REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER
THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 |
x | |
Pre-Effective Amendment No.
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o | |
Post-Effective Amendment No. 12
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x | |
and
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REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER
THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 |
x | |
Amendment No. 52
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x |
o | when declared effective pursuant to section 8(c) of the Securities Act of 1933 |
o | immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 486 |
x | On (June 28, 2013) pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 486 |
o | 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 486 |
o | on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 486 |
o | This post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed registration statement. |
Invesco Senior Loan Fund (formerly known as Invesco Van Kampen Senior Loan Fund) June 28, 2013 CLASS A SHARES (VSLAX) CLASS B SHARES (VSLBX) CLASS C SHARES (VSLCX) CLASS IB SHARES (XPRTX) CLASS IC SHARES (XSLCX) |
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Invesco Senior Loan Funds investment objective is to provide a high level of current income, consistent with preservation of capital. The Funds investment adviser seeks to achieve the Funds investment objective by investing primarily in adjustable rate senior loans. |
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(Continued on next page)
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Shares of the Fund have not been approved or disapproved by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the SEC has not passed upon the accuracy or adequacy of this Prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense. |
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
|
3 | |
Prospectus Summary
|
4 | |
Financial Highlights
|
10 | |
The Fund
|
15 | |
Investment Objective and Principal Investment Strategies
|
15 | |
Risks
|
22 | |
Investment Practices and Special Risks
|
26 | |
Management of the Fund
|
29 | |
Purchase of Shares
|
31 | |
Repurchase of Shares
|
42 | |
Distributions from the Fund
|
45 | |
Shareholder Services
|
45 | |
Description of Shares
|
48 | |
Federal Income Taxation
|
51 | |
Communications With Shareholders/Performance Information
|
52 | |
Custodian, Dividend Disbursing Agent and Transfer Agent
|
53 | |
Legal Opinions
|
53 | |
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
|
53 | |
Additional Information
|
53 | |
Table of Contents for the Statement of Additional Information
|
54 |
1 | Reduced for purchases of $100,000 and over. See Purchase of Shares Class A Shares. |
2 | Class IB Shares and Class IC Shares are not continuously offered. Class IB Shares and Class IC Shares have no early withdrawal charges (the early withdrawal schedules applicable to the former Class B Shares and former Class C Shares outstanding on February 18, 2005 have been terminated). |
3 | Investments of $1 million or more are not subject to any sales charge at the time of purchase, but an early withdrawal charge of 1.00% may be imposed on certain repurchases by the Fund made within eighteen months of purchase. See Purchase of Shares Class A Shares. |
4 | Effective November 30, 2010, Class B Shares are not continuously offered by the Fund. Class B Shares purchased prior to November 30, 2010 are subject to an early withdrawal charge. The maximum early withdrawal charge is 3.00% in the first year after purchase and declines thereafter as follows: |
5 | The maximum early withdrawal charge is 1.00% in the first year after purchase and 0.00% thereafter. |
6 | See Management of the Fund for additional information. |
7 | Class A Shares are subject to a combined annual distribution and service fee of up to 0.25% of average daily net assets attributable to such class of Shares. Class B Shares and Class C Shares are each subject to a combined annual distribution and service fee up to 1.00% of the average daily net assets attributable to each class of Shares. Class IC Shares are subject to a service fee of up to 0.25% of average daily net assets attributable to such class of Shares. The Funds Board of Trustees has only authorized the Fund to make service fee payments not to exceed 0.15% of the Funds average daily net assets attributable to Class IC Shares for any fiscal year. See Purchase of Shares. |
8 | Class B Distribution and/or Service (12 b-1) fees are restated to reflect current fees. |
9 | While Class C Shares do not have any front-end sales charges, their higher ongoing annual expenses (due to higher distribution and service fees) mean that over time you could end up paying more for these Shares than if you were to pay front-end sales charges for Class A Shares. |
10 | Interest payments on borrowed funds and Other are restated to reflect current fees. |
One
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Three
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Five
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Ten
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Year | Years | Years | Years | ||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Class A Shares | $ | 52 | $ | 91 | $ | 134 | $ | 252 | |||||||||||
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Class B Shares | $ | 50 | $ | 76 | $ | 110 | $ | 226 | | ||||||||||
|
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Class C Shares | $ | 37 | $ | 84 | $ | 142 | $ | 302 | |||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Class IB Shares | $ | 17 | $ | 53 | $ | 92 | $ | 200 | |||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Class IC Shares | $ | 19 | $ | 58 | $ | 100 | $ | 216 | |||||||||||
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3
One
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Three
|
Five
|
Ten
|
||||||||||||||||
Year | Years | Years | Years | ||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Class A Shares | $ | 52 | $ | 91 | $ | 134 | $ | 252 | |||||||||||
|
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Class B Shares | $ | 20 | $ | 61 | $ | 105 | $ | 226 | | ||||||||||
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Class C Shares | $ | 27 | $ | 84 | $ | 142 | $ | 302 | |||||||||||
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Class IB Shares | $ | 17 | $ | 53 | $ | 92 | $ | 200 | |||||||||||
|
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Class IC Shares | $ | 19 | $ | 58 | $ | 100 | $ | 216 | |||||||||||
|
| Based on conversion to Class A Shares eight years after the end of the calendar month in which the Shares were purchased. |
4
5
6
7
8
| seek high current income |
| wish to add to their investment portfolio a fund that invests primarily in adjustable rate senior loans |
9
Seven-Months
|
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Year Ended
|
Year Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
February 28, | February 29, | February 28, | Years Ended July 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Class A | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period
|
$ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.48 | $ | 8.65 | |||||||||||||
Net investment income (a)
|
0.40 | 0.33 | 0.18 | 0.28 | 0.40 | 0.61 | |||||||||||||||||||
Net gains (losses) on securities (both realized and unrealized)
|
0.34 | (0.15 | ) | 0.44 | 0.76 | (1.86 | ) | (1.17 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations
|
0.74 | 0.18 | 0.62 | 1.04 | (1.46 | ) | (0.56 | ) | |||||||||||||||||
Less:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dividends from net investment income
|
(0.43 | ) | (0.33 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.31 | ) | (0.42 | ) | (0.61 | ) | |||||||||||||
Return of capital
|
| | | (0.04 | ) | | | ||||||||||||||||||
Total distributions
|
(0.43 | ) | (0.33 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.35 | ) | (0.42 | ) | (0.61 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of period
|
$ | 6.89 | $ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.48 | |||||||||||||
Total return at net asset value
|
11.56% | (b)(c) | 2.80% | (b)(c) | 9.97% | (b)(c) | 18.78% | (b) | (18.60 | )%(d) | (6.70 | )%(d) | |||||||||||||
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted)
|
$ | 123,447 | $ | 122,252 | $ | 173,137 | $ | 188,589 | $ | 166,448 | $ | 281,436 | |||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover rate (e)
|
101% | 87% | 44% | 55% | 33% | 35% | |||||||||||||||||||
Ratios/supplemental data based on average net assets:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratio of expenses:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
1.71% | (c)(f) | 1.74% | (c) | 1.71% | (c)(g) | 1.89% | 2.34% | 2.51% | ||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements excluding
interest, facilities and maintenance fees
|
1.40% | (c)(f) | 1.47% | (c) | 1.37% | (c)(g) | 1.57% | 1.86% | 1.44% | ||||||||||||||||
Without fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
1.94% | (c)(f) | 1.99% | (c) | 1.96% | (c)(g) | 2.14% | 2.59% | 2.76% | ||||||||||||||||
Ratio of net investment income with fee waivers and/or expense
reimbursements
|
5.98% | (c)(f) | 5.10% | (c) | 4.86% | (c)(g) | 4.53% | 7.57% | 7.55% | ||||||||||||||||
Senior indebtedness:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total borrowings (000s omitted)
|
$ | 211,000 | $ | 228,000 | $ | 178,000 | $ | 198,000 | $ | 132,000 | $ | 458,000 | |||||||||||||
Asset coverage per $1,000 unit of senior indebtedness (h)
|
$ | 6,827 | $ | 6,732 | $ | 6,673 | $ | 6,239 | $ | 8,538 | $ | 4,538 | |||||||||||||
(a) | Calculated using average shares outstanding. |
(b) | Includes adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for financial reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions. Does not include sales charges and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. |
(c) | The total return, ratio of expenses to average net assets and ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets reflect actual 12b-1 fees of 0.04%, 0.00% and 0.00% for the years ended February 28, 2013 and February 29, 2012 and the seven months ended February 28, 2011, respectively. |
(d) | Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not include payment of the maximum sales charge of 3.25% or early withdrawal charge. On purchases of $1 million or more, an early withdrawal charge of 1% may be imposed on certain repurchases by the Fund made within eighteen months of purchase. If the sales charges were included, total returns would be lower. These returns include combined distribution and service fees of up to 0.25% and do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund distributions or the repurchases by the Fund of Fund shares. |
(e) | Portfolio turnover is calculated at the fund level and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. Calculation includes the proceeds from principal repayments and sales of variable rate senior loan interests. For the period ended February 29, 2012, the portfolio turnover calculation excludes the value of securities purchased of $614,414,753 and sold of $43,505,288 in the effort to realign the Funds portfolio holdings after the reorganization of Invesco Prime Income Trust into the Fund. |
(f) | Ratios are annualized and based on average daily net assets (000s omitted) of $117,813. |
(g) | Annualized. |
(h) | Calculated by subtracting the Funds total liabilities (not including the Borrowings) from the Funds total assets and dividing by the total number of senior indebtedness units, where one unit equals $1,000 of senior indebtedness. |
10
Seven-Months
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Year Ended
|
Year Ended
|
Ended
|
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February 28, | February 29, | February 28, | Years Ended July 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Class B | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period
|
$ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.48 | $ | 8.65 | |||||||||||||
Net investment income (a)
|
0.39 | 0.28 | 0.15 | 0.23 | 0.36 | 0.55 | |||||||||||||||||||
Net gains (losses) on securities (both realized and unrealized)
|
0.34 | (0.15 | ) | 0.44 | 0.77 | (1.86 | ) | (1.17 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations
|
0.73 | 0.13 | 0.59 | 1.00 | (1.50 | ) | (0.62 | ) | |||||||||||||||||
Less:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dividends from net investment income
|
(0.40 | ) | (0.28 | ) | (0.15 | ) | (0.28 | ) | (0.38 | ) | (0.55 | ) | |||||||||||||
Return of capital
|
| | | (0.03 | ) | | | ||||||||||||||||||
Total distributions
|
(0.40 | ) | (0.28 | ) | (0.15 | ) | (0.31 | ) | (0.38 | ) | (0.55 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of period
|
$ | 6.91 | $ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.48 | |||||||||||||
Total return at net asset value
|
11.38% | (b)(c) | 2.03% | (b)(c) | 9.50% | (b)(c) | 17.90% | (b) | (19.24 | )%(d) | (7.43 | )%(d) | |||||||||||||
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted)
|
$ | 12,888 | $ | 14,948 | $ | 19,455 | $ | 17,902 | $ | 16,974 | $ | 29,589 | |||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover rate (e)
|
101% | 87% | 44% | 55% | 33% | 35% | |||||||||||||||||||
Ratios/supplemental data based on average net assets:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratio of expenses:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
1.84% | (c)(f) | 2.49% | (c) | 2.46% | (c)(g) | 2.64% | 3.11% | 3.24% | ||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements excluding
interest, facilities and maintenance fees
|
1.53% | (c)(f) | 2.22% | (c) | 2.12% | (c)(g) | 2.32% | 2.63% | 2.20% | ||||||||||||||||
Without fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
2.07% | (c)(f) | 2.74% | (c) | 2.71% | (c)(g) | 2.89% | 3.36% | 3.49% | ||||||||||||||||
Ratio of net investment income with fee waivers and/or expense
reimbursements
|
5.85% | (c)(f) | 4.35% | (c) | 4.10% | (c)(g) | 3.79% | 6.85% | 6.76% | ||||||||||||||||
Senior indebtedness:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total borrowing outstanding (000s omitted)
|
$ | 211,000 | $ | 228,000 | $ | 178,000 | $ | 198,000 | $ | 132,000 | $ | 458,000 | |||||||||||||
Asset coverage per $1,000 unit of senior indebtedness (h)
|
$ | 6,827 | $ | 6,732 | $ | 6,673 | $ | 6,239 | $ | 8,538 | $ | 4,538 | |||||||||||||
(a) | Calculated using average shares outstanding. |
(b) | Includes adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for financial reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions. Does not include sales charges and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. |
(c) | The total return, ratio of expenses to average net assets and ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets reflect actual 12b-1 fees of 0.17%, 0.75% and 0.75% for the years ended February 28, 2013 and February 29, 2012 and the seven months ended February 28, 2011, respectively. |
(d) | Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not include payment of the maximum early withdrawal charge of 3%, charged on certain repurchases by the Fund made within one year of purchase and declining to 0% after the fifth year. If the sales charge was included, total returns would be lower. These returns include combined distribution and service fees of up to 1% and do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund distributions or the repurchases by the Fund of Fund shares. |
(e) | Portfolio turnover is calculated at the fund level and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. Calculation includes the proceeds from principal repayments and sales of variable rate senior loan interests. For the period ended February 29, 2012, the portfolio turnover calculation excludes the value of securities purchased of $614,414,753 and sold of $43,505,288 in the effort to realign the Funds portfolio holdings after the reorganization of Invesco Prime Income Trust into the Fund. |
(f) | Ratios are annualized and based on average daily net assets (000s omitted) of $13,880. |
(g) | Annualized. |
(h) | Calculated by subtracting the Funds total liabilities (not including the Borrowings) from the Funds total assets and dividing by the total number of senior indebtedness units, where one unit equals $1,000 of senior indebtedness. |
11
Seven-Months
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Year Ended
|
Year Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
February 28, | February 29, | February 28, | Years Ended July 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Class C | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period
|
$ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.48 | $ | 8.65 | |||||||||||||
Net investment income (a)
|
0.35 | 0.28 | 0.15 | 0.23 | 0.36 | 0.55 | |||||||||||||||||||
Net gains (losses) on securities (both realized and unrealized)
|
0.33 | (0.15 | ) | 0.44 | 0.77 | (1.86 | ) | (1.17 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations
|
0.68 | 0.13 | 0.59 | 1.00 | (1.50 | ) | (0.62 | ) | |||||||||||||||||
Less:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dividends from net investment income
|
(0.37 | ) | (0.28 | ) | (0.15 | ) | (0.28 | ) | (0.38 | ) | (0.55 | ) | |||||||||||||
Return of capital
|
| | | (0.03 | ) | | | ||||||||||||||||||
Total distributions
|
(0.37 | ) | (0.28 | ) | (0.15 | ) | (0.31 | ) | (0.38 | ) | (0.55 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of period
|
$ | 6.89 | $ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.48 | |||||||||||||
Total return at net asset value
|
10.67% | (b)(c) | 2.03% | (b)(c) | 9.50% | (b)(c) | 17.90% | (b) | (19.24 | )%(d) | (7.43 | )%(d) | |||||||||||||
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted)
|
$ | 142,143 | $ | 147,551 | $ | 195,963 | $ | 207,828 | $ | 196,591 | $ | 338,551 | |||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover rate (e)
|
101% | 87% | 44% | 55% | 33% | 35% | |||||||||||||||||||
Ratios/supplemental data based on average net assets:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratio of expenses:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
2.46% | (c)(f) | 2.49% | (c) | 2.46% | (c)(g) | 2.64% | 3.10% | 3.26% | ||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements excluding
interest, facilities and maintenance fees
|
2.15% | (c)(f) | 2.22% | (c) | 2.12% | (c)(g) | 2.32% | 2.62% | 2.20% | ||||||||||||||||
Without fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
2.69% | (c)(f) | 2.74% | (c) | 2.71% | (c)(g) | 2.89% | 3.35% | 3.51% | ||||||||||||||||
Ratio of net investment income with fee waivers and/or expense
reimbursements
|
5.23% | (c)(f) | 4.35% | (c) | 4.11% | (c)(g) | 3.79% | 6.83% | 6.79% | ||||||||||||||||
Senior indebtedness:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total borrowing outstanding (000s omitted)
|
$ | 211,000 | $ | 228,000 | $ | 178,000 | $ | 198,000 | $ | 132,000 | $ | 458,000 | |||||||||||||
Asset coverage per $1,000 unit of senior indebtedness (h)
|
$ | 6,827 | $ | 6,732 | $ | 6,673 | $ | 6,239 | $ | 8,538 | $ | 4,538 | |||||||||||||
(a) | Calculated using average shares outstanding. |
(b) | Includes adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for financial reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions. Does not include sales charges and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. |
(c) | The total return, ratio of expenses to average net assets and ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets reflect actual 12b-1 fees of 0.79%, 0.75% and 0.75% for the years ended February 28, 2013 and February 29, 2012 and the seven months ended February 28, 2011, respectively. |
(d) | Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not include payment of the maximum early withdrawal charge of 1%, charged on certain repurchases by the Fund made within one year of purchase. If the sales charge was included, total returns would be lower. These returns include combined distribution and service fees of up to 1% and do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund distributions or the repurchases by the Fund of Fund shares. |
(e) | Portfolio turnover is calculated at the fund level and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. Calculation includes the proceeds from principal repayments and sales of variable rate senior loan interests. For the period ended February 29, 2012, the portfolio turnover calculation excludes the value of securities purchased of $614,414,753 and sold of $43,505,288 in the effort to realign the Funds portfolio holdings after the reorganization of Invesco Prime Income Trust into the Fund. |
(f) | Ratios are annualized and based on average daily net assets (000s omitted) of $144,272. |
(g) | Annualized. |
(h) | Calculated by subtracting the Funds total liabilities (not including the Borrowings) from the Funds total assets and dividing by the total number of senior indebtedness units, where one unit equals $1,000 of senior indebtedness. |
12
Seven-Months
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Year Ended
|
Year Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
February 28, | February 29, | February 28, | Years Ended July 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Class IB | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period
|
$ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.49 | $ | 8.66 | |||||||||||||
Net investment income (a)
|
0.40 | 0.33 | 0.18 | 0.28 | 0.40 | 0.61 | |||||||||||||||||||
Net gains (losses) on securities (both realized and unrealized)
|
0.34 | (0.15 | ) | 0.44 | 0.76 | (1.87 | ) | (1.17 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations
|
0.74 | 0.18 | 0.62 | 1.04 | (1.47 | ) | (0.56 | ) | |||||||||||||||||
Less:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dividends from net investment income
|
(0.43 | ) | (0.33 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.31 | ) | (0.42 | ) | (0.61 | ) | |||||||||||||
Return of capital
|
| | | (0.04 | ) | | | ||||||||||||||||||
Total distributions
|
(0.43 | ) | (0.33 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.35 | ) | (0.42 | ) | (0.61 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of period
|
$ | 6.89 | $ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.49 | |||||||||||||
Total return at net asset value
|
11.59% | (b) | 2.80% | (b) | 9.97% | (b) | 18.77% | (b) | (18.56 | )%(c) | (6.69 | )%(c) | |||||||||||||
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted)
|
$ | 877,598 | $ | 943,491 | $ | 526,800 | $ | 527,108 | $ | 520,252 | $ | 815,141 | |||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover rate (d)
|
101% | 87% | 44% | 55% | 33% | 35% | |||||||||||||||||||
Ratios/supplemental data based on average net assets:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratio of expenses:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
1.67% | (e) | 1.74% | 1.71% | (f) | 1.89% | 2.34% | 2.49% | |||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements excluding
interest, facilities and maintenance fees
|
1.36% | (e) | 1.47% | 1.37% | (f) | 1.57% | 1.88% | 1.45% | |||||||||||||||||
Without fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
1.69% | (e) | | | | | | ||||||||||||||||||
Ratio of net investment income with fee waivers and/or expense
reimbursements
|
6.02% | (e) | 5.10% | 4.85% | (f) | 4.54% | 7.60% | 7.51% | |||||||||||||||||
Senior indebtedness:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total borrowing outstanding (000s omitted)
|
$ | 211,000 | $ | 228,000 | $ | 178,000 | $ | 198,000 | $ | 132,000 | $ | 458,000 | |||||||||||||
Asset coverage per $1,000 unit of senior indebtedness (g)
|
$ | 6,827 | $ | 6,732 | $ | 6,673 | $ | 6,239 | $ | 8,538 | $ | 4,538 | |||||||||||||
(a) | Calculated using average shares outstanding. |
(b) | Includes adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for financial reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions. Does not include sales charges and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. |
(c) | Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not include payment of the maximum early withdrawal charge of 3%, charged on certain repurchases by the Fund made within one year of purchase and declining to 0% after the fifth year. If the sales charge was included, total returns would be lower. These returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund distributions or the repurchases by the Fund of Fund shares. |
(d) | Portfolio turnover is calculated at the fund level and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. Calculation includes the proceeds from principal repayments and sales of variable rate senior loan interests. For the period ended February 29, 2012, the portfolio turnover calculation excludes the value of securities purchased of $614,414,753 and sold of $43,505,288 in the effort to realign the Funds portfolio holdings after the reorganization of Invesco Prime Income Trust into the Fund. |
(e) | Ratios are annualized and based on average daily net assets (000s omitted) of $908,637. |
(f) | Annualized. |
(g) | Calculated by subtracting the Funds total liabilities (not including the Borrowings) from the Funds total assets and dividing by the total number of senior indebtedness units, where one unit equals $1,000 of senior indebtedness. |
13
Seven-Months
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Year Ended
|
Year Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
February 28, | February 29, | February 28, | Years Ended July 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Class IC | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of period
|
$ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.49 | $ | 8.66 | |||||||||||||
Net investment income (a)
|
0.40 | 0.33 | 0.18 | 0.28 | 0.40 | 0.61 | |||||||||||||||||||
Net gains (losses) on securities (both realized and unrealized)
|
0.34 | (0.15 | ) | 0.44 | 0.76 | (1.87 | ) | (1.17 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations
|
0.74 | 0.18 | 0.62 | 1.04 | (1.47 | ) | (0.56 | ) | |||||||||||||||||
Less:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dividends from net investment income
|
(0.43 | ) | (0.33 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.31 | ) | (0.42 | ) | (0.61 | ) | |||||||||||||
Return of capital
|
| | | (0.04 | ) | | | ||||||||||||||||||
Total distributions
|
(0.43 | ) | (0.33 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.35 | ) | (0.42 | ) | (0.61 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of period
|
$ | 6.89 | $ | 6.58 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.29 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 7.49 | |||||||||||||
Total return at net asset value
|
11.57% | (b)(c) | 2.80% | (b)(c) | 9.97% | (b)(c) | 18.77% | (b) | (18.71 | )%(d) | (6.69 | )%(d) | |||||||||||||
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted)
|
$ | 73,356 | $ | 78,600 | $ | 94,440 | $ | 95,928 | $ | 94,721 | $ | 155,865 | |||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover rate (e)
|
101% | 87% | 44% | 55% | 33% | 35% | |||||||||||||||||||
Ratios/supplemental data based on average net assets:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratio of expenses:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
1.69% | (c)(f) | 1.74% | (c) | 1.71% | (c)(g) | 1.89% | 2.35% | 2.49% | ||||||||||||||||
With fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements excluding
interest, facilities and maintenance fees
|
1.38% | (c)(f) | 1.47% | (c) | 1.37% | (c)(g) | 1.57% | 1.88% | 1.45% | ||||||||||||||||
Without fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
1.84% | (c)(f) | 1.89% | (c) | 1.86% | (c)(g) | 2.04% | 2.50% | 2.64% | ||||||||||||||||
Ratio of net investment income with fee waivers and/or expense
reimbursements
|
6.00% | (c)(f) | 5.10% | (c) | 4.85% | (c)(g) | 4.54% | 7.60% | 7.52% | ||||||||||||||||
Senior indebtedness:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total borrowing outstanding (000s omitted)
|
$ | 211,000 | $ | 228,000 | $ | 178,000 | $ | 198,000 | $ | 132,000 | $ | 458,000 | |||||||||||||
Asset coverage per $1,000 unit of senior indebtedness (h)
|
$ | 6,827 | $ | 6,732 | $ | 6,673 | $ | 6,239 | $ | 8,538 | $ | 4,538 | |||||||||||||
(a) | Calculated using average shares outstanding. |
(b) | Includes adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for financial reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions. Does not include sales charges and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. |
(c) | The total return, ratio of expenses to average net assets and ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets reflect actual Service Plan fees of 0.02%, 0.00% and 0.00% for the years ended February 28, 2013 and February 29, 2012 and the seven months ended February 28, 2011, respectively. |
(d) | Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not include payment of the maximum early withdrawal charge of 1%, charged on certain repurchases by the Fund made within one year of purchase. If the sales charge was included, total returns would be lower. These returns include combined service fees of up to 0.15% and do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund distributions or the repurchases by the Fund of Fund shares. |
(e) | Portfolio turnover is calculated at the fund level and is not annualized for periods less than one year, if applicable. Calculation includes the proceeds from principal repayments and sales of variable rate senior loan interests. For the period ended February 29, 2012, the portfolio turnover calculation excludes the value of securities purchased of $614,414,753 and sold of $43,505,288 in the effort to realign the Funds portfolio holdings after the reorganization of Invesco Prime Income Trust into the Fund. |
(f) | Ratios are annualized and based on average daily net assets (000s omitted) of $76,296. |
(g) | Annualized. |
(h) | Calculated by subtracting the Funds total liabilities (not including the Borrowings) from the Funds total assets and dividing by the total number of senior indebtedness units, where one unit equals $1,000 of senior indebtedness. |
14
15
16
|
||||||||||
Rated Obligations | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||
BBB/Baa:
|
0 | .62% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
BB/Ba:
|
33 | .70% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
B/B:
|
49 | .60% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
CCC/Caa:
|
7 | .14% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
CC/Ca:
|
0 | .30% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Unrated Obligations | 8 | .63% | ||||||||
|
17
18
19
20
21
|
|||||||||||||
Assumed portfolio return, Net of expenses | (10)% | (5)% | 0% | 5% | 10% | ||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Corresponding return to common shareholders | (11.70)% | (5.98)% | (0.27)% | 5.45% | 11.17% | ||||||||
|
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
Average Daily Net Assets | % Per Annum | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
First $500 million | 0 | .900% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Next $1 billion | 0 | .850% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Next $1 billion | 0 | .825% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Next $500 million | 0 | .800% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Over $3 billion | 0 | .775% | ||||||||
|
| Mr. Philip Yarrow, Portfolio Manager, has been managing the Fund since March 2007 and has been associated with Invesco Senior Secured and/or its affiliates since 2010. From 2005-2010 and prior to joining Invesco Senior Secured, Mr. Yarrow was an Executive Director with Morgan Stanley. |
| Mr. Thomas Ewald, Portfolio Manager, has been managing the Fund since 2010 and has been |
30
associated with Invesco Senior Secured and/or its affiliates since 2000. |
| Mr. Scott Baskind, Portfolio Manager, has been managing the Fund since 2013 and has been associated with Invesco and/or its affiliates since 1999. |
31
32
33
As % of
|
As % of
|
||||||||||||
Size of
|
Offering
|
Net Amount
|
|||||||||||
Investment | Price | Invested | |||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Less than $100,000 | 3 | .25% | 3 | .36% | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
$100,000 but less than $250,000 | 2 | .75% | 2 | .83% | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
$250,000 but less than $500,000 | 1 | .75% | 1 | .78% | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
$500,000 but less than $1,000,000 | 1 | .50% | 1 | .52% | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
$1,000,000 or more | | | |||||||||||
|
| The actual sales charge that may be paid by an investor may differ slightly from the sales charge shown above due to rounding that occurs in the calculation of the offering price and in the number of Shares purchased. |
| No sales charge is payable at the time of purchase on investments in Class A Shares of $1 million or more, although such Class A Shares purchased without a sales charge may be subject to an early withdrawal charge of 1.00% on certain repurchases by the Fund made within eighteen months of purchase. The early withdrawal charge is assessed on an amount equal to the lesser of the then current market value of the Shares or the historical cost of the Shares (which is the amount actually paid for the Shares at the time of original purchase) being repurchased by the Fund. Accordingly, no early withdrawal charge is imposed on increases in net asset value above the initial purchase price. Shareholders should retain any records necessary to substantiate the historical cost of their Shares, as the Fund and authorized dealers may not retain this information. |
34
(1) | Any current, former or retired trustee, director, officer or employee (or immediate family member of a current, former or retired trustee, director, officer or employee) of any Invesco Fund or of Invesco Ltd. or any of its subsidiaries. This includes any foundation, trust or employee benefit plan maintained by any of the persons listed above. |
(2) | Directors, officers, employees and, when permitted, registered representatives, of financial institutions that have a selling group agreement with Invesco Distributors and their spouses or equivalent and children under 21 years of age when purchasing for any accounts they beneficially own, or, in the case of any such financial institution, when purchasing for retirement plans for such institutions employees; provided that such purchases are otherwise permitted by such institutions. |
(3) | Banks, broker-dealers and other financial institutions (including registered investment advisers and financial planners) that have entered into an agreement with Invesco Distributors or one of its affiliates, purchasing Shares on behalf of clients participating in a fund supermarket, wrap program, asset allocation program, or other program in which the clients pay an asset-based fee (which may be subject to a minimum flat fee) for: advisory or financial planning services, executing transactions in Participating Fund shares, or for otherwise participating in the program. |
(4) | Trustees and other fiduciaries purchasing Shares for retirement plans which invest in multiple fund families through broker-dealer retirement plan alliance programs that have entered into agreements with Invesco Distributors and which are subject to certain minimum size and operational requirements. Trustees and other fiduciaries may call Invesco Distributors for further details with respect to such alliance programs. |
35
(5) | Retirement plans funded by the rollovers of assets of Participating Funds from an employer-sponsored retirement plan and established exclusively for the benefit of an individual (specifically including, but not limited to, a Traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SIMPLE IRA, Solo 401(k), Money Purchase or Profit Sharing plan) if: |
(i) | the account being funded by such rollover is to be maintained by the same trustee, custodian or administrator that maintained the plan from which the rollover funding such rollover originated, or an affiliate thereof; and | |
(ii) | the dealer of record with respect to the account being funded by such rollover is the same as the dealer of record with respect to the plan from which the rollover funding such rollover originated, or an affiliate thereof. |
(6) | Trusts created under pension, profit sharing or other employee benefit plans (including qualified and non-qualified deferred compensation plans), provided that (a) the total plan assets are at least $1 million or (b) the plan has more than 100 eligible employees. A commission will be paid to authorized dealers who initiate and are responsible for such purchases within a rolling twelve-month period as follows: 1.00% on sales of $1 million to $2 million, plus 0.75% on the next $1 million, plus 0.50% on the next $2 million, plus 0.25% on the excess over $5 million. |
(7) | Clients of authorized dealers purchasing Shares in fixed or flat fee (rather than transaction based fee) brokerage accounts. |
(8) | Certain qualified state tuition plans qualifying pursuant to Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), that are approved by Invesco Distributors. |
(9) | Unit investment trusts sponsored by Invesco Distributors or its affiliates. |
36
Early Withdrawal
Charge
|
||||||||||
as a Percentage
of
|
||||||||||
Dollar Amount
|
||||||||||
Year Since Purchase | Subject to Charge | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
First | 3 | .00% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Second | 2 | .00% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Third | 1 | .50% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Fourth | 1 | .00% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Fifth | 0 | .50% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Sixth and After | 0 | .00% | ||||||||
|
37
38
39
Total
|
Amounts
|
||||||||||
Underwriting
|
Retained
|
||||||||||
Commissions | by the Funds Distributor | ||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
Fiscal year ended February 28, 2013 | $ | 154,764 | $ | 15,176 | |||||||
|
|||||||||||
Fiscal year ended February 29, 2012 | $ | 82,503 | $ | 9,003 | |||||||
|
|||||||||||
Seven-month period ended February 28, 2011* | $ | 51,531 | $ | 4,784 | |||||||
|
|||||||||||
Fiscal year ended July 31, 2010 | $ | 448,833 | $ | 37,946 | |||||||
|
* | Effective February 28, 2011, the Fund changed its fiscal year end from July 31 to the last day of February. |
Reallowed
|
||||||||||
to Dealers
|
||||||||||
Size of
|
as a Percentage
of
|
|||||||||
Investment | Offering Price | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
Less than $100,000 | 3 | .00% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
$100,000 but less than $250,000 | 2 | .50% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
$250,000 but less than $500,000 | 1 | .50% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
$500,000 but less than $1,000,000 | 1 | .25% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
$1,000,000 or more | | |||||||||
|
| A commission or transaction fee will be paid by Invesco Distributors at the time of purchase directly out of Invesco Distributors assets (and not out of the Funds assets) to authorized dealers who initiate and are responsible for purchases of $1 million or more computed as a percentage of the dollar value of such Shares sold as follows: 1.00% on sales of $1 million to $2 million, plus 0.75% on the next $1 million, plus 0.50% on the next $2 million, plus 0.25% on the excess over $5 million. On sales of less than $1 million, authorized dealers are eligible to receive the ongoing service fees with respect to such Shares immediately following the purchase. On sales greater than $1 million, authorized dealers become eligible to receive the ongoing service fees with respect to such Shares commencing in the second year following purchase; the proceeds from the distribution and service fees paid by the Fund during the first twelve months are paid to the Funds distributor and are used by the Funds distributor to defray its distribution and service-related expenses. |
40
Class IB
Shares
|
||||||||||
(former Class B
Shares)
|
||||||||||
Class IB
Shares
|
Annual
Compensation
|
|||||||||
(former Class B
Shares)
|
as a
Percentage
|
|||||||||
Year After
Date
|
of Value of
|
|||||||||
of Original Purchase | Shares Outstanding | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
First | 0 | .00% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Second | 0 | .10% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Third | 0 | .15% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Fourth | 0 | .20% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Fifth | 0 | .25% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Sixth and following | 0 | .35% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Class IC
Shares
|
||||||||||
(former Class C
Shares)
|
||||||||||
Class IC
Shares
|
Annual
Compensation
|
|||||||||
(former Class C
Shares)
|
as a
Percentage
|
|||||||||
Year After
Date
|
of Value of
|
|||||||||
of Original Purchase | Shares Outstanding | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
First | 0 | .00% | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Second and following | 0 | .75% | ||||||||
|
41
| The Fund is offering to repurchase Shares from shareholders at net asset value. |
| The percentage of Shares that the Fund is offering to repurchase and how the Fund will purchase Shares on a pro rata basis if the offer is oversubscribed. |
| The date on which a shareholders repurchase request is due (the repurchase request deadline). This will be the third Friday (or the preceding business day if such third Friday is not a business day) of each calendar month. |
| The date that will be used to determine the Funds net asset value applicable to the repurchase offer (the repurchase pricing date). Under normal market circumstances, the Fund expects that the repurchase pricing date will be the repurchase request deadline and pricing will be determined after the close of business on that date. The notice will discuss the risk of fluctuation in net asset value that could occur between the repurchases request deadline and the repurchases pricing date. |
42
| The date by which the Fund will pay to shareholders the proceeds from their Shares accepted for repurchase (the repurchase payment deadline). This is generally expected to be the third business day after the repurchase pricing date, although payment for Shares may be as many as seven days after the repurchase request deadline; in any event, the Fund will pay such proceeds at least five business days before notification of the next repurchase offer. |
| The net asset value of the Shares of the Fund as of a date no more than seven days prior to the date of the notification and the means by which shareholders may ascertain the net asset value. |
| The procedures by which shareholders may tender their Shares and the right of shareholders to withdraw or modify their tenders prior to the repurchase request deadline. |
| The circumstances in which the Fund may suspend or postpone a repurchase offer. |
| Any fees applicable to the repurchase offer. |
| The Fund has a policy of making periodic repurchase offers (Repurchase Offers) for the Funds common shares of beneficial interest, pursuant to Rule 23c-3(b) of the 1940 Act; |
| Repurchase Offers will be made at monthly intervals; |
| The repurchase request deadline will be the third Friday of each calendar month (or the preceding business day if such third Friday is not a business day) (the Request Deadline). |
| The repurchase pricing date for a Repurchase Offer shall occur no later than the fourteenth calendar day after such Repurchase Offers Request Deadline (or the next business day after such fourteenth calendar day if the fourteenth calendar day is not a business day). |
43
(1) | the Fund may accept all Shares tendered by persons who own in the aggregate not more than a specified number of Shares (not to exceed 100 Shares) and who tender all of their Shares before prorating Shares tendered by others; or |
(2) | the Fund may accept by lot Shares tendered by shareholders who tender all Shares held by them and who, when tendering, elect to have either all or none, or at least a minimum amount or none, accepted; however, the Fund first must accept all Shares tendered by shareholders who do not make this election. |
44
45
46
47
48
Quarterly
|
Class A | Class B | Class C | Class IB | Class IC | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Period Ending | High | Low | High | Low | High | Low | High | Low | High | Low | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
March 31, 2013
|
$ | 6.94 | $ | 6.82 | $ | 6.96 | $ | 6.84 | $ | 6.94 | $ | 6.82 | $ | 6.95 | $ | 6.82 | $ | 6.94 | $ | 6.82 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
December 31, 2012
|
$ | 6.86 | $ | 6.78 | $ | 6.88 | $ | 6.80 | $ | 6.85 | $ | 6.78 | $ | 6.86 | $ | 6.78 | $ | 6.86 | $ | 6.78 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
September 30, 2012
|
$ | 6.79 | $ | 6.60 | $ | 6.81 | $ | 6.59 | $ | 6.79 | $ | 6.59 | $ | 6.79 | $ | 6.60 | $ | 6.79 | $ | 6.60 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
June 30, 2012
|
$ | 6.68 | $ | 6.52 | $ | 6.68 | $ | 6.51 | $ | 6.68 | $ | 6.51 | $ | 6.68 | $ | 6.52 | $ | 6.68 | $ | 6.52 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
March 31, 2012
|
$ | 6.60 | $ | 6.38 | $ | 6.60 | $ | 6.38 | $ | 6.60 | $ | 6.38 | $ | 6.61 | $ | 6.39 | $ | 6.61 | $ | 6.39 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
December 31, 2011
|
$ | 6.41 | $ | 6.16 | $ | 6.41 | $ | 6.16 | $ | 6.41 | $ | 6.16 | $ | 6.41 | $ | 6.17 | $ | 6.41 | $ | 6.16 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
September 30, 2011
|
$ | 6.70 | $ | 6.21 | $ | 6.69 | $ | 6.21 | $ | 6.69 | $ | 6.21 | $ | 6.70 | $ | 6.22 | $ | 6.69 | $ | 6.21 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
June 30, 2011
|
$ | 6.77 | $ | 6.66 | $ | 6.76 | $ | 6.66 | $ | 6.76 | $ | 6.66 | $ | 6.77 | $ | 6.67 | $ | 6.77 | $ | 6.66 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
March 31, 2011
|
$ | 6.73 | $ | 6.54 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.54 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.54 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.55 | $ | 6.73 | $ | 6.55 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
49
(3)
|
(4)
|
|||||||||||||||||
Amount
|
Amount
|
|||||||||||||||||
Held
|
Outstanding
|
|||||||||||||||||
(2)
|
by Fund for
|
Exclusive of
|
||||||||||||||||
(1)
|
Amount
|
its Own
|
Amount Shown
|
|||||||||||||||
Title of Class | Authorized | Account | Under (3) | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Class A Shares | unlimited | 0 | 17,921,785 | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Class B Shares | unlimited | 0 | 1,864,897 | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Class C Shares | unlimited | 0 | 20,623,159 | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Class IB Shares | unlimited | 0 | 127,286,598 | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Class IC Shares | unlimited | 0 | 10,644,143 | |||||||||||||||
|
50
51
52
53
Page
|
||
General Information
|
B-2 | |
Investment Objective, Investment Strategies and Risks
|
B-3 | |
Investment Restrictions
|
B-3 | |
Trustees and Officers
|
B-5 | |
Advisory Agreement
|
B-15 | |
Fund Management
|
B-17 | |
Distribution and Service
|
B-20 | |
Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage Allocation
|
B-21 | |
Shareholder Services
|
B-23 | |
Net Asset Value
|
B-25 | |
Early Withdrawal Charge Class A
|
B-25 | |
Waiver of Early Withdrawal Charges
|
B-26 | |
Taxation
|
B-27 | |
Other Information
|
B-32 | |
Financial Statements
|
B-32 | |
Appendix A Ratings of Debt Securities
|
A-1 | |
Appendix B Proxy Voting Policies
|
B-1 |
54
| Call your broker |
| Web Site |
| FundInfo ® |
| Web Site |
| FundInfo ® |
Page
|
||||
General Information
|
B-2 | |||
Investment Objective, Investment Strategies and Risks
|
B-3 | |||
Investment Restrictions
|
B-3 | |||
Trustees and Officers
|
B-5 | |||
Advisory Agreement
|
B-15 | |||
Fund Management
|
B-17 | |||
Distribution and Service
|
B-20 | |||
Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage Allocation
|
B-21 | |||
Shareholder Services
|
B-23 | |||
Net Asset Value
|
B-25 | |||
Early Withdrawal Charge Class A
|
B-25 | |||
Waiver of Early Withdrawal Charges
|
B-26 | |||
Taxation
|
B-27 | |||
Other Information
|
B-32 | |||
Financial Statements
|
B-32 | |||
Appendix A Ratings of Debt Securities
|
A-1 | |||
Appendix B Proxy Voting Policies
|
B-1 |
B-1
Approximate
|
||||||||
Percentage of
|
||||||||
Class
|
Ownership
|
|||||||
Name and Address of Holder
|
of Shares | on June 14, 2013 | ||||||
First Clearing, LLC*
|
A | 20.95 | % | |||||
Special Custody Acct for the Exclusive Benefit of Customer
|
B | 32.66 | % | |||||
2801 Market St.
|
C | 18.60 | % | |||||
Saint Louis, MO 63103-2523
|
IB | 10.85 | % | |||||
IC | 13.39 | % | ||||||
MLPF&S for the Sole Benefit of Its Customers*
|
A | 8.33 | % | |||||
Attn: Fund Administration 97FW6
|
B | 8.77 | % | |||||
4800 Deer Lake Dr. E, 2nd Floor
|
C | 11.24 | % | |||||
Jacksonville, FL 32246-6484
|
IC | 6.00 | % | |||||
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney*
|
A | 15.90 | % | |||||
Harborside Financial Center
|
C | 31.93 | % | |||||
Plaza 2, 3rd Floor
|
IB | 40.88 | % | |||||
Jersey City, NJ 07311
|
IC | 24.50 | % | |||||
National Financial Services LLC
|
A | 9.95 | % | |||||
FEBO Customers Mutual Funds
|
B | 7.79 | % | |||||
200 Liberty St., 1WFC
|
C | 6.36 | % | |||||
New York, NY 10281-1003
|
IC | 5.86 | % | |||||
Pershing LLC*
|
A | 11.54 | % | |||||
1 Pershing Plaza
|
B | 10.21 | % | |||||
Jersey City, NJ 07399-0002
|
C | 6.59 | % | |||||
IB | 5.32 | % | ||||||
IC | 7.81 | % | ||||||
Raymond James
|
A | 6.68 | % | |||||
Omnibus for Mutual Funds
|
B | 6.29 | % | |||||
Attn: Courtney Waller
|
C | 6.68 | % | |||||
880 Carillon Parkway
|
||||||||
St. Petersburg, FL 33716-1102
|
||||||||
UBS WM USA
|
IC | 5.58 | % | |||||
Omni Account M/F
|
||||||||
Attn: Department Manager
|
||||||||
499 Washington Blvd. 9th Floor
|
||||||||
Jersey City, NJ 07310-2055
|
* | Shares held of record only. |
B-2
1. | Purchase any securities (other than obligations issued or guaranteed by the United States Government or by its agencies or instrumentalities), if as a result more than 5% of the Funds total assets would then be invested in securities of a single issuer or if as a result the Fund would hold more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of any single issuer; provided that, with respect to 50% of the Funds assets, the Fund may invest up to 25% of its assets in the securities of any one issuer. For purposes of this restriction, the term issuer includes both the Borrower under a Loan Agreement and the Lender selling a Participation to the Fund together with any other persons interpositioned between such Lender and the Fund with respect to a Participation. | |
2. | Purchase any security if, as a result of such purchase, more than 25% of the Funds total assets (taken at current value) would be invested in the securities of Borrowers and other issuers having their principal business activities in the same industry (the electric, gas, water and telephone utility industries, commercial banks, thrift institutions and finance companies being treated as separate industries for purposes of this restriction); provided, that this limitation shall not apply with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or by its agencies or instrumentalities. | |
3. | Issue senior securities nor borrow money, except that the Fund may issue senior securities or borrow money to the extent permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, (ii) the rules or regulations promulgated by the Commission under the 1940 Act, or (iii) an exemption or other relief applicable to the Fund from the provisions of the 1940 Act. | |
4. | Make loans of money or property to any person, except for obtaining interests in Senior Loans in accordance with its investment objective, through loans of portfolio securities or the acquisition of securities subject to repurchase agreements. |
B-3
5. | Buy any security on margin. Neither the deposit of initial or variation margin in connection with hedging transactions nor short-term credits as may be necessary for the clearance of such transactions is considered the purchase of a security on margin. | |
6. | Sell any security short, write, purchase or sell puts, calls or combinations thereof, or purchase or sell financial futures or options, except to the extent that the hedging transactions in which the Fund may engage would be deemed to be any of the foregoing transactions. | |
7. | Act as an underwriter of securities, except to the extent the Fund may be deemed to be an underwriter in connection with the sale of or granting of interests in Senior Loans or other securities acquired by the Fund. | |
8. | Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or participation in management, except to the extent that exercise by the Fund of its rights under Loan Agreements would be deemed to constitute such control or participation. | |
9. | Invest in securities of other investment companies, except as part of a merger, consolidation or other acquisitions. The Fund will rely on representations of Borrowers in Loan Agreements in determining whether such Borrowers are investment companies. |
10. | Buy or sell oil, gas or other mineral leases, rights or royalty contracts except pursuant to the exercise by the Fund of its rights under Loan Agreements. In addition, the Fund may purchase securities of issuers which deal in, represent interests in or are secured by interests in such leases, rights or contracts. | |
11. | Purchase or sell real estate, commodities or commodities contracts except pursuant to the exercise by the Fund of its rights under Loan Agreements, except to the extent the interests in Senior Loans the Fund may invest in are considered to be interests in real estate, commodities or commodities contracts and except to the extent that hedging instruments the Fund may invest in are considered to be commodities or commodities contracts. | |
12. | Notwithstanding the investment policies and restrictions of the Fund, upon approval of the Board of Trustees, the Fund may invest all or part of its investable assets in a management investment company with substantially the same investment objective, policies and restrictions as the Fund. |
B-4
Number of
|
||||||||||||
Funds in
|
||||||||||||
Term of
|
Fund
|
|||||||||||
Office and
|
Complex
|
|||||||||||
Position(s)
|
Length of
|
Overseen
|
||||||||||
Name, Age and
Address
(1)
|
Held with
|
Time
|
Principal Occupation(s)
|
by
|
Other Directorships
|
|||||||
of Independent Trustee | Fund | Served | During Past 5 Years | Trustee | Held by Trustee | |||||||
David C. Arch 1945
|
Trustee | Trustee since 1988 |
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Blistex Inc., a consumer
health care products manufacturer.
Formerly: Member of the Heartland Alliance Advisory Board, a nonprofit organization serving human needs based in Chicago. |
136 |
Trustee/Managing General Partner of funds in the Fund Complex.
Board member of the Illinois Manufacturers Association.
Member of the Board of Visitors, Institute for the Humanities,
University of Michigan.
|
|||||||
B-5
Number of
|
||||||||||||
Funds in
|
||||||||||||
Term of
|
Fund
|
|||||||||||
Office and
|
Complex
|
|||||||||||
Position(s)
|
Length of
|
Overseen
|
||||||||||
Name, Age and
Address
(1)
|
Held with
|
Time
|
Principal Occupation(s)
|
by
|
Other Directorships
|
|||||||
of Independent Trustee | Fund | Served | During Past 5 Years | Trustee | Held by Trustee | |||||||
Jerry D. Choate 1938
|
Trustee | Trustee since 2006 | Retired. From 1995 to 1999, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Allstate Corporation (Allstate) and Allstate Insurance Company. From 1994 to 1995, President and Chief Executive Officer of Allstate. Prior to 1994, various management positions at Allstate. | 13 | Trustee/Managing General Partner of funds in the Fund Complex. Director since 1998 and member of the governance and nominating committee, executive committee, compensation and management development committee and equity award committee, of Amgen Inc., a biotechnological company. Director since 1999 and member of the nominating and governance committee and compensation and executive committee, of Valero Energy Corporation, a crude oil refining and marketing company. Previously, from 2006 to 2007, Director and member of the compensation committee and audit committee, of H&R Block, a tax preparation services company. | |||||||
Linda Hutton Heagy 1948
|
Trustee | Trustee since 2006 | Retired. Prior to June 2008, Managing Partner of Heidrick & Struggles, the second largest global executive search firm, and from 2001-2004, Regional Managing Director of U.S. operations at Heidrick & Struggles. Prior to 1997, Managing Partner of Ray & Berndtson, Inc., an executive recruiting firm. Prior to 1995, Executive Vice President of ABN AMRO, N.A., a bank holding company, with oversight for treasury management operations including all non-credit product pricing. Prior to 1990, experience includes Executive Vice President of The Exchange National Bank with oversight of treasury management including capital markets operations, Vice President of Northern Trust Company and a trainee at Price Waterhouse. | 13 | Trustee/Managing General Partner of funds in the Fund Complex. Prior to 2010, Trustee on the University of Chicago Medical Center Board, Vice Chair of the Board of the YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago and a member of the Womens Board of the University of Chicago. | |||||||
R. Craig Kennedy 1952
|
Trustee | Trustee since 2006 | Director and President of the German Marshall Fund of the United States, an independent U.S. foundation created to deepen understanding, promote collaboration and stimulate exchanges of practical experience between Americans and Europeans. Formerly, advisor to the Dennis Trading Group Inc., a managed futures and option company that invests money for individuals and institutions. Prior to 1992, President and Chief Executive Officer, Director and member of the Investment Committee of the Joyce Foundation, a private foundation. | 13 | Trustee/Managing General Partner of funds in the Fund Complex. Director of First Solar, Inc. Advisory Board, True North Ventures. | |||||||
Hugo F. Sonnenschein 1940
|
Trustee | Trustee since 1994 | Distinguished Service Professor and President Emeritus of the University of Chicago and the Adam Smith Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Chicago. Prior to July 2000, President of the University of Chicago. | 136 | Trustee/Managing General Partner of funds in the Fund Complex. Trustee of the University of Rochester and a member of its investment committee. Member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical Society and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. | |||||||
B-6
Number of
|
||||||||||||
Funds in
|
||||||||||||
Term of
|
Fund
|
|||||||||||
Office and
|
Complex
|
|||||||||||
Position(s)
|
Length of
|
Overseen
|
||||||||||
Name, Age and
Address
(1)
|
Held with
|
Time
|
Principal Occupation(s)
|
by
|
Other Directorships
|
|||||||
of Independent Trustee | Fund | Served | During Past 5 Years | Trustee | Held by Trustee | |||||||
Suzanne H. Woolsey 1941
|
Trustee | Trustee since 2006 | Chief Executive Officer of Woolsey Partners LLC. Chief Communications Officer of the National Academy of Sciences and Engineering and Institute of Medicine/National Research Council, an independent, federally chartered policy institution, from 2001 to November 2003 and Chief Operating Officer from 1993 to 2001. Executive Director of the Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education at the National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council from 1989 to 1993. Prior to 1980, experience includes Partner of Coopers & Lybrand (from 1980 to 1989), Associate Director of the US Office of Management and Budget (from 1977 to 1980) and Program Director of the Urban Institute (from 1975 to 1977). | 13 | Trustee/Managing General Partner of funds in the Fund Complex. Independent Director and audit committee chairperson of Changing World Technologies, Inc., an energy manufacturing company, since July 2008. Independent Director and member of audit and governance committees of Fluor Corp., a global engineering, construction and management company, since January 2004. Director of Intelligent Medical Devices, Inc., a private company which develops symptom-based diagnostic tools for viral respiratory infections. Advisory Board member of ExactCost LLC, a private company providing activity-based costing for hospitals, laboratories, clinics, and physicians, since 2008. Chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Institute for Defense Analyses, a federally funded research and development center, since 2000. Trustee from 1992 to 2000 and 2002 to present, current chairperson of the finance committee, current member of the audit committee, strategic growth committee and executive committee, and former Chairperson of the Board of Trustees (from 1997 to 1999), of the German Marshall Fund of the United States, a public foundation. Lead Independent Trustee of the Rocky Mountain Institute, a non-profit energy and environmental institute; Trustee since 2004. Chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Colorado College; Trustee since 1995. Trustee of California Institute of Technology. Previously, Independent Director and member of audit committee and governance committee of Neurogen Corporation from 1998 to 2006; and Independent Director of Arbros Communications from 2000 to 2002. |
B-7
Number of
|
||||||||||||
Funds in
|
||||||||||||
Term of
|
Fund
|
|||||||||||
Office and
|
Complex
|
|||||||||||
Position(s)
|
Length of
|
Overseen
|
||||||||||
Name, Age and
Address
(1)
|
Held with
|
Time
|
Principal Occupation(s)
|
by
|
Other Directorships
|
|||||||
of Interested Trustee | Fund | Served | During Past 5 Years | Trustee | Held by Trustee | |||||||
Colin D. Meadows* 1971
|
Trustee,
President and Principal Executive Officer |
Trustee since 2010 | Chief Administrative Officer of Invesco Advisers, Inc. since 2006. Senior Managing Director and Chief Administrative Officer of Invesco, Ltd. since 2006. Prior to 2006, Senior Vice President of business development and mergers and acquisitions at GE Consumer Finance. Prior to 2005, Senior Vice President of strategic planning and technology at Wells Fargo Bank. From 1996 to 2003, associate principal with McKinsey & Company, focusing on the financial services and venture capital industries, with emphasis in the banking and asset management sectors. | 13 | None. | |||||||
Wayne W. Whalen 1939**
|
Trustee | Trustee since 1988 | Of Counsel, and prior to 2010, partner in the law firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, legal counsel to funds in the Fund Complex. | 136 | Trustee/Managing General Partner of funds in the Fund Complex. Director of the Mutual Fund Directors Forum, a nonprofit membership organization for investment company directors. Chairman and Director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation and Director of the Stevenson Center for Democracy. |
(1) | The principal business address of each Trustee is c/o Invesco Senior Loan Fund, 1555 Peachtree Street, N.E., Atlanta, Georgia 30309. |
* | Mr. Meadows is an interested person (within the meaning of Section 2(a)(19) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act)) of the funds in the Fund Complex because he is an officer of the Adviser. |
** | Mr. Whalen is an interested person (within the meaning of Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act) of certain funds in the Fund Complex because his firm currently provides legal services as legal counsel to such funds in the Fund Complex. |
B-8
Term of
|
||||||
Office and
|
||||||
Position(s)
|
Length of
|
|||||
Name, Age and
|
Held with
|
Time
|
Principal Occupation(s)
|
|||
Address (1) of Officer | Fund | Served | During Past 5 Years | |||
John M. Zerr 1962 | Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary |
Officer since
2010 |
Director, Senior Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel, Invesco Management Group, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Management Group, Inc.) and Van Kampen Exchange Corp.; Senior Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser); Senior Vice President and Secretary, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.); Director, Vice President and Secretary, Invesco Investment Services, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Investment Services, Inc.) and IVZ Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as INVESCO Distributors, Inc.); Director and Vice President, INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.; Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary, The Invesco Funds; Manager, Invesco PowerShares Capital Management LLC; Director, Secretary and General Counsel, Invesco Investment Advisers LLC (formerly known as Van Kampen Asset Management); Secretary and General Counsel, Invesco Capital Markets, Inc. (formerly known as Van Kampen Funds Inc.) and Chief Legal Officer, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust. | |||
Formerly: Director and Vice President, Van Kampen Advisors Inc.; Director Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel Van Kampen Investor Services Inc.; Director, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.); Director, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Invesco AIM Advisers, Inc.; and Van Kampen Investments Inc.; Director, Vice President and Secretary, Fund Management Company; Director, Senior Vice President, Secretary, General Counsel and Vice President, Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; Chief Operating Officer and General Counsel, Liberty Ridge Capital, Inc. (an investment adviser); Vice President and Secretary, PBHG Funds (an investment company) and PBHG Insurance Series Fund (an investment company); Chief Operating Officer, General Counsel and Secretary, Old Mutual Investment Partners (a broker-dealer); General Counsel and Secretary, Old Mutual Fund Services (an administrator) and Old Mutual Shareholder Services (a shareholder servicing center); Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Old Mutual Capital, Inc. (an investment adviser); and Vice President and Secretary, Old Mutual Advisors Funds (an investment company). | ||||||
Sheri Morris 1964 |
Vice President, Treasurer
and Principal Financial Officer |
Officer since
2010 |
Vice President, Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer, The Invesco Funds; Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser); Vice President, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust. | |||
Formerly: Treasurer, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust; Vice President, Invesco AIM Advisers, Inc., Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc. and Invesco Aim Private Asset Management, Inc.; Assistant Vice President and Assistant Treasurer, The Invesco Funds and Assistant Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc., Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc. and Invesco Aim Private Asset Management, Inc. | ||||||
B-9
Term of
|
||||||
Office and
|
||||||
Position(s)
|
Length of
|
|||||
Name, Age and
|
Held with
|
Time
|
Principal Occupation(s)
|
|||
Address (1) of Officer | Fund | Served | During Past 5 Years | |||
Karen Dunn Kelley 1960 | Vice President |
Officer since
2010 |
Head of Invescos World Wide Fixed Income and Cash Management Group; Director, Co-President, Co-Chief Executive Officer, and Co-Chairman, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A), Inc.) (registered investment adviser); Senior Vice President, Invesco Management Group, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Management Group, Inc.); Executive Vice President, Invesco Distributors, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Aim Distributors, Inc.): Director, Invesco Mortgage Capital Inc., INVESCO Global Asset Management Limited, Invesco Management Company Limited, and INVESCO Management S.A.; Director and President, INVESCO Asset Management (Bermuda) Ltd.; Vice President, The Invesco Funds (other than AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust) and Short-Term Investments Trust); and President and Principal Executive Officer, The Invesco Funds (AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust) and Short-Term Investments Trust only). | |||
Formerly: Senior Vice President, Van Kampen Investments Inc. and Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.); Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.); Director of Cash Management and Senior Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. and Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; President and Principal Executive Officer, Tax-Free Investments Trust; Director and President, Fund Management Company; Chief Cash Management Officer, Director of Cash Management, Senior Vice President, and Managing Director, Invesco Aim Capital Management, Inc.; Director of Cash Management, Senior Vice President, and Vice President, Invesco Advisers, Inc. and The Invesco Funds (AIM Treasurers Series Trust (Invesco Treasurers Series Trust), Short-Term Investments Trust and Tax-Free Investments Trust only). | ||||||
Crissie M. Wisdom 1969 |
Anti-Money Laundering
Compliance Officer |
Officer since
2013 |
Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer, Invesco Advisers, Inc. (formerly known as Invesco Institutional (N.A.), Inc.) (registered investment adviser), The Invesco Funds, Invesco Funds (Chicago), and PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II, PowerShares India Exchange-Traded Fund Trust, and PowerShares Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Fund Trust; and Fraud Prevention Manager and Controls and Risk Analysis Manager, Invesco Investment Services, Inc. | |||
Valinda Arnett-Patton 1959 | Chief Compliance Officer |
Officer since
2011 |
Chief Compliance Officer, The Invesco Funds (Chicago). | |||
Formerly: Compliance Director, Invesco Fixed Income, Invesco; Deputy Compliance Officer, AIG Sun America Asset Management Corp. |
(1) | The principal business address of each officer is c/o Invesco Senior Loan Fund, 1555 Peachtree Street N.E., Atlanta, Georgia 30309. |
B-10
B-11
B-12
Fund Complex | ||||||||||||
Aggregate
|
||||||||||||
Compensation
|
Total Compensation
|
Number of Funds
|
||||||||||
from
|
from Fund
|
in Fund Complex
|
||||||||||
Name
|
the
Fund
(1)(2)
|
Complex
(3)
|
Overseen by Trustee
|
|||||||||
Independent Trustees
|
||||||||||||
David C. Arch
|
$ | 14,813 | $ | 406,250 | 136 | |||||||
Jerry D. Choate
|
14,317 | 86,000 | 13 | |||||||||
Linda Hutton Heagy
|
14,813 | 86,000 | 13 | |||||||||
R. Craig Kennedy
|
14,813 | 86,000 | 13 | |||||||||
Hugo F. Sonnenschein
|
14,813 | 426,700 | 136 | |||||||||
Suzanne H. Woolsey
|
14,813 | 86,000 | 13 | |||||||||
Interested Trustees
|
||||||||||||
Colin D. Meadows
|
0 | 0 | 13 | |||||||||
Wayne W. Whalen
|
14,813 | 393,000 | 136 |
(1) | The amounts shown in this column represent the aggregate compensation from the Fund to each Trustee for the Funds fiscal ended February 28, 2013. |
(2) | The Fund does not accrue or pay retirement or pension benefits to Trustees as of the date of this SAI. |
(3) | The amounts shown in this column are accumulated from the aggregate compensation of the operating investment companies in the Fund Complex for the calendar year ended December 31, 2012. Because the funds in the Fund Complex have different fiscal year ends, the amounts shown in this column are presented on a calendar year basis. |
B-13
Trustees | ||||||||||||
Arch
|
Choate
|
Heagy
|
Kennedy
|
Sonnenschein
|
Woolsey
|
|||||||
Dollar range of equity securities in the Fund
|
$1-
$10,000 |
None
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
||||||
Aggregate dollar range of equity securities in all registered
investment companies overseen by trustee in the
Fund Complex
|
Over
$100,000 |
Over
$100,000 |
$50,001-
$100,000 |
$10,001-
$50,000 |
Over
$100,000 |
$10,001-
$50,000 |
Trustees | ||||
Meadows
|
Whalen
|
|||
Dollar range of equity securities in the Fund
|
None
|
$10,001-
$50,000 |
||
Aggregate dollar range of equity securities in
all registered investment companies overseen by trustee in the Fund Complex |
$1-
$10,000 |
Over
$100,000 |
B-14
B-15
Seven-Month
|
||||||||||||||||
Fiscal Year Ended
|
Fiscal Year Ended
|
Period Ended
|
Fiscal Year Ended
|
|||||||||||||
February 28, 2013 | February 29, 2012 | February 28, 2011* | July 31, 2010 | |||||||||||||
The Fund paid the approximate advisory fees of
|
$ | 10,712,831 | $ | 8,723,075 | $ | 5,189,272 | $ | 9,261,237 |
* | Effective February 28, 2011, the Fund changed its fiscal year end from July 31 to the last day of February. |
B-16
Seven-Month
|
||||||||||||||||
Fiscal Year Ended
|
Fiscal Year Ended
|
Period Ended
|
Fiscal Year Ended
|
|||||||||||||
February 28, 2013 | February 29, 2012 | February 28, 2011* | July 31, 2010 | |||||||||||||
The Fund paid the approximate administrative fees of
|
$ | 3,152,245 | $ | 2,492,081 | $ | 1,483,549 | $ | 2,650,364 |
* | Effective February 28, 2011, the Fund changed its fiscal year end from July 31 to the last day of February. |
Dollar Range of
|
Dollar Range of all
|
|||||||||||
Dollar Range of
|
Investments in Invesco
|
Investments in Funds
|
||||||||||
Investments in
|
pooled investment
|
and Invesco pooled
|
||||||||||
Portfolio Manager
|
each Fund (1) | vehicles (2) | investment vehicles (3) | |||||||||
Invesco Senior Loan Fund | ||||||||||||
Scott
Baskind
(4)
|
$1-$10,000 | N/A | $ | 100,001-$500,000 | ||||||||
Thomas Ewald
|
None | N/A | $ | 100,001-$500,000 | ||||||||
Philip Yarrow
|
$ | 10,001-$50,000 | N/A | $ | 100,001-$500,000 |
(1) | This column reflects investments in a Funds shares beneficially owned by a portfolio manager (as determined in accordance with Rule 16a-1(a) (2) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended). Beneficial ownership includes ownership by a portfolio managers immediate family members sharing the same household. |
(2) | This column reflects portfolio managers investments made either directly or through a deferred compensation or a similar plan in Invesco pooled investment vehicles with the same or similar objectives and strategies as the Fund as of the most recent fiscal year end of the Fund. |
(3) | This column reflects the combined holdings from both the Dollar Range of all Investments in Funds and Invesco pooled investment vehicles and the Dollar Range of Investments in each Fund columns. |
(4) | Effective June 28, 2013, Mr. Baskind is appointed as portfolio manager to Invesco Senior Loan Fund. Information for Mr. Baskind has been provided as of February 28, 2013. |
B-17
Other Pooled
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other Registered Investment
|
Investment Vehicles Managed
|
Other Accounts Managed
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Companies Managed (assets in millions) | (assets in millions) | (assets in millions) (5) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of
|
Number of
|
Number of
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Portfolio Manager
|
Accounts | Assets | Accounts | Assets | Accounts | Assets | |||||||||||||||||||
Invesco Senior Loan Fund | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Scott
Baskind
(4)
|
1 | $ | 2,499.8 | 1 | (6) | $ | 2,676.6 | (6) | None | None | |||||||||||||||
Thomas Ewald
|
2 | $ | 2,475.1 | None | None | None | None | ||||||||||||||||||
Philip Yarrow
|
2 | $ | 2,476.8 | None | None | None | None |
(5) | These are accounts of individual investors for which Invesco provides investment advice. Invesco offers separately managed accounts that are managed according to the investment models developed by its portfolio managers and used in connection with the management of certain Invesco Funds. These accounts may be invested in accordance with one or more of those investment models and investments held in those accounts are traded in accordance with the applicable models. |
(6) | This amount includes 1 Fund that pays performance based fees with $2,676.6M in total assets under management. |
| The management of multiple Funds and/or other accounts may result in a portfolio manager devoting unequal time and attention to the management of each Fund and/or other account. The Adviser and each Sub-Adviser seek to manage such competing interests for the time and attention of portfolio managers by having portfolio managers focus on a particular investment discipline. Most other accounts managed by a portfolio manager are managed using the same investment models that are used in connection with the management of the Funds. |
| If a portfolio manager identifies a limited investment opportunity which may be suitable for more than one Fund or other account, a Fund may not be able to take full advantage of that opportunity due to an allocation of filled purchase or sale orders across all eligible Funds and other accounts. To deal with these situations, the Adviser, each Sub-Adviser and the Funds have adopted procedures for allocating portfolio transactions across multiple accounts. |
| The Adviser and each Sub-Adviser determine which broker to use to execute each order for securities transactions for the Funds, consistent with its duty to seek best execution of the transaction. However, for certain other accounts (such as mutual funds for which Invesco or an affiliate acts as sub-adviser, other pooled investment vehicles that are not registered mutual funds, and other accounts managed for organizations and individuals), the Adviser and each Sub-Adviser may be limited by the client with respect to the selection of brokers or may be instructed to direct trades through a particular broker. In these cases, trades for a Fund in a particular security may be placed separately from, rather than aggregated with, such other accounts. Having separate transactions with respect to a security may temporarily affect the market price of the security or the execution of the transaction, or both, to the possible detriment of the Fund or other account(s) involved. |
| Finally, the appearance of a conflict of interest may arise where the Adviser or Sub-Adviser has an incentive, such as a performance-based management fee, which relates to the management of one Fund or account but not all Funds and accounts for which a portfolio manager has day-to-day management responsibilities. |
B-18
Sub-Adviser
|
Performance time
period
(7)
|
|
Invesco
(8)
Invesco Australia Invesco Deutschland Invesco Hong Kong (8) Invesco Asset Management |
One-, Three- and Five-year performance against Fund peer group. | |
Invesco- Invesco Real
Estate
(8),(9)
Invesco Senior Secured (8),(10) |
Not applicable | |
Invesco Canada (8) | One-year performance against Fund peer group. Three- and Five-year performance against entire universe of Canadian funds. | |
Invesco Japan (11) | One-, Three- and Five-year performance against the appropriate Micropol benchmark. |
(7) | Rolling time periods based on calendar year-end. |
(8) | Portfolio Managers may be granted an annual deferral award that vests on a pro-rata basis over a four year period and final payments are based on the performance of eligible Funds selected by the portfolio manager at the time the award is granted. |
(9) | Portfolio Managers for Invesco Global Real Estate Fund, Invesco Real Estate Fund, Invesco Global Real Estate Income Fund and Invesco V.I. Global Real Estate Fund base their bonus on new operating profits of the U.S. Real Estate Division of Invesco. |
(10) | Invesco Senior Secureds bonus is based on annual measures of equity return and standard tests of collateralization performance. |
(11) | Portfolio Managers for Invesco Pacific Growth Funds compensation is based on the one-, three- and five-year performance against the appropriate Micropol benchmark. |
B-19
B-20
Printing &
|
Underwriters
|
Dealers
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Advertising | Mailing | Seminars | Compensation | Compensation | Personnel | Travel | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Invesco Senior Loan Fund
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class A
|
$ | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 47,441 | $ | 0 | $ | 0 | ||||||||||||||
Class B
|
$ | 17 | $ | 0 | $ | 6 | $ | 8,287 | $ | 15,424 | $ | 107 | $ | 11 | ||||||||||||||
Class C
|
$ | 597 | $ | 119 | $ | 239 | $ | 29,730 | $ | 1,104,083 | $ | 4,059 | $ | 239 | ||||||||||||||
Class IC
|
$ | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 18,064 | $ | 0 | $ | 0 |
B-21
B-22
* | Effective February 28, 2011, the Fund changed its fiscal year end from July 31 to the last day of February. |
B-23
B-24
B-25
B-26
B-27
B-28
B-29
| an individual who is a citizen or resident of the United States; | |
| a corporation or partnership created or organized under the laws of the United States or any state or political subdivision thereof; | |
| an estate, the income of which is subject to federal income taxation regardless of its source; or | |
| a trust that (i) is subject to the primary supervision of a U.S. court and which has one or more U.S. fiduciaries who have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust, or (ii) has a valid election in effect under applicable U.S. Treasury regulations to be treated as a U.S. person. |
B-30
B-31
B-32
A-1
| Likelihood of payment capacity and willingness of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on an obligation in accordance with the terms of the obligation; | |
| Nature of and provisions of the obligation; | |
| Protection afforded by, and relative position of, the obligation in the event of bankruptcy, reorganization, or other arrangement under the laws of bankruptcy and other laws affecting creditors rights. |
A-2
A-3
| Amortization schedule the larger final maturity relative to other maturities, the more likely it will be treated as a note; and | |
| Source of payment the more dependent the issue is on the market for its refinancing, the more likely it will be treated as a note. |
A-4
A-5
a. | the issuer has entered into a grace or cure period following non-payment of a material financial obligation; | |
b. | the issuer has entered into a temporary negotiated waiver or standstill agreement following a payment default on a material financial obligation; or |
c. | Fitch Ratings otherwise believes a condition of RD or D to be imminent or inevitable, including through the formal announcement of a coercive debt exchange. |
a. | the selective payment default on a specific class or currency of debt; | |
b. | the uncured expiry of any applicable grace period, cure period or default forbearance period following a payment default on a bank loan, capital markets security or other material financial obligation; | |
c. | the extension of multiple waivers or forbearance periods upon a payment default on one or more material financial obligations, either in series or in parallel; or |
d. | execution of a coercive debt exchange on one or more material financial obligations. |
A-6
A-7
Applicable to
|
Retail Accounts | |
Risk Addressed by Policy
|
breach of fiduciary duty to client under Investment Advisers Act of 1940 by placing Invesco personal interests ahead of client best economic interests in voting proxies | |
Relevant Law and Other Sources
|
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 | |
Last Tested Date
|
||
Policy/Procedure Owner
|
Advisory Compliance | |
Policy Approver
|
Fund Board | |
Approved/Adopted Date
|
January 1, 2010 |
March 2012
|
I.2 - 1 |
B-1
| Elections of directors. In uncontested director elections for companies that do not have a controlling shareholder, Invesco votes in favor of slates if they are comprised of at least a majority of independent directors and if the boards key committees are fully independent. Key committees include the Audit, Compensation and Governance or Nominating Committees. Invescos standard of independence excludes directors who, in addition to the directorship, have any material business or family relationships with the companies they serve. |
March 2012
|
I.2 - 2 |
B-2
Contested director elections are evaluated on a case-by-case basis and are decided within the context of Invescos investment thesis on a company. | |||
| Director performance. Invesco withholds votes from directors who exhibit a lack of accountability to shareholders, either through their level of attendance at meetings or by enacting egregious corporate-governance or other policies. In cases of material financial restatements, accounting fraud, habitually late filings, adopting shareholder rights plan (poison pills) without shareholder approval, or other areas of poor performance, Invesco may withhold votes from some or all of a companys directors. In situations where directors performance is a concern, Invesco may also support shareholder proposals to take corrective actions such as so-called clawback provisions. | ||
| Auditors and Audit Committee members. Invesco believes a companys Audit Committee has a high degree of responsibility to shareholders in matters of financial disclosure, integrity of the financial statements and effectiveness of a companys internal controls. Independence, experience and financial expertise are critical elements of a well-functioning Audit Committee. When electing directors who are members of a companys Audit Committee, or when ratifying a companys auditors, Invesco considers the past performance of the Committee and holds its members accountable for the quality of the companys financial statements and reports. | ||
| Majority standard in director elections. The right to elect directors is the single most important mechanism shareholders have to promote accountability. Invesco supports the nascent effort to reform the U.S. convention of electing directors, and votes in favor of proposals to elect directors by a majority vote. | ||
| Classified boards. Invesco supports proposals to elect directors annually instead of electing them to staggered multi-year terms because annual elections increase a boards level of accountability to its shareholders. | ||
| Supermajority voting requirements. Unless proscribed by law in the state of incorporation, Invesco votes against actions that would impose any supermajority voting requirement, and supports actions to dismantle existing supermajority requirements. | ||
| Responsiveness. Invesco withholds votes from directors who do not adequately respond to shareholder proposals that were approved by a majority of votes cast the prior year. | ||
| Cumulative voting. The practice of cumulative voting can enable minority shareholders to have representation on a companys board. Invesco supports proposals to institute the practice of cumulative voting at companies whose overall corporate-governance standards indicate a particular need to protect the interests of minority shareholders. |
March 2012
|
I.2 - 3 |
B-3
| Shareholder access. On business matters with potential financial consequences, Invesco votes in favor of proposals that would increase shareholders opportunities to express their views to boards of directors, proposals that would lower barriers to shareholder action and proposals to promote the adoption of generally accepted best practices in corporate governance. |
| Executive compensation. Invesco evaluates compensation plans for executives within the context of the companys performance under the executives tenure. Invesco believes independent compensation committees are best positioned to craft executive-compensation plans that are suitable for their company-specific circumstances. We view the election of those independent compensation committee members as the appropriate mechanism for shareholders to express their approval or disapproval of a companys compensation practices. Therefore, Invesco generally does not support shareholder proposals to limit or eliminate certain forms of executive compensation. In the interest of reinforcing the notion of a compensation committees accountability to shareholders, Invesco supports proposals requesting that companies subject each years compensation record to an advisory shareholder vote, or so-called say on pay proposals. | ||
| Equity-based compensation plans. When voting to approve or reject equity-based compensation plans, Invesco compares the total estimated cost of the plans, including stock options and restricted stock, against a carefully selected peer group and uses multiple performance metrics that help us determine whether the incentive structures in place are creating genuine shareholder wealth. Regardless of a plans estimated cost relative to its peer group, Invesco votes against plans that contain structural features that would impair the alignment of incentives between shareholders and management. Such features include the ability to reprice or reload options without shareholder approval, the ability to issue options below the stocks current market price, or the ability to automatically replenish shares without shareholder approval. |
March 2012
|
I.2 - 4 |
B-4
| Employee stock-purchase plans. Invesco supports employee stock-purchase plans that are reasonably designed to provide proper incentives to a broad base of employees, provided that the price at which employees may acquire stock is at most a 15 percent discount from the market price. | ||
| Severance agreements. Invesco generally votes in favor of proposals requiring advisory shareholder ratification of executives severance agreements. However, we oppose proposals requiring such agreements to be ratified by shareholders in advance of their adoption. |
March 2012
|
I.2 - 5 |
B-5
March 2012
|
I.2 - 6 |
B-6
March 2012
|
I.2 - 7 |
B-7
March 2012
|
I.2 - 8 |
B-8
Applicable to
|
Institutional Accounts | |
Risk Addressed by Policy
|
breach of fiduciary duty to client under Investment Advisers Act of 1940 by placing Invesco personal interests ahead of client best economic interests in voting proxies | |
Relevant Law and Other Sources
|
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 | |
Last Tested Date
|
||
Policy/Procedure Owner
|
Advisory Compliance, Proxy Committee | |
Policy Approver
|
Invesco Risk Management Committee | |
Approved/Adopted Date
|
March 2012 |
March 2012
|
I.1 - 1 |
B-9
March 2012
|
I.1 - 2 |
B-10
March 2012
|
I.1 - 3 |
B-11
(1) | describe any real or perceived conflict of interest, | ||
(2) | determine whether such real or perceived conflict of interest is material, | ||
(3) | discuss any procedure used to address such conflict of interest, | ||
(4) | report any contacts from outside parties (other than routine communications from proxy solicitors), and | ||
(5) | include confirmation that the recommendation as to how the proxies are to be voted is in the best economic interests of clients and was made without regard to any conflict of interest. |
March 2012
|
I.1 - 4 |
B-12
March 2012
|
I.1 - 5 |
B-13
§ | Business Relationships where Invesco manages money for a company or an employee group, manages pension assets or is actively soliciting any such business, or leases office space from a company; | ||
§ | Personal Relationships where an Invesco person has a personal relationship with other proponents of proxy proposals, participants in proxy contests, corporate directors, or candidates for directorships; and | ||
§ | Familial Relationships where an Invesco person has a known familial relationship relating to a company (e.g. a spouse or other relative who serves as a director of a public company or is employed by the company). |
March 2012
|
I.1 - 6 |
B-14
March 2012
|
I.1 - 7 |
B-15
|
|
|||||
|
||||||
|
|
B-16
|
Invesco Perpetual
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship |
B-17
Page |
Section
|
|||||
|
||||||
01
|
1. | Introduction | ||||
|
||||||
01
|
2. | Scope | ||||
|
||||||
02
|
3. | Responsible voting | ||||
|
||||||
02
|
4. | Voting procedures | ||||
|
||||||
03
|
5. | Dialogue with companies | ||||
|
||||||
03
|
6. | Non-routine resolutions and other topics | ||||
|
||||||
04
|
7. | Evaluation of companies environmental, social and governance arrangements (ESG) | ||||
|
||||||
04
|
8. | Disclosure and reporting | ||||
|
||||||
05
|
9. | UK Stewardship Code | ||||
|
||||||
07
|
Appendix 1 Voting on shares listed outside of the UK, Europe and the US |
B-18
Invesco Perpetual
|
01 | |||
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship
|
1. | Introduction | |
Invesco Perpetual (IP), a business name of Invesco Asset Management Limited, has adopted a clear and considered policy towards its responsibility as a shareholder on behalf of all investors in portfolios managed by them. As part of this policy, IP will take steps to satisfy itself about the extent to which the companies in which it invests look after shareholder value in their companies and comply with local recommendations and practices, such as the UK Corporate Governance Code issued by the Financial Reporting Council and the U.S. Department of Labor Interpretive Bulletins. | ||
IP has a responsibility to optimise returns to its clients. As a core part of the investment process, IPs fund managers will endeavour to establish a dialogue with company management to promote company decision making that is in the best interests of shareholders, and is in accordance with good Corporate Governance principles. | ||
Being a major shareholder in a company is more than simply expecting to benefit in its future earnings streams. In IPs view, it is about helping to provide the capital a company needs to grow, about being actively involved in its strategy, when necessary, and helping to ensure that shareholder interests are always at the forefront of managements thoughts. | ||
IP primarily defines stewardship as representing the best interests of clients in its fiduciary role as a discretionary asset manager (not asset owner) and as an institutional shareholder, i.e. an organization which pools large sums of money and invest those sums in securities, real property and other investment assets. This is considered more appropriate than undertaking the stewardship of investee companies, which we believe should always remain the responsibility of the directors and executives of those companies. IP may at times seek to influence strategies of investee companies, where appropriate, on behalf of its clients, but IP will never seek to be involved in the day to day running of any investee companies. | ||
IP considers that shareholder activism is fundamental to good Corporate Governance. Although this does not entail intervening in daily management decisions, it does involve supporting general standards for corporate activity and, where necessary, taking the initiative to ensure those standards are met, with a view to protecting and enhancing value for our investors in our portfolios. | ||
Engagement will also be proportionate and will reflect the size of holdings, length of holding period and liquidity of the underlying company shares. This is because in most of IPs investment jurisdictions, the only effective remedy of last resort available to shareholders, other than liquidating their share ownership, is the removal of directors. |
2. | Scope | |
The scope of this policy covers all portfolios that are managed by the IP investment teams located in Henley on Thames, United Kingdom and specifically excludes portfolios that are managed by other investment teams within the wider Invesco group that have their own voting, corporate governance and stewardship policies. As an example, within IPs ICVC range the following funds are excluded: IP UK Enhanced Index, IP Hong Kong & China, IP Japanese Smaller Companies, IP Global Balanced Index, IP Global ex-UK Core Equity Index, IP Global ex-UK Enhanced Index and the IP Balanced Risk 6, 8 and 10 funds. |
B-19
Invesco Perpetual
|
02 | |||
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship
|
3. | Responsible voting | |
One important means of putting shareholder responsibility into practice is via the exercising of voting rights. In deciding whether to vote, IP will take into account such factors as the likely impact of voting on management activity, and where expressed, the preference of clients in portfolios managed by them. As a result of these two factors, IP will tend to vote on all UK, European and US shares but to vote on a more selective basis on other shares. (See Appendix I - Voting on shares listed outside of the UK, Europe and the US). | ||
IP considers that the voting rights attached to its clients investments should be actively managed with the same duty of care as that applied to all other aspects of asset administration. As such, voting rights will be exercised on an informed and independent basis, and will not simply be passed back to the company concerned for discretionary voting by the Chairman. | ||
In voting for or against a proposal, IP will have in mind three objectives, as follows: |
- | To protect the rights of its clients | ||
- | To minimise the risk of financial or business impropriety within the companies in which its clients are invested, and | ||
- | To protect the long-term value of its clients investments. |
It is important to note that, when exercising voting rights, the third option of abstention can also be used as a means of expressing dissatisfaction, or lack of support, to a board on any particular issue. Additionally, in the event of a conflict of interest arising between IP and its clients over a specific issue, IP will either abstain or seek instruction from each client. | ||
IP will actively exercise the voting rights represented by the shares it manages on behalf of its clients where it is granted the discretion to do so. In certain circumstances the discretion is retained by the client, where they wish to be responsible for applying their own right to vote. |
Note: Share blocking | ||
Generally, IP will not vote where this results in shares being blocked from trading for a period of more than a few hours. IP considers that it is not in the interest of clients that their shares are blocked at a potentially sensitive time, such as the time around a shareholder meeting. |
4. | Voting procedures | |
IP will endeavour to keep under regular review with trustees, depositaries, custodians and third party proxy voting services the practical arrangements for circulating company resolutions and notices of meetings and for exercising votes in accordance with standing or special instructions. Although IPs proxy voting service will provide research and recommendations for each resolution, each fund manager will cast their vote independently considering their own research and dialogue with company management. | ||
Proxy voting research and services are currently provided by Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), part of the RiskMetrics Group. | ||
IP will endeavour to review regularly any standing or special instructions on voting and where possible, discuss with company representatives any significant issues. | ||
IP will take into account the implications of stock lending arrangements where this is relevant (that is, when stock is lent to the extent permitted by local regulations, the voting rights attaching to that stock pass to the borrower). However, IP does not currently enter into any stock lending arrangements as it believes the facility does not support active shareholder engagement. |
B-20
Invesco Perpetual
|
03 | |||
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship
|
5. | Dialogue with companies | |
IP will endeavour, where practicable and in accordance with its investment approach, to enter into a dialogue with companies management based on the mutual understanding of objectives. This dialogue is likely to include regular meetings with company representatives to explore any concerns about corporate governance where these may impact on the best interests of clients. In discussion with company boards and senior non-Executive Directors, IP will endeavour to cover any matters of particular relevance to investee company shareholder value. | ||
Those people on the inside of a company, most obviously its executives, know their businesses much more intimately. Therefore, it is usually appropriate to leave strategic matters in their hands. However, if that strategy is not working, or alternatives need exploring, IP will seek to influence the direction of that company where practicable. In IPs view, this is part of its responsibility to investors, where possible, in shaping strategy. Ultimately the business performance will have an impact on the returns generated by IPs portfolios, whether it is in terms of share price performance or dividends, and IP wants to seek to ensure that the capital IP has invested on behalf of its clients is being used as effectively as possible. In the majority of cases IP is broadly in agreement with the direction of a company that it has invested in, as its initial decision to invest will have taken these factors into account. But these issues demand regular review, which can only be achieved through company meetings. | ||
The building of this relationship facilitates frank and open discussion, and on-going interaction is an integral part of the fund managers role. The fact that IP has been a major shareholder in a number of companies for a long time, in particular within its domestic UK portfolios, reflects both the fact that IPs original investments were based on a joint understanding of where the businesses were going and the ability of the companies management to execute that plan. Inevitably there are times when IPs views diverge from those of the companies executives but, where possible, it attempts to work with companies towards a practical solution. However, IP believes that its status as part-owner of companies means that it has both the right and the responsibility to make its views known. The option of selling out of those businesses is always open, but normally IP prefers to push for change, even if this can be a slow process. | ||
Specifically when considering resolutions put to shareholders, IP will pay attention to the companies compliance with the relevant local requirements. In addition, when analysing companies prospects for future profitability and hence returns to shareholders, IP will take many variables into account, including but not limited to, the following: |
- | Nomination and audit committees | ||
- | Remuneration committee and directors remuneration | ||
- | Board balance and structure | ||
- | Financial reporting principles | ||
- | Internal control system and annual review of its effectiveness | ||
- | Dividend and Capital Management policies | ||
- | Socially Responsible Investing policies |
6. | Non-routine resolutions and other topics | |
These will be considered on a case-by-case basis and where proposals are put to the vote will require proper explanation and justification by (in most instances) the Board. Examples of such proposals would be all political donations and any proposal made by a shareholder or body of shareholders (typically a pressure group). | ||
Apart from the three fundamental voting objectives set out under Responsible Voting above, considerations that IP might apply to non-routine proposals will include: |
- | The degree to which the companys stated position on the issue could affect its reputation and/ or sales, or leave it vulnerable to boycott or selective purchasing | ||
- | Peer group response to the issue in question | ||
- | Whether implementation would achieve the objectives sought in the proposal | ||
- | Whether the matter is best left to the Boards discretion. |
B-21
Invesco Perpetual
|
04 | |||
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship
|
7. | Evaluation of companies environmental, social and governance arrangements | |
At IP, each fund manager is individually responsible for environmental, social and governance (ESG) matters, rather than utilising ESG professionals or an internal / external discrete team independent from the fund management process. ESG issues are deemed as an essential component of the fund managers overall investment responsibilities. Additionally, fund managers may call on the support of the IP Investment Management Operations team on any ESG matter. | ||
As mentioned in Section 5, company meetings are an integral part of IPs investment research approach and discussions at these meetings include all matters that might affect the share price, including ESG issues. | ||
IPs research is structured to give it a detailed understanding of a companys key historical and future, long-term business drivers, such as demand for its products, pricing power, market share trends, cash flow and management strategy. This enables IPs investment teams to form a holistic opinion of management strategy, the quality of the management, an opinion on a companys competitive position, its strategic advantages/ disadvantages, and corporate governance arrangements, thus incorporating any inherent ESG issues. | ||
IP will, when evaluating companiesgovernance arrangements, particularly those relating to board structure and composition, give due weight to all relevant factors brought to its attention. |
8. | Disclosure and reporting | |
Although IP acknowledges initiatives of transparency, it is also very aware of its fiduciary duty and the interests of all investors in portfolios managed by them. As such, IP is very cognisant that disclosure of any meeting specific information may have a detrimental effect in its ability to manage its portfolios and ultimately would not be in the best interests of all clients. Primarily, this is for investor protection and to allow IPs fund managers to manage their portfolios in the interests of all its clients. | ||
Although IP does not report specific findings of company meetings for external use, it will seek to provide regular illustrations to demonstrate that active engagement is at the heart of its investment process. | ||
For clients with individual mandates, (i.e. not invested in a fund), IP may discuss specific issues where it can share details of a clients portfolio with that specific client. Occasionally, where IP has expressed strong views to management over matters of governance, those views have gained media attention, but IP will never seek to encourage such debates in the media. | ||
On request from investors, IP will in good faith provide records of voting instructions given to third parties such as trustees, depositaries and custodians provided that: |
- | In IPs view, it does not conflict with the best interests of other investors; and | ||
- | It is understood that IP will not be held accountable for the expression of views within such voting instructions and | ||
- | IP is not giving any assurance nor undertaking nor has any obligation to ensure that such instructions resulted in any votes actually being cast. Records of voting instructions within the immediate preceding three months will not normally be provided for activities within the funds managed by IP |
Note: | ||
The record of votes will reflect the voting instruction of the relevant fund manager. This may not be the same as votes actually cast as IP is entirely reliant on third parties complying promptly with such instructions to ensure that such votes are cast correctly. Accordingly, the provision of information relating to an instruction does not mean that a vote was actually cast, just that an instruction was given in accordance with a particular view taken. |
B-22
Invesco Perpetual
|
05 | |||
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship
|
9. | The UK Stewardship Code | |
The UK Stewardship Code (the Code) issued by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) aims to enhance the quality of engagement between institutional investors and companies to help improve long-term returns to shareholders and the efficient exercise of governance responsibilities. The Code sets out seven principles, which support good practice on engagement with UK investee companies and to which the FRC believes institutional investors should aspire. The Code is applied on a comply or explain approach. IP sets out below how it complies with each principle or details why it chooses not to. |
IP complies with Principle 1 and publishes the Invesco Perpetual Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship, which sets out how it will discharge its stewardship responsibilities, on the About us page on its website: | ||
www.invescoperpetual.co.uk | ||
The following is a summary: | ||
IP primarily defines stewardship as representing the best interests of clients in its fiduciary role as a discretionary asset manager (not asset owner) and as an institutional shareholder, i.e. an organization which pools large sums of money and invest those sums in securities, and other investment assets. This is considered more appropriate than undertaking the stewardship of investee companies, which we believe should always remain the responsibility of the directors and executives of those companies. IP may at times seek to influence strategies of investee companies, where appropriate, on behalf of its clients, but IP will never seek to be involved in the day to day running of any investee companies. As a result, in the interests of the beneficiaries of the assets under its management, IP will engage with investee companies on strategy, share value performance, risk, capital structure, governance, culture, remuneration and other significant matters that may be subject to voting in a general meeting and of proportional interest in terms of value discovery in a business. |
IP complies with Principle 2 by meeting its regulatory requirement of having an effective Conflicts of Interest Policy. Any conflicts of interest arising through its stewardship of investee companies will be handled in accordance with that policy. | ||
In respect of stewardship, IP anticipates the opportunity for conflicts arising would be limited, e.g. where it invests in a company that is also a broker (i.e. dealing) of, or client of IP. | ||
This Invesco UK Conflicts of Interest Policy is available on request and covers potential conflicts of interest in relation to stewardship. The Conflicts of Interest Policy defines a conflict of interest as a situation where there is a material risk of damage to the interests of a client arising because of the interests of Invesco and our clients differ and any client and those of another client differ. As UK Stewardship is carried out in our clients interests, there are limited opportunities for conflicts of interest arising and, where they do, these are managed appropriately. |
As an active shareholder, IP complies with Principle 3. Through its investment process, fund managers endeavour to establish on a proportionate basis, on-going dialogue with company management and this is likely to include regular meetings. In discussions with company boards and senior non-Executive Directors, IP will explore any concerns about corporate governance where these may impact on the best interests of clients, together with any other matters of particular value to shareholders. | ||
Meeting company boards of investee companies is a core part of IPs investment process and IP is committed to keeping records of all future key engagement activities. As part of the engagement process IP fund managers may choose to be made insiders (i.e. to be made privy to material, non-public information) to protect and/or enhance investor value. In such circumstances they will follow IPs regulatory required policy and processes to mitigate against market abuse, principally by systematically blocking any trading in insider securities. | ||
When casting votes on behalf of investors, IP keeps detailed records of all instructions given in good faith to third parties such as trustees, depositories and custodians. Although the rationale for voting in a particular manner is not automatically captured through the voting process, the individually responsible fund manager would be expected to be able to clearly articulate their decision whenever required. |
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Invesco Perpetual
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06 | |||
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship
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9. | The UK Stewardship Code |
IP complies with Principle 4 with its fund managers managing corporate governance matters independently being a key part of their investment process to protect and add value on behalf investors. Initially any issues/concerns would be raised by its fund managers through IPs process of on-going dialogue and company meetings. On occasions that a fund manager believes an issue is significant enough to be escalated, this will be done through IPs Chief Investment Officer (CIO) and the IP Investment Management Operations team who will ensure the relevant internal resources are made available to support the fund manager in securing the most appropriate outcome for IPs clients. |
IP is supportive of collective engagement in cases where objectives between parties are mutually agreeable, there are no conflicts of interest and, as they pertain to the UK market, are not in breach of concert party rules. Other shareholders can engage directly with the relevant fund manager or through an investment adviser. Alternatively, enquiries can be directed to any of the below: |
- | Stuart Howard Head of IP Investment Management Operations | ||
- | Dan Baker IP Investment Management Operations Manager | ||
- | Charles Henderson UK Equities Business Manager |
As detailed in Section 3, IP is committed to voting on all the UK (together with European and US) stocks it holds for its underlying investors and where it has the full discretion to do so. Whilst comprehensive records of IPs voting instructions are maintained, IP does not report specifically on its voting activity. Whilst being mindful of its fiduciary duty and the interest of all investors, IP believes that automatic public disclosure of its voting records may have a detrimental effect on its ability to manage its portfolios and ultimately would not be in the best interest of all clients. | ||
On specific requests from clients, IP will in good faith provide records of voting instructions given to third parties such as trustees, depositaries and custodians subject to limitations detailed in Section 8. | ||
IP uses ISS to process its voting decisions and the ABIs IVIS service for research for UK securities. Its instructions to ISS include a default instruction to vote with management, which is used only on the rare occasion when instructions are not successfully transmitted to ISS. IP will also consider the need to attend and vote at general meetings if issues prevent the casting of proxy votes within required time limits. | ||
IP does not enter into stock lending arrangements which might impact the voting process. |
IP complies with Principle 7 through a commitment to provide regular illustrations of its engagement activities and to respond to voting record requests from investors in its portfolios on an individual basis. | ||
Although IP does not report specific findings of company meetings for external use, we will seek to provide illustrations to demonstrate that active engagement is at the heart of its investment process. On request from investors, IP will in good faith provide records of voting instructions given to third parties such as trustees, depositaries and custodians subject to certain limitations outlined in Section 8. Although the rationale for its voting decision is not captured through the voting process, individual fund managers would be expected to articulate their decision whenever required. | ||
IP currently does not obtain an independent opinion on its engagement and voting processes as it believes any value for its clients from such an opinion is outweighed by the costs of obtaining such an opinion. There is also no material demand from clients to provide such an independent assurance. |
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07 | |||
Policy on Corporate Governance and Stewardship
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- | Likely impact of voting on management activity, versus the cost to the client | |
- | Portfolio management restrictions (e.g. share blocking) that may result from voting | |
- | Preferences, where expressed, of clients |
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1. | Purpose and Background |
2. | Application |
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3. | Proxy Administration, Records Management and Data Retention |
3.1 | Proxy Administration |
3.2 | Records Management and Data Retention |
4. | Reporting |
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| reduce the rights or options of shareholders, | ||
| reduce shareholder influence over the board of directors and management, | ||
| reduce the alignment of interests between management and shareholders, or | ||
| reduce the value of shareholders investments. |
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I. | BOARDS OF DIRECTORS |
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| Long-term financial company performance relative to a market index, | ||
| Composition of the board and key board committees, | ||
| Nominees attendance at board meetings, | ||
| Nominees time commitments as a result of serving on other company boards, | ||
| Nominees stock ownership position in the company, | ||
| Whether the chairman is also serving as CEO, and | ||
| Whether a retired CEO sits on the board. |
| Long-term financial performance of the company relative to its industry, | ||
| Managements track record, | ||
| Background to the proxy contest, | ||
| Qualifications of director nominees (both slates), | ||
| Evaluation of what each side is offering shareholders as well as the likelihood that the proposed objectives and goals can be met, and | ||
| Stock ownership positions in the company. |
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| Designated lead director, appointed from the ranks of the independent board members with clearly delineated duties; | ||
| Majority of independent directors; | ||
| All-independent key committees; | ||
| Committee chairpersons nominated by the independent directors; | ||
| CEO performance is reviewed annually by a committee of independent directors; and | ||
| Established governance guidelines. |
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II. | AUDITORS |
| It is not clear that the auditors will be able to fulfill their function; |
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| There is reason to believe the auditors have rendered an opinion that is neither accurate nor indicative of the companys financial position; or | ||
| The auditors have a significant professional or personal relationship with the issuer that compromises their independence. |
III. | COMPENSATION PROGRAMS |
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| ability to re-price underwater options without shareholder approval, | ||
| ability to issue options with an exercise price below the stocks current market price, | ||
| ability to issue reload options, or | ||
| automatic share replenishment (evergreen) features. |
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IV. | CORPORATE MATTERS |
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| will result in financial and operating benefits, | ||
| have a fair offer price, | ||
| have favourable prospects for the combined companies, and | ||
| will not have a negative impact on corporate governance or shareholder rights. |
V. | SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY |
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VI. | SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS |
| the proposals impact on the companys short-term and long-term share value, | ||
| its effect on the companys reputation, | ||
| the economic effect of the proposal, | ||
| industry and regional norms in which the company operates, | ||
| the companys overall corporate governance provisions, and | ||
| the reasonableness of the request. |
| the company has failed to adequately address these issues with shareholders, | ||
| there is information to suggest that a company follows procedures that are not in compliance with applicable regulations, or | ||
| the company fails to provide a level of disclosure that is comparable to industry peers or generally accepted standards. |
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VII. | OTHER |
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Voting opportunities which exist in relation to securities within each individual UCITS are monitored on an ongoing basis in order to ensure that advantage can be taken of any opportunity that arises to benefit the individual UCITS. |
| the cost of participating in the vote relative to the potential benefit to the UCITS | ||
| the impact of participation in a vote on the liquidity of the securities creating the voting opportunity due to the fact that some jurisdictions will require that the securities are not sold for a period if they are the subject of a vote. | ||
| Other factors as deemed appropriate by the Investment Manager in relation to the investment objectives and policy of the individual UCITS. |
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1.1 | Invesco recognises its fiduciary obligation to act in the best interests of all clients, be they retirement scheme trustees, institutional clients, unitholders in pooled investment vehicles or personal investors. The application of due care and skill in exercising shareholder responsibilities is a key aspect of this fiduciary obligation. | ||
1.2 | The sole objective of Invescos proxy voting policy is to promote the economic interests of its clients. At no time will Invesco use the shareholding powers exercised in respect of its clients investments to advance its own commercial interests, to pursue a social or political cause that is unrelated to clients economic interests, or to favour a particular client or other relationship to the detriment of others. | ||
1.3 | Invesco also recognises the broader chain of accountability that exists in the proper governance of corporations, and the extent and limitations of the shareholders role in that process. In particular, it is recognised that company management should ordinarily be presumed to be best placed to conduct the commercial affairs of the enterprise concerned, with prime accountability to the enterprises Board of Directors which is in turn accountable to shareholders and to external regulators and exchanges. The involvement of Invesco as an institutional shareholder will not extend to interference in the proper exercise of Board or management responsibilities, or impede the ability of companies to take the calculated commercial risks which are essential means of adding value for shareholders. | ||
1.4 | The primary aim of the policy is to encourage a culture of performance among investee companies, rather than one of mere conformance with a prescriptive set of rules and constraints. Rigid adherence to a checklist approach to corporate governance issues is of itself unlikely to promote the maximum economic performance of companies, or to cater for circumstances in which non-compliance with a checklist is appropriate or unavoidable. | ||
1.5 | Invesco considers that proxy voting rights are an asset which should be managed with the same care as any other asset managed on behalf of its clients. |
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2.1 | An important dimension of Invescos approach to corporate governance is the exercise of proxy voting authority at the Annual General Meetings or other decision-making forums of companies in which we manage investments on behalf of clients. | ||
2.2 | An initial issue to consider in framing a proxy voting policy is the question of where discretion to exercise voting power should rest with Invesco as the investment manager, or with each individual client? Under the first alternative, Invescos role would be both to make voting decisions on clients behalf and to implement those decisions. Under the second alternative, Invesco would either have no role to play, or its role would be limited solely to implementing voting decisions under instructions from our clients. | ||
2.3 | In addressing this issue, it is necessary to distinguish the different legal structures and fiduciary relationships which exist as between individually-managed clients, who hold investments directly on their own accounts, and pooled fund clients, whose investments are held indirectly under a trust structure. | ||
2.4 | Individually-Managed Clients | ||
2.4.1 | As a matter of general policy, Invesco believes that unless a clients mandate gives specific instructions to the contrary, discretion to exercise votes should normally rest with the investment manager, provided that the discretion is always exercised in the clients interests alone. | ||
2.4.2 | The reason for this position is that Invesco believes that, with its dedicated research resources and ongoing monitoring of companies, an investment manager is usually better placed to identify issues upon which a vote is necessary or desirable. We believe it is also more practical that voting discretion rests with the party that has the authority to buy and sell shares, which is essentially what investment managers have been engaged to do on behalf of their clients. | ||
2.4.3 | In cases where voting authority is delegated by an individually-managed client, Invesco recognises its responsibility to be accountable for the decisions it makes. If a client requires, an appropriate reporting mechanism will be put in place. | ||
2.4.4 | While it is envisaged that the above arrangements will be acceptable in the majority of cases, it is recognised that some individually-managed clients will wish to retain voting authority for themselves, or to place conditions on the circumstances in which it can be exercised by investment managers. In practice, it is believed that this option is generally only likely to arise with relatively large clients such as trustees of major superannuation funds or statutory corporations which have the resources to develop their own policies and to supervise their implementation by investment managers and custodians. In particular, clients who have multiple equity managers and utilise a master custody arrangement may be more likely to consider retaining voting authority in order to ensure consistency of approach across their total portfolio. | ||
2.4.5 | In any event, whatever decision is taken as to where voting authority should lie, Invesco believes that the matter should be explicitly covered by the terms of the investment management agreement and clearly understood by the respective parties. | ||
2.4.6 | Accordingly, Invesco will pursue the following policies with respect to the exercise of proxy voting authority for individually-managed clients: |
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2.5 | Pooled Fund Clients | ||
2.5.1 | The legal relationship between an investment manager and its pooled fund clients is different in a number of important respects from that applying to individually-managed clients. These differences have a bearing on how proxy voting authority is exercised on behalf of pooled fund clients. | ||
2.5.2 | These legal relationships essentially mean that the manager is required to act solely in the collective interests of unitholders at large rather than as a direct agent or delegate of each unitholder. On the issue of proxy voting, as with all other aspects of our client relationships, Invesco will naturally continue to be receptive to any views and concerns raised by its pooled fund clients. However, the legal relationship that exists means it is not possible for the manager to accept instructions from a particular pooled fund client as to how to exercise proxy voting authority in a particular instance. | ||
2.5.3 | As in the case of individually-managed clients who delegate their proxy voting authority, Invescos accountability to pooled fund clients in exercising its fiduciary responsibilities is best addressed as part of the managers broader client relationship and reporting responsibilities. | ||
2.5.4 | Accordingly, Invesco will pursue the following policies with respect to the exercise of proxy voting authority for pooled fund clients: |
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3.1 | This section outlines Invescos intended approach in cases where proxy voting authority is being exercised on clients behalf. | ||
3.2 | Invesco will vote on all material issues at all company meetings where it has the voting authority and responsibility to do so. We will not announce our voting intentions and the reasons behind them. | ||
3.3 | Invesco applies two underlying principles. First, our interpretation of material voting issues is confined to those issues which affect the value of shares we hold on behalf of clients and the rights of shareholders to an equal voice in influencing the affairs of companies in proportion to their shareholdings. We do not consider it appropriate to use shareholder powers for reasons other than the pursuit of these economic interests. Second, we believe that a critical factor in the development of an optimal corporate governance policy is the need to avoid unduly diverting resources from our primary responsibilities to add value to our clients portfolios through investment performance and client service. | ||
3.4 | In order to expand upon these principles, Invesco believes it is necessary to consider the role of proxy voting policy in the context of broader portfolio management and administrative issues which apply to our investment management business as a whole. These are discussed as follows. | ||
3.5 | Portfolio Management Issues Active Equity Portfolios | ||
3.5.1 | While recognising in general terms that issues concerning corporate governance practices can have a significant bearing on the financial performance of companies, the primary criterion for the selection and retention of a particular stock in active equity portfolios remains our judgment that the stock will deliver superior investment performance for our clients, based on our investment themes and market analysis. | ||
3.5.2 | In view of these dynamics, Invesco does not consider it feasible or desirable to prescribe in advance comprehensive guidelines as to how it will exercise proxy voting authority in all circumstances. The primary aim of Invescos approach to corporate governance is to encourage a culture of performance among the companies in which we manage investments in order to add value to our clients portfolios, rather than one of mere conformance with a prescriptive set of rules and constraints. | ||
3.5.3 | Nevertheless, Invesco has identified a limited range of issues upon which it will always exercise proxy voting authority either to register disapproval of management proposals or to demonstrate support for company initiatives through positive use of voting powers. These issues are outlined as follows: |
ä | contentious issues (eg. issues of perceived national interest, or where there has been extensive press coverage or public comment); | |
ä | approval of changes of substantial shareholdings; | |
ä | mergers or schemes of arrangement; and | |
ä | approval of major asset sales or purchases. |
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3.6 | Administrative Issues | ||
3.6.1 | In addition to the portfolio management issues outlined above, Invescos proxy voting policy also takes account of administrative and cost implications, together with the size of our holdings as compared to the issue size, involved in the exercise of proxy voting authority on our clients behalf. | ||
3.6.2 | There are practical constraints to the implementation of proxy voting decisions. Proxy voting is a highly seasonal activity, with most company Annual General Meetings being collapsed into a few months, with short deadlines for the distribution and return of notice papers, multiple resolutions from multiple companies being considered simultaneously, and under a legal system which is essentially dependent upon paper-based communication and record-keeping. | ||
3.6.3 | In addition, for investment managers such as Invesco who do not invest as principals and who consequently do not appear directly on the share registers of companies, all of these communications are channelled through external custodians, among whom there is in turn a considerable variation in the nature and quality of systems to deal with the flow of information. | ||
3.6.4 | While Invesco has the systems in place to efficiently implement proxy voting decisions when required, it can be seen that administrative and cost considerations by necessity play an important role in the application of a responsible proxy voting policy. This is particularly so bearing in mind the extremely limited time period within which voting decisions must often be made and implemented (which can in practice be as little as a few days). This factor also explains why Invesco resists any suggestion that there should be compulsory proxy voting on all issues, as in our view this would only increase the costs to be borne by our clients with very little practical improvement in corporate performance in most cases. | ||
3.6.5 | These administrative constraints are further highlighted by the fact that many issues on which shareholders are in practice asked to vote are routine matters relating to the ongoing administration of the company eg. approval of financial accounts or housekeeping amendments to Articles of Association. Generally in such cases, we will be in favour of the motion as most companies take seriously their duties and are acting in the best interests of shareholders. However, the actual casting of a yes vote on all such resolutions in our view would entail an unreasonable administrative workload and cost. | ||
3.6.6 | Accordingly, Invesco believes that an important consideration in the framing of a proxy voting policy is the need to avoid unduly diverting resources from our primary responsibilities to add value to our clients investments through portfolio management and client service. The policies outlined below have been prepared on this basis. |
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4.1 | The following diagram illustrates the procedures adopted by Invesco for the administration of proxy voting: |
4.2 | As shown by the diagram, a central administrative role is performed by our Corporate Action Team, located within the Client Administration section. The initial role of the Corporate Action Team is to receive company notice papers via the range of custodians who hold shares on behalf of our clients, to ascertain which client portfolios hold the stock, and to initiate the decision-making process by distributing the company notice papers to the Primary Investment Manager responsible for the company in question. | ||
4.3 | A voting decision on each company resolution (whether a yes or no vote, or a recommended abstention) is made by the Primary Investment Manager responsible for the company in question. Invesco believes that this approach is preferable to the appointment of a committee with responsibility for handling voting issues across all companies, as it takes advantage of the expertise of individuals whose professional lives are occupied by analysing particular companies and sectors, and who are familiar with the issues facing particular companies through their regular company visits. | ||
4.4 | Moreover, the Primary Equity Manager has overall responsibility for the relevant market and this ensures that similar issues which arise in different companies are handled in a consistent way across the relevant market. | ||
4.5 | The voting decision is then documented and passed back to the Corporate Action Team, who issue the voting instructions to each custodian in advance of the closing date for receipt of proxies by the company. At the same time, the Corporate Action Team logs all proxy voting activities for record keeping or client reporting purposes. | ||
4.6 | A key task in administering the overall process is the capture and dissemination of data from companies and custodians within a time frame that makes exercising votes feasible in practice. This applies particularly during the company Annual General Meeting season, when there are typically a large number of proxy voting issues under consideration simultaneously. Invesco has no control over the former dependency and Invescos ability to influence a custodians service levels are limited in the case of individually-managed clients, where the custodian is answerable to the client. |
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4.7 | The following policy commitments are implicit in these administrative and decision-making processes: |
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5.1 | Invesco will keep records of its proxy voting activities. | ||
5.2 | Upon client request, Invesco will regularly report back to the client on proxy voting activities for investments owned by the client. | ||
5.2 | The following points summarise Invescos policy commitments on the reporting of proxy voting activities to clients (other than in cases where specific forms of client reporting are specified in the clients mandate): |
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Date | Content | |
April 20, 2011
|
Revision associated with review of proxy voting guideline |
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1. | Procedural Proposal |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting approval of the financial statements, business reports and auditor reports, except in the following circumstances: |
- | Concerns exist about the settlement or auditing procedures; or | ||
- | The relevant company has not answered shareholders questions concerning matters that should be disclosed. |
| A decision regarding a proposal requesting approval of the allocation of earned surplus and dividends will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the financial condition and the business performance of the relevant company as well as the economic interests of shareholders. |
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(1) | Independence |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to elect an external director, however, we will oppose a candidate for an external director who is perceived to have an interest in the relevant company. | ||
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for an external director who does not have independence in the case of a committees organized company, except where the majority of the board are independent. | ||
| Listed parent and subsidiary |
| In principle we shall oppose a director candidate in the following case: |
- | An attendance rate of less than 75 percent at meetings of the board of directors. |
| In the following circumstances we will consider opposing a candidate for reelection as a director: |
- | If the relevant company has a problematic system as set forth bellow and if business performance of the relevant company during the term in office of the candidate experienced a deficit in three consecutive periods and no dividends were paid or they were inferior when compared to others in the same industry. | ||
- | If a takeover defense strategy is introduced, that has not been approved by a resolution of a general meeting of shareholders. |
| We will consider opposing a candidate for reelection as a director in the event that business |
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performance of the relevant company during the term in office of the candidate experienced a deficit in three consecutive periods and no dividends were paid. |
| We will consider opposing a candidate for reelection as a director in the event that business performance of the relevant company during the term in office of the candidate was inferior when compared to others in the same industry. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for reelection as a director in the event that during the term in office of the candidate a corporate scandal occurred that had a significant impact on society and caused or could cause damage to of shareholder value. | ||
| In principle we will consider opposing a candidate for reelection as a director in the event that during the term in office of the candidate window dressing or inappropriate accounting practices occurred on the part of the relevant company. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for director in the event that information concerning the relevant candidate has not been sufficiently disclosed. |
| A decision regarding a proposal concerning amendment of the number of directors or the composition of the board of directors will be made by making a comparison with the existing situation and considering, inter alia, the impact on the relevant company and the economic interests of shareholders. |
| A decision regarding a proposal concerning amendment of the required qualifications of directors, their terms of office or scope of liabilities will be made by making a comparison with the existing situation and considering, inter alia, the impact on the relevant company and the economic interests of shareholders. | ||
| In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting retention of a certain number of a companys own shares as a condition of installation or continuation in office of a director. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to restrict a term in office of a director. | ||
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to institute a normal retirement age of directors. | ||
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to reduce the liabilities of a director from liability in connection with financial damage as a result of a violation of the fiduciary duties. |
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| A decision regarding a proposal concerning amendment of the procedural method of electing directors will be made by making a comparison with the existing situation and considering, inter alia, the reasonability of the amendment. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for an external statutory auditor if the candidate does not have independence. |
(2) | Suitability |
| In principle we shall oppose a statutory auditor candidate in the following case: |
- | An attendance rate of less than 75 percent at meetings of the board of directors or meetings of the board of auditors |
(3) | Accountability |
| In principle we will consider opposing a candidate for reelection as a statutory auditor in the event that significant concerns exist in an audit report that has been submitted or audit proceedings. |
(4) | Antisocial Activities on the Part of the Company |
| In principle we will consider opposing a candidate for reelection as a statutory auditor in the event that during the term in office of the candidate a corporate scandal occurred that had a significant impact on society and caused or could cause damage to shareholder value. |
| In principle we will consider opposing a candidate for reelection as a statutory auditor in the event that during the term in office of the candidate window dressing or inappropriate accounting practices occurred on the part of the relevant company. |
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We will decide on proposals concerning the election of an accounting auditor by considering, inter alia, the suitability of the candidate for accounting auditor, and the level of audit fees. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for accounting auditor in the event that the accounting auditor can be determined to have expressed an opinion that is not accurate concerning the financial condition of the relevant company. |
| In principle we will oppose in the event that a contract for non-auditing work exists between the accounting auditor and the relevant company, and it is determined that the non-auditing work can be found to present a conflict of interest with the auditing work. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for accounting auditor in the event that an excessive auditing fee is paid. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting a change of accounting auditor in the event that the reason for the change can be determined to be a result of a difference in interpretation between the accounting auditor and the relevant company regarding accounting policy. |
| A decision regarding a proposal concerning compensation will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the levels of compensation, the business performance of the company, and the reasonability of the framework. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to obtain approval of compensation, except in the following cases: |
- | A negative correlation appears to exist between the business performance of the company and compensation |
- | A compensation framework or practice exists which presents an issue |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to pay compensation only by granting shares. |
(2) | Stock Option Plan |
| A proposal to introduce or amend a stock option plan will be decided in consideration of, inter alia, the impact that introducing or amending the plan will have on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, as well as the level of compensation, the scope of implementation, and the reasonability of the plan. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to reduce the exercise price of a stock option plan. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to request that an amendment of the exercise price of a stock option plan be made a matter for approval by the shareholders. |
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| A decision regarding a proposal requesting the introduction or amendment of a stock purchase plan will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact that introducing or amending the plan will have on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, the scope of implementation, and the reasonability of the plan. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to pay a retirement bonus of a director or a statutory auditor if all of the following conditions are satisfied. |
- | Retirement bonus amount is disclosed. |
- | The prospective recipients do not include an external director or an external statutory auditor. |
- | None of the prospective recipients have committed a significant criminal conduct. |
- | The business performance of the relevant company has not experienced a deficit for three consecutive periods and had no dividend or dividends or they were inferior when compared to others in the same industry. |
- | During the terms of office of the prospective recipients there has been no corporate scandal that had a significant impact on society and caused or could cause damage to shareholder value. |
- | During their terms in office there has been no window dressing or inappropriate accounting practices in the relevant company. |
| A decision regarding a proposal requesting an increase in the number of authorized shares will be made by considering, inter alia, the impact that amending the number of authorized shares will have on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, as well as the reasonability of the amendment of the number of authorized shares, and the impact on the listing of shares as well as on the continuity of the company. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting an increase in the number of authorized shares if it can be determined that unless an increase is made to the number of authorized shares the company will be delisted or that there is a risk of a significant impact on the continuity of the company. |
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| In principle we will oppose a proposal to increase the number of authorized shares after the appearance of an acquirer. |
| A decision regarding a proposal for a company to acquire or reissue its own shares shall be made by considering, inter alia, its reasonability. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal involving a stock split. |
| A decision regarding a proposal involving a consolidation of shares (reverse split) shall be made by considering, inter alia, its reasonability. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the creation of new preferred shares or increasing the authorized number of preferred shares, by way of a blank power of attorney that does not specify the voting rights, dividends, conversion or other rights. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to create new preferred shares or to increase the number of authorized preferred shares if the voting rights, dividends, conversion and other rights are stipulated and these rights can be determined to be reasonable. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to the effect that approval of issuing preferred shares is so be obtained from shareholders. |
| A decision regarding a proposal to issue convertible bonds shall be made by considering, inter alia, the number of shares into which the bonds are to be converted, and the period to maturity of the bonds. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with the issuing of non-convertible bonds or increasing a borrowing limit shall be made by considering, inter alia the financial condition of the relevant company. |
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| A decision regarding a proposal requesting an amendment of the number of authorized shares or issuing of shares of the company in relation to a debt restructuring shall be made in consideration of, inter alia, the conditions of amending the number of authorized shares or issuing shares of the company, the impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders, the reasonability thereof, and the impact on listing of the shares as well as on the continuity of the company. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with a capital reduction will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders, the reasonability of the capital reduction, as well as the impact on listing of the shares and on the continuity of the company. |
| In principle we will approve a proposal requesting a capital reduction in the form of a standard accounting processing. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with a financing plan will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, as well as the reasonability thereof, and the impact on the listing of shares as well as on the continuity of the company. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting approval of a financing plan. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting a capitalization of reserves. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting an amendment of the settlement period, except when it can be determined that the objective is to delay a general meeting of shareholders. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to amend the articles of incorporation if amendment of the articles of incorporation is necessary by law. |
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| In principle we will oppose a proposal to amend the articles of incorporation if it can be determined that there is a risk that the rights of shareholders will be infringed or a risk that a reduction in shareholder value will occur as a result of the relevant amendment. |
| In principal we will vote in favor of a proposal submitted by the board in connection with transition to a committees organized company. |
| In principal we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting mitigation or abolishment of the requirements for special resolution. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with an amendment of the quorum of a general meeting of shareholders will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders as well as the customs of the region or country. |
| A proposal in connection with amending the quorum of a special resolution of a general meeting of shareholders will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders as well as the customs of the region or country. |
| In principle we will oppose an omnibus proposal at a general meeting of shareholders if the entire proposal will not be in the best interests of shareholders. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting amendment of a tradename. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting amendment of a location of corporate registration. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with a corporate reorganization as set forth below will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, the respective impact on the financial condition and business performance of the relevant company, as well as the reasonability thereof, and the impact on the listing of shares as well as on the continuity of the company: |
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| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with election of a director from among opposing candidates will be made in consideration of the independence, suitability, existence or absence of any antisocial activities in the past, actions in corporate governance and accountability on the part of the candidates for director, the business performance of the company, the existence or absence of antisocial activities of the company, and the background to the proxy contest. |
| A person who is considered to be independent shall mean a person for whom there is no relationship between the relevant company and the candidate for director other than that of being selected as a candidate director of the relevant company. |
| Staggered Board |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the introduction of a staggered board of directors. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting that the terms in office of directors be one year. |
| Authority to Dismiss Directors |
In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting more stringent requirements for the shareholders to be able to dismiss a director. |
| Cumulative Voting |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to introduce cumulative voting in connection with the election of directors. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the abolition of cumulative voting in connection with the election of directors. |
| Introduction or Amendment of Takeover Defense Strategy | ||
In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting to introduce or amend a takeover defense strategy that will reduce shareholder value or infringe the rights of shareholders. |
| Rights Plan (Poison Pill) | ||
A decision regarding a proposal to introduce a rights plan (poison pill) will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the triggering conditions, the effective period, the conditions of disclosure of content, the composition of directors of the relevant company, and the status |
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of introducing other takeover defense strategies. |
- | In principal we will oppose a proposal in which, a triggering condition of the number of outstanding shares is less than 20%. | ||
- | In principal we will oppose a proposal that the effective period is beyond 3 years. | ||
- | In principal we will oppose a proposal that directors are not selected annually. |
- | In principal we will oppose a proposal in the event that there are less than 2 directors or 20% of the board who are independent with no issue of the attendance records of the board meeting. |
- | We will vote in favor for a proposal that a rights plan is considered by an independent committee before introducing such plan. We will vote in favor a proposal only if all special committee members are independent with no issue of the attendance records of the board meeting. |
- | In principal we will oppose a proposal in the event that other takeover defense strategies exist. |
- | In principal we will oppose a proposal in the event that the issuing date of invitation notice to shareholders is less than 3 weeks before the general shareholders meeting. |
- | In principal we will oppose a proposal unless the introduction of takeover defense strategies is considered reasonably beneficial to interests of minority shareholders. |
| Relaxation of Requirements to Amend the Articles of Incorporation or Company Regulations | ||
A decision regarding a proposal to relax the requirements to amend the articles of incorporation or company regulations will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders. |
| Relaxation of Requirements for Approval of a Merger | ||
A decision regarding a proposal to relax the requirements to approve a merger will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders. |
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11. | Information Disclosure |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal for which sufficient information is not disclosed for the purpose of making a voting decision. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to increase information disclosure, if all of the following standards are satisfied. |
- | The information will be beneficial to shareholders. | ||
- | The time and expense required for the information disclosure will be minimal. |
- | Invesco Limited. |
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| In principle we will vote in favor of a selection of the chairman of a general meeting of shareholders, approval of the minutes, approval of the shareholders registry and other proposals in connection with procedures to hold a general meeting of shareholders. | ||
| In principle we will vote in favor of a procedural proposal such as the following: |
- | Opening of a general meeting of shareholders | ||
- | Closing of a general meeting of shareholders | ||
- | Confirming the proper convening of a general meeting of shareholders | ||
- | Satisfaction of the quorum for a general meeting of shareholders | ||
- | Confirming the agenda items of a general meeting of shareholders | ||
- | Election of a chairman of a general meeting of shareholders |
- | Designation of shareholders who will sign the minutes of a general meeting of shareholders |
- | Preparing and approving a registry of shareholders |
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- | Filing of legally prescribed documents in connection with a general meeting of shareholders |
- | Designation of an inspector or shareholder to inspect the minutes of a general meeting of shareholders | ||
- | Permission to ask questions | ||
- | Approval of the issuing of minutes of a general meeting of shareholders |
- | Approval of matters of resolution and granting to the board of directors the authority to execute matters that have been approved |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting approval of the financial statements, business reports and auditor reports, except in the following circumstances: |
- | Concerns exist about the settlement or auditing procedures; or |
- | The relevant company has not answered shareholders questions concerning matters that should be disclosed. |
| A decision regarding a proposal requesting approval of the allocation of earned surplus and dividends will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the financial condition and the business performance of the relevant company as well as the economic interests of shareholders. |
| In the following circumstances we will in principle oppose or withhold approval of a |
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candidate for an internal director, or a candidate for an external director who cannot be found to have a relationship of independence from the relevant company: |
- | If the internal director or the external director who cannot be found to have a relationship of independence from the relevant company is a member of the compensation committee or the nominating committee; |
- | If the audit committee, compensation committee, or nominating committee has not been established and the director functions as a committee member; |
- | If the nominating committee has not been established; |
- | If external directors who are independent from the relevant company do not constitute a majority of the board of directors; |
- | A person who is independent shall mean a person for whom there is no relationship between the relevant company and the candidate for director other than that of being selected as a director. |
| In principle we shall oppose or withhold approval of a director candidate in the following circumstances: |
- | An attendance rate of less than 75 percent at meetings of any of the board of directors, the audit committee, the compensation committee, or the nominating committee; |
- | Serving as a director of six or more companies; or |
- | Serving as a CEO of another company and also serving as an external director of at least two other companies. |
| In principle we will oppose or withhold approval of all candidates for reelection in the event that the board of directors employs a system of staggered terms of office and a problem of governance has occurred in the board of directors or committee but the responsible director is not made a subject of the current proposal to reelect directors. |
| In the following circumstances we will in principle oppose or withhold approval of a candidate for reelection of a director who is a member of the audit committee: |
- | If an excessive auditing fee is being paid to the accounting auditor; |
- | If the accounting auditor has expressed an opinion of non-compliance concerning the |
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financial statements of the relevant company; or |
- | If the audit committee has agreed with the accounting auditor to reduce or waive the liability of accounting auditor, such as by limiting the right of the company or the shareholders to take legal action against the accounting auditor. |
| In the following circumstances we will in principle oppose or withhold approval of a candidate for reelection as a director who is a member of the compensation committee: |
- | If there appears to be a negative correlation between the business performance of the company and the compensation of the CEO; |
- | If in the case of an option for which the stock price of the relevant company is less than the exercise price, an amendment of the exercise price or an exchange for cash or the like has been made without the approval of a general meeting of shareholders; |
- | If an exchange (sale) of stock options which is limited to a single exercise has been made without obtaining the approval of a general meeting of shareholders; |
- | If the burn rate has exceeded the level promised in advance to shareholders (the burn rate is the annual rate of dilution measured by the stock options or rights to shares with restriction on assignment that have been actually granted (otherwise known as the run rate)); or |
- | If a compensation system or practice exists that presents a problem. |
| In the following circumstances we will in principle oppose or withhold approval of all candidates for reelection as directors: |
- | If the board of directors has not taken appropriate action regarding a shareholders proposal even if there was a shareholders proposal which was approved by a majority of the overall votes in the previous period at a general meeting of shareholders. |
- | If the board of directors has not taken appropriate action regarding a shareholders proposal even if a shareholders proposal has been approved by a majority of the valid votes in two consecutive periods at a general meeting of shareholders; |
- | If the board of directors has not taken appropriate action such as withdrawing a takeover defense strategy, despite a majority of shareholders having accepted a public tender offer; or |
- | If the board of directors has not taken appropriate action regarding the cause of opposition or withholding of approval even though at the general meeting of shareholders for the previous period there was a candidate for director who was opposed or for whom approval was withheld by a majority of the valid votes. |
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| In the following cases we will consider opposing or withholding approval from a candidate for reelection as a director: |
- | If a notice of convening states that there is a director with an attendance rate of less than 75% at meetings of the board of directors or committee meetings, but the name of the individual is not specifically stated. |
- | If the relevant company has a problematic system as set forth below, and business performance of the relevant company during the term in office of candidate has been in a deficit and with no dividend or is inferior when compared to those in the same industry in three consecutive periods : | ||
- | A system of staggered terms of office; | ||
- | A system of special resolution that is not by simple majority; | ||
- | Shares of stock with multiple votes; |
- | A takeover defense strategy that has not been approved by a resolution of a general meeting of shares; |
- | No clause for exceptions exists in the event that there are competing candidates, even though a system of majority resolution has been introduced for the election of directors; |
- | An unreasonable restriction is imposed on the authority of shareholders to convene an extraordinary general meeting of shareholders; or |
- | An unreasonable restriction is imposed on the shareholders right to seek approval or disapproval on the part of shareholders by means of a letter of consent by shareholders; |
- | In principle we will oppose or withhold approval of all candidates for reelection as directors in the event that a dead hand or similar provision is included in a poison pill, until this provision is abolished. |
- | In principle we will oppose or withhold approval of all candidates for reelection as directors in the event of introducing a new poison pill with an effective duration of 12 months or more (a long-term pill), or any renewal of a poison pill including a short-term pill with an effective period of less than 12 months, by the board of directors without the approval of a general meeting of shareholders. | ||
Nevertheless we will in principle vote in favor of all candidates for reelection as directors in the event of a new introduction if a commitment is made by binding resolution to seek approval of the new introduction at a general meeting of shareholders. |
- | In principle we will oppose or withhold approval of all candidates for reelection as directors in the event that a significant amendment to the disadvantage of shareholders is added to a poison pill, by the board of directors without the approval of a general meeting of shareholders. |
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| We will consider opposing or withholding a candidate for reelection as a director in the event that business performance of the relevant company during the term in office of the candidate experienced a deficit in three consecutive periods and no dividends were paid. |
| We will consider opposing or withholding candidate for reelection as a director in the event that business performance of the relevant company during the term in office of the candidate was inferior when compared to others in the same industry. |
| In principle we will oppose or withhold a candidate for reelection as a director in the event that during the term in office of the candidate a corporate scandal occurred that had a significant impact on society and caused or could cause damage to of shareholder value. |
| In principle we will oppose or withhold approval of a candidate for reelection as a director who was a member of the audit committee, if inappropriate accounting practices occurred at the relevant company such as window dressing, accounting treatment that deviates from GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles), or a significant omission in disclosure pursuant to Article 404 of the Sox Law. |
| In principle we will oppose or withhold a candidate for director in the event that information concerning the relevant candidate has not been sufficiently disclosed. |
(8) | Amendment of the Number and Composition of Directors |
| A decision regarding a proposal concerning amendment of the number of directors or the composition of the board of directors will be made by making a comparison with the existing situation and considering, inter alia, the impact on the relevant company and the economic interests of shareholders. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to diversify the composition of a board of directors. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to fix the number of members of a board of directors, except when it is determined that this is a takeover defense strategy. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to make shareholder approval unnecessary in connection with an amendment of the number of members or composition of the board of directors. |
| A decision regarding a proposal concerning amendment of the required qualifications of directors, their terms of office or scope of liabilities will be made by making a comparison |
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with the existing situation and considering, inter alia, the impact on the relevant company and the economic interests of shareholders |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting retention of a certain number of a companys own shares as a condition of installation or continuation in office of a director. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to restrict a term in office of a director. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to institute normal retirement age of directors. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to reduce the liabilities of a director from liability in connection with financial damage as a result of a violation of the fiduciary duties. |
| We will decide on proposal concerning amendment of the procedural method of electing directors will be made by making a comparison with the existing situation and considering, inter alia, the reasonability of the amendment. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to require the approval of the majority of the valid votes for an election of a director. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to prohibit the US style voting system. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with electing a statutory auditor shall be made by considering, inter alia, the independence and suitability of the statutory auditor candidate. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for reelection as a statutory auditor in the event that significant concerns exist in an audit report that has been submitted or audit proceedings. |
| A person who is independent shall mean a person for whom there is no relationship between the relevant company and the candidate for statutory auditor other than that of being selected as a statutory auditor. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for accounting auditor in the event that the accounting auditor can be determined to have expressed an opinion that is not accurate concerning the financial condition of the relevant company. |
| In principle we will oppose in the event that a contract for non-auditing work exists |
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between the accounting auditor and the relevant company, and it is determined that the non-auditing work can be found to present a conflict of interest with the auditing work. |
| In principle we will oppose a candidate for accounting auditor in the event that an excessive auditing fee is paid. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting a change of accounting auditor in the event that the reason for the change can be determined to be a result of a difference in interpretation between the accounting auditor and the relevant company regarding accounting policy. |
| Proposals concerning compensation will be decided in consideration of, inter alia, levels of compensation, business performance of the company, and the reasonability of the framework. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to obtain approval of compensation reports, except in the following cases: |
- | A negative correlation appears to exist between the business performance of the company and compensation. |
- | A compensation framework or practice exists which presents an issue. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to set an absolute level or maximum compensation. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to pay compensation only by granting shares. |
| A proposal to introduce or amend a stock option plan will be decided in consideration of, inter alia, the impact that introducing or amending the plan will have on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, as well as the level of compensation, the scope of implementation and the reasonability of the plan. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to reduce the exercise price of a stock option plan. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to request that an amendment of the exercise price of a stock option plan be made a matter for approval by the shareholders. |
| A decision regarding a proposal requesting the introduction or amendment of a stock purchase plan will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact that introducing or amending the plan will have on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, the scope of implementation and the reasonability of the plan. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with awarding a retirement bonus to a |
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director or a statutory auditor will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the extent of the persons who are to be recipients, the existence or absence of antisocial activities in the past on the part of the prospective recipients, the business performance of the company, and the existence or absence of antisocial activities on the part of the company. In principle we will oppose awarding a retirement bonus in the event that a significant criminal act has been committed by the recipient during his or her term in office. Moreover we will also consider opposing the awarding of a retirement bonus in the event that the business performance of the relevant company during the term in office of the candidate experienced a deficit in three consecutive periods and no dividends were paid or they were inferior when compared to others in the same industry. In principle we will oppose awarding a retirement bonus in the event that during the term in office of the recipient inappropriate accounting practices occurred such as window dressing or accounting treatment that deviates from generally accepted accounting principles or a significant omission in disclosure, or a corporate scandal occurred, which had a significant impact on society and caused or could cause damage to shareholder value. |
| A decision regarding a proposal requesting an increase in the number of authorized shares of stock shall be made by considering, inter alia, the impact that amending the number of authorized shares will have on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders, as well as the reasonability of the amendment of the number of authorized shares, and the impact on the listing of shares as well as on the continuity of the company. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting an increase in the number of authorized shares if it can be determined that unless an increase is made to the number of authorized shares the company will be delisted or that there is a risk of a significant impact on the continuity of the company. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to increase the number of authorized shares after the appearance of an acquirer. |
| In principle if the existing shareholders will be granted new share subscription rights (pre-emptive purchase rights) we will vote in favor of a proposal to issue new shares up to 100 percent of the number of shares issued and outstanding. |
| If the existing shareholders will not be granted new share subscription rights (pre-emptive purchase rights) we will in principle vote in favor of a proposal to issue new shares up to 20 percent of the number of shares issued and outstanding. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal to issue new shares after an acquirer has appeared. |
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| A decision regarding a proposal for a company to acquire or reissue its own shares shall be made by considering, inter alia, its reasonability. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal involving a stock split. |
| A decision regarding a proposal involving a consolidation of shares (reverse split) shall be made by considering, inter alia, its reasonability. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal reducing the par value of shares. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with creating new preferred shares or amending the number of authorized preferred shares shall be made by considering, inter alia, the existence or absence of voting rights, dividends, conversion or other rights to be granted to the preferred shares as well as the reasonability of those rights. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the creation of new preferred shares or increasing the authorized number of preferred shares, by way of a blank power of attorney that does not specify the voting rights, dividends, conversion or other rights. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to create new preferred shares or to increase the number of authorized preferred shares if the voting rights, dividends, conversion and other rights are stipulated and these rights can be determined to be reasonable. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to make the issuing of preferred shares a matter for approval by the shareholders. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the creation of new shares with differing voting rights or increasing the authorized number of shares with differing voting rights. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to convert to a capital structure in which there is one vote per share. |
| A decision regarding a proposal to issue convertible bonds shall be made by considering, inter alia, the number of shares into which the bonds are to be converted, and the period to maturity of the bonds. |
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| A decision regarding a proposal to issue non-convertible bonds will be made by considering, inter alia, the financial condition of the relevant company. |
| A decision regarding a proposal to increase a borrowing limit shall be made by considering, inter alia, the financial condition of the relevant company. |
| A decision regarding a proposal requesting an amendment of the number of authorized shares or issuing of shares of the company in relation to a debt restructuring shall be made in consideration of, inter alia, the conditions of amending the number of authorized shares or issuing shares of the company, the impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders, the reasonability thereof, as well as the impact on listing of the shares and on the continuity of the company. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with a capital reduction will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders, the reasonability of the capital reduction, as well as the impact on listing of the shares and on the continuity of the company. |
| In principle we will approve a proposal requesting a capital reduction in the form of a standard accounting processing. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with a financing plan will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders, as well as the reasonability thereof, and the impact on the listing of shares as well as on the continuity of the company. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting approval of a financing plan. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting a capitalization of reserves. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting an amendment of the settlement period, except when it can be determined that the objective is to delay a general meeting of shareholders. |
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| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with an amendment of the articles of incorporation will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders as well as the necessity and the reasonability of amending the articles of incorporation. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to amend the articles of incorporation if amendment of the articles of incorporation is necessary by law. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to amend the articles of incorporation if it can be determined that there is a risk that the rights of shareholders will be infringed or a risk that a reduction in shareholder value will occur as a result of the relevant amendment. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with amending the quorum of a general meeting of shareholders and a special resolution of a general shareholders meeting will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders as well as the customs of the region or country. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to reduce the quorum of a general meeting of shareholders. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to reduce the quorum of a special resolution. |
| In principle we will oppose an omnibus proposal at a general meeting of shareholders if the entire proposal will not be in the best interests of shareholders. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting anonymous voting, an independent vote counter, an independent inspector, and separate disclosure of the results of voting on a resolution of a general meeting of shareholders. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting to grant to a company the authority to postpone a general meeting of shareholders. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting a relaxation or abolishment of the requirement for a super majority. |
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| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting amendment of a tradename. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting amendment of a location of corporate registration. |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with a corporate reorganization as set forth below will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the respective impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders, the impact on the financial condition and on the business performance of the relevant company, as well as the reasonability thereof, and the impact on the listing of shares as well as on the continuity of the company: |
| A decision regarding a proposal in connection with election of a director from among opposing candidates will be made in consideration of the independence, suitability, existence or absence of any antisocial activities in the past on the part of a candidate for director, the actions in corporate governance, accountability the business performance of the company, the existence or absence of antisocial activities of the company, and the background to the proxy contest. |
| A person who is considered to be independent shall mean a person for whom there is no relationship between the relevant company and the candidate for director other than that of being selected as a candidate director of the relevant company. |
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| Staggered Board | ||
In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the introduction of staggered board of directors: |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the introduction of a staggered board of directors. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting that the terms in office of directors be one year. |
| Authority to Dismiss Directors | ||
In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting more stringent requirements for the shareholders to be able to dismiss a director. |
| Cumulative Voting |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to introduce cumulative voting in connection with the election of directors. However, in principle we will oppose a proposal which a majority of valid votes is required to elect a director except in the event that shareholders are able to write-in their own candidate in the convening notice or ballot of the company and the number of candidates exceeds a prescribed number. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal requesting the abolition of cumulative voting in connection with the election of directors. |
| Authority to Call an Extraordinary General Meeting of Shareholders |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting a right of shareholders to call an extraordinary general meeting of shareholders. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to abolish restrictions on the right of shareholders to call an extraordinary general meeting of shareholders. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to restrict or prohibit the right of shareholders to call an extraordinary general meeting of shareholders. |
| Letter of Consent Seeking Approval or Disapproval from Shareholders |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting that shareholders have the right to seek approval or disapproval on the part of shareholders by means of a letter of consent. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to abolish restrictions on the right of shareholders to seek approval or disapproval on the part of shareholders by means of a letter of consent. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to restrict or prohibit the right of shareholders to seek approval or disapproval on the part of shareholders by means of a letter of consent. |
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| Rights Plan (Poison Pill) | ||
A decision regarding a proposal in connection with introducing a rights plan (poison pill) will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the triggering conditions, the effective period, the conditions of disclosure of content, the composition of directors of the relevant company, and the status of introducing other takeover defense strategies. |
| Fair Price Conditions | ||
A decision regarding a proposal in connection with introducing fair price conditions will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the triggering conditions, the decision-making process for triggering, and the reasonability of the plan. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting the introduction of fair price conditions, provided that the following is satisfied. |
- | At the time of triggering the fair price provision, the approval of a majority or not more than a majority of shareholders without a direct interest in the acquisition is to be sought |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to reduce the number of approvals by shareholders that is necessary to trigger fair price provision. |
| Anti-Greenmail Provision | ||
A decision regarding a proposal in connection with introducing an anti-greenmail provision will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the triggering conditions, the decision-making process for triggering, and the reasonability of the plan. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting the introduction of anti-greenmail provisions, provided that all of the following standards are satisfied: |
- | The definition of greenmail is clear |
- | If a buyback offer is to be made to a person who holds a large number of shares, that the buy-back offer will be made to all shareholders, or confirmation will be made that shareholders who do not have a direct interest in the takeover do not oppose the buyback offer to the person who holds a large number of shares. |
- | No clause is included which would restrict the rights of shareholders, such as measures to deter being bought out. |
| Golden Parachute and Tin Parachute Conditions | ||
A decision regarding a proposal in connection with introducing a golden parachute or a tin parachute will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the triggering conditions, the decision-making process for triggering, the level of compensation to be provided and the |
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reasonability of the plan. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to introduce or amend a golden parachute or a tin parachute if all of the following criteria are satisfied: |
- | The triggering of the golden parachute or the tin parachute will be determined by an independent committee. | ||
- | The payable compensation shall be no more than three times the employment compensation payable for a year. | ||
- | Payment of compensation shall be made after the transfer of control. |
| Classified Shares | ||
In principle we will oppose a proposal in connection with creating new classified shares with multiple voting rights. | |||
A decision regarding a proposal in connection with creating new classified shares with no voting rights or less voting rights will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the terms of the classified shares. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to create classified shares with multiple voting rights. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to create new classified shares with no voting rights or less voting rights if all of the following conditions are satisfied. |
- | The objective of creating the new classified shares is to obtain financing while minimizing the dilution of the existing shareholders. |
- | The creation of the new classified shares does not have an objective of protecting the voting rights of shareholders that have a direct interest in a takeover or of major shareholders. |
| Issuing New Shares to a White Squire or a White Knight | ||
A decision regarding a proposal in connection with issuing shares to a white squire or a white knight will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the conditions of issuing the shares. |
| Relaxation of Requirements to Amend the Articles of Incorporation or Company Regulations | ||
A decision regarding a proposal to relax the requirements to amend the articles of incorporation or company regulations will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and the rights of shareholders. |
B-83
| Relaxation of Requirements for Approval of a Merger | ||
A decision regarding a proposal to relax the requirements to approve a merger will be made in consideration of, inter alia, the impact on shareholder value and on the rights of shareholders. |
| Introduction or Amendment of Takeover Defense Strategy | ||
In principle we will oppose a proposal in connection with introducing or amending a takeover defense strategy that will reduce shareholder value or infringe the rights of shareholders. |
| In principle we will oppose a proposal for which sufficient information is not disclosed for the purpose of making a voting decision. |
| In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to increase information disclosure, if all of the following criteria are satisfied. |
- | The information will be beneficial to shareholders. | ||
- | The time and expense required for the information disclosure will be minimal. |
| Ex Post Facto Approval of Actions by Directors and Executive Officers | ||
In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting ex post facto approval of an action taken by the directors or executive officers as long as there are no material concerns such as having committed an act in violation of fiduciary duties. |
| Separation of Chairman of the Board of Directors and CEO |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to have a director who is independent from the relevant company serve as the chairman of the board of directors as long as there are not sufficient reasons to oppose the proposal, such as the existence of a corporate governance organization that will counter a CEO who is also serving as chairman. |
B-84
- | A person considered to be independent shall mean a person for whom there is no relationship between the relevant company and the director other than that of being selected as a director. |
| Independence of Board of Directors |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to have directors who are independent from the relevant company account for at least a majority or more than two-thirds of the members of the board of directors. |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal that the audit committee, compensation committee and nominating committee of the board of directors shall be composed solely of independent directors. |
- | A person considered to be independent shall mean a person for whom there is no relationship between the relevant company and the director other than that of being selected as a director. |
| Ex Post Facto Approval of Actions by Statutory Auditors | ||
In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting ex post facto approval of an action taken by a statutory auditor as long as there are no material concerns such as having committed an act in violation of fiduciary duties. |
| Attendance by a Statutory Auditor at a General Meeting of Shareholders | ||
In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting that a statutory auditor attend a general meeting of shareholders. |
| Fees of an accounting auditor |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal requesting that the decision on the fees of an accounting auditor is left up to the discretion of the board of directors. |
- | In principle we will oppose a proposal to reduce or waive the liability of an accounting auditor. |
| Selection of the Accounting Auditor by a General Meeting of Shareholders |
- | In principle we will vote in favor of a proposal to make the selection of an accounting auditor a matter for resolution by a general meeting of shareholders. |
B-85
- | Invesco Limited. |
B-86
1. | Proxy Voting Policy |
1.1 | Introduction | ||
Invesco recognises its fiduciary obligation to act in the best interests of all clients, be they superannuation trustees, institutional clients, unit-holders in managed investment schemes or personal investors. One way Invesco represents its clients in matters of corporate governance is through the proxy voting process. | |||
This policy sets out Invesco Australias approach to proxy voting in the context of portfolio management, client service responsibilities and corporate governance principles. | |||
This policy applies to; |
| all Australian based and managed funds and mandates, in accordance with IFSA Standard No. 13.00 October 2004, clause 9.1 and footnote #3. |
This policy does not apply; |
| where investment management of an international fund has been delegated to an overseas Invesco company, proxy voting will rest with that delegated manager. |
In order to facilitate its proxy voting process and to avoid conflicts of interest where these may arise, Invesco may retain a professional proxy voting service to assist with in-depth proxy research, vote recommendations, vote execution, and the necessary record keeping. | |||
1.2 | Guiding Principles | ||
1.2.1 | The objective of Invescos Proxy Voting Policy is to promote the economic interests of its clients. At no time will Invesco use the shareholding powers exercised in respect of its clients investments to advance its own commercial interests, to pursue a social or political cause that is unrelated to clients economic interests, or to favour a particular client or other relationship to the detriment of others. | ||
1.2.2 | The involvement of Invesco as an institutional shareholder will not extend to interference in the proper exercise of Board or management responsibilities, or impede the ability of companies to take the calculated commercial risks which are essential means of adding value for shareholders. | ||
1.2.3 | The primary aim of the policy is to encourage a culture of performance among investee companies, rather than one of mere conformance with a prescriptive set of rules and constraints. | ||
1.2.4 | Invesco considers that proxy voting rights are an important power, which if exercised diligently can enhance client returns, and should be managed with the same care as any other asset managed on behalf of its clients. | ||
1.2.5 | Invesco may choose not to vote on a particular issue if this results in shares being blocked from trading for a period of more than 4 |
B-87
hours; it may not be in the interest of clients if the liquidity of investment holdings is diminished at a potentially sensitive time, such as that around a shareholder meeting. |
1.3 | Proxy Voting Authority | ||
1.3.1 | Authority Overview | ||
An important dimension of Invescos approach to corporate governance is the exercise of proxy voting authority at the Annual General Meetings or other decision-making forums of companies in which we manage investments on behalf of clients. | |||
Proxy voting policy follows two streams, each defining where discretion to exercise voting power should rest with Invesco as the investment manager (including its ability to outsource the function), or with individual mandate clients. | |||
Under the first alternative, Invescos role would be both to make voting decisions, for pooled funds and on individual mandate clients behalf, and to implement those decisions. | |||
Under the second alternative, where IM clients retain voting control, Invesco has no role to play other than administering voting decisions under instructions from our clients on a cost recovery basis. | |||
1.3.2 | Individually-Managed Clients | ||
IM clients may elect to retain voting authority or delegate this authority to Invesco. If delegated, Invesco will employ either ISS or ASCI guidelines (selected at inception by the client) but at all times Invesco Investment Managers will retain the ability to override any decisions in the interests of the client. Alternate overlays and ad hoc intervention will not be allowed without Board approval. | |||
In cases where voting authority is delegated by an individually-managed client, Invesco recognises its responsibility to be accountable for the decisions it makes. | |||
Some individually-managed clients may wish to retain voting authority for themselves, or to place conditions on the circumstances in which it can be exercised by investment managers 1 . | |||
The choice of this directive will occur at inception or at major review events only. Individually managed clients will not be allowed to move on an ad hoc basis between delegating control to the funds manager and full direct control. |
1 | In practice, it is believed that this option is generally only likely to arise with relatively large clients such as trustees of major superannuation funds or statutory corporations that have the resources to develop their own policies and to supervise their implementation by investment managers and custodians. In particular, clients who have multiple equity managers and utilise a master custody arrangement may be more likely to consider retaining voting authority in order to ensure consistency of approach across their total portfolio. Such arrangements will be costed into administration services at inception. |
B-88
1.3.3 | Pooled Fund Clients | ||
The funds manager is required to act solely in the collective interests of unit holders at large rather than as a direct agent or delegate of each unit holder. The legal relationship that exists means it is not possible for the manager to accept instructions from a particular pooled fund client as to how to exercise proxy voting authority in a particular instance. | |||
Invescos accountability to pooled fund clients in exercising its fiduciary responsibilities is best addressed as part of the managers broader client relationship and reporting responsibilities. | |||
In considering proxy voting issues arising in respect of pooled fund shareholdings, Invesco will act solely in accordance with its fiduciary responsibility to take account of the collective interests of unit holders in the pooled fund as a whole. | |||
All proxy voting decisions may be delegated to an outsourced provider, but Invesco investment managers will retain the ability to override these decisions in the interests of fund unit holders. | |||
1.4 | Key Proxy Voting Issues | ||
1.4.1 | Issues Overview | ||
Invesco will consider voting requirements on all issues at all company meetings directly or via an outsourced provider. We will generally not announce our voting intentions and the reasons behind them. | |||
1.4.2 | Portfolio Management Issues | ||
Invesco does not consider it feasible or desirable to prescribe in advance comprehensive guidelines as to how it will exercise proxy voting authority in all circumstances. The primary aim of Invescos approach to corporate governance is to encourage a culture of performance among the companies in which we invest in order to add value to our clients portfolios, rather than one of mere conformance with a prescriptive set of rules and constraints. | |||
As a general rule, Invesco will vote against any actions that will reduce the rights or options of shareholders, reduce shareholder influence over the board of directors and management, reduce the alignment of interests between management and shareholders, or reduce the value of shareholders investments, unless balanced by reasonable increase in net worth of the shareholding. | |||
Where appropriate, Invesco will also use voting powers to influence companies to adopt generally accepted best corporate governance practices in areas such as board composition, disclosure policies and the other areas of recommended corporate governance practice. | |||
Administrative constraints are highlighted by the fact that many issues on which shareholders are in practice asked to vote are routine matters relating to the ongoing administration of the company eg. approval of financial accounts or housekeeping amendments to Articles of Association. Generally in such cases, |
B-89
Invesco will be in favour of the motion as most companies take seriously their duties and are acting in the best interests of shareholders. However, reasonable consideration of issues and the actual casting of a vote on all such resolutions would entail an unreasonable administrative workload and cost. For this reason, Invesco may outsource all or part of the proxy voting function at the expense of individual funds. Invesco believes that an important consideration in the framing of a proxy voting policy is the need to avoid unduly diverting resources from our primary responsibilities to add value to our clients investments through portfolio management and client service. |
1.5 | Internal Proxy Voting Procedure | ||
In situations where an override decision is required to be made or where the outsourced provider has recused itself from a vote recommendation, the responsible Investment Manager will have the final say as to how a vote will be cast. | |||
In the event that a voting decision is considered not to be in the best interests of a particular client or where a vote is not able to be cast, a meeting may be convened at any time to determine voting intentions. The meeting will be made up of at least three of the following: |
Chief Executive Officer; | |||
Head of Operations & Finance; | |||
Head of either Legal or Compliance; and | |||
Relevant Investment Manager(s). |
1.6 | Client Reporting |
Upon client election, Invesco will report quarterly or annually to the client on proxy voting activities for investments owned by the client. | |||
A record will be kept of the voting decision in each case by Invesco or its outsourced provider. Invesco will disclose on an annual basis, a summary of its proxy voting statistics on its website as required by IFSA standard No. 13 Proxy Voting. |
B-90
(a)(1)(a)
|
Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust dated May 15, 2012* | |
(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust, dated July 20, 2012* | |
(b)(1)(a)
|
Bylaws* | |
(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Bylaws* | |
(d)
|
Not Applicable | |
(g)(1)
|
Master Investment Advisory Agreement* | |
(2)
|
Master Intergroup Sub-Advisory Contract* | |
(3)
|
Memorandum of Agreement regarding Expense Limitations(18) | |
(4)
|
Memorandum of Agreement regarding Affiliated Money Market Fund Advisory Fee Waiver* | |
(h)(1)
|
Master Distribution Agreement* | |
(2)
|
Amended and Restated Plan of Distribution* | |
(i)
|
Memorandum of Agreement regarding 12b-1 Fee Waivers(18) | |
(j)(1)
|
Amended and Restated Master Custodian Contract(16) | |
(2)(i)
|
Transfer Agency and Service Agreement(16) | |
(ii)
|
Amendment to Transfer Agency and Service Agreement(16) | |
(iii)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Transfer Agency and Service Agreement, dated July 1, 2011* | |
(k)(1)(i)(a)
|
Master Administrative Services Agreement(16) | |
(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Master Administrative Services Agreement* | |
(c)
|
Amendment No. 2 to the Master Administrative Services Agreement* | |
(ii)(a)
|
Administration Agreement(16) | |
(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Administration Agreement* | |
(2)(i)
|
Revolving Credit and Security Agreement(15) | |
(ii)
|
Agreement of Amendment No. 2 and Assignment dated August 20, 2010(16) | |
(iii)
|
Agreement of Amendment No. 3 to the Revolving Credit and Security Agreement, dated August 18, 2011* | |
(iv)
|
Agreement of Amendment No. 4 to the Revolving Credit and Security Agreement, dated August 16, 2012* | |
(3)
|
Service Plan* | |
(4)
|
Second Amended and Restated Multi-Class Plan* | |
(5)
|
Master Sub-Accounting Services Agreement(17) |
C-1
(l)(1)
|
Opinion and Consent of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP regarding Class A Shares, Class B Shares and Class C Shares(9) | |
(2)
|
Opinion and Consent of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP regarding former Class B Shares (now Class IB Shares) and former Class C Shares (now Class IC Shares)(6) | |
(3)
|
Opinion and Consent of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP regarding Class A Shares, Class B Shares and Class C Shares(14) | |
(4)
|
Opinion and Consent of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP* | |
(n)
|
Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm* | |
(p)
|
Letter of Investment Intent(1) | |
(r)(1)
|
Invesco Advisers, Inc. Code of Ethics adopted January 1, 2011, relating to Invesco Advisers, Inc. and any of its subsidiaries* | |
(2)
|
Invesco Asset Management Limited Code of Ethics, dated 2011, relating to Invesco UK* | |
(3)
|
Invesco Ltd. Code of Conduct, dated October 2011, relating to Invesco Asset Management (Japan) Limited* | |
(4)
|
Invesco Staff Ethics and Personal Share Dealing policy, dated January 2013, relating to Invesco Hong Kong Limited* | |
(5)
|
Invesco Ltd. Code of Conduct, revised October 2011, relating to Invesco Canada Ltd.; Invesco Canada Ltd. Policy No. D-6 Gifts and Entertainment, revised November 2011, and Policy No. D-7 Invesco Canada Personal Trading Policy, revised September 2012, together the Code of Ethics relating to Invesco Canada Ltd.* | |
(6)
|
Invesco Asset Management Deutschland GmbH Code of Ethics, dated 2012, relating to Invesco Continental Europe* | |
(7)
|
Invesco Ltd. Code of Conduct, revised October 2011, relating to Invesco Australia Limited* | |
(8)
|
Invesco Senior Secured Management Code of Ethics* | |
(s)
|
Power of Attorney* |
(1) | Incorporated by reference to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-14499 and 811-5845, filed on October 21, 1996. |
(2) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-14999 and 811-5845, filed on November 13, 1997. |
(3) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-75911 and 811-5845, filed on November 8, 2000. |
(4) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 6 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-75911 and 811-5845, filed on November 27, 2002. |
(5) | Incorporated by reference to Amendment No. 1 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-14, File Nos. 333-103330 and 811-5845, filed on March 11, 2003. |
(6) | Incorporated by reference to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-104959 and 811-5845, filed on June 12, 2003. |
(7) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-104959 and 811-5845, filed on November 26, 2003. |
(8) | Incorporated by reference to the Funds Schedule TO filed on June 18, 2004. |
(9) | Incorporated by reference to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on February 15, 2005. |
(10) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on November 28, 2005. |
C-2
(11) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on September 29, 2006. |
(12) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 4 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on November 28, 2007. |
(13) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 5 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on November 26, 2008. |
(14) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 6 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on December 19, 2008. |
(15) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 7 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on November 24, 2009. |
(16) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on September 29, 2010. |
(17) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-5845, filed on November 29, 2010. |
(18) | Incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 11 to the Funds Registration Statement on Form N-2, File Nos. 333-121061 and 811-05845, filed on June 28, 2012. |
Securities and Exchange Commission fees
|
$ | 0 | ||
Printing and engraving expenses*
|
$ | 9,415 | ||
Legal fees*
|
$ | 33,983 | ||
Audit expenses*
|
$ | 74,057 | ||
Total
|
$ | 117,455 | ||
Title of Class
|
Number of Record Holders
|
|||
Class A Shares
|
1,002 | |||
Class B Shares
|
206 | |||
Class C Shares
|
439 | |||
Class IB Shares
|
9,064 | |||
Class IC Shares
|
938 |
C-3
C-4
C-5
C-6
By: |
/s/
Colin
Meadows
|
Signatures
|
Title
|
|
Principal Executive Officer:
|
||
/s/
Colin
Meadows
|
President and Principal Executive Officer
|
|
Principal Financial Officer: | ||
/s/
Sheri
Morris
|
Principal Financial Officer and Treasurer
|
|
Trustees: | ||
/s/
David
C. Arch*
|
Trustee | |
/s/
Jerry
D. Choate*
|
Trustee | |
/s/
Linda
Hutton Heagy*
|
Trustee | |
/s/
R.
Craig Kennedy*
|
Trustee | |
/s/
Colin
Meadows
|
Trustee | |
/s/
Hugo
F. Sonnenschein*
|
Trustee |
C-7
Signatures
|
Title
|
|
/s/
Wayne
W. Whalen*
|
Trustee | |
/s/
Suzanne
H. Woolsey*
|
Trustee | |
|
||
* Signed by John M. Zerr pursuant to a Power of Attorney filed herewith. | ||
/s/
John
M. Zerr
|
June 27, 2013 |
C-8
Exhibit
|
||
Number
|
Exhibit
|
|
(a)(1)(a)
|
Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust dated May 15, 2012 | |
(a)(1)(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust, dated July 20, 2012 | |
(b)(1)(a)
|
Bylaws | |
(b)(1)(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Bylaws | |
(g)(1)
|
Master Investment Advisory Agreement | |
(g)(2)
|
Master Intergroup Sub-Advisory Contract | |
(g)(4)
|
Memorandum of Agreement regarding Affiliated Money Market Fund Advisory Fee Waiver | |
(h)(1)
|
Master Distribution Agreement | |
(h)(2)
|
Amended and Restated Plan of Distribution | |
(j)(2)(iii)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Transfer Agency and Service Agreement dated July 1, 2011 | |
(k)(1)(i)(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Master Administrative Services Agreement | |
(k)(1)(i)(c)
|
Amendment No. 2 to the Master Administrative Services Agreement | |
(k)(1)(ii)(b)
|
Amendment No. 1 to the Administration Agreement | |
(k)(2)(iii)
|
Agreement of Amendment No. 3 to the Revolving Credit and Security Agreement, dated August 18, 2011 | |
(k)(2)(iv)
|
Agreement of Amendment No. 4 to the Revolving Credit and Security Agreement, dated August 16, 2012 | |
(k)(3)
|
Service Plan | |
(k)(4)
|
Second Amended and Restated Multi-Class Plan | |
(l)(4)
|
Opinion and Consent of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP | |
(n)
|
Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | |
(r)(1)
|
Invesco Advisers, Inc. Code of Ethics, adopted January 1, 2011, relating to Invesco Advisers, Inc. and any of its subsidiaries | |
(r)(2)
|
Invesco Asset Management Limited Code of Ethics, dated 2011, relating to Invesco UK | |
(r)(3)
|
Invesco Ltd. Code of Conduct, dated October 2011, relating to Invesco Asset Management (Japan) Limited | |
(r)(4)
|
Invesco Staff Ethics and Personal Share Dealing policy, dated January 2013, relating to Invesco Hong Kong Limited | |
(r)(5)
|
Invesco Ltd. Code of Conduct, revised October 2011, relating to Invesco Canada Ltd.; Invesco Canada Ltd. Policy No. D-6 Gifts and Entertainment, revised November 2011, and Policy No. D-7 Invesco Canada Personal Trading Policy, revised September 2012, together the Code of Ethics relating to Invesco Canada Ltd. | |
(r)(6)
|
Invesco Asset Management Deutschland GmbH Code of Ethics, dated 2012, relating to Invesco Continental Europe | |
(r)(7)
|
Invesco Ltd. Code of Conduct, revised October 2011, relating to Invesco Australia Limited | |
(r)(8)
|
Invesco Senior Secured Management Code of Ethics | |
(s)
|
Power of Attorney |
C-9
-1-
(a) | Affiliated Person, Commission, Company, Person, and Principal Underwriter shall have the meanings given them in the 1940 Act, as modified by or interpreted by any applicable order or orders of the Commission or any rules or regulations adopted or interpretive releases of the Commission thereunder; | ||
(b) | Agreement means this Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust, as it may be amended, amended and restated or supplemented from time to time; | ||
(c) | Board of Trustees or Board shall mean the governing body of the Trust, that is comprised of the number of Trustees of the Trust fixed from time to time pursuant to Article III hereof, having the powers and duties set forth herein; | ||
(d) | Bylaws means the Bylaws of the Trust as amended from time to time by the Trustees; | ||
(e) | Certificate of Trust shall mean the certificate of trust of the Trust filed on April 2, 2012 with the office of the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware as required under the Delaware Act, as such certificate may be amended or restated from time to time; | ||
(f) | class or class of Shares refers to the division of Shares into two or more classes as provided in Section 2.1; | ||
(g) | Code means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time, and the regulations promulgated thereunder; | ||
(h) | Covered Person means a person who is or was a Trustee, officer, employee or agent of the Trust, or is or was serving at the request of the Trustees as a director, trustee, partner, officer, employee or agent of another foreign or domestic corporation, trust, partnership, joint venture or other enterprise; | ||
(i) | Delaware Act refers to the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, 12 Del. C. § 3801 et seq., as such Act may be amended from time to time; | ||
(j) | Governing Instrument means collectively, this Agreement, the Bylaws, all amendments to this Agreement and the Bylaws, all written committee and sub-committee charters adopted by the Trustees, and every resolution of the Trustees or any committee or sub-committee of the Trustees that by its terms is incorporated by reference into this Agreement or stated to constitute part of the Trusts Governing Instrument, in each case as of the date of the adoption of each such resolution or amendment or modification thereto; |
-2-
(k) | Majority Shareholder Vote means the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Trust with each class of Shares voting together as a single class, except to the extent the 1940 Act or the Governing Instrument requires the separate vote of one or more classes of Shares, in which case the applicable proportion of such classes of Shares voting as a separate class, as the case may be, will be required; | ||
(l) | Majority Trustee Vote means the vote of a majority of the Trustees then in office; | ||
(m) | 1933 Act means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended from time to time, and the rules promulgated thereunder; | ||
(n) | 1940 Act means the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended from time to time, and the rules promulgated thereunder; | ||
(o) | Record Owner means, as of any particular time, a record owner of Shares of the Trust shown on the books of the Trust or the Trusts transfer agent as then issued and outstanding at such time; | ||
(p) | Registration Statement means a registration statement of the Trust relating to Shares filed with the Commission under the 1933 Act and the 1940 Act, and all amendments to such registration statement, as in effect from time to time. The effective date of a Registration Statement shall be the date on which such Registration Statement (and any amendments thereto) is declared effective by the Commission, or becomes effective pursuant to the 1933 Act and/or the 1940 Act; | ||
(q) | series or series of Shares refers to the designation of Shares representing any class as one or more series as provided in Section 2.1; | ||
(r) | Shareholder means, as of any particular time, an owner of outstanding Shares, whether beneficially or of record, of the Trust; | ||
(s) | Shares means the transferable units of beneficial interest into which the beneficial interest in the Trust shall be divided from time to time and includes fractions of Shares as well as whole Shares. All references to Shares shall be deemed to be Shares of any or all series or classes as the context may require; | ||
(t) | Trust means Invesco Van Kampen Senior Loan Fund, the Delaware statutory trust formed under the Original Declaration, as amended and restated by this Agreement, and by filing of the Certificate of Trust with the office of the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware and governed by this Agreement, as such instruments may be further amended, restated or supplemented from time to time; |
-3-
(u) | Trust Property means any and all property, real or personal, tangible or intangible, which is owned or held by or for the account of the Trust, or by the Trustees on behalf of the Trust; and | ||
(v) | Trustees means the natural persons who have signed this Agreement as trustees so long as they shall continue to serve as trustees of the Trust in accordance with the terms hereof, and all other natural persons who may from time to time be duly appointed as Trustee in accordance with the provisions of Section 3.4, or elected as Trustee by the Shareholders, and reference herein to a Trustee or to the Trustees shall refer to such natural persons in their capacity as Trustees hereunder. |
(a) | The Trustees may, without Shareholder approval, authorize one or more classes of Shares (which classes may be designated as one or more series), with Shares of each such class or series having such par value and such preferences, voting powers, terms of redemption, if any, and special or relative rights or privileges (including conversion rights, if any) as the Trustees may determine. Subject to applicable law, the Trustees may, without Shareholder approval, authorize the Trust to issue subscription or other rights representing interests in Shares to existing Shareholders or other persons subject to such terms and conditions as the Trustees may determine. The number of Shares of each class or series authorized shall be unlimited, and the Shares so authorized may be represented in part by fractional shares. The Trustees may without Shareholder approval from time to time divide or combine the Shares of any class or series into a greater or lesser number without thereby changing the proportionate beneficial interest in the class or series. All Shares issued hereunder, including without limitation, Shares issued in connection with a dividend or other distribution in Shares or a split or reverse split of shares, when issued on the terms determined by the Trustees, shall be fully paid and nonassessable. | ||
(b) | The Shares shall be designated as one class, a class of an unlimited number of common Shares, no par value (the Common Shares), having the powers, preferences, rights, qualifications, limitations and restrictions described below. |
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(c) | Shareholders shall have no power to vote on any matter except matters on which a vote of Shareholders is required by the 1940 Act or the Governing Instrument. | ||
(d) | Subject to any Board resolution establishing and designating a class of Shares, Shareholders shall have no preemptive or other right to subscribe for new or additional authorized, but unissued Shares or other securities issued by the Trust. | ||
(e) | Dividends or other distributions, when, as and if declared by the Board, shall be shared equally by the holders of Common Shares on a share for share basis. In the event of the termination of the Trust, the holders of the Common Shares shall be entitled to receive pro rata the net distributable assets of the Trust. | ||
(f) | Any Trustee, officer or other agent of the Trust, and any organization in which any such Person has an economic or other interest, may acquire, own, hold and dispose of Shares in the Trust, whether such Shares are authorized but unissued, or already outstanding, to the same extent as if such Person were not a Trustee, officer or other agent of the Trust; and the Trust may issue and sell and may purchase such Shares from any such Person or any such organization, subject to the limitations, restrictions or other provisions applicable to the sale or purchase of such shares herein, the 1940 Act and other applicable law. |
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(a) | The Trustees shall have exclusive and absolute control over the Trust Property and over the business of the Trust to the same extent as if the Trustees were the sole owners of the Trust Property and business in their own right, but with such powers of delegation as may be permitted by this Agreement. |
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(b) | The Trustees shall have power to conduct the business of the Trust and carry on its operations in any and all of its branches and maintain offices both within and without the State of Delaware, in any and all states of the United States of America, in the District of Columbia, in any and all commonwealths, territories, dependencies, colonies, or possessions of the United States of America, and in any and all foreign jurisdictions and to do all such other things and execute all such instruments as they deem necessary, proper or desirable in order to promote the interests of the Trust although such things are not herein specifically mentioned. | ||
(c) | The enumeration of any specific power in this Agreement shall not be construed as limiting the aforesaid power. The powers of the Trustees may be exercised without order of or resort to any court or other authority. |
(a) | The Board of Trustees shall not be divided into classes, except that upon the occurrence of any event requiring the Trust to hold annual meetings of the Shareholders, including, but not limited to, the listing of Shares of the Trust on any national securities exchange, the Board of Trustees shall be divided into three classes. In such event, the number of Trustees in each class, and the individual Trustees assigned to each class, shall be determined by resolution of the Board of Trustees and the terms of office for each class of Trustees shall be determined as follows: |
(1) | The term of office of the first class shall expire on the date of the first annual meeting of Shareholders, or special meeting in lieu thereof at which Trustees are elected, following the date of such event; | ||
(2) | The term of office of the second class shall expire on the date of the second annual meeting of Shareholders or special meeting in lieu thereof at which Trustees are elected, following the date of such event; | ||
(3) | The term of office of the third class shall expire on the date of the third annual meeting of Shareholders or special meeting in lieu thereof at which Trustees are elected, following the date of such event; and | ||
(4) | Upon expiration of the term of office of each class as set forth above, the number of Trustees in such class, as determined by the Board of Trustees, shall be elected to succeed the Trustees whose terms of office expire for a term expiring on the date of the third annual meeting of Shareholders, or special meeting in lieu thereof at which Trustees are elected, following such expiration. The term of any Trustee standing for |
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re-election who fails to receive sufficient votes to be elected to office due to a lack of quorum or a failure to receive the required Shareholder vote set forth in Section 3.4 shall continue for successive one year terms until such Trustee is duly elected, at which time such Trustee shall serve the remainder of the term of office for the class to which such Trustee was originally elected. |
(b) | Each Trustee elected shall hold office until his or her successor shall have been elected at a meeting of Shareholders called for the purpose of electing Trustees and shall have qualified; except that: |
(1) | Any Trustee may resign as trustee or may retire by written instrument signed by such Trustee and delivered to the other Trustees, which shall take effect upon such delivery or upon such later date as is specified therein; | ||
(2) | Any Trustee may be removed at any time, with or without cause, by written instrument signed by at least 75% of the number of Trustees prior to such removal, specifying the date when such removal shall become effective; provided that from the date hereof through June 30, 2013, such instrument shall be signed by at least eighty percent (80%) of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; | ||
(3) | Any Trustee who has died, become physically or mentally incapacitated by reason of disease or otherwise, or is otherwise unable to serve, may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees, specifying the date of his retirement; and | ||
(4) | A Trustee shall be retired in accordance with the terms of any retirement policy adopted by at least 75% of the Trustees and in effect from time to time. |
(a) | Trustees shall be elected by the affirmative vote of a majority of the Shares of the Trust present in person or by proxy and entitled to vote at a meeting of Shareholders called by the Board for that purpose at which a quorum is present. | ||
(b) | In case of the declination to serve, death, resignation, retirement or removal of a Trustee, or a Trustee is otherwise unable to serve, or an increase in the size of the Board, a vacancy shall occur. Whenever a vacancy in the Board of Trustees shall occur, until such vacancy is filled, the other Trustees shall have all the powers hereunder and the determination of the other Trustees of such vacancy shall be conclusive. In the case of any vacancy, the remaining Trustees may fill such vacancy by appointing such other person as they in their discretion shall see fit, or may leave such vacancy unfilled or may reduce the size of the Board to not less than three (3) Trustees. Such appointment shall be evidenced by a written instrument signed by a majority of the Trustees in office or by resolution of the Board of Trustees, duly adopted, which shall be recorded in the minutes of a meeting of the Trustees, whereupon the appointment shall take effect. |
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(c) | An appointment of a Trustee may be made by the Trustees then in office in anticipation of a vacancy to occur by reason of retirement, resignation, or removal of a Trustee, or an increase in the size of the Board effective at a later date, provided that said appointment shall become effective only at the time or after the expected vacancy occurs. | ||
(d) | As soon as any Trustee appointed pursuant to this Section 3.4 or elected by the Shareholders shall have accepted the Trust and agreed in writing to be bound by the terms of the Agreement, the Trust estate shall vest in the new Trustee or Trustees, together with the continuing Trustees, without any further act or conveyance, and he shall be deemed a Trustee hereunder. |
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(a) | Without limiting the foregoing and subject to any applicable limitation in the Governing Instrument or applicable law, the Trustees shall have power and authority: |
(1) | To invest and reinvest cash and other property, and to hold cash or other property uninvested, without in any event being bound or limited by any present or future law or custom in regard to investments by Trustees, and to sell, exchange, lend, pledge, mortgage, hypothecate, write options on, distribute and otherwise deal with and lease any or all of the assets of the Trust; | ||
(2) | To operate as, and to carry on the business of, an investment company, and to exercise all the powers necessary and appropriate to the conduct of such operations; | ||
(3) | To borrow money and in this connection issue notes or other evidence of indebtedness; to secure borrowings by mortgaging, pledging or otherwise subjecting as security the Trust Property; to endorse, guarantee, or undertake the performance of an obligation or engagement of any other Person and to lend Trust Property; | ||
(4) | To provide for the distribution of Shares either through a principal underwriter in the manner hereafter provided for or by the Trust itself, or both, or otherwise pursuant to an underwriting agreement of any kind; | ||
(5) | To adopt Bylaws not inconsistent with this Agreement providing for the conduct of the business of the Trust and to amend and repeal them all without a vote of the Shareholders; such Bylaws shall be deemed incorporated and included in the Governing Instrument; | ||
(6) | To elect and remove such officers and appoint and terminate such agents as they consider appropriate; | ||
(7) | To employ one or more banks, trust companies or companies that are members of a national securities exchange or such other domestic or foreign entities as custodians of any assets of the Trust subject to any conditions set forth in this Agreement or in the Bylaws; |
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(8) | To retain one or more transfer agents and shareholder servicing agents; | ||
(9) | To set record dates in the manner provided herein or in the Bylaws; | ||
(10) | To delegate such authority as they consider desirable to any officers of the Trust and to any investment adviser, manager, administrator, custodian, underwriter or other agent or independent contractor; | ||
(11) | To sell or exchange any or all of the assets of the Trust, subject to the right of Shareholders, if any, to vote on such transaction pursuant to Section 6.1; | ||
(12) | To vote or give assent, or exercise any rights of ownership, with respect to stock or other securities or property; and to execute and deliver proxies and powers of attorney to such person or persons as the Trustees shall deem proper, granting to such person or persons such power and discretion with relation to securities or property as the Trustee shall deem proper; | ||
(13) | To exercise powers and rights of subscription or otherwise that in any manner arise out of ownership of securities; | ||
(14) | To hold any security or property in a form not indicating any trust, whether in bearer, book entry, unregistered or other negotiable form; or either in the name of the Trust or a custodian or a nominee or nominees, subject in either case to proper safeguards according to the usual practice of Delaware statutory trusts or investment companies; | ||
(15) | To consent to or participate in any plan for the reorganization, consolidation or merger of any corporation or concern, with respect to any security which is held in the Trust; to consent to any contract, lease, mortgage, purchase, or sale of property by such corporation or concern, and to pay calls or subscriptions with respect to any security held in the Trust; | ||
(16) | To compromise, arbitrate, or otherwise adjust claims in favor of or against the Trust or any matter in controversy including, but not limited to, claims for taxes; | ||
(17) | To declare and pay dividends and make distributions of income and of capital gains and capital to Shareholders in the manner hereinafter provided; | ||
(18) | To repurchase Shares from time to time as permitted by applicable law, upon such terms and conditions as the Trustees shall establish; | ||
(19) | To establish one or more committees or sub-committees, to delegate any of the powers of the Trustees to said committees or sub-committees and to adopt a written charter for one or more of such committees or sub-committees governing its membership, duties and operations and any other characteristics as the Trustees may deem proper, each of which |
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committees and sub-committees may consist of less than the whole number of Trustees then in office, and may be empowered to act for and bind the Trustees and the Trust as if the acts of such committee or sub-committee were the acts of all the Trustees then in office; | |||
(20) | To interpret the investment policies, practices or limitations of the Trust; | ||
(21) | To establish a registered office and have a registered agent in the State of Delaware; | ||
(22) | To enter into joint ventures, general or limited partnerships, limited liability companies, and any other combinations and associations; and | ||
(23) | In general, to carry on any other business in connection with or incidental to any of the foregoing powers, to do everything necessary, suitable or proper for the accomplishment of any purpose or the attainment of any object or the furtherance of any power hereinbefore set forth, either alone or in association with others, and to do every other act or thing incidental or appurtenant to or growing out of or connected with the aforesaid business or purposes, objects or powers. |
(b) | The foregoing clauses of Section 4.1(a) shall be construed both as objects and powers, and the foregoing enumeration of specific powers shall not be held to limit or restrict in any manner the general powers of the Trustees. | ||
(c) | Any action by one or more of the Trustees in their capacity as such hereunder shall be deemed an action on behalf of the Trust, and not an action in an individual capacity. | ||
(d) | The Trustees shall not be limited to investing in obligations maturing before the possible termination of the Trust. | ||
(e) | No one dealing with the Trustees shall be under any obligation to make any inquiry concerning the authority of the Trustees, or to see to the application of any payments made or property transferred to the Trustees or upon their order. |
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(a) | The Trustees may in their discretion, from time to time, enter into an investment advisory or management contract or contracts with respect to the Trust whereby the other party or parties to such contract or contracts shall undertake to furnish the Trustees with such management, investment advisory, statistical and research facilities and services and such other facilities and services, if any, and all upon such terms and conditions, as the Trustees may in their discretion determine. |
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(b) | The Trustees may authorize the investment adviser to employ, from time to time, one or more sub-advisers to perform such of the acts and services of the investment adviser, and upon such terms and conditions, as may be agreed upon among the Trustees, the investment adviser and sub-adviser. Any references in this Agreement to the investment adviser shall be deemed to include such sub-advisers, unless the context otherwise requires. |
(a) | The Shareholders shall have power to vote only to: |
(1) | Elect Trustees, provided that a meeting of Shareholders has been called for that purpose; | ||
(2) | Approve transactions described in Section 6.2 and Article IX of this Agreement; | ||
(3) | Approve any amendment to this Article VI or Article IX or, to the extent required by Section 6.2, to Section 8.4; |
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(4) | In the event the Board is classified pursuant to the terms of Section 3.3, approve any amendment to declassify the Board; and | ||
(5) | Approve such additional matters as may be required by the 1940 Act or the Governing Instrument, or as the Trustees, in their sole discretion, shall determine. |
(b) | Until Shares are issued, the Trustees may exercise all rights of Shareholders and may take any action required or permitted by law or by the Governing Instrument that may be taken by Shareholders. | ||
(c) | Each whole Share shall be entitled to one vote as to any matter on which it is entitled to vote, and each fractional Share shall be entitled to a proportionate fractional vote. | ||
(d) | Except as otherwise provided in the Governing Instrument, on any matter submitted to a vote of the Shareholders, all Shares shall be voted together as a single class, except when required by applicable law, or when the Trustees have determined that the matter affects the interests of one or more classes or affects each class differently, then the Shareholders of each such affected class shall be entitled to vote separately thereon. | ||
(e) | Shareholders shall not be entitled to cumulative voting in the election of Trustees or on any other matter. | ||
(f) | Subject to any provision of applicable law and except as otherwise provided in the Governing Instrument, an affirmative Majority Shareholder Vote shall be required to approve any matter requiring a vote of the Shareholders. | ||
(g) | Only Record Owners shall have the power to cast a vote at a meeting of shareholders subject to the voting provisions set forth in the Governing Instrument. Beneficial owners of Shares who are not Record Owners shall not be entitled to cast a vote at a meeting of Shareholders but shall be entitled to provide voting instructions to corresponding Record Owners, subject to any limitations imposed by applicable law and stock exchanges on which the Shares are listed for trading. |
(a) | Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the Shareholders shall have power to vote to approve any amendment to Section 8.4 of this Agreement approved by the Board of Trustees that would have the effect of reducing the indemnification provided thereby to Shareholders or former Shareholders, and any such action shall require the affirmative vote or consent of Shareholders owning at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the Outstanding Shares. | ||
(b) | Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, any amendment to declassify the Board following any classification of the Board in accordance with Section 3.3 or to this Article VI or Article IX of this Agreement shall require the affirmative vote or consent of the Board of Trustees followed by the affirmative vote or consent of Shareholders owning at least seventy-five percent (75%) of |
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the Outstanding Shares, unless such amendment has been previously approved, adopted or authorized by the affirmative vote of at least two thirds (66 2/3%) of the Board of Trustees, in which case an affirmative Majority Shareholder Vote shall be required. | |||
(c) | The voting requirements set forth in this Section 6.2 shall be in addition to, and not in lieu of, any vote or consent of the Shareholders otherwise required by applicable law (including, without limitation, any separate vote by class that may be required by the 1940 Act) or by the Governing Instrument. | ||
(d) | Any additional matter not expressly requiring a vote of Shareholders on which the Trustees determine the Shareholders shall have power to vote shall require the affirmative vote or consent of Shareholders owning at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the Outstanding Shares, unless such matter has been previously approved, adopted or authorized by the affirmative vote of at least two-thirds (66 2/3%) of the Board of Trustees, in which case an affirmative Majority Shareholder Vote shall be required. |
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(a) | The Trust shall have perpetual existence, except that the Trust shall be dissolved upon approval by vote of the Board followed by a vote of Shareholders as set forth in Section 9.1; provided that if the affirmative vote of at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the Board approves the dissolution, no vote of Shareholders shall be required to dissolve the Trust. | ||
(b) | Upon dissolution of the Trust, the Trust shall carry on no business except for the purpose of winding up its affairs, and all powers of the Trustees under this Agreement shall continue until such affairs have been wound up. Without limiting the foregoing, the Trustees shall (in accordance with Section 3808 of the Delaware Act) have the power to: |
(1) | Fulfill or discharge the contracts of the Trust; |
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(2) | Collect its assets; | ||
(3) | Sell, convey, assign, exchange, merge where the Trust is not the survivor, transfer or otherwise dispose of all or any part of the remaining Trust Property to one or more Persons at public or private sale for consideration which may consist in whole or in part in cash, securities or other property of any kind; | ||
(4) | Pay or make reasonable provision (including through the use of a liquidating trust) to pay all claims and obligations of the Trust, including all contingent, conditional or unmatured claims and obligations known to the Trust, and all claims and obligations which are known to the Trust, but for which the identity of the claimant is unknown, and claims and obligations that have not been made known to the Trust or that have not arisen but that, based on the facts known to the Trust, are likely to arise or to become known to the Trust within 10 years after the date of dissolution; and | ||
(5) | Do all other acts appropriate to liquidate its business. |
(c) | If there are sufficient assets held with respect to the Trust, such claims and obligations shall be paid in full and any such provisions for payment shall be made in full. If there are insufficient assets held with respect to the Trust, such claims and obligations shall be paid or provided for according to their priority and, among claims and obligations of equal priority, ratably to the extent of assets available therefor. Any remaining assets (including, without limitation, cash, securities or any combination thereof) held with respect to the Trust shall be distributed to the Record Owners of the Trust ratably according to the number of Shares of the Trust held of record by the several Record Owners on the date for such dissolution distribution, subject to any then existing preferential rights of Shares. | ||
(d) | On completion of distribution of the remaining assets and upon the winding up of the Trust in accordance with Section 3808 of the Delaware Act and its termination, any one (1) Trustee shall execute, and cause to be filed, a certificate of cancellation, with the office of the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware in accordance with the provisions of Section 3810 of the Delaware Act, whereupon, the Trust shall terminate and the Trustees and the Trust shall be discharged from all further liabilities and duties hereunder with respect thereto. The Trustees shall not be personally liable to the claimants of the dissolved Trust by reason of the Trustees actions in winding up the Trusts affairs if the Trustees complied with Section 3808(e) of the Delaware Act. | ||
(e) | Each class hereafter created shall have perpetual existence unless terminated upon: |
(1) | The vote of the Board of Trustees; or |
(2) | The occurrence of a termination event pursuant to any Board resolution establishing and designating such class. |
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(a) | Merger or Consolidation. |
(1) | Pursuant to an agreement of merger or consolidation, the Board of Trustees may cause the Trust or any of its subsidiaries to merge or consolidate with or into one or more statutory trusts or other business entities (as defined in Section 3801 of the Delaware Act) formed or organized or existing under the laws of the State of Delaware or any other state of the United States or any foreign country or other foreign jurisdiction. Any such merger or consolidation shall require approval by vote of the Board of Trustees followed by approval of the Shareholders as set forth in Section 9.1. |
(2) | By reference to Section 3815(f) of the Delaware Act, any agreement of merger or consolidation approved in accordance with this Section 9.3(a) may, without a separate Shareholder vote, unless required by the 1940 Act or the requirements of any securities exchange on which Shares are listed for trading, effect any amendment to the Governing Instrument or effect the adoption of a new governing instrument if the Trust is the surviving or resulting statutory trust in the merger or consolidation, which amendment or new governing instrument shall be effective at the effective time or date of the merger or consolidation. |
(3) | If the Trust is to be the surviving or resulting statutory trust, any one (1) Trustee shall execute, and cause to be filed, a certificate of merger or consolidation in accordance with Section 3815 of the Delaware Act. |
(b) | Conversion. |
(1) | The Board of Trustees may cause: |
(2) | Any such statutory conversion, Share conversion or Share exchange shall require approval by vote of the Board of Trustees followed by the approval of the Shareholders of the Trust as set forth in Section 9.1. |
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(c) | Reorganization. |
(1) | The Board of Trustees may cause the Trust to sell, convey and transfer all or substantially all of the assets of the Trust (sale of Trust assets) to another trust, statutory trust, partnership, limited partnership, limited liability company, corporation or other association organized under the laws of any state, or to one or more separate series thereof, in exchange for cash, shares or other securities, with such sale, conveyance and transfer either (a) being made subject to, or with the assumption by the transferee of, the liabilities associated with the Trust, or (b) not being made subject to, or not with the assumption of, such liabilities. |
(2) | Any such sale, conveyance and transfer shall require approval by vote of the Board of Trustees followed by the approval of the Shareholders of the Trust as set forth in Section 9.1. |
(3) | Following such sale of Trust assets, the Board of Trustees shall distribute such cash, shares or other securities ratably among the Record Owners of the Trust (giving due effect to the differences among the various classes). |
(4) | If all of the assets of the Trust have been so sold, conveyed and transferred, the Trust shall be dissolved. |
(a) | Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement and subject to the exceptions provided in Section 9.5(c), the types of transactions described in sub-paragraphs (1) through (3) below shall require approval by vote of the Board of Trustees and the Shareholders of the Trust as set forth in Section 9.1 when a Principal Shareholder (as defined in Section 9.5(b)) is a party to the transaction. |
(1) | The issuance of any securities of the Trust or any of its subsidiaries to any Principal Shareholder for cash (other than pursuant to any dividend reinvestment plan). |
(2) | The sale, lease or exchange of all or any substantial part of the assets of the Trust or any of its subsidiaries to any Principal Shareholder (except assets having an aggregate fair market value of less than two percent (2%) of the total assets of the Trust or any of its subsidiaries, aggregating for the purpose of such computation all assets sold, leased or exchanged in any series of similar transactions within a twelve-month period). |
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(3) | The sale, lease, or exchange to the Trust or any subsidiary thereof, in exchange for securities of the Trust or any of its subsidiaries, of any assets of any Principal Shareholder (except assets having an aggregate fair market value of less than two percent (2%) of the total assets of the Trust or any of its subsidiaries, aggregating for the purpose of such computation, all assets sold, leased or exchanged in any series of similar transactions within a twelve-month period). |
(b) | For purposes of this Section 9.5, the term Principal Shareholder shall mean any Person or group (within the meaning of Rule 13d-5 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the 1934 Act)), that is the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of five percent (5%) or more of the Shares of the Trust and shall include any affiliate or associate, as such terms are defined in clause (2) below, of a Principal Shareholder, but shall not include the investment adviser of the Trust or any affiliated person of the investment adviser of the Trust. For the purposes of this Section 9.5, in addition to the Shares that a Principal Shareholder beneficially owns directly, a Principal Shareholder shall be deemed to be the beneficial owner of any Shares (1) which the Principal Shareholder has the right to acquire pursuant to any agreement or upon exercise of conversion rights or warrants, or otherwise or (2) which are beneficially owned, directly or indirectly (including Shares deemed owned through application of clause (1) above), by any other Person or group with which the Principal Shareholder or its affiliate or associate, as those terms are defined in Rule 12b-2, or any successor rule, under the 1934 Act, has any agreement, arrangement, or understanding for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting, or disposing of Shares, or which is its affiliate or associate as so defined. For purposes of this Section 9.5, calculation of the total Shares of the Trust shall not include Shares deemed owned through application of clause (1) above. | ||
(c) | The provisions of this Section 9.5 shall not be applicable to any such transaction between the Trust and any entity of which a majority of the outstanding shares of all classes and series of a stock normally entitled to vote in elections of directors is owned of record and beneficially by the Trust and its subsidiaries. | ||
(d) | The Board of Trustees shall have the power and duty to determine for the purposes of this Section 9.5, on the basis of information known to the Trust, whether: |
(1) | A Person or group beneficially owns five percent (5%) or more of the Shares; |
(2) | A corporation, person or entity is an affiliate or associate (as defined above) of another; and |
(3) | The assets being sold, leased or exchanged by or to the Trust have an aggregate fair market value of less than 2% of the total assets of the Trust (as defined above). |
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(a) | It is hereby expressly declared that a trust and not a partnership is created hereby. All persons extending credit to, contracting with or having any claim against the Trust or the Trustees in their capacity as such shall look only to the assets of the Trust for payment under such credit, contract or claim; and neither the Shareholders, the Trustees, nor the Trusts officers nor any of the agents of the Trustees whether past, present or future, shall be personally liable therefor. | ||
(b) | It is intended that the Trust be classified for income tax purposes as an association taxable as a corporation, and the Trustees shall do all things that they, in their sole discretion, determine are necessary to achieve that objective, including (if they so determine), electing such classifications on Internal Revenue Form 8832. The Trustees, in their sole discretion and without the vote or consent of the Shareholders, may amend this Agreement to ensure that this objective is achieved. |
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(a) | The Trust and the Governing Instrument (including this Agreement), and the rights, obligations and remedies of the Trustees and Shareholders hereunder, are to be governed by and construed and administered according to the Delaware Act, including the provision that gives maximum freedom to contract, the other laws of the State of Delaware and the applicable provisions of the 1940 Act. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the following provisions shall not be applicable to the Trust, the Trustees, the Shareholders or the Governing Instrument: |
(1) | The provisions of Section 3533, 3540, 3561 and 3583(a) of Title 12 of the Delaware Code; or |
(2) | Any provisions of the laws (statutory or common) of the State of Delaware (other than the Delaware Act) pertaining to trusts which relate to or regulate: |
(b) | The Trust shall be of the type commonly called a statutory trust, and without limiting the provisions hereof, the Trust may exercise all powers which are ordinarily exercised by such a trust under Delaware law. The Trust specifically reserves the right to exercise any of the powers or privileges afforded to trusts or actions that may be engaged in by trusts under the Delaware Act, and the absence of a specific reference herein to any such power, privilege or action shall not imply that the Trust may not exercise such power or privilege or take such actions; provided, however, that the exercise of any such power, privilege or action shall not otherwise violate applicable law. |
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/s/ David C. Arch
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/s/ Jerry D. Choate
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/s/ Linda Hutton Heagy
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/s/ R. Craig Kennedy
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/s/ Colin D. Meadows
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/s/ Hugo F. Sonnenschein
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/s/ Wayne W. Whalen
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/s/ Suzanne H. Woolsey, Ph.D.
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By: | /s/ John M. Zerr | |||
Name: | John M. Zerr | |||
Title: | Senior Vice President | |||
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Invesco Van Kampen Senior Loan Fund | ||||||||
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/s/ Peter Davidson
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Assistant Secretary
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Name: | John M. Zerr | ||||||
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Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||||
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Attest: | Invesco Advisers, Inc. | |||||||
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/s/ Peter Davidson
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Assistant Secretary
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Name : | John M. Zerr | ||||||
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Title : | Senior Vice President |
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Fund Name | Advisory Fee Rate | |
Invesco Van Kampen Senior Loan Fund
|
.900% on first $500 million of net assets | |
|
.850% on next $1 billion of net assets | |
|
.825% on next $1 billion of net assets | |
|
.800% on next $500 million of net assets | |
|
.775% on net assets over $3 billion |
6
2
3
4
5
INVESCO ADVISERS, INC.
Adviser |
|||||
By: | /s/ John M. Zerr | ||||
Name: | John M. Zerr | ||||
Title: | Senior Vice President |
6
INVESCO ASSET MANAGEMENT
DEUTSCHLAND GMBH |
INVESCO ASSET MANAGEMENT
LIMITED |
|
|
||
Sub-Adviser
|
Sub-Adviser | |
|
||
By: /s/ Christian Puschmann / Jens Langewand
|
By: /s/ Graeme J. Proudfoot | |
|
|
|
Name: Christian Puschmann / Jens Langewand
|
Name: Graeme J. Proudfoot | |
Title: Managing Directors
|
Title: Director | |
|
||
INVESCO ASSET MANAGEMENT (JAPAN) LIMITED
|
INVESCO AUSTRALIA LIMITED | |
|
||
Sub-Adviser
|
Sub-Adviser | |
|
||
By: /s/ Masakazu Hasegawa
|
By: /s/ Mark Yesberg / Nick Burrell | |
|
|
|
Name: Masakazu Hasegawa
|
Name: Mark Yesberg / Nick Burrell | |
Title: Managing Director
|
Title: Co SEC / Director | |
|
||
INVESCO HONG KONG LIMITED
|
INVESCO SENIOR SECURED MANAGEMENT, INC. | |
|
||
Sub-Adviser
|
Sub-Adviser | |
|
||
By: /s/ Fanny Lee / Gracie Liu
|
By: /s/ Jeffrey H. Kupor | |
|
|
|
Name: Fanny Lee / Gracie Liu
|
Name: Jeffrey H. Kupor | |
Title: Director / Director
|
Title: Secretary & General Counsel | |
|
||
INVESCO CANADA LTD.
|
||
|
||
Sub-Adviser
|
||
|
||
By: /s/ Eric Adelson / David C. Warren
|
||
|
|
|
Name: Eric Adelson / David C. Warren
|
||
Title: SVP;Head of Legal-Canada;CCO; and
Secretary / EVP&CFO
|
||
|
7
8
1. | Each Fund and Invesco agree that until the expiration date, if any, of the commitment set forth on the attached Exhibit A occurs, as such Exhibit A is amended from time to time, Invesco will waive advisory fees payable by an Investing Fund (defined below) in an amount equal to 100% of the net advisory fee Invesco receives on the Uninvested Cash (defined below) from the Affiliated Money Market Fund (defined below) in which the Investing Fund invests (the Waiver). |
i. | Invescos Fund Accounting Group will calculate, and apply, the Waiver monthly, based upon the average investment of Uninvested Cash made by the Investing Fund during the previous month in an Affiliated Money Market Fund. | ||
ii. | The Waiver will not apply to those investing Funds that do not charge an advisory fee, either due to the terms of their advisory agreement, or as a result of contractual or voluntary fee waivers. | ||
iii. | The Waiver will not apply to cash collateral for securities lending. |
For purposes of the paragraph above, the following terms shall have the following meanings: |
(a) | Affiliated Money Market Fund any existing or future fund managed by Invesco or its affiliates that holds itself out as a money market fund and complies with Rule 2a-7 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended; | ||
(b) | Investing Fund any Fund investing Uninvested Cash in an Affiliated Money Market Fund; and | ||
(b) | Uninvested Cash cash available and uninvested by a Fund that may result from a variety of sources, including dividends or interest received on portfolio securities, unsettled securities transactions, strategic reserves, matured investments, proceeds from liquidation of investment securities, dividend payments, or new investor capital. |
2. | Neither a Fund nor Invesco may remove or amend the Waiver to a Funds detriment prior to requesting and receiving the approval of the Funds Board of Trustee/Managing General Partners to remove or amend such Waiver. Invesco will not have any right to reimbursement of any amount so waived. |
INVESCO ADVANTAGE MUNICIPAL INCOME TRUST II
INVESCO BOND FUND INVESCO CALIFORNIA VALUE MUNICIPAL INCOME TRUST INVESCO DYNAMIC CREDIT OPPORTUNITIES FUND INVESCO HIGH INCOME TRUST II INVESCO MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITY TRUST INVESCO MUNICIPAL TRUST INVESCO PENNSYLVANIA VALUE MUNICIPAL INCOME TRUST INVESCO SENIOR INCOME TRUST INVESCO SENIOR LOAN FUND INVESCO TRUST FOR INVESTMENT GRADE MUNICIPALS INVESCO TRUST FOR INVESTMENT GRADE NEW YORK MUNICIPALS INVESCO VAN KAMPEN EXCHANGE FUND |
||||||
|
||||||
|
By: |
/s/ John M. Zerr
|
||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||
|
||||||
INVESCO ADVISERS, INC. | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: |
/s/ John M. Zerr
|
||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President |
2
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Advantage Municipal
Income Trust
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Bond Fund
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco California Value Municipal
Income Trust
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Dynamic Credit Opportunities
Fund
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco High Income Trust II
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Municipal Opportunity Trust
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Municipal Trust
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Pennsylvania Value
Municipal Income Trust
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
A-1
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Senior Income Trust
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Senior Loan Fund
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Trust for Investment
Grade Municipals
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Trust for Investment Grade
New York Municipals
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
FUND | EFFECTIVE DATE | COMMITTED UNTIL | ||
Invesco Van Kampen Exchange Fund
|
May 15, 2012 | June 30, 2014 |
A-2
2
3
4
5
6
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN SENIOR LOAN FUND
|
||||
By: | /s/ John M. Zerr | |||
Name: | John M. Zerr | |||
Title: | Senior Vice President | |||
INVESCO DISTRIBUTORS, INC.
|
||||
By: | /s/ John M. Zerr | |||
Name: | John M. Zerr | |||
Title: | Senior Vice President | |||
7
1 | The Fund is authorized to offer multiple classes of shares pursuant to an exemptive order granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission and pursuant to a Rule 18f-3 Plan adopted under the 1940 Act. The Fund has agreed to comply with Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act as if the Fund were an open-end investment company. |
1
2
3
4
(a) | Remote access, license and usage charges paid by the Transfer Agent for use of shareholder record keeping and related systems provided by DST Systems, Inc., and used by the Transfer Agent to service Shareholder accounts, including but not limited to: |
(i) | TA2000 ® , the record keeping system on which records related to most Shareholder accounts will be maintained; | ||
(ii) | TRAC2000 ® , the record keeping system on which records related to Shareholder accounts held by and through employer-sponsored retirement plans are maintained; | ||
(iii) | Automated Work Distributor TM , a document imaging, storage and distribution system; | ||
(iv) | Financial Access Network, a computer system and related software applications which will provide the necessary interfaces to allow customers to access account information residing on the TA2000 and TRAC2000 systems through aiminvestments.com; | ||
(v) | PowerSelect TM , a reporting database that the Transfer Agent can query to produce reports derived from Shareholder account data residing on the TA2000 and TRAC2000 systems; and | ||
(vi) | Client specific system enhancements. |
(b) | Computer and data processing and storage equipment, communication lines and equipment, printers and other equipment used in connection with the provision of services hereunder, and any expenses incurred in connection with the installation and use of such equipment and lines. | ||
(c) | Microfiche, microfilm and electronic image scanning equipment. | ||
(d) | Electronic data and image storage media and related storage costs. | ||
(e) | Record retention, retrieval and destruction costs, including, but not limited to exit fees charged by third party record keeping vendors. | ||
(f) | Telephone and telecommunication costs, including all lease, maintenance and line costs. | ||
(g) | Programming costs, system access and usage fees, electronic presentment service fees, data and document delivery fees, and other related fees and costs which relate to the printing and delivery of the following documents to Shareholders and to each Shareholders broker of record: |
(i) | Investment confirmations; | ||
(ii) | Periodic account statements; | ||
(iii) | Tax forms; and | ||
(iv) | Redemption checks. |
(h) | Printing costs, including, without limitation, the costs associated with printing stationery, envelopes, share certificates, checks, investment confirmations, periodic account statements, and tax forms. | ||
(i) | Postage (bulk, pre-sort, ZIP+4, bar coding, first class), certified and overnight mail and private delivery services, courier services and related insurance. | ||
(j) | Certificate insurance. | ||
(k) | Banking charges, including without limitation, incoming and outgoing wire charges and charges associated with the receipt and processing of government allotments. | ||
(l) | Check writing fees. | ||
(m) | Federal Reserve charges for check clearance. | ||
(n) | Rendering fees. | ||
(o) | Audit, consulting and legal fees which relate to the provision of service hereunder. | ||
(p) | Shareholder information and education mailings, including, but not limited to, periodic shareholder newsletters and tax guides. | ||
(q) | Duplicate services; | ||
(r) | Such other miscellaneous expenses reasonably incurred by the Transfer Agent in performing its duties and responsibilities. | ||
(s) | Due diligence mailings. | ||
(t) | Ad hoc reports. |
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN SENIOR LOAN FUND | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By:
Name: |
/s/ John M. Zerr
|
||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President |
ATTEST:
|
||
|
||
/s/ Vilma Valdez
|
INVESCO INVESTMENT SERVICES, INC.
|
||||||
|
By:
Name: |
/s/ William J. Galvin, Jr.
|
||||
|
Title: | President |
ATTEST:
|
||
|
||
/s/ Vilma Valdez
|
1. | Appendix A is hereby deleted in its entirety and replaced with the following: |
Portfolio | Effective Date of Agreement | |
Invesco Van Kampen Senior Loan Fund
|
June 1, 2010 |
Rate* | Net Assets | |||
0.023%
|
First $1.5 billion | |||
0.013%
|
Next $1.5 billion | |||
0.003%
|
Over $3 billion |
* | Annual minimum fee is $50,000. An additional $5,000 per class of shares is charged for each class other than the initial class. The $5,000 class fee is waived for the above Fund with insufficient assets to result in the payment of more than the minimum fee of $50,000. |
INVESCO ADVISERS, INC. | ||||||||
|
||||||||
Attest:
|
/s/ Peter Davidson
|
By:
Name: |
/s/ Todd L. Spillane
|
|||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||||
|
||||||||
(SEAL)
|
||||||||
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN SENIOR LOAN FUND | ||||||||
|
||||||||
Attest:
|
/s/ Peter Davidson | By: | /s/ John M. Zerr | |||||
|
||||||||
|
Assistant Secretary | Name: | John M. Zerr | |||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||||
|
||||||||
(SEAL)
|
1. | Pursuant to Section 8 of the Agreement, the last sentence of Section 7 of the Agreement is hereby deleted and replaced with the following: | ||
This Agreement shall terminate automatically in the event of its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder), except that the Fund may assign this Agreement, without approval of the Administrator, 1) to a successor in connection with a redomestication of the Fund and 2) to another fund within the Invesco family of funds in connection with a merger or reorganization of the Fund and such other Invesco fund. |
INVESCO ADVISERS, INC. | ||||||||
|
||||||||
Attest:
|
/s/ Peter Davidson
|
By:
Name: |
/s/ John M. Zerr
|
|||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||||
|
||||||||
(SEAL)
|
||||||||
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN SENIOR LOAN FUND | ||||||||
|
||||||||
Attest:
|
/s/ Peter Davidson | By: | /s/ John M. Zerr | |||||
|
||||||||
|
Assistant Secretary | Name: | John M. Zerr | |||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||||
|
||||||||
(SEAL)
|
1. | Pursuant to Section 10 of the Agreement, Section 9 of the Agreement is hereby deleted and replaced with the following: | ||
Duration and Termination. This Agreement will become effective upon the date hereabove written and shall continue in effect thereafter until terminated without penalty by the Administrator or the Fund upon 30 days written notice to the other. This Agreement shall terminate automatically in the event of its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder), except that the Fund may assign this Agreement, without approval of the Administrator, 1) to a successor in connection with a redomestication of the Fund and 2) to another fund within the Invesco family of funds in connection with a merger or reorganization of the Fund and such other Invesco fund. |
INVESCO ADVISERS, INC. | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||
Attest:
|
/s/ Peter Davidson
|
By:
Name: |
/s/ John M. Zerr
|
|||||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
(SEAL)
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN SENIOR LOAN FUND | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||
Attest:
|
/s/ Peter Davidson
|
By:
Name: |
/s/ John M. Zerr
|
|||||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
(SEAL)
|
(1) the amount by which the aggregate Adjusted Asset Value of all Eligible Collateral (other than Cash and Eligible Government Securities) issued or Guaranteed by any Person (together with all Affiliates of such Person), other than the five (5) Persons that have issued or Guaranteed the highest amounts of the aggregate Adjusted Asset Value of all Eligible Collateral (other than Cash and Eligible Government Securities)(collectively, the Largest Issuers), exceeds three percent (3%) of the aggregate Adjusted Asset Value of all Eligible Collateral; | |||
(viii)the amount by which the aggregate Adjusted Asset Value of all Eligible Collateral which is not rated by S&P nor Moodys exceeds twenty percent (20%) of the aggregate Adjusted Asset Value of all Eligible Collateral; | |||
(xi) the amount by which the aggregate Adjusted Asset Value of all Eligible Collateral (other than Cash and Eligible Government Securities) issued or Guaranteed by any Largest Issuer (together with all Affiliates of such Largest Issuer) exceeds five percent (5%) of the aggregate Adjusted Asset Value of all Eligible Collateral. |
; provided further that the Borrower shall be deemed to have consented to any such assignment unless it shall object thereto by written notice to the Program Agent within five (5) Business Days after having received notice thereof |
; provided further that the Borrower shall be deemed to have consented to any such assignment unless it shall object thereto by written notice to the Program Agent and such Secondary Lender within five (5) Business Days after having received notice thereof |
; provided further that the Borrower shall be deemed to have consented to any such assignment unless it shall object thereto by written notice to the Program Agent and such Direct Lender within five (5) Business Days after having received notice thereof. |
; provided further that the Borrower shall be deemed to have consented to any such assignment unless it shall object thereto by written notice to the Program Agent within five (5) Business Days after having received notice thereof |
2
3
CITIBANK, N.A., | CITIBANK, N.A., | |||||||||
as Program Agent | as Secondary Lender | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
By:
|
/s/ Todd D. Fritchman
|
By: |
/s/ Todd D. Fritchman
|
|||||||
|
Title: Vice President | Title: Vice President | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
CIESCO, LLC | STATE STREET BANK AND | |||||||||
as Conduit Lender | TRUST COMPANY, | |||||||||
as Direct Lender | ||||||||||
By:
|
Citibank, N.A., as | |||||||||
|
Attorney-in-Fact | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
By:
|
/s/ Todd D. Fritchman | By: | /s/ Janet B. Nolin | |||||||
|
||||||||||
|
Name: Todd D. Fritchman | Name: Janet B. Nolin | ||||||||
|
Title: Vice President | Title: Vice President | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
INVESCO VAN KAMPEN | ||||||||||
SENIOR LOAN FUND,
|
||||||||||
as Borrower
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
By:
|
/s/ John M. Zerr | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
|
Name: John M. Zerr | |||||||||
|
Title: Senior Vice President |
TO
AGREEMENT OF AMENDMENT NO. 3
CRC Funding, LLC
750 Washington Boulevard
Stamford, CT 06901
Attention: Robert Kohl
Telephone No. (203) 975-6383
Facsimile No. (914) 274-9038
Email: robert.kohl@citi.com
Citibank, N.A.
390 Greenwich Street, 1
st
Floor
New York, New York 10013
Attention: Junette Earl
Telephone No.: (212) 723-3704
Facsimile No.: (646) 843-3661
Email: junette.m.earl@citi.com
Citibank, N.A.
390 Greenwich Street, 1
st
Floor
New York, New York 10013
Attention: Junette Earl
Telephone No.: (212) 723-3704
Facsimile No.: (646) 291-3661
Email: junette.m.earl@citi.com
Citibank, N.A.
750 Washington Boulevard
Stamford, CT 06901
Attention: Robert Kohl
Telephone No. (203) 975-6383
Facsimile No. (914) 274-9038
Email: robert.kohl@citi.com
Citibank, N.A.
390 Greenwich Street, 1
st
Floor
New York, New York 10013
Attention: Junette Earl
Telephone No.: (212) 723-3704
Facsimile No.: (646) 843-3661
Email: junette.m.earl@citi.com
Invesco Van Kampen Senior Loan Fund
Citibank, N.A.
750 Washington Boulevard
Stamford, CT 06901
Attention: Robert Kohl
Telephone No. (203) 975-6383
Facsimile No. (914) 274-9038
Email: robert.kohl@citi.com
State Street Bank and Trust Company
100 Huntington Avenue
Copley Place Tower 1, Floor 4
Boston, MA 02116
Attention: Karen Gallagher
Telephone No.: (617) 662-8626
Facsimile No.: (617) 988-9535
Invesco Van Kampen Senior Loan Fund
|
If to any | |||
|
Conduit Lender: | 750 Washington Boulevard | ||
|
Stamford, CT 06901 | |||
|
Attention: Robert Kohl | |||
|
Telephone No. (203) 975-6383 | |||
|
Facsimile No. (914) 274-9038 | |||
|
Email: robert.kohl@citi.com | |||
|
||||
|
In each case, | |||
|
with a copy to: | Citibank, N.A. | ||
|
390 Greenwich Street, 1st Floor | |||
|
New York, New York 10013 | |||
|
Attention: Junette Earl | |||
|
Telephone No.: (212) 723-3704 | |||
|
Facsimile No.: (646) 843-3661 | |||
|
Email: junette.m.earl@citi.com |
2
3
CITIBANK, N.A., | CITIBANK, N.A., | |||||||
as Program Agent | as Secondary Lender | |||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
/s/ Todd D. Fritchman | By: | /s/ Todd D. Fritchman | |||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
Title: Vice President | Title: Vice President | ||||||
|
||||||||
CHARTA, LLC | CAFCO, LLC | |||||||
as Conduit Lender | as Conduit Lender | |||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
Citibank, N.A., as | By: | Citibank, N.A., as | |||||
|
Attorney-in-Fact | Attorney-in-Fact | ||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
/s/ Todd D. Fritchman | By: | /s/ Todd D. Fritchman | |||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: Todd D. Fritchman | Name: Todd D. Fritchman | ||||||
|
Title: Vice President | Title: Vice President | ||||||
|
||||||||
CRC FUNDING, LLC | CIESCO, LLC | |||||||
as Conduit Lender | as Conduit Leader | |||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
Citibank, N.A., as | By: | Citibank, N.A., as | |||||
|
Attorney-in-Fact | Attorney-in-Fact | ||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
/s/ Todd D. Fritchman | By: | /s/ Todd D. Fritchman | |||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: Todd D. Fritchman | Name: Todd D. Fritchman | ||||||
|
Title: Vice President | Title: Vice President | ||||||
|
||||||||
STATE STREET BANK AND | INVESCO VAN KAMPEN | |||||||
TRUST COMPANY, | SENIOR LOAN FUND, | |||||||
as Direct Lender | as Borrower | |||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
/s/ Janet B. Nolin | By: | /s/ John M. Zerr | |||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: Janet B. Nolin | Name: John M. Zerr | ||||||
|
Title: Vice President | Title: Senior Vice President |
INVESCO ADVISERS, INC. | ||||
as Adviser | ||||
|
||||
By:
|
/s/ John M. Zerr
|
|||
|
Title: Senior Vice President |
5
1
2
3
1. | Definitions . As used herein, the terms set forth below shall have the meanings ascribed to them below. |
(a) | Class: a class of Shares of the Fund. | ||
(b) | Class A Shares shall have the meaning ascribed in Section 2(a). | ||
(c) | Class B Shares shall have the meaning ascribed in Section 2(b). | ||
(d) | Class C Shares shall have the meaning ascribed in Section 2(c). | ||
(e) | Class IB Shares shall have the meaning ascribed in Section 2(d). | ||
(f) | Class IC Shares shall have the meaning ascribed in Section 2(e). | ||
(g) | CDSC: contingent deferred sales charge. | ||
(h) | CDSC Shares: shares of Invesco Funds which are subject to a CDSC upon their redemption by the shareholder. | ||
(i) | CDSC Schedule: the schedule of years following acquisition during which classes of CDSC Shares are assessed a CDSC upon their redemption by the shareholder. | ||
(j) | Distribution Expenses: expenses incurred in activities which are primarily intended to result in the distribution and sale of Shares as defined in the Plan of Distribution and/or board resolutions. | ||
(k) | Distribution Fee: a fee paid by the Fund to the Distributor in reimbursement of Distribution Expenses. | ||
(l) | Distributor: Invesco Distributors, Inc. |
(m) | EWC : early withdrawal charge. | ||
(n) | EWC Period: the schedule of years following acquisition during which Shares of certain classes of the Fund are assessed an EWC upon their repurchase by the Fund. | ||
(o) | EWC Rate: the rate that EWCs are assessed on Shares of certain classes of the Fund upon their repurchase by the Fund according to a schedule of years following acquisition. | ||
(p) | Plan of Distribution: Any plan adopted with respect to payment of a Distribution Fee wherein the Fund agrees to comply with Rule 12b-1 under the Act as if the Fund were an open-end investment company. | ||
(q) | Service Fees: fees paid to financial intermediaries for the ongoing provision of personal services to Fund shareholders and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts. | ||
(r) | Share: a share of beneficial interest of the Fund. | ||
(s) | Trustees: the trustees of the Fund. | ||
(t) | Invesco Funds: certain open-end investment companies, distributed by Invesco Distributors, Inc., which offer shares for which tendering shareholders of the Fund may exchange their Class A Shares, Class B Shares, Class C Shares, Class IB Shares or Class IC Shares as described herein. |
2. | Classes . The Fund offers five Classes of Shares as follows: |
(a) | Class A Shares . Class A Shares shall be offered at net asset value plus a front-end sales charge as approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information, which may be reduced or eliminated for larger purchases, under a combined purchase privilege, under a right of accumulation, under a letter of intent or for certain categories of purchasers and as set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. Class A Shares that are not subject to a front-end sales charge as a result of the foregoing, may be subject to an EWC for the EWC Period and EWC Rate as set forth in Section 4. The offering price of Shares subject to a front-end sales charge shall be computed in accordance with procedures approved by the Board of Trustees and disclosed in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. Class A Shares shall be subject to ongoing Service Fees and Distribution Fees approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. |
2
(b) | Class B Shares . Class B Shares shall be (1) offered at net asset value, (2) subject to an EWC for the EWC Period and EWC Rate as set forth in Section 4, (3) subject to ongoing Service Fees and Distribution Fees approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information and (4) converted to Class A Shares three to ten years after the calendar month in which the shareholders order to purchase was accepted, which number of years shall be as approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. | ||
(c) | Class C Shares . Class C Shares shall be (1) offered at net asset value, (2) subject to an EWC for the EWC Period and EWC Rate as set forth in Section 4, and (3) subject to ongoing Service Fees and Distribution Fees approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. | ||
(d) | Class IB Shares . Class IB Shares shall be (1) offered at net asset value and (2) are not subject to a Distribution Fee or a Service Fee. | ||
(e) | Class IC Shares . Class IC Shares shall be (1) offered at net asset value and (2) subject to ongoing Service Fees approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. |
3. | Rights and Privileges of Classes . Each Class of the Fund will represent an interest in the same portfolio of investments of the Fund and will have identical voting, dividend, liquidation and other rights, preferences, powers, restrictions, limitations, qualifications, designations and terms and conditions except as described otherwise herein. | |
4. | EWC . An EWC may be imposed upon repurchase of Class A Shares, Class B Shares and Class C Shares that do not incur a front end sales charge subject to the following conditions: |
(a) | EWC Period . The EWC Period for Class A Shares shall be 18 months. The EWC Period for Class B Shares shall be at least three years but not more than ten years as approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. The EWC Period for Class C Shares shall be one year. | ||
(b) | EWC Rates . The EWC Rate shall be approved from time to time by the Trustees and set forth in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. If an EWC is imposed for a period greater than eighteen months the EWC Rate must decline during the EWC Period such that (a) the EWC Rate is less in the last year of the EWC Period than in the first and (b) in each succeeding year the EWC Rate shall be less than or equal to the EWC Rate in the preceding year. |
3
(c) | Disclosure and Changes . The EWC Rate and EWC Period shall be disclosed in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information and may not be increased unless approved as set forth in Section 12. | ||
(d) | Method of Calculation . The EWC shall be assessed on an amount equal to the lesser of the then current market value or the cost of the Shares being repurchased. No sales charge shall be imposed on increases in the net asset value of the Shares being repurchased above the initial purchase price. No EWC shall be assessed on Shares derived from reinvestment of dividends or capital gains distributions. The order in which Class A Shares, Class B Shares and Class C Shares are to be redeemed when not all of such Shares would be subject to an EWC shall be as determined by the Distributor in accordance with the provisions of Rule 6c-10 under the Act as if the Fund were an open-end investment company. | ||
(e) | Waiver . The Distributor may in its discretion waive an EWC otherwise due upon the repurchase of Shares under circumstances previously approved by the Trustees and disclosed in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. | ||
(f) | Calculation of Offering Price . The offering price of Shares subject to an EWC shall be computed in accordance with procedures approved by the Board of Trustees and disclosed in the Funds prospectus or statement of additional information. | ||
(g) | Retention by Distributor . The EWC paid with respect to Shares of the Fund shall be retained by the Distributor as reimbursement for expenses incurred in connection with the sale of Shares. |
5. | Service and Distribution Fees. Class A, Class B, and Class C Shares shall be subject to a Service Fee and a Distribution Fee. Class IC Shares may be subject to a Service Fee but not to a Distribution Fee. The Service Fee applicable to any class shall not exceed 0.25% per annum of the average daily net assets of the Class and the Distribution Fee shall not exceed 0.75% per annum of the average daily net assets of the Class. All other terms and conditions with respect to Service Fees and Distribution Fees shall be governed by the plans adopted by the Fund with respect to such fees and Rule 12b-1 of the Act as if the Fund were an open-end investment company. | |
6. | Conversion. Shares purchased through the reinvestment of dividends and distributions paid on Shares subject to conversion shall be treated as if held in a separate sub-account. Each time any Shares in a Shareholders account (other than Shares held in the sub-account) convert to Class A Shares, a proportionate number of Shares held in the sub-account shall also convert to Class A Shares. All conversions shall be effected on the basis of the relative net asset values of the two Classes without the imposition of any sales load or other charge. So long as any Class of Shares converts into Class A Shares, the Distributor shall waive or |
4
reimburse the Fund, or take such other actions with the approval of the Trustees as may be reasonably necessary, to ensure the expenses, including payments authorized under a Plan of Distribution, applicable to the Class A Shares are not higher than the expenses, including payments authorized under the Plan of Distribution, applicable to the class of shares converting into Class A Shares. | ||
7. | Allocation of Expenses, Income and Gains Among Classes. |
(a) | Expenses Applicable to a Particular Class . Shares of each Class of the Fund shall be assessed only that Service Fee, Distribution Fee and/or EWC applicable to that particular Class of Shares. Other expenses applicable to a particular Class, such as incremental transfer agency fees, but not including advisory or custodial fees or other expenses related to the management of the Funds assets, shall be allocated between Classes in different amounts if they are actually incurred in different amounts by the Classes or the Classes receive services of a different kind or to a different degree than other Classes. | ||
(b) | Distribution Expenses . Distribution Expenses actually attributable to the sale of all Classes shall be allocated to each Class based upon the ratio which sales of each Class bears to the sales of all Shares of the Fund. For this purpose, Shares issued upon reinvestment of dividends or distributions, upon conversion from Class B Shares to Class A Shares or upon stock splits will not be considered sales. | ||
(c) | Income, Capital Gains and Losses and Other Expenses Applicable to all Classes . Income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses and expenses such as advisory fees applicable to all Classes shall be allocated to each Class on the basis of the net asset value of that Class in relation to the net asset value of the Fund. | ||
(d) | Determination of Nature of Expense s. The Trustees shall determine in their sole discretion whether any expense other than those listed herein is properly treated as attributed to a particular Class or all Classes. |
8. | Exchange Privilege . Shareholders whose Shares are accepted by the Fund for repurchase may elect to receive in exchange, in lieu of cash, shares of the same class of an Invesco Fund at net asset value and without a sales charge, subject to the following conditions: |
(a) | General . Shares of the Fund may be exchanged for shares of the same class of an Invesco Fund at net asset value and without sales charges provided that the Distributor may specify that certain funds may not be exchanged within a designated period after acquisition, which shall not exceed 90 days, without prior Distributor approval. The class of an Invesco Fund for which Class IB Shares and Class IC Shares of the Fund shall be exchanged is the Class A Shares of such Invesco Fund. |
5
(b) | CDSC Schedule . Any CDSC Shares acquired through such an exchange will be subject to a CDSC Schedule for such class of such Invesco Fund equivalent to the EWC Rates for such class of the Fund upon their subsequent redemption. For purposes of computing the length of time the acquired CDSC Shares have been held prior to redemption, the holding period of the original Class A, Class B or Class C Shares shall be added to the holding period of the acquired CDSC Shares. |
9. | Voting Rights of Classes . |
(a) | Shareholders of each Class shall have exclusive voting rights on any matter submitted to them that relates solely to the Plan of Distribution related to that Class, provided that: |
(i) | If any amendment is proposed to the plan under which Distribution Fees are paid with respect to Class A Shares of the Fund that would increase materially the amount to be borne by Class A Shares under that plan, then no Class B Shares shall convert into Class A Shares of that Fund until the holders of Class B Shares of that Fund have also approved the proposed amendment. | ||
(ii) | If the holders of the Class B Shares referred to in subparagraph (a)(i) do not approve the proposed amendment, the Trustees of the Fund and the Distributor shall take such action as is necessary to ensure that the Class voting against the amendment shall convert into another Class identical in all material respects to Class A Shares of the Fund as constituted prior to the amendment. |
(b) | Shareholders shall have separate voting rights on any matter submitted to shareholders in which the interest of one Class differs from the interests of any other Class. |
10. | Dividends . Dividends paid by the Fund with respect to each Class, to the extent any dividends are paid, will be calculated in the same manner, at the same time and on the same day and will be in substantially the same amount, except any Distribution Fees, Service Fees or incremental expenses relating to a particular Class will be borne exclusively by that Class. | |
11. | Reports to Trustees . The Distributor shall provide to the Trustees of the Fund quarterly and annual statements concerning distribution and shareholder servicing expenditures complying with paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of Rule 12b-1 of the Act, as it may be amended from time to time, as if the Fund were an open-end fund. The Distributor also shall provide the Trustees such information as the Trustees may from time to time deem to be reasonably necessary to evaluate this Plan. | |
12. | Amendment . Any material amendment to this Plan shall be approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the Trustees of the Fund, including the affirmative vote of the Trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund, except that any amendment that increases an EWC Rate or lengthens the EWC Period must also be approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the Shares of the affected Class. The Distributor shall provide the Trustees such information as may be reasonably necessary to evaluate any amendment to this Plan. |
6
RE: |
Invesco Senior Loan Fund
Registration Statement on Form N-2 |
Code of Ethics | 1 |
Section | Item | Page | ||||
|
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I. |
Introduction
|
3 | ||||
|
||||||
II. |
Statement of Fiduciary Principles
|
3 | ||||
|
||||||
III. |
Compliance With Laws, Rules and Regulations; Reporting of Violations
|
4 | ||||
|
||||||
IV. |
Limits on Personal Investing
|
4 | ||||
A. Personal Investing
|
4 | |||||
1 Pre-clearance of Personal Securities Transactions
|
4 | |||||
Blackout Period
|
5 | |||||
Investment Personnel
|
5 | |||||
De Minimis
Exemptions
|
5 | |||||
2 Prohibition of Short-Term Trading Profits
|
6 | |||||
3 Initial Public Offerings
|
6 | |||||
4 Prohibition of Short Sales by Investment Personnel
|
7 | |||||
5 Restricted List Securities
|
7 | |||||
6 Other Criteria to Consider in Pre-Clearance
|
||||||
7 Brokerage Accounts
|
7 | |||||
8 Reporting Requirements
|
8 | |||||
a. Initial Holdings Reports
|
8 | |||||
b. Quarterly Transactions Reports
|
8 | |||||
c. Annual Holdings Reports
|
9 | |||||
d. Discretionary Managed Accounts
|
9 | |||||
e. Certification of Compliance
|
10 | |||||
9 Private Securities Transactions
|
10 | |||||
10 Limited Investment Opportunity
|
10 | |||||
11 Excessive Short-Term Trading in Funds
|
10 | |||||
|
||||||
B. Invesco Ltd. Securities
|
10 | |||||
C. Limitations on Other Personal Activities
|
11 | |||||
1 Outside Business Activities
|
11 | |||||
2 Gifts and Entertainment Policy
|
11 | |||||
Entertainment
|
11 | |||||
Gifts
|
11 | |||||
3 U.S. Department of Labor Reporting
|
12 | |||||
D. Parallel Investing Permitted
|
12 | |||||
|
||||||
V. |
Reporting of Potential Compliance Issues
|
13 | ||||
|
||||||
VI. |
Administration of the Code
|
13 | ||||
|
||||||
VII. |
Sanctions
|
13 | ||||
|
||||||
VIII. |
Exceptions to the Code
|
14 | ||||
|
||||||
IX. |
Definitions
|
14 | ||||
|
||||||
X. |
Invesco Ltd. Policies and Procedures
|
16 | ||||
|
||||||
X1. Code of Ethics Contacts | 16 |
Code of Ethics | 2 |
I. | Introduction |
| any director, officer, full or part time Employee of Invesco Advisers, Inc. or any full or part time Employee of any Invesco Advisers, Inc.s affiliates that, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes, participates in , or obtains any information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities or who is involved in making or obtains information concerning investment recommendations with respect to such purchase or sales of Covered Securities; or who has access to non-public information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities, access to non-public securities recommendations or access to non-public information concerning portfolio holdings of any portfolio advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
| all Employees of Invesco Ltd. located in the United States who are not covered by the Code of Ethics of a registered investment advisory affiliate of Invesco Ltd. | ||
| any other persons falling within such definitions under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 , as amended (the Investment Company Act)or Rule 204A-1 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the Advisers Act) and such other persons that may be so deemed by Compliance. |
II. | Statement of Fiduciary Principles |
| the interests of Clients and shareholders of investment company Clients must be placed first at all times and Covered Persons must not take inappropriate advantage of their positions; and | ||
| all personal securities transactions must be conducted consistent with this Code and in a manner to avoid any abuse of an individuals position of trust and responsibility. This Code is our effort to address conflicts of interest that may arise in the ordinary course of our business. |
Code of Ethics | 3 |
III. | Compliance with Laws, Rules and Regulations; Reporting of Violations |
IV. | Limits on Personal Investing |
A. | Personal Investing | ||
1. Pre-clearance of Personal Security Transactions . All Covered Persons must pre-clear with the Compliance Department using the automated review system all personal security transactions involving Covered Securities for which they have Beneficial Ownership. A Covered Person may have Beneficial Ownership in securities held by members of his or her immediate family sharing the same household (i.e., a spouse and children) or by certain partnerships, trusts, corporations, or other arrangements. | |||
Additionally, all Covered Persons must pre-clear personal securities transactions involving securities over which they have discretion. For example, if a Covered Person is directing the transactions for a friend or family member (regardless of whether they share the same household) all transactions in Covered Securities must be pre-cleared. Covered Securities include but are not limited to all investments that can be traded by an Invesco Advisers, Inc. entity for its Clients, including stocks, bonds, municipal bonds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and any of their derivatives such as options. Although Affiliated Mutual Funds are considered Covered Securities, those that are held by Employees at the Affiliated Mutual Funds transfer agent or in the Invesco Ltd. 401(k) or Money Purchase plans (excluding the Personal Choice Retirement Account (PCRA)) do not need to be pre-cleared through the automated review system because compliance monitoring for these plans is done through a separate process. |
Code of Ethics | 4 |
| Any approval granted to a Covered Person to execute a personal security transaction is valid for that business day only, except that if approval is granted after the close of trading day such approval is good through the next trading day. |
| Non-Investment Personnel. |
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security within two trading days before or after a Client trades in that security. | ||
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security if there is a Client order on that security currently with the trading desk. |
| Investment Personnel . |
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security within three trading days before or after a Client trades in that security. | ||
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security if there is a Client order on that security currently with the trading desk. |
Code of Ethics | 5 |
| Equity de minimis exemptions . |
| If a Covered Person does not have knowledge of trading activity in a particular equity security, he or she may execute up to 500 shares of such security in a rolling 30-day period provided the issuer of such security is included in the Russell 1000 Index. | ||
| If a Covered Person does not have knowledge of trading activity in a particular equity security, he or she may execute up to 500 shares of such security in a rolling 30 day period provided that there is no conflicting client activity in that security during the blackout period or on the trading desk that exceeds 500 shares per trading day. |
| Fixed income de minimis exemption . If a Covered Person does not have knowledge of trading activity in a particular fixed income security he or she may execute up to $100,000 of par value of such security in a rolling 30-day period. |
| A Letter of Education will be provided to any Covered Person whose failure to pre-clear is considered immaterial or inadvertent. | ||
| Repeat violations may result in in-person training, probation, withdrawal of personal trading privileges or employment termination, depending on the nature and severity of the violations. |
Code of Ethics | 6 |
| full service broker-dealers. | ||
| discount broker-dealers. discount brokerage are accounts in which all trading is completed online. These accounts must be held with firms that provide electronic feeds of confirmations directly to the Compliance Department, | ||
| Invesco Advisers, Incs. -affiliated Broker-dealer (Invesco Distributors, Inc.) |
Code of Ethics | 7 |
| A list of all security holdings, including the name, number of shares (for equities) and the principal amount (for debt securities) in which the person has direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership. A Covered Person may have Beneficial Ownership in securities held by members of their immediate family sharing the same household (i.e., a spouse and children) or by certain partnerships, trusts, corporations, or other arrangements. | ||
| The name of any broker-dealer or bank with which the person maintains an account in which any securities are held for the direct or indirect benefit of the person; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted by the Covered Person |
| The nature of the transaction (buy, sell, etc.); | ||
| The price of the Covered Security at which the transaction was executed; | ||
| The name of the broker-dealer or bank executing the transaction; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted to the Compliance Department. |
Code of Ethics | 8 |
| The date the account was established; | ||
| The name of the broker-dealer or bank; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted to the Compliance Department. |
| The security and the number of shares (for equities) or the interest rate and maturity date (if applicable) and principal amount (for debt securities) for each Covered Security in which the Covered Person has any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership; | ||
| The name of the broker-dealer or bank with or through which the security is held; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted by the Covered Person to the Compliance Department. |
Code of Ethics | 9 |
B. | Invesco Ltd. Securities |
Code of Ethics | 10 |
C. | Limitations on Other Personal Activities |
| Entertainment . Employees must report Entertainment with the Compliance Department within thirty (30) calendar days after the receipt or giving by submitting a Gift Report within the automated review system. The requirement to report Entertainment includes dinners or any other event with a Business Partner of Invesco Advisers, Inc. in attendance. | ||
Employees may not reimburse Business Partners for the cost of tickets that would be considered excessive or for travel related expenses without approval of the Compliance Department. | |||
Examples of Entertainment that may be considered excessive in value include Super Bowls, All-Star games, Kentucky Derby, hunting trips, ski trips, etc. An occasional sporting event, golf outing or concert when accompanied by the Business Partner may not be excessive. | |||
Gifts . Employees are prohibited from accepting or giving the following: single Gifts valued in excess of $100 in any calendar year; or Gifts from one person or firm valued in excess of $100 during a calendar year period. | |||
Reporting Requirements for Gifts and Entertainment: |
Code of Ethics | 11 |
| Reporting of Gifts and Entertainment given to an Invesco Employee by a Client or Business Partner. All Gifts and Entertainment received by an Employee must be reported through the automated pre-clearance system within thirty (30) calendar days after the receipt of the Gift or the attendance of the Entertainment event. | ||
| Reporting of Gifts and Entertainment given by an Invesco Employee to a Client or Business Partner. All Gifts and Entertainment given by an Employee must be reported through the reporting requirements of the Employees business unit. An Employee should contact their manager or Compliance if they are not sure how to report gifts they intend to give or have given to a Client or Business Partner. |
D. | Parallel Investing Permitted | ||
Subject to the provisions of this Code, Employees may invest in or own the same securities as those acquired or sold by Invesco Advisers, Inc. for its Clients. |
V. | Reporting of Potential Compliance Issues |
Code of Ethics | 12 |
VI. | Administration of the Code of Ethics |
| describes significant issues arising under the Code since the last report to the ICCC, including information about material violations of the Code and sanctions imposed in response to material violations; and | ||
| certifies that Invesco Advisers, Inc. has adopted procedures reasonably designed to prevent Covered Persons from violating the Code. |
VII. | Sanctions |
Code of Ethics | 13 |
VIII. | Exceptions to the Code |
IX. | Definitions |
| Affiliated Mutual Funds generally includes all mutual funds advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc All Invesco funds and Invesco Van Kampen funds are Affiliated Mutual Funds. | ||
| Automatic Investment Plan means a program in which regular purchases or sales are made automatically in or from investment accounts in accordance with a predetermined schedule and allocation, including dividend reinvestment plans. | ||
| Beneficial Ownership has the same meaning as Rule 16a-1(a)(2) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the 34 Act). To have a beneficial interest, Covered Persons must have a direct or indirect pecuniary interest, which is the opportunity to profit directly or indirectly from a transaction in securities. Thus a Covered Person may have Beneficial Ownership in securities held by members of his or her immediate family sharing the same household (i.e. a spouse and children) or by certain partnerships, trusts, corporations, or other arrangements. | ||
| Client means any account for which Invesco Advisers, Inc. is either the adviser or sub-adviser including Affiliated Mutual Funds. | ||
| Control has the same meaning as under Section 2(a)(9) of the Investment Company Act. | ||
| Covered Person means and includes: |
| any director, officer, full or part time Employee of Invesco Advisers, Inc. or any full or part time Employee of any Invesco Advisers, Inc.s affiliates that, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes, participates in , or obtains any information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities or who is involved in making or obtains information concerning investment recommendations with respect to such purchase or sales of Covered Securities ; or who has access to non-public information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities, access to non-public securities recommendations or access to non-public information concerning portfolio holdings of any portfolio advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
| all Employees of Invesco Ltd. located in the United States who are not covered by the Code of Ethics of a registered investment advisory affiliate of Invesco Ltd. | ||
| any other persons falling within such definitions under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 , as amended (the Investment Company Act)or Rule 204A-1 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the Advisers Act) and such other persons that may be so deemed by Compliance. |
Code of Ethics | 14 |
| Covered Security means a security as defined in Section 2(a)(36) of the Investment Company Act except that it does not include the following (Please note : exchange traded funds (ETFs) are considered a Covered Security). |
| Direct obligations of the Government of the United States or its agencies; | ||
| Bankers acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper and high quality short-term debt instruments, including repurchase agreements; | ||
| Any open-end mutual fund not advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. (All Affiliated Mutual Funds shall be considered Covered Securities regardless of whether they are advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
| Any unit investment trust, including unit investment trusts advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc.; | ||
| Invesco Ltd. stock because it is subject to the provisions of Invesco Ltd.s Code of Conduct. Notwithstanding this exception, transactions in Invesco Ltd. securities are subject to all the pre-clearance and reporting requirements outlined in other provisions of this Code and any other corporate guidelines issued by Invesco Ltd. |
| Employee means and includes: |
| Any full or part time Employee of Invesco Advisers, Inc. or any full or part time Employee of any Invesco Advisers, Inc.s affiliates that, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes or participates in, or obtains any information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securties or who is involved in making or obtains information concerning investment recommendations with respect to such purchase or sales of Covered Securities; or who has access to non-public information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities, access to non-public securities recommendations or access to non-public information concerning portfolio holdings of any portfolio advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
| All Employees of Invesco Ltd. located in the United States who are not covered by the Code of Ethics of a registered investment advisory affiliate of Invesco Ltd. | ||
| Any other persons falling within such definitions under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act or Rule 204A-1 under the Advisers Act and such other persons that may be so deemed by Compliance. |
| Gifts, Entertainment and Business Partner have the same meaning as provided in the Invesco Ltd. Gifts and Entertainment Policy. | ||
| Initial Public Offering means an offering of securities registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the issuer of which, immediately before the registration, was not subject to the reporting requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the 34 Act. | ||
| Invesco Advisers, Inc.s -affiliated Broker-dealer means Invesco Distributors, Inc. or its successors. |
Code of Ethics | 15 |
| Private Securities Transaction means any securities transaction relating to new offerings of securities which are not registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, provided however that transactions subject to the notification requirements of Rule 3050 of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authoritys (FINRA) Conduct Rules, transactions among immediate family members (as defined in the interpretation of the FINRA Board of Governors on free-riding and withholding) for which no associated person receives any selling compensation, and personal securities transactions in investment company and variable annuity securities shall be excluded. | ||
| Restricted List Securities means the list of securities that are provided to Compliance Department by Invesco Ltd. or investment departments, which include those securities that are restricted from purchase or sale by Client or Employee accounts for various reasons (e.g., large concentrated ownership positions that may trigger reporting or other securities regulatory issues, or possession of material, non-public information, or existence of corporate transaction in the issuer involving an Invesco Ltd. unit). |
X. | Invesco Ltd. Policies and Procedures |
XI. | Code Of Ethics Contacts |
| Telephone Hotline: 1-877-331-CODE [2633] | ||
| E-Mail: CodeofEthics(North America)@invesco.com |
Code of Ethics | 16 |
Page 1 of 31
SECTION | PAGE | |||
|
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1. Statement of General Principles
|
3 | |||
|
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2. Material, Non-Public Information
|
5 | |||
|
||||
3. Personal Investing Activities, Pre-Clearance and Pre-Notification
|
7 | |||
|
||||
4. Trade Restrictions on Personal Investing
|
11 | |||
|
||||
5. Economic Opportunities, Confidentiality and Outside Directorships
|
14 | |||
|
||||
6. Client Investments in Securities Owned by Invesco Employees
|
16 | |||
|
||||
7. Reports
|
16 | |||
|
||||
8. Miscellaneous
|
18 | |||
|
||||
APPENDICIES
|
||||
|
||||
A: Definitions
|
19 | |||
|
||||
B: Procedures to Deal
|
21 | |||
|
||||
C: Pre-Clearance of Personal Trade Authorisation Form
|
23 | |||
|
||||
D: Acknowledgement of Receipt of Revised Code of Ethics
|
25 | |||
|
||||
E: Annual Certification of Compliance with the Code of Ethics
|
26 | |||
|
||||
F: Types of Transactions in Invesco Shares: Pre-Clearance Guidance
|
30 |
Page 2 of 31
| Prohibitions related to material, non-public information; | |
| Personal securities investing; and | |
| Service as a director and other business opportunities. |
| Gifts, Benefits and Entertainment (Inducements) Policy; | ||
| Conflicts of Interest Policy; | ||
| Treating Customers Fairly Policy; | ||
| Whistleblowing Policy; | ||
| Market Abuse Policy; and | ||
| Anti-Bribery Policy. |
1 | STATEMENT OF GENERAL PRINCIPLES |
1.1 | As a fiduciary, Invesco owes an undivided duty of loyalty to its clients. It is Invescos policy that all employees conduct themselves so as to avoid not only actual conflicts of interest with Invesco clients, but also that they refrain from conduct which could give rise to the appearance of a conflict of interest that may compromise the trust our clients have placed in us. | ||
1.2 | The Code is designed to ensure, among other things, that the personal securities transactions of all employees are conducted in accordance with the following general principles: |
1.2.1 | A duty at all times to place the interests of Invescos clients first and foremost; | ||
1.2.2 | The requirement that all personal securities transactions be conducted in a manner consistent with this Code and in such a manner as to avoid any actual, potential or appearance of a conflict of interest or any abuse of an employees position of trust and responsibility; and |
Page 3 of 31
1.2.3 | The requirement that employees should not take inappropriate advantage of their positions. |
1.3 | Invescos policy is to avoid actual or apparent conflicts of interest but, where they unavoidably occur, to record, manage, and disclose them to prevent abuse and protect our clients, employees and other counterparties. | ||
1.4 | Invesco does not make political contributions with corporate funds. No employees may, under any circumstances, use company funds to make political contributions, nor may you represent your personal political views as being those of the company. | ||
1.5 | Invesco seeks to do business with clients and suppliers on a fair and equitable basis. Employees may not accept or provide gifts, entertainment or other non-monetary benefits of an unreasonable value which could create a conflict with the duty owed to clients. Any limits imposed by our business units policies, local laws, or regulations with respect to the acceptance or provision of gifts, entertainment and non-monetary benefits must be complied with. | ||
1.6 | Invesco does not tolerate bribery. Employees must not offer, give, request, and agree to accept or accept financial or non-financial advantages of any kind where the purpose is to influence a person to behave improperly in their decisions or actions or to reward them for having done so. Charitable donations must not be made as an inducement or reward for improper behaviour. Unofficial payments to speed up routine government or other processes must never be made, however small. These restrictions apply to Invesco staff and to anybody appointed to act on Invescos behalf and cover relationships with prospective or existing clients or business partners. Further information can be found in the Anti-Bribery Policy. | ||
1.7 | Legislation exists to protect employees who blow the whistle about wrongdoing within the Firm. This legislation encourages employees to raise concerns internally in the first instance. Invesco employees should feel able to raise any such concerns internally, confident that it will be dealt with properly and that all reasonable steps will be taken to prevent victimisation. If employees wish to report concerns anonymously they can call the Invesco Compliance Reporting Hotline, 1-855-234-9780. The toll-free telephone number for calls from the UK is 0800-032-8483. Employees may also report their concerns by visiting the Invesco Compliance Reporting Hotline website at: www.invesco.ethicspoint.com . To ensure confidentiality, this telephone line and website is provided by an independent company and is available twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. All submissions to the Compliance Reporting Hotline will be reviewed and handled in a prompt, fair, and discreet manner. Employees are encouraged to report questionable practices so that Invesco has an opportunity to address and resolve these before they become more significant regulatory or legal issues. | ||
1.8 | It is Invesco UK policy, in the context of being an Asset Manager, to treat its customers fairly. |
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1.9 | No employee should have ownership in or other interest in or employment by any outside concern which does business with Invesco Ltd. This does not apply to stock or other investments in a publicly held company, provided that the stock and other investments do not, in the aggregate, exceed 5% of the outstanding ownership interests of such company. Invesco Ltd may, following a review of the relevant facts, permit ownership interests which exceed these amounts if management or the Board of Directors, as appropriate, concludes that such ownership interests will not adversely affect Invescos business interests or the judgment of the affected staff. | ||
1.10 | Employees are prohibited from using personal hedging strategies or remuneration or liability related contracts of insurance to undermine any risk alignment effects embedded in their remuneration arrangements. This includes, for instance, entering into an arrangement with a third party under which that third party will make payments directly, or indirectly, to the employee that are linked to, or commensurate with, the amounts by which the employees remuneration is subject to reductions arising from the implementation of the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD3) and the FSAs Remuneration Code. | ||
2 | MATERIAL, NON-PUBLIC INFORMATION | ||
2.1 | Restriction on Trading or Recommending Trading Each employee is reminded that it constitutes a violation of law and/or Market Abuse regulations for any person to trade in or recommend trading in the securities of a company while in possession of material, non-public information concerning that company, or to disclose such information to any person not entitled to receive it if there is reason to believe that such information will be used in connection with a trade in the securities of that company. Violations of law and regulations may give rise to civil as well as criminal liability, including the imposition of monetary penalties or prison sentences upon the individuals involved. Tippees (i.e, persons who receive material, non-public information) also may be held liable if they trade or if they do not trade but pass along such information to others. | ||
2.2 | What is material, non-public information? Material information is any information about a company which, if disclosed, is likely to affect the market price of the companys securities or to be considered important by an average investor in deciding whether to purchase or sell those securities. Examples of information which should be presumed to be material are matters such as dividend increases or decreases, earnings estimates by the company, changes in the companys previously released earnings estimates, significant new products or discoveries, major litigation by or against the company, liquidity or solvency problems, extraordinary management developments, significant merger or acquisition proposals, or similar major events which would be viewed as having materially altered the total mix of information available regarding the company or the market for any of its securities. Further examples can be found in the FSA Market Abuse Handbook. | ||
2.3 | Non-public information, often referred to as inside information, is information that has not yet been publicly disclosed. Information about a company is considered to be non-public information if it is received under circumstances which indicate that it is not yet in general circulation and that such information may be attributable, directly or indirectly, to the company or its insiders, or that |
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the recipient knows to have been furnished by someone in breach of a fiduciary obligation. Courts have held that fiduciary relationships exist between a company and another party in a broad variety of situations involving a relationship between a company and its lawyers, investment bankers, financial printers, employees, technical advisors and others. This list is not exhaustive and the types of fiduciary relationships and the way in which they are formed are extensive. | |||
2.4 | Information should not be considered to have been publicly disclosed until a reasonable time after it has been made public (for example, by a press release). Someone with access to inside information may not beat the market by trading simultaneously with, or immediately after, the official release of material information. | ||
2.5 | The responsibility of ensuring that the proposed transaction does not constitute insider dealing or a conflict with the interests of a client remains with the relevant employee and obtaining pre-clearance to enter into a transaction under Section 3.3 below does not absolve that responsibility. | ||
2.6 | Invesco is in a unique position, being privy to market research and rumours and being privy also to information about its clients which may be public companies. Invesco employees must be aware and vigilant to ensure that they cannot be accused of being a party of any insider dealing or market abuse situations. | ||
2.7 | In particular, the following investment activities must not be entered into without carefully ensuring that there are no implications of insider trading: |
2.7.1 | Trading in shares for a client in any other client of Invesco which is quoted on a recognised stock exchange. | ||
2.7.2 | Trading in shares for a client in a quoted company where Invesco: |
i) | obtains information in any official capacity which may be price sensitive and has not been made available to the general public. | ||
ii) | obtains any other information which can be substantiated in connection with a quoted company which is also both price sensitive and has not been made available to the general public. |
2.7.3 | Manipulation of the market through the release of information to regular market users which is false or misleading about a company. | ||
2.7.4 | Release of information about a company that would have the effect of distorting the market in such a way to be considered market abuse. |
2.8 | Reporting Requirement. Whenever an employee believes that he or she may have come into possession of material, non-public information about a public company, he or she personally must immediately notify the Compliance Department and should not discuss such information with anyone else |
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including Invesco employees and should not engage in transactions for himself or others, including Invesco clients. | |||
2.9 | Upon receipt of such information the Compliance Department will include the company name on the IVZ Restricted list in respect of which no transactions may be entered into. This list will be advised to the Equity dealing desk and no discussion will be entered into. Whenever an employee is aware of the reason why a company has been included on the IVZ Restricted list but nevertheless wishes to deal in a fund which contains the stock of that company, this must be notified to the European Director of Compliance to decide whether the deal will be permitted. Approval to deal in a personal capacity (i.e. in a Covered Account) in a fund which holds a stock on the IVZ Restricted List will not be granted where the stock represents over 5% of the value of the funds portfolio. | ||
2.10 | Confidentiality. No information regarding the affairs of any client of Invesco may be passed to anyone outside Invesco unless specifically requested by law, regulation or court order. In any event, the Compliance and Legal Departments must be consulted prior to furnishing such information. | ||
2.11 | Employees should maintain the confidentiality of information entrusted to them by the Company and their fellow employees. External publication or distribution of internal company information, policies or procedures is prohibited except when disclosure is properly authorised by the functional owner of the information or legally mandated. Employees should make all reasonable efforts to safeguard such information that is in their possession against inadvertent disclosure and shall comply with any non-disclosure obligations imposed on Invesco in its agreements with third parties | ||
2.12 | Sanctions. Any employee who knowingly trades or recommends trading while in possession of material, non-public information may be subject to civil and criminal penalties, as well as to immediate suspension and/or dismissal from Invesco. |
3 | PERSONAL INVESTING ACTIVITIES, PRE-CLEARANCE AND PRE-NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS |
3.1 | Transactions covered by this Code All transactions in investments made for Covered Accounts are subject to the pre-clearance procedures, trading restrictions, pre-notification and reporting requirements described below, unless otherwise indicated. For a list of the types of employee and other accounts which are Covered Accounts, please see the definition in Appendix A. | ||
3.2 | Transactions in the following investments (Exempt Investments) are not subject to the trading restrictions or other requirements of this Code and do not need to be pre-notified, pre-cleared or reported: |
3.2.1 | Registered unaffiliated (e.g. Schroders) open ended Collective Investment Schemes [CIS] including; mutual funds, open-ended investment companies/ICVCs or unit trusts but not Exchange |
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Traded Funds (ETFs) or closed-end funds, e.g. Investment Trusts; and | |||
3.2.2 | Securities which are direct obligations of an OECD country (e.g. US Treasurys). |
3.3 | Pre-Clearance |
3.3.1 | Transactions in a Covered Account which must be notified to the Compliance department for pre-clearance, regardless of whether the order is placed directly or through a broker/adviser, include the following: |
| buys or sales of ordinary securities, equivalent securities, venture capital schemes such as Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs) and Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), including any of these investments which are held within a product/wrapper such as a Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) or Individual savings Account (ISA); | ||
| buys, sales, switches or transfers of holdings in Invesco UK ICVCs, GPR Funds, Pension Funds or other affiliated schemes, including any of these investments which are held within an unaffiliated product/wrapper e.g. Invesco ICVCs held with a Hargreaves Lansdown ISA or Invesco pension funds held within an Aviva Group Personal Pension (GPP). |
Employees wishing to carry out transactions must complete the relevant sections of the Trade Authorisation Form which can be found in Appendix C (and on the Compliance Europe intranet site) and pre-clearance must be obtained. | |||
The Trade Authorisation Form must be sent by e-mail to * UK-Compliance Personal Share Dealing in respect of transactions in the following: |
| Invesco ordinary shares: | ||
| Invesco UK ICVCs, GPR Funds, Pension Funds or other affiliated schemes; and | ||
| VCTs. |
In all other cases, the Trade Authorisation Form must be sent by e-mail to *UK-lnvest. Dealers. | |||
Transactions are subject to the 60 day holding period requirements. |
The Trade Authorisation Form requires employees to provide certain information and to make certain representations in connection with the specific securities transaction (s). |
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3.3.2 | After receiving the completed Trade Authorisation Form, UK Equity Dealers will review the information set forth in the form and, as soon as practicable, will determine whether to clear the proposed Securities Transaction, subject to local requirements. | ||
3.3.3 | Once UK Equity Dealers have authorised the transaction, it is passed electronically to Compliance to complete the authorisation process again this is conducted electronically by e-mail. UK Equity Dealers will forward the authorised Form to * UK-Compliance Personal Share Dealing, who will then check the proposed transaction against the significant holdings/block list to ascertain whether or not the security in question has been blocked. | ||
3.3.4 | If satisfactory, then the Form will be authorised by Compliance and confirmation returned by e-mail to the individual, who will then be at liberty to deal through his or her broker within the designated timescales. | ||
3.3.5 | No order for a Securities Transaction for which pre-clearance authorisation is sought may be placed prior to the receipt of authorisation of the transaction by both the UK Equity Dealers and Compliance. The authorisation and date and time of the authorisation must be reflected on the Trade Authorisation Form (see Appendix C). The original of the completed form will be kept as part of Invescos books and -records, and matched to the copy contract note (or equivalent) that the member of staff must ensure is sent by their broker to Invesco. | ||
3.3.6 | If an employee receives permission to trade a security or instrument, the trade must be executed by the close of business on the next business day, unless the local European Director of Compliances authorisation to extend this period has been obtained. | ||
3.3.7 | Where an employee receives permission to buy or sell Invesco Limited ordinary shares on the basis of a limit or stop loss order, the pre-clearance remains valid for up to two weeks or until the trade takes place if this is sooner; if the trade does not take place within two weeks, employees must notify Compliance again and seek further pre-clearance to trade. If, during this period, employees gain non-public price sensitive information, they must notify compliance immediately and cancel the trade. For those employees who are members of the Blackout Group, normal Blackout restrictions continue to apply; therefore, any such limit or stop loss order which remains outstanding when a closed period starts must be cancelled by the employee. Where trades involving limit or stop loss orders are approved, further pre-clearance is required before these orders can be changed. | ||
3.3.8 | For any transaction to buy or sell Invesco Limited ordinary shares pre clearance needs only to be sought from Compliance. The trade authorisation form which should be completed in the way detailed above and sent to *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing. |
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3.3.9 | Copies of the relevant contract notes (or equivalent) must be sent to the Compliance Department. This must be done within 14 days of the transaction. |
3.4 | Transactions that do not need to be pre-cleared but must be reported . The pre-clearance requirements (and the trading restrictions on personal investing described below) do not apply to the following transactions: |
3.4.1 | Discretionary Accounts. Transactions effected in any Covered Account over which the employee has no direct or indirect influence or control (a Discretionary Account). An employee shall be deemed to have no direct or indirect influence or control over an account only if all of the following conditions are met: |
i) | investment discretion for such account has been delegated in writing to an independent fiduciary and such investment discretion is not shared with the employee, or decisions for the account are made by a family member or significant other and not by, or in connection with, the employee; | ||
ii) | the employee (and, where applicable, the family member or significant other) certifies in writing that he or she has not and will not discuss any potential investment decisions with such independent fiduciary or household member; and | ||
iii) | the Compliance Department has determined that the account satisfies the foregoing requirements. |
3.4.2 | Governmental Issues Investments in the debt obligations of Federal agencies or of state and municipal governments or agencies, (e.g. Essex Council Electricity Bond). | ||
3.4.3 | Non-Volitional Trades Transactions which are non-volitional on the part of the employee (such as the receipt of securities pursuant to a stock dividend or merger). | ||
3.4.4 | Automatic Transactions Purchases of the stock of a company pursuant to an automatic dividend reinvestment plan or an employee stock purchase plan sponsored by such company. | ||
3.4.5 | Rights Offerings Receipt or exercise of rights issued by a company on a pro rata basis to all holders of a class of security. Employees must, however, pre-clear transactions for the acquisition of such rights from a third party or the disposition of such rights. | ||
3.4.6 | Interests in Securities comprising part of a broad-based, publicly traded market basket or index of stocks , e.g. S & P 500 Index, FTSE 100, DAX. |
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3.4.7 | Non-Executive Directors transactions Transactions in securities, except for Invesco Ltd shares and/or UK Investment Trusts and GPR Funds managed by Invesco, by non-executive Directors. | ||
3.4.8 | Note that all of the transactions described in paragraphs 3.4.1. to 3.4.7 while not subject to pre-clearance are nevertheless subject to all of the reporting requirements set forth below in paragraph 7.3. |
4 | TRADE RESTRICTIONS ON PERSONAL INVESTING |
4.1 | All transactions in Covered Accounts which are subject to the preclearance requirements specified in this Code are also subject to the following trading restrictions: |
4.1.1 | Blackout Restrictions Transactions in Covered Accounts generally will not be permitted during a specific period before and after a client account trades in the same security or instrument. | ||
4.1.2 | Blackout Periods An employee may not buy or sell, or permit any Covered Account to buy or sell, a security or any instrument: |
i) | within three business days before or after the day on which any client account trades in the same security or instrument or in a security convertible into or exchangeable for such security or instrument (including options) on transactions other than those covered under the paragraph below, or | ||
ii) | within two business days before or after the day on which a pro rata strip trade, which includes such security, is made for the purpose of rebalancing client accounts. |
4.1.3 | Blackout periods will no longer apply to equity and corporate bond transactions in main index constituents, i.e. FTSE 100, Dow Jones, etc, subject to a cost and proceeds limit of £25,000 per transaction for equities and £50,000 nominal per transaction for corporate bonds. Normal blackout conditions will apply to transactions outside of these criteria. If in any doubt please consult the European Director of Compliance. On a case by case basis and at the discretion of the European Director of Compliance in consultation with the Chief Investment Officer, this limit may be relaxed. | ||
4.1.4 | Trades effected by Invesco for the account of an index fund it manages in the ordinary course of such funds investment activity will not trigger the blackout period. However, the addition or removal of a security from an index, thereby triggering an index fund trade, would cause employee trades in such security to be blacked-out for the seven prior and subsequent calendar days, as described above. | ||
4.1.5 | In the event there is a trade in a client account in the same security or instrument within a blackout period, the employee may |
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be required to close out the position and to disgorge any profit to a charitable organisation chosen by the local Board of Directors; provided, however, that if an employee has obtained preclearance for a transaction and a subsequent client trade occurs within the blackout period, the Chief Executive Officer in consultation with the European Director of Compliance, upon a demonstration of hardship or extraordinary circumstances, may determine to review the application of the disgorgement policy to such transaction and may select to impose alternative restrictions on the employees position. The disgorgement of profits will only apply if the total profit exceeds £100 within the blackout period. | |||
4.1.6 | Invesco Ltd Shares Pre-clearance is required to buy or sell Invesco Ltd Shares. For staff who have been advised that they are part of the Blackout Group, permission will not be given during a closed period. | ||
Persons within the Blackout Group are determined on a quarterly basis and will be notified that they have been added to or removed from the list. | |||
In line with the Invesco Insider Trading Policy, the closed periods for each quarter commence on 15 March, 15 June, 15 September and 15 December respectively and end on the second business day following the Companys issue of the relevant earnings release. | |||
Full details of the Invesco stock transaction Pre-Clearance Guide and restrictions for all employees of Invesco can be found in Appendix F. | |||
4.1.7 | Invesco Investment Trusts Staff dealing in Invesco Investment Trusts will also be subject to closed periods as dictated by each of the Trusts. | ||
4.1.8 | UK ICVCs and other affiliated schemes will be subject to the Short Term Trading restrictions (60 day rule see 4.1.9). The preferential rate of sales charge allowed to staff will be withdrawn in circumstances where it is apparent that the employee has traded on a short term basis in those shares i.e. where previous transactions by that person have resulted in the short term holding of those investments. Shares of UK ICVCs and affiliated schemes will not be accepted for redemption if the funds themselves are closed for redemption due to the effects of subsequent market or currency movements. | ||
4.1.9 | Short Term Trading Profits It is Invescos policy to restrict the ability of employees to benefit from short-term trading in securities and instruments. Employees must disgorge profits made on the sale by an employee of any security or instrument held less than 60 days and will not be permitted to purchase any security or instrument that has been sold by such employee within the prior 60 days. Employees are required to disgorge profits made on the sale in a Covered Account within the 60 days period. Exceptions may be granted by the Compliance Department on a case by case |
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basis. This policy applies to trading in all types of securities and instruments, except where in a particular case the European Director of Compliance in consultation with the Chief Executive Officer has made a specific finding of hardship and it can be demonstrated that no potential abuse or conflict is presented (for example, when an employees request to sell a security purchased within 60 days prior to the request is prompted by a major corporate or market event, such as a tender offer, and the security was not held in client accounts). This section (4.1.9) will not apply to Financial Spread Betting transactions which have been approved under the Exceptions section (4.1.16) of this Policy. | |||
4.1.10 | Initial Public Offerings No employee may purchase or permit any Covered Account to purchase a security offered pursuant to an initial public offering, except in a Venture Capital Trust, wherever such offering is made. However where the public offering is made by a Government of where the employee is resident and different amounts of the offering are specified for different investor types e.g. private and institutional, the European Director of Compliance may allow such purchases after consultation with the local Chief Executive Officer or his designee. | ||
4.1.11 | Privately-Issued Securities Employees may not purchase or permit a Covered Account to purchase or acquire any privately-issued securities, other than in exceptional cases specifically approved by the local Chief Executive Officer (e.g. where such investment is part of a family-owned and operated business venture that would not be expected to involve an investment opportunity of interest to any Invesco client). Requests for exceptions should be made in the first instance to the European Director of Compliance. | ||
4.1.12 | Employees, however, may invest in interests in private investment funds (i.e. hedge funds) that are established to invest predominantly in public securities and instruments, subject to the pre-clearance procedures, trading restrictions and reporting requirements contained in this Code. Employees may also invest in residential co-operatives and private recreational clubs (such as sports clubs, country clubs, luncheon clubs and the like) for their personal use; such investments are not subject to the pre-clearance procedures, trading restrictions and reporting requirements unless the employees investing is part of a business conducted by the employee. Such ownership should be reported to the European Director of Compliance. | ||
4.1.13 | Short Sales An employee may not sell short a security. Requests for exceptions should be made to the European Director of Compliance. | ||
4.1.14 | Financial Spread Betting Employees may not enter into Financial Spread betting arrangements unless they have applied in writing to do so under the Exceptions section of this Policy (4.1.16) and have received written confirmation that this is permitted. Exceptions |
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will not be granted for Financial Spread Betting on single stocks but, depending on the circumstances, spread betting on Exchange Rates, Main Indices and Government Bonds may be allowed on an exceptions basis. | |||
4.1.15 | Futures Employees may not write, sell or buy exchange-traded futures, synthetic futures, swaps and similar non-exchange traded instruments. | ||
4.1.16 | Exceptions The Chief Executive Officer or his designee in consultation with the European Director of Compliance may, on a case by case basis, grant exceptions from these trading restrictions upon written request. Any exceptions granted will be reported to the local Board of Directors at least annually. |
5 | ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, CONFIDENTIALITY AND OUTSIDE DIRECTORSHIPS |
5.1 | In order to reduce potential conflicts of interest arising from the participation of employees on the boards of directors of public, private, non-profit and other enterprises, all employees are subject to the following restrictions and guidelines: |
5.1.1 | An employee may not serve as a director of a public company without the approval of the European Director of Compliance after consultation with the local Chief Executive Officer. | ||
5.1.2 | An employee may serve on the board of directors or participate as an adviser or otherwise, or advisers of a private company only if: |
(i) | client assets have been invested in such company and having a seat on the board would be considered beneficial to our clients interest; and | ||
(ii) | service on such board has been approved in writing by the European Director of Compliance. The employee must resign from such board of directors as soon as the company contemplates going public, except where the European Director of Compliance has determined that an employee may remain on a board. In any event, an employee shall not accept any compensation for serving as a director (or in a similar capacity) of such company; any compensation offered shall either be refused or, if unable to be refused, distributed pro rata to the relevant client accounts. |
5.1.3 | An employee must receive prior written permission from the European Director of Compliance or his designee before serving as a director, trustee or member of an advisory board of either: |
(i) | any non-profit or charitable institution; or | ||
(ii) | a private family-owned and operated business. |
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5.1.4 | An employee may serve as an officer or director of a residential co-operative, but must receive prior written permission from the European Director of Compliance before serving as a director if, in the course of such service, he or she gives advice with respect to the management of the co-operatives funds. | ||
5.1.5 | If an employee serving on the board of directors or advisers of any entity comes into possession of material, non-public information through such service, he or she must immediately notify the European Director of Compliance. | ||
5.1.6 | An Invesco employee shall not take personal advantage of any economic opportunity properly belonging to an Invesco Client or to Invesco itself. Such opportunities could arise, for example, from confidential information belonging to a client or the offer of a directorship. Employees must not disclose information relating to a clients intentions, activities or portfolios except: |
i) | to fellow employees, or other agents of the client, who need to know it to discharge their duties; or | ||
ii) | to the client itself. |
5.1.7 | Employees may not cause or attempt to cause any Client to purchase, sell or hold any Security in a manner calculated to create any personal benefit to the employee or Invesco. | ||
5.1.8 | If an employee or immediate family member stands to materially benefit from an investment decision for an Advisory Client that the employee is recommending or participating in, the employee must disclose that interest to persons with authority to make investment decisions and to the European Director of Compliance. Based on the information given, a decision will be made on whether or not to restrict the employees participation in causing a client to purchase or sell a Security in which the employee has an interest. | ||
5.1.9 | An employee must disclose to those persons with authority to make investment decisions for a Client (or to the European Director of Compliance if the employee in question is a person with authority to make investment decisions for the Client), any Beneficial Interest that the employee (or immediate family) has in that Security or an Equivalent Security, or in the issuer thereof, where the decision could create a material benefit to the employee (or immediate family) or the appearance of impropriety. The person to whom the employee reports the interest, in consultation with the European Director of Compliance, must determine whether or not the employee will be restricted in making investment decisions. |
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6 | CLIENT INVESTMENTS IN SECURITIES OWNED BY INVESCO EMPLOYEES |
6.1 | General principles In addition to the specific prohibitions on certain personal securities transactions as set forth herein, all employees are prohibited from: |
6.1.1 | Employing any device, scheme or artifice to defraud any prospect or client; | ||
6.1.2 | Making any untrue statement of a material fact or omitting to state to a client or a prospective client, a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading; | ||
6.1.3 | Engaging in any act, practice or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any prospect or client; | ||
6.1.4 | Engaging in any manipulative practice with respect to any prospect or client; or | ||
6.1.5 | Revealing to any other person (except in the normal course of his or her duties on behalf of a client) any information regarding securities transactions by any client or by Invesco, | ||
6.1.6 | Revealing to any other person (except in the normal course of his or her duties on behalf of a client) the consideration of any securities transactions by any client or by Invesco. |
7 | REPORTS |
7.1 | In order to implement the general principles, restrictions and prohibitions contained in this Code, each Employee is required to provide the following: | ||
7.2 | Initial Certification and Schedules . This Code forms part of an employees contract of employment and any breach may be grounds for disciplinary action up to and including summary dismissal. |
7.2.1 | On commencing employment at Invesco, each new employee shall receive a copy of the Code via electronic means and will be expected to confirm that they understand and accept this Code within their first month of employment. (See Appendix D). | ||
7.2.2 | New employees are also required on commencement of employment to provide the following to the Compliance Department: |
(i) | a list of all Covered Accounts; and | ||
(ii) | details of any directorships (or similar positions) of for-profit, non-profit and other enterprises. |
7.3 | Confirmations Each employee shall cause to be provided to the Compliance Department, where an outside broker undertakes the transaction, duplicate copies of confirmations of all transactions in each Covered Account. |
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7.4 | Annual Certification All employees are required to confirm their understanding of and adherence to the Code of Ethics on an annual basis. (See Appendix E). |
7.4.1 | Annual acceptance of the Code is normally submitted electronically and requires the employee to provide an up-to-date list of: |
i) | all Covered Accounts/securities; | ||
ii) | directorships (or similar positions) of for-profit, non-profit and other enterprises; | ||
iii) | trades undertaken for which contract notes/confirmations have not been provided to the Compliance Department; | ||
iv) | potential conflicts of interest identified which have not yet been reported to the Compliance Department; and | ||
v) | potential Treating Customers Fairly issues identified which have not yet been reported to the Compliance Department. |
7.4.2 | With respect to Discretionary Accounts, if any, certifications that such employee does not discuss any investment decisions with the person making investment decisions; and | ||
7.4.3 | With respect to any non-public security owned by such employee, a statement indicating whether the issuer has changed its name or publicly issued securities during such calendar year. |
7.5 | Exempt Investments Confirmations and periodic reports need not be provided with respect to Exempt Investments, (see 3.2). | ||
7.6 | Disclaimer of Beneficial Ownership Any report required under this Code may contain a statement that such report is not to be construed as an admission by the person making the report that he or she has any direct and indirect beneficial ownership of the security to which the report relates. | ||
7.7 | Annual Review The European Director of Compliance will review the Code as necessary, in light of legal and business developments and experience in implementing the Code, and will prepare a report to the relevant Executive Committee that: |
7.7.1 | summarizes existing procedures concerning personal investing and any changes in the procedures made during the past year, | ||
7.7.2 | identifies any violations requiring significant remedial action during the past year, and | ||
7.7.3 | identifies any recommended changes in existing restrictions or procedures based on the experience under the Code, evolving industry practices, or developments in applicable laws or regulations |
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8 | MISCELLANEOUS |
8.1 | Interpretation The provisions of this Code will be interpreted by the European Director of Compliance. Questions of interpretation should be directed in the first instance to the European Director of Compliance or his/her designee or, if necessary, with the Compliance Officer of another Invesco entity. The interpretation of the European Director of Compliance is final. | ||
8.2 | Sanctions If advised of a violation of this Code by an employee, the local Chief Executive Officer (or, in the case of the local Chief Executive Officer, the local Board of Directors) may impose such sanctions as are deemed appropriate. Any violations of this Code and sanctions therefore will be reported to the local Board of Directors at least annually. | ||
8.3 | Effective Date This revised Code shall become effective as of 1 April 2012. |
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1. | Advisory Client means any client (including both investment companies and managed accounts) for which Invesco serves as an investment adviser, renders investment advice, or makes investment decisions. | |
2 | Beneficial Interest means the opportunity to share, directly or indirectly, in any profit or loss on a transaction in Securities, including but not limited to all joint accounts, partnerships and trusts. | |
3 | Covered Accounts means: |
3.1 | any account/securities held by you, or your family, while an employee; | ||
3.2 | accounts/securities held by you for the benefit of your spouse, significant other, or any children or relatives who share your home; | ||
3.3 | accounts/securities for which you have or share, directly or indirectly, through any contract, arrangement, understanding, relationship, or otherwise: |
(i) | voting power (which includes power to vote, or to direct the voting of, a security), or | ||
(ii) | investment power (which includes the power to dispose, or to direct the disposition) of a security; or |
3.4 | accounts/securities held by any other person to whose support you materially contribute or in which, by reason of any agreement or arrangement, you have or share benefits substantially equivalent to ownership, including, for example: |
(i) | arrangements such as Investment Clubs (which may be informal) under which you have agreed to share the profits from an investment, and | ||
(ii) | accounts maintained or administered by you for a relative (such as children or parents) who do not share your home. |
3.5 | Families include husbands and wives, significant other, sons and daughters and other immediate family only where any of those persons take part in discussion or passing on of investment information. |
4. | Employee means a person who has a contract of employment with, or employed by, Invesco UK or any associated Invesco Company within Europe; including consultants, contractors or temporary employees. |
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5. | Equivalent Security means any Security issued by the same entity as the issuer of a security, including options, rights, warrants, preferred stock, restricted stock, bonds and other obligations of that company. | |
6. | Fund means an investment company for which Invesco serves as an adviser or subadviser. | |
7. | High quality short-term debt instruments means any instrument having a maturity at issuance of less than 366 days and which is treated in one of the highest two rating categories by a Nationally Recognised Statistical Rating Organisation, or which is unrated but is of comparable quality. | |
8. | Independent Fund Director means an independent director of an investment company advised by Invesco. | |
9. | Initial Public Offering means any security which is being offered for the first time on a Recognised Stock Exchange. | |
10. | Open-Ended Collective Investment Scheme means any Open-ended Investment Company, US Mutual Fund, UK ICVC or Irish Unit Trust, Luxembourg SICAV, French SICAV or Bermuda Fund. | |
11. | Securities Transaction means a purchase of or sale of Securities. | |
12. | Security includes stock, notes, bonds, debentures and other evidences of indebtedness (including loan participations and assignments), limited partnership interests, investment contracts, and all derivative instruments, such as options and warrants. | |
13. | UK ICVC and affiliate schemes defined as all UK domiciled retail Invesco ICVCs, all Invesco Continental European domestic ranges and all Invesco Ireland and Luxembourg SICAVs and Unit Trusts. | |
14. | Main Index defined as a member of the FTSE 100 or equivalent. The equivalency will be determined by the European Director of Compliance on a case by case basis. |
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1 | The procedures to deal are as follows: |
A: | Obtain the UK Pre-Clearance Trade Authorisation Form from the Compliance Europe Intranet site homepage. | ||
B: | Complete Trade Authorisation Form noting: |
i) | permission sought to either buy or sell; | ||
ii) | the amount in shares or currency; | ||
iii) | is the transaction an Invesco ICVC/ISA/GPR or affiliated scheme - yes or no if yes, then you will have to submit your pre-clearance form to *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing e-mail group if no, then pre-clearance is not required; | ||
iv) | type of security; | ||
v) | name of company or other; | ||
vi) | date of request to deal; | ||
vii) | name of beneficial owner; and | ||
viii) | address of beneficial owner. |
Then complete each of the questions in connection with the transaction you require completed yes or no answers will be required. | |||
C: | For Venture Capital Trust ordinary securities or for Invesco ICVC/ISA/GPR Trades, you should now only complete section Two. Once you have answered both questions, the pre-clearance form must be submitted to the e-mail *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing - Compliance will review the prospective transaction and revert to you by e-mail. Once you have received this confirmation e-mail you are free to deal. However, the trade must be completed by the end of the next business day from the date of confirmation. | ||
If you wish to sell/buy Invesco shares you should complete Section two as noted above. | |||
D: | For Equity, Bond or Warrant deals, obtain pre-clearance to deal from the UK Investment Dealers by submitting the completed pre-clearance form by e-mail to *UK- Invest. Dealers. | ||
E: | Once the UK Investment Dealers have authorised the pre-clearance form, they will send the form on by e-mail to *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing for additional authorisation. | ||
Once Compliance has completed their checks, they will authorise the pre-clearance form and send back to the originator. The originator then has until close of business the day after pre-clearance is granted to deal. If dealing is not completed in this time frame, then additional pre-clearance MUST be sought via the same process. |
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F: | Once authority has been granted from the UK Investment Dealers and Compliance, the originator must also send a copy of the completed form to Elaine Coleman in Henley Compliance, who will enter the authority in the Personal Share Dealing Register. | ||
G: | A copy of the contract note (or equivalent) must also be sent to Compliance. | ||
NB | Permission to deal will not be granted retrospectively. Deals undertaken without permission will be brought to the European Director of Compliances attention, by a review of the personal share dealing register, for discussion with the person concerned. |
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1. | In accordance with Section 7 of the Code of Ethics, I will fully disclose the Securities holdings in Covered Accounts* | |
2. | In accordance with Section 3 of the Code of Ethics, I will obtain prior authorisation for all Securities Transactions in each of my Covered Accounts except for transactions exempt from pre-clearance under Section 3 of the Code of Ethics* | |
3. | In accordance with section 7 of the Code of Ethics, I will report all Securities Transactions in each of my Covered Accounts except for transactions exempt from reporting under Section 3 of the Code of Ethics. | |
4. | I will comply with the Code of Ethics in all other respects. |
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* | Representations Nos: 1 and 2 do not apply to Independent Fund Directors |
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a) | Sections A & B contain a complete list of Covered Account(s) as well as a complete list of my directorships, advisory board memberships and similar positions; | |
b) | Section C contains a complete list of trades, other than Exempt Investments, in my Covered Account(s) during the Calendar Year for which contract notes/confirmations have not been forwarded; | |
c) | Sections D & E contain details of any potential Conflicts of Interest and Treating Customers Fairly issues identified during the year but not yet reported. |
a) | For any of my Covered Accounts which have been approved by the Compliance Department as a Discretionary Account(s) (which have been identified on Section A with an E prefix), that I have not exercised investment discretion or influenced any investment decisions and that I will not exercise investment discretion or influence any potential investment decisions with such Discretionary Account(s); | |
b) | As appropriate, I have identified on Section A hereto those Covered Accounts which contain open-ended Collective Investment Schemes/Investment Companies shares only but for which account statements and confirms are not and have not been provided and hereby confirm that all securities transactions in these accounts are and will be limited exclusively to transactions in shares of open-ended Collective Investment Schemes; | |
c) | For any privately-issued security held by me or my Covered Account(s), I will inform the Compliance Department upon learning that any issuer has either changed its name or has issued or proposed to issue any class of security to the public; | |
d) | I have complied with the requirements of the Conflicts of Interest Policy, the Gifts, Benefits and Entertainment (Inducements) Policy, the Anti-Bribery Policy, the Market Abuse Policy, and the Treating Customers Fairly Policy; | |
e) | I have not used personal hedging strategies or remuneration or liability related insurance contracts to undermine any risk alignment effects embedded in my remuneration arrangements; | |
f) | I have read and understand my departments procedures; and | |
g) | I have received a copy of and understand the Code in its entirety and acknowledge that I am subject to its provisions. I also certify that I have complied and will comply with its requirements; |
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Pre | Quarterly Reporting of | Annual Report of | ||||||
Type of Transaction in IVZ | Clearance | Basis for Approval | Transactions | Holdings | ||||
- Open market purchases & sales
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Yes | Not permitted in | Yes | Yes | ||||
- Transactions in 401 (k) plan
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blackout periods. | |||||||
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European Director | European Director of | European Director of | |||||
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of Compliance | Compliance | Compliance | |||||
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Exercise of Employee Stock Options when same day sale
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Yes | Not permitted in closed periods for | Yes | n/a | ||||
Recd when merged w/ Invesco
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IVZ Company | those in the | European Director of | |||||
Options for Stock Grants
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Secretarial | Blackout Group. | Compliance | |||||
Options for Global Stock Plans
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Options for Restricted StkAwards
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Option holding period must be satisfied. | |||||||
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Sale of Stocks Exercised and held until later date.
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Yes | Not permitted in closed periods for | Yes | Yes | ||||
Options Exercised will have been received as follows:
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those in the | |||||||
Recd when merged w/ Invesco
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European Director | Blackout Group. | European Director of | European Director of | ||||
Options for Stock Grants
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of Compliance | Compliance | Compliance | |||||
Options for Global Stock Plans
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Options for Restricted StkAwards
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Stock holding period must be satisfied. | |||||||
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Sale of Stock Purchased through Sharesave
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Yes |
Not permitted in
closed periods for |
Yes | Yes | ||||
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European Director | those in the | European Director of | European Director of | ||||
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of Compliance | Blackout Group. | Compliance | Compliance | ||||
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Sale of Stock Purchased through UK SIP
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Yes |
Not permitted in
closed periods for |
Yes | Yes | ||||
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European Director | those in the | European Director of | European Director of | ||||
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of Compliance | Blackout Group. | Compliance | Compliance |
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§ | We are passionate about our clients success | ||
§ | We earn trust by acting with integrity | ||
§ | People are the foundation of our success | ||
§ | Working together, we achieve more | ||
§ | We believe in the continuous pursuit of performance excellence |
Ø | Best interests of clients As fiduciaries, we have a duty to act with reasonable care, skill and caution in the best interests of our clients, and to avoid conflicts of interest. |
Ø | Global fiduciary standards Invesco seeks to maintain the same high fiduciary standards throughout the world, even though those standards may not be legally required, or even recognized, in some countries. |
Ø | Client confidentiality We must maintain the confidentiality of information relating to the client, and comply with the data protection requirements imposed by many jurisdictions. |
Ø | Information Clients must be provided with timely and accurate information regarding their accounts. |
Ø | Segregation and protection of assets Processes must be established for the proper maintenance, control and protection of client assets. Fiduciary assets must be segregated from Invesco assets and property. |
Ø | Delegation of duties Fiduciary duties should be delegated only when the client consents and where permitted by applicable law. Reasonable care, skill and caution must be exercised in the selection of agents and review of their performance. |
Ø | Client guidelines Invesco is responsible for making investment decisions on behalf of clients that are consistent with the prospectus, contract, or other controlling document relating to the clients account. |
Ø | Relations with regulators We seek relationships with regulators that are open and responsive in nature. |
| influence a specific decision or action or | ||
| enhance future relationships or | ||
| maintain existing relationships |
Ø | Violations of any laws or regulations generally involving Invesco; | ||
Ø | Questionable accounting matters, internal accounting controls, auditing matters, breaches of fiduciary duty or violations of United States or foreign securities laws or rules (collectively, Accounting Matters) including, but not limited to: |
| fraud or deliberate error in the preparation, evaluation, review or audit of any financial statement of Invesco; | ||
| fraud or deliberate error in the recording and maintaining of financial records of Invesco; | ||
| deficiencies in or non-compliance with Invescos internal accounting controls; | ||
| misrepresentation or false statements to or by a senior officer or accountant regarding a matter contained in the financial records, financial reports or audit reports of Invesco; | ||
| deviation from full and fair reporting of Invescos financial condition; or | ||
| fraudulent or criminal activities engaged in by officers, directors or employees of Invesco; |
| is necessary to alleviate undue hardship or in view of unforeseen circumstances or is otherwise appropriate under all the relevant facts and circumstances; | ||
| will not be inconsistent with the purposes and objectives of the Code; | ||
| will not adversely affect the interests of clients of the company or the interests of the company; and | ||
| will not result in a transaction or conduct that would violate provisions of applicable laws or regulations. |
10.1 | Fiduciary Duty | |
10.1.1 | As a fiduciary, Invesco owes an undivided duty of loyalty to its clients. It is Invescos policy that all employees conduct themselves so as to avoid not only actual conflicts of interest with Invesco clients, but also that they refrain from conduct which could give rise to the appearance of a conflict of interest that may compromise the trust that clients have placed in Invesco. | |
10.1.2 | The personal securities transactions of all employees must be conducted in accordance with the following general principles: |
(a) | There is duty at all times to place the interests of Invesco clients first and foremost; | ||
(b) | All personal securities transactions be conducted in a manner consistent with these rules and in such a manner as to avoid any actual, potential or appearance of a conflict of interest or any abuse of an employees position of trust and responsibility; and | ||
(c) | Employees should not take inappropriate advantage of their positions. |
10.1.3 | Invescos policy is to avoid conflicts and, where they unavoidably occur, to resolve them in a manner that clearly places our clients interests first. | |
10.1.4 | A copy of the INVESCO LTD. Insider Dealing Policy & Social Media Policy are attached as Appendix 10.8 & 10.9 respectively. | |
10.1.5 | The policy on personal securities transactions is set out under the following headings: |
(i) | Definitions | ||
(ii) | Prohibited Personal Transactions | ||
(iii) | Transactions Exempt from Personal Share Dealing Rules | ||
(iv) | Transactions Exempt from Authorisation | ||
(v) | Permitted Transactions Requiring Authorisation and Reporting | ||
(vi) | Procedures for Authorisation and Placing Orders | ||
(vii) | Procedures for Reporting | ||
(viii) | Restrictions on Investing | ||
(ix) | Dealing in Invesco Ltd | ||
(x) | Dealing in Invesco Funds/non Invesco Funds |
10.2 | Definitions | |
10.2.1 | Business Associate shall mean any person or organisation that provides services to Invesco, that may do business or is being solicited to do business with Invesco or that is associated with an organisation that does or seeks to do business with Invesco. | |
10.2.2 | High Quality Short-Term Debt Instrument means, but is not limited to, bankers acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper and repurchase agreements; and means any instrument having a maturity at issuance of less than 366 days.. | |
10.2.3 | Security includes stock, notes, bonds, debentures and other evidences of indebtedness (including loan participations and assignments), limited partnership interests, investment contracts, and all derivative instruments, such as options and warrants. | |
10.2.4 | Related Accounts means: |
(a) | accounts held by (or for the benefit of) an employees spouse, significant other, or any minor children; | ||
(b) | accounts for which the employee has or shares, directly or indirectly, through any contract, arrangement, understanding, relationship, or otherwise; |
(i) | voting power (which includes power to vote, or to direct the voting of, a security), or |
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(ii) | investment power (which includes the power to dispose, or to direct the disposition) of a security; or |
(c) | accounts held by any other person to whose support the employee materially contributes or in which, by reason of any agreement or arrangement, the employee has or shares benefits substantially equivalent to ownership, including, for example: |
(i) | arrangements (which may be informal) under which the employee has agreed to share the profits from an investment, and | ||
(ii) | accounts maintained or administered by the employee for a relative (such as children or parents) who do not share his/her home. |
(d) | accounts in which the employees hold beneficial interest | ||
(e) | Families include husbands and wives, significant other, sons and daughters and other immediate family only where those persons take part in discussion or passing on of investment information. | ||
(f) | All Invesco employees or members of his family only insofar as the Invesco employee controls or influences the investment decision are subject to the Invesco Code |
10.2.5 | Non-Discretionary Account shall mean an account where an employee is deemed to have no direct or indirect influence or control over an account i.e.: |
(a) | investment discretion for such account has been delegated in writing to an independent fiduciary and such investment discretion is not shared with the employee, or decisions for the account are made by a family member or significant other and not by, or in connection with, the employee; | ||
(b) | the employee (and, where applicable, the family member or significant other) certifies in writing that he or she has not and will not discuss any potential investment decisions with such independent fiduciary or household member; and | ||
(c) | the Compliance Department has determined that the account satisfies the foregoing requirements. |
10.2.6 | Pre-Clearance Officer is the Head of Compliance or his deputy. |
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10.3 | Prohibited Personal Transactions | |
10.3.1 | Privately Issued Securities . Employees may not purchase or permit a Related Account to purchase or acquire any privately-issued securities, other than in exceptional cases where such investment is part of a family-owned and operated business venture that would not be expected to involve an investment opportunity of interest to any Invesco client. | |
10.3.2 | Short Selling . An employee may not, sell short a security unless this is specifically related to personal taxation issues. Requests for exceptions should be made to the local Head of Compliance. | |
10.3.3 | Futures . Employees may not write, sell or buy exchange-traded futures, synthetic futures, swaps and similar non-exchange traded instruments. | |
10.3.4 | Deminimus transactions . An employee may request permission to buy or sell a security which would otherwise be the subject of the Blackout restrictions (10.10.1) if that security is so liquid that the transaction would not affect the price per share so that there is no disadvantage to any Invesco client transaction. Transaction unit size or cost should be considered by the local Head of Dealing and Chief Investment Officer. | |
10.3.5 | The local Head of Compliance may in rare instances grant exceptions from these trading restrictions upon written request. Employees must demonstrate hardship or extraordinary circumstances. | |
10.4 | Transactions Exempt From Personal Dealing Rules | |
The following types of share dealing transactions do not need to be approved or reported. | ||
Non Invesco Funds |
(a) | authorised non-Invesco managed investment schemes excluding REITs & ETFs. |
Direct Government Obligations |
(b) | Securities which are direct obligations of the country in which the employee is a resident (e.g., US treasuries for US residents/UK treasuries for UK residents); |
Short Term Debt |
(c) | High quality short-term debt instruments; |
Retirement Fund |
(d) | member choice pension scheme. |
10.5 | Transactions Exempt From Authorisation & Short Term Trading Rules | |
10.5.1 | The following types of personal share dealing transactions are exempt from approval & Short Term Trading Rules as stated in Section 10.10.4 |
(a) | Investments in the debt obligations of Federal agencies or of state and municipal governments or agencies. | ||
(b) | Transactions which are non-intentional on the part of the employee (e.g., receipt of securities pursuant to a stock dividend or merger bonus issues). | ||
(c) | Purchases of the stock of a company pursuant to an automatic dividend reinvestment plan or an employee stock purchase plan sponsored by such company. |
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(d) | Receipt or exercise of rights issued by a company on a pro rata basis to all holders of a class of security. Employees must, however, pre-clear transactions for the acquisition of such rights from a third party or the disposition of such rights. | ||
(e) | Exchange Traded Funds and/or similar products which are publicly traded. |
10.6 | Permitted Transactions Requiring Authorisation and Reporting | |
10.6.1 | Transactions in any other Security not dealt with above for either an employee a Related Account are subject to the authorisation and reporting rules set out below. | |
10.6.2 | IPOs . Where there are different amounts of an IPO specified for different investor types (e.g. private and institutional) investment is permitted with the consent of the local Head of Compliance after consultation with the local Chief Investment Officer or his designee. | |
10.6.3 | Clubs . Employees may also invest in residential co-operatives and private recreational clubs (such as sports clubs, country clubs, luncheon clubs and the like) for their personal use; such investments are not subject to the pre-clearance procedures, trading restrictions and reporting requirements unless the employees investing is part of a business conducted by the employee. | |
10.7 | Procedures for Authorisations | |
10.7.1 | Prior to entering an order for a securities transaction either for the employee or in a Related Account, the employee must complete a Pre-Clearance of Personal Trade Authorisation Form (attached as Appendix 10.2) have it signed by the Head of Investment-Asia Pacific or local Chief Investment Officer or his deputy in his absence and submit the completed form to the local Head of Compliance or his deputy in his absence (see Appendix 10.2). |
10.7.2 | (a) | The employee must ensure that he answers all the questions on the Pre-Clearance of Personal Trade Authorisation Form honestly; |
(b) | In particular, he must check with the relevant dealing desk as to whether there are any client trades ongoing or outstanding in the same stock; | ||
(c) | If there are no such client orders he should note the time he checked this with the dealing desk and who reported back to him in writing on the form; | ||
(d) | If there are client orders in place or if the transaction would fall in one of the blackout periods specified in Section 10.10.1, he should not submit the form until the blackout period has ended as the authorisation may expire in accordance with Section 10.7.9. |
10.7.3 | After receiving the completed Pre-Clearance of Personal Trade Authorisation Form, the local Head of Compliance or his deputy in his absence will review the information in the form and, as soon as practicable, will decide whether to clear the proposed Personal Transaction, subject to local requirements. | |
10.7.4 | No order for a Personal Transaction for which pre-clearance authorisation is sought may be placed prior to the receipt of approval of the transaction by the Head of Compliance or his deputy in his absence. | |
10.7.5 | The authorisation and date and time of the authorisation must be stated on the Pre-Clearance of Personal Trade Authorisation Form. |
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10.8 | Placing Personal Share Dealing Orders | |
10.8.1 | Once a Pre-Clearance of Personal Trade Authorisation Form has been duly signed the original form will be maintained by the local Head of Compliance. | |
10.8.2 | The employee may then place his order to deal with an outside broker. | |
10.8.3 | The employee must ensure that a copy of or duplicate contract note is provided to the Head of Compliance either directly from the broker or by the employee if the broker fail to provide such. | |
10.9 | Procedures for Reporting | |
10.9.1 | Initial certification and Schedules . Within 10 days of commencing employment at Invesco, each employee shall submit to the Compliance Department: |
(a) | a signed Initial Certification of Compliance with the Invesco Code (attached as Appendix 10.3); and | ||
(b) | a signed Initial Declaration of Personal Holding (attached as Appendix 10.4) listing |
(i) | all Related Accounts; | ||
(ii) | all public and private securities and instruments directly or indirectly held by any Related Account of such employee (other than exempt investments as set out in Section 10.4), with nonpublic securities plainly indicated; and | ||
(iii) | directorships (or similar positions) of for-profit, non-profit and other enterprises. | ||
The Compliance Department will give these documents to each employee during the compliance briefing when commencing employment. |
10.9.2 | (a) | Disclosure of Outside Brokerage Account . All employees must receive approval from the Head of Compliance prior to setting up personal share dealing accounts with brokers. |
(b) | New employees must disclose existing broker accounts on joining Invesco in Appendix 10.4. | ||
(c) | Disciplinary action may be taken against employees who deal through a non-disclosed broker account. |
(i) | all Related Accounts; | ||
(ii) | directorships/advisory board memberships or similar positions of profit-making, non-profit and other enterprises. | ||
(iii) | if the employee is responsible for making investment decisions or obtaining the information/making any recommendations prior to buying or selling investments on behalf of the clients, the employee should disclose all public and private securities and instruments directly or indirectly held by him or any Related Account of such employee (other than exempt investment as set out in Section 10.4); |
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10.10 | Restrictions on Personal Investing | |
10.10.1 | Blackout Periods . An employee may not buy or sell for himself or permit any Related Account to buy or sell, a security or any instrument: |
(a) | on the same day as any client is trading in the stock; | ||
(b) | where he knows that the sale or purchase of the securities are being considered for a client account; | ||
(c) | if the employee is a portfolio manager, within 7 calendar days before or after one trading day on which any client account trades in the same security or instrument or in a security convertible into or exchangeable for such security or instrument (including options) on transactions |
10.10.2 | In the event there is a trade in a personal and a client account in the same security or instrument within a blackout period, the employee may be required to close out his personal position and to disgorge any profit to a charitable organisation; | |
10.10.3 | Trades effected by Invesco for the account of an index fund it manages in the ordinary course of such funds investment activity will not trigger the blackout period restrictions except where client activity occurs on the same day as the personal transaction pre-clearance request. However, the addition or removal of a security from an index, thereby triggering an index fund trade, would cause employee trades in such security to be blacked-out for the seven prior and subsequent calendar days, as described above. | |
10.10.4 | Short Term Trading Profits . |
(a) | It is Invescos policy to restrict the ability of employees to benefit from short-term trading in securities and instruments. | ||
(b) | Employees must disgorge profits made on the sale by an employee of any security or instrument held less than 60 days. | ||
(c) | Employees will not be permitted to purchase any security or instrument that has been sold by such employee within the prior 60 days. | ||
(d) | Employees may be required to disgorge profits made on the sale for his own account or in a Related Account within the 60 days period. | ||
(e) | This policy applies to trading in all types of securities and instruments, except where in a particular case the Head of Compliance has made a specific finding of hardship and it can be demonstrated that no potential abuse or conflict is present (for example, when an employees request to sell a security purchased within 60 days prior to the request is prompted by a major corporate or market event, such as a tender offer, and the security was not held in client accounts). |
10.11 | Dealing in Invesco Ltd | |
10.11.1 | The Groups Insider Trading Policy states that no employees who is aware of the material nonpublic information regarding Invesco may buy or sell securities of Invesco or engage in any other action to take personal advantage of that information. The Policy also governs certain transactions under Company-sponsored plans, including: |
■ | Stock Option Exercises . The Policys trading restrictions generally do not apply to the exercise of a stock option. The restrictions do apply, however, to any sale of the underlying stock or to a cashless exercise of the option through a broker, as this entails selling a portion of the underlying stock to cover the costs of exercise and/or taxes. |
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■ | Invesco Stock Plans . this Policys trading restrictions apply to any elections you may make to transfer funds out of Company shares or borrow money against your Invesco stock plan if the loan will result in a liquidation of some or all of your Company stock fund balance. | ||
■ | Dividend Reinvestment Plan . This Policys trading restrictions do not apply to purchases of Company shares resulting from your reinvestment of dividends paid on Company securities under any Company dividend reinvestment plan. The trading restrictions do apply, however, to voluntary purchases of Company shares resulting from additional contributions you choose to make to any such plan, and to your election to participate in the plan or increase your level of participation in the plan. This Policy also applies to your sale of any Company shares purchased pursuant to the reinvestment plan. |
| Short Sales. You may not engage in short sales of the Invescos securities (sales of securities that are not then owned), including a sale against the box (a sale with delayed delivery). | ||
| Publicly Traded Options. You may not engage in transactions in publicly traded options, such as puts, calls and other derivative securities relating to the Invescos securities, whether on an exchange or in any other organized market. | ||
| Standing Orders. Standing orders (other than pursuant to a pre-approved trading plan that complies with SEC Rule 10b5-1) should be used only for a very brief period of time (not longer than one business day). A standing order placed with a broker to sell or purchase stock at a specified price leaves you with no control over the timing of the transaction. A standing order transaction executed by the broker when you are aware of material nonpublic information may result in unlawful insider trading. | ||
| Margin Accounts and Pledges. Securities held in a margin account or pledged as collateral for a loan may be sold without your consent by the broker if you fail to meet a margin call or by the lender in foreclosure if you default on the loan. Because a margin or foreclosure sale may occur at a time when you are aware of material nonpublic information or otherwise are not permitted to trade in Invesco securities, you are prohibited from holding Invesco securities in a margin account or pledging Invesco securities as collateral for a loan. An exception to this prohibition may be granted where you wish to pledge Invesco securities as collateral for a loan (not including margin debt) and clearly demonstrate the financial capacity to repay the loan without resort to the pledged securities. If you wish to pledge Invesco securities as collateral for a loan, you must submit a request for approval to the Legal and Compliance Department at least two weeks prior to the proposed execution of documents evidencing the proposed pledge. |
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| Hedging Transactions. Hedging or monetization transactions, such as zero-cost collars and forward sale contracts, involve the establishment of a short position in the Invescos securities and limit or eliminate your ability to profit from an increase in the value of the Invescos securities. Therefore, you are prohibited from engaging in any hedging or monetization transactions involving Invesco securities. |
10.12 | Dealing in Invesco Funds | |
10.12.1 | All Staff and/or their related accounts who wish to deal in Invesco Funds must complete a Pre-Clearance Form (Appendix 10.2a). The Pre-Clearance Form is available on the Intranet. This from must be signed off by members of Compliance Department. All completed Pre-Clearance Forms together with the relevant signed deal instruction should be forwarded to the Retil Fund Administration Department. (Note-Pre-clearance is required for initial participation of the Regular Saving Plan. There is no need to go through pre-clearance for subsequent investment of the plan) | |
10.12.2 | Retil Fund Administration Department will review the deal instruction and ensure the documents are sufficient to place the deal. The Retil Fund Administration Department will also ensure that the Pre Clearance Form is completed and signed off by the relevant parties. | |
10.12.3 | In the event a deal of a deal being rejected, the member of staff must be contacted immediately and be given the reason for the rejection. | |
10.12.4 | The personal dealing form is only valid until the next trading days after the sign off by compliance. |
10.12.5 | (a) | Staff will be exempt from paying front end load |
(b) | Employees will not be permitted to purchase any units/shares that has been sold by such employee within the prior 60 days | |
(c) | Employees will not permitted to sell any units/shares that has been purchased by such employee within the prior 60 days. | |
(note- the 60 days holding period does not apply to the dividend payouts/dividend re-investments & Money Market Funds); | ||
(d) | Full subscription payment must be made on application; no credit will be given in any circumstances; and | |
(f) | Staff should follow the relevant procedures for dealing in Invesco Funds (including the placement of deals between the hours of 9:00am to 5:00pm (Hong Kong time)). |
10.12.6 | After the 60 day holding period, shares/units purchased may be transferred but only to family members previously nominated on the Relationship Declaration Form on commencement of employment, after marriage or on other notified changes of family relationships. Transfers to people not nominated on the Relationship Declaration Form will not be allowed. | |
10.12.7 | Staff will be allocated C shares in Invesco Funds wherever C shares are offered. However, transfers will be switched into A shares, if the value of the switch is below the normal C share threshold (normally USD1,000,000 or as stated in the prospectus). | |
10.12.8 | Subscribing for shares on behalf of other people to take advantage of staff front end load concessions is strictly against company policy and offender may be subject to disciplinary action. | |
10.13 | Dealing in Non Invesco Funds | |
10.13.1 | Employees are not required to seek permission to deal in units/shares of open-ended funds managed by other fund managers. |
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10.13.2 | Employees are not required to report deals in non- Invesco managed open-ended funds. | |
10.14 | Hong Kong Employee Referrals | |
10.14.1 | Invesco employees may invite friends or family to subscribe for units in Invesco Funds. Investors referred in this manner may, at the discretion of the Head of Investor Services, Pooled Products or his/her deputy, be offered a discount on the FEL. | |
10.14.2 | For any subscriptions into Invesco Funds referred by an employee, the employee should put his/her name in the Agents Stamp Box on the application form and sign the form. | |
10.14.3 | The completed application form should be given to the Head of Investor Services, Pooled Products or his/her deputy who will decide how much discount on the FEL fee should be given to the referred investor and countersigned by the local Head of Compliance or his/her deputy. | |
10.14.4 | The Head of Investor Services, Pooled Products or his/her deputy should write the FEL to be charged on the application form and sign to indicate his approval. | |
10.14.5 | The approved application form should be given to the Retail Administration Department to complete the subscription. |
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10.15 | Gifts and Entertainment | |
10.15.1 | It is required that all Invesco personnel adhere to the highest standards of ethical conduct, including sensitivity to actual or apparent conflicts of interest. The provision or receipt of gifts or entertainment can create, or can have the appearance of creating, conflicts of interest. In addition, Invescos clients and their personnel may be subject to similar restrictions regarding the receipt of gifts or entertainment. | |
10.15.2 | This Policy establishes minimum standards to protect our Company. If the laws or regulations establish higher standards, we must adhere to those standards. | |
10.15.3 | For purposes of this Policy, a Gift is anything of value given (1) by the Company or its personnel to a Business Associate (as defined in 10.2.1), or to a member of such a persons immediate family, or (2) by a Business Associate to any INVESCO personnel, or to a member of such a persons immediate family. Gifts may include, but are not limited to, personal items, office accessories and sporting equipment (e.g., golf clubs, tennis rackets, etc.). For purposes of this Policy, Gifts also include charitable contributions made to or at the request of a Business Associate. For purposes of this Policy, Gifts do not include promotional items of nominal value (e.g., golf balls, pens, etc.) that display the logo of INVESCO, or of the Business Associate. | |
10.15.4 | Entertainment involves attendance at activities, including but not limited to meals, sporting events, the theatre, parties or receptions, and similar functions. Entertainment requires the presence of both Invesco personnel and the Business Associate; unless personnel from both entities attend, the activity constitutes a Gift. The value of Entertainment includes the cost of the activity itself (for example, the cost of tickets or a meal), as well as the cost of any related activities or services provided (such as prizes, transportation, and lodging in connection with the event). Entertainment does not include research or analysts meetings provided by issuers and attended by investment personnel or industry educational events sponsored by industry groups, so long as such events are for educational or research purposes. All Invesco personnel also should keep in mind that regulators may attempt to treat entertainment as gifts for compliance purposes, particularly where the entertainment appears excessive in value or frequency. | |
10.15.5 | The providing or receiving of any Gift or Entertainment that is conditioned upon the Company doing business or not doing business with the Business Associate or any other person are strictly prohibited . | |
10.15.6 | Gifts . An employee may not retain a gift received from a Business Associate without the approval of the Head of Department and the local Head of Compliance (see Approval Form in Appendix 10.6). Reporting and approval are required for gifts received during festive seasons, including Christmas dinner sponsor, mooncakes, hampers, and flower and fruit baskets. | |
10.15.7 | Under no circumstances, the value of gift given or received should exceed USD 200 or HKD 1,600 per individual annually . If the value of the gift received is not able to be determined, professional judgment should be used to determine the value of the gift. Should the value exceed USD 200 or HKD 1,600, it should be returned to the donor, passed to the Human Resources or donates to the charity. Approval from Head of Department is required for providing and receiving gift, however prior approval from local Head of Compliance is not necessary. Post approval from local Head of Compliance is required. If the gift is not giving to any particular person, the gift shall be passed to Human Resources Department and distributed to the staff on a raffle basis. The gift limit is applied to each individual office. | |
10.15.8 | Employees may not give, and must tactfully refuse, any gift of cash, a gift certificate or a gift that is substantially the same as cash. Notwithstanding this requirement, employees may give or receive Lai-See (red envelopes) at Lunar New Year of an amount not more than HK$200 each. In case the amount is more than HK$200, the case must be reported to the Head of Department and the local Head of Compliance. Due to Chinese custom, it may be difficult to return the Lai-See. Therefore, the full amount should be donated to a charitable organization in Hong Kong, and the Business Associate be informed of the donation. | |
10.15.9 | Gifts should not be given to an employee of any securities firm which is making a public offering of a fund advised by Invesco nor given in connection with the acquisition of a new client by INVESCO. |
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10.15.10 | Entertainment . Each employee is expected to use professional judgment, subject to review by his or her supervisor, in entertaining and in being entertained by a Business Associate. | |
10.15.11 | Provided that the employee and Business Associate both attend, an employee may accept from a single business partner, or provide to a single person or a Business Partner for Entertainment of value up to USD 1,200 or HKD 9,300 in a calendar year . Under no circumstances, the value of the entertainment should exceed USD 400 or HKD 3,100 per individual per event . Approval from Head of Department is required for providing and receiving entertainment, however prior approval from local Head of Compliance is not necessary. Post approval from local Head of Compliance is required. If the event of the entertainment such as movie tickets is not giving to any particular employee, the event of the entertainment shall be passed to the Human Resources Department and distributed to the staff on a raffle basis. The entertainment limit is applied to each individual office. | |
10.15.12 | For gifts and entertainment received from or provided to Business Associate, each employee is required to submit approval request to Compliance within 30 days from the date of event, except when such timeline is unattainable for justifiable reason. | |
10.15.13 | The relevant forms are attached as Appendix 10.6. The information required on the form will need to be completed in full. Approval request will not be accepted if there is missing information on the form. | |
10.15.14 | Approval from Compliance is required before gift and entertainment expenses will be reimbursed by Finance. Review will be performed on a regular basis to test reimbursements for compliance approval. |
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10.16 | Outside Activities | |
10.16.1 | In order to reduce potential conflicts of interest arising from the participation of employees on the boards of directors of public, private, non-profit and other enterprises, all employees are subject to the following restrictions and guidelines. | |
10.16.2 | An employee may not serve as a director of a public company without the approval of the Head of Asia Pacific after consultation with the local Head of Compliance. | |
10.16.3 | An employee may serve on the board of directors or participate as an adviser or otherwise, or advisers of a private company only if: |
(a) | client assets have been invested in such company; and | ||
(b) | service on a such board has been approved in writing by the Head of Asia Pacific. The employee must resign from such board of directors as soon as the company contemplates going public, except where the Head of Asia Pacific has determined that an employee may remain on a board. (In any event, an employee shall not accept any compensation for serving as a director (or in a similar capacity) of such company; except with the prior written approval of the Head of Asia Pacific. | ||
(c) | service on such a board is directly as a result of the employee position or status at Invesco. In this case any fees received for being a director must be reimbursed to Invesco. |
10.16.5 | If an employee serving on the board of directors or advisers of any entity comes into possession of material, nonpublic information through such service, he or she must immediately notify his or her local Head of Compliance. The local Head of Compliance will then consider the totality of facts and decide if there is conflict of interest. If such conflict of interest do exist, employee must resign from the board of directors or advisers immediately . | |
10.17 | Economic Opportunities | |
10.17.1 | An Invesco employee shall not take personal advantage of any economic opportunity properly belonging to a Invesco client or to Invesco itself. Such opportunities could arise, for example, from confidential information belonging to a client or the offer of a directorship. Employees must not disclose information relating to a clients intentions, activities or portfolios except: |
(a) | to fellow employees, or other agents of the client, who need to know it to discharge their duties; or | ||
(b) | to the client itself. |
10.17.2 | Employees may not cause or attempt to cause any client to purchase, sell or hold any Security in a manner calculated to create any personal benefit to the employee or Invesco. | |
10.17.3 | If an employee or immediate family member stands to materially benefit from an investment decision for a Client that the employee is recommending or participating in, the employee must disclose that interest to persons with authority to make investment decisions or to the Head of Compliance. Based on the information given, a decision will be made on whether or not to restrict the employees participation in causing a client to purchase or sell a Security in which the employee has an interest. | |
10.17.4 | Employees must disclose to those persons with authority to make investment decisions for a client (or to the Head of Compliance if the employee in question is a person with authority to make investment decisions for the client), any beneficial interest that the employee (or immediate family member) has in that Security, or in the issuer thereof, where the decision could create a material benefit to the employee (or immediate family member) or the appearance of impropriety. The person to whom the employee reports the interest, in consultation with the Head of Compliance, must determine whether or not the employee will be restricted in making investment decisions. |
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10.18 | Sanctions | |
10.18.1 | These rules will be interpreted by the local Head of Compliance, as applicable. Questions of interpretation should be directed in the first instance to the local Head of Compliance or his/her designee or, if necessary, with the Head of Compliance of another Invesco entity. | |
10.18.2 | If advised of a material violation of these rules by an employee, the Head of Compliance will report to the Head of Asia Pacific and discuss the appropriate action with him. | |
10.19 | Annual Review | |
Compliance Department performs a review at least once a year. | ||
10.20 | Company Assistance | |
Any person who has a question about the above Policies or its application to any proposed transaction may obtain additional guidance from the Local Compliance Department. Do not try to resolve uncertainties on your own because the rule are often complex, not always intuitive and carry severe consequences. |
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§ | We are passionate about our clients success | ||
§ | We earn trust by acting with integrity | ||
§ | People are the foundation of our success | ||
§ | Working together, we achieve more | ||
§ | We believe in the continuous pursuit of performance excellence |
Ø | Best interests of clients As fiduciaries, we have a duty to act with reasonable care, skill and caution in the best interests of our clients, and to avoid conflicts of interest. |
Ø | Global fiduciary standards Invesco seeks to maintain the same high fiduciary standards throughout the world, even though those standards may not be legally required, or even recognized, in some countries. |
Ø | Client confidentiality We must maintain the confidentiality of information relating to the client, and comply with the data protection requirements imposed by many jurisdictions. |
Ø | Information Clients must be provided with timely and accurate information regarding their accounts. |
Ø | Segregation and protection of assets Processes must be established for the proper maintenance, control and protection of client assets. Fiduciary assets must be segregated from Invesco assets and property. |
Ø | Delegation of duties Fiduciary duties should be delegated only when the client consents and where permitted by applicable law. Reasonable care, skill and caution must be exercised in the selection of agents and review of their performance. |
Ø | Client guidelines Invesco is responsible for making investment decisions on behalf of clients that are consistent with the prospectus, contract, or other controlling document relating to the clients account. |
Ø | Relations with regulators We seek relationships with regulators that are open and responsive in nature. |
| influence a specific decision or action or | ||
| enhance future relationships or | ||
| maintain existing relationships |
Ø | Violations of any laws or regulations generally involving Invesco; | ||
Ø | Questionable accounting matters, internal accounting controls, auditing matters, breaches of fiduciary duty or violations of United States or foreign securities laws or rules (collectively, Accounting Matters) including, but not limited to: |
| fraud or deliberate error in the preparation, evaluation, review or audit of any financial statement of Invesco; | ||
| fraud or deliberate error in the recording and maintaining of financial records of Invesco; | ||
| deficiencies in or non-compliance with Invescos internal accounting controls; | ||
| misrepresentation or false statements to or by a senior officer or accountant regarding a matter contained in the financial records, financial reports or audit reports of Invesco; | ||
| deviation from full and fair reporting of Invescos financial condition; or | ||
| fraudulent or criminal activities engaged in by officers, directors or employees of Invesco; |
| is necessary to alleviate undue hardship or in view of unforeseen circumstances or is otherwise appropriate under all the relevant facts and circumstances; | ||
| will not be inconsistent with the purposes and objectives of the Code; | ||
| will not adversely affect the interests of clients of the company or the interests of the company; and | ||
| will not result in a transaction or conduct that would violate provisions of applicable laws or regulations. |
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1. | Purpose and Application |
| A duty at all times to place the interests of client accounts first. | ||
| Employees should not take inappropriate advantage of their positions. | ||
| Employees must not use any nonpublic information about client accounts for their direct or indirect personal benefit. |
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2. | Definitions |
2.1 | Covered Accounts |
| Where the Employee is the registered owner of the securities in the account, thereby having a direct financial interest or benefit from the account | ||
| In which an Employee has indirect financial interest or indirect benefit, such as accounts held in the name of the Employees spouse or minor children | ||
| In which an Employee has direct control, such as any account for which the Employee has a power of attorney or trading authorization, trust accounts on which the Employee is appointed a trustee, or corporate accounts for which the Employee is an authorized signing officer |
2.2 | Reportable Securities |
| Stocks, bonds, options, rights, warrants, Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), Exchange-Traded Notes (ETNs), and any closed-end mutual funds. | ||
| Any mutual funds, including proprietary investment products managed by Invesco. | ||
| IVZ vested shares that are part of the employee equity awards program are received into STAR Compliance from an electronic data feed provided by the custodian of the IVZ account. Since, Compliance receives this information from an external party, employees should verify that these holdings are captured in the STAR Compliance system and are included in their Annual Holdings Report. Furthermore, the sales of these securities are subject to pre-clearance requirements. |
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2.3 | Non-Reportable Securities |
| Unit investment trusts (i.e., variable insurance contracts funded by insurance company separate accounts organized as unit investment trusts) invested exclusively in open-end mutual funds that are not managed or distributed by Invesco. | ||
| Open-end U.S. and Canadian mutual funds that are not managed or distributed by Invesco. | ||
| Securities held in Employee accounts administered by Group Retirement Services (GRS). | ||
| Securities issued or guaranteed by (i.e., securities that are the direct obligations of) the government of Canada or the government of the United States. | ||
| Principal protected or Linked note investment products. | ||
| Money market instruments, money market mutual funds, guaranteed investment certificates, bankers acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper and repurchase agreements. |
3. | Pre-Clearance Requirements |
3.1 | Submitting the Request to Trade |
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| The proposed trade must be entered into the Star Compliance system. Covered persons (e.g. an Employees spouse) who do not have access to the Star Compliance system can submit their trade requests either through the Invesco employee or may contact the Code of Ethics (North America) team directly. The Star Compliance system will confirm if there is any activity currently on the trading desk and check the portfolio accounting system to verify if there have been any transactions in the same or equivalent security within the corresponding Blackout Rule period. | ||
| The Star Compliance system will check to see if the security is on the restricted list (refer to section 8.1). | ||
| The Star Compliance system will provide an automated response on a timely basis for all pre-approval requests indicating whether the transaction has been approved or denied. |
3.2 | Executing Approved Transactions |
3.3 | De Minimis Exemption |
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3.4 | Exceptions to Pre-clearance Requirements |
| Open-end mutual funds (including Invesco managed mutual funds), open-end unit investment trusts and pooled trust funds. | ||
| Variable annuities, variable life products, segregated funds, and other similar unit-based insurance products issued by insurance companies and insurance company separate accounts. | ||
| Securities issued or guaranteed by the Government of Canada, or the government of any province or territory in Canada. | ||
| Securities issued or guaranteed by the Governments of the United States. | ||
| Physical commodities or securities relating to those commodities. | ||
| Other securities or classes of securities as the Invesco Compliance department or the Code of Ethics (North America) team may from time to time designate. |
| Employee share purchase plans, except for the sale of the securities. |
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| Invesco employee stock option purchase plans, except for the sale of the securities. |
4. | Reporting Requirements |
4.1 | Initial Holdings Reports |
| a complete list of all Covered Accounts (including the name of the financial institution with which the Employee maintains the account); | ||
| a list of each Reportable Security including the number of shares (equities) or principal amount (debt securities) held in each Covered Account. |
4.2 | Quarterly Transaction Reports |
4.3 | Annual Holdings Reports |
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| all Covered Accounts of such Employee (including the name of the financial institution with which the Employee maintained the account) | ||
| a list of each Reportable Security including the number of shares (equities) or principal amount (debt securities) in each Covered Account |
4.4 | Reports of Trade Confirmations |
4.5 | New Covered Accounts Opened Since Joining Invesco |
4.6 | Certification of Compliance |
| Certificate of Compliance by using the Star Compliance system | ||
| Invesco Code of Conduct |
5. | Discretionary Managed Accounts |
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| The account is subject to a written contract and all investment discretion has been delegated to another party. | ||
| The Employee has provided the Chief Compliance Officer or the Code of Ethics (North America) team with a copy of such written agreement. | ||
| The Employee certifies in writing that he or she has not discussed, and will not discuss, potential investment decisions with the party to whom investment discretion has been delegated. | ||
| Discretionary managed accounts for which this exemption is available would not include ones where the accountholder has given a power of attorney (POA) to another person such as a broker for temporary discretionary trading. |
6. | Options Trading |
7. | Short Sales |
| No short sales on shares of Invesco Ltd. |
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| No short sales on securities where there has been a trade in the same security where the corresponding Blackout Rule period applies in one of the client accounts. | ||
| Portfolio managers are prohibited from short selling a security if the client account the Portfolio Manager manages are long the security. | ||
| If a Portfolio Manager is selling a stock there should generally be no short selling allowed until that position is completely sold. This provision includes the situation where the Portfolio Manager stops selling the security for a short period, for example to let the market absorb what has been sold, and then resumes selling the position. |
8. | Restrictions on Certain Activities |
8.1 | Prohibition against Trading in Securities on Restricted Lists |
8.2 | Prohibition against Short-Term Trading Activities |
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8.1 | Prohibition against Purchases in Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) |
8.4 | Restricted Securities Issued by Public Companies |
8.5 | Restrictions on Private Placements |
8.6 | Investment Clubs |
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8.7 | Trading in Securities of Invesco Ltd. |
| Short term trading in Invesco shares is prohibited. | ||
| Pledging Invesco securities as collateral for a loan is generally prohibited. Exceptions must be approved by the Chief Compliance Officer or the Code of Ethics (North America) team. |
9. | Independent Directors |
a) | any director of Invesco Canadas corporate funds or members of the Invesco Canada Fund Advisory Board |
i) | who is neither an officer nor Employee of Invesco or of any Invesco Company. |
b) | any director of Invesco Canada who |
i) | is not an interested person of a US Fund under Section 2(a)(19) of the Investment Company Act (1940) and would otherwise be |
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required to submit a pre-clearance request or make a report solely by reason of being an Invesco Aim director and | |||
ii) | does not regularly obtain information concerning the investment recommendations or decisions made by Invesco Canada on behalf of the US Funds. |
10. | Oversight |
10.1 | Ethics Committee |
10.2 | Invesco Canada Chief Compliance Officer |
| Compliance with the Policy for the period under review. | ||
| Violations of the Policy for the period under review. | ||
| Sanctions imposed under the Policy by Invesco Canada during the period under review. | ||
| Changes in procedures recommended for the Policy. |
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| Any other information requested by the Committee. |
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2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
SECTION | PAGE | |||
1. Statement of General Principles
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3 | |||
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2. Material, Non-Public Information
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5 | |||
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3. Personal Investing Activities, Pre-Clearance and Pre-Notification
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6 | |||
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4. Trade Restrictions on Personal Investing
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9 | |||
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5. Economic Opportunities, Confidentiality and Outside Directorships
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6. Client Investments in Securities Owned by Invesco Employees
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7. Reports
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8. Training
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14 | |||
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9. Miscellaneous
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10. Guidelines for Compliance in Real Estate Investments
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16 | |||
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APPENDICIES
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A: Procedures to Deal for Invesco Europe
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18 | |||
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B: Definitions
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20 | |||
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C: Personal Account Dealing Guidance
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22 |
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2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
| Prohibitions related to material, non-public information | |
| Personal securities investing | |
| Service as a director and other business opportunities. |
| Gifts, Benefits and Entertainment (Inducements) Policy; | |
| Conflicts of Interest Policy; | |
| Treating Customers Fairly Policy; | |
| Whilstleblowing Policy; | |
| Market Abuse Policy; and | |
| Anti-Bribery Policy |
1 | STATEMENT OF GENERAL PRINCIPLES |
1.1 | As a fiduciary, Invesco owes an undivided duty of loyalty to its clients. It is Invescos policy that all employees conduct themselves so as to avoid not only actual conflicts of interest with Invesco clients, but also that they refrain from conduct which could give rise to the appearance of a conflict of interest that may compromise the trust our clients have placed in us. | |
1.2 | The Code is designed to ensure, among other things, that the personal securities transactions of all employees are conducted in accordance with the following general principles: |
1.2.1 | A duty at all times to place the interests of Invescos clients first and foremost; | ||
1.2.2 | The requirement that all personal securities transactions be conducted in a manner consistent with this Code and national legal & regulatory requirements and in such a manner as to avoid any actual, potential or appearance of a conflict of interest or any abuse of an employees position of trust and responsibility; and | ||
1.2.3 | The requirement that employees should not take inappropriate advantage of their positions. |
1.3 | Invescos policy is to avoid actual or apparent conflicts of interest but, where they unavoidably occur, to record, manage, and disclose them to prevent abuse and protect our clients, employees and other counterparties | |
1.4 | Invesco does not make political contributions with corporate funds. No employees may, under any circumstances, use company funds to make political contributions, nor may you represent your personal political views as being those of the company. | |
1.5 | Invesco seeks to do business with clients and suppliers on a fair and equitable basis. Employees may not accept or provide gifts, entertainment or other non-monetary benefits of an unreasonable value which could create a conflict with the duty owed to clients. Any limits |
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2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
imposed by our business units policies, local laws, or regulations with respect to the acceptance or provision of gifts, entertainment and non-monetary benefits must be complied with. | ||
1.6 | Invesco does not tolerate bribery. Employees must not offer, give request, and agree to accept or accept financial or non-financial advantages of any kind where the purpose is to influence a person to behave improperly in their decisions or actions or to reward them for having done so. Charitable donations must not be made as an inducement or reward for improper behaviour. Unofficial payments to speed up routine government or other processes must never be made, however small. These restrictions apply to Invesco staff and to anybody appointed to act on Invescos behalf and cover relationships with prospective or existing clients or business partners. Further information can be found in the Anti-Bribery Policy. | |
1.7 | Legislation exists to protects employees who blow the whistle about wrongdoing within the Firm. This legislation encourages employees to raise concerns internally in the first instance. Invesco employees should feel able to raise any such concern internally, confident that it will be dealt with properly and that all reasonable steps will be taken to prevent victimisation. If employees wish to report concerns anonymously they can call the Invesco Compliance Reporting Hotline, 1-855-234-9780. For calls originating outside of the U.S. and Canada, toll-free telephone numbers are available and vary depending on your location. These telephone numbers are as follows: | |
Austria: 0800-291870
Belgium: 0800-77004 Czech Republic: 800-142-550 France: 0800-902500 Germany: 0800-1016582 Italy: 800-786907 Netherlands: 0800-0226174 Spain: 900-991498 Sweden: 020-79-8729 Switzerland: 0800-562907 |
Employees may also report their concerns by visiting the Invesco Compliance Reporting Hotline website at: www.invesco.ethicspoint.com. To ensure confidentiality, this telephone line and website is provided by an independent company and is available twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. All submissions to the Compliance Reporting Hotline will be reviewed and handled in a prompt, fair, and discreet manner. Employees are encouraged to report these questionable practices so that Invesco has an opportunity to address and resolve these before they become more significant regulatory or legal issues. | ||
1.8 | It is Invesco policy, in the context of being an Asset Manager, to treat its customers fairly. |
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1.9 | No employee should have ownership in or other interest in or employment by any outside concern which does business with Invesco Ltd. This does not apply to stock or other investments in a publicly held company, provided that the stock and other investments do not, in the aggregate, exceed 5% of the outstanding ownership interests of such company. Invesco Ltd may, following a review of the relevant facts, permit ownership interests which exceed these amounts if management or the Board of Directors, as appropriate, concludes that such ownership interests will not adversely affect Invesco Ltds business interests or the judgment of the affected staff. | |
1.10 | Employees are prohibited from using personal hedging strategies or remuneration or liability related contracts of insurance to undermine any risk alignment effects embedded in their remuneration arrangements. This includes, for instance, entering into an arrangement with a third party under which that third party will make payments directly, or indirectly, to the employee that are linked to, or commensurate with, the amounts by which the employees remuneration is subject to reductions arising from the implementation of the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD3). | |
2 | MATERIAL, NON-PUBLIC INFORMATION | |
2.1 | Restriction on Trading or Recommending Trading | |
Each employee is reminded that it constitutes a violation of law and/or Market Abuse regulations for any person to trade in or recommend trading in the securities of a company while in possession of material, non-public information concerning that company, or to disclose such information to any person not entitled to receive it if there is reason to believe that such information will be used in connection with a trade in the securities of that company. Violations of law and regulations may give rise to civil as well as criminal liability, including the imposition of monetary penalties or prison sentences upon the individuals involved. Persons who receive material, non-public information also may be held liable if they trade or if they do not trade but pass along such information to others. | ||
2.2 | What is material, non-public information? | |
Material information is any information about a company which, if disclosed, is likely to affect the market price of the companys securities or to be considered important by an average investor in deciding whether to purchase or sell those securities. Examples of information which should be presumed to be material are matters such as dividend increases or decreases, earnings estimates by the company, changes in the companys previously released earnings estimates, significant new products or discoveries, major litigation by or against the company, liquidity or solvency problems, extraordinary management developments, significant merger or acquisition proposals, or similar major events which would be viewed as having materially altered the total mix of information available regarding the company or the market for any of its securities. | ||
2.3 | Non-public information | |
Non-public information often referred to as inside information is information that has not yet been publicly disclosed. Information about a company is considered to be non-public information if it is received under circumstances which indicate that it is not yet in general circulation and that such information may be attributable, directly or indirectly, to the company or its insiders, or that the recipient knows to have been furnished by someone in breach of a fiduciary obligation. Courts have held that fiduciary relationships exist between a company and another party in a broad variety of situations involving a relationship between a company and its lawyers, investment bankers, financial printers, employees, technical advisors and others. This list is not exhaustive and the types of fiduciary relationships and the way in which they are formed are extensive. |
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2.4 | Information should not be considered to have been publicly disclosed until a reasonable time after it has been made public (for example, by a press release). Someone with access to inside information may not beat the market by trading simultaneously with, or immediately after, the official release of material information. | |
2.5 | The responsibility of ensuring that the proposed transaction does not constitute insider dealing or a conflict with the interests of a client remains with the relevant employee and obtaining pre-clearance to enter into a transaction under Section 3.3 below does not absolve that responsibility. | |
2.6 | Invesco is in a unique position, being privy to market research and rumours and being privy also to information about its clients which may be public companies. Invesco employees must be aware and vigilant to ensure that they cannot be accused of being a party of any insider dealing or market abuse situations. | |
2.7 | In particular, the following investment activities must not be entered into without carefully ensuring that there are no implications of insider trading: |
2.7.1 | Trading in shares for a client in any other client of Invesco which is quoted on a recognised stock exchange. | ||
2.7.2 | Trading in shares for a client in a quoted company where Invesco: |
i) | obtains information in any official capacity which may be price sensitive and has not been made available to the general public. | ||
ii) | obtains any other information which can be substantiated in connection with a quoted company which is also both price sensitive and has not been made available to the general public. |
2.7.3 | Manipulation of the market through the release of information to regular market users which is false or misleading about a company. | ||
2.7.4 | Release of information about a company that would have the effect of distorting the market in such a way to be considered market abuse. |
2.8 | Reporting Requirement |
Whenever an employee believes that he or she may have come into possession of material or non-public information about a public company, he or she personally must immediately notify the Compliance Department and should not discuss such information with anyone else including Invesco employees and should not engage in transactions for himself or others, including Invesco clients. | ||
2.9 | Upon receipt of such information the Compliance Department will include the company name on the IVZ Restricted list of which no transactions may be entered into. This list will be advised to the Equity dealing desk and no discussion will be entered into. Whenever an employee is aware of the reason why a company has been included on the IVZ Restricted list but nevertheless wishes to deal in a fund which contains the stock of that company, this must be notified to the local Compliance Officer to decide whether the deal will be permitted . Approval to deal in a personal capacity (i.e. in a Covered Account) in a fund which holds a stock on the IVZ Restricted List will not be granted where the stock represents over 5% of the value of the funds portfolio. | |
2.10 | Confidentiality | |
No information regarding the affairs of any client of Invesco may be passed to anyone outside Invesco unless specifically requested by law, regulation or court order. In any event, the Compliance and Legal Departments must be consulted prior to furnishing such information. | ||
2.11 | Employees should maintain the confidentiality of information entrusted to them by the Company and their fellow employees. External publication or distribution of internal company information, policies or procedures is prohibited except when disclosure is properly authorised by the functional owner of the information or legally mandated. Employees should make all reasonable efforts to safeguard such information that is in their possession against inadvertent disclosure |
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Any employee who knowingly trades or recommends trading while in possession of material, non-public information may be subject to civil and criminal penalties, as well as to immediate suspension and/or dismissal from Invesco. | ||
3 | PERSONAL INVESTING ACTIVITIES, PRE-CLEARANCE AND PRE-NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS | |
3.1 | Transactions covered by this Code | |
All transactions in investments made for Covered Accounts, other than those in respect of an exempted investment shown in 3.2 below, are subject to the pre-clearance procedures, trading restrictions, pre-notification and reporting requirements described below, unless otherwise indicated. For a list of the types of employee and other accounts which fall within the definition of Covered Accounts please see Appendix B. | ||
3.2 | Exempt Investments | |
Transactions in the following investments (Exempt Investments) are not subject to the trading restrictions or other requirements of this Code and do not need not be pre-notified, pre-cleared or reported: |
3.2.1 | Registered unaffiliated (e.g. Schroders) open ended Collective Investment Schemes [CIS] including; mutual funds, open-ended investment companies/ICVCs or unit trusts but not Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) or closed-end funds, e.g. Investment Trusts; and | ||
3.2.2 | Securities which are direct debt obligations of an OECD country (e.g. US Treasury Bills). |
3.3 | Pre-Clearance |
3.3.1 | Transactions to buy or sell Venture Capital Trust ordinary securities or to buy, sell, switch or transfer holdings in Invesco Ltd ordinary shares, Invesco funds or investment products or other affiliated schemes are subject to pre-clearance by the Compliance Department regardless of whether the order is placed directly or through a broker/adviser. Prior to entering an order for a Securities Transaction in a Covered Account, the employee must complete a Trade Authorisation Form (available on the Compliance Europe intranet site) and submit the completed form electronically to the Compliance department by e-mail to *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing. Transactions are subject to the 60 day holding period requirements. | ||
The Trade Authorisation Form requires employees to provide certain information and to make certain representations in connection with the specific securities transaction(s). | |||
3.3.2 | If satisfactory, then the Form will be authorised by Compliance and confirmation returned by e-mail to the individual, who will then be at liberty to deal through his or her broker within the designated timescales. | ||
3.3.3 | Trading should not occur prior to receipt of authorisation: no order for a Securities Transaction for which pre-clearance authorisation is sought may be placed prior to the receipt of authorisation from Compliance. The authorisation and date and time of the authorisation must be reflected on the Trade Authorisation Form. The original of the completed form will be kept as part of Invescos books and records. Further, the employee is requested to send a copy of the transaction note to their |
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local Compliance Officer in order for it to be matched to the Trade Authorisation Form. Any mismatches will be reported to the Director of European Compliance. | |||
3.3.4 | If an employee receives permission to trade a security or instrument, the trade must be executed by the close of business on the next business day, unless the local Compliance Officers authorisation to extend this period has been obtained. Permission may be granted to place Stop loss and limit orders but only in cases where express clearance for this type of transaction has been granted by Compliance. | ||
3.3.5 | Where an employee receives permission to buy or sell Invesco Limited ordinary shares on the basis of a limit or stop loss order, the pre-clearance remains valid for up to two weeks or until the trade takes place if this is sooner; if the trade does not take place within two weeks, employees must notify Compliance again and seek further pre-clearance to trade. If, during this period, employees gain non-public price sensitive information, they must notify compliance immediately and cancel the trade. For those employees who are members of the Blackout Group, normal Blackout restrictions continue to apply; therefore, any such limit or stop loss order which remains outstanding when a closed period starts must be cancelled by the employee. Where trades involving limit or stop loss orders are approved, further pre-clearance is required before these orders can be changed. | ||
3.3.6 | For any transaction to buy or sell Invesco Ltd ordinary shares pre clearance needs to be sought from Compliance. The trade authorisation form should be completed in the way detailed above and sent to *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing. | ||
3.3.7 | Copies of the relevant contract notes (or equivalent) must be sent to the Compliance Department. This must be done within 14 days of the transaction. |
3.4 | Transactions that do not need to be pre-cleared but must be reported. | |
The pre-clearance requirements (and the trading restrictions on personal investing described below) do not apply to the following transactions: |
i) | investment discretion for such account has been delegated in writing to an independent fiduciary and such investment discretion is not shared with the employee, or decisions for the account are made by a family member or significant other and not by, or in connection with, the employee; | ||
ii) | the employee (and, where applicable, the family member or significant other) certifies in writing that he or she has not and will not discuss any potential investment decisions with such independent fiduciary or household member; and | ||
iii) | the Compliance Department has determined that the account satisfies the foregoing requirements. |
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3.4.2 Governmental Issues |
Investments in the debt obligations of Federal agencies or of state and municipal governments or agencies, (e.g. Essex Council Electricity Bond). |
3.4.3 Non-Volitional Trades |
Transactions which are non-volitional on the part of the employee (such as the receipt of securities pursuant to a stock dividend or merger). |
3.4.4 Automatic Transactions |
Purchases of the stock of a company pursuant to an automatic dividend reinvestment plan or an employee stock purchase plan sponsored by such company. |
3.4.5 Rights Offerings |
Receipt or exercise of rights issued by a company on a pro rata basis to all holders of a class of security. Employees must, however, pre-clear transactions for the acquisition of such rights from a third party or the disposition of such rights. |
3.4.6 | Interests in Securities comprising part of a broad-based, publicly traded market basket or index of stocks, e.g. S & P 500 Index, FTSE 100, DAX. |
3.4.7 Non-Executive Directors transactions |
Transactions in securities, except for Invesco Ltd shares and/or UK Investment Trusts managed by Invesco, by non-executive Directors. |
3.5.8 | Note that all of the transactions described in paragraphs 3.4.1. to 3.4.7 while not subject to pre-clearance are nevertheless subject to all of the reporting requirements set forth below in paragraph 7.3. |
4 | TRADE RESTRICTIONS ON PERSONAL INVESTING | |
4.1 | All transactions in Covered Accounts which are subject to the pre-clearance requirements specified in this Code are also subject to the following trading restrictions: |
4.1.1 | Blackout Restrictions | ||
Transactions in Covered Accounts generally will not be permitted during a specific period (the blackout period) before and after a client account trades in the same security or instrument. | |||
4.1.2 | Blackout Periods | ||
An employee may not buy or sell, or permit any Covered Account to buy or sell, a security or any instrument: |
i) | within three business days before or after the day on which any client account trades in the same security or instrument or in a security convertible into or exchangeable for such security or instrument (including options) on transactions other than those covered under the paragraph below, or | ||
ii) | within two business days before or after the day on which a pro rata strip trade, which includes such security, is made for the purpose of rebalancing client accounts. |
4.1.3 | Exemptions from Blackout Periods | ||
Blackout periods will no longer apply to equity and corporate bond transactions in main index constituents, i.e. FTSE 100, Dow Jones, etc, subject to a cost and proceeds limit of 35.000 EUR per transaction for equities and 70,000 EUR per transaction for corporate bonds. Normal blackout conditions will apply to transactions outside of these criteria. If in any doubt please consult your local Compliance Officer. On a case by case basis and at the discretion of the |
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Compliance Officer in consultation with the Chief Investment Officer, this limit may be relaxed. | |||
4.1.4 | Trades effected by Invesco for the account of an index fund it manages in the ordinary course of such funds investment activity will not trigger the blackout period. However, the addition or removal of a security from an index, thereby triggering an index fund trade, would cause employee trades in such security to be blacked-out for the seven prior and subsequent calendar days, as described above. | ||
4.1.5 | In the event there is a trade in a client account in the same security or instrument within a blackout period, the employee may be required to close out the position and to disgorge any profit to a charitable organisation chosen by the local Board of Directors; provided, however, that if an employee has obtained pre-clearance for a transaction and a subsequent client trade occurs within the blackout period, the Chief Executive Officer in consultation with the Compliance Officer, upon a demonstration of hardship or extraordinary circumstances, may determine to review the application of the disgorgement policy to such transaction and may select to impose alternative restrictions on the employees position. The disgorgement of profits will only apply if the total profit exceeds 150 EUR within the blackout period. | ||
4.1.6 | Invesco Ltd Shares | ||
Pre-clearance is also required to buy or sell Invesco Ltd Shares. For staff who have been advised that they are part of the Blackout Group, permission will not be given during a closed period. | |||
Persons within the Blackout Group are determined on a quarterly basis and will be notified that they have been added to or removed from the list. | |||
In line with the Invesco Insider Trading Policy, the Blackout Periods for each quarter commence on 15 March, 15 June, 15 September and 15 December and end on the second business day following the Companys issue of the relevant earnings release. | |||
Full details of the Invesco Ltd stock transaction Pre-Clearance Guide and restrictions for all employees of Invesco Ltd can be found on the Compliance intranet site. | |||
4.1.7 | UK ICVCs, the Offshore Global Product Range (GPR) | ||
and other affiliated schemes are subject to the Short Term Trading restrictions (60 day rule see 4.1.8). The preferential rate of sales charge allowed to staff will be withdrawn in circumstances where it is apparent that the employee has traded on a short term basis in those shares i.e. where previous transactions by that person have resulted in the short term holding of those investments. Shares of UK ICVCs, the GPR and affiliated schemes will not be accepted for redemption if the funds themselves are closed for redemption due to the effects of subsequent market or currency movements. | |||
4.1.8 | Short Term Trading Profits | ||
It is Invescos policy to restrict the ability of employees to benefit from short-term trading in securities and instruments. Employees must disgorge profits made on the sale by an employee of any security or instrument held less than 60 days and will not be permitted to purchase any security or instrument that has been sold by such employee within the prior 60 days. Employees are required to disgorge profits made on the sale in a Covered Account within the 60 days period. Exceptions may be granted by the Compliance Department on a case by case basis. This policy applies to trading in all types of securities and instruments, except where in a particular case the local Chief Executive Officer in consultation with the Compliance Officer has made a specific finding of hardship and it can be demonstrated that no potential abuse or conflict is presented (for example, when |
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an employees request to sell a security purchased within 60 days prior to the request is prompted by a major corporate or market event, such as a tender offer, and the security was not held in client accounts). This section (4.1.8) will not apply to Financial Spread Betting transactions which have been approved under the Exceptions section (4.1.15) of this Policy. | |||
4.1.9 | Initial Public Offerings | ||
No employee may purchase or permit any Covered Account to purchase a security offered pursuant to an initial public offering, wherever such offering is made except in a Venture Capital Trust. However, in certain circumstances an employee may be permitted to buy an IPO for example where the public offering is made by a Government of where the employee is resident and different amounts of the offering are specified for different investor types e.g. private and institutional, the local Compliance Officer may allow such purchases after consultation with the local Chief Executive Officer or his designee. | |||
4.1.10 | Privately-Issued Securities | ||
Employees may not purchase or permit a Covered Account to purchase or acquire any privately-issued securities, other than in exceptional cases specifically approved by the local Chief Executive Officer (e.g. where such investment is part of a family-owned and operated business venture that would not be expected to involve an investment opportunity of interest to any Invesco client). Requests for exceptions should be made in the first instance to the local Compliance Officer. | |||
4.1.11 | Private Investment Funds | ||
Employees, however, may invest in interests in private investment funds (i.e. hedge funds) that are established to invest predominantly in public securities and instruments, subject to the pre-clearance procedures, trading restrictions and reporting requirements contained in this Code. Employees may also invest in residential co-operatives and private recreational clubs (such as sports clubs, country clubs, luncheon clubs and the like) for their personal use; such investments are not subject to the pre-clearance procedures, trading restrictions and reporting requirements unless the employees investing is part of a business conducted by the employee. Such ownership should be reported to the Compliance Officer. | |||
4.1.12 | Short Sales | ||
An employee may not sell short a security. Requests for exceptions should be made to the local Compliance Officer. | |||
4.1.13 | Financial Spread Betting | ||
Employees may not enter into Financial Spread betting arrangements unless they have applied in writing to do so under the Exceptions section of this Policy (4.1.15) and have received written confirmation that this is permitted. Exceptions will not be granted for Financial Spread Betting on single stocks but, depending on the circumstances, spread betting on Exchange Rates, Main Indices and Government Bonds may be allowed on an exceptions basis. | |||
4.1.14 | Futures | ||
Employees may not write, sell or buy exchange-traded futures, synthetic futures, swaps and similar non-exchange traded instruments. | |||
4.1.15 | Exceptions | ||
The Chief Executive Officer or his designee in consultation with the Compliance Officer may in on a case by case basis grant exceptions from these trading restrictions upon written request. Any exceptions granted will be reported to the local Board of Directors at least annually. Additionally if a local Board or its designee wish to impose additional restrictions these should be communicated to the staff. |
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5 | ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, CONFIDENTIALITY AND OUTSIDE DIRECTORSHIPS |
5.1 | Monitoring the use of the name of Invesco | |
To be able to fully monitor the appearance of the name of Invesco, any employees activities on behalf of Invesco such as the participation in an industry body or an external consulting group need to be pre-cleared to the local Compliance Officer and the local CEO. | ||
5.2 | Avoiding conflicts of interests | |
In order to reduce potential conflicts of interest arising from the participation of employees on the boards of directors of public, private, non-profit and other enterprises, all employees are subject to the following restrictions and guidelines: |
5.2.1 | An employee may not serve as a director of a public company without the approval of the local Chief Executive Officer after consultation with the local Compliance Officer, with the exception of approved industry associations. | ||
5.2.2 | An employee may serve on the board of directors or participate as an adviser or otherwise, or advisers of a private company only if: |
(i) | client assets have been invested in such company and having a seat on the board would be considered beneficial to our clients interest; and | ||
(ii) | service on such board has been approved in writing by the local Chief Executive Officer. The employee must resign from such board of directors as soon as the company contemplates going public, except where the local Chief Executive Officer in consultation with the Compliance Officer has determined that an employee may remain on a board. In any event, an employee shall not accept any compensation for serving as a director (or in a similar capacity) of such company; any compensation offered shall either be refused or, if unable to be refused, distributed pro rata to the relevant client accounts. |
5.2.3 | An employee must receive prior written permission from the Chief Executive Officer or his designee before serving as a director, trustee or member of an advisory board of either: |
(i) | any non-profit or charitable institution; or | ||
(ii) | a private family-owned and operated business. |
5.2.4 | An employee may serve as an officer or director of a residential co-operative, but must receive prior written permission from the local Chief Executive Officer and the local Compliance Department before serving as a director if, in the course of such service, he or she gives advice with respect to the management of the co-operatives funds. | ||
5.2.5 | If an employee serving on the board of directors or advisers of any entity comes into possession of material, non-public information through such service, he or she must immediately notify the local Compliance Officer. | ||
5.2.6 | An Invesco employee shall not take personal advantage of any economic opportunity properly belonging to an Invesco Client or to Invesco itself. Such opportunities could arise, for example, from confidential information belonging to a client or the offer of a directorship. Employees must not disclose information relating to a clients intentions, activities or portfolios except: |
i) | to fellow employees, or other agents of the client, who need to know it to discharge their duties; or |
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ii) | to the client itself. |
5.2.7 | Employees may not cause or attempt to cause any Client to purchase, sell or hold any Security in a manner calculated to create any personal benefit to the employee or Invesco. | ||
5.2.8 | If an employee or immediate family member stands to materially benefit from an investment decision for an Advisory Client that the employee is recommending or participating in, the employee must disclose that interest to persons with authority to make investment decisions and to the local Compliance Officer. Based on the information given, a decision will be made on whether or not to restrict the employees participation in causing a client to purchase or sell a Security in which the employee has an interest. | ||
5.2.9 | An employee must disclose to those persons with authority to make investment decisions for a Client (or to the Compliance Officer if the employee in question is a person with authority to make investment decisions for the Client), any Beneficial Interest that the employee (or immediate family) has in that Security or an Equivalent Security, or in the issuer thereof, where the decision could create a material benefit to the employee (or immediate family) or the appearance of impropriety. The person to whom the employee reports the interest, in consultation with the Compliance Officer, must determine whether or not the employee will be restricted in making investment decisions. |
6 | CLIENT INVESTMENTS IN SECURITIES OWNED BY INVESCO EMPLOYEES | |
6.1 | General principles | |
In addition to the specific prohibitions on certain personal securities transactions as set forth herein, all employees are prohibited from: |
6.1.1 | Employing any device, scheme or artifice to defraud any prospect or client; | ||
6.1.2 | Making any untrue statement of a material fact or omitting to state to a client or a prospective client, a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading; | ||
6.1.3 | Engaging in any act, practice or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any prospect or client; | ||
6.1.4 | Engaging in any manipulative practice with respect to any prospect or client; or | ||
6.1.5 | Revealing to any other person (except in the normal course of his or her duties on behalf of a client) any information regarding securities transactions by any client or the consideration of any client or Invesco of any securities transactions. |
7 | REPORTS | |
7.1 | In order to implement the general principles, restrictions and prohibitions contained in this Code, each Employee is required to provide the following reports: | |
7.2 | Initial Certification and Schedules . This Code forms part of an employee s contract of employment and any breach may be grounds for disciplinary action up to and including summary dismissal. |
7.2.1 | On commencing employment at Invesco, each new employee shall receive a copy of the Code via electronic means and will be expected to confirm that they understand and accept this Code within their first month of employment. |
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7.2.2 | New employees are also required on commencement of employment to provide the following to the Compliance Department: |
(i) | A list of all Covered Accounts and | ||
(ii) | Details of any directorships (or similar positions) of for-profit, non- profit and other enterprises. |
7.3 | Confirmations |
7.3.1 | Each employee shall cause to be provided to the Compliance Department where an outside broker undertakes the transaction duplicate copies of confirmations of all transactions in each Covered Account. |
7.4 | Annual Certification |
Annual acceptance of the Code is normally submitted electronically and requires the employee to provide an up-to-date list of: |
i) | all Covered Accounts and any other transactions not included in the monthly statements; and | ||
ii) | directorships (or similar positions) of for-profit, non-profit and other enterprises. | ||
iii) | trades undertaken for which contract notes/confirmations have not been provided to the Compliance Department; | ||
iv) | potential conflicts of interest identified which have not yet been reported to the Compliance Department; | ||
v) | potential Treating Customers Fairly issues identified which have not yet been reported to the Compliance Department. |
7.4.1 | A schedule listing directorships (or similar positions) of for-profit, non-profit and other enterprises; | ||
7.4.2 | With respect to Discretionary Accounts, if any, certifications that such employee does not discuss any investment decisions with the person making investment decisions; and | ||
7.4.3 | With respect to any non-public security owned by such employee, a statement indicating whether the issuer has changed its name or publicly issued securities during such calendar year. |
7.5 | Exempt Investments | |
Confirmations and periodic reports need not be provided with respect to Exempt Investments, (see 3.2). | ||
7.6 | Disclaimer of Beneficial Ownership | |
Any report required under this Code may contain a statement that such report is not to be construed as an admission by the person making the report that he or she has any direct and indirect beneficial ownership of the security to which the report relates. | ||
7.7 | Annual Review | |
The Director of European Compliance in consultation with the local Compliance Officers will review the Code as necessary, in light of legal and business developments and experience in implementing the Code, and will prepare a report to the relevant management committee that: |
7.7.1 | summarizes existing procedures concerning personal investing and any changes in the procedures made during the past year, | ||
7.7.2 | identifies any violations requiring significant remedial action during the past year, and |
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7.7.3 | identifies any recommended changes in existing restrictions or procedures based on the experience under the Code, evolving industry practices, or developments in applicable laws or regulations. |
8 | TRAINING REQUIREMENTS | |
In order to make sure that every employee is fully aware of the current rules and guidelines as well as changes in the local regulatory environment, he has to participate in Compliance and Anti Money Laundering training at least once a year. Several of these training events will be provided in the local offices by the Compliance Officer and the AML Officer. | ||
9 | MISCELLANEOUS | |
9.1 Interpretation | ||
The provisions of this Code will be interpreted by the local Compliance Officer, as applicable. Questions of interpretation should be directed in the first instance to the local Compliance Officer or his/her designee or, if necessary, with the Compliance Officer of another Invesco entity. The interpretation of the local Compliance Officer is final. | ||
9.2 Sanctions | ||
If advised of a violation of this Code by an employee, the local Chief Executive Officer (or, in the case of the local Chief Executive Officer, the local Board of Directors) may impose such sanctions as are deemed appropriate. Any violations of this Code and sanctions therefore will be reported to the local Board of Directors at least annually. | ||
9.3 Effective Date | ||
This revised Code shall become effective as of 1 April 2012 . |
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10 | Guidelines for Compliance in Real Estate Investments | |
11.1 | The purpose of this section is to ensure all personal real estate transactions of employees are conducted |
| to place the interests of Invescos clients first, | ||
| to avoid any actual, potential or appearance of a conflict of interest, | ||
| to avoid any abuse of an employees position of trust and responsibility and | ||
| to avoid the possibility that employees would take inappropriate advantage of their positions. |
11.2 | The requirements in these sections are an addition to rather than a substitute of all other requirements made in the Code of Ethics. |
| knowingly invests in real estate or recommends investments in real estate while in possession of material, non-public information, | ||
| informs somebody (outside of Invesco or the client) about a real estate investment or about a client using information he has received through his employment with Invesco |
1. | Personally investing in real estate for a client when another client or a business partner of Invesco is involved in setting up and selling the investment. I.e. as an intermediary or a financier. | ||
2. | Entering into a private real estate transaction when any cost or fees brought forth by it are other than at arms length. | ||
3. | Taking personal advantage of any economic opportunity properly belonging to an Invesco Client or to Invesco itself. |
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4. | Investing in real estate for a client where Invesco has access to information which may be price sensitive. | ||
5. | Manipulation of the market through the release of information to regular market users which is false or misleading about a company or a real estate investment. | ||
6. | Release of any information (except in the normal course of his or her duties as an employee of Invesco) about a clients considerations of a real estate investment. | ||
7. | Personally engaging in real estate investments and thereby using information received through the employment with Invesco. |
Page 17 of 24
|
2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
1 | The procedures to deal are as follows: |
A: | Obtain the Pre-Clearance Trade Authorisation Form from the forms section of the Compliance Intranet site. | ||
B: | Complete Trade Authorisation Form noting: |
i) | permission sought to either buy or sell; | ||
ii) | the amount in shares or currency; | ||
iii) | is the transaction an Invesco ICVC/ISA/GPR or affiliated scheme yes or no if yes, then you will have to submit your pre-clearance form to *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing e-mail group if no, then pre- clearance is not required; | ||
iv) | type of security; | ||
v) | name of company or other; | ||
vi) | date of request to deal; | ||
vii) | name of beneficial owner; and | ||
viii) | address of beneficial owner. |
Then complete each of the questions in connection with the transaction you require completed yes or no answers will be required. | |||
C: | For Venture Capital Trust ordinary securities or for Invesco ICVC/ISA/GPR Trades, you should now only complete section Two. Once you have answered both questions, the pre-clearance form must be submitted to the e-mail *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing - Compliance will review the prospective transaction and revert to you by e-mail. Once you have received this confirmation e-mail you are free to deal. However, the trade must be completed by the end of the next business day from the date of confirmation. If dealing is not completed in this time frame, then additional pre-clearance MUST be sought via the same process. | ||
D: | If you wish to sell/buy Invesco shares you should complete Section two as noted above. | ||
E: | For Equity, Bond or Warrant deals, you should now only complete section Three. Once you have answered these questions, the pre-clearance form must be submitted to the e-mail *UK- Compliance Personal Share Dealing - Compliance will review the prospective transaction and revert to you by e-mail. Once you have received this confirmation e-mail you are free to deal. However, the trade must be completed by the end of the next business day from the date of confirmation. If dealing is not completed in this time frame, then additional pre-clearance MUST be sought via the same process. |
Page 18 of 24
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2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
NB | Permission to deal will not be granted retrospectively. Deals undertaken without permission will be brought to the Compliance Officers attention, by a review of the personal share dealing register, for discussion with the person concerned. |
Page 19 of 24
|
2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
1. | Advisory Client means any client (including both investment companies and managed accounts) for which Invesco serves as an investment adviser, renders investment advice, or makes investment decisions. | |
2 | Beneficial Interest means the opportunity to share, directly or indirectly, in any profit or loss on a transaction in Securities, including but not limited to all joint accounts, partnerships and trusts. | |
3 | Covered Accounts means: |
3.1 | any account/securities held by you, or your family, while an employee; | ||
3.2 | accounts/securities held by you for the benefit of your spouse, significant other, or any children or relatives who share your home; | ||
3.3 | accounts/securities for which you have or share, directly or indirectly, through any contract, arrangement, understanding, relationship, or otherwise: |
(i) | voting power (which includes power to vote, or to direct the voting of, a security), or | ||
(ii) | investment power (which includes the power to dispose, or to direct the disposition) of a security; or |
3.4 | accounts/securities held by any other person to whose support you materially contribute or in which, by reason of any agreement or arrangement, you have or share benefits substantially equivalent to ownership, including, for example: |
(i) | arrangements such as Investment Clubs (which may be informal) under which you have agreed to share the profits from an investment, and | ||
(ii) | accounts maintained or administered by you for a relative (such as children or parents) who do not share your home. |
3.5 | Families include husbands and wives, significant other, sons and daughters and other immediate family only where any of those persons take part in discussion or passing on of investment information. |
4. | Employee means a person who has a contract of employment with, or employed by, Invesco UK or any associated Invesco Company within Europe; including consultants, contractors or temporary employees. | |
5. | Equivalent Security means any Security issued by the same entity as the issuer of a security, including options, rights, warrants, preferred stock, restricted stock, bonds and other obligations of that company. | |
6. | Fund means an investment company for which Invesco serves as an adviser or subadviser. | |
7. | High quality short-term debt instruments means any instrument having a maturity at issuance of less than 366 days and which is treated in one of the highest two rating categories by a Nationally Recognised Statistical Rating Organisation, or which is unrated but is of comparable quality. | |
8. | Independent Fund Director means an independent director of an investment company advised by Invesco. |
Page 20 of 24
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2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
9. | Initial Public Offering means any security which is being offered for the first time on a Recognised Stock Exchange. | |
10. | Open-Ended Collective Investment Scheme means any Open-ended Investment Company, US Mutual Fund, UK ICVC or Irish Unit Trust, Luxembourg SICAV, French SICAV or Bermuda Fund. | |
11. | Securities Transaction means a purchase of or sale of Securities. | |
12. | Security includes stock, notes, bonds, debentures and other evidences of indebtedness (including loan participations and assignments), limited partnership interests, investment contracts, and all derivative instruments, such as options and warrants. | |
13. | UK ICVC and affiliate schemes defined as all UK domiciled retail Invesco ICVCs, all Invesco Continental European domestic ranges and all Invesco Ireland and Luxembourg SICAVs and Unit Trusts. | |
14. | Main Index defined as a member of the FTSE 100 or equivalent. The equivalency will be determined by the European Director of Compliance on a case by case basis. |
Page 21 of 24
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2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
60 day | ||||||||||
holding | Post- | |||||||||
Investment / transaction | period | Pre- | event | Not | ||||||
type | * | Clearance | Reporting | Exempt | Allowed | |||||
ANY deliberate transactions
(buys or sells) in investments
of any type including:
|
||||||||||
Equities, Options, Fixed
Income, Venture Capital
Funds, IVZ shares**, ETFs
etc.
|
x | x | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
IVZ funds/products including
ETFs*
|
x | x | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Privately issued investment
securities/hedge funds
|
x | x | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Non-Executive Directors:
|
||||||||||
Personal Investment
Transactions in IVZ Ltd.
shares & products.
|
x | x | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Government and local
authority debt (non-OECD
country)
|
x | x | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Non-Executive Directors:
|
||||||||||
Personal Investment
Transactions in non- IVZ
shares & funds
|
x | x | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Undirected/Automatic
transactions or movements
|
x | x | ||||||||
|
||||||||||
Non-IVZ Collective
Investment Schemes
(excluding ETFs)
|
x | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
OECD debt (e.g. US treasury
bills)
|
x | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
Financial Spread betting ***
|
x | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
Initial Public Offerings***
|
x | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
Futures/Short Sales
|
x |
Note: | in all cases, unless exempt, contract notes confirming the trades must be provided to the Compliance Department within 14 days of the trade. Pre-trade approval is valid until close of business the following day. | |
* | An exemption might be granted but if so, profits cannot be retained | |
** | May be subject to a close period | |
*** | Apply for an exemption within the pre-trade authorisation process |
Page 22 of 24
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2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
Page 23 of 24
|
2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
Page 24 of 24
|
2012 Code of Ethics (CE) |
§ | We are passionate about our clients success | ||
§ | We earn trust by acting with integrity | ||
§ | People are the foundation of our success | ||
§ | Working together, we achieve more | ||
§ | We believe in the continuous pursuit of performance excellence |
Ø | Best interests of clients As fiduciaries, we have a duty to act with reasonable care, skill and caution in the best interests of our clients, and to avoid conflicts of interest. |
Ø | Global fiduciary standards Invesco seeks to maintain the same high fiduciary standards throughout the world, even though those standards may not be legally required, or even recognized, in some countries. |
Ø | Client confidentiality We must maintain the confidentiality of information relating to the client, and comply with the data protection requirements imposed by many jurisdictions. |
Ø | Information Clients must be provided with timely and accurate information regarding their accounts. |
Ø | Segregation and protection of assets Processes must be established for the proper maintenance, control and protection of client assets. Fiduciary assets must be segregated from Invesco assets and property. |
Ø | Delegation of duties Fiduciary duties should be delegated only when the client consents and where permitted by applicable law. Reasonable care, skill and caution must be exercised in the selection of agents and review of their performance. |
Ø | Client guidelines Invesco is responsible for making investment decisions on behalf of clients that are consistent with the prospectus, contract, or other controlling document relating to the clients account. |
Ø | Relations with regulators We seek relationships with regulators that are open and responsive in nature. |
| influence a specific decision or action or | ||
| enhance future relationships or | ||
| maintain existing relationships |
Ø | Violations of any laws or regulations generally involving Invesco; | ||
Ø | Questionable accounting matters, internal accounting controls, auditing matters, breaches of fiduciary duty or violations of United States or foreign securities laws or rules (collectively, Accounting Matters) including, but not limited to: |
| fraud or deliberate error in the preparation, evaluation, review or audit of any financial statement of Invesco; | ||
| fraud or deliberate error in the recording and maintaining of financial records of Invesco; | ||
| deficiencies in or non-compliance with Invescos internal accounting controls; | ||
| misrepresentation or false statements to or by a senior officer or accountant regarding a matter contained in the financial records, financial reports or audit reports of Invesco; | ||
| deviation from full and fair reporting of Invescos financial condition; or | ||
| fraudulent or criminal activities engaged in by officers, directors or employees of Invesco; |
| is necessary to alleviate undue hardship or in view of unforeseen circumstances or is otherwise appropriate under all the relevant facts and circumstances; | ||
| will not be inconsistent with the purposes and objectives of the Code; | ||
| will not adversely affect the interests of clients of the company or the interests of the company; and | ||
| will not result in a transaction or conduct that would violate provisions of applicable laws or regulations. |
Policy:
|
Code of Ethics Policy | |
|
||
Area of Focus:
|
Compliance |
Policy Owner:
|
Compliance, Management | |
Policy Approver:
|
Compliance | |
Policy Contact:
|
Compliance | |
Version:
|
1.1 | |
Version Effective Date:
|
January 31, 2012 | |
Review Frequency:
|
Annual | |
Review Date:
|
January 31, 2013 | |
Applicable Authority:
|
Rule 204A-1 | |
Policy Cross References:
|
Invesco Code of Conduct and Invesco Code of Ethics |
| We are fiduciaries. Our duty is at all times to place the interests of our Clients first. | ||
| All personal securities transactions will be conducted in such a manner as to be consistent with the Code of Ethics and to avoid any actual or potential conflict of interest or any abuse of an employees position of trust and responsibility. | ||
| No employee should take inappropriate advantage of their position. | ||
| The fiduciary principle that information concerning the identity of security holdings and financial circumstances of any Client is confidential. |
| To defraud such Client in any manner; | ||
| To engage in any act, practice or course of conduct which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon such a Client; | ||
| To engage in any manipulative practice with respect to such Client; or | ||
| To engage in any manipulative practice with respect to securities, including price manipulation. |
Page 2
Page 3
| Direct obligations of the US Government (e.g., treasury securities) | ||
| Bankers acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper, and high quality short-term debt obligations, including repurchase agreements. | ||
| Shares issued by money market funds | ||
| Shares of open-end mutual funds that are not advised or sub-advised by Invesco Ltd. or any of its affiliates; and | ||
| Shares issued by unit investment trusts. |
Page 4
1
Section | Item | Page | ||||
I. |
Introduction
|
3 | ||||
|
||||||
II. |
Statement of Fiduciary Principles
|
3 | ||||
|
||||||
III. |
Compliance With Laws, Rules and Regulations; Reporting of Violations
|
4 | ||||
|
||||||
IV. |
Limits on Personal Investing
|
4 | ||||
A. Personal Investing
|
4 | |||||
1 Pre-clearance of Personal Securities Transactions
|
4 | |||||
Blackout Period
|
5 | |||||
Investment Personnel
|
5 | |||||
De Minimis
Exemptions
|
5 | |||||
2 Prohibition of Short-Term Trading Profits
|
6 | |||||
3 Initial Public Offerings
|
6 | |||||
4 Prohibition of Short Sales by Investment Personnel
|
7 | |||||
5 Restricted List Securities
|
7 | |||||
6 Other Criteria to Consider in Pre-Clearance
|
||||||
7 Brokerage Accounts
|
7 | |||||
8 Reporting Requirements
|
8 | |||||
a. Initial Holdings Reports
|
8 | |||||
b. Quarterly Transactions Reports
|
8 | |||||
c. Annual Holdings Reports
|
9 | |||||
d. Discretionary Managed Accounts
|
9 | |||||
e. Certification of Compliance
|
10 | |||||
9 Private Securities Transactions
|
10 | |||||
10 Limited Investment Opportunity
|
10 | |||||
11 Excessive Short-Term Trading in Funds
|
10 | |||||
|
||||||
B. Invesco Ltd. Securities
|
10 | |||||
C. Limitations on Other Personal Activities
|
11 | |||||
1 Outside Business Activities
|
11 | |||||
2 Gifts and Entertainment Policy
|
11 | |||||
Entertainment
|
11 | |||||
Gifts
|
11 | |||||
3 U.S. Department of Labor Reporting
|
12 | |||||
D. Parallel Investing Permitted
|
12 | |||||
|
||||||
V. |
Reporting of Potential Compliance Issues
|
13 | ||||
|
||||||
VI. |
Administration of the Code
|
13 | ||||
|
||||||
VII. |
Sanctions
|
13 | ||||
|
||||||
VIII. |
Exceptions to the Code
|
14 | ||||
|
||||||
IX. |
Definitions
|
14 | ||||
|
||||||
X. |
Invesco Ltd. Policies and Procedures
|
16 | ||||
|
||||||
X1. |
Code of Ethics Contacts
|
16 |
2
| any director, officer, full or part time Employee of Invesco Advisers, Inc. or any full or part time Employee of any Invesco Advisers, Inc.s affiliates that, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes, participates in , or obtains any information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities or who is involved in making or obtains information concerning investment recommendations with respect to such purchase or sales of Covered Securities; or who has access to non-public information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities, access to non-public securities recommendations or access to non-public information concerning portfolio holdings of any portfolio advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
| all Employees of Invesco Ltd. located in the United States who are not covered by the Code of Ethics of a registered investment advisory affiliate of Invesco Ltd. | ||
| any other persons falling within such definitions under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 , as amended (the Investment Company Act)or Rule 204A-1 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the Advisers Act) and such other persons that may be so deemed by Compliance. |
| the interests of Clients and shareholders of investment company Clients must be placed first at all times and Covered Persons must not take inappropriate advantage of their positions; and | ||
| all personal securities transactions must be conducted consistent with this Code and in a manner to avoid any abuse of an individuals position of trust and responsibility. This Code is our effort to address conflicts of interest that may arise in the ordinary course of our business. |
3
A. | Personal Investing |
4
| Non-Investment Personnel. |
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security within two trading days before or after a Client trades in that security. | ||
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security if there is a Client order on that security currently with the trading desk. |
| Investment Personnel . |
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security within three trading days before or after a Client trades in that security. | ||
| may not buy or sell a Covered Security if there is a Client order on that security currently with the trading desk. |
5
o | Equity de minimis exemptions . |
| If a Covered Person does not have knowledge of trading activity in a particular equity security, he or she may execute up to 500 shares of such security in a rolling 30-day period provided the issuer of such security is included in the Russell 1000 Index. | ||
| If a Covered Person does not have knowledge of trading activity in a particular equity security, he or she may execute up to 500 shares of such security in a rolling 30 day period provided that there is no conflicting client activity in that security during the blackout period or on the trading desk that exceeds 500 shares per trading day. |
o | Fixed income de minimis exemption . If a Covered Person does not have knowledge of trading activity in a particular fixed income security he or she may execute up to $100,000 of par value of such security in a rolling 30-day period. |
| A Letter of Education will be provided to any Covered Person whose failure to pre-clear is considered immaterial or inadvertent. | ||
| Repeat violations may result in in-person training, probation, withdrawal of personal trading privileges or employment termination, depending on the nature and severity of the violations. |
6
| full service broker-dealers. | ||
| discount broker-dealers. discount brokerage are accounts in which all trading is completed online. These accounts must be held with firms that provide electronic feeds of confirmations directly to the Compliance Department, | ||
| Invesco Advisers, Incs. -affiliated Broker-dealer (Invesco Distributors, Inc.) |
7
| A list of all security holdings, including the name, number of shares (for equities) and the principal amount (for debt securities) in which the person has direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership. A Covered Person may have Beneficial Ownership in securities held by members of their immediate family sharing the same household (i.e., a spouse and children) or by certain partnerships, trusts, corporations, or other arrangements. | ||
| The name of any broker-dealer or bank with which the person maintains an account in which any securities are held for the direct or indirect benefit of the person; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted by the Covered Person |
| The nature of the transaction (buy, sell, etc.); | ||
| The price of the Covered Security at which the transaction was executed; | ||
| The name of the broker-dealer or bank executing the transaction; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted to the Compliance Department. |
8
| The date the account was established; | ||
| The name of the broker-dealer or bank; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted to the Compliance Department. |
| The security and the number of shares (for equities) or the interest rate and maturity date (if applicable) and principal amount (for debt securities) for each Covered Security in which the Covered Person has any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership; | ||
| The name of the broker-dealer or bank with or through which the security is held; and | ||
| The date that the report is submitted by the Covered Person to the Compliance Department. |
9
10
o | Entertainment . Employees must report Entertainment with the Compliance Department within thirty (30) calendar days after the receipt or giving by submitting a Gift Report within the automated review system. The requirement to report Entertainment includes dinners or any other event with a Business Partner of Invesco Advisers, Inc. in attendance. | ||
Employees may not reimburse Business Partners for the cost of tickets that would be considered excessive or for travel related expenses without approval of the Compliance Department. | |||
Examples of Entertainment that may be considered excessive in value include Super Bowls, All-Star games, Kentucky Derby, hunting trips, ski trips, etc. An occasional sporting event, golf outing or concert when accompanied by the Business Partner may not be excessive. | |||
Gifts . Employees are prohibited from accepting or giving the following: single Gifts valued in excess of $100 in any calendar year; or Gifts from one person or firm valued in excess of $100 during a calendar year period. |
11
Reporting Requirements for Gifts and Entertainment: |
o | Reporting of Gifts and Entertainment given to an Invesco Employee by a Client or Business Partner. All Gifts and Entertainment received by an Employee must be reported through the automated pre-clearance system within thirty (30) calendar days after the receipt of the Gift or the attendance of the Entertainment event. | ||
o | Reporting of Gifts and Entertainment given by an Invesco Employee to a Client or Business Partner. All Gifts and Entertainment given by an Employee must be reported through the reporting requirements of the Employees business unit. An Employee should contact their manager or Compliance if they are not sure how to report gifts they intend to give or have given to a Client or Business Partner. |
12
| describes significant issues arising under the Code since the last report to the ICCC, including information about material violations of the Code and sanctions imposed in response to material violations; and | ||
| certifies that Invesco Advisers, Inc. has adopted procedures reasonably designed to prevent Covered Persons from violating the Code. |
13
| Affiliated Mutual Funds generally includes all mutual funds advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc All Invesco funds and Invesco Van Kampen funds are Affiliated Mutual Funds. | ||
| Automatic Investment Plan means a program in which regular purchases or sales are made automatically in or from investment accounts in accordance with a predetermined schedule and allocation, including dividend reinvestment plans. | ||
| Beneficial Ownership has the same meaning as Rule 16a-1(a)(2) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the 34 Act). To have a beneficial interest, Covered Persons must have a direct or indirect pecuniary interest, which is the opportunity to profit directly or indirectly from a transaction in securities. Thus a Covered Person may have Beneficial Ownership in securities held by members of his or her immediate family sharing the same household (i.e. a spouse and children) or by certain partnerships, trusts, corporations, or other arrangements. | ||
| Client means any account for which Invesco Advisers, Inc. is either the adviser or sub-adviser including Affiliated Mutual Funds. | ||
| Control has the same meaning as under Section 2(a)(9) of the Investment Company Act. | ||
| Covered Person means and includes: |
o | any director, officer, full or part time Employee of Invesco Advisers, Inc. or any full or part time Employee of any Invesco Advisers, Inc.s affiliates that, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes, participates in , or obtains any information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities or who is involved in making or obtains information concerning investment recommendations with respect to such purchase or sales of Covered Securities ; or who has access to non-public information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities, access to non-public securities recommendations or access to non-public information concerning portfolio holdings of any portfolio advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
o | all Employees of Invesco Ltd. located in the United States who are not covered by the Code of Ethics of a registered investment advisory affiliate of Invesco Ltd. | ||
o | any other persons falling within such definitions under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 , as amended (the Investment Company Act)or Rule 204A-1 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the Advisers Act) and such other persons that may be so deemed by Compliance. |
14
| Covered Security means a security as defined in Section 2(a)(36) of the Investment Company Act except that it does not include the following (Please note : exchange traded funds (ETFs) are considered a Covered Security). |
o | Direct obligations of the Government of the United States or its agencies; | ||
o | Bankers acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper and high quality short-term debt instruments, including repurchase agreements; | ||
o | Any open-end mutual fund not advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc.(All Affiliated Mutual Funds shall be considered Covered Securities regardless of whether they are advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
o | Any unit investment trust, including unit investment trusts advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc.; | ||
o | Invesco Ltd. stock because it is subject to the provisions of Invesco Ltd.s Code of Conduct. Notwithstanding this exception, transactions in Invesco Ltd. securities are subject to all the pre-clearance and reporting requirements outlined in other provisions of this Code and any other corporate guidelines issued by Invesco Ltd. |
| Employee means and includes: |
o | Any full or part time Employee of Invesco Advisers, Inc. or any full or part time Employee of any Invesco Advisers, Inc.s affiliates that, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes or participates in, or obtains any information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securties or who is involved in making or obtains information concerning investment recommendations with respect to such purchase or sales of Covered Securities; or who has access to non-public information concerning any Clients purchase or sale of Covered Securities, access to non-public securities recommendations or access to non-public information concerning portfolio holdings of any portfolio advised or sub-advised by Invesco Advisers, Inc. | ||
o | All Employees of Invesco Ltd. located in the United States who are not covered by the Code of Ethics of a registered investment advisory affiliate of Invesco Ltd. | ||
o | Any other persons falling within such definitions under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act or Rule 204A-1 under the Advisers Act and such other persons that may be so deemed by Compliance. |
| Gifts, Entertainment and Business Partner have the same meaning as provided in the Invesco Ltd. Gifts and Entertainment Policy. | ||
| Initial Public Offering means an offering of securities registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the issuer of which, immediately before the registration, was not subject to the reporting requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the 34 Act. | ||
| Invesco Advisers, Inc.s -affiliated Broker-dealer means Invesco Distributors, Inc. or its successors. |
15
| Private Securities Transaction means any securities transaction relating to new offerings of securities which are not registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, provided however that transactions subject to the notification requirements of Rule 3050 of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authoritys (FINRA) Conduct Rules, transactions among immediate family members (as defined in the interpretation of the FINRA Board of Governors on free-riding and withholding) for which no associated person receives any selling compensation, and personal securities transactions in investment company and variable annuity securities shall be excluded. | ||
| Restricted List Securities means the list of securities that are provided to Compliance Department by Invesco Ltd. or investment departments, which include those securities that are restricted from purchase or sale by Client or Employee accounts for various reasons (e.g., large concentrated ownership positions that may trigger reporting or other securities regulatory issues, or possession of material, non-public information, or existence of corporate transaction in the issuer involving an Invesco Ltd. unit). |
| Telephone Hotline: 1-877-331-CODE [2633] | ||
| E-Mail: CodeofEthics(North America)@invesco.com |
16
/s/ David C. Arch | ||||
David C. Arch | ||||
/s/ Jerry D. Choate | ||||
Jerry D. Choate | ||||
/s/ Linda Hutton Heagy | ||||
Linda Hutton Heagy | ||||
/s/ R. Craig Kennedy | ||||
R. Craig Kennedy | ||||
/s/ Colin D. Meadows | ||||
Colin D. Meadows | ||||
/s/ Hugo F. Sonnenschein | ||||
Hugo F. Sonnenschein | ||||
/s/ Wayne W. Whalen | ||||
Wayne W. Whalen | ||||
/s/ Suzanne H. Woolsey | ||||
Suzanne H. Woolsey | ||||