Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2012/04/04/2012-8017/small-business-investment-companies-conflicts-of-interest-and-investment-of-idle-funds
Timestamp: 2017-09-20 13:51:54
Document Index: 471468056

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', 'art 107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107', '§\u2009107']

Federal Register :: Small Business Investment Companies-Conflicts of Interest and Investment of Idle Funds
Small Business Investment Companies-Conflicts of Interest and Investment of Idle Funds
A Rule by the Small Business Administration on 04/04/2012
This rule is effective May 4, 2012.
77 FR 20292
20292-20294 (3 pages)
3245-AF56
2012-8017
SBA-2010-0013
Small business investment companies: conflicts of interest and investment of idle funds
Compliance With Executive Orders 12866, 12988 and 13132, the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35) and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612)
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2012-8017 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2012-8017
The U.S. Small Business Administration is revising a rule which prohibits a small business investment company (SBIC) from providing financing to an Associate, as defined in the rules, unless it first obtains a conflict of interest exemption from SBA. The revision eliminates the requirement for an exemption in the case of a follow-on investment in a small business concern by an SBIC and an Associate investment fund, where both parties invested previously on the same terms and conditions and where the follow-on investment would also be on the same terms and conditions as well as in the same proportions. In addition, this rule implements two provisions of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958, as amended. First, it brings the public notice requirement for conflict of interest transactions into conformity with statutory requirements. Second, it expands the types of investments an SBIC is permitted to make with its “idle funds” (cash that is not immediately needed for fund operations or investments in small business concerns). Finally, the rule makes two technical corrections: Removing an outdated cross-reference; and eliminating a section that exactly duplicates a provision found elsewhere in part 107.
Carol Fendler, Office of Investment, (202) 205-7559 or sbic@sba.gov.
On October 14, 2010, SBA published a proposed rule (75 FR 63110) to: (1) Remove the requirement for an SBIC to obtain a conflict of interest exemption from SBA for certain follow-on financings; (2) revise the public notice requirements for conflict of interest financings to conform with statutory requirements under the Small Business Investment Act of 1958, as amended (SBI Act); and (3) expand the types of investments an SBIC is permitted to make with its “idle funds”, in conformity with the SBI Act. The rule also included two non-substantive technical corrections.
SBA received no relevant comments on the proposed rule, which is being finalized without change. SBA's section-by-section explanation of the proposed regulatory changes, all of which have been implemented in this final rule, is repeated here as a convenience to the reader.
Section 107.730—Financings which constitute conflicts of interest. The SBI Act authorizes SBA to adopt regulations to govern transactions that may constitute a conflict of interest and which may be detrimental to small business concerns, small business investment companies, their investors, or SBA. Accordingly, SBA promulgated 13 CFR 107.730, which generally prohibits financing transactions that involve a conflict of interest, unless the SBIC obtains a prior written exemption from SBA. The most common type of transaction requiring an exemption is “financing an Associate.” Associates of an SBIC, as defined in § 107.50, encompass a broad range of related parties based on business, economic and family ties, both direct and indirect.
In addition to identifying transactions requiring a conflict of interest exemption, § 107.730 sets forth the circumstances under which an SBIC is permitted to co-invest with its Associates. The primary purpose of these provisions is to ensure that the terms of such co-investments are “fair and equitable” to the SBIC, i.e. that the SBIC is not being disadvantaged relative to an Associate. The co-investment rules include a number of “safe harbor” provisions under which the transaction is presumed to be fair and equitable to the SBIC; one of these safe harbors covers financings where the SBIC and its Associate invest at the same time and on the same terms and conditions. SBIC managers frequently seek to rely on this provision because they are involved in the management of more than one fund and would like to have the funds co-invest in a small business. SBA generally considers such co-investments to be beneficial because risk is spread across more than one entity. The small business may also benefit from having access to multiple investors.
It became apparent after adoption of the current § 107.730 that certain types of transactions could be characterized as both “co-investment with an Associate” and “financing an Associate”. As with all other transactions that involve the financing of an Associate, SBA has required the SBIC to obtain a prior written exemption even if the financing would fall under the safe harbor for co-investments with Associates.
However, SBA believes the exemption requirement is unnecessarily burdensome for one particular type of transaction: The SBIC and an Associate investment fund (most typically a fund under common management) make an initial investment in a small business under the same terms and conditions, which include the acquisition by each fund of at least a 10% equity interest in the small business. This initial round of financing is a “co-investment with an Associate” and does not require a conflict of interest exemption. However, when the same two parties want to make a follow-on investment in the same small business, again under the same terms and conditions, the second and subsequent round(s) of financing are considered to be “financing an Associate” and do require a prior written exemption. This is because the Associate fund's 10% or greater equity interest causes the small business itself to be defined as an Associate of the SBIC under paragraph (8)(ii) of the definition in § 107.50. While SBA would approve a conflict of interest exemption for a follow-on financing transaction on the same terms and conditions by an SBIC and its Associate fund, the Agency is concerned that the exemption requirement may cause unnecessary delays in making financing available to the small business, and imposes a significant administrative burden on both the SBIC and SBA.
To address this concern, the final rule adds an exception to 13 CFR 107.730(a)(1). This paragraph previously prohibited any financing of an Associate without a prior written conflict of interest exemption. Under the new exception, a prior written exemption is not required for an Associate financing that satisfies all of the following conditions:
1. The small business that will receive the financing is an Associate of the SBIC, pursuant to paragraph (8)(ii) of the Associate definition, only because an Associate investment fund already holds a 10% or greater equity interest in the small business.
2. The SBIC and the Associate fund previously invested in the small business at the same time and on the same terms and conditions.
3. The SBIC and the Associate fund will provide follow-on financing to the small business at the same time and on the same terms and conditions.
4. The SBIC and the Associate fund will provide follow-on financing to the small business in the same proportionate dollar amounts as their respective investments in the previous round of financing (e.g., if the SBIC invested $2 million and the Associate invested $1 million in the previous round, their follow-on investments would be in the same 2:1 ratio).
The revision will allow transactions meeting these specific conditions to be governed only by the co-investment provisions of § 107.730(d) rather than by the “Associate financing” provisions of the current § 107.730(a), thereby returning to SBA's original intent when it promulgated the co-investment rules. SBA expects that this change will help to eliminate delays in making follow-on financing available to small businesses while providing appropriate protection for small business concerns, investors in SBICs and the Federal government.
SBA has also revised § 107.730(g), which requires public notice of all requests by SBICs for conflict of interest exemptions. The previous language required public notice by both SBA (via publication in the Federal Register) and the requesting SBIC (via publication in a newspaper in the locality most directly affected by the transaction). These disclosure requirements exceeded those required by section 312 of the SBI Act, from which the local publication requirement was removed by section 3 of Public Law 107-100 (December 21, 2001). The final rule brings the regulation into conformity with the statute by eliminating the requirement for public notice in the affected locality; the requirement for public notice in the Federal Register is not affected.
Section 107.530—Restrictions on investments of idle funds by leveraged Licensees. An SBIC holding idle funds may invest those funds only as permitted by § 107.530(b). The permitted investments are all relatively short term and bear minimal or no risk of loss, such as direct obligations of the United States that mature within 15 months of the date of investment. The final rule revises this section to reflect an amendment to section 308(b) of the SBI Act (15 U.S.C. 687(b)) made by Public Law 108-447, Division K, section 202 (December 8, 2004) that allows an SBIC to invest “in mutual funds, securities, or other instruments that consist of, or represent pooled assets of” the various direct investment vehicles permitted by section 308(b). 15 U.S.C. 687(b)(3). For example, this provision allows an SBIC to invest idle funds in a money market account, as long as the money market fund invests exclusively in permitted instruments.
Section 107.855—Interest rate ceiling and limitations on fees charged to Small Businesses (“Cost of Money”). The final rule corrects an error by removing § 107.855(g)(10). This paragraph provided an exclusion from the Cost of Money calculation in the form of a cross-reference to the non-existent § 107.855(i).
Section 107.505—Facsimile requirement. The final rule eliminates duplication by removing § 107.505, which required an SBIC to have the capability to receive fax messages. This section repeated language already found in § 107.504(b).
The Office of Management and Budget has determined that this rule is not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866. This rule also is not a major rule under the Congressional Review Act (CRA).
This action meets applicable standards set forth in Sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden. The action does not have retroactive or presumptive effect.
For the purposes of Executive Order 13132, SBA has determined that this final rule will not have substantial direct effects on the States, or the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government. Therefore, SBA has determined that this final rule has no federalism implications warranting the preparation of a federalism assessment.
For purposes of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. chapter 35, SBA has determined that this rule will not impose any new reporting or recordkeeping requirements. The requirement for SBICs to submit requests for conflict of interest exemptions is not an information collection as that term is defined by the PRA because the requests do not involve any standardized or identical reporting, recordkeeping or disclosure requirements. Rather, each request for exemption is unique to the circumstances of the particular SBIC. In any event, to the extent that SBICs have been required to submit conflict of interest exemptions under the circumstances described in this rule, that requirement no longer exists.
When an agency promulgates a final rule following publication of the proposed rule, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601-612) requires the agency to prepare a final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) which describes the potential economic impact of the rule on small entities and alternatives that may minimize that impact. Section 605 of the RFA allows an agency to certify a rule, in lieu of preparing a FRFA, if the rulemaking is not expected to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This final rule affects all SBICs, of which there are currently 294, most of which are small entities. Therefore, SBA has determined that this rule will have an impact on a substantial number of small entities. However, SBA has determined that the impact on entities affected by the rule will not be significant. The new conflict of interest exception eliminates the requirement for SBICs to obtain a conflict of interest exemption for a particular type of transaction. This change is expected to reduce the regulatory burden on SBICs and allow them to close such financing transactions with less delay.
SBA asserts that the economic impact of the rule, if any, will be minimal and entirely beneficial to small SBICs. Accordingly, the Administrator of the SBA hereby certifies that this rule will not have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Small Business Administration amends part 107 of title 13 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 681 et seq., 683, 687(c), 687b, 687d, 687g, 687m, Pub. L. 106-554, 114 Stat. 2763; and Pub. L. 111-5, 123 Stat. 115.
§ 107.505
2. Remove § 107.505.
3. Amend § 107.530 by redesignating paragraphs (b)(3) through (b)(6) as (b)(4) through (b)(7), and adding a new paragraph (b)(3) to read as follows:
§ 107.530
Restrictions on investments of idle funds by leveraged Licensees.
(b) Permitted investments of idle funds. * * *
(3) Mutual funds, securities, or other instruments that exclusively consist of, or represent pooled assets of, investments described in paragraphs (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section; or
4. Amend § 107.730 by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (g) to read as follows:
§ 107.730
(1) Provide Financing to any of your Associates, except for a Financing to an Associate that meets all of the following conditions:
(i) The Small Business that receives the Financing is your Associate, pursuant to paragraph (8)(ii) of the Associate definition in § 107.50, only because an investment fund that is your Associate holds a 10% or greater equity interest in the Small Business.
(ii) You and the Associate investment fund previously invested in the Small Business at the same time and on the same terms and conditions.
(iii) You and the Associate investment fund are providing follow-on financing to the Small Business at the same time, on the same terms and conditions, and in the same proportionate dollar amounts as your respective investments in the previous round(s) of financing (for example, if you invested $2 million and your Associate invested $1 million in the previous round, your respective follow-on investments would be in the same 2:1 ratio).
(g) Public notice. Before granting an exemption under this § 107.730, SBA will publish notice of the transaction in the Federal Register.
§ 107.855
5. Amend § 107.855 by removing paragraph (g)(10) and redesignating current paragraphs (g)(11) through (g)(13) as (g)(10) through (g)(12).
[FR Doc. 2012-8017 Filed 4-3-12; 8:45 am]