Document ID: SEC-2008-1133-0001
Agency: sec
Document Type: Notice
Title: Prudential Annuities Life Assurance Corporation, et al.; Notice of Application
Posted Date: 2008-08-14T04:00Z

[Federal Register: August 14, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 158)]
[Notices]               
[Page 47635-47638]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr14au08-57]                         

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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. IC-28354; File No. 812-13532]

 
Prudential Annuities Life Assurance Corporation, et al.; Notice 
of Application

August 8, 2008
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or ``Commission'').

ACTION: Notice of application for an order under Section 6(c) of the 
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the ``1940 Act'') granting 
exemptions from the provisions of Sections 2(a)(32), 22(c), and 
27(i)(2)(A) of the 1940 Act and Rule 22c-1 thereunder.

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Applicants:  Prudential Annuities Life Assurance Corporation 
(``PALAC''), Prudential Annuities Life Assurance Corporation Variable 
Account B (``Account''), and Prudential Annuities Distributors, Inc. 
(``PAD,'' and collectively with PALAC, and the Account, the 
``Applicants'').

Summary of Application:  Applicants seek an order under Section 6(c) of 
the 1940 Act to the extent necessary to permit, under specified 
circumstances, the recapture of credits applied to purchase payments 
made under the Advanced Series XTra Credit Eight variable annuity 
contract (``Contract''), as well as other contracts that PALAC may 
issue in the future through the Account or any other separate account 
established in the future by PALAC that support variable annuity 
contracts that are substantially similar in all material respects to 
the Contract.

Filing Date:  The application was filed on May 7, 2008 and amended on 
July 15, 2008.

Hearing or Notification of Hearing:  An order granting the application 
will be issued unless the Commission orders a hearing. Interested 
persons may request a hearing by writing to the Secretary of the 
Commission and serving Applicants with a copy of the request, 
personally or by mail. Hearing requests should be received by the 
Commission by 5:30 p.m. on September 2, 2008, and should be accompanied 
by proof of service on Applicants, in the form of an affidavit or, for 
lawyers, a certificate of service. Hearing requests should state the 
nature of the requester's interest, the reason for the request, and the 
issues contested. Persons who wish to be notified of a hearing may 
request notification by writing to the Secretary of the Commission.

ADDRESSES: Secretary, SEC, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-
1090. Applicants, c/o C. Christopher Sprague, Esq., The Prudential 
Insurance Company of America, 751 Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07102-2992.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michelle Roberts, Staff Attorney, or 
Joyce M. Pickholz, Branch Chief, Office of Insurance Products, Division 
of Investment Management, at (202) 551-6795.

[[Page 47636]]

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following is a summary of the 
application. The complete application may be obtained for a fee from 
the SEC's Public Reference Branch, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 
20549-1090 (tel. (202) 551-8090).

Applicants' Representations

    1. The Contract \1\ is a ``bonus annuity'' that offers a credit of 
up to 8% of purchase payments (``Contract Credits''). Applicants 
propose to recapture the Contract Credits under the following 
circumstances: (a) If the Contract is returned during the free look 
period, (b) if the Contract Credit was applied within 12 months prior 
to death (except that PALAC will not recapture the Contract Credit to 
the extent that the death benefit is equal to the account value, but 
after the recovery of all or a portion of the Contract Credit, the 
death benefit would be equal to less than purchase payments minus 
proportional withdrawals), and (c) if the Contract Credit was applied 
within 12 months prior to the exercise of the medically-related 
surrender of the Annuity.
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    \1\ PALAC also offers a ``private label'' version of the 
Contract, called Optimum XTra, which is sold through Linsco/Private 
Ledger Corp. References to the ``Contract'' in this application are 
intended to include that private label version.
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    2. Applicants seek an order pursuant to Section 6(c) of the 1940 
Act exempting them from Sections 2(a)(32), 22(c), and 27(i)(2)(A) of 
the 1940 Act and Rule 22c-1 thereunder to the extent necessary to 
permit PALAC to recapture the Contract Credits under the scenarios 
described above. Applicants request that the order apply to any 
separate account established in the future by PALAC (``Future 
Account'') that supports variable annuity contracts offered by PALAC in 
the future that are substantially similar in all material respects to 
the Contract (``Future Contracts''). Applicants also request that the 
order extend to any FINRA member broker-dealer controlling, controlled 
by, or under common control with PALAC, whether existing or created in 
the future, that serves as a distributor or principal underwriter of 
the Contract offered through the Account or any Future Account 
(``Broker-Dealers''). Applicants also request that the order extend to 
any broker-dealers that are FINRA-registered and not affiliated with 
PALAC or the Broker-Dealers (the ``Unaffiliated Broker-Dealers''). Each 
Unaffiliated Broker-Dealer will have entered into a dealer agreement 
with PAD or an affiliate of PAD prior to offering the Contract.
    3. The Contract is a flexible premium deferred variable annuity 
contracts that is registered on Form N-4 (file no. 333-150220). The 
minimum initial purchase payment is $10,000, and any additional 
purchase payment must be at least $100 (except for contract owners who 
participate in certain periodic purchase payment programs). The maximum 
issue age for the Contract is 75, meaning that (a) the owner must be 75 
or younger, or (b) for a Contract that is entity-owned, the annuitant 
must be 75 or younger.
    4. There are various insurance features under the Contract and 
charges associated with those features. There is a mortality and 
expense risk charge equal to 1.60% annually, and an administration 
charge equal to 0.15% annually. There is a maintenance fee equal to the 
lesser of $35 or 2% of account value, which is assessed annually on the 
Contract's anniversary date or upon surrender. PALAC imposes no fee 
with respect to the first 20 transfers in an annuity year, but after 
the 20th such transfer, currently imposes a fee of $10 per transfer 
($15 maximum). There is a contingent deferred sales charge (``CDSC'') 
under the Contract, the amount of which is based on the number of years 
that have elapsed since the issue date of the annuity. The CDSC begins 
at 9% in year one, and each year thereafter is equal, respectively, to 
9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, with no CDSC in years 11 and later. 
No CDSC is imposed on the portion of a withdrawal that can be taken as 
part of the free withdrawal feature of the Contract. The maximum free 
withdrawal amount available in each annuity year is equal to 10% of all 
purchase payments that are subject to a CDSC. Earnings are not subject 
to any CDSC, and thus are not considered part of the free withdrawal. 
No CDSC is imposed in any situation in which Applicants recapture a 
Contract Credit.
    5. A Contract owner may select one or more of several optional 
living benefits. The Guaranteed Minimum Income Benefit, which offers 
lifetime payments based on a guaranteed protected value, is subject to 
a charge of 0.50% per year of the average protected income value each 
year. The Lifetime Five Income Benefit (which allows the owner to 
withdraw a specified protected value through periodic withdrawals or as 
a series of payments for life) is subject to a charge of 0.60% annually 
of the average daily net assets in the sub-accounts. The Contract also 
offers a variant of the Lifetime Five benefit (called ``Spousal 
Lifetime Five'') that, for a charge of 0.75% annually, guarantees 
income until the second-to-die of two individuals married to each 
other. There is yet another variant called Highest Daily Lifetime Five, 
under which the protected withdrawal value is based on a highest daily 
account value and which bears a charge of 0.60% annually. There are 
other lifetime withdrawal benefits called Highest Daily Lifetime Seven, 
Spousal Highest Daily Lifetime Seven, Highest Daily Lifetime Seven with 
Beneficiary Income Option, Spousal Highest Daily Lifetime Seven with 
Beneficiary Income Option, and Highest Daily Lifetime Seven with 
Lifetime Income Accelerator. The charges for these benefits range from 
0.60% to 0.95% of the Protected Withdrawal Value under the benefit. The 
Contract offers two guaranteed minimum accumulation benefits, called 
the Guaranteed Return Option Plus 2008 and Highest Daily Guaranteed 
Return Option, for which PALAC imposes a charge equal to 0.35% 
annually, applied against the account value in the sub-accounts. 
Finally, the Contract offers a guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefit 
for a charge of 0.35% annually, applied against the account value in 
the sub-accounts.
    6. The Contract offers several optional death benefits, including 
the Enhanced Beneficiary Protection Death Benefit for a charge of 0.25% 
annually, the Highest Anniversary Value Death Benefit for a charge of 
0.25% annually, a Combination 5% roll-up and Highest Anniversary Value 
Death Benefit for a charge of 0.50% annually, and a Highest Daily Value 
Death Benefit for a charge of 0.50% annually.
    7. Applicants may add other optional living and death benefits to 
the Contract in the future. In addition to the optional insurance 
features, the Contract offers several optional administrative features 
at no additional cost (e.g., auto rebalancing and systematic 
withdrawals).
    8. The Contract offers variable investment options and a companion 
market-value adjustment option that is registered on Form S-3 (file no. 
333-136996). At present, the Contract offers portfolios of Advanced 
Series Trust (formerly, American Skandia Trust), INVESCO AIM Variable 
Insurance Funds, Evergreen Variable Annuity Trust, First Defined 
Portfolio Fund, Franklin Templeton Variable Insurance Products Trust, 
Nationwide Variable Insurance Trust, and Wells Fargo Variable Trust. 
Under the Contract, Applicants reserve the right to add new underlying 
funds and series, and to substitute new portfolios for existing 
portfolios (subject to Commission approval).
    9. An owner choosing to annuitize under the Contract will have only 
fixed annuity options available. Those fixed

[[Page 47637]]

annuity options include annuities offering payments for life, payments 
based on joint lives, payments for life with a certain period, and 
fixed payments for a certain period. The latest annuitization date is 
the first day of the month coinciding with, or immediately following 
the later of the annuitant's 95th birthday or the fifth annuity 
anniversary.
    10. Under the Contract, PALAC will apply a Contract Credit to the 
Contract owner's account value with respect to any purchase payment 
made during the first six years that the Contract has been in effect. 
Purchase payments made in the seventh year of the Contract and later 
will not receive any Contract Credit. The amount of the Contract Credit 
is determined by the year in which the purchase payment is made and the 
amount of purchase payments that already have been made under the 
Contract (aka ``cumulative'' purchase payments). Once purchase payments 
total $100,000 or more, the Contract Credit is 8% in year one of the 
Contract, 6% in year two, 4% in year three, 3% in year four, 2% in year 
five, and 1% in year six. So long as cumulative purchase payments 
amount to less than $100,000, the Contract Credit is 6% in year one of 
the Contract, 5% in year two, 4% in year three, 3% in year four, 2% in 
year five and 1% in year six. PALAC will pay Contract Credits from its 
general account assets. PALAC will allocate each Contract Credit to the 
variable investment options in the same proportion that the 
corresponding purchase payment is allocated to such options.
    11. With respect to Contracts issued on or after the date of the 
Commission order under this application, Applicants wish to recapture 
the full amount of any Contract Credit under the scenarios identified 
in the following sentence. Specifically, Applicants will recapture a 
Contract Credit if (a) the Contract is surrendered during the free look 
period, or (b) the Contract Credit was applied within 12 months prior 
to death (except that PALAC will not recapture the Contract Credit to 
the extent that the death benefit is equal to the account value, but 
after the recovery of all or a portion of the Contract Credit, the 
death benefit would be equal to less than purchase payments minus 
proportional withdrawals) or (c) the Contract Credit was applied within 
12 months prior to the surrender of the Contract under the medically-
related surrender provision (e.g., if the owner is diagnosed with a 
``fatal illness'' and chooses to invoke this contract provision on that 
basis). (The medically-related surrender feature is not available in 
New York.)

Applicants' Legal Analysis

    1. Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act authorizes the Commission to exempt 
any person, security or transaction, or any class or classes of 
persons, securities or transactions, from the provisions of the 1940 
Act and the rules promulgated thereunder if and to the extent that such 
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.
    2. Applicants request that the Commission, pursuant to Section 6(c) 
of the 1940 Act, issue an order to the extent necessary to permit the 
recapture of the Contract Credits under the circumstances described 
above. Applicants believe that the requested exemptions are appropriate 
in the public interest and consistent with the protection of investors 
and the purposes fairly intended by the policy and provisions of the 
1940 Act.
    3. Applicants submit that the recapture of the Contract Credits 
will not raise concerns under Sections 2(a)(32), 22(c) and 27(i)(2)(A) 
of the 1940 Act, and Rule 22c-1 thereunder. The Contract Credits will 
be recaptured only if the owner (a) exercises his/her free look right, 
(b) dies within 12 months after receiving the Contract Credit (except 
as described above), or (c) makes a medically-related surrender within 
12 months after receiving the Contract Credit. The amounts recaptured 
equal the Contract Credit provided by PALAC from its own general 
account assets.
    4. Applicants argue that when PALAC recaptures the Contract Credit, 
it is merely retrieving its own assets, and the owner has not been 
deprived of a proportionate share of the Account's assets, because his 
or her interest in the Contract Credit amount has not vested. With 
respect to a Contract Credit recaptured upon the exercise of the free-
look privilege, it would be unfair to allow an owner exercising that 
privilege to retain the Contract Credit under a Contract that has been 
returned for a refund after a period of only a few days. If PALAC could 
not recapture the Contract Credit during the free look period, 
individuals could purchase a Contract with no intention of retaining 
it, and simply return it for a quick profit. Applicants also note that 
the Contract owner is entitled to retain any investment gain 
attributable to the Contract Credit, even if the Contract Credit is 
ultimately recaptured. Furthermore, the recapture of the Contract 
Credit if death or a medically-related surrender occurs within 12 
months after receipt of a Contract Credit is designed to provide PALAC 
with a measure of protection against ``anti-selection.'' The risk here 
is that an owner, with full knowledge of impending death or serious 
illness, will make very large payments and thereby leave PALAC less 
time to recover the cost of the Contract Credit, to PALAC's financial 
detriment.
    5. Applicants submit that the provisions for recapture of the 
Contract Credit does not, and any such Future Contract provisions will 
not, violate Sections 2(a)(32) and 27(i)(2)(A) of the 1940 Act, and 
Rule 22c-1 thereunder.
    6. The recapture of a Contract Credit could be viewed as involving 
the redemption of redeemable securities for a price other than one 
based on the current net asset value of an Account. Applicants state 
that the recapture of the Contract Credit does not involve either of 
the evils that Rule 22c-1 was intended to address, namely: (a) The 
dilution of the value of outstanding redeemable securities of 
registered investment companies through their sale at a price below net 
asset value or redemption or repurchase at a price above it, and (b) 
other unfair results, including speculative trading practices. 
Applicants assert that the proposed recapture of the Contract Credit 
does not pose a threat of dilution. To effect a recapture of a Contract 
Credit, interests in an owner's account will be redeemed at a price 
determined on the basis of the current net asset value. The amount 
recaptured will equal the amount of the Contract Credit that PALAC paid 
out of its general account assets. Although the owner will be entitled 
to retain any investment gain attributable to a Contract Credit, the 
amount of that gain will be determined on the basis of current net 
asset value. Therefore, no dilution will occur upon the recapture of a 
Contract Credit. Applicants also submit that the second harm that Rule 
22c-1 was designed to address, namely speculative trading practices 
calculated to take advantage of backward pricing, will not occur as a 
result of the recapture of a Contract Credit.
    7. Applicants submit that their request for an order that applies 
to the Account or any Future Accounts established by PALAC in 
connection with the issuance of Contracts and Future Contracts, and 
underwritten or distributed by PAD or other broker-dealers, is 
appropriate in the public interest. Such an order would promote 
competitiveness in the variable annuity market by eliminating the need 
to file redundant exemptive applications, thereby reducing 
administrative

[[Page 47638]]

expenses and maximizing the efficient use of Applicants' resources. 
Investors would not receive any benefit or additional protection by 
requiring Applicants to repeatedly seek exemptive relief that would 
present no issue under the 1940 Act that has not already been addressed 
in this application. Having Applicants file additional applications 
would impair Applicants' ability effectively to take advantage of 
business opportunities as they arise.
    8. Applicants undertake that Future Contracts funded by the Account 
or by Future Accounts that seek to rely on the order issued pursuant to 
the application will be substantially similar to the Contract in all 
material respects.

Conclusion

    Applicants submit that their request for an order meets the 
standards set out in Section 6(c) of the 1940 Act and that an order 
should, therefore, be granted.

    For the Commission, by the Division of Investment Management, 
under delegated authority.
Florence E. Harmon,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8-18801 Filed 8-13-08; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 8010-01-P