,
is priced based upon its liquidation value, dividend rate, credit quality, and frequency of payment. Investors buy preferred stockshares
for the purpose of receiving payments at the frequency bargained for and do not expect the liquidation value of their shares to change.
The proposed Order will assist the Funds in avoiding these Rule 19b-1 problems.
F. | General |
The relief
requested is that the Commission permit the Funds to make periodic distributions in respect of their common stockshares
as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year and in respect of their preferred stockshares
as specified by or determined in accordance with the terms thereof. Granting this relief would provide the Funds with flexibility in meeting
investor interest in receiving more frequent distributions. Implementation of the relief would actually ameliorate the concerns that gave
rise to Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1 and help avoid the “selling of dividends” problem, which Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-1
are not effective in preventing.
The potential
issues under Rule 19b-1 are not relevant to distributions on preferred stockshares
. Not only are such distributions fixed or determined by the market rather than by reference to the performance of the issuer but also
the long-term capital gain component is mandated by the IRS to be the same proportion as the proportion of long-term gain dividends bears
to the total distributions in respect of the common stockshares
and consequently the long-term gain component cannot even be known until the end of the fund’s fiscal year. In these circumstances
it would be very difficult for any of the potential abuses reflected in Rule 19b-1’s restrictions to occur.
In summary,
Rule 19b-1, in the circumstances referred to above, is likely to distort the effective and proper functioning of a Fund’s Distribution
Policy and gives rise to the very pressures on portfolio management decisions that Rule 19b-1 was intended to avoid. These distortions
forced by Rule 19b-1 serve no purpose and are not in the best interests of stockshareholders.
VI. APPLICANTS’ CONDITIONS
Applicants agree that, with respect to each Fund seeking to rely on the Order, the Order will be subject to each of the following conditions:
1. | Compliance Review and Reporting |
The Fund’s chief compliance officer will: (a) report to the Fund’s Board, no less frequently than once every three months or at the next regularly scheduled quarterly Board meeting, whether (i) the Fund and its Adviser have complied with the conditions of the Order and (ii) a material compliance matter (as defined in Rule 38a-1(e)(2) under the 1940 Act) has occurred with respect to such conditions; and (b) review the adequacy of the policies and procedures adopted by the Board no less frequently than annually.
____________________
6 1989-1 C.B. 226.
Page 41 of 51 Pages |
2. | Disclosures to Fund |
(a)
Each 19(a) Notice disseminated to the holders of the Fund’s common stockshares,
in addition to the information required by Section 19(a) and Rule 19a-1:
(i) | will provide, in a tabular or graphical format: |
(1)
the amount of the distribution, on a per share of common stockshares
basis, together with the amounts of such distribution amount, on a per share of common stockshares
basis and as a percentage of such distribution amount, from estimated: (A) net investment income; (B) net
realized short-term capital gains; (C) net realized long-term capital gains; and (D) return of capital or other capital source;
(2)
the fiscal year-to-date cumulative amount of distributions, on a per share of common
stockshares
basis, together with the amounts of such cumulative amount, on a per share of common stockshares
basis and as a percentage of such cumulative amount of distributions, from estimated: (A)
net investment income; (B) net realized short-term capital gains; (C) net realized long-term capital gains; and (D) return of capital
or other capital source;
(3) the average annual total return in relation to the change in NAV for the 5-year period (or, if the Fund’s history of operations is less than five years, the time period commencing immediately following the Fund’s first public offering) ending on the last day of the month ended immediately prior to the most recent distribution record date compared to the current fiscal period’s annualized distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date; and
(4) the cumulative total return in relation to the change in NAV from the last completed fiscal year to the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date compared to the fiscal year-to-date cumulative distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the last day of the month prior to the most recent distribution record date.
Such disclosure shall be made in a type size at least as large and as prominent as the estimate of the sources of the current distribution; and
(ii) | will include the following disclosure: |
(1) “You should not draw any conclusions about the Fund’s investment performance from the amount of this distribution or from the terms of the Fund’s Distribution Policy.”;
(2) “The Fund estimates that it has distributed more than its income and net realized capital gains; therefore, a portion of your distribution may be a return of capital. A return of capital may occur, for example, when some or all of the money that you invested in the Fund is paid back to you. A return of capital distribution does not necessarily reflect the Fund’s investment performance and should not be confused with ‘yield’ or ‘income’”;7 and
(3) “The amounts and sources of distributions reported in this 19(a) Notice are only estimates and are not being provided for tax reporting purposes. The actual amounts and sources of the amounts for tax reporting purposes will depend upon the Fund’s investment experience during the remainder of its fiscal year and may be subject to changes based on tax regulations. The Fund will send you a Form 1099-DIV for the calendar year that will tell you how to report these distributions for federal income tax purposes.”
____________________
7 The disclosure in this condition 2(a)(ii)(2) will be included only if the current distribution or the fiscal year-to-date cumulative distributions are estimated to include a return of capital.
Page 42 of 51 Pages |
Such disclosure shall be made in a type size at least as large as and as prominent as any other information in the 19(a) Notice and placed on the same page in close proximity to the amount and the sources of the distribution.
(b) | On the inside front cover of each report to |
(i) | describe the terms of the Distribution Policy (including the fixed amount or fixed percentage of the distributions and the frequency of the distributions); | |
(ii) | include the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii)(1) above; | |
(iii) | state, if applicable, that the Distribution
Policy provides that the Board may amend or terminate the Distribution Policy at any time without prior
notice to Fund | |
(iv) | describe any reasonably foreseeable circumstances that might cause the Fund to terminate the Distribution Policy and any reasonably foreseeable consequences of such termination. |
(c) | Each
report provided to |
3. | Disclosure to |
(a)
The Fund will include the information contained in the relevant 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure
required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, in any written communication (other than a communication on Form 1099) about the Distribution Policy
or distributions under the Distribution Policy by the Fund, or agents that the Fund has authorized to make such communication on the Fund’s
behalf, to any Fund stockholdershareholder,
prospective stockholdershareholder
or third-party information provider;
(b) The Fund will issue, contemporaneously with the issuance of any 19(a) Notice, a press release containing the information in the 19(a) Notice and will file with the Commission the information contained in such 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, as an exhibit to its next filed Form N-CSR; and
(c) The Fund will post prominently a statement on its (or the Adviser’s) website containing the information in each 19(a) Notice, including the disclosure required by condition 2(a)(ii) above, and maintain such information on such website for at least 24 months.
4. | Delivery of 19(a) Notices to Beneficial Owners |
If a broker, dealer, bank or other person (“financial
intermediary”) holds common stockshares
issued by the Fund in nominee name, or otherwise, on behalf of a beneficial owner, the Fund:
(a)
will request that the financial intermediary, or its agent, forward the 19(a) Notice to all beneficial
owners of the Fund’s stockshares
held through such financial intermediary;
(b)
will provide, in a timely manner, to the financial intermediary, or its agent, enough copies of the
19(a) Notice assembled in the form and at the place that the financial intermediary, or its agent, reasonably requests to facilitate the
financial intermediary’s sending of the 19(a) Notice to each beneficial owner of the Fund’s stockshares;
and
(c) upon the request of any financial intermediary, or its agent, that receives copies of the 19(a) Notice, will pay the financial intermediary, or its agent, the reasonable expenses of sending the 19(a) Notice to such beneficial owners.
Page 43 of 51 Pages |
5. | Additional Board Determinations for Funds Whose Common |
If :
(a)
The Fund’s common stock
hasshares have
traded on the stock exchange that they primarily trade on at the time in question at an average premium
to NAV equal to or greater than 10%, as determined on the basis of the average of the discount or premium to NAV of the Fund’s common
shares of common stock as of the close of each trading day over a 12-week rolling
period (each such 12-week rolling period ending on the last trading day of each week); and
(b) The Fund’s annualized distribution rate for such 12-week rolling period, expressed as a percentage of NAV as of the ending date of such 12-week rolling period, is greater than the Fund’s average annual total return in relation to the change in NAV over the 2-year period ending on the last day of such 12-week rolling period;
then:
(i) | At the earlier of the next regularly scheduled meeting or within four months of the last day of such 12-week rolling period, the Board, including a majority of its Independent Board Members: |
(1) | will request and evaluate, and the Fund’s Adviser will furnish, such information as may be reasonably necessary to make an informed determination of whether the Distribution Policy should be continued or continued after amendment; |
(2) | will determine
whether continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy is consistent with the
Fund’s investment objective(s) and policies and is in the best interests of the Fund and its |
(A) | whether the Distribution Policy is accomplishing its purpose(s); | |
(B) | the reasonably foreseeable
material effects of the Distribution Policy on the Fund’s long-term total return in
relation to the market price and NAV of the Fund’s common | |
(C) | the Fund’s current distribution rate, as described in condition 5(b) above, compared with the Fund’s average annual taxable income or total return over the 2-year period, as described in condition 5(b), or such longer period as the Board deems appropriate; and |
(3) | based upon that determination, will approve or disapprove the continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy; and |
(ii) | The Board will record the information considered by it, including its consideration of the factors listed in condition 5(b)(i)(2) above, and the basis for its approval or disapproval of the continuation, or continuation after amendment, of the Distribution Policy in its meeting minutes, which must be made and preserved for a period of not less than six years from the date of such meeting, the first two years in an easily accessible place. |
6. | Public Offerings |
The Fund will not make a public offering
of the Fund’s common stockshares
other than:
(a) | a
rights offering below NAV to holders of the Fund’s common | |
(b) | an offering in connection with a dividend reinvestment plan, merger, consolidation, acquisition, spin off or reorganization of the Fund; or | |
(c) | an offering other than an offering described in conditions 6(a) and 6(b) above, provided that, with respect to such other offering: |
(i)
the Fund’s annualized distribution rate for the six months ending on the last day of the month
ended immediately prior to the most recent distribution record date,8,
expressed as a percentage of NAV as of such date, is no more than 1one
percentage point greater than the Fund’s average annual total return for the 5-year period ending on such date;9
and
(ii)
the transmittal letter accompanying any registration statement filed with the Commission in connection
with such offering discloses that the Fund has received an order under Section 19(b) to permit it to make periodic distributions of long-termlong-
term capital gains with respect to its common
shares of common stock as frequently as twelve times each year, and as frequently
as distributions are specified by or determined in accordance with the terms of any outstanding shares of preferred stockshares
as the Fund may issue.
____________________
8 If the Fund has been in operation fewer than six months, the measured period will begin immediately following the Fund’s first public offering.
9 If the Fund has been in operation fewer than five years, the measured period will begin immediately following the Fund’s first public offering.
Page 44 of 51 Pages |
7. | Amendments to Rule 19b-1 |
The requested Order
will expire on the effective date of any amendment to Rule 19b-1 that provides relief permitting certain closed-end investment companies
to make periodic distributions of long-term capital gains with respect to their outstanding common stockshares
as frequently as twelve times each year.
VII. | APPLICABLE PRECEDENT |
The Commission has recently granted substantially the same relief as that sought herein in High Income Securities Fund, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34373 (September 9, 2021) (notice) and 34395 (October 5, 2021) (order); First Eagle Global Opportunities Fund and First Eagle Investment Management, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34397 (October 12, 2021) (notice) and 34416 (November 9, 2021) (order); Mainstay CBRE Global Infrastructure Megatrends Fund, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34372 (September 3, 2021) (notice) and 34390 (September 29, 2021) (order); DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 34328 (July 13, 2021) (notice) and 34353 (August 9, 2021) (order); Vertical Capital Income Fund and Oakline Advisors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33505 (June 12, 2019) (notice) and 33548 (July 9, 2019) (order); Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust, et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33449 (April 17, 2019) (notice) and 33474 (May 14, 2019) (order); Macquarie Global Infrastructure Total Return Fund Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33389 (March 5, 2019) (notice) and 33436 (April 2, 2019) (order); Special Opportunities Fund, Inc. and Bulldog Investors, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33367 (February 4, 2019) and 33386 (March 4, 2019); Vivaldi Opportunities Fund and Vivaldi Asset Management, LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33147 (July 3, 2018)(notice) and 33185 (July 31, 2018) (order); The Swiss Helvetia Fund, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33075 (April 23, 2018)(notice) and 33099 (May 21, 2018)(order); The Mexico Equity& Income Fund, Inc. and Pichardo Asset Management, S.A. de C.V., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 32640 (May 18, 2017)(notice) and 32676 (June 13, 2017)(order); RiverNorth DoubleLine Strategic Opportunity Fund, Inc. and RiverNorth Capital Management LLC, Investment Company Act Release Nos. 32635 (May 12, 2017)(notice) and 32673 (June 7, 2017)(order); Brookfield Global Listed Infrastructure Income Fund Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 31802 (September 1, 2015) (notice) and 31855 (September 30, 2015)(order); and Ares Dynamic Credit Allocation Fund, Inc., et al., Investment Company Act Release Nos. 31665 (June 9, 2015) (notice) and 31708 (July 7, 2015)(order).
VIII. | PROCEDURAL MATTERS |
All of the
requirements for execution and filing of this Application on behalf of the Applicants have been complied with in accordance with the applicable
organizational documents of the Applicants, and the undersigned officers of the Applicants are fully authorized to execute this Application.
The resolutions of the Board of Trustees of DBL, DSL, DLY, and DSCthe
Fund, authorizing the filing of this Application, required by Rule 0-2(c) under the 1940 Act, are included as Exhibit A to this
Application. The verifications required by Rule 0-2(d) under the 1940 Act are included as Exhibit
B to this Application.
Pursuant to
Rule 0-2(f) under the 1940 Act, Applicants state that their address is 333 South Grand405
Lexington Avenue, Suite 1800, Los Angeles, California 9007158th
Floor, New York, NY 10174 and that all written communications regarding this Application should be directed to the individuals
and addresses indicated on the cover 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.
Page 45 of 51 Pages |
IX. | CONCLUSION |
For the foregoing
reasons, Applicants respectfully request that the Commission issue an order under Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act exempting the Funds from
the provisions of Section 19(b) of the 1940 Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder to permit each Fund to make distributions on its common stockshares
consisting in whole or in part of capital gain dividends as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year so long as it complies
with the conditions of the Order and maintains in effect a Distribution Policy with respect to its common stockshares
as described in this Application. In addition, Applicants request that the Order permit each Fund to make distributions on its preferred
stockshares (if any)
that it has issued or may issue in the future consisting in whole or in part of capital gain dividends as frequently as specified by or
determined in accordance with the terms thereof. Applicants submit that the requested exemption is necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, consistent with the protection of investors and consistent with the purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions of
the 1940 Act.
[Signature
Page Follows]
Page 46 of 51 Pages |
Dated: |
Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II By: /s/
Name: Pierre Weinstein Title: Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees | |
Dated: May 29, 2024 |
Saba Capital Management, L.P. By: /s/ Michael D’ Angelo Name: Michael D’Angelo
| |
Page 47 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBITS TO APPLICATION
The following materials are made a part of the Application and are attached hereto:
DESIGNATION | DOCUMENT |
Exhibit A | Resolutions of the Board of Trustees of |
Exhibit B | Verifications |
Exhibit C |
Marked copy of the Applicants’ application
showing changes from the application of Marked copy of the Applicants’ application showing changes from the application of DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit, et al. (File No. 812-15240), an application identified by the Applicants as substantially identical under Rule 0-5(e)(3) |
Page 48 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT A
Votes of the Board of Trustees of DoubleLine
Opportunistic Credit Fund, DoubleLine Income Solutions Fund, DoubleLine Yield Opportunities Fund, and DoubleLine Shiller CAPE® Enhanced
Income Fund
Resolutions of the Board of Trustees of
Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II
Exemptive Application
Voted
that:RESOLVED, that the officers and
agents of DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund, DoubleLine Income Solutions Fund, DoubleLine Yieldof
Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund, and DoubleLine Shiller CAPE® Enhanced Income
Fund (collectively, II (the “Funds”)
be, and they areeach hereby
is, authorized and directed to file withto
prepare, execute and submit, on behalf of the Fund, an exemptive application to the Securities and Exchange Commission the
Application for an order underpursuant
to Section 6(c) of the 1940Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Act”), for
an exemption from Section 19(b) of the Act and Rule 19b-1 thereunder,
in substantially the form presented to the Board of Trustees, and that each of the officers and agents of the Funds, acting alone, is
authorized, empowered, and directed on behalf of the Funds to cause to be prepared, executed and filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission any and all amendments of and exhibits to the Application, to be in such form as the officers or agents of the Funds shall
approve, such approval to be conclusively evidenced by their filing thereof. the
Act to permit the Fund to make periodic capital gain dividends (as defined in Section 852(b)(3)(C) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended) that include long-term capital gains as frequently as twelve times in any one taxable year in respect of its common shares
of beneficial interest and as often as specified by, or determined in accordance with the terms of, any preferred shares of beneficial
interest issued by the Fund; and be it further
Voted
that: That each officer and agent of the Funds, acting with advice of counsel, be, and is, authorized and empowered to make such changes
as may be necessary by reason of any comment on such materials by the Securities and Exchange Commission or for any other reason deemed
appropriate by the officers or agents of the Funds.
Voted
that: That eachRESOLVED, that the appropriate
officers and agent of
the Funds, acting alone, be, and each
hereby is, authorized, empowered and directed to take
any and all additional acts and to prepare, execute and deliver any and all other agreements,
documents, instruments and certificates, as they, or any of them acting alonefile
such documents, including any amendments thereof, and to take such other actions as he or she may deems
necessary, appropriate or convenient to carry out the intent and purposes of the foregoing
resolutions, such determination to be conclusively evidenced by the takingdoing
of such actionsacts
and the preparation, execution, and deliveryfiling
of such agreements, documents, instruments and certificates.
General Authorization
RESOLVED, that all actions taken by the appropriate officers of the Fund in furtherance of the actions authorized by the foregoing resolutions hereby are expressly ratified, adopted and approved.
Page 49 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT B
Verifications of DoubleLine Opportunistic
Credit Fund, DoubleLine Income Solutions Fund, DoubleLine Yield Opportunities Fund, and DoubleLine Shiller CAPE® Enhanced Income Fund,
DoubleLine Capital LP, and DoubleLine Alternatives LP
Verifications of Saba Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II and Saba Capital Management, L.P.
The undersigned states that he has duly executed
the attached application dated June 22, 2021 for and on behalf of DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund in his capacity as President of
such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument
have been taken. The undersigned further states 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.
The
undersigned states that he has duly executed the attached application dated June 22, 2021 for and on behalf of DoubleLine Income Solutions
Fund in his capacity as President of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned
to execute and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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.
The
undersigned states that he has duly executed the attached amended and restated
application dated June 22May
29, 20214 for
and on behalf of DoubleLine YieldSaba
Capital Income & Opportunities Fund II in his capacity
as PresidentChief
Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary
to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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.
The undersigned
states that he has duly executed the attached application dated June 22, 2021 for and on behalf of DoubleLine Shiller CAPE® Enhanced
Income Fund in his capacity as President of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the
undersigned to execute and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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.
The undersigned states that he has duly executed
the attached application dated June 22, 2021 for and on behalf of DoubleLine Capital LP in his capacity as Authorized Signer of such entity
and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute and file such instrument have been
taken. The undersigned further states 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/ Pierre Weinstein
Name: Pierre Weinstein
Title: Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Trustees
The undersigned
states that he has duly executed the attached amended and restated application
dated June 22May
29, 20214 for and on
behalf of DoubleLine Alternatives LPSaba
Capital Management, L.P. in his capacity as PresidentGeneral
Counsel of such entity and that all actions by the holders and other bodies necessary to authorize the undersigned to execute
and file such instrument have been taken. The undersigned further states 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/ Michael D’Angelo
Name: Michael D’Angelo
Title: General Counsel
Page 50 of 51 Pages |
EXHIBIT DC
Marked copies of the Application showing changes from the final versions of the two applications identified as substantially identical under Rule 0-5(e)(3).
Page 51 of 51 Pages