Company Name: ING Senior Income Fund
Public Availability Date: October 9, 2003
Kimberly Dopkin Rasevic
Dechert LLP
1775 Eye St. N.W.
Washington. DC 20006-2401
Re:ING Senior Income Fund
File No. TP 03-121
Dear Ms. Rasevic:
In regard to your letter dated October 8, 2003, as supplemented by
conversations with the staff, you request an exemption from Rule 102 of
Regulation M, to allow ING Senior Income Fund (the "Fund") to
conduct a rescission offer while concurrently offering shares to the
public at their public offering price. We have attached a copy of your
letter to this response to avoid reciting the facts. Unless otherwise
noted, each defined term in this letter has the same meaning as defined
in your letter.
RESPONSE:
As a consequence of the continuous offering ("Continuous Offering")
of the shares ("Shares") of the Fund, the Fund is engaged in a
distribution of Shares subject to Rule 102 of Regulation M. As a result,
bids for or purchases of Shares or any "reference security" by the Fund,
or by an "affiliated purchaser" of the Fund, that are not specifically
excepted or exempted from the provisions of Rule 102, are prohibited
during the "restricted period" specified in Rule 102.1
The Rescission Offer is not eligible for the exception contained in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of Rule 102 for periodic tender offers conducted by
closed-end investment companies.
Nevertheless, based upon your representations and the facts
presented, particularly that:
- it is highly unlikely that there will be a significant economic
incentive for Rescission Offerees to accept the Rescission Offer and
that very few Rescission Offerees will accept the Rescission Offer;
- the Rescission Offer will be conducted to qualify for the
exception described in Rule 13e-4(h)(6);
- the Rescission Offer will be directed at a limited number of
persons and will not be publicized;
- the Shares will be repurchased at the price paid for the Shares
by the Rescission Offeree, plus interest; and
- there is no potential for price manipulation of the Shares
because there is no trading market for the Shares, and it is not
anticipated that one will develop, and Shares are continuously
offered only at the public offering price based upon their current
net asset value (as determined under the 1940 Act) and not at a
trading market determined price,
the Rescission Offer does not appear to result in any of the abuses
that Rule 102 is designed to prevent. Accordingly, on the basis of these
facts and representations, but without necessarily concurring in your
analysis, the Commission hereby grants the Fund an exemption from Rule
102 of Regulation M pursuant to paragraph (e) thereof to permit the Fund
to conduct the Rescission Offer as described.
The foregoing exemption from Rule 102 is based solely on your
representations and the facts presented to the staff, and is strictly
limited to the application of this rule to the Rescission Offer. If any
material change occurs with respect to any of those facts or
representations, the Rescission Offer should be discontinued, pending
presentation of the facts for our consideration.
In addition, your attention is directed to the anti-fraud and
anti-manipulation provisions of the Exchange Act, particularly Sections
10(b) and 14(e), and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. Responsibility for
compliance with these and any other applicable provisions of the federal
securities laws must rest with the participants in the various
transactions. The Division expresses no view with respect to any other
questions that the Rescission Offer may raise, including, but not
limited to, the adequacy of disclosure concerning, and the applicability
of any other federal or state laws to, the Rescission Offer.
For the Commission, by the
Division of Market Regulation,
pursuant to delegated authority,
James A. Brigagliano
Assistant Director
1 The
terms "reference security," "affiliated purchaser" and "restricted
period" are defined in Rule 100 of Regulation M.
Incoming Letter:
October 8, 2003
Mr. James A. Brigagliano
Assistant DirectorDivision of Market Regulation
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20549
Re:ING Senior Income Fund (the "Fund")
Request for Exemption Pursuant to Regulation M, Rule 102(e)
Dear Mr. Brigagliano:
On behalf of the Fund, we request that the Division of Market
Regulation ("Division"), pursuant to delegated authority, grant an
exemption pursuant to Rule 102(e) of Regulation M1
from the prohibition of Rule 102(a) under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 ("1934 Act"), if the Fund conducts a Rescission Offer (as described
below) while it continues to offer its shares to the public at net asset
value. The Rescission Offer is being made to rectify an inadvertent
oversale of shares pursuant to an otherwise effective prospectus, and
will be made pursuant to a registration statement which has been filed
with the Commission under the Securities Act of 1933 ("1933 Act") and
the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("1940 Act") and is expected to
become effective shortly.
For the reasons set forth herein, we believe that simultaneously
conducting the Rescission Offer and the continuous offering of the
Fund's shares poses none of the dangers of manipulation of the market at
which the 1934 Act, in general, and Regulation M, in particular, is
aimed; that making the Rescission Offer is necessary to effectuate the
purposes of the 1933 Act; and that requiring the Fund to suspend the
continuous offering of its shares as a de facto "condition" of making a
Rescission Offer would be detrimental to the Fund and effectively impose
penalties upon it which would be grossly disproportionate to the
inadvertent oversale which has given rise to the Rescission Offer.
The Fund
The Fund, a so-called "prime rate fund,"2
is registered under the 1940 Act as a closed-end, diversified management
investment company.3
The Fund continuously offers its shares4
at their public offering price based upon their net asset value per
share pursuant to a registration statement filed with the Commission
under the 1933 Act and 1940 Act on Form N-2. The Fund's 1933 Act
registration statement is amended when necessary for the purpose of
updating the financial statements and/or other information included in
its prospectus. Unlike most open-end investment companies that register
an indefinite number of shares, as a closed-end investment company, the
Fund registers a specific number of shares. When these shares have been
sold, the Fund files a new registration statement under the 1933 Act
registering additional shares.
As a closed-end investment company, the Fund does not redeem its
shares. There has not been (and is not expected to be) any trading
market for shares of the Fund. Unlike most closed-end funds which are
traded on an exchange or in the over-the-counter market at the
termination of the offering, the Fund has not sought (and does not
intend to seek) to list its shares on an exchange, nor has the Fund
arranged for over-the-counter trading on the National Association of
Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System. To the Fund's knowledge,
no broker-dealer, whether in the group of broker-dealers regularly
selling ING funds or otherwise, has made or will make an informal market
in the shares. The Fund believes that the development of any secondary
market for shares is highly unlikely under any foreseeable
circumstances.
In order to provide liquidity to Fund shareholders, the Fund has
conducted and expects to continue to conduct monthly repurchase offers
at net asset value pursuant to Rule 23c-3 under the 1940 Act and an
exemptive order granted by the Commission that exempts the Fund from
certain provisions of Rule 23c-3. In accordance with Rule 23c-3 and the
exemptive order, the Fund offers to repurchase at least 5% and up to 25%
of its shares on a monthly basis. The repurchase price is the Fund's net
asset value on the repurchase offer's pricing date. If more shares are
tendered for repurchase than the Fund has offered to repurchase, the
Trustees of the Fund may (but are not obligated to) increase the number
of shares offered to be repurchased by 2% of the Fund's outstanding
shares. If there are still more shares tendered than offered for
repurchase, shares will be repurchased on a pro rata basis. Since
the Fund's inception date, no repurchase offer has been oversubscribed
Inadvertent Sale of Unregistered Shares
As noted, to conduct its continuous offering of shares, the Fund
registers a specific number of shares per class on Form N-2 under the
1933 Act. The Fund is proposing the Rescission Offer because the Fund's
Class A shares sold during the period of June 30, 2003 to July 16, 2003
were not registered under the 1933 Act. Although the Fund had previously
registered Class A shares for sale and the number of registered Class A
shares remaining for sale is monitored on a periodic basis, the recent
increase in the demand for these shares caused the available registered
shares to be sold at a rate much faster than originally anticipated. As
a result, for thirteen business days during the period from June 30,
2003 through July 16, 2003 (the "Rescission Period"), the Fund sold
approximately $6,957,182 (or 454,994 shares) of Class A shares in excess
of the number of Class A shares registered under the 1933 Act.6
When these sales were discovered, the Fund filed a new registration
statement registering additional shares which became effective upon
filing pursuant to Rule 486(b) under the 1933 Act on July 17, 2003, so
that all share sales beginning on July 17, 2003 have been properly
registered under the 1933 Act. This filing is separate from the
registration statement filed with respect to the Rescission Offer.
The Proposed Rescission Offer
The staff of the Division has considered and granted requests for
relief under Rule 102(e) with respect to rescission offers by prime rate
funds involving terms substantially identical to those of the Rescission
Offer described below, including granting a prior request for relief by
the Fund. See, ING Senior Income Fund, SEC Exemptive Order (pub.
avail. Oct. 17, 2002), Liberty Floating Rate Advantage Fund, SEC
Exemptive Order (pub. avail. May 2, 2001) and EV Classic Senior-Floating
Rate Fund, SEC Exemptive Order (pub. avail. Mar. 19, 1997), hereinafter
referred to as "Senior Income Fund," "Liberty" and "Eaton
Vance," respectively.
The Fund has filed with the Commission a registration statement on
Form N-2 which (i) registers 454,994 shares of the Fund (or $7,248,054,
including applicable sales charges), and (ii) includes a Rescission
Offer, the current, effective prospectus of the Fund, and a text
description of the reasons for and an explanation of the terms of the
Rescission Offer (effectively, in the form of a "sticker" or "wrapper").
The Fund's registration statement is being reviewed by the Division of
Investment Management and is expected to be ordered effective on an
accelerated basis.
In substance, the Rescission Offer will be made to all holders of
Class A shares purchased during the Rescission Period ("Rescission
Offerees") and will offer each such purchaser the option to tender all
shares purchased during the Rescission Period at the price paid by the
Rescission Offeree for such shares7
plus interest at an annual rate determined by using the One-Year
Constant Maturity Treasury Yield, published by the Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, during the Rescission Period (the "Interest
Rate"), less any dividends declared and paid or payable by the Fund with
respect to the shares from the date of purchase to the expiration date
of the Rescission Offer.8 The
Rescission Offer will remain open for 30 days. Rescission Offerees who
do not respond to the Rescission Offer by the expiration date will be
deemed by the Fund to have declined the Rescission Offer and the shares
held by such Rescission Offerees will automatically be deemed to be
registered shares under the 1933 Act effective as of the date of the
Rescission Offer without any further action on the part of such
Rescission Offerees.
ING Investments, LLC, the Fund's investment adviser, will bear all
costs and expenses of making this Rescission Offer, including any loss
incurred by the Fund due to a change (reduction) in the net asset value
of Class A shares and/or a difference between the interest rate to be
paid and the dividends paid or payable on shares surrendered in response
to the Rescission Offer. The net asset value per share of Class A shares
at the close of business on September 30, 2003 was $15.21. From the
initial date of the Rescission Period through September 30, 2003, the
annualized rate of dividends declared was 4.28% for Class A shares,
which exceeds the annualized Interest Rate payable pursuant to the
Rescission Offer as of September 30, 2003, which would have been 1.15%
for Class A shares of the Fund. The Fund believes it is highly unlikely
that there will be a significant economic incentive for Rescission
Offerees to accept the Rescission Offer and, therefore, believes that
very few Rescission Offerees will accept the Rescission Offer.
Applicable Law and Regulation
As relevant to the issues raised in this letter, Rule 102 of
Regulation M is designed to prevent manipulation of the trading markets
while a distribution of securities is in process. More particularly,
Rule 102 prohibits an issuer (and certain other persons participating in
a distribution) from purchasing securities of the same class being
distributed while a distribution of the issuer's securities is in
process because such purchases might create the appearance of trading
activity which is unjustified, or might maintain or increase the prices
at which the securities are being traded. As stated in its adopting
release, Regulation M was adopted by the Commission with the intent to
preclude manipulative conduct by persons with an interest in the outcome
of an offering.9
Rule 102 of Regulation M contains various exceptions from the
limitations or prohibitions upon the purchase of securities while a
distribution is in process. In addition, Rule 102(e) provides, in
substance, that upon written application, the Commission may grant an
exemption from the prohibitions, either conditionally or on specified
terms and conditions, to any transactions or class of transactions, or
to any security or class of securities.
In each of Senior Income Fund, Liberty and Eaton Vance, the
staff of the Division granted relief with respect to a rescission offer
by a prime rate fund involving substantially identical terms to the
Rescission Offer. In each of those cases, the applicant maintained that
the proposed rescission offer did not implicate the market manipulation
concerns underlying Regulation M in large measure because of the
inherent characteristics of prime rate funds operating as closed-end
investment companies making periodic tender offers.10
In addition to the Senior Income Fund, Liberty and Eaton Vance
precedents that we believe are directly on point, the Commission has
long acknowledged that share repurchase activities by funds such as the
Fund generally do not involve market manipulation concerns and therefore
have been broadly exempted from Regulation M and its predecessor
regulations. Pursuant to former Rule 10b-6, the Commission, beginning in
1988, had granted exemptions to prime rate funds (among others) to
permit them to conduct periodic tender offers for the purchase of shares
during a continuous offering. These exemptions have been conditioned
upon the funds conducting these repurchases in accord with provisions of
Section 23(c)(2) of the 1940 Act and tender offer Rule 13e-4 under the
1934 Act. The Commission has granted these exemptions11
from the prohibitions of Rule 10b-6 in recognition of, among other
factors, the fact that (i) there is no trading market for shares of a
prime rate fund such as the Fund, and (ii) the conduct of a repurchase
program (pursuant to tender offers) concurrent with the conduct of a
continuous offering does not present any potential for price
manipulation because shares are continuously offered only at the public
offering price based upon their current net asset value (as determined
under the 1940 Act) and not at a trading market determined price, and
are repurchased in the tender offer at the public offering price based
upon their current net asset value and not at a trading market
determined price.
Reasons for Granting an Exemption
The proposed Rescission Offer is substantially identical to those
permitted by the Division staff in Senior Income Fund, Liberty
and Eaton Vance, and is analogous to the tender offers heretofore
permitted by the Commission under Rule 10b-6 and now codified as an
exempted activity under Rule 102(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of Regulation M. In
substance, the issuer in a tender or repurchase offer is offering to
repurchase shares at the public offering price based upon the net asset
value at which the fund's continuously offered shares are being offered
and sold. In the proposed Rescission Offer, as in the Senior Income
Fund, Liberty and Eaton Vance rescission offers, the issuer
(the Fund) is offering to repurchase only those shares currently
outstanding that were sold during the Rescission Period at the public
offering price paid by the shareholder. Like a tender or repurchase
offer, there is no potential through the Rescission Offer to create the
appearance of trading activity when none otherwise exists, since the
Rescission Offer is limited to only those shareholders who owned shares
of the Fund during the Rescission Period.
Under Rule 102(b)(2)(i) and (ii), a repurchase or tender offer must
be made to "all holders" of shares of the Fund. As in the Senior
Income Fund, Liberty and Eaton Vance rescission offers,
offers will be made only to the Rescission Offerees who purchased shares
of the Fund during the Rescission Period. However, Rule 13e-4(h)(6)
under the 1934 Act anticipated this distinction by providing that an
issuer tender offer made solely to effect a rescission offer is not
subject to Rule 13e-4's restrictions -- including the "all holders"
requirement -- provided certain conditions12
are met. This exception from Rule 13e-4's all holders requirement
recognizes that the extension of a rescission offer to a limited group
of shareholders arises as a result of legal rights which have accrued to
them under Section 12(a)(1) of the 1933 Act, and not as a result of any
favoritism or any other discrimination by the issuer and does not
adversely affect other shareholders.
Further, Rule 102 was promulgated to prevent participants in a
distribution of securities from artificially maintaining the trading
price of the security above that which would otherwise prevail as a
result of market factors. In the proposed Rescission Offer as in the
Senior Income Fund, Liberty and Eaton Vance rescission
offers, there is no potential to affect or manipulate the price at which
the continuously offered shares are being sold.
First, because shares of the Fund are not listed for trading on any
national securities exchange or any secondary or over-the-counter
markets, the concerns of price manipulation raised by the Commission in
adopting Regulation M are absent. Also, the Rescission Offer will be
directed at a limited number of persons and will not be publicized.
Second, while the Fund will repurchase shares at their public
offering price, ING Investments, LLC, and not the Fund, will absorb any
difference between the public offering price and the current net asset
value (due to any loss incurred by the Fund due to any decrease in the
Fund's net asset value). Thus, those Rescission Offerees who purchased
unregistered securities are being given the opportunity to be made whole
(above and beyond the net asset value of the shares being continuously
offered during the Rescission Offer) at the expense of ING Investments,
LLC and not at the expense of the Fund or its current shareholders. The
only potential residual impact to the Fund as a result of the Rescission
Offer is that the volume of Rescission Offerees who accept the
Rescission Offer could impact the net asset value of the Fund's shares.
Management of the Fund believes, however, that this is unlikely to
affect the net asset value of the shares being continuously sold during
the Rescission Offer. For example, the Fund accepted $82,919,307 in
tendered shares pursuant to its repurchase offers year-to-date in 2003
with little to no impact on the net asset value of the Fund.
Finally, there is no opportunity for price manipulation by the issuer
because the Fund will follow its board-approved procedures for
calculating the net asset value of its shares, including valuing the
underlying securities of the Fund through an independent third-party
pricing service.
As in the cases of Senior Income Fund, Liberty and Eaton Vance,
the failure to grant the exemption requested would in effect operate as
an unwarranted and totally disproportionate penalty upon the Fund.13
The only alternative available to the Fund would be to suspend the
continuous offering of its shares for more than a month in order to make
the Rescission Offer. Doing so would adversely impact the Fund and its
shareholders by disrupting its currently positive cash flow, and
possibly creating confusion in the broker-dealer community which
distributes the Fund's shares. Requiring the Fund to suspend sales would
provide no corresponding public policy benefit, particularly in light of
the inadvertent nature of the oversale of shares.
Request for Exemption
Based upon the above-described facts and circumstances, the Fund
requests that the Division, pursuant to delegated authority, grant an
exemption pursuant to Rule 102(e) of Regulation M under the 1934 Act
from the prohibition set forth in Rule 102(a) under the 1934 Act.
***
If you have any questions with respect to this letter, please contact
Jeffrey S. Puretz at 202.261.3358 or the undersigned at 202.261.3447.
Sincerely,
Kimberly Dopkin Rasevic
| cc: |
James M. Hennessy
President
ING Investments, LLC
Huey P. Falgout, Jr., Esq.
Chief Counsel
ING Americas U.S. Legal Services
William H. Rivoir III, Esq.
Counsel
ING Americas US Legal Services
Jeffrey S. Puretz, Esq.
Dechert LLP |
1 Regulation
M became effective March 4, 1997 and replaced Rule 10b-6 (and other
rules) under the 1934 Act.
2 A prime
rate, or loan participation, fund is one which invests primarily in
assets consisting of interests in senior, corporate loans that have
floating interest rates. Although such funds register as closed-end
investment companies, most operate much like open-end investment
companies, offering shares continuously and providing the sole source of
liquidity for their shareholders through periodic tender or repurchase
offers. They are characterized by relatively stable net asset values and
by dividends paid to shareholders from net investment income which have
been significantly higher than the dividends paid by the typical money
market fund. See, Protecting Investors: A Half-Century of Investment
Company Regulation (1992), pp. 439-454.
3 The Fund's
investment objective is to provide a high level of monthly income. The
Fund invests primarily in higher yielding, U.S. dollar denominated,
floating rate secured senior loans made only to corporations or other
business entities organized under U.S. laws or located in the U.S.
("Senior Loans"). Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest
at least 80% of its total assets in Senior Loans. The Fund may also
invest up to 20% of its total assets in other instruments, including
unsecured loans, subordinated loans, corporate debt securities, loans
made to, or debt securities issued by, corporations or other business
entities organized or located outside the U.S., equity securities
incidental to investment in loans, and other investment companies such
as money market funds. Under normal circumstances, the Fund may also
invest up to 10% of its total assets in cash and/or short-term
instruments.
4 The Fund
issues four classes of shares of securities. Except as described in this
paragraph, for purposes of Regulation M no other distribution of Fund
shares, or any security of the classes of the shares, or any securities
immediately convertible into or exchangeable for or any right to acquire
any such security by the Fund or attributable to it (e.g., distributions
by persons who are "affiliated purchasers" of the Fund as defined in
Rule 100 of Regulation M) is now in progress or pending.
5 See,
In the Matter of ING Pilgrim Investments, LLC, et al., Investment
Company Act Release Nos. 25167 (Sept. 21, 2001) (notice) and 25212 (Oct.
17, 2001) (order).
6 We note
and emphasize that the shares of the Fund were offered and sold by means
of a prospectus and registration statement which was current and would
otherwise be effective but for the fact that the correct number of
shares had not been registered. This is not a situation where shares
were offered and sold without regard to the registration requirements of
the 1933 Act, or offered and sold pursuant to a prospectus and/or
registration statement which failed to contain all of the material
information required by the Commission's registration form. Without
minimizing the importance of properly registering the shares, we also
note that if the Fund was registered as an open-end investment company
continuously offering its shares pursuant to a current prospectus, the
Fund could "cure" the oversale without any right of rescission. See,
1940 Act, Section 24(f) and Rule 24f-2 thereunder.
7 Purchases
of Class A shares of the Fund are subject to a maximum front-end sales
charge of 4.75%, which is reduced for purchases of $50,000 and over. The
front-end sales charge will be returned to investors who tender shares
in the Rescission Offer. Investors who purchase $1 million or more of
Class A shares are not subject to the Fund's front-end sales load.
However, such investors are subject to an early withdrawal charge of up
to 1.0% if they are repurchased by the Fund within one or two years of
purchase, depending on the amount of the purchase. Investors who tender
their shares in the Rescission Offer will not be assessed such early
withdrawal fee.
8 The Fund
is making a Rescission Offer in order to limit any contingent liability
the Fund may have as a result of the sale of shares which were not
registered under the 1933 Act. Rescission Offerees will be advised that
non-acceptance of the Rescission Offer may not terminate a Rescission
Offeree's legal rights against the Fund.
9 Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 38067 (December 20, 1996), 62 FR 520.
10 Rather
than a fund (such as the Fund) making monthly repurchase offers, Liberty
involved a fund making quarterly repurchase offers under Rule 23c-3 and
Eaton Vance involved a fund making periodic tender offers at net asset
value under Rule 13e-4. However, we do not believe these differences are
meaningful with respect to the analysis of potential market manipulation
concerns under Regulation M.
11 These
exemptions from Rule 10b-6 have been incorporated in Rule 102(b)(2)(ii)
of Regulation M and individual exemptions need no longer be obtained by
application. Rule 102(b)(2)(i) similarly provides an exemption for funds
that make quarterly repurchase offers for their shares pursuant to Rule
23c-3 under the 1940 Act.
12 The
conditions are that the rescission offer be registered under the 1933
Act, and that the amount to be paid is equal to the price paid by each
rescission offeree plus legal interest -- conditions which the Fund's
Rescission Offer will satisfy.
13 See,
note 6, above, which points out that as an open-end investment company
the Fund could simply pay an additional registration fee to "cure" this
inadvertent oversale.
http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/cf-noaction/ing100903.htm
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