On December 8, 2016, the Chief Counsel’s Office of the Division of Investment Management of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission“) provided “no‑action letter” assurance to CenturyLink Investment Management Company, an investment adviser registered as such under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (“Adviser“), that it would not recommend enforcement action to the Commission if it were to withdraw its registration. Adviser is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of CenturyLink, Inc., a telecommunications firm (“Parent“), that was established, and has been operated, for the sole purpose of providing investment advisory services to (i) the employee benefit plans sponsored by the Parent (the “Plans“), which were established solely for the benefit of current and previous employees of the Parent, its predecessors and affiliates, and comprise retirement and health and welfare employee benefit plans, including both qualified and nonqualified plans governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA“); and (ii) the CenturyLink – Clarke M. Williams Foundation (the “Foundation“), a charitable foundation organized as a Colorado nonprofit corporation by a predecessor company of the Parent for charitable and educational purposes.
The response of the staff is consistent with other no-action letters issued to wholly owned subsidiaries of a parent that satisfy comparable conditions, except with respect to the Foundation. The significance of this letter is that it extends the application of these principles to advisory services provided to a charitable foundation under the circumstances presented.
In providing its response, the staff stated that its position is based particularly on representations that:
- Adviser is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of the Parent and has been established, and has been operated, for the sole purpose of providing investment advisory services to the Plans and the Foundation;
- Adviser does not hold itself out to the public as an investment adviser, provides investment advice only to the Plans and the Foundation, and will not in the future provide investment advisory services to any third party;
- The Plans are established solely for the benefit of current and previous employees of the Parent, its predecessors and affiliates, and comprise employee benefit plans governed by ERISA;
- The Foundation is a charitable foundation organized as a Colorado nonprofit corporation by the Parent for charitable and educational purposes, and its beneficiaries are charitable and educational organizations; the Parent is the sole voting member of the Foundation, has rights with respect to the management of the Foundation and, since 2012, is its sole contributor;
- The only amounts received by the Parent in connection with the Plans are reimbursements that are subject to the restrictions imposed by ERISA;
- The only amounts received in connection with Adviser’s advisory services to the Foundation are reimbursements to the Parent from the Foundation for Adviser’s expenses associated with such advisory services; and
- Neither the Plans nor the Foundation is required to register as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940.