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- SEC. gov | Fund of Funds
However, the rule permits an acquired fund to invest in excess of the section 12 (d) (1) limits in securities of another investment company that is: acquired in reliance on section 12 (d) (1) (E) of the Investment Company Act (i e , master-feeder arrangements);
- SEC Approves U. S. Master Fund Foreign Feeder Fund Arrangement – Section . . .
1 Section 12 (d) (1) (A) would prohibit a Foreign Feeder Fund from (i) acquiring more than 3% of a U S Master Fund’s shares, (ii) investing more than 5% of its assets in a single U S Master Fund or (iii) investing more than 10% of its assets in SEC-registered investment companies
- SEC Adopts New Rule for Fund of Fund Arrangements
Section 12 (d) (1) (C) prohibits registered funds (together with companies or funds they control and other registered funds that have the same adviser) from acquiring more than 10% of the outstanding voting stock of a registered closed-end fund
- The New Fund-of-Funds Rule: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly for Closed . . .
Rule 12d1-4 will also allow fund-of-funds arrangements when: (i) the Acquiring Fund and Acquired Fund hold themselves out to investors as being part of the same group of investment companies; or (ii) the Acquired Fund’s investment adviser is affiliated through control with the Acquiring Fund’s sub-adviser
- Fund of Funds Rule Adoption—A Deeper Dive Into the Impact of Rule 12d1 . . .
Rule 12d1-4 requires an acquiring fund and its advisory group to mirror vote shares (i e , cast votes in the same proportion as the other holders of the acquired fund) held in certain acquired funds if ownership of the acquired fund exceeds certain thresholds
- Investment restrictions: Navigating the Section 12 d: 1: Limit
Section 12 (d) (1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 places limitations on the amount of investment that a registered investment company can make in another investment company The purpose of these limitations is to prevent excessive layering of fees and to prevent affiliated companies from
- Dechert LLP, March 8, 2017 - SEC. gov
Section 12 (d) (1) (E) is a conditional exemption from the restrictions in Sections 12 (d) (1) (A) and (B) that is relied upon by, among others, private funds and foreign investment companies to invest in U S -registered funds
- Investment Company Act of 1940 - Section 12(d)(1)(e) PIMCO Funds
Section 12 (d) (1) (E), in effect, permits an investment company (e g , a feeder fund) to own shares of another investment company (e g , the master fund) in excess of the limits imposed by section 12 (d) (1) (A) and (B) of the Act so long as those shares are the only investment securi ties that are owned by the acquiring investment company 6 C
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