Company Name: Banc of America Investors, L.P. ("BACI")
Public Availability Date: February 25, 2004
Securities Act of 1933 - Rule 144(d)
February 25, 2004
Response of the Office of Chief Counsel
Division of Corporation Finance
Re: Banc of America Investors, L.P. ("BACI")
Incoming Letter dated December 5, 2003
Based on the facts presented, the Division's view is that the holding
period under Rule 144(d) for shares of Class C Common Stock of Nexstar
Broadcasting Group, Inc. issued to BACI began not earlier than November
28, 2003. On that date, BACI executed the preferred holder agreement and
thereby nullified its ability to dissolve Nexstar Broadcasting Group,
L.L.C. or to veto Nexstar Broadcasting Group, L.L.C.'s reorganization or
Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc.'s initial public offering.
This position is based on the representations made to the Division in
your letter. Any different facts or circumstances might require the
Division to reach a different conclusion. Further, this response
expresses the Division's position on enforcement action only and does
not express any legal conclusion on the questions presented.
Sincerely, Robert T. Plesnarski
Special Counsel
Incoming Letter:
December 5, 2003
Office of Chief Counsel
Division of Corporation Finance
Securities and Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20549
Re: Banc of America Capital Investors, L.P./Request for
Interpretive Advice/Rule 144(d)(3)/ Tacking of Holding Periods in a
Limited Liability Company Reorganization
On behalf of our client, Banc of America Capital Investors, L.P. ("BACI"),
we respectfully request that the Staff of the Division of Corporation
Finance of the Securities and Exchange Commission concur with our
interpretation of the tacking provisions under Rule 144(d)(3) with
respect to the circumstances described below.
I. Overview.
BACI is a private investment partnership affiliated with Bank of
America Corporation. In August 2001, BACI invested in Nexstar
Broadcasting Group, L.L.C. (the "LLC"), a television broadcasting
company focused on the acquisition, development and operation of
television stations. From the date of such investment until the
consummation of the transactions described below, BACI was the sole
holder of both Class D-2 Common Membership Interests (the "Class D-2
Common Interests") and Series AA Preferred Membership Interests (the
"Series AA Preferred Interests") in the LLC, neither of which
interests entitled the holders to general voting rights.
On November 28, 2003, BACI sold all of the Series AA Preferred
Interests (the "Series AA Sale") as follows: the LLC purchased
approximately 96% of the outstanding Series AA Preferred Interests by
distributing promissory notes to BACI in the principal amount of
approximately $52.8 million (the "LLC Notes"), and Nexstar
Broadcasting Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of the
LLC (the "Corporation"), purchased the remaining Series AA
Preferred Interests by issuing a promissory note from the Corporation to
BACI in the principal amount of approximately $2.1 million (the "Corporation
Note"). After giving effect to the Series AA Sale, BACI held only
the Class D-2 Common Interests, which represented approximately 9.2% of
the economic interests in the LLC.
Also on November 28, 2003 but following the Series AA Sale, the LLC
was merged (the "Reorganization") with and into the Corporation
in order to facilitate an initial public offering. In connection with
the Reorganization, BACI received shares of the Corporation's non-voting
Class C Common Stock in exchange for its non-voting Class D-2 Common
Interests. Immediately following the Reorganization, BACI's Class C
Common Stock represented approximately 9.2% of all outstanding classes
of Common Stock of the Corporation (i.e., the same percentage economic
interest BACI held in the LLC immediately prior to the Reorganization).
On November 28, 2003, subsequent to the Reorganization, the Corporation
consummated the initial public offering (the "IPO") of its Class
A Common Stock. Following the consummation of the IPO, BACI's equity
ownership of the Corporation was diluted to approximately 5.5% of all of
the outstanding classes of Common Stock of the Corporation.
The Corporation expects to close the acquisition of the subsidiaries
of Quorum Broadcast Holdings, LLC ("Quorum"), another television
broadcast company whose principal equityholders are affiliates of ABRY
Broadcast Partners, LLC ("ABRY"), in mid-December. The LLC
entered into the definitive agreement relating to the Quorum acquisition
on September 12, 2003. The Corporation will issue shares of Class A
Common Stock and shares of Class B Common Stock as a portion of the
consideration to be paid in connection with the Quorum acquisition.
BACI's equity ownership of the Corporation will be further diluted
following the closing of the Quorum acquisition.
In several no-action letters, the Staff has delineated the
circumstances that must be present to allow holders of securities in
limited partnerships and limited liability companies that are
reorganized as corporations to tack their holding periods pursuant to
Rule 144(d)(3). In light of the circumstances underlying the issuance of
securities in the Corporation to BACI, we believe that the criteria
delineated by the Staff in these no-action letters, as well as the
policy underlying Rule 144, have been satisfied. Therefore, we believe
that BACI should be permitted to tack the holding period of its Class
D-2 Common Interests in the LLC to the holding period of the shares of
Class C Common Stock of the Corporation it received in the
Reorganization.
II. Background.
In August 2001, BACI purchased both Series AA Preferred Interests and
Class D-2 Common Interests in the LLC in a private placement exempt from
the registration requirements of Section 5 of the Securities Act of
1933. Holders of these interests were not entitled to any general voting
rights.
The governing document of the LLC, the Fifth Amended and Restated
Limited Liability Company Agreement of Nexstar Broadcasting Group,
L.L.C. dated as of November 14, 2001 (the "Operating Agreement"),
provided that in the event the LLC's Manager (an affiliate of ABRY)
determined that a reorganization as a corporation was necessary to
effect an initial public offering of interests in the LLC, the
interestholders in the LLC would consent to such reorganization. An
identical provision was in the prior version of the Operating Agreement
(the Fourth Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of
Nexstar Broadcasting Group, L.L.C., dated August 7, 2001), which was in
effect when BACI made its investment in the LLC and was subsequently
replaced and superceded by the Operating Agreement. Section 14.2 of the
Operating Agreement specifically provided:
In the event that a Public Offering of equity securities
is approved by the Manager, the Interestholders will take all necessary
or desirable actions that are reasonably requested by the Manager in
connection with the consummation of such Public Offering. If the Manager
determines in good faith that the limited liability company form and/or
the capital structure of the LLC may adversely affect the marketability
of a Public Offering, then each Interestholder will consent to and vote
for a recapitalization, reorganization, incorporation and/or exchange of
its Interests into securities that the Manager and, in the case of a
Public Offering of equity securities, Members which own a majority of
the outstanding Class A Interests which are owned by Persons who are
Members, reasonably determine to be appropriate and will take all
necessary or desirable actions that are reasonably requested by the
Manager in connection with the consummation of any such
recapitalization, reorganization, incorporation and/or exchange;
provided that (a) the resulting securities, to the extent possible,
reflect and are consistent with the Interestholders' respective economic
and voting interests and Capital Accounts as in effect immediately prior
to such Public Offering, determined without regard to any change in
economic position attributable to the fact that such securities may
represent an interest in a corporation or other non-partnership entity
rather than an interest in a partnership, (b) if such Public Offering is
an offering of common stock, then the outstanding Class B Interests will
be exchanged for or otherwise become shares of common stock of the class
so offered, and (c) the Class D-2 Interests will be exchanged for or
otherwise become shares of the same class and type of stock as the Class
A Interests.
Section 9.1(d) of the Operating Agreement further provided that
holders of the Series AA Preferred Interests and the Class D-2 Common
Interests, among others, had no voting rights, and also provided that at
any time the vote or consent of the interestholders of the LLC was
required by the Operating Agreement, such vote or consent would be
deemed to require the vote or consent of only the holders of a majority
of the Class A Common Membership Interests (the "Class A Common
Interests") of the LLC. Notwithstanding this lack of voting rights
associated with the Series AA Preferred Interests and the Class D-2
Common Interests, the investment documents pursuant to which BACI
purchased its Series AA Preferred Interests provided BACI, as the sole
holder of the Series AA Preferred Interests, the right to veto certain
fundamental transactions, including a merger of the type involved in the
Reorganization. As described below, the Series AA Preferred Interests
were sold by BACI in the Series AA Sale on November 28, 2003 prior to
the consummation of the Reorganization.
On November 26, 2003, two days prior to the consummation of the IPO,
the Corporation, the LLC and certain of its direct and indirect
subsidiaries entered into an Agreement of Merger (the "Reorganization
Agreement") in order to effect the Reorganization.
On November 28, 2003, the LLC purchased approximately 96% of the
outstanding Series AA Preferred Interests by distributing the LLC Notes
to BACI, and the Corporation purchased the remaining Series AA Preferred
Interests in exchange for the Corporation Note. The LLC Notes and the
Corporation Note issued to BACI in the Series AA Sale matured upon the
consummation of the IPO. Although the investment documents pursuant to
which BACI purchased the Series AA Preferred Interests provided that the
Series AA Preferred Interests could be redeemed for cash, the indenture
governing certain indebtedness of the LLC and its subsidiaries did not
permit the LLC to distribute cash to redeem the Series AA Preferred
Interests or to redeem more than approximately $52.8 million of the
Series AA Preferred Interests with the LLC Notes. Therefore, BACI, upon
the LLC's request, consented to the receipt of the LLC Notes in lieu of
cash and the purchase of the remaining Series AA Preferred Interests by
the Corporation in exchange for the Corporation Note in order to
facilitate the IPO on terms permitted under the documents governing the
indebtedness of the LLC and its subsidiaries.
Following the Series AA Sale, BACI's Class D-2 Common Interests
represented an approximately 9.2% economic interest in the LLC. These
Class D-2 Common Interests had no voting rights. A substantial majority
of the economic and voting interests in the LLC were held by ABRY
Broadcast Partners II, L.P. and ABRY Broadcast Partners III, L.P., both
of which are affiliates of ABRY. Following the Series AA Sale, ABRY and
its affiliates held approximately 88% of the economic interests in the
LLC and approximately 98% of the voting power of the LLC, in each case
through their ownership of Class A and Class B Common Interests of the
LLC.
Following the Series AA Sale on November 28, 2003, the Reorganization
was consummated. As a result of the Reorganization, the LLC and certain
of its subsidiaries were merged with and into the Corporation, and the
membership interests in the LLC were converted into Class A Common
Stock, Class B Common Stock (which is entitled to ten votes per share
and is freely convertible into Class A Common Stock) and Class C Common
Stock of the Corporation (which is non-voting and freely convertible
into Class A Common Stock). The Series AA Preferred Interests purchased
by the LLC and the Corporation in the Series AA Sale were cancelled in
the Reorganization.
After the Series AA Sale and immediately prior to the Reorganization,
BACI had no voting rights and its Class D-2 Common Interests represented
approximately 9.2% of all outstanding common equity interests of the
LLC. Immediately following the Reorganization, BACI's Class C Common
Stock had no voting rights and represented approximately 9.2% of all
classes of outstanding Common Stock of the Corporation. The exchange of
the securities in the Reorganization was effected for no consideration
other than the securities exchanged.
The holders of Class A and Class B Common Interests in the LLC
received high-voting Class B Common Stock of the Corporation.1
BACI, as the sole holder of the Class D-2 Common Interests, received
non-voting Class C Common Stock of the Corporation in proportion to its
remaining economic interest in the LLC. Although Section 14.2(c) of the
Operating Agreement provided that holders of Class D-2 Common Interests
would receive the Class B Common Stock in the same manner as would be
received by the holders of Class A Common Interests, BACI requested that
it instead receive a class of non-voting stock in the Corporation in
light of certain regulatory requirements of the Federal Communications
Commission (the "FCC") that may otherwise limit BACI's ownership
of media companies and that would subject BACI to certain regulatory
requirements and limitations with respect to its ownership of voting
securities of the Corporation. Given these concerns, the other parties
to the Reorganization consented to BACI receiving non-voting Class C
Common Stock in exchange for its non-voting Class D-2 Common Interests.
Other than the difference in voting rights, the Class C Common Stock is
identical to the Class A and Class B Common Stock and is freely
convertible at BACI's option into Class A Common Stock, subject to
compliance with applicable FCC regulations.2
Thus, the Reorganization substantially complied with the requirements of
Section 14.2 of the Operating Agreement.
On November 28, 2003, following the Series AA Sale and the
Reorganization, the IPO was consummated. After the consummation of the
IPO, affiliates of ABRY held approximately 97% of the outstanding shares
of the Corporation's Class B Common Stock, which represented
approximately 52% of the outstanding Common Stock of the Corporation and
approximately 90% of the voting power of the Corporation. BACI held all
of the outstanding shares of the non-voting Class C Common Stock, which
represented approximately 5.5% of the outstanding Common Stock of the
Corporation.
The LLC entered into the definitive agreement relating to the Quorum
acquisition on September 12, 2003, and the Corporation currently expects
to consummate the Quorum acquisition in mid-December. Quorum's principal
equityholders and the Corporation's two principal stockholders are
affiliates of ABRY. The Corporation will issue 3,490,883 shares of Class
A Common Stock and 80,230 shares of Class B Common Stock as a portion of
the consideration to be paid in connection with the Quorum acquisition.
Following the Corporation's anticipated issuance of shares of Common
Stock in the Quorum acquisition, BACI's shares of non-voting Class C
Common Stock will represent approximately 4.8% of all outstanding shares
of Common Stock of the Corporation. Following the Quorum acquisition,
ABRY and its affiliates will own approximately 26% of the outstanding
shares of Class A Common Stock and approximately 97% of the outstanding
shares of Class B Common Stock, representing in the aggregate
approximately 58% of all outstanding shares of Common Stock and
approximately 90% of the total voting power of the Corporation.
III. Analysis.
A. Rule 144.
The preliminary note to Rule 144 states that the purpose of the
holding period requirement is to ensure that the holder of the
securities has assumed the economic risks of its investment. Rule 144(d)
sets forth the method by which the holding period is calculated. In
certain circumstances listed in Rule 144(d)(3), such as
recapitalizations, the Rule provides that the holding periods for
different securities may be tacked. In these situations, the underlying
economic risk of the investment has not changed, and the investor does
not make a new investment decision in receiving the new security.3
B. Elements Required for Tacking After a Reorganization.
In several no-action letters, the Staff has permitted partners of a
limited partnership and members of a limited liability company to tack
the holding period of their interests in the limited partnership or
limited liability company to the holding period of securities of a
corporation which succeeded to the business of the limited partnership
or limited liability company. These reorganizations may be accomplished
through share exchanges or mergers4
and are often effected to facilitate an initial public offering of the
entity's securities. In cases where tacking was permitted, Staff has
required the presence of the following elements: (1) the partnership
agreement or other organizational document expressly contemplated
reorganization into a corporation; (2) the equity interests of the
shareholders of the successor corporation were based on their
proportionate interests in the prior entity; (3) no additional
consideration was provided by the equity holders of the predecessor
entity in connection with the issuance to them of the shares of the
successor corporation; (4) the holders of the securities of the
predecessor entity seeking to tack did not have veto or other meaningful
voting rights with respect to the transaction; and (5) there was no
change to the business or operations of the entity as a result of the
reorganization.5
With regard to BACI's acquisition of the Class C Common Stock, we
conclude that all five elements have been satisfied. A discussion of
each element follows.
1. Contemplation of Reorganization Into Corporate Form.
Since first allowing tacking in corporate reorganizations of limited
partnerships and limited liability companies, the Staff has required
that the reorganization into a corporation in advance of an initial
public offering be expressly contemplated in an agreement among the
securityholders at the time the partnership or limited liability company
was formed.6 With regard to the
LLC, Section 14.2 of the Operating Agreement (and the prior version of
the Operating Agreement in effect at the time of BACI's investment in
August 2001) specifically contemplated reorganization into a corporation
in that it states that the Manager had the authority to change the
entity's form in order to effect an initial public offering by
"recapitalization, reorganization [or] incorporation." (Emphasis
added.)
This provision is similar to that addressed by the Staff in Juno
Online Services, Inc.7 In
Juno, the operative provision in the limited partnership
agreement provided the general partner with the ability to convert or
reorganize the limited partnership "in a corporation or other entity."
The limited partnership was subsequently reorganized as a corporation,
and its stock was offered to the public in an initial public offering.
Although the partnership agreement contemplated that a form other than a
corporate form could be elected by the general partner, the Staff
permitted tacking, noting that a corporate form was identified and it
was the form chosen. Similarly, the Operating Agreement specifically
authorizes the Manager to utilize a corporate entity to consummate the
initial public offering - the term "incorporation" is used twice
in the section - and it was the corporate form that was chosen.
Therefore, we believe that this element is satisfied.
2. Proportionate Equity Interests.
The second element required for tacking under these circumstances is
that the interest received in the successor corporation must be
proportionate to the interest held in the predecessor entity. In
connection with the Reorganization, the interestholders of the LLC
received equity interests in the Corporation proportionate to the equity
interests they held in the predecessor entity.
BACI received shares of non-voting Class C Common Stock in the
Reorganization in exchange for its non-voting Class D-2 Common Interests
in the LLC. BACI had a 9.2% economic interest in the LLC immediately
prior to the Reorganization and owned 9.2% of all outstanding Common
Stock immediately after the Reorganization. While Section 14.2 of the
Operating Agreement specifically contemplated that the Class D-2 Common
Interests would be exchanged for the same security as the Class A Common
Interests (in the Reorganization, the Class A Common Interests were
exchanged for shares of high-voting Class B Common Stock), BACI
requested that it instead receive non-voting Class C Common Stock in
exchange for its non-voting Class D-2 Common Interests in order to
accommodate certain FCC regulatory requirements and limits that would be
imposed on BACI as a result of the nature of the Corporation's business.
The fact that BACI received non-voting securities of the Corporation
instead of voting securities should not be relevant to the tacking
analysis. The presence or absence of voting rights does not impact the
economic risk associated with BACI's investment, particularly in light
of the overwhelming voting control over both the LLC and the Corporation
held by ABRY and its affiliates. Indeed, BACI's request that it receive
non-voting securities of the Corporation caused it to receive securities
in the Reorganization that were as nearly as identical as possible to
those owned by it in the predecessor LLC.
In Cravath, the Staff permitted tacking where the minority
member was able to choose between high and low voting common stock, but
its equity interest remained proportionate. Further, in the Goldman
Sachs no-action letter, the Staff permitted tacking of the holding
period of limited partnership interests where the limited partners were
given the option of receiving cash, subordinated debentures or common
stock in the successor corporation. However, in each case, the limited
partners would receive consideration consistent with their respective
proportionate interests in the successor corporation. Likewise, BACI
will maintain its proportionate interest in the Corporation. Given the
analysis in Cravath and Goldman Sachs, it appears that an
election as to the voting rights or other nature of the consideration
received does not prohibit tacking, so long as the underlying economics
remain proportionate. The Reorganization did not change the ownership or
the economic risk that BACI took upon its initial investment in the LLC.
Therefore, we believe that this element was satisfied.
3. No Additional Consideration.
BACI did not provide any additional consideration in connection with
the issuance of Class C Common Stock to it in the Reorganization.
4. No Veto or Voting Rights Over Reorganization
Decision.
The Staff has also required that the holders of the securities of the
predecessor entity seeking to tack not have veto or meaningful other
voting rights with respect to the transaction.8
Although BACI held Series AA Preferred Interests, which would have
allowed BACI a veto right with regard to the Reorganization, BACI sold
these Series AA Preferred Interests in the Series AA Sale and, at the
time the Reorganization was consummated, held only non-voting Class D-2
Common Interests. Holders of the Class D-2 Common Interests had no veto
or voting rights with respect to the Reorganization.
We do not believe that BACI's consent to receiving the LLC Notes and
the Corporation Note in connection with the Series AA Sale may be
considered a voting right with respect to the Reorganization. Rather,
BACI accommodated a request for the use of consideration in connection
with the sale that differed from that contemplated by the redemption
provision contained in the documents governing BACI's Series AA
Preferred Interest investment. The Staff did not find that a choice of
consideration, including cash or debentures, constituted a voting right
in Goldman Sachs and, likewise, BACI's consent to the use of the
notes in lieu of cash as consideration in the Series AA Sale should not
be construed as a voting right in connection with the Reorganization.
Additionally, Section 14.2 of the Operating Agreement provided that
each interestholder of the LLC, including BACI as a holder of Class D-2
Common Interests, would "take all necessary or reasonable actions
requested by" the Manager of the LLC in order to effect the
Reorganization. Although BACI, as a holder of Class D-2 Common
Interests, had no voting or consent rights pursuant to Section 9.1(d) of
the Operating Agreement, to the extent it would somehow have otherwise
been entitled to vote on or consent to the Reorganization, Section 14.2
also required all interestholders to "consent to and vote for" the
Reorganization. Thus, BACI had no veto or other voting rights with
respect to the Reorganization. Further, the agreement by which the
Series AA Sale was effected contained an acknowledgement by all parties
that BACI's consent was not necessary or required in order for the
Reorganization to be consummated.
Although BACI consented to the manner in which the Series AA Sale was
effected, we do not believe that this should be construed as providing
BACI with any veto or meaningful voting rights with respect to the
Reorganization. As such, we believe this element has been satisfied.
5. No Change to the Business or Operations.
Finally, the Staff has required that there be no change to the
business or operations of the entity as a result of the reorganization.
In this situation, the Reorganization did not result in any change to
the business or operations of the LLC. Immediately following the
Reorganization and the IPO, the Corporation had the same assets,
liabilities and business as the LLC. While the Corporation has entered
into an agreement to acquire Quorum, the existence of this proposed
transaction should not alter the conclusion that BACI is entitled to
tack its holding period of the Class D-2 Common Interests in the LLC to
its holding period of its Class C Common Stock of the Corporation. The
Reorganization was not contingent in any manner upon the Quorum
transaction. Further, in the proposed Quorum acquisition, the
Corporation will simply be effecting an acquisition by issuing shares of
its Class A Common Stock and Class B Common Stock to the holders of
Quorum's equity interests as partial payment of the acquisition
consideration. BACI is not an equityholder of Quorum, will not receive
any of the consideration payable in connection with the proposed Quorum
acquisition and has at no time had any right to consent to or vote upon
the Quorum acquisition.
We believe that this element relating to no changes in the business
or operations of the entity as a result of the reorganization has been
satisfied.
IV. Conclusion.
Based upon the foregoing facts and analysis, we conclude that BACI
may include the time it held the Class D-2 Common Interests in the LLC
in calculating its holding period for the shares of Class C Common Stock
it received in the Reorganization. We respectfully request that the
Staff concur with our opinion that the circumstances described above are
sufficient to permit tacking of the Rule 144(d) holding periods for BACI
in connection with the Reorganization.
In accordance with Release No. 33-6269 (available December 5, 1980),
seven additional copies of this letter are enclosed. If for any reason
you do not concur with our conclusions, we would appreciate the
opportunity to confer with you by telephone prior to any written
response to this letter. If you need any additional information
regarding this letter, or if we may otherwise be of assistance, please
call me at (704) 331-7406 or Debra Ingraham at (704) 331-5735.
Please acknowledge receipt of this letter by stamping the additional
enclosed copy of this letter and returning it to the undersigned in the
enclosed self-addressed, stamped envelope.
SEC_CODE_REF_0090001192884
Sincerely, /s/ Sean M. Jones
Sean M. Jones
For the Firm
Endnotes
1 The
distribution of the Class B Common Stock to the holders of the Class B
Common Interests was not in accordance with Section 14.2(b) of the
Operating Agreement, which required that the holders of Class B Common
Interests receive the interests being offered in the public offering.
The Corporation offered its Class A Common Stock in the IPO. BACI was
not involved in the decision to issue the Class B Common Stock to the
holders of the Class B Common Interests and had no voting rights with
respect thereto.
2 The
capitalization of the Corporation is described further in the prospectus
filed by the Corporation with the Securities and Exchange Commission
pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act on November 24, 2003.
3 See,
e.g., Antigenics, Inc., 2000 WL 992189, *1 (SEC No-Action Letter,
July 20, 2000); Cravath, Swaine & Moore, 2000 WL 190027, *1 (SEC
No-Action Letter, February 11, 2000);
The Peterson Companies,
1998 WL 403888, *2 (SEC No-Action Letter, July 16, 1998).
4 In
Juno
Online Services, Inc., 1999 WL 1042178 (SEC No-Action Letter,
November 17, 1999) and in The Goldman Sachs Group, L.P., 1998 WL
537884 (SEC No-Action Letter, August 24, 1998), the Staff allowed
tacking where the reorganization involved a merger of the predecessor
entity into a corporation.
5 See
Antigenics at *1; Cravath at *1.
6 Cravath
at *1; The Peterson Companies at *8 (the Staff stated that, to
permit tacking, the securityholders agreement "would need to expressly
contemplate conversion of [the limited liability company] into a
corporate form in advance of a public offering of securities, with
holders of units in the [limited liability company] retaining no veto
power or other voting power with respect to the conversion"); The
Goldman Sachs Group, L.P., 1998 WL 537884, *3 (SEC No-Action Letter,
August 24, 1998).
7 Juno
Online Services, Inc., 1999 WL 1042178 (SEC No-Action Letter,
November 17, 1999).
8 In
Antigenics, the Staff took the position that any voting rights
retained by a member of a limited liability company with respect to the
reorganization occurring, including a member who lacks the requisite
voting power to veto the reorganization, will prevent the member from
being able to tack its holding periods. The Staff stated that "[i]t is
immaterial that a single member's vote decision could not have
influenced the results of the vote of all members on the merger
resolution or any member refrained from voting."
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