As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on November 20, 2020
Securities Act File No. 333-
U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-14
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
UNDER
THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
Pre-Effective Amendment No.
Post-Effective Amendment No.
(Check appropriate box or boxes)
VALIC COMPANY I
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in the Charter)
2919 Allen Parkway
Houston, Texas 77019
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)
Telephone Number: (800) 445-7862
(Area Code and Telephone Number)
Kathleen D. Fuentes, Esq.
SunAmerica Asset Management, LLC
Harborside 5
185 Hudson Street, Suite 3300
Jersey City, NJ 07311-4992
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
Copies to:
Margery K. Neale, Esq.
Elliot J. Gluck, Esq.
Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP
787 Seventh Avenue
New York, New York 10019-6099
Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: As soon as practicable after this Registration Statement becomes effective under the Securities Act of 1933.
Title of securities being registered: Shares of common stock, par value $0.01 per share. Calculation of Registration Fee under the Securities Act of 1933: No filing fee is required because of reliance on Section 24(f) and Rule 24f-2 under the Investment Company Act of 1940.
The Registrant hereby amends this Registration Statement on such date or dates as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrant shall file a further amendment which specifically states that this Registration Statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 or until this Registration Statement shall become effective on such date as the Securities and Exchange Commission, acting pursuant to said Section 8(a), may determine.
VALIC COMPANY I
Core Equity Fund
Large Cap Core Fund
2919 Allen Parkway
Houston, Texas 77019
(800-445-7862)
[•], 2020
Dear Shareholder:
You are receiving the enclosed Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement because you owned interests in the Core Equity Fund and/or the Large Cap Core Fund (each, a “Target Fund” and together, the “Target Funds”), each a series of VALIC Company I (“VC I”), as of the close of business on January 11, 2021. If you are an owner of a variable annuity or variable life insurance contract or certificate issued by The Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company (“VALIC”) or other affiliated life insurance company, you have the right to instruct VALIC or such affiliated life insurance company how to vote shares of your Target Fund at a joint special meeting of shareholders to be held on Monday, April 5, 2021 at 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time (the “Special Meeting”). Shareholders of Target Funds who invest through a qualified retirement plan or an individual retirement account outside of a variable annuity or variable life insurance contract may vote their shares directly. Due to concerns regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, the Special Meeting will be held in a virtual meeting format only. You will not be able to attend the Special Meeting in person, but you will be able to view the Special Meeting live and cast your vote(s) by accessing an event link.
We are asking for your vote to approve a proposed reorganization of your Target Fund with the Systematic Core Fund (the “Acquiring Fund”), a series of VC I. In this reorganization, your Target Fund shares would be exchanged for the shares of the Acquiring Fund with the same aggregate net asset value of the Target Fund shares that you currently hold. It is currently anticipated that the reorganization of each Target Fund will be effected on a tax-free basis for federal income tax purposes.
The reorganization of each Target Fund is being proposed because VALIC, the investment adviser to each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund, believes that shareholders of each fund will benefit more from the potential operating efficiencies and economies of scale that may be achieved by combining the funds’ assets in the respective reorganization, than by continuing to operate the fund separately. VALIC further believes that it is in the best interests of each Target Fund to combine the Target Fund’s assets with a fund that has a lower net expense structure. VALIC believes that the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective and strategies make it a compatible fund within the VALIC complex for a reorganization with each of the Target Funds.
At a meeting of the Board of Directors of VC I (the “Board”) held on October 26-27, 2020, VALIC recommended that the Board consider and approve each proposed reorganization. The Board has determined that the proposed reorganization of each relevant Target Fund with the Acquiring Fund is in the best interests of the Target Fund and the interests of the Target Fund’s existing shareholders will not be diluted as a result of the reorganization, and the Board has also determined that each proposed reorganization is in the best interests of the Acquiring Fund and the interests of the Acquiring Fund’s existing shareholders will not be diluted as a result of each reorganization. If a reorganization is approved by shareholders, it is expected that the proposed reorganization will take effect during the second quarter of 2021. Shareholder approval of one reorganization is not contingent upon shareholder approval of the other reorganization. Included in this booklet is information about the upcoming Special Meeting:
• | A Notice of a Joint Special Meeting of Shareholders, which summarizes the matter on which you are being asked to vote; and |
• | The Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement, which provides detailed information on the Acquiring Fund, the specific proposal relating to your Target Fund being considered at the Special Meeting, and why the proposal is being made. |
The Board recommends that you vote “FOR” the proposal.
VALIC has also attached a “Questions and Answers” section to assist you in evaluating the proposal. I encourage you to review the enclosed materials carefully. You may vote in one of the following ways:
• | By calling us toll-free at the telephone number listed on the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card; |
• | By Internet at the website address listed on the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card; |
• | By returning the enclosed proxy voting card or voting instruction card in the postage-paid envelope; or |
• | By participating at the Special Meeting. |
As always, we appreciate your support.
| | Sincerely, | |
| | ||
| | /s/ John Genoy | |
| | John Genoy | |
| | President |
Please vote now. Your vote is important.
To avoid the wasteful and unnecessary expense of further solicitation, we urge you to promptly indicate your vote on the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card, date and sign it and return it in the envelope provided, or record your voting instructions by telephone or via the Internet, no matter how large or small your holdings may be. If you submit a properly executed proxy card or voting instruction card but do not indicate how you wish your shares to be voted, your shares will be voted “For” the applicable reorganization.
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
We recommend that you read the complete Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement. For your convenience, we have provided a brief overview of the issue(s) to be voted on.
Q: | Why is a shareholder meeting being held? |
A: | You are being asked to approve one or more of the following: (i) an agreement and plan of reorganization (a “Reorganization Agreement”) between VALIC Company I (“VC I” or the “Company”), on behalf of its series, Core Equity Fund, and VC I, on behalf of its series, Systematic Core Fund (the “Acquiring Fund”); and (ii) a Reorganization Agreement between VC I, on behalf of its series, Large Cap Core Fund, and VC I, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund. The Core Equity Fund and the Large Cap Core Fund are each referred to as a “Target Fund” and together as the “Target Funds” and collectively with the Acquiring Fund as the “Funds” or each, a “Fund.” If the proposed reorganization (“Reorganization”) relating to your Target Fund is approved and completed, you will then have an investment in the Acquiring Fund, and your Target Fund will also be terminated as a series of the Company. |
The Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement is being furnished to owners of a variable annuity or variable life insurance contract or certificate (a “Contract”) (the “Contract owners”) issued by The Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company (“VALIC”) or other affiliated life insurance company (together with VALIC, the “Life Companies” and each, a “Life Company”), having Contract values allocated to a subaccount of a separate account (“Separate Account”) invested in shares of a Target Fund as of the close of business on January 11, 2021 (the “Record Date”). Contract owners have a beneficial interest in a Target Fund, but do not invest directly in or hold shares of the Target Fund. The Life Companies, as the shareholders of a Target Fund, have voting rights with respect to the Target Fund shares, but pass through those voting rights to Contract owners. Accordingly, as a Contract owner, you have the right to instruct your Life Company how to vote Target Fund shares attributable to your Contract. The Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement is also being furnished to custodians/trustees of individual retirement accounts (each, an “IRA”) and plan fiduciaries of or participants in qualified employer-sponsored retirement plans (each, a “Plan”) as of the Record Date. Shareholders of Target Funds who invest through a Plan or IRA outside of a Contract may vote their shares directly. Plan participants and IRA owners may have the right to vote or give voting instructions depending on the type of Plan or account or the terms of the Plan or IRA custodial or other agreement. For convenience, we refer to Contract owners, Plan participants and IRA owners collectively as “shareholders.” Additionally, any reference to Contract owners owning “shares” of a Fund refers to owning accumulation units of the subaccount that invests in such Fund.
Upon approval and completion of the applicable Reorganization, shares of your Target Fund will, in effect, be exchanged for shares of the Acquiring Fund based on a specified exchange ratio determined by the respective net asset values of the two Funds’ shares. Your Contract, Plan or IRA will be credited with shares of the Acquiring Fund whose aggregate value at the time of issuance will equal the aggregate value of the Target Fund held under your Contract, Plan or IRA on that date. After such date each Target Fund will be terminated as a series of the Company. Please refer to the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement for a detailed explanation of the proposed Reorganization and for a more complete description of the Acquiring Fund.
Q: | How does the Board of Directors of VC I suggest that I vote? |
A: | After careful consideration, the Board of Directors of VC I (the “Board”) has determined that the applicable Reorganization is in the best interests of the relevant Target Fund and that the Target Fund’s existing shareholders will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganization and, therefore, recommends that you cast your vote “For” the proposed Reorganization. The Board has determined that shareholders of the relevant Target Fund may benefit from, among other things, the following: |
(i) | Shareholders of each Fund will remain invested in a diversified, open-end fund that has higher net assets; |
(ii) | The larger net asset size of the combined fund is expected to give rise to possible operating efficiencies (e.g., certain fixed costs, such as printing shareholder reports and proxy statements, legal expenses, audit fees, mailing costs and other expenses, will be spread across a larger asset base, thereby potentially lowering the total expense ratio borne by shareholders of the combined fund); and |
(iii) | The combined fund will have projected total annual fund net operating expenses that are expected to be below those of each Target Fund prior to the Reorganization after taking into account applicable contractual fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements. |
i
Please see “Reasons for the Reorganizations” in the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement for more detailed information relating to the Board’s considerations.
Q: | How will the Reorganizations affect me? |
A: | If shareholders of a Target Fund approve the proposed Reorganization, all of the assets and liabilities of the Target Fund will, in effect, be combined with those of the Acquiring Fund. Shares of the Target Fund will be exchanged for shares of the Acquiring Fund based on a specified exchange ratio determined by the respective net asset values of the Funds’ shares. Your Contract, Plan or IRA value immediately before the Reorganization will be the same as your Contract, Plan or IRA value immediately following completion of the Reorganization; however, you will no longer own shares of your Target Fund but will own shares of the Acquiring Fund. After the completion of the Reorganization, you will own a smaller percentage of the Acquiring Fund than you did of the Target Fund because the combined fund will be significantly larger than each of the Target Funds. |
Q: | Will I own the same number of shares of the Acquiring Fund as I currently own of my Target Fund? |
A: | No. However, you will receive shares of the Acquiring Fund with the same aggregate net asset value as the shares of the Target Fund you own prior to the Reorganization relating to your Target Fund. The number of shares you receive will depend on the relative net asset value of the shares of the relevant Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund on the closing date. Thus, on the closing date, if the net asset value of a share of the Acquiring Fund is lower than the net asset value of a share of the relevant Target Fund, you will receive a greater number of shares of the Acquiring Fund in the applicable Reorganization than you held in the Target Fund before the Reorganization. On the other hand, if the net asset value of a share of the Acquiring Fund is higher than the net asset value of a share of the relevant Target Fund, you will receive fewer shares of the Acquiring Fund in the applicable Reorganization than you held in the Target Fund before the Reorganization. The aggregate net asset value of your Acquiring Fund shares immediately after the applicable Reorganization will be the same as the aggregate net asset value of your Target Fund shares immediately prior to the Reorganization. Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each share or unit held on the Record Date. |
Q: | Will my privileges as a shareholder change after the Reorganization? |
A: | Your rights as a shareholder will not change in any way as a result of the Reorganization relating to your Target Fund, but you will be a shareholder of the Acquiring Fund, which is a separate series of VC I. The shareholder services available to you after the applicable Reorganization will be identical. |
Q: | Who will advise the Acquiring Fund once the Reorganizations are completed? |
A: | As you know, each Target Fund is advised by VALIC. The Acquiring Fund is also advised by VALIC and will continue to be advised by VALIC once the Reorganizations are completed. The subadviser for the Core Equity Fund is BlackRock Investment Management, LLC, the subadviser of Large Cap Core Equity Fund is Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, and the subadviser for the Acquiring Fund is Goldman Sachs Asset Management L.P. (“GSAM”). It is anticipated that GSAM will continue to serve as subadviser to the Acquiring Fund following the completion of the Reorganizations. |
Q: | How will the Reorganizations affect Fund expenses? |
A: | Following the Reorganizations, the net operating expense ratio of the combined fund is expected to be lower than the current net operating expense ratio of each Target Fund, and the gross operating expense ratio of the combined fund is expected to be lower than the current gross operating expense ratio of the Core Equity Fund, but slightly higher than the current gross operating expense ratio of the Large Cap Core Fund. For more detailed information about each Fund’s operating expense ratios, see “Summary—Fees and Expenses” in the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement. |
Q: | What happens to my account if the Reorganization is approved? |
A: | You will not need to take any further action. If the Reorganization relating to your Target Fund is approved, your shares of the Target Fund automatically will be converted into shares of the Acquiring Fund on the date of the completion of the applicable Reorganization. You will receive written confirmation that this change has taken place. The aggregate net asset value of the shares you receive in the Reorganization relating to your Target Fund will be equal to the aggregate net asset value of the shares you own immediately prior to the Reorganization. |
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Q: | I have received another combined prospectus/proxy statement from other funds in the VALIC complex. Is this a duplicate combined prospectus/proxy statement? |
A: | This is not a duplicate combined prospectus/proxy statement. You are being asked to vote separately for each fund in which you own shares. The proposals included here were not included in any other combined prospectus/proxy statement. |
Q: | What happens if the Reorganization is not approved? |
A: | If a Reorganization is not approved by shareholders of the relevant Target Fund, the Reorganization for that Target Fund will not occur and the Board may consider alternatives. |
Q: | What happens if shareholders of one Target Fund approve their Reorganization, while shareholders of the other Target Fund do not? |
A: | Each Reorganization is a separate transaction and is not dependent on the approval of the other Reorganization. Thus, if shareholders of one Target Fund approve the Reorganization relating to their Target Fund, their Target Fund will be reorganized, even if shareholders of the other Target Fund do not approve the Reorganization relating to their Target Fund. |
Q: | Will the Reorganization create a taxable event for me? |
A: | No, you will not recognize gain or loss for federal income tax purposes as a result of the Reorganization. |
While the portfolio managers of the Acquiring Fund do not anticipate disposing of a material portion of either Target Fund’s holdings following the closing of the Reorganizations, they do anticipate requesting the disposition of a substantial portion of the holdings of the Core Equity Fund and a majority of the holdings of the Large Cap Core Fund in preparation for the applicable Reorganization. The purpose of these sales is to align the holdings of each Target Fund with that of the Acquiring Fund prior to the closing of the Reorganization. During this period, each Target Fund may deviate from its principal investment strategies. VALIC has estimated that the brokerage commission and other portfolio transaction costs relating to the realignment of each of the Core Equity Fund’s portfolio and the Large Cap Core Fund’s portfolio prior to its respective Reorganization will be approximately $61,682 and $28,104, respectively, or, based on shares outstanding as of August 31, 2020, $0.006 per share and $0.002 per share, respectively. Each Target Fund will pay the transaction costs relating to the realignment of its portfolio prior to the Reorganization.
Whether a substantial portion of the Core Equity Fund’s portfolio holdings or a majority of the Large Cap Core Fund’s portfolio holdings are sold will depend upon market conditions and portfolio composition of the Funds at the time of the Reorganization. The tax impact of any such sales will depend on the difference between the price at which such portfolio holdings are sold and each Target Fund’s tax basis in such holdings. Any capital gains recognized in these sales on a net basis prior to the closing of the Reorganization will be distributed, if required, to the shareholders of a Target Fund as capital gain dividends (to the extent of net realized long-term capital gains) and/or ordinary dividends (to the extent of net realized short-term capital gains) during or with respect to the year of sale. Any capital gains recognized in these sales on a net basis following the closing of the Reorganization will be distributed, if required, to the combined fund’s shareholders as capital gain dividends (to the extent of net realized long-term capital gains) and/or ordinary dividends (to the extent of net realized short-term capital gains) during or with respect to the year of sale. As is the case with other distributions, Contract owners will not be taxed on such distributions to the Separate Accounts of the Life Companies, although they may be subject to tax upon redemption from Contracts. Shareholders holding through Plans or IRAs will also not be taxed on such distributions, although they may be subject to tax when they withdraw funds from such accounts.
Q: | Who will pay for the Reorganizations? |
A: | VALIC or its affiliates will pay the expenses incurred in connection with each Reorganization, including all direct and indirect expenses and out-of-pocket costs other than any transaction costs relating to the sale of each Target Fund’s portfolio securities prior to or after the closing of the Reorganization relating to such Target Fund. Please refer to “Information About the Reorganizations – Expenses of the Reorganizations” for additional information about the expenses associated with each Reorganization. |
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Q: | How do I vote my shares? |
A: | You can vote by completing the enclosed proxy card, providing voting instructions using the enclosed voting instruction card or by participating at the special meeting, or as described below. Please see “Instructions for Signing Voting Instruction Cards” on the next page. |
You can authorize a proxy to vote your shares by (1) using the telephone or Internet as described on your proxy card or voting instruction card, or (2) completing and signing the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card and mailing it in the enclosed postage-paid envelope, or you can vote during the special meeting by following the instructions that will be available on the special meeting website during the special meeting.
Due to concerns regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, the special meeting will be held in a virtual meeting format only. Shareholders that owned interests in a Target Fund as of the Record Date may participate in the special meeting by means of remote communication by registering at https://viewproxy.com/AIG/broadridgevsm2/.
If you owned interests in a Target Fund on the Record Date and wish to attend the special meeting, you must first register with Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”), the Target Funds’ proxy solicitor, at https://viewproxy.com/AIG/broadridgevsm2/. You will be required to enter your name, an email address and the control number found on your proxy card or voting instruction card. Requests for registration must be received no later than 5:00 p.m., Eastern Time, on Friday, April 2, 2021. Once your registration is approved, you will receive an email confirming your registration with an event link and optional dial-in information to attend the special meeting. A separate email will follow containing a password to enter at the event link in order to access the special meeting. You may vote during the special meeting at www.proxyvote.com/. You will need your control number to vote.
For shareholders who own shares through a Contract, no matter how large or small your holdings may be, your vote counts, since the Life Companies will vote Target Fund shares in the same proportions as the instructions received from all Contract owners with assets invested in the Target Fund. Shares for which the Life Companies receive no timely voting instructions from a Contract owner will be voted by the Life Companies as for, against, or abstain, in the same proportion as the shares for which voting instructions were received from Contract owners, even if only a small number of Contract owners provide voting instructions. The effect of proportional voting is that if a large number of Contract owners fail to give voting instructions, a small number of Contract owners may determine the outcome of the vote.
Q: | Why are multiple proxy cards or voting instruction cards enclosed? |
A: | If you are a shareholder of more than one Target Fund, you will receive a proxy card or voting instruction card for each Target Fund. |
Q: | When will the Reorganization occur? |
A: | If approved by shareholders, each Reorganization is expected to occur during the second quarter of 2021. A Reorganization will not take place if the Reorganization is not approved by the relevant Target Fund’s shareholders. |
Q: | How does the Board recommend that I vote? |
A: | The Board recommends that shareholders vote “FOR” the proposal. |
Q: | Whom do I contact if I have questions? |
A: | Please call Broadridge, the proxy solicitor, toll-free at 1-833-670-0696 Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Eastern Time. |
To Our Group Deferred Compensation Contract Owners:
As the group contract owner of your deferred compensation plan, you have the option to 1) give voting instructions, or 2) direct us to follow individual participants’ instructions for voting.
• | Should you decide to give voting instructions, please complete the voting instruction section of the enclosed card. We request that you clearly mark your vote for the proposal on the card. We will then disregard any voting instructions received from individual participants within your Contract. |
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• | Alternatively, if you want us to accept voting instructions from your individual participants, please complete the “Group Authorization” section of the enclosed card. This will allow us to follow the voting instructions from the individual participants. |
As the group contract owner of a nonqualified unfunded deferred compensation plan, you have the right to give voting instructions. Participants in a nonqualified unfunded deferred compensation plan will not have the right to give voting instructions.
IF VOTING BY MAIL
INSTRUCTIONS FOR SIGNING VOTING INSTRUCTION CARDS
The following general rules for signing voting instruction cards may be of assistance to you.
1. | Individual Accounts: Sign your name exactly as it appears in the registration on the voting instruction card form. |
2. | Joint Accounts: Either party may sign, but the name of the party signing should conform exactly to the name shown in the registration on the voting instruction card. |
3. | All Other Accounts: The capacity of the individual signing the voting instruction card should be indicated unless it is reflected in the form of registration. For example: |
Registration | | | Valid Signature |
Corporate Accounts | | | ABC Corp. |
(1)ABC Corp. | | | John Doe, Treasurer |
(2)ABC Corp. | | | |
(3)ABC Corp. c/o John Doe, Treasurer | | | John Doe John Doe, Trustee |
(4)ABC Corp. Profit Sharing Plan | | | |
| | ||
Trust Accounts | | | |
(1)ABC Trust | | | Jane B. Doe, Trustee |
(2)Jane B. Doe, Trustee u/t/d 12/28/78 | | | Jane B. Doe |
| | ||
Custodial or Estate Accounts | | ||
(1)John B. Smith, Cust. f/b/o John B. Smith, Jr. UGMA | | | John B. Smith John B. Smith, Jr., Executor |
(2)Estate of John B. Smith | |
Important additional information about the proposal is set forth in the accompanying Combined
Prospectus/Proxy Statement. Please read it carefully.
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VALIC COMPANY I
Core Equity Fund
Large Cap Core Fund
2919 Allen Parkway
Houston, Texas 77019
(800-445-7862)
NOTICE OF JOINT SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
TO BE HELD ON MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2021
To the Shareholders of each of the Core Equity Fund and the Large Cap Core Fund:
This is to notify you that a Joint Special Meeting of Shareholders (the “Special Meeting”) of each of the Core Equity Fund and the Large Cap Core Fund (each, a “Target Fund” and together, the “Target Funds”), each a series of VALIC Company I (“VC I”), a Maryland corporation, will be held on Monday, April 5, 2021 at 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time, for the below purposes. Due to concerns regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, the Special Meeting will be held in a virtual meeting format only. You will not be able to attend the Special Meeting in person, but you will be able to view the Special Meeting live and cast your vote(s) by accessing an event link.
1. | The shareholders of each Target Fund are being asked to consider and vote upon a proposal to approve an Agreement and Plan of Reorganization relating to their Target Fund, pursuant to which the Target Fund will transfer all of its assets to the Systematic Core Fund (the “Acquiring Fund”), a series of VC I, in exchange for the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of all of the liabilities of the Target Fund and shares of the Acquiring Fund, which shares will be distributed by the Target Fund to the holders of its shares in complete liquidation thereof; and |
2. | To transact such other business as may properly be presented at the Special Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof. |
The shareholders of each Target Fund will vote separately on the proposal relating to their Target Fund. The Board of Directors of VC I (the “Board”) has fixed the close of business on January 11, 2021 as the record date (the “Record Date”) for determination of shareholders of each relevant Target Fund entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Special Meeting and any adjournments or postponements thereof.
Shareholders of record on the Record Date may participate in and vote at the Special Meeting on the Internet by virtual means by visiting the following website: https://viewproxy.com/AIG/broadridgevsm2/. If you owned interests in a Target Fund on the Record Date and wish to attend the Special Meeting, you must first register with Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc., the proxy solicitor, at https://viewproxy.com/AIG/broadridgevsm2/. You will be required to enter your name, an email address and the control number found on your proxy card or voting instruction card. Requests for registration must be received no later than 5:00 p.m., Eastern Time, on Friday, April 2, 2021. Once your registration is approved, you will receive an email confirming your registration with an event link and optional dial-in information to attend the Special Meeting. A separate email will follow containing a password to enter at the event link in order to access the Special Meeting. You may vote during the Special Meeting at www.proxyvote.com/. You will need your control number to vote.
For owners of a variable annuity or variable life insurance contract or certificate (a “Contract”) (“Contract owners”) issued by The Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company (“VALIC”) or by an affiliated life insurance company, you have the right to instruct the issuer of the Contract how to vote Target Fund shares that are attributable to your Contract at the Special Meeting. However, participants in a nonqualified unfunded deferred compensation plan will not have the right to give voting instructions. Contract votes for which no timely instructions are received will be voted in the affirmative, the negative, or in abstention, in the same proportion as those shares for which instructions have been received from other Contract owners. Shareholders of Target Funds who invest through a qualified employer-sponsored retirement plan (each, a “Plan”) or an individual retirement account (each, an “IRA”) without a Contract may vote shares directly. Plan participants and IRA owners may have the right to vote or give voting instructions depending on the type of Plan or account or the terms of the Plan or IRA custodial or other agreement. For purposes of the enclosed Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement, we refer to Contract owners, Plan participants and IRA owners collectively as “shareholders.”
Your vote is important regardless of the size of your holdings in the Target Fund. Whether or not you expect to attend the Special Meeting virtually, please complete and sign the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card and return it promptly in the enclosed envelope. You may also vote by telephone or over the Internet; please see pages 37-38 of the enclosed Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement for details. If you vote by proxy and then desire to change your vote or vote, you may revoke your proxy at any time prior to the votes being tallied at the Special Meeting. Please refer to the section of the enclosed Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement entitled “Voting Information and Requirements—Manner of Voting” for more information.
| | By Order of the Board, | |
| | /s/ Kathleen D. Fuentes | |
| | Kathleen D. Fuentes | |
| | Secretary |
Houston, Texas
[•], 2020
SUBJECT TO COMPLETION DATED NOVEMBER 20, 2020
COMBINED PROSPECTUS/PROXY STATEMENT
VALIC COMPANY I
Core Equity Fund
Large Cap Core Fund
Systematic Core Fund
2919 Allen Parkway
Houston, Texas 77019
(800-445-7862)
This Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement is furnished to you as a shareholder of the Core Equity Fund and/or the Large Cap Core Fund (each, a “Target Fund” and together, the “Target Funds”), each a series of VALIC Company I (“VC I” or the “Company”), a Maryland corporation.
A joint special meeting of shareholders of each of the Target Funds (the “Special Meeting”) will be held on Monday, April 5, 2021 at 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time, to consider the items that are listed below and discussed in greater detail elsewhere in this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement. Due to concerns regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, the Special Meeting will be held in a virtual meeting format only. You will not be able to attend the Special Meeting in person, but you will be able to view the Special Meeting live and cast your vote(s) by accessing an event link. Shareholders of record of each Target Fund at the close of business on January 11, 2021 (the “Record Date”) are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Special Meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof. This Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement, proxy card/voting instruction card and accompanying Notice of Joint Special Meeting of Shareholders were first sent or given to shareholders of each Target Fund on or about [•]. The Board of Directors of VC I (the “Board”) requests that shareholders vote their shares by completing and returning the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card.
Shareholders of record on the Record Date may participate in and vote at the Special Meeting on the Internet by virtual means by visiting the following website: https://viewproxy.com/AIG/broadridgevsm2/. If you owned interests in a Target Fund on the Record Date and wish to attend the Special Meeting, you must first register with Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc., the proxy solicitor, at https://viewproxy.com/AIG/broadridgevsm2/. You will be required to enter your name, an email address and the control number found on your proxy card or voting instruction card. Requests for registration must be received no later than 5:00 p.m., Eastern Time, on Friday, April 2, 2021. Once your registration is approved, you will receive an email confirming your registration with an event link and optional dial-in information to attend the Special Meeting. A separate email will follow containing a password to enter at the event link in order to access the Special Meeting. You may vote during the Special Meeting at www.proxyvote.com/. You will need your control number to vote.
The purpose of the Special Meeting is:
1. | The shareholders of each Target Fund are being asked to consider and vote upon a proposal to approve an Agreement and Plan of Reorganization relating to their Target Fund, pursuant to which the Target Fund will transfer all of its assets to the Systematic Core Fund (the “Acquiring Fund”), a series of VC I, in exchange for the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of all of the liabilities of the Target Fund and shares of the Acquiring Fund, which shares will be distributed by the Target Fund to the holders of its shares in complete liquidation thereof; and |
2. | To transact such other business as may properly be presented at the Special Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof. |
For owners of a variable annuity or variable life insurance contract or certificate (a “Contract”) (the “Contract owners”) issued by The Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company (“VALIC”) or by an affiliated life insurance company (together with VALIC, the “Life Companies” and each, a “Life Company”), you have the right to instruct the applicable Life Company how to vote Target Fund shares that are attributable to your Contract. However, participants in a nonqualified unfunded deferred compensation plan will not have the right to give voting instructions. Contract votes for which no timely instructions are received will be voted in the affirmative, the negative, or in abstention, in the same proportion as those shares for which instructions have been received from other Contract owners. Shareholders of Target Funds who invest through a qualified employer-sponsored retirement plan (each, a
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“Plan”) or an individual retirement account (each, an “IRA”) outside of a Contract may vote shares directly. Plan participants and IRA owners may have the right to vote or give voting instructions depending on the type of Plan or account or the terms of the Plan or IRA custodial or other agreement. For convenience, we refer to Contract owners, Plan participants and IRA owners collectively as “shareholders.”
The Board has approved the reorganization (“Reorganization”) with respect to each Target Fund by which the Target Fund, a separate series of the Company, an open-end management investment company, would be acquired by the Acquiring Fund. The investment objective of the Acquiring Fund is to seek to provide long-term growth of capital through investment in common stocks. The Core Equity Fund’s investment objective of seeking to provide long-term growth of capital through investment primarily in equity securities is similar to the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective. The Large Cap Core Fund’s investment objective of seeking capital growth with the potential for current income is also similar to the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective. The Acquiring Fund has certain strategies that are similar and compatible with those of each of the Target Funds. Each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund, however, employ certain differing investment strategies to achieve their respective objectives, as discussed in more detail below. For more information on each Target Fund’s and the Acquiring Fund’s investment strategies, see “Summary – Investment Objectives and Principal Investment Strategies” below.
If a Target Fund’s shareholders approve the Reorganization relating to their Target Fund, the Target Fund will transfer its assets to the Acquiring Fund. The Acquiring Fund will assume all of the liabilities of the Target Fund and will issue shares to the Target Fund in an amount equal to the aggregate net asset value of the outstanding shares of the Target Fund. Immediately thereafter, the Target Fund will distribute these shares of the Acquiring Fund to its shareholders. After distributing these shares, the Target Fund will be terminated as a series of the Company. When the Reorganization is complete, the aggregate net asset value of the Acquiring Fund shares received in the Reorganization by Target Fund shareholders will equal the aggregate net asset value of the Target Fund shares held by Target Fund shareholders immediately prior to the Reorganization. As a result of the Reorganization, however, a shareholder of the Target Fund will represent a smaller percentage of ownership in the combined fund than the shares held by those in the Target Fund prior to the Reorganization. Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each share or unit held on the Record Date.
This Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement sets forth concisely the information shareholders of each Target Fund should know before voting on the Reorganization relating to their Target Fund and constitutes an offering of shares of the Acquiring Fund only. Please read it carefully and retain it for future reference.
The following documents containing additional information about the Acquiring Fund and the Target Funds (together, the “Funds”), each having been filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), are incorporated by reference into (legally considered to be part of) this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement:
• | the Statement of Additional Information dated [•] (the “Reorganization SAI”), relating to this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement; and |
• | the VC I Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information (the “VC I SAI”), each dated October 1, 2020, containing additional information about each of the Funds |
In addition, the following document has been filed with the SEC and is incorporated by reference into (legally considered to be a part of) and also accompanies this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement:
• | the Summary Prospectus of the Acquiring Fund dated October 1, 2020 (the “Acquiring Fund Summary Prospectus”) |
Except as otherwise described herein, the policies and procedures set forth herein relating to the shares of the Acquiring Fund will apply to the shares to be issued by the Acquiring Fund in connection with each Reorganization.
These documents are on file with the SEC. Each of the Funds is subject to the informational requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), and in accordance therewith, files reports and other information, including proxy materials, with the SEC.
Copies of the foregoing and any more recent reports filed after the date hereof may be obtained without charge by calling (800) 445-7862 or writing to the applicable Fund at VALIC Company I, 2919 Allen Parkway, Houston Texas 77019.
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If you wish to request the Reorganization SAI, please ask for the “Reorganization SAI.”
You also may view or obtain these documents from the SEC:
By E-mail: | | | publicinfo@sec.gov (duplicating fee required) |
| | ||
By Internet: | | | www.sec.gov |
The Board knows of no business other than that discussed above that will be presented for consideration at the Special Meeting. If any other matter is properly presented, it is the intention of the persons named in the enclosed proxy to vote in accordance with their best judgment.
No person has been authorized to give any information or make any representation not contained in this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement and, if so given or made, such information or representation must not be relied upon as having been authorized. This Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities in any jurisdiction in which, or to any person to whom, it is unlawful to make such offer or solicitation.
Neither the SEC nor any state regulator has approved or disapproved of these securities or passed upon the adequacy of this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
The date of this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement is [•].
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The following is a summary of certain information contained elsewhere in this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the more complete information contained herein. Shareholders should read the entire Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement carefully.
VC I is an open-end management investment company (“open-end fund”) registered with the SEC. Each of the Funds is a separate series of VC I. The investment objective of the Acquiring Fund is to seek to provide long-term growth of capital through investment in common stocks. The Core Equity Fund’s investment objective of seeking to provide long-term growth of capital through investment primarily in equity securities is similar to the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective. The Large Cap Core Fund’s investment objective of seeking capital growth with the potential for current income is also similar to the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective.
The Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company (“VALIC” or the “Adviser”) serves as investment adviser for each Fund. The subadviser for the Core Equity Fund is BlackRock Investment Management, LLC (“BlackRock”), the subadviser for the Large Cap Core Fund is Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (“Columbia”), and the subadviser for the Acquiring Fund is Goldman Sachs Asset Management L.P. (“GSAM” or the “Subadviser”).
Core Equity Fund and Acquiring Fund. Each of the Core Equity Fund and the Acquiring Fund invest principally in large-cap equity securities. The Core Equity Fund invests primarily in quality large-cap companies with long-term growth potential. The Core Equity Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of its net assets, at the time of purchase, in equity securities, consisting primarily of common stocks. The Acquiring Fund seeks to achieve a higher risk-adjusted performance than the Russell 1000® Index (the “Index”) over the long term through a proprietary selection process employed by the Fund’s Subadviser. As of June 30, 2020, the median market capitalization of a company in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $10 billion and the dollar-weighted average capitalization of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $348 billion. The Acquiring Fund primarily invests in common stock of U.S. large capitalization companies included in the Index. The Subadviser uses a rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). Both Funds are diversified.
Large Cap Core Fund and Acquiring Fund. Each of the Large Cap Core Fund and the Acquiring Fund invest principally in large-cap equity securities. The Large Cap Core Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of its net assets in the common stocks of large-cap U.S. companies. The Large Cap Core Fund invests in equity securities of U.S. companies that have large market capitalizations (generally over $2 billion) that Columbia believes are undervalued and have the potential for long-term growth and current income. In addition, the Fund may invest up to 20% of its net assets in foreign securities, including depositary receipts. The Acquiring Fund seeks to achieve a higher risk-adjusted performance than the Index over the long term through a proprietary selection process employed by the Fund’s Subadviser. As of June 30, 2020, the median market capitalization of a company in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $10 billion and the dollar-weighted average capitalization of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $348 billion. The Acquiring Fund primarily invests in common stock of U.S. large capitalization companies included in the Index. The Subadviser uses a rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). Both Funds are diversified.
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The Board, including the directors (the “Directors”) who are not “interested persons” of the Company (as defined in the 1940 Act) (the “Independent Directors”), has unanimously approved each applicable Reorganization, on behalf of each relevant Target Fund. Subject to approval by the relevant Target Fund shareholders, each Reorganization provides for:
• | the transfer of all the assets of the relevant Target Fund to the Acquiring Fund in exchange for the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of all of the liabilities of the relevant Target Fund and shares of the Acquiring Fund having an aggregate net asset value equal to the value of the assets of the relevant Target Fund acquired by the Acquiring Fund reduced by the amount of such assumed liabilities; |
• | the distribution of such shares of the Acquiring Fund to the relevant Target Fund’s shareholders; and |
• | the termination of the relevant Target Fund as a series of the Company. |
If a proposed Reorganization is approved and completed, a Target Fund’s shareholders will receive shares of the Acquiring Fund that have the same aggregate net asset value as the shares of the Target Fund that they owned immediately prior to the Reorganization.
At a meeting held on October 26-27, 2020 (the “October Board Meeting”), VALIC proposed the Reorganizations to the Board as part of an effort to optimize the fund line-up in its product offerings, including by considering potential opportunities for consolidation of certain funds that have similar objectives and strategies. VALIC believes that, with respect to each proposed Reorganization, the shareholders of each Fund will benefit more from the potential operating efficiencies and economies of scale that may be achieved by combining the Funds’ assets in the Reorganization, than by continuing to operate the Funds separately. VALIC further believes that it is in the best interests of each Target Fund to combine its assets with a Fund that has a lower net expense structure. VALIC believes that the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective and strategies make it a compatible fund within the VALIC complex for a reorganization with each Target Fund.
The Acquiring Fund, following completion of one or more of the Reorganizations, may be referred to as the “Combined Fund” in this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement. It is anticipated that the total annual gross operating expense ratio for the Combined Fund will be lower than the current total annual gross operating expense ratio for each of the Core Equity Fund and the Acquiring Fund, but higher than the current total annual gross operating expense ratio for the Large Cap Core Fund, and that the total annual net operating expense ratio for the Combined Fund will be lower than the current total annual net operating expense ratio for each Fund. VALIC believes that continuing to operate each Target Fund as currently constituted is not in the best interests of the Target Fund.
In approving each Reorganization, the Board, including the Independent Directors, determined that participation in the Reorganization is in the best interests of the relevant Target Fund and that the interests of the Target Fund’s shareholders will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganization. The Board considered the Reorganization proposals at October Board Meeting, and the entire Board, including the Independent Directors, unanimously approved each relevant Reorganization. The approval determinations were made on the basis of each Director’s business judgment after consideration of all of the factors taken as a whole, though individual Directors may have placed different weight on various factors and assigned different degrees of materiality to various conclusions.
The factors considered by the Board with regard to each Reorganization include, but are not limited to, the following:
• | The fact that the investment objective of each Target Fund is similar to the investment objective of the Acquiring Fund, as well as the fact that certain strategies of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund are similar, while others are different. The Board considered the principal differences in investment strategy between the Acquiring Fund and each Target Fund. See “Summary—Investment Objectives and Principal Investment Strategies.” |
• | The possibility that the Combined Fund is more likely to achieve further operating efficiencies and economies of scale from its larger net asset size compared to each Target Fund. |
• | The advisory fee rate to be paid by the Combined Fund is lower than the current advisory fee rate paid by the Core Equity Fund and is higher than the current advisory fee rate paid by Large Cap Core Fund. |
• | The expectation that the Combined Fund will have net annual operating expenses below those of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund. |
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• | The Acquiring Fund will be the survivor of each Reorganization for accounting and performance purposes. |
• | The personnel of VALIC and the Subadviser who will manage the Combined Fund. The Directors considered that VALIC will continue to serve as the investment adviser of the Combined Fund after the Reorganizations, and the Subadviser of the Acquiring Fund will continue to serve as subadviser to the Combined Fund after the Reorganizations. The Reorganizations are not expected to result in diminution in the level or quality of services that each Target Fund’s shareholders currently receive. See “Comparison of the Funds – Management of the Funds.” |
• | The relative performance histories of each Fund over different time periods compared with each other. The Acquiring Fund outperformed the Core Equity Fund for the one-year period ended December 31, 2019 but underperformed the Large Cap Core Fund for the one-year period ended December 31, 2019; outperformed each Target Fund for the five-year period ended December 31, 2019; and underperformed each Target Fund for the ten-year period ended December 31, 2019. While not predictive of future results, the Board also considered certain data with respect to the performance of each Fund as compared to the performance of its relevant peer group. |
• | The relative size of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund, and the prospects for further growth and long-term viability of each Target Fund. |
• | The fact that it is currently anticipated that there will be no gain or loss recognized by shareholders for federal income tax purposes as a result of the Reorganization, as the Reorganization is expected to be a tax-free transaction. |
• | The fact that the aggregate net asset value of the shares that shareholders of each Target Fund will receive in the Reorganization will equal the aggregate net asset value of the shares that shareholders of the respective Target Fund own immediately prior to the Reorganization, and that shareholders of each Target Fund will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganization. |
• | The terms and conditions of each of the Reorganization Agreements. |
• | The fact that VALIC or its affiliates will pay the expenses incurred in connection with the Reorganization, including all direct and indirect expenses and out-of-pocket costs other than any transaction costs relating to the sale of each Target Fund’s portfolio securities prior to or after the Reorganization as described in the respective Reorganization Agreement. No shareholder would incur any sales charge, commission, redemption fee or other transactional fee as a result of the change of investment resulting from the Reorganization. |
• | The possible alternatives to the Reorganization. |
• | The estimated brokerage commission and other portfolio transaction costs relating to the realignment of each Target Fund’s portfolio prior to the applicable Reorganization. It was noted that many of the portfolio holdings of each Target Fund would be sold before the Reorganization would be completed. |
• | The Reorganizations may result in some potential benefits to VALIC, including but not limited to cost savings, resulting from managing one Combined Fund rather than three separate Funds because the fixed costs involved with operating the Combined Fund will be spread across a larger asset base following the Reorganizations. The Board also considered the Reorganization’s anticipated impact on VALIC’s profitability. |
If a Reorganization is not approved by shareholders of the relevant Target Fund, the Board may consider other alternatives.
The Board unanimously recommends that you vote “For” the Reorganization relating to your Target Fund.
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Comparison of the Core Equity Fund and the Acquiring Fund
Investment Objectives. The investment objectives of the Acquiring Fund and the Core Equity Fund are similar. The investment objective of the Acquiring Fund is to seek to provide long-term growth of capital through investment in common stocks. The investment objective of the Core Equity Fund is to seek to provide long-term growth of capital through investment primarily in equity securities. Each of the Acquiring Fund’s and Core Equity Fund’s investment objective may be changed without shareholder approval. The Combined Fund will pursue the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective.
Principal Investment Strategies. The Acquiring Fund seeks to achieve a higher risk-adjusted performance than the Russell 1000® Index over the long term through a proprietary selection process employed by the Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser. The Acquiring Fund primarily invests in common stock of U.S. large capitalization companies included in the Index. As of June 30, 2020, the median market capitalization of a company in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $10 billion and the dollar-weighted average capitalization of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $348 billion. The size of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index changes with market conditions and the composition of the Russell 1000® Index.
The Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser uses a rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). The Subadviser seeks to capitalize on the low correlations in returns across these factors by diversifying exposure to securities selected based on such factors. The Subadviser may, in its discretion, make changes to its quantitative techniques, or use other quantitative techniques that are based on the Subadviser’s proprietary research.
The Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser constructs the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio by investing in the securities comprising the Russell 1000® Index and adjusting the relative weight of each security based on the security’s attractiveness when evaluated based on the factors as described above, subject to the Acquiring Fund being constrained to long-only positions. Based on the Subadviser’s process, the Acquiring Fund expects that its portfolio will be overweight with respect to certain securities (i.e., the Acquiring Fund will hold a greater percentage of those securities than the Russell 1000® Index) and underweight with respect to others (i.e., the Acquiring Fund will hold a lesser percentage of those securities than the Russell 1000® Index), and that such weightings may change over time. The percentage of the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio exposed to any single security will vary from time to time as the weightings of the securities within the Acquiring Fund change. The degree to which components of the Acquiring Fund represent certain sectors or industries may change over time.
The Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser will rebalance the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio according to the process set forth above on a quarterly basis, and it generally employs a strategy to continue to hold securities between quarterly rebalancings, even if there are adverse developments concerning a particular security, an industry, the economy or the stock market generally. The Subadviser may reduce the position size of a security or sell the security during quarterly rebalancings if the security no longer has favorable scores in one or more of the four factors.
The Core Equity Fund invests primarily in quality large-cap companies with long-term growth potential. Important characteristics of such companies include: a strong management team, a leadership position within an industry, a globally competitive focus, a strong balance sheet and a high return on equity. The Core Equity Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of net assets, at the time of purchase, in equity securities, consisting primarily of common stocks.
Columbia, the Core Equity Fund’s subadviser, may engage in frequent and active trading of portfolio securities to achieve the Core Equity Fund’s investment objective.
In order to generate additional income, each of the Acquiring Fund and the Core Equity Fund may lend portfolio securities to broker-dealers and other financial institutions, provided that the value of the loaned securities does not exceed 30% of its total assets. These loans earn income for the Fund and are collateralized by cash and securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities.
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Each Fund’s principal investment strategies may be changed without shareholder approval, although investors in the Core Equity Fund will be given at least 60 days’ written notice in advance of any change to the Fund’s 80% investment policy. The Combined Fund’s principal investment strategies will be those of the Acquiring Fund.
Comparison. One principal difference between the Funds is the methodology of investment. The Acquiring Fund uses a rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). The Core Equity Fund’s stock selection emphasizes quality large-cap companies with long-term growth potential. Important characteristics of such companies include: a strong management team, a leadership position within an industry, a globally competitive focus, a strong balance sheet and a high return on equity.
The Core Equity Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of net assets, at the time of purchase, in equity securities, consisting primarily of common stocks. The 80% policy is a fundamental policy of the Core Equity Fund and may not be changed without 60 days’ prior notice to shareholders. The Acquiring Fund does not have an 80% policy.
While the Core Equity Fund and the Acquiring Fund have certain differences in strategies, the Funds utilize certain similar investment strategies to achieve their respective investment objectives. Both Funds invest in large-cap equity securities.
For a discussion of the principal and other investment risks associated with an investment in the Acquiring Fund and, therefore, the Combined Fund, please see “Comparison of the Funds—Principal and Other Investment Risks” below.
While the portfolio managers of the Acquiring Fund do not anticipate disposing of a material portion of the Core Equity Fund’s holdings following the closing of the Reorganization, they do anticipate requesting the disposition of a substantial portion of the holdings of the Core Equity Fund in preparation for the Reorganization. The purpose of these sales is to align the holdings of the Core Equity Fund with that of the Acquiring Fund prior to the closing of the Reorganization. During this period, the Core Equity Fund may deviate from its principal investment strategies. VALIC has estimated that the brokerage commission and other portfolio transaction costs relating to the realignment of the Core Equity Fund’s portfolio prior to the Reorganization will be approximately $61,682 or, based on shares outstanding as of August 31, 2020, $0.006 per share.
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Some of the similarities and differences of the principal and other significant investment strategies of the Funds are described in the chart below.
| Core Equity Fund | | | Acquiring Fund | |
| ■The Fund invests primarily in quality large-cap companies with long-term growth potential. ■Important characteristics of such companies include: a strong management team, a leadership position within an industry, a globally competitive focus, a strong balance sheet and a high return on equity. | | | ■The Fund seeks to achieve a higher risk-adjusted performance than the Russell 1000® Index over the long term through a proprietary selection process employed by the Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser. As of June 30, 2020, the median market capitalization of a company in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $10 billion and the dollar-weighted average capitalization of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $348 billion. ■The Acquiring Fund uses a rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). | |
| ■The Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of net assets, at the time of purchase, in equity securities, consisting primarily of common stocks. | | | ■The Fund does not have a comparable strategy. | �� |
| ■The Fund is diversified. | | | ■The Fund is diversified. | |
| ■The Fund may also engage in frequent and active trading of portfolio securities. | | | ■The Fund does not have a comparable strategy. | |
Comparison of the Large Cap Core Fund and the Acquiring Fund
Investment Objectives. The investment objectives of the Acquiring Fund and Large Cap Core Fund are similar. The investment objective of the Acquiring Fund is to seek to provide long-term growth of capital through investment in common stocks. The investment objective of the Large Cap Core Fund is to seek capital growth with the potential for current income. Each of the Acquiring Fund’s and the Large Cap Core Fund’s investment objective may be changed without shareholder approval. The Combined Fund will pursue the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective.
The Acquiring Fund seeks to achieve a higher risk-adjusted performance than the Russell 1000® Index over the long term through a proprietary selection process employed by the Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser. The Acquiring Fund primarily invests in common stock of U.S. large capitalization companies included in the Index. As of June 30, 2020, the median market capitalization of a company in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $10 billion and the dollar-weighted average capitalization of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $348 billion. The size of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index changes with market conditions and the composition of the Russell 1000® Index.
The Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser uses a rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative
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to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). The Subadviser seeks to capitalize on the low correlations in returns across these factors by diversifying exposure to securities selected based on such factors. The Subadviser may, in its discretion, make changes to its quantitative techniques, or use other quantitative techniques that are based on the Subadviser’s proprietary research.
The Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser constructs the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio by investing in the securities comprising the Russell 1000® Index and adjusting the relative weight of each security based on the security’s attractiveness when evaluated based on the factors as described above, subject to the Acquiring Fund being constrained to long-only positions. Based on the Subadviser’s process, the Acquiring Fund expects that its portfolio will be overweight with respect to certain securities (i.e., the Acquiring Fund will hold a greater percentage of those securities than the Russell 1000® Index) and underweight with respect to others (i.e., the Acquiring Fund will hold a lesser percentage of those securities than the Russell 1000® Index), and that such weightings may change over time. The percentage of the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio exposed to any single security will vary from time to time as the weightings of the securities within the Acquiring Fund change. The degree to which components of the Acquiring Fund represent certain sectors or industries may change over time.
The Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser will rebalance the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio according to the process set forth above on a quarterly basis, and it generally employs a strategy to continue to hold securities between quarterly rebalancings, even if there are adverse developments concerning a particular security, an industry, the economy or the stock market generally. The Subadviser may reduce the position size of a security or sell the security during quarterly rebalancings if the security no longer has favorable scores in one or more of the four factors.
The Large Cap Core Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of its net assets in the common stocks of large-cap U.S. companies. The Large Cap Core Fund invests in equity securities of U.S. companies that have large market capitalizations (generally over $2 billion) that the subadviser believes are undervalued and have the potential for long-term growth and current income. Investors will be given at least 60 days’ written notice in advance of any change to the Fund’s 80% investment policy set forth above.
The Large Cap Core Fund may invest up to 20% of its net assets in foreign securities, including depositary receipts. Depositary receipts are receipts issued by a bank or trust company reflecting ownership of underlying securities issued by foreign companies. The Large Cap Core Fund may from time to time emphasize one or more sectors in selecting its investments, including the financial services sector and the information technology and technology-related sectors.
In order to generate additional income, each of the Acquiring Fund and the Large Cap Core Fund may lend portfolio securities to broker-dealers and other financial institutions, provided that the value of the loaned securities does not exceed 30% of its total assets. These loans earn income for the Fund and are collateralized by cash and securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities.
Each Fund’s principal investment strategies may be changed without shareholder approval, although investors in the Large Cap Core Fund will be given at least 60 days’ written notice in advance of any change to the Fund’s 80% investment policy. The Combined Fund’s principal investment strategies will be those of the Acquiring Fund.
Comparison. One principal difference between the Funds is the Acquiring Fund invests in U.S. securities while the Large Cap Core Fund may invest up to 20% of its assets in foreign securities, including depositary receipts.
The Large Cap Core Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of its net assets in the common stocks of large-cap U.S. companies. The 80% policy is a fundamental policy of the Large Cap Core Fund and may not be changed without 60 days’ prior notice to shareholders. The Acquiring Fund does not have a comparable 80% policy.
The Acquiring Fund uses rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). The Large Cap Core Fund does not have a comparable strategy.
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While the Large Cap Core Fund and the Acquiring Fund have certain differences in strategies, the Funds utilize certain similar investment strategies to achieve their respective investment objectives. Both Funds invest in U.S. large-cap companies.
For a discussion of the principal and other investment risks associated with an investment in the Acquiring Fund and, therefore, the Combined Fund, please see “Comparison of the Funds—Principal and Other Investment Risks” below.
While the portfolio managers of the Acquiring Fund do not anticipate disposing of a material portion of the Large Cap Core Fund’s holdings following the closing of the Reorganization, they do anticipate requesting the disposition of a majority of the holdings of the Large Cap Core Fund in preparation for the Reorganization. The purpose of these sales is to align the holdings of the Large Cap Core Fund with that of the Acquiring Fund prior to the closing of the Reorganization. During this period, the Large Cap Core Fund may deviate from its principal investment strategies. VALIC has estimated that the brokerage commission and other portfolio transaction costs relating to the realignment of the Large Cap Core Fund’s portfolio prior to the Reorganization will be approximately $28,104 or, based on shares outstanding as of August 31, 2020, $0.002 per share.
Some of the similarities and differences of the principal and other significant investment strategies of the Funds are described in the chart below.
| Large Cap Core Fund | | | Acquiring Fund | |
| ■The Fund invests at least 80% of net assets in the common stocks of large-cap U.S. companies. ■The Fund invests in equity securities of U.S. companies that have large market capitalizations (generally over $2 billion) that the Subadviser believes are undervalued and have the potential for long-term growth and current income. | | | ■The Fund seeks to achieve a higher risk-adjusted performance than the Russell 1000® Index over the long term through a proprietary selection process employed by the Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser. As of June 30, 2020, the median market capitalization of a company in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $10 billion and the dollar-weighted average capitalization of the companies in the Russell 1000® Index was approximately $348 billion. ■The Acquiring Fund uses a rules-based methodology that emphasizes quantitatively-based stock selection and portfolio construction and efficient implementation. The Acquiring Fund seeks to capture common sources of active equity returns, including the following factors: value (i.e., how attractively a stock is priced relative to its “fundamentals,” such as book value and free cash flow), momentum (i.e., whether a company’s share price is trending up or down), quality (i.e., profitability) and low volatility (i.e., a relatively low degree of fluctuation in a company’s share price over time). | |
| ■The Fund may invest up to 20% of its assets in foreign securities, including depositary receipts. | | | ■The Fund does not have a comparable strategy. | |
| ■The Fund is diversified. | | | ■The Fund is diversified. | |
Additional Information About the Acquiring Fund’s Investment Strategies. The Acquiring Fund may not take temporary defensive positions that are inconsistent with its principal investment strategies, in attempting to respond to adverse market, economic, political, or other conditions.
The Acquiring Fund seeks to provide long-term growth of capital through investment in common stocks. The Acquiring Fund seeks to achieve a higher risk-adjusted performance than the Russell 1000® Index over the long term
8
through a proprietary selection process employed by the Acquiring Fund’s Subadviser. The Fund primarily invests in common stocks of U.S. large capitalization companies included in the Index. In managing the Acquiring Fund, GSAM uses a rules-based methodology that involves two steps.
Step One
In the first step, individual factor portfolios are constructed at the same level of targeted tracking error to the Russell 1000® Index. GSAM assigns all securities in the Russell 1000® Index a “factor score” that is derived from the measurements described below to create four factor portfolios.
• | Value: The value measurement is a composite of three valuation measures, which consist of book value-to-price, sales-to-price and free cash flow-to-price (earnings-to-price ratios are used for financial stocks or where free cash flow data are not available). |
• | Momentum: The momentum measurement is based on beta- and volatility-adjusted daily returns over an 11-month period ending one month prior to the rebalance date. |
• | Quality: The quality measurement is gross profit divided by total assets or return on equity for financial stocks or when gross profit is not available. |
• | Low Volatility: The volatility measurement is defined as the inverse of the standard deviation of past 12-month daily total stock returns. |
The securities are ranked and scored on each factor measurement independently. Based on these scores, securities with a favorable factor score will be generally overweight in the factor portfolio relative to the Russell 1000® Index and securities with an unfavorable factor score will be generally underweight in the factor portfolio relative to the Russell 1000® Index. Securities in each factor portfolio are also subject to minimum and maximum weights, depending on the securities’ relative weight in the Russell 1000® Index. The Acquiring Fund’s portfolio only includes long positions (i.e., short positions are impermissible).
Step Two
In the second step, GSAM combines the factor portfolios in equal weights to create the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio. As part of this combination, offsetting security positions are calculated and netted across the factor portfolios. As part of this netting process, trades are generally reduced across factor portfolios by offsetting trades in one factor portfolio against weights in another factor portfolio, subject to all security weights remaining within the upper and lower bounds around the target weight.
GSAM will rebalance the Acquiring Fund’s portfolio according to the process set forth above on a quarterly basis, and it generally employs a strategy to continue to hold securities between quarterly rebalancings, even if there are adverse developments concerning a particular security, an industry, the economy or the stock market generally. GSAM may reduce the position size of a security or sell the security during quarterly rebalancings if the security no longer has favorable scores in one or more of the four factors. GSAM may, in its discretion, make changes to its quantitative techniques or investment approach, including with respect to intra-quarter actions, from time to time.
The investment objective and principal strategies for the Acquiring Fund are non-fundamental and may be changed by the Board without shareholder approval. References to “net assets” take into account any borrowings for investment purposes by the Acquiring Fund. Unless stated otherwise, all percentages are calculated as of the time of purchase.
In addition to the securities and techniques described herein, there are other securities and investment techniques in which the Acquiring Fund may invest in limited instances, which are not described in this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement. These other securities and investment techniques are listed in the VC I SAI, which may be obtained free of charge.
Below is additional information about the Acquiring Fund’s principal investments identified above.
Diversification
The Acquiring Fund’s diversification policy limits the amount that the Fund may invest in certain securities. The Acquiring Fund’s diversification policy is also designed to comply with the diversification requirements of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”) as well as the 1940 Act. The Acquiring Fund is diversified under the 1940 Act and is expected to satisfy the Code’s diversification requirements.
9
Equity Securities
Equity securities represent an ownership position in a company. The prices of equity securities fluctuate based on changes in the financial condition of the issuing company and on market and economic conditions. If you own an equity security, you own a part of the company that issued it. Companies sell equity securities to get the money they need to grow.
Stocks are one type of equity security. Generally, there are three types of stocks:
• | Common stock — Each share of common stock represents a part of the ownership of the company. The holder of common stock participates in the growth of the company through increasing stock price and receipt of dividends. If the company runs into difficulty, the stock price can decline and dividends may not be paid. |
• | Preferred stock — Each share of preferred stock usually allows the holder to get a set dividend before the common stock shareholders receive any dividends on their shares. |
• | Convertible preferred stock — A stock with a set dividend which the holder may exchange for a certain amount of common stock. |
Stocks are not the only type of equity security. Other equity securities include but are not limited to convertible securities, depositary receipts, warrants, rights and partially paid shares, investment company securities, real estate securities, convertible bonds and American Depositary Receipts, European Depositary Receipts and Global Depositary Receipts.
Market cap ranges. Companies are determined to be large-cap companies, mid-cap companies, or small-cap companies based upon the total market value of the outstanding common stock (or similar securities) of the company at the time of purchase. The market capitalization of the companies in which the Acquiring Fund invests change over time. The Acquiring Fund will not automatically sell or cease to purchase stock of a company that it already owns just because the company’s market capitalization grows or falls outside this range.
Lending Portfolio Securities
The Acquiring Fund may make secured loans of its portfolio securities for purposes of realizing additional income. No lending may be made with any companies affiliated with VALIC. The Acquiring Fund will only make loans to broker-dealers and other financial institutions deemed by State Street Bank and Trust Company (the “securities lending agent” or “State Street”) to be creditworthy. The securities lending agent also holds the cash and the portfolio securities of VC I. Each loan of portfolio securities will be continuously secured by collateral in an amount at least equal to the market value of the securities loaned. Such collateral will be cash and securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities. As with other extensions of credit, securities lending involves the risk that the borrower may fail to return the securities in a timely manner or at all. The Acquiring Fund may lose money if it does not recover the securities and/or the value of the collateral or the value of investments made with cash collateral falls. Such events may also trigger adverse tax consequences for the Acquiring Fund. To the extent that either the value of the cash collateral or the Acquiring Fund’s investments of the cash collateral declines below the amount owed to a borrower, the Acquiring Fund also may incur losses that exceed the amount it earned on lending the security. Securities lending also involves the risks of delay in receiving additional collateral or possible loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially. Engaging in securities lending could also have a leveraging effect, which may intensify the market risk, credit risk and other risks associated with investments in the Acquiring Fund.
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Fee Tables (unaudited)
Fee Table of the Core Equity Fund, the Acquiring Fund and the Pro Forma Combined Fund*
The table below describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the Funds. The Funds’ annual operating expenses do not reflect the separate account fees charged in the Contracts in which the Funds are offered. The percentages presented in the fee table are based on fees and expenses incurred during the 12-month period ended May 31, 2020 for each of the Funds and estimated pro forma fees and expenses attributable to shares of the Pro Forma Combined Fund for the 12-month period ended May 31, 2020, assuming the Reorganization had taken place at the beginning of the fiscal year. Future fees and expenses may be greater or less than those indicated below.
| | | Actual | | | | |||||
| | | Core Equity Fund (Target Fund) | | | Acquiring Fund | | | Pro Forma Combined Fund | | |
| Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment) | | | | | | | | |||
| Management Fee | | | 0.80% | | | 0.75% | | | 0.75% | |
| Other Expenses | | | 0.13% | | | 0.24% | | | 0.15%3 | |
| Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses | | | 0.93% | | | 0.99% | | | 0.90% | |
| Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements | | | -0.18%1 | | | -0.22%2 | | | -0.22%4 | |
| Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements | | | 0.75%1 | | | 0.77%2 | | | 0.68%4 | |
1 | The Target Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Target Fund to VALIC equals 0.62% of average monthly assets on the first $250 million, 0.57% on the next $250 million, 0.52% on the next $500 million and 0.47% thereafter. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
2 | The Acquiring Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Acquiring Fund to VALIC equals 0.53% of average monthly assets on the first $500 million and 0.505% of average monthly assets over $500 million. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
3 | Other Expenses are based on estimated amounts for the current fiscal year. |
4 | The Combined Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Combined Fund to VALIC equals 0.53% of average monthly assets on the first $500 million and 0.505% of average monthly assets over $500 million. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
* | Pro Forma Combined Fund assumes the Reorganization of only the Core Equity Fund into the Acquiring Fund. |
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Fee Table of the Large Cap Core Fund, the Acquiring Fund and the Pro Forma Combined Fund*
The table below describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the Funds. The Funds’ annual operating expenses do not reflect the separate account fees charged in the Contracts in which the Funds are offered. The percentages presented in the fee table are based on fees and expenses incurred during the 12-month period ended May 31, 2020 for each of the Funds and estimated pro forma fees and expenses attributable to shares of the Pro Forma Combined Fund for the 12-month period ended May 31, 2020, assuming the Reorganization had taken place at the beginning of the fiscal year. Future fees and expenses may be greater or less than those indicated below.
| | | Actual | | | | |||||
| | | Large Cap Core Fund (Target Fund) | | | Acquiring Fund | | | Pro Forma Combined Fund | | |
| Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment) | | | | | | | | |||
| Management Fee | | | 0.70% | | | 0.75% | | | 0.75% | |
| Other Expenses | | | 0.15% | | | 0.24% | | | 0.16%3 | |
| Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses | | | 0.85% | | | 0.99% | | | 0.91% | |
| Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements | | | -0.07%1 | | | -0.22%2 | | | -0.22%4 | |
| Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements | | | 0.78%1 | | | 0.77%2 | | | 0.69%4 | |
1 | Effective on September 1, 2020, the Target Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Target Fund to VALIC equals 0.63% on the first $250 million of the Target Fund’s average monthly net assets, 0.58% on the next $250 million of the Target Fund’s average monthly net assets, 0.53% on the next $500 million of the Target Fund’s average monthly net assets and 0.48% on average monthly net assets over $1 billion. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. VALIC may not recoup any advisory fees waived with respect to the Target Fund pursuant to this Fee Waiver Agreement. |
2 | The Acquiring Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Acquiring Fund to VALIC equals 0.53% of average monthly assets on the first $500 million and 0.505% of average monthly assets over $500 million. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
3 | Other Expenses are based on estimated amounts for the current fiscal year. |
4 | The Combined Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Combined Fund to VALIC equals 0.53% of average monthly assets on the first $500 million and 0.505% of average monthly assets over $500 million. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
* | Pro Forma Combined Fund assumes the Reorganization of only the Large Cap Core Fund into the Acquiring Fund. |
12
Fee Table of the Large Cap Core Fund, the Core Equity Fund, the Acquiring Fund and the Pro Forma Combined Fund*
The table below describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the Funds. The Funds’ annual operating expenses do not reflect the separate account fees charged in the Contracts in which the Funds are offered. The percentages presented in the fee table are based on fees and expenses incurred during the 12-month period ended May 31, 2020 for each of the Funds and estimated pro forma fees and expenses attributable to shares of the Pro Forma Combined Fund for the 12-month period ended May 31, 2020, assuming the Reorganization had taken place at the beginning of the fiscal year. Future fees and expenses may be greater or less than those indicated below.
| | | Actual | | | | ||||||||
| | | Core Equity Fund (Target Fund) | | | Large Cap Core Fund (Target Fund) | | | Acquiring Fund | | | Pro Forma Combined Fund | | |
| Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment) | | | | | | | | | | ||||
| Management Fee | | | 0.80% | | | 0.70% | | | 0.75% | | | 0.75% | |
| Other Expenses | | | 0.13% | | | 0.15% | | | 0.24% | | | 0.14%4 | |
| Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses | | | 0.93% | | | 0.85% | | | 0.99% | | | 0.89% | |
| Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements | | | -0.18%1 | | | -0.07%2 | | | -0.22%3 | | | -0.22%5 | |
| Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements | | | 0.75%1 | | | 0.78%2 | | | 0.77%3 | | | 0.67%5 | |
1 | The Target Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Target Fund to VALIC equals 0.62% of average monthly assets on the first $250 million, 0.57% on the next $250 million, 0.52% on the next $500 million and 0.47% thereafter. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
2 | Effective on September 1, 2020, the Target Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Target Fund to VALIC equals 0.63% on the first $250 million of the Target Fund’s average monthly net assets, 0.58% on the next $250 million of the Target Fund’s average monthly net assets, 0.53% on the next $500 million of the Target Fund’s average monthly net assets and 0.48% on average monthly net assets over $1 billion. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. VALIC may not recoup any advisory fees waived with respect to the Target Fund pursuant to this Fee Waiver Agreement. |
3 | The Acquiring Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Acquiring Fund to VALIC equals 0.53% of average monthly assets on the first $500 million and 0.505% of average monthly assets over $500 million. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
4 | Other Expenses are based on estimated amounts for the current fiscal year. |
5 | The Combined Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Combined Fund to VALIC equals 0.53% of average monthly assets on the first $500 million and 0.505% of average monthly assets over $500 million. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
* | Pro Forma Combined Fund assumes the Reorganization of each of the Large Cap Core Fund and the Core Equity Fund into the Acquiring Fund. |
13
EXAMPLES:
These Examples are intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the relevant Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. These Examples assume that you invest $10,000 in the relevant Fund for the time periods indicated and then redeem all of your shares at the end of those periods. The Examples also assume that your investment has a 5% return each year and that the Fund’s operating expenses remain the same and, if applicable, include fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements for year one. The Examples do not reflect charges imposed by the Contract. If the Contract fees were reflected, the expenses would be higher. See the Contract prospectus for information on such charges. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions and the net expenses shown in the fee table, your costs would be:
Core Equity Fund into Acquiring Fund
| | 1 Year | | | 3 Years | | | 5 Years | | | 10 Years | |
Core Equity Fund | | | $77 | | | $278 | | | $497 | | | $1,127 |
Acquiring Fund | | | $79 | | | $293 | | | $526 | | | $1,193 |
Pro Forma Combined Fund* | | | $69 | | | $265 | | | $477 | | | $1,088 |
* | Pro Forma Combined Fund assumes the Reorganization of only the Core Equity Fund into the Acquiring Fund. |
Large Cap Core Fund into Acquiring Fund
| | 1 Year | | | 3 Years | | | 5 Years | | | 10 Years | |
Large Cap Core Fund | | | $80 | | | $264 | | | $465 | | | $1,043 |
Acquiring Fund | | | $79 | | | $293 | | | $526 | | | $1,193 |
Pro Forma Combined Fund* | | | $70 | | | $268 | | | $482 | | | $1,099 |
* | Pro Forma Combined Fund assumes the Reorganization of only the Large Cap Core Fund into the Acquiring Fund. |
Core Equity Fund and Large Cap Core Fund into Acquiring Fund
| | 1 Year | | | 3 Years | | | 5 Years | | | 10 Years | |
Core Equity Fund | | | $77 | | | $278 | | | $497 | | | $1,127 |
Large Cap Core Fund | | | $80 | | | $264 | | | $465 | | | $1,043 |
Acquiring Fund | | | $79 | | | $293 | | | $526 | | | $1,193 |
Pro Forma Combined Fund* | | | $68 | | | $262 | | | $472 | | | $1,076 |
* | Pro Forma Combined Fund assumes the Reorganization of each of the Core Equity Fund and the Large Cap Core Fund into the Acquiring Fund. |
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Because of the similarities in the principal investment strategies of the Funds, the Funds are subject to similar principal investment risks associated with an investment in the relevant Fund. The principal risks of each Fund are set out in the tables below. For more information on these risks, see “Comparison of the Funds—Risks of the Funds.”
Core Equity Fund and Acquiring Fund
| | | Core Equity Fund | | | Acquiring Fund | | |||||||
| Principal Risks | | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | | ■ | | | Disciplined Strategy Risk | |
| | | ■ | | | Growth Style Risk | | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | | ■ | | | Factor-Based Investing Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | |
| | | | | | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | |
Large Cap Core Fund and Acquiring Fund
| | | Large Cap Core Fund | | | Acquiring Fund | | |||||||
| Principal Risks | | | ■ | | | Currency Risk | | | ■ | | | Disciplined Strategy Risk | |
| | | ■ | | | Depositary Receipts Risk | | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | | ■ | | | Factor-Based Investing Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Foreign Investment Risk | | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Growth Stock Risk | | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | | ■ | | | Sector Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | | | ■ | | | Value Style Risk | |
You will find additional descriptions of specific risks in the prospectuses and statements of additional information for the Funds.
As with any mutual fund, there can be no assurance that each Fund’s investment objective will be met or that the net return on an investment in the Fund will exceed what could have been obtained through other investment or savings vehicles. Shares of the Funds are not bank deposits and are not guaranteed or insured by any bank, government entity or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. If the value of the assets of your Fund goes down, you could lose money.
Each Reorganization is expected to qualify as a tax-free “reorganization” for U.S. federal income tax purposes. If a Reorganization so qualifies, in general, none of the relevant Target Fund, the Acquiring Fund, or their respective shareholders, will recognize gain or loss for U.S. federal income tax purposes in the transactions contemplated by the Reorganization except for any gain or loss that may be required to be recognized as a result of the closing of the tax year of the Target Fund or upon the transfer of an asset regardless of whether such transfer would otherwise be a non-recognition transaction under the Code. As a condition to the closing of each Reorganization, VC I, on behalf of each Fund, will receive an opinion from Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP to that effect. An opinion of counsel is not binding on the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) or any court and thus does not preclude the IRS from asserting, or a court from rendering, a contrary position.
For more information about the U.S. federal income tax consequences of each Reorganization, see “Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Consequences of the Reorganizations.”
Procedures for the purchase, redemption and valuation of shares of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund are identical.
15
Core Equity Fund and Acquiring Fund
The Funds are subject to certain similar principal risks associated with an investment in the relevant Fund. The principal and non-principal investment risks of each Fund are set out in the table below.
| | | Core Equity Fund | | | Acquiring Fund | | |||||||
| Principal Risks | | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | | ■ | | | Disciplined Strategy Risk | |
| | | ■ | | | Growth Style Risk | | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | | ■ | | | Factor-Based Investing Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | | | | | | |||
| Non-Principal Risks | | | ■ | | | Convertible Securities Risk | | | None | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Derivatives Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Depositary Receipts Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Foreign Investment Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Investment Company Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Preferred Stock Risk | | | | | |
Large Cap Core Fund and Acquiring Fund
The Funds are subject to certain similar principal risks associated with an investment in the relevant Fund. The principal and non-principal investment risks of each Fund are set out in the table below.
| | | Large Cap Core Fund | | | Acquiring Fund | | |||||||
| Principal Risks | | | ■ | | | Currency Risk | | | ■ | | | Disciplined Strategy Risk | |
| | | ■ | | | Depositary Receipts Risk | | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Equity Securities Risk | | | ■ | | | Factor-Based Investing Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Foreign Investment Risk | | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Growth Stock Risk | | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Large-Cap Companies Risk | | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Management Risk | | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | | |
| | | ■ | | | Market Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Sector Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Securities Lending Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Value Style Risk | | | | | | |||
| Non-Principal Risks | | | ■ | | | Convertible Securities Risk | | | None | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Cybersecurity Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Derivatives Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Junk Bond Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Preferred Stock Risk | | | | | | |||
| | | ■ | | | Unseasoned Issuer Risk | | | | | |
The following discussion describes the principal risks that may affect the Acquiring Fund and, therefore, the Combined Fund. You will find additional descriptions of specific risks in the Acquiring Fund Summary Prospectus.
As with any mutual fund, there can be no assurance that the Acquiring Fund’s investment objective will be met or that the net return on an investment in the Acquiring Fund will exceed what could have been obtained through other investment or savings vehicles.
16
Shares of the Acquiring Fund are not bank deposits and are not guaranteed or insured by any bank, government entity or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. If the value of the assets of the Acquiring Fund goes down, you could lose money.
The following are the principal investment risks associated with the Acquiring Fund and, therefore, also with the Combined Fund:
Disciplined Strategy Risk. The Fund will generally not deviate from its strategy, even during adverse market, economic, political, or other conditions (except to the extent necessary to comply with federal tax laws or other applicable laws). If the Fund is committed to a strategy that is unsuccessful, the Fund will not meet its investment goal. Because the Fund generally will not use certain techniques available to other mutual funds to reduce stock market exposure, the Fund may be more susceptible to general market declines than other mutual funds.
Equity Securities Risk. The Fund’s investments in equity securities are subject to the risk that stock prices will fall and may underperform other asset classes. Individual stock prices fluctuate from day-to-day and may decline significantly. The prices of individual stocks may be negatively affected by poor company results or other factors affecting individual prices, as well as industry and/or economic trends and developments affecting industries or the securities market as a whole.
Factor-Based Investing Risk. There can be no assurance that the multi-factor selection process employed by the subadviser will enhance performance. Exposure to investment style factors may detract from performance in some market environments, which may continue for prolonged periods.
Large-Cap Companies Risk. Large-cap companies tend to go in and out of favor based on market and economic conditions. Large-cap companies tend to be less volatile than companies with smaller market capitalizations. In exchange for this potentially lower risk, the Fund’s value may not rise as much as the value of funds that emphasize smaller capitalization companies. Larger, more established companies may be unable to respond quickly to new competitive challenges, such as changes in technology and consumer tastes. Larger companies also may not be able to attain the high growth rate of successful smaller companies, particularly during extended periods of economic expansion.
Management Risk. Different investment styles and strategies tend to shift in and out of favor depending upon market and economic conditions, as well as investor sentiment. The investment style or strategy used by the Fund may fail to produce the intended result. Moreover, the Fund may outperform or underperform funds that employ a different investment style or strategy. A subadviser’s assessment of a particular security or company may prove incorrect, resulting in losses or underperformance.
Market Risk. The Fund’s share price can fall because of weakness in the broad market, a particular industry, or specific holdings. The market as a whole can decline for many reasons, including adverse political or economic developments here or abroad, changes in investor psychology, or heavy institutional selling and other conditions or events (including, for example, military confrontations, war, terrorism, disease/virus, outbreaks and epidemics). The prospects for an industry or company may deteriorate because of a variety of factors, including disappointing earnings or changes in the competitive environment. In addition, the subadviser’s assessment of companies held in the Fund may prove incorrect, resulting in losses or poor performance even in a rising market. Markets tend to move in cycles with periods of rising prices and periods of falling prices. Like markets generally, the investment performance of the Fund will fluctuate, so an investor may lose money over short or even long periods.
The coronavirus pandemic and the related governmental and public responses have had and may continue to have an impact on the Fund’s investments and net asset value and have led and may continue to lead to increased market volatility and the potential for illiquidity in certain classes of securities and sectors of the market. Preventative or protective actions that governments may take in respect of pandemic or epidemic diseases may result in periods of business disruption, business closures, inability to obtain raw materials, supplies and component parts, and reduced or disrupted operations for the issuers in which the Fund invests. Government intervention in markets may impact interest rates, market volatility and security pricing. The occurrence, reoccurrence and pendency of such diseases could adversely affect the economies (including through changes in business activity and increased unemployment) and financial markets either in specific countries or worldwide.
Securities Lending Risk. Engaging in securities lending could increase the market and credit risk for Fund investments. The Fund may lose money if it does not recover borrowed securities, the value of the collateral falls, or the value of investments made with cash collateral declines. If the value of either the cash collateral or the Fund’s
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investments of the cash collateral falls below the amount owed to a borrower, the Fund also may incur losses that exceed the amount it earned on lending the security. Securities lending also involves the risks of delay in receiving additional collateral or possible loss of rights in the collateral if the borrower fails. Another risk of securities lending is the risk that the loaned portfolio securities may not be available to the Fund on a timely basis and the Fund may therefore lose the opportunity to sell the securities at a desirable price.
Each of the Funds has similar investment restrictions. If the shareholders of a Target Fund approve the Reorganization relating to their Target Fund, VALIC will manage the Combined Fund pursuant to the investment restrictions of the Acquiring Fund. The complete list of the fundamental and non-fundamental investment restrictions of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund is set out in “Appendix A – Fundamental and Non-Fundamental Investment Restrictions.”
The following bar charts and tables illustrate the risks of investing in each Fund by showing changes in the Fund’s performance from calendar year to calendar year and comparing the Fund’s average annual returns to those of one or more broad-based securities indices. Fees and expenses incurred at the contract level are not reflected in the bar charts or tables. If these amounts were reflected, returns would be less than those shown. Of course, past performance is not necessarily an indication of how the Fund will perform in the future.
Calendar Year Total Returns, as of 12/31 each year for
the Core Equity Fund
During the 10-year period shown in the bar chart, the highest return for a quarter was 13.55% (quarter ended March 31, 2012) and the lowest return for a quarter was -18.21% (quarter ended September 30, 2011). The year-to-date calendar return as of September 30, 2020, was 3.91%.
Average Annual Total Returns (For the periods ended December 31, 2019)
| | 1 Year | | | 5 Years | | | 10 Years | |
Core Equity Fund | | | 28.54% | | | 9.92% | | | 11.96% |
Russell 1000® Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes) | | | 31.43% | | | 11.48% | | | 13.54% |
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Calendar Year Total Returns, as of 12/31 each year for
the Large Cap Core Fund
During the 10-year period shown in the bar chart, the highest return for a quarter was 14.70% (quarter ended March 31, 2012) and the lowest return for a quarter was -17.15% (quarter ended September 30, 2011). The year-to-date calendar return as of September 30, 2020, was 6.91%.
Average Annual Total Returns (For the periods ended December 31, 2019)
| | 1 Year | | | 5 Years | | | 10 Years | |
Large Cap Core Fund | | | 32.58% | | | 10.46% | | | 13.26% |
Russell 1000® Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes) | | | 31.43% | | | 11.48% | | | 13.54% |
Calendar Year Total Returns, as of 12/31 each year for
the Acquiring Fund
During the 10-year period shown in the bar chart, the highest return for a quarter was 14.93% (quarter ended March 31, 2012) and the lowest return for a quarter was -16.73% (quarter ended September 30, 2011). The year-to-date calendar return as of September 30, 2020, was 7.91%.
Average Annual Total Returns (For the periods ended December 31, 2019)
| | 1 Year | | | 5 Years | | | 10 Years | |
Acquiring Fund | | | 30.63% | | | 10.61% | | | 11.80% |
Russell 1000® Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes) | | | 31.43% | | | 11.48% | | | 13.54% |
S&P 500® Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes) | | | 31.49% | | | 11.70% | | | 13.56% |
Because the Combined Fund will most closely resemble the Acquiring Fund, the Acquiring Fund will be the accounting survivor of each Reorganization. The Combined Fund will also maintain the performance history of the Acquiring Fund at the closing of each Reorganization.
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VALIC, located at 2929 Allen Parkway, Houston, Texas 77019, is a stock life insurance company which has been in the investment advisory business since 1960 and is the investment adviser for each of the Funds. VALIC is an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of American International Group, Inc. (“AIG”). AIG is a holding company which through its subsidiaries is engaged in a broad range of insurance and insurance-related activities and financial services in the United States and abroad.
VALIC serves as investment adviser to each Fund pursuant to the same Investment Advisory Agreement (the “Advisory Agreement”) with VC I, on behalf of the Funds. As investment adviser, VALIC oversees the day-to-day operations of each Fund and supervises the purchase and sale of Fund investments. VALIC employs investment subadvisers who make investment decisions for the Funds.
VC I relies upon an exemptive order from the SEC which permits VALIC, subject to certain conditions, to select new unaffiliated subadvisers or replace existing subadvisers with an unaffiliated subadviser without first obtaining shareholder approval for the change. The Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors, must approve each new subadvisory agreement. This allows VALIC to act more quickly to change subadvisers when it determines that a change is beneficial by avoiding the delay of calling and holding shareholder meetings to approve each change. In accordance with the exemptive order, VC I will provide investors with information about each new subadviser and its subadvisory agreement within 90 days of hiring the new subadviser. VALIC is responsible for selecting, monitoring, evaluating and allocating assets to the subadvisers and oversees the subadvisers’ compliance with the relevant Fund’s investment objective, policies and restrictions.
Acquiring Fund
GSAM serves as the Subadviser to the Acquiring Fund. GSAM is located at 200 West Street, New York, NY 10282. GSAM has been registered as an investment adviser with the SEC since 1990 and is an affiliate of Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC (“Goldman”). As of September 30, 2020, GSAM, including its investment advisory affiliates, had assets under management of approximately $1.863 trillion in total assets under supervision. Assets under supervision include assets under management and other client assets for which Goldman does not have full discretion.
The team responsible for managing the Acquiring Fund is Khalid (Kal) Ghayur, Ronan G. Heaney and Stephen C. Platt.
Mr. Ghayur is the head of the ActiveBeta Equity Strategies business within GSAM’s Smart Beta Strategies Platform, overseeing the team’s customized, factor-based equity portfolios. Mr. Ghayur joined GSAM as a Managing Director upon GSAM’s acquisition of Westpeak Global Advisors (“Westpeak”) in June 2014. Prior to joining GSAM, Mr. Ghayur was the Managing Partner and Chief Investment Officer of Westpeak, a pioneer in the smart beta space with their patented ActiveBeta investment methodology.
Prior to joining Westpeak in 2007, Mr. Ghayur was the Director of Research Policy at MSCI in New York, where he was a member of its Global Executive Committee and Chairman of the MSCI Index Policy Committee. In that capacity, Mr. Ghayur was responsible for MSCI’s global markets and benchmarking research and new product development. From 1994 to 2000, Mr. Ghayur was Global Head of Quantitative Research and Strategy for HSBC Asset Management in London, where he was responsible for the development and application of strategic and tactical asset allocation, fixed income modeling, stock selection techniques, portfolio construction and analysis, and risk management. From 1992 to 1994, Mr. Ghayur was a Senior Quantitative Analyst at Credit Lyonnais Asset Management in Paris, and from 1987 to 1991, he held the position of Portfolio Manager at Union National Bank in Abu Dhabi, where he was responsible for managing the bank’s UK and US investment portfolios.
Mr. Ghayur has served on the Board of Governors of the CFA Institute, the Board’s Nominating Committee, and as Chairman of the Board’s External Relations and Volunteer Involvement Committee. He is a former trustee of the CFA Institute Research Foundation. Mr. Ghayur was a member of the Editorial Board of Financial Analysts Journal and was founding President of the UK Society of Investment Professionals. Mr. Ghayur received an MBA in Finance and International Business from the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées, Paris, and an MA and BA in Economics from the University of Karachi. He is a CFA charterholder, a member of the CFA Institute, and a Fellow of the Society of Investment Professionals (“FSIP”). He is also a Diplomaed Associate of the Institute of Bankers Pakistan.
Mr. Heaney is the head of research for the ActiveBeta Equity Strategies business within GSAM’s Smart Beta Strategies Platform. He is responsible for investment research activities, including improving quantitative investment models and portfolio construction methodologies and identifying and testing new model components and
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implementation techniques. Mr. Heaney joined GSAM following GSAM’s acquisition of Westpeak in June 2014. Prior to joining GSAM, Mr. Heaney was the Director of Research for Westpeak, pioneering Westpeak’s patent Methods and Systems for Building and Managing Portfolios based on Ordinal Ranks of Securities.
Prior to joining Westpeak in 1998, Mr. Heaney was employed by Multum Information Services in Denver, Colorado, as a Software Architect. From 1992 to 1996, he held the position of Senior Software Developer at Swiss Bank Corporation in Chicago. Mr. Heaney received an MS in Computer Science from Purdue University, where he was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship, and a BS in Applied Physics from Dublin University, Ireland.
Mr. Platt is a senior portfolio manager for the ActiveBeta Equity Strategies business within GSAM’s Smart Beta Strategies Platform. He is responsible for portfolio management, including portfolio construction and risk management of global developed and emerging market equity portfolios and custom indexes. Mr. Platt joined GSAM following GSAM’s acquisition of Westpeak in June 2014. Prior to joining GSAM, Mr. Platt oversaw the management of $10 billion in client assets in a variety of global quantitative investment strategies, including domestic and international long-only, enhanced index, active extension (130/30) and a market neutral hedge fund at Westpeak.
Prior to joining Westpeak in 1999, Mr. Platt was cofounder and Senior Vice President of Cordillera Asset Management in Denver, Colorado. Mr. Platt’s career in the investment industry began in 1989, and he has been an institutional quantitative equity portfolio manager since 1992. Mr. Platt received a BS in Finance from the University of Colorado, Boulder. He is a CFA charterholder and a member of the CFA Institute and the CFA Society of Colorado.
Core Equity Fund
BlackRock serves as the subadviser to the Core Equity Fund. BlackRock is located at 1 University Square Drive, Princeton, NJ 08540. BlackRock is an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of BlackRock, Inc. BlackRock and its affiliates offer a full range of equity, fixed income, cash management and alternative investment products with strong representation in both retail and institutional channels, in the U.S. and in non-U.S. markets. As of September 30, 2020, the assets under management of BlackRock, Inc. (including its subsidiaries) were $7.8 trillion.
The Core Equity Fund is managed by BlackRock’s U.S. Income & Value Team.
Todd Burnside, Director, is a member of the Fundamental Active Equity division of BlackRock’s Active Equities Group. Mr. Burnside is a portfolio manager on the US Income & Value Team. Previously, he had responsibility for fundamental research coverage of US large cap equities, with a focus on the Consumer Discretionary, Financials and Telecommunications sectors. Mr. Burnside joined BlackRock in 2008. Previously, he was an analyst with Morgan Stanley Investment Management from 2003 to 2008, where he was responsible for covering US large cap industrials and consumer stocks. Prior to that, he was a software equity analyst with Prudential Securities from 1999 to 2001. He began his career as an analyst with Nasdaq-Amex in 1997. Mr. Burnside earned a BS degree in Finance from Penn State University in 1997 and an MBA degree in Finance from New York University in 2003.
Joseph Wolfe, CFA, CQF, FRM, Director is a member of the Fundamental Active Equity division of BlackRock’s Active Equities Group. Mr. Wolfe is a portfolio manager on the US Income & Value Team. Previously, he was the Lead Quantitative Analyst for the Large Cap Series Team. Prior to this role, he served as the head of the Quantitative Alpha Research Group. Before joining BlackRock in 2012, Mr. Wolfe was the head of Quantitative Active Research at Northern Trust in Chicago where he directed quantitative research across the active equity teams, developed ETF strategies for FlexShares and co-managed several active mutual funds. Prior to joining Northern Trust in 2005, Mr. Wolfe was a senior quantitative analyst for the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio where he co-managed several quantitative strategies and served as a risk manager. Mr. Wolfe earned a BS degree in Economics from Slippery Rock University and holds advanced degrees in Economics from Kent State University and the Ohio State University. He is also a Chartered Financial Analyst and Certified Financial Risk Manager, and has obtained his Certificate in Quantitative Finance.
Large Cap Core Fund
Columbia serves as the subadviser to the Large Cap Core Fund. Columbia is located at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110. Columbia is a registered investment adviser and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial, Inc. Columbia’s management experience covers all major asset classes, including equity securities, debt instruments and
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money market instruments. In addition to serving as an investment adviser to traditional mutual funds, exchange-traded funds and closed-end funds, Columbia acts as an investment manager for itself, its affiliates, individuals, corporations, retirement plans, private investment companies and financial intermediaries. Columbia managed $356 billion in assets as of September 30, 2020.
The Large Cap Core Fund is managed by Guy W. Pope, CFA. Mr. Pope is a Senior Portfolio Manager and Head of Contrarian Core Strategy for Columbia. Mr. Pope began his investment career in 1993.
The VC I SAI provides additional information about the compensation of each Fund’s portfolio managers, other accounts managed by such managers and such managers’ ownership of securities in each Fund and other funds managed by VALIC.
As discussed below under “Investment Advisory Agreement,” following the Reorganization, VALIC will continue to serve as the investment adviser of the Combined Fund and GSAM will continue to serve as Subadviser to the Combined Fund. It is anticipated that Messrs. Ghayur, Heaney and Platt will be the portfolio managers of the Combined Fund following the Reorganizations.
The exemptive order discussed above will continue to apply to the Combined Fund following the completion of the Reorganizations. As a result, shareholder approval would not be required to employ an unaffiliated subadviser for the Combined Fund, change the terms of particular agreements with unaffiliated subadvisers or continue the employment of existing unaffiliated subadvisers after events that would otherwise cause an automatic termination of a subadvisory agreement.
Pursuant to the Advisory Agreement, each Fund pays VALIC an advisory fee. As compensation for its services, VALIC receives from each Fund a fee, accrued daily and payable monthly, based on the average monthly net asset value of the Fund at the following annual rates listed below:
Fund | | | Average monthly net asset value | | | Advisory Fee Rate |
Core Equity Fund* | | | First $250 million | | | 0.80% |
| | Next $250 million | | | 0.75% | |
| | Next $500 million | | | 0.70% | |
| | Over $1 billion | | | 0.65% | |
Large Cap Core Fund** | | | First $250 million | | | 0.70% |
| | Next $250 million | | | 0.65% | |
| | Next $500 million | | | 0.60% | |
| | Over $1 billion | | | 0.55% | |
Acquiring Fund*** | | | First $500 million | | | 0.750% |
| | Over $500 million | | | 0.725% |
* | The Target Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Fund to VALIC equals 0.62% of average monthly assets on the first $250 million, 0.57% on the next $250 million, 0.52% on the next $500 million and 0.47% thereafter. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
** | Effective on September 1, 2020, the Target Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Fund to VALIC equals 0.63% on the first $250 million of the Fund’s average monthly net assets, 0.58% on the next $250 million of the Fund’s average monthly net assets, 0.53% on the next $500 million of the Fund’s average monthly net assets and 0.48% on average monthly net assets over $1 billion. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. VALIC may not recoup any advisory fees waived with respect to the Fund pursuant to this Fee Waiver Agreement. |
*** | The Acquiring Fund’s investment adviser, VALIC, has contractually agreed to waive its advisory fee through September 30, 2022, so that the advisory fee payable by the Fund to VALIC equals 0.53% of average monthly assets on the first $500 million and 0.505% of average monthly assets over $500 million. This agreement may be modified or discontinued prior to such time only with the approval of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors. |
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For its most recent fiscal year, each Fund paid VALIC a fee equal to the following percentage of average monthly net assets:
Fund | | | Fee |
Core Equity Fund* | | | 0.62% |
Large Cap Core Fund* | | | 0.70% |
Acquiring Fund* | | | 0.73% |
*Net of management fee waiver.
VALIC has contractually agreed to reimburse the expenses of the Acquiring Fund through September 30, 2022, so that the Fund’s Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements do not exceed 0.85%. For purposes of the Expense Limitation Agreement, “Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses” shall not include extraordinary expenses (i.e., expenses that are unusual in nature and infrequent in occurrence, such as litigation), or acquired fund fees and expenses, brokerage commissions and other transactional expenses relating to the purchase and sale of portfolio securities, interest, taxes and governmental fees, and other expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of the Acquiring Fund’s business. This Expense Limitation Agreement will continue in effect from year to year thereafter unless terminated by the Board prior to any such renewal.
A discussion regarding the basis for the Board’s approval of the Advisory Agreement is available in VC I’s most recent semi-annual report to shareholders.
If the shareholders of each Target Fund approve the Reorganization relating to their Target Fund, the Combined Fund will be managed by VALIC pursuant to the Advisory Agreement with respect to the Acquiring Fund, as described above. The services provided to each Fund under the applicable Advisory Agreement are identical.
State Street, located at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110, serves as custodian for each Fund. In this capacity, State Street maintains the portfolio securities held by each Fund, administers the purchase and sale of portfolio securities and performs certain other duties.
SunAmerica Asset Management, LLC (“SunAmerica”), located at Harborside 5, 185 Hudson Street, Suite 3300, Jersey City, New Jersey 07311, serves as the administrator for each Fund.
VALIC Retirement Services Company, 2929 Allen Parkway, Houston, Texas 77019, is each Fund’s transfer and dividend disbursing agent.
[ ], located at [ ], is each Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm. PwC performs an annual audit of each Fund’s financial statements and provides tax advisory services and tax return preparation.
The firm of Sullivan & Worcester LLP, located at 1666 K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006, serves as legal counsel to each Fund and as independent counsel to the Independent Directors of the Company.
Combined Fund. Each Fund currently uses the same service providers and it is anticipated that the Combined Fund will continue to use such service providers.
Dividends from Net Investment Income. For each Fund, dividends from net investment income are declared and paid annually. Dividends from net investment income are automatically reinvested for you into additional shares of the Fund.
Distributions from Capital Gains. When a Fund sells a security for more than it paid for that security, a capital gain results. For each Fund, distributions from capital gains, if any, are normally declared and paid annually. Distributions from capital gains are automatically reinvested for you into additional shares of the Fund.
Tax Consequences. As the owner of a Contract, a participant under your employer’s Contract or Plan or as an IRA account owner, you will not be directly affected by the federal income tax consequences of distributions, sales or redemptions of Fund shares. You should consult your Contract prospectus, Plan document, custodial agreement or your tax professional for further information concerning the federal income tax consequences to you of investing in the Funds.
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The Company is an open-end fund and may offer shares of its Funds for sale at any time. However, the Company offers shares of its Funds only to registered and unregistered separate accounts (the “Separate Accounts” and each, a “Separate Account”) of VALIC and its affiliates and to qualifying retirement plans (previously defined as the “Plans”) and IRAs.
Valuation of shares. The net asset value per share for a Fund is determined each business day at the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time) by dividing the net assets of the Fund by the number of outstanding shares. The net asset value per share for each Fund also may be calculated on any other day in which there is sufficient liquidity in the securities held by the Fund. As a result, the value of the Fund’s shares may change on days when you will not be able to purchase or redeem your shares. Investments for which market quotations are readily available are valued at their market price as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange for the day, unless, in accordance with pricing procedures approved by the Board, the market quotations are determined to be unreliable. Securities and other assets for which market quotations are unavailable or unreliable are valued at fair value in accordance with pricing procedures periodically approved by the Board. There is no single standard for making fair value determinations, which may result in prices that vary from those of other funds. In addition, there can be no assurance that fair value pricing will reflect actual market value and it is possible that the fair value determined for a security may differ materially from the value that could be realized upon the sale of the security.
Investments in registered investment companies that do not trade on an exchange are valued at the end of the day net asset value per share. Investments in registered investment companies that trade on an exchange are valued at the last sales price or official closing price as of the close of the customary trading session on the exchange where the security principally traded. The prospectus for any such open-end funds should explain the circumstances under which these funds use fair value pricing and the effect of using fair value pricing.
As of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange, securities traded primarily on security exchanges outside the United States are valued at the last sale price on such exchanges on the day of valuation or if there is no sale on the day of valuation, at the last reported bid price. If a security’s price is available from more than one exchange, a Fund uses the exchange that is the primary market for the security. However, depending on the foreign market, closing prices may be up to 15 hours old when they are used to price a Fund’s shares, and a Fund may determine that certain closing prices do not reflect the fair value of a security. This determination will be based on review of a number of factors, including developments in foreign markets, the performance of U.S. securities markets, and the performance of instruments trading in U.S. markets that represent foreign securities and baskets of foreign securities. If a Fund determines that closing prices do not reflect the fair value of the securities, the Fund will adjust the previous closing prices in accordance with pricing procedures approved by the Board to reflect what it believes to be the fair value of the securities as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange. A Fund may also fair value securities in other situations, for example, when a particular foreign market is closed but the Fund is open. For foreign equity securities and foreign equity futures contracts, a Fund uses an outside pricing service to provide it with closing market prices and information used for adjusting those prices.
Certain Funds may invest in securities that are primarily listed on foreign exchanges that trade on weekends or other days when the Fund does not price its shares. As a result, the value of such foreign securities may change on days when the Funds are not open to purchases or redemptions. During periods of extreme volatility or market crisis, a Fund may temporarily suspend the processing of sell requests or may postpone payment of proceeds for up to seven business days or longer, or as allowed by federal securities laws.
Buy and Selling Shares. As a participant in a Contract, Plan, or IRA, you do not directly buy shares of the Funds that make up VC I. Instead, you buy units in either a registered or unregistered separate account of VALIC or of its affiliates or through a trust or custodial account under a Plan or an IRA. When you buy these units, you specify the Funds in which you want the Separate Account, trustee or custodian to invest your money. The Separate Account, trustee or custodian in turn, buys the shares of the Funds according to your instructions. After you invest in a Fund, you participate in Fund earnings or losses in proportion to the amount of money you invest. When you provide instructions to buy, sell, or transfer shares of the Funds, the Separate Account, trustee or custodian does not pay any sales or redemption charges related to these transactions. The value of such transactions is based on the next calculation of net asset value after the orders are placed with the Fund.
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For certain investors, there may be rules or procedures regarding the following:
• | any minimum initial investment amount and/or limitations on periodic investments; |
• | how to purchase, redeem or exchange your interest in the Funds; |
• | how to obtain information about your account, including account statements and |
• | any fees applicable to your account. |
For more information on such rules or procedures, you should review your Contract prospectus, Plan document or custodial agreement. The Funds do not currently foresee any disadvantages to participants arising out of the fact that they may offer their shares to Separate Accounts of various insurance companies to serve as the investment medium for their variable annuity and variable life insurance contracts. Nevertheless, the Board intends to monitor events in order to identify any material irreconcilable conflicts which may possibly arise and to determine what action, if any, should be taken in response to such conflicts. If such a conflict were to occur, one or more insurance companies’ Separate Accounts might be required to withdraw their investments in the Funds and shares of another Fund may be substituted. This might force a Fund to sell portfolio securities at disadvantageous prices. In addition, VC I reserves the right to refuse to sell shares of any Fund to any Separate Account, plan sponsor, trustee or custodian, or financial intermediary, or may suspend or terminate the offering of shares of any Fund if such action is required by law or regulatory authority or is in the best interests of the shareholders of the Fund.
Execution of requests. The Company is open on those days when the New York Stock Exchange is open for regular trading. Buy and sell requests are executed at the next net asset value to be calculated after the request is accepted by the Company. If the order is received by the Company, or the insurance company as its authorized agent, before the Company’s close of business (generally 4:00 p.m., Eastern time), the order will receive that day’s closing price. If the order is received after that time, it will receive the next business day’s closing price.
Normally, the Company redeems Fund shares within seven days when the request is received in good order, but may postpone redemptions beyond seven days when: (i) the New York Stock Exchange is closed for other than weekends and customary holidays, or trading on the New York Stock Exchange becomes restricted; (ii) an emergency exists making disposal or valuation of the Fund’s assets not reasonably practicable; or (iii) the SEC has so permitted by order for the protection of the Company’s shareholders. For these purposes, the SEC determines the conditions under which trading shall be deemed to be restricted and an emergency shall be deemed to exist.
The Funds, which are offered only through Contracts, Plans or IRAs, are intended for long-term investment and not as a frequent short-term trading (“market timing”) vehicle. Accordingly, organizations or individuals that use market timing investment strategies and make frequent transfers or redemptions should not purchase shares of the Funds. The Board has adopted policies and procedures with respect to market timing activity as discussed below. The Company believes that market timing activity is not in the best interest of the participants of its Funds. Due to the disruptive nature of this activity, it can adversely impact the ability of the subadvisers to invest assets in an orderly, long-term manner. In addition, market timing can disrupt the management of a Fund and raise its expenses through: increased trading and transaction costs; forced and unplanned portfolio turnover; and large asset swings that decrease the Fund’s ability to provide maximum investment return to all participants. This in turn can have an adverse effect on Fund performance.
If a Fund invests in foreign securities and/or high yield fixed income securities (“junk bonds”), it may be particularly vulnerable to market timing. Market timing in a Fund that invests significantly in foreign securities may occur because of time zone differences between the foreign markets on which the Fund’s international portfolio securities trade and the time as of which the Fund’s net asset value is calculated. Market timing in a Fund that invests significantly in junk bonds may occur if market prices are not readily available for a Fund’s junk bond holdings. Market timers might try to purchase shares of the Funds based on events occurring after foreign market closing prices are established but before calculation of the Fund’s net asset value, or if they believe market prices for junk bonds are not accurately reflected by the Fund. One of the objectives of the Company’s fair value pricing procedures is to minimize the possibilities of this type of market timing.
Shares of the Funds are generally held through insurance company Separate Accounts, Plans or through a trust or custodial account (“Financial Intermediaries”). The ability of the Company to monitor transfers made by the participants in Separate Accounts or Plans maintained by financial intermediaries is limited by the institutional nature
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of Financial Intermediaries’ omnibus accounts. The Company’s policy is that its Funds will rely on the Financial Intermediaries to monitor market timing within the Funds to the extent that the Company believes that each Financial Intermediary’s practices are reasonably designed to detect and deter transactions that are not in the best interest of the Funds.
There is no guarantee that the Company will be able to detect market timing activity or the participants engaged in such activity, or, if it is detected, to prevent its recurrence. Whether or not the Company detects it, if market timing occurs, then you should anticipate that you will be subject to the disruptions and increased expenses discussed above. In situations in which the Company becomes aware of possible market timing activity, it will notify the Financial Intermediary in order to help facilitate the enforcement of such entity’s market timing policies and procedures. The Company has entered into agreements with various Financial Intermediaries that require such intermediaries to provide certain information to help identify frequent trading activity and to prohibit further purchases or exchanges by a participant identified as having engaged in frequent trades. The Company reserves the right, in its sole discretion and without prior notice, to reject, restrict or refuse purchase orders received from a Financial Intermediary, whether directly or by transfer, including orders that have been accepted by a Financial Intermediary, that the Company determines not to be in the best interest of the Fund. Such rejections, restrictions or refusals will be applied uniformly without exception.
You should review your Contract prospectus, Plan document or custodial agreement for more information regarding market timing, including any restrictions, limitations or fees that may be charged on trades made through a Contract, Plan or IRA. Any restrictions or limitations imposed by the Contract, Plan or IRA may differ from those imposed by the Company.
VALIC, as a life insurance company and as the investment adviser of the Funds, receives revenue sharing payments from certain subadvisers (other than SunAmerica, an affiliated investment adviser) in connection with certain administrative, marketing and other servicing activities, including payments to help offset costs for marketing activities and training to support sales of the Funds, as well as occasional gifts, entertainment or other compensation as incentives. Payments may be derived from investment management fees received by VALIC or subadvisers.
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The following Financial Highlights table for the Acquiring Fund is intended to help you understand the Acquiring Fund’s financial performance for the past 5 years. Certain information reflects financial results for a single Acquiring Fund share. The total returns in each table represent the rate that an investor would have earned on an investment in the Acquiring Fund (assuming reinvestment of all dividends and distributions). Separate Account charges are not reflected in the total returns. If these amounts were reflected, returns would be less than those shown. This information has been audited by [ ], whose report, along with the Acquiring Fund’s financial statements, is included in VC I’s Annual Report to shareholders, which is available upon request.
| | Acquiring Fund | |||||||||||||
| | Year Ended May 31, | |||||||||||||
| | 2020 | | | 2019 | | | 2018 | | | 2017 | | | 2016 | |
PER SHARE DATA | | | | | | | | | | | |||||
Net asset value at beginning of period | | | $20.35 | | | $22.23 | | | $20.70 | | | $18.44 | | | $19.70 |
Income (loss) from investment operations: | | | | | | | | | | | |||||
Net investment income (loss)(d) | | | 0.18 | | | 0.21 | | | 0.19 | | | 0.20 | | | 0.20 |
Net realized and unrealized gain(loss) on investments and foreign currencies | | | 2.68 | | | 0.43 | | | 2.34 | | | 2.94 | | | (0.34) |
Total income (loss) from investment operations | | | 2.86 | | | 0.64 | | | 2.53 | | | 3.14 | | | (0.14) |
Distributions from: | | | | | | | | | | | |||||
Net investment income | | | (0.24) | | | (0.21) | | | (0.21) | | | (0.24) | | | (0.24) |
Net realized gain on securities | | | (2.40) | | | (2.31) | | | (0.79) | | | (0.64) | | | (0.88) |
Total distributions | | | (2.64) | | | (2.52) | | | (1.00) | | | (0.88) | | | (1.12) |
Net asset value at end of period | | | $20.57 | | | $20.35 | | | $22.23 | | | $20.70 | | | $18.44 |
TOTAL RETURN(a) | | | 15.08% | | | 2.87% | | | 12.17% | | | 17.22% | | | 0.08% |
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA | | | | | | | | | | | |||||
Ratio of expenses to average net assets(b) | | | 0.85% | | | 0.85% | | | 0.85% | | | 0.85% | | | 0.85% |
Ratio of expenses to average net assets(c) | | | 0.99% | | | 0.92% | | | 0.90% | | | 0.91% | | | 0.91% |
Ratio of expense reductions to average net assets | | | 0.00% | | | 0.00% | | | 0.00% | | | 0.00% | | | 0.00% |
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets(b) | | | 0.85% | | | 0.95% | | | 0.88% | | | 1.03% | | | 1.08% |
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets(c) | | | 0.71% | | | 0.88% | | | 0.83% | | | 0.97% | | | 1.02% |
Portfolio turnover rate | | | 98% | | | 44% | | | 43% | | | 34% | | | 33% |
Number of shares outstanding at end of period(000’s) | | | 5,963 | | | 5,774 | | | 5,767 | | | 5,822 | | | 6,176 |
Net assets at end of period (000’s) | | | $122,639 | | | $117,501 | | | $128,172 | | | $120,515 | | | $113,885 |
(a) | Total return includes, if any, expense reimbursements and expense reductions. The effect of fees and charges incurred at the separate account level are not reflected in these performance figures. If such expenses had been included, the total return would have been lower for each period presented. |
(b) | Includes, if any, expense reimbursement, but excludes, if any, expense reductions. |
(c) | Excludes, if any, expense reimbursements and expense reductions. |
(d) | The per share amounts are calculated using the average share method. |
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Under each Reorganization Agreement, the relevant Target Fund will transfer all of its assets and liabilities to the Acquiring Fund in exchange for shares of the Acquiring Fund. For more details about the Reorganization Agreements, see Appendix B— “Form of Agreement and Plan of Reorganization.” The shares of the Acquiring Fund issued to each Target Fund will have an aggregate net asset value equal to the aggregate net asset value of the Target Fund’s shares outstanding immediately prior to the applicable Reorganization. Upon receipt by a Target Fund of the shares of the Acquiring Fund, the Target Fund will distribute the shares to its shareholders. Then, as soon as practicable after the Closing Date (as defined in Appendix B), the Target Fund will be terminated as a series of the Company under Maryland state law.
The distribution of Acquiring Fund shares to the Target Fund’s shareholders will be accomplished by crediting Target Fund shareholder accounts with shares of the Acquiring Fund whose aggregate value at the time of issuance will equal the aggregate value of the Target Fund attributable to such shareholder on that date. See “Terms of the Reorganization Agreement” below.
Accordingly, as a result of a Reorganization, the relevant Target Fund shareholders will own shares of the Acquiring Fund having an aggregate net asset value immediately after the Closing Date equal to the aggregate net asset value of that shareholder’s Target Fund shares immediately prior to the Closing Date. Each Reorganization will not result in dilution of either Fund’s net asset value. However, as a result of a Reorganization, a shareholder of the relevant Target Fund or the Acquiring Fund will hold a reduced percentage of ownership in the larger Combined Fund than the shareholder did in the applicable Fund.
Pursuant to each Reorganization Agreement, the Acquiring Fund will acquire the assets of the relevant Target Fund on the Closing Date in consideration for the assumption of all of the Target Fund’s liabilities and shares of the Acquiring Fund.
On the Closing Date, the relevant Target Fund will transfer to the Acquiring Fund its assets in exchange solely for shares of the Acquiring Fund that are equal in value to the value of the net assets of the Target Fund transferred to the Acquiring Fund as of the Closing Date, as determined in accordance with the Acquiring Fund’s valuation procedures or such other valuation procedures as shall be mutually agreed upon by the Funds, and the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of all of the liabilities of the Target Fund. In order to minimize any potential for undesirable federal income and excise tax consequences in connection with each Reorganization, the relevant Target Fund will distribute on or before the Closing Date all of its undistributed net investment income and net capital gains as of such date.
Each Target Fund expects to distribute the shares of the Acquiring Fund to the shareholders of the Target Fund promptly after the Closing Date. Upon distribution of such shares, all outstanding shares of the Target Fund will be redeemed in accordance with applicable state law and the organizational documents of the Company. Thereafter, the relevant Target Fund will be terminated as a series of the Company under Maryland state law.
Each of the Funds has made certain standard representations and warranties to each other regarding capitalization, status and conduct of business.
Unless waived in accordance with the applicable Reorganization Agreement, the obligations of the Company, on behalf of its Funds, are conditioned upon, among other things:
• | the approval of the Reorganization by the Target Fund’s shareholders; |
• | the absence of any rule, regulation, order, injunction or proceeding preventing or seeking to prevent the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the Reorganization Agreement; |
• | the receipt of all necessary approvals, consents, registrations and exemptions under federal, state and local laws; |
• | the truth in all material respects as of the Closing Date of the representations and warranties of the Funds and performance and compliance in all material respects with the Funds’ agreements, obligations and covenants required by the Reorganization Agreement; |
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• | the effectiveness under applicable law of the registration statement of the Company of which this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement forms a part and the absence of any stop orders under the Securities Act of 1933 pertaining thereto; |
• | the declaration of a dividend by the Target Fund to distribute all of its undistributed net investment income and net capital gains; and |
• | the receipt of opinions of counsel relating to, among other things, the tax-free nature of the Reorganization. |
Each Reorganization Agreement may be terminated or amended by the mutual consent of the Company, on behalf of the relevant Fund, either before or after approval thereof by the shareholders of the Target Fund.
The Board unanimously recommends that you vote to approve the Reorganization relating to the relevant Target Fund, as it believes the Reorganization is in the best interests of the Target Fund (as described more fully in “Reasons for the Reorganizations” below) and that the interests of existing shareholders of the Target Fund will not be diluted as a result of consummation of the proposed Reorganization.
At the October Board Meeting, the Board, including the Independent Directors, evaluated each Reorganization independently of the other Reorganization and approved the applicable Reorganization. At the October Board Meeting, VALIC proposed the Reorganizations to the Board as part of an effort to optimize the fund line-up in its product offerings, including by considering potential opportunities for consolidation of certain funds that have similar objectives and strategies. In approving each Reorganization Agreement, the Board evaluated extensive information that was provided by VALIC about each Fund and the terms of the proposed Reorganization Agreement. The information showed that the Reorganizations are expected to result in operational efficiencies for the Combined Fund, although no assurance can be given that these efficiencies will be achieved. The Board approved the Reorganizations on the recommendations of VALIC and based on each Director’s business judgment after consideration of all of the factors taken as a whole, though individual Directors may have attributed different weights to various factors and assigned different degrees of materiality to various conclusions. The factors considered by the Board with regard to each relevant Reorganization include, but are not limited to, the following:
• | The fact that the investment objective of each Target Fund is similar to the investment objective of the Acquiring Fund, as well as the fact that certain strategies of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund are similar, while others are different. The Board considered the principal differences in investment strategy between the Acquiring Fund and each Target Fund. See “Summary—Investment Objectives and Principal Investment Strategies.” |
• | The possibility that the Combined Fund is more likely to achieve further operating efficiencies and economies of scale from its larger net asset size compared to each Target Fund. |
• | The advisory fee rate to be paid by the Combined Fund is lower than the current advisory fee rate paid by the Core Equity Fund and is higher than the current advisory fee rate paid by Large Cap Core Fund. |
• | The expectation that the Combined Fund will have net annual operating expenses below those of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund. |
• | The Acquiring Fund will be the survivor of each Reorganization for accounting and performance purposes. |
• | The personnel of VALIC and the Subadviser who will manage the Combined Fund. The Directors considered that VALIC will continue to serve as the investment adviser of the Combined Fund after the Reorganizations, and the Subadviser of the Acquiring Fund will continue to serve as subadviser to the Combined Fund after the Reorganizations. The Reorganizations are not expected to result in diminution in the level or quality of services that each Target Fund’s shareholders currently receive. See “Comparison of the Funds – Management of the Funds.” |
• | The relative performance histories of each Fund over different time periods compared with each other. The Acquiring Fund outperformed the Core Equity Fund for the one-year period ended December 31, 2019 but underperformed the Large Cap Core Fund for the one-year period ended December 31, 2019; outperformed |
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each Target Fund for the five-year period ended December 31, 2019; and underperformed each Target Fund for the ten-year period ended December 31, 2019. While not predictive of future results, the Board also considered certain data with respect to the performance of each Fund as compared to the performance of its relevant peer group.
• | The relative size of each Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund, and the prospects for further growth and long-term viability of each Target Fund. |
• | The fact that it is currently anticipated that there will be no gain or loss recognized by shareholders for federal income tax purposes as a result of the Reorganization, as the Reorganization is expected to be a tax-free transaction. |
• | The fact that the aggregate net asset value of the shares that shareholders of each Target Fund will receive in the Reorganization will equal the aggregate net asset value of the shares that shareholders of the respective Target Fund own immediately prior to the Reorganization, and that shareholders of each Target Fund will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganization. |
• | The terms and conditions of each of the Reorganization Agreements. |
• | The fact that VALIC or its affiliates will pay the expenses incurred in connection with the Reorganization, including all direct and indirect expenses and out-of-pocket costs other than any transaction costs relating to the sale of each Target Fund’s portfolio securities prior to or after the Reorganization as described in the respective Reorganization Agreement. No shareholder would incur any sales charge, commission, redemption fee or other transactional fee as a result of the change of investment resulting from the Reorganization. |
• | The possible alternatives to the Reorganization. |
• | The estimated brokerage commission and other portfolio transaction costs relating to the realignment of each Target Fund’s portfolio prior to the applicable Reorganization. It was noted that many of the portfolio holdings of each Target Fund would be sold before the Reorganization would be completed. |
• | The Reorganizations may result in some potential benefits to VALIC, including but not limited to cost savings, resulting from managing one Combined Fund rather than three separate Funds because the fixed costs involved with operating the Combined Fund will be spread across a larger asset base following the Reorganizations. The Board also considered the Reorganization’s anticipated impact on VALIC’s profitability. |
During their consideration of the Reorganizations, the Independent Directors consulted with counsel to the Independent Directors in executive session outside the presence of Fund management. After consideration of the factors noted above, together with other factors and information considered to be relevant, and recognizing that there can be no assurance that any operating efficiencies or other benefits will in fact be realized, the Board unanimously concluded that, based upon the factors and determinations summarized above, consummation of each relevant Reorganization is in the best interests of the relevant Target Fund and the interests of the Target Fund’s existing shareholders will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganization. Consequently, they approved the Reorganization Agreements and directed that the Reorganization Agreements be submitted to shareholders of the Target Funds for approval. The Board also approved the Reorganization Agreements on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, after concluding that the proposed Reorganizations would be in the best interests of the Acquiring Fund and the interests of the Acquiring Fund’s existing shareholders will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganizations.
The approval determinations were made on the basis of each Director’s business judgment after consideration of all of the factors taken as a whole, though individual Directors may have placed different weight on various factors and assigned different degrees of materiality to various conclusions.
The following is a general summary of the material anticipated U.S. federal income tax consequences of each Reorganization. The discussion is based upon the Code, Treasury regulations, court decisions, published positions of the IRS and other applicable authorities, all as in effect on the date hereof and all of which are subject to change or differing interpretations (possibly with retroactive effect). The discussion is limited to U.S. persons that hold shares of a Target Fund as capital assets for U.S. federal income tax purposes. This summary does not address all of the U.S.
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federal income tax consequences that may be relevant to a particular shareholder or to shareholders who may be subject to special treatment under federal income tax laws. No assurance can be given that the IRS would not assert, or that a court would not sustain, a position contrary to any of the tax aspects described below. This discussion assumes that the Contracts issued by the respective Life Companies are and remain qualified as annuity contracts. Shareholders should consult their own tax advisers as to the U.S. federal income tax consequences of a Reorganization, as well as the effects of state, local and non-U.S. tax laws.
It is a condition to the closing of each Reorganization that the Company, on behalf of each relevant Fund, receive an opinion from Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, special tax counsel to each Fund, dated as of the Closing Date, that the Reorganization will be a “reorganization” within the meaning of Section 368(a) of the Code and that the Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund each will be a “party to a reorganization” within the meaning of Section 368(b) of the Code. As a “reorganization” within the meaning of Section 368(b) of the Code, the U.S. federal income tax consequences of each Reorganization can be summarized as follows:
• | No gain or loss will be recognized by the Target Fund or by the Acquiring Fund upon the transfer of all of the assets of the Target Fund to the Acquiring Fund solely in exchange for the shares of the Acquiring Fund and the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of all of the liabilities of the Target Fund; or upon the distribution of the shares of the Acquiring Fund by the Target Fund to its shareholders in the subsequent termination of the Target Fund. |
• | No gain or loss will be recognized by a shareholder of the Target Fund that exchanges all of its shares of the Target Fund solely for the shares of the Acquiring Fund pursuant to the Reorganization. |
• | The tax basis of the shares of the Acquiring Fund received by a shareholder of the Target Fund pursuant to the Reorganization (including any fractional share) will be the same as the tax basis of the shares of the Target Fund surrendered in exchange therefor. |
• | The holding period of the shares of the Acquiring Fund received by a shareholder of the Target Fund pursuant to the Reorganization (including any fractional share) will include the holding period of the shares of the Target Fund surrendered in exchange therefor. |
• | The Acquiring Fund’s tax basis in assets of the Target Fund received by the Acquiring Fund pursuant to the Reorganization will, in each instance, equal the tax basis of such assets in the hands of the Target Fund immediately prior to the Reorganization increased by the amount of gain (or decreased by the amount of loss), if any, recognized by the Target Fund upon the transfer, and the Acquiring Fund’s holding period for such assets will, in each instance, include the period during which the assets were held by the Target Fund except for any assets which may be marked to market for federal income taxes on the termination of the Target Fund’s taxable year or on which gain was recognized upon the transfer to the Acquiring Fund. |
The opinion of Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP relating to each Reorganization will be based on U.S. federal income tax law in effect on the Closing Date. In rendering each opinion, Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP will also rely upon certain representations of the management of the Funds and assume, among other things, that the applicable Reorganization will be consummated in accordance with the operative documents. Each opinion will not express an opinion as to the tax effects to the respective Target Fund, the Acquiring Fund, or the respective shareholders of each from the marking to market of certain categories of assets as of the closing of the taxable year of each Target Fund at the time of the applicable Reorganization or as a result of the transfer of certain types of assets. An opinion of counsel is not binding on the IRS or any court.
The Acquiring Fund intends to continue to be taxed under the rules applicable to regulated investment companies as defined in Section 851 of the Code, which are the same rules currently applicable to each Target Fund and its shareholders.
Effect on Owners of Contracts
Contract owners will not recognize gain or loss as a result of either Reorganization. As is the case with other distributions to the Separate Accounts of the Life Companies holding shares, Contract owners will not be taxed on any distributions paid with respect to either Reorganization.
Effect on the Separate Accounts of the Life Companies and Other Shareholders
Prior to the Closing Date, each Target Fund will declare a distribution to its shareholders, if any, which together with all previous distributions, will have the effect of distributing to shareholders all of its investment company taxable
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income (computed without regard to the deduction for dividends paid) and net realized capital gains, if any, through the Closing Date. Contract owners will not be directly affected by such Target Fund distributions.
As discussed above, a substantial portion of the portfolio securities of the Core Equity Fund and a majority of the portfolio securities of the Large Cap Core Fund are expected to be sold in connection with the applicable Reorganization. The tax impact of any such sales will depend on the difference between the price at which such portfolio securities are sold and the Target Fund’s basis in such securities. Any capital gains recognized in such sales on a net basis following the closing of the Reorganization will be distributed, if required, to the Separate Accounts of the Life Companies and other shareholders of the Combined Fund, as applicable, as capital gain dividends (to the extent of net realized long-term capital gains) and/or ordinary dividends (to the extent of net realized short-term capital gains) during or with respect to the year of sale. Any capital gains recognized in such sales on a net basis prior to the closing of the Reorganization will be distributed, if required, to the Separate Accounts of the Life Companies and other shareholders of the Target Fund, as applicable, as capital gain dividends (to the extent of net realized long-term capital gains) and/or ordinary dividends (to the extent of net realized short-term capital gains) during or with respect to the year of sale. As is the case with other distributions, Contract owners will not be taxed on these distributions. VALIC also has advised that none of the Target Funds or the Combined Fund will dispose of holdings in the Target Funds’ or the Combined Fund’s portfolios to such an extent that it would adversely affect the tax-free nature of the applicable Reorganization for federal income tax purposes.
As a result of the Reorganizations, the Acquiring Fund will succeed to tax attributes, including capital loss carryforwards, if any, of each Target Fund. The capital loss carryforwards of the Funds will be available to offset future capital gains recognized by the Combined Fund, subject to limitations under the Code. These limitations generally apply to a fund that experiences a greater than 50% ownership change as a result of a reorganization. In addition, pursuant to Section 381 of the Code, an acquiring fund generally may not use a target fund’s capital loss carryforwards to offset gains recognized during the portion of the year before the date of a reorganization, but may use such capital loss carryforwards to offset post-reorganization gains. Where these limitations apply, the Combined Fund may not be able to use all or a portion of a Fund’s capital loss carryforwards in a particular year, the effect of which may be to accelerate the recognition of taxable gains to the Combined Fund and its shareholders post-closing of the Reorganization. As of May 31, 2020, no Fund had capital loss carryforwards. The Reorganizations are not expected to result in an ownership change of the Funds. In addition, any limitation under Section 381 of the Code is not expected to be material. Thus, it is not anticipated that the limitations on use of a Fund’s capital loss carryforwards, if any, would be material.
VALIC or its affiliates will pay the expenses incurred in connection with each Reorganization, including all direct and indirect expenses and out-of-pocket costs other than any transaction costs relating to the sale of each Target Fund’s portfolio securities prior to or after the applicable Reorganization as described in the relevant Reorganization Agreement. Expenses incurred in connection with each Reorganization include, but are not limited to: all costs related to the preparation and distribution of materials distributed to the Board, including legal and accounting costs; all expenses incurred in connection with the preparation of the Reorganization Agreement and a registration statement on Form N-14; SEC filing fees and legal and audit fees in connection with the Reorganization; the costs of printing and distributing this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement; auditing fees associated with inclusion of each Fund’s financial statements in the Form N-14; tabulation expenses; portfolio transfer taxes (if any); and any similar expenses incurred in connection with the Reorganization.
All other expenses of each of the Funds shall be paid by the applicable Fund. VALIC has estimated that the brokerage commission and other transactions costs associated with the pre-Reorganization portfolio repositioning will be $61,682 for the Core Equity Fund and $28,104 for the Large Cap Core Fund. None of the Funds will pay any expenses of shareholders arising out of or in connection with the Reorganizations, except for the estimated broker commissions listed above.
Certain legal matters concerning the federal income tax consequences of each Reorganization and issuance of shares of the Acquiring Fund will be passed on by Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP and Venable LLP, each special counsel to VC I, respectively, in connection with the Reorganizations.
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The following table sets forth as of May 31, 2020: (i) the unaudited capitalization of the Core Equity Fund, (ii) the unaudited capitalization of the Large Cap Core Fund, (iii) the unaudited capitalization of the Acquiring Fund, and (iv) the unaudited pro forma combined capitalization of the Combined Fund assuming each Reorganization has been approved. The capitalizations are likely to be different when a Reorganization is scheduled to be completed as a result of daily share purchase and redemption activity.
Core Equity Fund
| Net Assets: | | | $223,065,541 | |
| Shares Outstanding: | | | 11,267,453 | |
| Net Assets Per Share: | | | $19.80 | |
Large Cap Core Fund
| Net Assets: | | | $174,700,173 | |
| Shares Outstanding: | | | 14,986,516 | |
| Net Assets Per Share: | | | $11.66 | |
Acquiring Fund
| Net Assets: | | | $122,639,231 | |
| Shares Outstanding: | | | 5,963,169 | |
| Net Assets Per Share: | | | $20.57 | |
Core Equity Fund into Acquiring Fund
Pro Forma Combined Fund
| Net Assets: | | | $345,704,772 | |
| Shares Outstanding: | | | 16,809,433 | |
| Net Assets Per Share: | | | $20.57 | |
Large Cap Core Fund into Acquiring Fund
Pro Forma Combined Fund
| Net Assets: | | | $297,339,404 | |
| Shares Outstanding: | | | 14,457,732 | |
| Net Assets Per Share: | | | $20.57 | |
Core Equity Fund and Large Cap Core Fund into Acquiring Fund
Pro Forma Combined Fund
| Net Assets: | | | $520,404,945 | |
| Shares Outstanding: | | | 25,303,996 | |
| Net Assets Per Share: | | | $20.57 | |
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Core Equity Fund. As of October 31, 2020, there were 10,674,822 shares of the Core Equity Fund outstanding. As of such date, the Directors and officers of VC I as a group owned less than 1% of the shares of the Core Equity Fund. As of October 31, 2020, no person was known by the Core Equity Fund to own beneficially or of record 5% or more of the Core Equity Fund’s shares, except as follows:
Name | | | Address | | | % |
VALIC Separate Account A | | | 2929 Allen Parkway Houston, Texas 77019 | | | 99.86% |
Large Cap Core Fund. As of October 31, 2020, there were 14,160,937 shares of the Large Cap Core Fund outstanding. As of such date, the Director and officers of VC I as a group owned less than 1% of the shares of the Large Cap Core Fund. As of October 31, 2020, no person was known by the Large Cap Core Fund to own beneficially or of record 5% or more of the Large Cap Core Fund’s shares, except as follows:
Name | | | Address | | | % |
VALIC Separate Account A | | | 2929 Allen Parkway Houston, Texas 77019 | | | 81.05% |
Aggressive Growth Lifestyle Fund, a series of VC I | | | 2929 Allen Parkway Houston, Texas 77019 | | | 6.16% |
Moderate Growth Lifestyle Fund, a series of VC I | | | 2929 Allen Parkway Houston, Texas 77019 | | | 6.47% |
Acquiring Fund. As of October 31, 2020, there were 5,771,734 shares of the Acquiring Fund outstanding. As of such date, the Directors and officers of VC I as a group owned less than 1% of the shares of the Acquiring Fund. As of October 31, 2020, no person was known by the Acquiring Fund to own beneficially or of record 5% or more of the Acquiring Fund’s shares, except as follows:
Name | | | Address | | | % |
VALIC Separate Account A | | | 2929 Allen Parkway Houston, Texas 77019 | | | 93.12% |
Each Fund is a series of VC I. VC I is an open-end fund organized as a corporation under the laws of the State of Maryland on December 7, 1984. As a Maryland corporation, VC I is governed by the Maryland General Corporation Law (the “MGCL”), its charter (the “Charter”) and bylaws (the “Bylaws”). VC I is currently authorized to issue 45 separate investment portfolios each of which is, in effect, a separate mutual fund issuing its own separate class of common stock. VC I has an authorized capitalization of 37,250,000,000 billion shares of common stock, $0.01 par value per share, which are authorized to be issued in 45 classes (portfolios) comprising 750 million to 1 billion shares each. The Directors may authorize the creation of additional series or classes of stock in the future. The MGCL and the Charter permit the Board to supplement the Charter without a vote of the shareholders to increase the aggregate number of authorized shares or the number of shares of any series or class.
Shareholder Voting. Shareholders of VC I are entitled to one vote per share and fractional votes for fractional shares on each matter submitted to a vote at a meeting of shareholders.
Election and Removal of Directors. Shareholders of VC I may elect Directors at any annual meeting of shareholders or at a special meeting of shareholders that is called for the purpose of electing directors. As permitted by the MGCL for an open-end fund, the Bylaws provide that VC I is not required to hold an annual meeting of shareholders in any year in which the election of Directors is not required by the 1940 Act. A special meeting of shareholders may be called to remove a Director upon the written request of shareholders entitled to cast not less than a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on such matter at such meeting. A Director may be removed, with or without cause, by the affirmative vote of a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast generally for the election of Directors..
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Issuance of Shares. As permitted by the MGCL and the Charter, the Board of VC I has the power to authorize the issuance of shares of stock. Prior to issuance of shares of each series or class, the Board may, in its sole discretion, set the terms, preferences, conversion and other rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends and other distributions, qualifications and terms or conditions of redemption for each series or class.
Extraordinary Corporate Actions and Charter Amendments. Under the MGCL, a Maryland corporation generally cannot dissolve, amend its charter, or engage in a statutory share exchange, merger or consolidation unless declared advisable by the board of directors and approved by a vote of shareholders. Pursuant to amendments to the MGCL that recently became effective for open-end funds such as VC I, these extraordinary corporate actions and charter amendments can be approved by a majority of the entire board of directors and in the manner required by the 1940 Act. Most charter amendments and many corporate actions do not require shareholder approval under the 1940 Act. Accordingly, the Board of VC I could authorize these corporate actions without shareholder approval.
Shareholder, Director and Officer Liability. Under Maryland law, shareholders generally are not personally liable for debts or obligations of a corporation. Maryland law provides that a director who has met his or her statutory standard of conduct has no liability by reason of being or having been a director. The Charter and Bylaws provide that, to the maximum extent permitted by Maryland law in effect from time to time, VC I shall indemnify and, without requiring a preliminary determination of the ultimate entitlement to indemnification, shall pay or reimburse reasonable expenses in advance of final disposition of a proceeding to any individual who is a present or former Director or officer of VC I and who is made or threatened to be made a party to the proceeding by reason of his or her service in that capacity. The indemnification provisions and the limitation on liability are both subject to any limitations of the 1940 Act, which generally provides that no director or officer shall be protected from liability to the corporation or its shareholders by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his or her office. The provisions governing the advance of expenses are subject to applicable requirements of the 1940 Act or rules thereunder and the Charter.
Derivative Actions. Under Maryland law, applicable case law at the time of a particular derivative action will establish any requirements or limitations with respect to shareholder derivative actions.
Each outstanding share of a Fund has one vote on all matters that shareholders vote on. Participants vote on these matters indirectly by voting their units. The manner in which participants vote their units depends on their Contract or Plan. See your Contract prospectus or Plan document for specific details. When a matter comes up for vote, the Separate Account will vote its shares in the same proportion as the unit votes it actually receives. If VALIC determines that it may, under the current interpretation of the 1940 Act, vote shares directly instead of voting through its units, it may decide to vote that way.
Maryland law does not require VC I to hold regular, annual shareholder meetings. However, VC I must hold shareholder meetings on the following matters: (a) to approve certain agreements as required by the 1940 Act; (b) to change fundamental investment restrictions; and (c) to fill vacancies on the Board if the shareholders have elected less than a majority of the Directors. Shareholders who would like to submit proposals for consideration at future shareholder meetings should send written proposals to Kathleen D. Fuentes, Vice President and Secretary of VC I, Harborside 5, 185 Hudson Street, Suite 3300, Jersey City, NJ 07311. To be considered for presentation at a shareholders’ meeting, rules promulgated by the SEC require that, among other things, a shareholder’s proposal must be received at the offices of the applicable Fund within a reasonable time before a solicitation is made. Timely submission of a proposal does not necessarily mean that such proposal will be included.
Solicitations of proxies are being made on behalf of each of the Target Funds and the Board primarily by the mailing of the Notice and this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement with its enclosures on or about [•]. In addition to the solicitation of proxies by mail, employees of the Target Funds and its affiliates may, without additional compensation, solicit proxies in person or by mail, telephone, facsimile or oral communication. The tabulation and solicitation expenses in connection with the Reorganizations along with certain other reorganizations of other VALIC funds being proposed are estimated to be approximately $401,699, all of which will be borne by VALIC or its affiliates. VALIC or its affiliates will also bear any additional costs that may be incurred in connection with contacting those shareholders who have not voted in the event of a need for re-solicitation of votes. Currently, if VALIC determines to retain the services of a proxy solicitation firm on behalf of any of the Target Funds, it anticipates retaining
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Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”). Any proxy solicitation firm engaged by VALIC, among other things, will be: (i) required to maintain the confidentiality of all shareholder information; (ii) prohibited from selling or otherwise disclosing shareholder information to any third party; and (iii) required to comply with applicable telemarketing laws.
Questions about the proposal should be directed to Broadridge by telephone toll-free at 1-833-670-0696.
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This Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement is furnished in connection with the proposed Reorganization of each Target Fund into the Acquiring Fund and the solicitation of proxies by and on behalf of the Board for use at the Special Meeting. The Special Meeting will be held on Monday, April 5, 2021, at 4:00 p.m., Eastern Standard Time, at the offices of SunAmerica, located at 185 Hudson Street, Suite 3300, Jersey City, New Jersey 07311, or at such later time as is made necessary by adjournment or postponement.
As of October 31, 2020, the Core Equity Fund had 10,674,822 shares outstanding and the Large Cap Core Fund had 14,160,937 shares outstanding.
Only shareholders of record as of the close of business on January 11, 2021 will be entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Special Meeting or any postponements or adjournments thereof. Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each share or unit held on that date.
Voting Requirements: Approval by each Target Fund of its proposed Reorganization will require the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Target Fund as defined under the 1940 Act. The 1940 Act defines such vote as the lesser of (i) 67% or more of the total number of shares of the Target Fund present or represented by proxy at the Special Meeting, if holders of more than 50% of the outstanding shares are present or represented by proxy at the Special Meeting; or (ii) more than 50% of the total number of outstanding shares of the Target Fund. Shareholder approval of one Reorganization is not contingent upon shareholder approval of the other Reorganization. If a Target Fund’s shareholders fail to approve the applicable proposed Reorganization, the Reorganization will not occur and the Board may consider other alternatives. If no suitable alternatives can be found, the Board may consider the liquidation of such Target Fund. The Board has fixed the close of business on January 11, 2021 as the Record Date for the determination of shareholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Special Meeting.
Quorum Requirements: With respect to each Target Fund, a quorum for the Special Meeting is present if a majority of the outstanding shares of stock entitled to vote at the Special Meeting are present in person (virtually) or by proxy. Abstentions will be treated as present for determining the quorum. Abstentions will not, however, be counted as voting on any matter at the Special Meeting and will have the same effect as a vote against the proposal. As noted above, the Separate Accounts and the Plans own directly nearly all of the outstanding shares of a Target Fund and the Separate Accounts will vote those shares for which they receive timely voting instructions from shareholders in accordance with those instructions. As a result, a majority of the outstanding shares of a Target Fund will be represented at the Special Meeting and thus a quorum will be present. However, in the event that a quorum is not present at the Special Meeting, or in the event that a quorum is present but sufficient votes to approve the proposal are not received, the chairman of the Special Meeting or the persons named as proxies may propose one or more adjournments of the Special Meeting to permit further solicitation of votes. If submitted to shareholders, any such adjournment will require the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of those shares voting on the adjournment.
Target Fund shareholders may authorize their proxy by returning the enclosed proxy card or provide voting instructions by returning the enclosed voting instruction card, as applicable. Target Fund shareholders may also authorize their proxy or provide voting instructions via telephone or Internet using the instructions provided on the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card. A proxy may be revoked at any time prior to its exercise at the Special Meeting by written notice to Kathleen D. Fuentes, Harborside 5, 185 Hudson Street, Suite 3300, Jersey City, NJ 07311. Unless revoked, all valid proxies will be voted in accordance with the specification thereon or, in the absence of specification, for approval of the respective proposal.
Pass Through Voting: Shares of the Funds are sold to Separate Accounts and are used as investment options under Contracts and to Plans and IRA custodians.
Contract owners (including participants in a Plan) who select a Fund for investment through a Contract do not invest directly in or hold shares of the Fund. An insurance company that uses the Funds as a funding vehicle, is, in most cases, the legal shareholder of a Fund and, as such, has sole voting power with respect to the shares, but generally
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will pass through any voting rights to Contract owners. Therefore, for Fund shares owned through a Separate Account that is registered with the SEC, a Life Company will request voting instructions from the Contract owner and will vote shares or other interests in the Separate Account as directed by the Contract owner. In the event that any Contract owner fails to provide voting instructions with respect to the Separate Account, the Life Company will vote the shares attributable to those Contract owners for, against, or abstain, in the same proportion as the shares for which voting instructions were received from Contract owners investing through the same Separate Account, even if only a small number of Contract owners provide voting instructions. The effect of proportional voting is that if a large number of Contract owners fail to give voting instructions, a small number of Contract owners may determine the outcome of the vote.
Shares of the Funds are also sold directly to Plans and to IRA custodians. A Plan or IRA custodial account that includes a Fund as an investment option, is, in most cases, the legal shareholder of the Fund and, as such, has sole voting power with respect to the shares, but in most cases will pass through any voting rights to Plan participants or IRA owners who have an interest in the Fund. Shareholders who are participants in a Plan or an IRA custodial account that invests in a Fund without a variable annuity contract vote their shares directly.
Voting by Mail: To vote by mail, you should date and sign the proxy card or voting instruction card, as applicable, included with this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement, indicate your vote on the proposal, and return the form in the envelope provided. Please mail it early enough to be delivered prior to the Special Meeting.
Voting by Telephone: You may use the automated touch-tone voting method by calling the toll-free number provided on the proxy card or voting instruction card, as applicable. At the prompt, follow the menu. Prior to calling, you should read this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement and have your proxy card or voting instruction card at hand.
Internet Voting. To vote over the Internet, please log on to the website listed on your proxy card or voting instruction card, as applicable, and click on the proxy voting button. Prior to logging on, you should read this Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement and have your proxy card or voting instruction card at hand. After logging on, follow the instructions on the screen. If you receive more than one proxy card or voting instruction card, you may vote them during the same session.
Additional Information. Shareholders voting their proxies or providing voting instructions by telephone or Internet need not return their voting proxy card or instruction card by mail.
A person submitting votes by telephone or Internet is deemed to represent that he or she is authorized to vote on behalf of all owners of the account, including spouses or other joint owners. By using the telephone or the Internet to submit voting instructions, the shareholder is authorizing Broadridge, a tabulation agent, and its agents, to execute a proxy to vote the shareholder’s shares at the Special Meeting as the shareholder has indicated.
Each Target Fund believes that the procedures for authorizing the execution of a proxy by telephone or Internet set forth above are reasonably designed to ensure that the identity of the shareholder casting the vote is accurately determined and that the voting instructions of the shareholder are accurately recorded.
You are requested to fill in, sign and return the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card, as applicable, promptly. No postage is necessary if mailed in the United States.
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FUNDAMENTAL AND NON-FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
VC I, on behalf of each Fund, has adopted certain fundamental investment restrictions which cannot be changed without approval by a majority of its outstanding voting securities. A majority of the outstanding voting securities is defined as the vote of the lesser of (i) 67% or more of the outstanding shares of the Fund present at a meeting, if the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding voting shares are present in person or by proxy or (ii) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund. A change in policy affecting only one Fund may be effected with the approval of a majority of the outstanding shares of such Fund.
In addition, the Funds may have non-fundamental investment restrictions or operating policies which have been approved by the Board. Non-fundamental investment restrictions or operating policies may be changed by the Board without shareholder approval. The fundamental and non-fundamental investment restrictions and operating policies of each Fund are listed below. The percentage limitations referenced in some of the restrictions are to be determined at the time of purchase. However, percentage limitations for illiquid investments and borrowings apply at all times. Calculation of each Fund’s total assets for compliance with any of the investment restrictions or any other restrictions will not include cash collateral held in connection with securities lending activities.
In applying the limitations on investments in any one industry (concentration), the Funds may use industry classifications based, where applicable, on industry classification guides such as Baseline, Bridge Information Systems, Reuters, or S&P Stock Guide, Global Industry Classification Standard information obtained from Bloomberg L.P. and Moody’s International, or Barra, and/or the industry classifications set forth in the prospectus of the issuing company of the investment. Further, regarding the securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal business activities in the same industry: (i) there is no limitation with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, any state, territory or possession of the United States, the District of Columbia or any of their authorities, agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions and repurchase agreements secured by such instruments, (ii) wholly-owned finance companies will be considered to be in the industries of their parents if their activities are primarily related to financing the activities of the parents, (iii) utilities will be divided according to their services, for example, gas, gas transmission, electric and gas, electric and telephone will each be considered a separate industry, and (iv) personal credit and business credit businesses will be considered separate industries.
Fundamental Investment Restrictions
The Funds have the following fundamental investment restrictions:
Borrowing
Each Fund may borrow money in amounts up to 33 1⁄3% of the value of its total assets for temporary or emergency purposes, or as permitted by law. Each Fund may also borrow money for investment purposes, up to the maximum extent permissible under the 1940 Act. A Fund may also obtain such short-term credits as may be necessary for the clearance of purchases and sales of portfolio securities. In order to secure any permitted borrowings and reverse repurchase agreements under this section, a Fund may pledge, mortgage or hypothecate its assets. This policy shall not prohibit a Fund from engaging in reverse repurchase agreements, dollar rolls, or similar investment strategies described in the Fund’s Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, as amended from time to time.
Notes: The 1940 Act permits a Fund to borrow money in amounts of up to one-third of the Fund’s total assets from banks for any purpose, and to borrow up to an additional 5% of the Fund’s total assets from banks or other lenders for temporary purposes. (A Fund’s total assets include the amounts being borrowed.) To limit the risks attendant to borrowing, the 1940 Act requires a Fund to maintain an “asset coverage” of at least 300% of the amount of its borrowings (other than the 5% temporary borrowings); provided that in the event that the Fund’s asset coverage falls below 300%, the Fund is required to reduce the amount of its borrowings so that it meets the 300% asset coverage threshold within three days (not including Sundays and holidays). Asset coverage means the ratio that the value of a Fund’s total assets (including amounts borrowed), minus liabilities other than borrowings, bears to the aggregate amount of all borrowings. Certain trading practices and investments may be considered borrowings and therefore subject to the 1940 Act restrictions. The investment restriction will be interpreted to permit a Fund to engage in trading practices and investments that may be considered borrowings to the extent consistent with the 1940 Act. Short-term credits necessary for the settlement of securities transactions and arrangements with respect to securities lending are not considered to be borrowings under the restriction. Practices and investments that may involve leverage but are not considered to be borrowings are not subject to the restriction.
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Commodities
Neither Fund may purchase or sell physical commodities except that each Fund may (i) hold and sell physical commodities acquired as a result of the Fund’s ownership of securities or other instruments; (ii) purchase or sell securities or other instruments backed by physical commodities; or (iii) purchase or sell commodity options and futures contracts in accordance with its investment practices and policies.
Concentration
Each Fund may not concentrate its investments in the securities of issuers primarily engaged in any particular industry (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities and repurchase agreements secured thereby), or domestic bank money market instruments.
Notes: The 1940 Act does not define what constitutes “concentration” in an industry. The SEC staff has taken the position that investment of 25% or more of a fund’s total assets in one or more issuers conducting its principal activities in the same industry or group of industries constitutes concentration. It is possible that interpretations of concentration could change in the future. A fund that invests a significant percentage of its total assets in a single industry may be particularly susceptible to adverse events affecting that industry and may be riskier than a fund that does not concentrate in an industry. The fundamental investment restriction will be interpreted to refer to concentration as it may be determined from time to time. The fundamental investment restriction also will be interpreted to permit investment without limit in the following: securities of the U.S. government and its agencies or instrumentalities; securities of state, territory, possession or municipal governments and its authorities, agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions (other than private activity municipal debt securities whose principal and interest payments are derived principally from the revenues and the assets of a non-governmental user); and repurchase agreements collateralized by any of such obligations. Accordingly, issuers of the foregoing securities will not be considered members of any industry. Finally, the restriction will be interpreted to give broad authority to a Fund as to how to classify issuers within or among industries.
Diversification
Each Fund may not make any investment inconsistent with its classification as a diversified investment company under the 1940 Act. This means that each Fund may not purchase securities of an issuer (other than obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) if, (a) with respect to 75% of its total assets, more than 5% of the Fund’s total assets would be invested in the securities of that issuer or (b) the Fund would hold more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of that issuer. With respect to the remaining 25% of its total assets, the Fund may invest more than 5% of its assets in one issuer. Under the 1940 Act, a Fund cannot change its classification from diversified to non-diversified without shareholder approval.
Issuance of Senior Securities
Neither Fund may issue senior securities except as permitted by the 1940 Act, any rule, regulation, or order under the 1940 Act or any SEC staff interpretation of the 1940 Act.
Notes: The 1940 Act prohibits a Fund from issuing “senior securities,” which are defined as Fund obligations that have a priority over the Fund’s shares with respect to the payment of dividends or the distribution of Fund assets, except that the Fund may borrow money in amounts of up to one-third of the Fund’s total assets from banks for any purpose. A Fund also may borrow up to an additional 5% of its total assets from banks or other lenders for temporary purposes, and these borrowings are not considered senior securities. The issuance of senior securities by a Fund can increase the speculative character of the Fund’s outstanding shares through leveraging. Leveraging of a Fund through the issuance of senior securities magnifies the potential for gain or loss on monies, because even though the Fund’s net assets remain the same, the total risk to investors is increased to the extent of the Fund’s gross assets. The fundamental investment restriction will be interpreted not to prevent collateral arrangements with respect to swaps, options, forward or futures contracts or other derivatives, or the posting of initial or variation margin.
Lending
Neither Fund may make loans, except that each Fund may, in accordance with its investment practices and policies (i) engage in repurchase agreements; (ii) lend portfolio securities; (iii) purchase debt securities; (iv) purchase commercial paper; and (v) enter into any other lending arrangement, including interfund lending, as permitted by the 1940 Act, any rule, regulation or order under the 1940 Act, by exemptive relief, or by any SEC staff interpretation of the 1940 Act.
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Real Estate
Neither Fund may purchase or sell real estate except that each Fund may (i) hold and sell real estate acquired as a result of the Fund’s ownership of securities or other instruments; (ii) purchase or sell securities or other instruments backed by real estate, or interests in real estate; and (iii) purchase or sell securities of entities or investment vehicles, including real estate investment trusts, that invest, deal, or otherwise engage in the business of real estate.
Underwriting
Neither Fund may underwrite the securities of other issuers, except as permitted by the Board within applicable law, and except to the extent that in connection with the sale or disposition of its portfolio securities, a Fund may be deemed to be an underwriter.
Non-Fundamental Investment Restrictions
The Funds have the following non-fundamental investment restrictions:
Control of Companies
Each Fund may not invest in companies for the purpose of exercising management control or influence, except that the Fund may purchase securities of other investment companies to the extent permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, as amended from time to time, (ii) the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, as amended from time to time, or (iii) an exemption or similar relief from the provisions of the 1940 Act.
Illiquid Securities
Each Fund may not invest more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities, including repurchase agreements with maturities in excess of seven days, stripped mortgage securities and inverse floaters, but excluding variable amount master demand notes and liquid Rule 144A securities. This restriction on illiquid securities is applicable at all times.
Foreign Securities
To the extent consistent with their respective investment objectives, each of the Funds as noted immediately below may invest in foreign securities, which may include emerging market securities. American Depositary Receipts (“ADRs”) and U.S. dollar-denominated securities of foreign issuers are excluded from such percentage limitation for each Fund.
35%:
Core Equity Fund
Systematic Core Fund
20%:
Large Cap Core Fund
Margin
Each Fund may not purchase securities on margin, except that a Fund may obtain such short-term credits as may be necessary for the clearance of purchases and sales of portfolio securities. The payment by the Fund of initial or variation margin in connection with futures or related options transactions will not be considered the purchase of a security on margin.
Short Sales
Each Fund may not sell securities short except to the extent permitted by applicable law.
Investment Companies
Each Fund may invest in securities issued by other investment companies to the extent permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, as amended from time to time, (ii) the rules and regulations promulgated by the SEC under the 1940 Act, as amended from time to time, or (iii) an exemption or other relief from the provisions of the 1940 Act. No Fund that is acquired by the Dynamic Allocation Fund may acquire any securities of a registered open-end management investment company or of a registered unit investment trust in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(G) or 12(d)(1)(F) of the 1940 Act.
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FORM OF AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF REORGANIZATION
THIS AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF REORGANIZATION (the “Agreement”) is made as of this day of , 2020, among and between VALIC Company I, a Maryland corporation (the “Corporation”), severally and not jointly on behalf of each of the (the “Acquiring Fund”) and the (the “Target Fund,” and together with the Acquiring Fund, the “Funds”) and, solely with respect to Article IX, the Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company. Each of the Acquiring Fund and Target Fund is designated as a legally separate series of the Corporation. Other than the Target Fund and the Acquiring Fund, no other series of the Corporation are parties to the Agreement.
This Agreement is intended to be, and is adopted as, a plan of reorganization within the meaning of Section 368(a) of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), and the Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder. The reorganization will consist of: (i) the transfer of all of the assets of the Target Fund in exchange for shares of the Acquiring Fund (“Acquiring Fund Shares”); (ii) the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of the Assumed Liabilities (as defined in paragraph 1.3) of the Target Fund; (iii) the distribution, after the Closing Date (as defined in paragraph 3.1), of the Acquiring Fund Shares to the shareholders of the Target Fund; and (iv) the complete liquidation of the Target Fund, all upon the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement (the “Reorganization”).
WHEREAS, the Corporation is an open-end, registered management investment company within the meaning of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), and the Target Fund owns securities that are assets of the character in which the Acquiring Fund is permitted to invest;
WHEREAS, each of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund is treated properly as a “regulated investment company” under Subchapter M of the Code;
WHEREAS, the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, is authorized to issue its shares of beneficial interest;
WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of the Corporation has determined that the Reorganization is in the best interests of the Acquiring Fund and that the interests of the existing shareholders of the Acquiring Fund will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganization; and
WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of the Corporation has determined that the Reorganization is in the best interests of the Target Fund, the interests of the existing shareholders of the Target Fund will not be diluted as a result of the Reorganization and the Reorganization is advisable and directed that the Reorganization be submitted for consideration at a special meeting of the Target Fund Shareholders (as defined in paragraph 1.5);
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and of the covenants and agreements hereinafter set forth, the parties hereto covenant and agree as follows:
ARTICLE I
TRANSFER OF ASSETS OF THE TARGET FUND IN EXCHANGE FOR ACQUIRING FUND SHARES AND THE ASSUMPTION OF THE TARGET FUND’S LIABILITIES AND LIQUIDATION OF THE TARGET FUND
1.1 THE EXCHANGE. Subject to the terms and conditions contained herein and on the basis of the representations and warranties contained herein, the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, agrees to convey, transfer and deliver the assets of the Target Fund described in paragraph 1.2 to the Acquiring Fund free and clear of all liens, encumbrances and claims whatsoever. In exchange, the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, agrees: (a) to deliver to the Target Fund the number of full and fractional shares of the Acquiring Fund, determined by dividing: (i) the aggregate value of the Target Fund’s assets, net of liabilities of the Target Fund, computed in the manner and as of the time and date set forth in paragraph 2.1, by (ii) the net asset value of one Acquiring Fund Share computed in the manner and as of the time and date set forth in paragraph 2.2; and (b) to assume the liabilities of the Target Fund as described in paragraph 1.3. Such transactions shall take place at the closing (the “Closing”) provided for in paragraph 3.1.
1.2 ASSETS TO BE ACQUIRED. The assets of the Target Fund to be acquired by the Acquiring Fund shall consist of all property owned by the Target Fund, including, without limitation, all cash, securities, commodities, interests in futures and other financial instruments, claims (whether absolute or contingent, known or unknown), receivables (including dividends, interest, principal, subscriptions and other receivables), goodwill and other
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intangible property, all books and records belonging to the Target Fund, any deferred or prepaid expenses shown as an asset on the books of the Target Fund on the Closing Date, and all interests, rights, privileges and powers, other than cash in an amount necessary to pay dividends and distributions as provided in paragraph 7.3 and other than the Target Fund’s rights under this Agreement (the “Assets”).
The Target Fund will, within 7 days prior to the Closing Date, furnish the Acquiring Fund with a list of the Target Fund’s portfolio securities and other investments.
1.3 LIABILITIES TO BE ASSUMED. The Target Fund will endeavor to identify and discharge, to the extent practicable, all of its liabilities and obligations, including all liabilities relating to operations, before the Closing Date. The Acquiring Fund shall assume all liabilities of, allocated or attributable to, the Target Fund, whether known or unknown, accrued or unaccrued, absolute or contingent or conditional or unmatured except for all expenses that are solely and directly related to the Reorganization (determined in accordance with the guidelines set for in Rev. Rul. 73-54, 1973-1 C.B. 187) and borne by the Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company, each Fund’s investment adviser (the “Adviser”), pursuant to Article IX (the “Assumed Liabilities”).
1.4 STATE FILINGS. Prior to the Closing Date, the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, shall make any filings with the State of Maryland that are required under the laws of the State of Maryland to be made prior to the Closing Date. Prior to the Closing Date, the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, shall make any filings with the State of Maryland that are required under the laws of the State of Maryland to be made prior to the Closing Date.
1.5 LIQUIDATION AND DISTRIBUTION. On or as soon as practicable after the Closing Date, the Target Fund will distribute in complete liquidation of the Target Fund, pro rata to its shareholders of record, determined as of the close of business on the Closing Date (the “Target Fund Shareholders”), all of the Acquiring Fund Shares received by the Target Fund. Upon completion of the distribution of all of the Acquiring Fund Shares in accordance with the prior sentence, the Target Fund will thereupon proceed to liquidate and terminate as set forth in paragraph 1.9 below. Such distribution will be accomplished by the transfer on the books of the Corporation of Acquiring Fund Shares credited to the account of the Target Fund to open accounts on the share records of the Acquiring Fund in the name of the Target Fund Shareholders, and representing the respective pro rata number of each class of Acquiring Fund Shares due Target Fund Shareholders holding the corresponding class of the Target Fund’s shares. All issued and outstanding shares of the Target Fund will, simultaneously with the liquidation, be cancelled on the books of the Target Fund and will be null and void. The Corporation shall not issue certificates representing Acquiring Fund Shares in connection with such transfer.
1.6 OWNERSHIP OF SHARES. Ownership of Acquiring Fund Shares will be shown on the books of the Acquiring Fund’s transfer agent.
1.7 TRANSFER TAXES. Any transfer taxes payable upon the issuance of Acquiring Fund Shares in a name other than the registered holder of the Target Fund shares on the books of the Corporation as of that time shall, as a condition of such transfer, be paid by the person to whom such Acquiring Fund Shares are to be issued and transferred.
1.8 REPORTING RESPONSIBILITY. Any reporting responsibility of the Target Fund, including, without limitation, the responsibility for filing of regulatory reports, tax returns or other documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”), any state securities commission, and any federal, state or local tax authorities or any other relevant regulatory authority, is and shall remain the responsibility of the Target Fund, or the Corporation on behalf of the Target Fund. The Corporation shall fully cooperate to the extent necessary or desirable for these responsibilities to be discharged.
1.9 TERMINATION. The Target Fund shall be terminated as a series of the Corporation promptly following all distributions made pursuant to paragraph 1.5 in accordance with the laws of the State of Maryland and the federal securities laws.
1.10 BOOKS AND RECORDS. Concurrently with the Closing, the share transfer books relating to the Target Fund shall be closed and no transfer of shares shall thereafter be made on such books. All books and records relating to the Target Fund, including all books and records required to be maintained under the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder transferred to the Acquiring Fund, shall be made available to the Acquiring Fund from and after the Closing Date at the Acquiring Fund’s cost of producing such books and records until at least the date through which such books and records must be maintained under applicable law.
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1.11 ACTION BY CORPORATION. All actions expressed herein as being the obligations of the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund will be taken by the Corporation, on behalf of each of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund.
ARTICLE II
VALUATION
2.1 VALUATION OF ASSETS. The gross value of the Assets to be acquired by the Acquiring Fund hereunder shall be the gross value of such Assets as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) on the business day immediately preceding the Closing Date (the “Valuation Time”), after the payment of the dividends pursuant to Section 7.3, using the Corporation’s valuation procedures or such other valuation procedures as shall be mutually agreed upon by the parties.
2.2 VALUATION OF SHARES. The net asset value per share of each class of the Acquiring Fund Shares shall be the net asset value per share for that class computed at the Valuation Time, using the Corporation’s valuation procedures or such other valuation procedures as shall be mutually agreed upon by the parties.
ARTICLE III
CLOSING AND CLOSING DATE
3.1 CLOSING DATE. Subject to the terms and conditions set forth herein, the Closing shall occur on [ ], 2021, or such other date and time as the parties may agree to in writing (the “Closing Date”). Unless otherwise provided, all acts taking place at the Closing shall be deemed to take place as of immediately prior to the commencement of business on the Closing Date. The Closing shall be held virtually.
3.2 CUSTODIAN’S CERTIFICATE. The Target Fund shall instruct its custodian, State Street Bank and Trust Company (“SSB&T” or the “Custodian”), to deliver at the Closing a certificate of an authorized officer stating that: (a) the Assets have been delivered in proper form to the Acquiring Fund on the Closing Date; and (b) all necessary taxes including all applicable federal and state stock transfer stamps, if any, have been paid, or provision for payment shall have been made, in conjunction with the delivery of portfolio securities by the Target Fund. The Target Fund’s portfolio securities represented by a certificate or other written instrument shall be presented by the Custodian to the custodian for the Acquiring Fund, SSB&T, for examination no later than five (5) business days preceding the Closing Date and transferred and delivered by the Target Fund as of the Closing Date for the account of the Acquiring Fund, duly endorsed in proper form for transfer in such condition as to constitute good delivery thereof free and clear of all liens, encumbrances and claims whatsoever, in accordance with the custom of brokers. The Target Fund’s securities and instruments deposited with a securities depository (as defined in Rule 17f-4 under the 1940 Act) or other permitted counterparties or a futures commission merchant (as defined in Rule 17f-6 under the 1940 Act) shall be transferred to or for the account of the Acquiring Fund as of the Closing Date by book entry in accordance with the customary practices of such depositories and futures commission merchants and the Custodian. The cash to be transferred by the Target Fund shall be transferred and delivered by the Target Fund as of the Closing Date for the account of the Acquiring Fund.
3.3 EFFECT OF SUSPENSION IN TRADING. In the event that, on the business day immediately preceding the Closing Date, either: (a) the NYSE or another primary exchange on which the portfolio securities of the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund are purchased or sold shall be closed to trading or trading on such exchange shall be restricted; or (b) trading or the reporting of trading on the NYSE or elsewhere shall be disrupted so that accurate appraisal of the value of the net assets of the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund is impracticable, the Closing shall be postponed until the first business day after the day when trading is fully resumed and reporting is restored or such other date as the parties may agree to.
3.4 TRANSFER AGENT’S CERTIFICATE. The Target Fund shall instruct its transfer agent, VALIC Retirement Services Company, to deliver at the Closing a certificate of an authorized officer stating that its records contain the names and addresses of the Target Fund Shareholders as of the Closing Date, and the number and percentage ownership (to four decimal places) of each outstanding class of shares of the Target Fund owned by each Target Fund Shareholder immediately prior to the Closing. The Acquiring Fund shall issue and deliver, or instruct its transfer agent to issue and deliver, a confirmation evidencing Acquiring Fund Shares to be credited on the Closing Date to the Target Fund, or provide evidence reasonably satisfactory to the Target Fund that such Acquiring Fund Shares have been credited to the relevant Target Fund’s account on the books of the Acquiring Fund.
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3.5 DELIVERY OF ADDITIONAL ITEMS. At the Closing, each party shall deliver to the other such bills of sale, checks, assignments, assumptions of liabilities, receipts and other documents, if any, as such other party or its counsel may reasonably request.
3.6 FAILURE TO DELIVER ASSETS. If the Target Fund is unable to make delivery pursuant to paragraph 3.2 hereof to the Acquiring Fund’s custodian of any of the Assets of the Target Fund for the reason that any of such Assets have not yet been delivered to it by the Target Fund’s broker, dealer or other counterparty, then, in lieu of such delivery, the Target Fund shall deliver, with respect to said Assets, executed copies of an agreement of assignment and due bills executed on behalf of said broker, dealer or other counterparty, together with such other documents as may be required by the Acquiring Fund or its custodian, including brokers’ confirmation slips.
ARTICLE IV
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES
4.1 REPRESENTATIONS OF THE CORPORATION AND THE TARGET FUND. The Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, represents and warrants to the Acquiring Fund as follows:
(a) The Corporation is a corporation that is duly organized, validly existing and in good standing under laws of the State of Maryland. The Target Fund has been validly designated as a separate series of the Corporation. The Corporation is duly authorized to transact business in the State of Maryland and is qualified to do business in all jurisdictions in which it is required to be so qualified, except jurisdictions in which the failure to so qualify would not have a material adverse effect on the Target Fund. The Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, has all material federal, state and local authorizations necessary to own all of the properties and the Assets and to carry on its business as now being conducted, except authorizations which the failure to so obtain would not have a material adverse effect on the Target Fund.
(b) The Corporation is registered as an open-end management investment company under the 1940 Act, and its registration with the Commission as an investment company under the 1940 Act is in full force and effect. The Corporation is in compliance in all material respects with the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder with respect to the Target Fund.
(c) If applicable, the Registration Statement on Form N-14 and the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement contained therein as so amended or supplemented (the “N-14 Registration Statement”), as of the effective date of the N-14 Registration Statement and at all times subsequent thereto up to and including the Closing Date, conforms and will conform, as it relates to the Corporation and the Target Fund, in all material respects to the requirements of the federal and state securities laws and the rules and regulations thereunder and does not and will not include, as it relates to the Corporation and the Target Fund, any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. Any written information furnished by the Corporation with respect to itself and the Target Fund for use in the N-14 Registration Statement or any other materials provided in connection with the Reorganization, as of the effective date of the N-14 Registration Statement and at all times subsequent thereto up to and including the Closing Date, does not and will not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated or necessary to make the statements, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading.
(d) The Target Fund’s prospectus, statement of additional information and shareholder reports, each to the extent included or incorporated by reference in the N-14 Registration Statement, are accurate and complete in all material respects and comply in all material respects with federal securities and other laws and regulations, and do not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated or necessary to make the statements, in light of the circumstances in which such statements were made, not misleading.
(e) The Target Fund is not in violation of, and the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement in accordance with its terms by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, will not result in the violation of Maryland law or any provision of the Corporation’s articles of incorporation or by-laws or of any material agreement, indenture, note, mortgage, instrument, contract, lease or other undertaking to which the Corporation (with respect to the Target Fund) or the Target Fund is a party or by which it is bound, nor will the execution, delivery and
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performance of this Agreement by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, result in the acceleration of any obligation, or the imposition of any penalty, under any material agreement, indenture, instrument, contract, lease or other undertaking to which the Corporation (with respect to the Target Fund) or the Target Fund is a party or by which it is bound.
(f) The Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, has no material contracts, agreements or other commitments that will not be terminated without liability to it before the Closing Date, other than liabilities, if any, to be discharged prior to the Closing Date or that are Assumed Liabilities.
(g) No litigation, claims, actions, suits, proceeding or investigation of or before any court or governmental body is pending or to the Corporation’s knowledge threatened against the Target Fund or any of its properties or Assets which, if adversely determined, would materially and adversely affect the Corporation or the Target Fund’s financial condition, the conduct of its business or which would prevent or hinder the ability of the Target Fund to carry out the transactions contemplated by this Agreement. The Target Fund knows of no facts that might form the basis for the institution of such proceedings and is not a party to or subject to the provisions of any order, decree or judgment of any court or governmental body that materially and adversely affects its business or its ability to consummate the transactions contemplated herein.
(h) The audited financial statements of the Target Fund as of May 31, 2020, the most recent fiscal year ended, have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”) consistently applied and have been audited by [________] and such statements (true and complete copies of which have been furnished to the Acquiring Fund) fairly reflect in all material respects the financial condition and the results of operations of the Target Fund as of such date and the results of operations and changes in net assets for the periods indicated, and there are no material liabilities of the Target Fund whether actual or contingent and whether or not determined or determinable as of such date that are required by GAAP to be disclosed but are not disclosed in such statements. The unaudited financial statements of the Target Fund for the six months ended [November 30, 2020] have been prepared in accordance with GAAP consistently applied by the Target Fund, and such statements (true and complete copies of which have been furnished to the Acquiring Fund) fairly reflect in all material respects the financial condition and the results of operations of Target Fund as of such date and the results of operations and changes in net assets for the periods indicated, and there are no material liabilities of Target Fund whether actual or contingent and whether or not determined or determinable as of such date that are required by GAAP to be disclosed but are not disclosed in such statements.
(i) There have been no changes in the financial position of the Target Fund as reflected in the audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2020 and the unaudited financial statements for the six months ended [November 30, 2020], other than those occurring in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice in connection with the purchase and sale of portfolio assets, the issuance and redemption of Target Fund shares and the payment of normal operating expenses, dividends and capital gains distributions. Since the date of the financial statements referred to in paragraph 4.1(h) above, there has been no material adverse change in the Target Fund’s financial condition, assets, liabilities or business, results of operations or the manner of conducting business of the Target Fund (other than changes occurring in the ordinary course of business), or any incurrence by the Target Fund of indebtedness maturing more than one year from the date such indebtedness was incurred, except as otherwise disclosed to and accepted in writing by the Acquiring Fund. For the purposes of this paragraph 4.1(i), a decline in the net asset value of the Target Fund due to declines in the value of the Target Fund’s Assets, the discharge of the Target Fund’s liabilities or the redemption of the Target Fund’s shares by a Target Fund’s Shareholders shall not constitute a material adverse change.
(j) Since [November 30, 2020] there has not been: (i) any change in the business, results of operations, assets or financial condition or the manner of conducting the business of the Target Fund other than changes in the ordinary course of its business, or any pending or threatened litigation, which has had or may have a material adverse effect on such business, results of operations, assets or financial condition; (ii) issued any option to purchase or other right to acquire shares of the Target Fund granted by or on behalf of the Target Fund to any person other than subscriptions to purchase shares at net asset value in accordance with the terms in the prospectus for the Target Fund; (iii) any entering into, amendment or termination of any contract or agreement by or on behalf of the Target Fund, except as otherwise contemplated by this Agreement; (iv) any indebtedness incurred, other than in the ordinary course of business, by or on behalf of the Target Fund for borrowed money or any commitment to borrow money by or on behalf of the Target Fund; and (v) any grant or imposition of any lien, claim, charge or encumbrance (other than
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encumbrances arising in the ordinary course of business with respect to covered options) upon any asset of the Target Fund other than a lien for taxes not yet due and payable. Since [_______], there has not been any amendment of the Corporation’s organizational documents in a manner materially affecting the Target Fund.
(k) As of the date hereof and at the Closing Date, all federal and other tax returns and reports of the Target Fund required by law to be filed have or shall have been timely and duly filed by such dates (including any extensions) and are or will be correct in all material respects, and all federal and other taxes required to be paid pursuant to such returns and reports have been paid. To the best of the Target Fund’s knowledge after reasonable investigation, no such return is currently under audit or examination, and no assessment or deficiency has been asserted with respect to any such returns.
(l) The Corporation has authorized shares of common stock allocated to the Target Fund consisting of [________] shares having a par value of $0.01 per share, of which it is authorized to issue [_______] shares for the Target Fund. All issued and outstanding shares of common stock of the Target Fund have been offered and sold in compliance in all material respects with applicable registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “1933 Act”) or an exemption therefrom and applicable state securities laws and are, and on the Closing Date will be, duly authorized and validly issued and outstanding, fully paid and nonassessable, and are not subject to preemptive or dissenter’s rights. All of the issued and outstanding shares of the Target Fund will, at the time of the Closing Date, be held by the persons and in the amounts set forth in the records of the Target Fund’s transfer agent as provided in paragraph 3.4. The Target Fund has no outstanding options, warrants or other rights to subscribe for or purchase any of the Target Fund shares and has no outstanding securities convertible into any Target Fund shares.
(m) At the Closing Date, the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, will have good and marketable title to the Assets to be transferred to the Acquiring Fund pursuant to paragraph 1.2, and full right, power and authority to sell, assign, transfer and deliver such Assets hereunder, free of any lien or other encumbrance, except those liens or encumbrances as to which the Acquiring Fund has received notice and which have been taken into account in the net asset valuation of the Target Fund, and, upon delivery of the Assets and the filing of any documents that may be required under Maryland state law, the Acquiring Fund will acquire good and marketable title to the Assets, subject to no restrictions on their full transfer, other than such restrictions as might arise under the 1933 Act, and other than as disclosed to and accepted in writing by the Acquiring Fund.
(n) Subject to the approval of this Agreement by the Target Fund Shareholders, the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, has the power to enter into this Agreement and to consummate the transactions contemplated herein. Subject to the approval of this Agreement by the Target Fund Shareholders, the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement and consummation of the transactions contemplated herein have been duly authorized by all necessary action on the part of the Directors of the Corporation Subject to the approval of this Agreement by the Target Fund Shareholders, this Agreement constitutes a valid and binding obligation of the Corporation and the Target Fund, enforceable in accordance with its terms and no other corporate action or proceedings by the Target Fund are necessary to authorize this Agreement and the transactions contemplated herein, subject as to enforcement to bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium and other laws relating to or affecting creditors’ rights and to general equity principles.
(o) The information to be furnished by the Target Fund for use in no-action letters, applications for orders, registration statements, proxy materials and other documents that may be necessary in connection with the transactions contemplated herein shall be accurate and complete in all material respects and shall comply in all material respects with federal securities and other laws and regulations.
(p) The Target Fund is a separate series of the Corporation that is treated as a corporation separate from any and all other series of the Corporation under Section 851(g) of the Code. For each taxable year of its operation (including the taxable year ending on the Closing Date), the Target Fund has met (or for that year will meet) the requirements of Subchapter M of Chapter 1 of the Code for qualification and treatment as a “regulated investment company,” has elected to be such, has been (or for that year will be) eligible to compute and has computed (or for that year will compute) its federal income tax under Section 852 of the Code, and on or before the Closing Date, will have distributed or will have declared dividends intended to be sufficient to distribute substantially all of (i) the excess of (x) its investment income excludible from gross income under Section 103 of the Code over (y) its deductions disallowed under Sections 265 and 171 of the Code (“net tax-exempt income”), (ii) its investment company taxable income (as defined in the Code) (computed without regard to any deduction for dividends paid) and (iii) any net
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capital gain (as defined in the Code) (after reduction for any allowable capital loss carryover) that has accrued or been recognized, respectively, through the Closing Date such that for all tax periods ending on or before the Closing Date (and treating the current tax year as ending on the Closing Date) the Target Fund will not have any tax liability under Section 852 or Section 4982.
(q) Except for the N-14 Registration Statement and the approval of this Agreement by the Target Fund Shareholders, no consent, approval, authorization or order under any federal or state law or of any court or governmental authority is required for the consummation by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, of the transactions contemplated herein. No consent of or notice to any third party or entity other than the Target Fund Shareholders as described in paragraph 4.1(r) is required for the consummation by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
(r) The Target Fund has called a special meeting of the Target Fund Shareholders to consider and act upon this Agreement (or transactions contemplated hereby) and to take all other appropriate action necessary to obtain approval of the transactions contemplated herein. Such meeting shall be scheduled for no later than [ ], 2021 (or such other date as the parties may agree to in writing).
4.2 REPRESENTATIONS OF THE CORPORATION AND THE ACQUIRING FUND. The Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, represents and warrants to the Target Fund, as follows:
(a) The Corporation is a corporation that is duly organized, validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the State of Maryland. The Acquiring Fund has been validly established as a separate series of the Corporation. The Corporation is duly authorized to transact business in the State of Maryland and is qualified to do business in all jurisdictions in which it is required to be so qualified, except jurisdictions in which the failure to so qualify would not have a material adverse effect on the Acquiring Fund. The Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, has all material federal, state and local authorizations necessary to own all of its properties and assets and to carry on its business as now being conducted, except authorizations which the failure to so obtain would not have a material adverse effect on the Acquiring Fund.
(b) The Corporation is registered as an open-end management investment company under the 1940 Act, and its registration with the Commission as an investment company under the 1940 Act is in full force and effect. The Corporation is in compliance in all material respects with the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder with respect to the Acquiring Fund.
(c) The N-14 Registration Statement as of its effective date and at all times subsequent thereto up to and including the Closing Date, conforms and will conform, as it relates to the Corporation and the Acquiring Fund, in all material respects to the requirements of the federal and state securities laws and the rules and regulations thereunder and does not and will not include, as it relates to the Corporation and the Acquiring Fund, any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, except that no representations and warranties in this paragraph 4.2 apply to statements or omissions made in reliance upon and in conformity with written information concerning the Corporation and the Target Fund furnished to the Acquiring Fund by the Corporation or the Target Fund. From the effective date of the N-14 Registration Statement through the time of the meeting of the Target Fund Shareholders and on the Closing Date, any written information furnished by the Corporation with respect to itself and the Acquiring Fund for use in the N-14 Registration Statement or any other materials provided in connection with the Reorganization, as of the effective date of the N-14 Registration Statement and at all times subsequent thereto up to and including the Closing Date, does not and will not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated or necessary to make the statements, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading.
(d) The Acquiring Fund’s current prospectus, statement of additional information and shareholder reports, each to the extent included or incorporated by reference in the N-14 Registration Statement, are accurate and complete in all material respects and comply in all material respects with federal securities and other laws and regulations, and do not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated or necessary to make the statements, in light of the circumstances in which such statements were made, not misleading.
(e) The Acquiring Fund is not in violation of, and the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement in accordance with its terms by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, will not result in the violation of Maryland law or any provision of the Corporation’s articles of incorporation or by-laws or of any material agreement,
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indenture, note, mortgage, instrument, contract, lease or other undertaking to which the Corporation (with respect to the Acquiring Fund) or the Acquiring Fund is a party or by which it is bound, nor will the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, result in the acceleration of any obligation, or the imposition of any penalty, under any material agreement, indenture, instrument, contract, lease or other undertaking to which the Corporation (with respect to the Acquiring Fund) or the Acquiring Fund is a party or by which it is bound.
(f) No litigation, claims, actions, suits proceeding or investigation of or before any court or governmental body is pending or to the Corporation’s knowledge threatened against the Acquiring Fund or any of its properties or its assets which, if adversely determined, would materially and adversely affect the Corporation or the Acquiring Fund’s financial condition, the conduct of its business or which would prevent or hinder the ability of the Acquiring Fund to carry out the transactions contemplated by this Agreement. The Acquiring Fund knows of no facts that might form the basis for the institution of such proceedings and is not a party to or subject to the provisions of any order, decree or judgment of any court or governmental body that materially and adversely affects its business or its ability to consummate the transactions contemplated herein.
(g) The audited financial statements of the Acquiring Fund as of May 31, 2020, the most recent fiscal year ended, have been prepared in accordance with GAAP consistently applied and have been audited by [________], and such statements (true and complete copies of which have been furnished to the Target Fund) fairly reflect in all material respects the financial condition and the results of operations of the Acquiring Fund as of such date and the results of operations and changes in net assets for the periods indicated, and there are no material liabilities of the Acquiring Fund whether actual or contingent and whether or not determined or determinable as of such date that are required by GAAP to be disclosed but are not disclosed in such statements. The unaudited financial statements of the Acquiring Fund for the six months ended [November 30, 2020] have been prepared in accordance with GAAP consistently applied by the Acquiring Fund, and such statements (true and complete copies of which have been furnished to the Target Fund) fairly reflect in all material respects the financial condition and the results of operations of Acquiring Fund as of such date and the results of operations and changes in net assets for the periods indicated, and there are no material liabilities of Acquiring Fund whether actual or contingent and whether or not determined or determinable as of such date that are required by GAAP to be disclosed but are not disclosed in such statements.
(h) There have been no changes in the financial position of the Acquiring Fund as reflected in the audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2020 and the unaudited financial statements for the six months ended [November 30, 2020], other than those occurring in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice in connection with the purchase and sale of portfolio assets, the issuance and redemption of Acquiring Fund shares and the payment of normal operating expenses, dividends and capital gains distributions. Since the date of the financial statements referred to in paragraph 4.2(g) above, there has been no material adverse change in the Acquiring Fund’s financial condition, assets, liabilities or business, results of operations or the manner of conducting business of the Acquiring Fund, or any incurrence by the Acquiring Fund of indebtedness maturing more than one year from the date such indebtedness was incurred, except as otherwise disclosed to and accepted in writing by the Target Fund. For the purposes of this paragraph 4.2(h), a decline in the net asset value of the Acquiring Fund due to declines in the value of Acquiring Fund’s assets, the discharge of the Acquiring Fund’s liabilities or the redemption of Acquiring Fund shares by Acquiring Fund shareholders shall not constitute a material adverse change.
(i) As of the date hereof and at the Closing Date, all federal and other tax returns and reports of the Acquiring Fund required by law to be filed have or shall have been timely and duly filed by such dates (including any extensions) and are or will be correct in all material respects, and all federal and other taxes required to be paid pursuant to such returns and reports have been paid. To the best of the Acquiring Fund’s knowledge after reasonable investigation, no such return is currently under audit or examination, and no assessment or deficiency has been asserted with respect to any such returns.
(j) The Corporation has authorized shares of common stock allocated to the Acquiring Fund consisting of [________] shares having a par value of $0.01 per share, of which it is authorized to issue [_______] shares for the Acquiring Fund. All issued and outstanding shares of beneficial interest of the Acquiring Fund have been offered and sold in compliance in all material respects with applicable registration requirements of the 1933 Act or an exemption there from and applicable state securities laws and are, and on the Closing Date will be, duly authorized and validly issued and outstanding, fully paid and nonassessable, and are not subject to preemptive or dissenter’s rights. The Acquiring Fund has no outstanding options, warrants or other rights to subscribe for or purchase any of the Acquiring Fund’s shares and has no outstanding securities convertible into any of the Acquiring Fund’s shares.
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(k) The Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, has the power to enter into this Agreement and to consummate the transactions contemplated herein. The execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement and consummation of the transactions contemplated herein have been duly authorized by all necessary action on the part of the Directors of the Corporation. This Agreement constitutes a valid and binding obligation of the Corporation and the Acquiring Fund, enforceable in accordance with its terms and no other corporate action or proceedings by the Acquiring Fund are necessary to authorize this Agreement and the transactions contemplated herein, subject as to enforcement to bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium and other laws relating to or affecting creditors’ rights and to general equity principles.
(l) The Acquiring Fund Shares to be issued and delivered to the Target Fund for the account of the Target Fund Shareholders pursuant to the terms of this Agreement will, at the Closing Date, have been duly authorized. When so issued and delivered, the Acquiring Fund Shares will be duly and validly issued and will be fully paid and nonassessable.
(m) The information to be furnished by the Acquiring Fund for use in no-action letters, applications for orders, registration statements, proxy materials and other documents that may be necessary in connection with the transactions contemplated herein shall be accurate and complete in all material respects and shall comply in all material respects with federal securities and other laws and regulations.
(n) The Acquiring Fund is a separate series of the Corporation that is treated as a corporation separate from any and all other series of the Corporation under Section 851(g) of the Code. For each taxable year of its operation (including the taxable year that includes the Closing Date), the Acquiring Fund has met (or for that year will meet) the requirements of Subchapter M of Chapter 1 of the Code for qualification and treatment as a “regulated investment company,” has elected to be treated as such, and has been (or for that year will be) eligible to compute and has computed (or for that year will compute) its federal income tax under Section 852 of the Code, and will have distributed (or for that year will distribute pursuant to the provisions of Section 855 of the Code) substantially all of (i) its net tax-exempt income, (ii) its investment company taxable income (as defined in the Code) (computed without regard to any deduction for dividends paid) and (iii) any net capital gain (as defined in the Code) (after reduction for any allowable capital loss carryover) for taxable years ending with or prior to the Closing Date such that for all those years the Acquiring Fund will have no tax liability under Section 852 or Section 4982.
(o) Except for the N-14 Registration Statement, no consent, approval, authorization or order under any federal or state law or of any court or governmental authority is required for the consummation by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, of the transactions contemplated herein. No consent of or notice to any third party or entity other than the shareholders of the Target Fund as described in paragraph 4.1(r) is required for the consummation by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
ARTICLE V
COVENANTS OF THE CORPORATION, THE ACQUIRING FUND AND THE TARGET FUND
5.1 OPERATION IN ORDINARY COURSE. Subject to paragraph 7.3, each of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund will operate its business in the ordinary course of business between the date of this Agreement and the Closing Date, it being understood that such ordinary course of business will include customary dividends and shareholder purchases and redemptions. No party shall take any action that would, or would reasonably be expected to, result in any of its representations and warranties set forth in this Agreement being or becoming untrue in any material respect.
5.2 STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES. The Target Fund will prepare and deliver to the Acquiring Fund on the second business day prior to the Closing Date a statement of the assets and liabilities of the Target Fund as of such date for review and agreement by the parties to determine that the Assets and Assumed Liabilities of the Target Fund are being correctly determined in accordance with the terms of this Agreement. The Target Fund will deliver at the Closing (1) an updated statement of Assets and Assumed Liabilities of the Target Fund and (2) a list of the Target Fund’s portfolio showing the tax costs of each of its Assets by lot and the holding periods of such Assets, each of (1) and (2) as of the Closing Date, and certified by the Treasurer of the Corporation.
5.3 ACCESS TO BOOKS AND RECORDS. Upon reasonable notice, the Target Fund shall make available to the Corporation’s officers and agents, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, all books and records of the Target Fund.
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5.4 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. The Corporation and the Target Fund will assist the Acquiring Fund in obtaining such information as the Acquiring Fund reasonably requests concerning the beneficial ownership of the Target Fund’s shares.
5.5 CONTRACT TERMINATION. The Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, will terminate all agreements to which it is a party, on behalf of the Target Fund (other than this Agreement), effective as of the Closing Date without any liability not paid prior to the Closing Date other than as accrued as part of the Assumed Liabilities.
5.6 FURTHER ACTION. Subject to the provisions of this Agreement, the Corporation, on behalf of each of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund, will take or cause to be taken all action and do or cause to be done all things reasonably necessary, proper or advisable to consummate and make effective the transactions contemplated by this Agreement, including any actions required to be taken after the Closing Date. In particular, the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, covenants that it will, as and when reasonably requested by the Acquiring Fund, execute and deliver or cause to be executed and delivered all such assignments and other instruments and will take or cause to be taken such further action as the Acquiring Fund may reasonably deem necessary or desirable in order to vest in and confirm the Acquiring Fund’s title to and possession of all the Assets and otherwise to carry out the intent and purpose of this Agreement.
5.7 STATEMENT OF EARNINGS AND PROFITS. As promptly as practicable, but in any case within thirty (30) days after the Closing Date, the Corporation shall furnish to the Acquiring Fund, in such form as is reasonably satisfactory to the Acquiring Fund, a statement of the earnings and profits of the Target Fund for federal income tax purposes, as well as any capital loss carryovers and items that the Acquiring Fund will succeed to and take into account as a result of Section 381 of the Code, and which will be certified by the Treasurer of the Corporation.
5.8 UNAUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. The Corporation shall furnish to the Acquiring Fund within five (5) business days after the Closing Date, an unaudited statement of the Target Fund’s assets and liabilities, portfolio of investments and the related statements of operations and changes in net assets as of and for the interim period ending on the Closing Date; such financial statements will represent fairly the financial position of the Target Fund as of the date thereof and the portfolio of investments, the results of operations and changes in net assets indicated in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles applied on a consistent basis and such financial statements shall be certified by the Treasurer of the Corporation as complying with the requirements hereof.
5.9 PREPARATION OF N-14 REGISTRATION STATEMENT. The Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, will prepare and file with the Commission the N-14 Registration Statement relating to the Acquiring Fund Shares to be issued to the Target Fund Shareholders, if necessary. The N-14 Registration Statement shall include a notice to Target Fund Shareholders, a Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement and other materials relating to the transactions contemplated by this Agreement. At the time the N-14 Registration Statement becomes effective, at the time of the Target Fund Shareholders meeting and at the Closing Date, the N-14 Registration Statement shall be in compliance in all material respects with the 1933 Act, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “1934 Act”) and the 1940 Act, as applicable. Each party will provide the materials and information necessary to prepare the N-14 Registration Statement, for inclusion therein, in connection with the meeting of the Target Fund Shareholders to consider the approval of this Agreement and the transactions contemplated herein, including in the case of the Target Fund any special interim financial information necessary for inclusion therein. If at any time prior to the Closing Date a party becomes aware of any untrue statement of material fact or omission to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements made not misleading in light of the circumstances under which they were made, the party discovering the item shall notify the other parties and the parties shall cooperate in promptly preparing, filing and clearing the Commission and, if appropriate, distributing to the Target Fund Shareholders appropriate disclosure with respect to the item.
5.10 TAX STATUS OF REORGANIZATION. The intention of the parties is that the transaction contemplated by this Agreement will qualify as a reorganization within the meaning of Section 368(a) of the Code. Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, special counsel to each of the Corporation and the Funds, will render an opinion on these matters. None of the Corporation, the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund shall take any action or cause any action to be taken (including, without limitation, the filing of any tax return) that is inconsistent with such treatment or results in the failure of the transaction to qualify as a reorganization within the meaning of Section 368(a) of the Code. At or prior to the Closing Date, the Corporation, the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund will take such action, or cause such
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action to be taken, as is reasonably necessary to enable Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, special counsel to the Corporation, to render the tax opinion required herein (including, without limitation, each party’s execution of representations reasonably requested by and addressed to Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP).
5.11 REASONABLE BEST EFFORTS. Each of the Corporation, the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund shall use its reasonable best efforts to fulfill or obtain the fulfillment of the conditions precedent to effect the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
5.12 AUTHORIZATIONS. The Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, agrees to use all reasonable efforts to obtain the approvals and authorizations required by the 1933 Act, the 1940 Act and any state blue sky or securities laws as it may deem appropriate in order to operate in the normal course of business after the Closing Date.
5.13 DISTRIBUTION. The Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, covenants that the Acquiring Fund Shares to be issued hereunder are not being acquired for the purpose of making any distribution thereof other than in accordance with the terms of this Agreement.
5.14 PROXY. The Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, agrees to mail to its respective shareholders of record entitled to vote at the special meeting of shareholders at which action is to be considered regarding this Agreement, in sufficient time to comply with requirements as to notice thereof, a combined Proxy Statement and Prospectus which complies in all material respects with the applicable provisions of Section 14(a) of the 1934 Act and Section 20(a) of the 1940 Act, and the rules and regulations, respectively, thereunder.
ARTICLE VI
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT TO OBLIGATIONS OF THE CORPORATION AND THE TARGET FUND
The obligations of the Target Fund to consummate the transactions provided for herein shall be subject, at its election, to the performance by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, of all the obligations to be performed by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, pursuant to this Agreement on or before the Closing Date and, in addition, subject to the following conditions:
6.1 All representations, covenants and warranties of the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, contained in this Agreement shall be true and correct in all material respects as of the date hereof and as of the Closing Date, with the same force and effect as if made on and as of the Closing Date.
6.2 The Corporation shall have received on the Closing Date an opinion of Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, dated as of the Closing Date, in a form reasonably satisfactory to the Corporation and the Target Fund, covering the following points with such assumptions, exceptions and limitations as are customary in opinions of this sort:
(a) The Corporation is registered as an open-end management investment company under the 1940 Act.
(b) Neither the execution, delivery nor performance by the Corporation of the Agreement nor the compliance by the Acquiring Fund with the terms and provisions thereof will contravene any provision of applicable federal securities law of the United States of America.
(c) To the best of our knowledge, no governmental approval, which has not been obtained and is not in full force and effect, is required to authorize, or is required in connection with, the execution or delivery of the Agreement by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, or the enforceability of the Agreement against the Corporation and the Acquiring Fund.
ARTICLE VII
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT TO OBLIGATIONS OF THE CORPORATION AND THE ACQUIRING FUND
The obligations of the Acquiring Fund to consummate the transactions provided for herein shall be subject, at its election, to the performance by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, of all the obligations to be performed by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, pursuant to this Agreement on or before the Closing Date and, in addition, shall be subject to the following conditions:
7.1 All representations, covenants and warranties of the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, contained in this Agreement shall be true and correct in all material respects as of the date hereof and as of the Closing Date, with the same force and effect as if made on and as of the Closing Date.
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7.2 The Target Fund shall have delivered to the Acquiring Fund (1) a statement as of the Closing Date of the Target Fund’s Assets and Assumed Liabilities, in accordance with paragraph 5.2, and (2) a list of the Target Fund’s portfolio showing the tax costs of each of its assets by lot and the holding periods of such assets, as of the Closing Date, certified by the Treasurer of the Corporation.
7.3 Except to the extent prohibited by Rule 19b-1 under the 1940 Act, prior to the valuation of the Assets on the Closing Date, the Target Fund shall have declared a dividend or dividends, with a record and ex-dividend date prior to the valuation of the Assets, which, together with all previous dividends, shall have the effect of distributing to the Target Fund Shareholders all of its investment company taxable income for all taxable periods ending on or before the Closing Date (computed without regard to any deduction for dividends paid), if any, and all of its net capital gains realized in all taxable periods ending on or before the Closing Date (after reduction for any capital loss carry forward).
7.4 The Corporation shall have received on the Closing Date an opinion of Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, dated as of the Closing Date, in a form reasonably satisfactory to the Corporation and the Acquiring Fund, covering the following points with such assumptions, exceptions and limitations as are customary in opinions of this sort:
(a) The Corporation is registered as an open-end management investment company under the 1940 Act.
(b) Neither the execution, delivery nor performance by the Corporation of the Agreement nor the compliance by the Target Fund with the terms and provisions thereof will contravene any provision of applicable federal securities law of the United States of America.
(c) To the best of our knowledge, no governmental approval, which has not been obtained and is not in full force and effect, is required to authorize, or is required in connection with, the execution or delivery of the Agreement by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, or the enforceability of the Agreement against the Corporation and the Target Fund.
7.5 As of the Closing Date, there shall have been no material change in the investment objective, policies and restrictions nor any material increase in the investment management fees, fee levels payable pursuant to any shareholder servicing plan or agreement, other fees payable for services provided to the Target Fund, or sales loads of the Target Fund nor any material reduction in the fee waiver or expense reduction undertakings from those described in the N-14 Registration Statement.
ARTICLE VIII
FURTHER CONDITIONS PRECEDENT TO OBLIGATIONS OF EACH OF THE CORPORATION, THE ACQUIRING FUND AND THE TARGET FUND
If any of the conditions set forth below shall not have been satisfied on or before the Closing Date or shall not remain satisfied with respect to the Corporation, the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund, as applicable, shall, at its option, not be required to consummate the transactions contemplated by this Agreement; if any of the conditions set forth below shall not have been satisfied on or before the Closing Date or shall not remain satisfied with respect to the Target Fund, the Acquiring Fund shall, at its option, not be required to consummate the transactions contemplated by this Agreement with respect to the Target Fund:
8.1 This Agreement and the transactions contemplated herein, with respect to the Target Fund, shall have been approved by the requisite vote of the holders of the outstanding shares of the Target Fund in accordance with the provisions of the Corporation’s articles of incorporation and by-laws, applicable Maryland law and the 1940 Act. Evidence of such approval shall have been delivered to the Acquiring Fund, in such form as shall be reasonably acceptable to the Acquiring Fund. Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, none of the Corporation, the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund may waive the condition set forth in this paragraph 8.1.
8.2 The Commission shall not have issued an unfavorable report under Section 25(b) of the 1940 Act, or instituted any proceeding seeking to enjoin the consummation of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement under Section 25(c) of the 1940 Act.
8.3 All third party consents and all consents, orders and permits of federal, state and local regulatory authorities (including those of the Commission and of state securities authorities, including any necessary “no-action” positions and exemptive orders from such federal authorities) in each case required to permit consummation of the transactions
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contemplated herein shall have been obtained, except where failure to obtain any such consent, order or permit would not reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the assets or properties of the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund, provided that any party hereto may waive any such conditions for itself.
8.4 The N-14 Registration Statement shall have become effective under the 1933 Act, and no stop orders suspending the effectiveness thereof shall have been issued. To the best knowledge of the parties to this Agreement, no investigation or proceeding for that purpose shall have been instituted or be pending, threatened or contemplated under the 1933 Act. The registration statement of the Corporation, with respect to the Acquiring Fund, on Form N-1A under the 1940 Act covering the sale of shares of the Acquiring Fund shall be effective and no stop orders suspending the effectiveness thereof shall have been issued.
8.5 As of the Closing Date, there shall be no pending litigation brought by any person against the Corporation, the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund, or the Adviser, Trustees or officers of the foregoing, arising out of, or seeking to prevent completion of the transactions contemplated by, this Agreement. Furthermore, no action, suit or other proceeding shall be pending before any court or governmental agency in which it is sought to restrain or prohibit, or obtain damages or other relief in connection with, this Agreement or the transactions contemplated herein.
8.6 The Corporation shall have received an opinion of Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, special counsel to the Corporation, substantially to the effect that, based on certain facts, assumptions and representations of the parties, and upon certain certifications made by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, by the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund, and their respective authorized officers, for U.S. federal income tax purposes:
(a) the transfer to the Acquiring Fund of all of the Assets solely in exchange for Acquiring Fund Shares and the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of the Assumed Liabilities of the Target Fund followed by the distribution by the Target Fund of Acquiring Fund Shares to the Target Fund Shareholders in complete liquidation of the Target Fund, all pursuant to this Agreement, will constitute a “reorganization” within the meaning of Section 368(a) of the Code, and the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund will each be a “party to a reorganization” within the meaning of Section 368(b) of the Code;
(b) under Section 1032 of the Code, no gain or loss will be recognized by the Acquiring Fund upon the receipt of all of the Assets solely in exchange for Acquiring Fund Shares and the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of the Assumed Liabilities of the Target Fund;
(c) under Sections 361 and 357(a) of the Code, no gain or loss will be recognized by the Target Fund upon the transfer of the Assets to the Acquiring Fund solely in exchange for Acquiring Fund Shares and the assumption by the Acquiring Fund of the Assumed Liabilities or upon the distribution of Acquiring Fund Shares to the Target Fund Shareholders in exchange for such shareholders’ shares of the Target Fund in liquidation of the Target Fund except for any gain or loss that may be required to be recognized solely as a result of the close of the Target Fund’s taxable year due to the Reorganization;
(d) under Section 354 of the Code, no gain or loss will be recognized by the Target Fund Shareholders upon the exchange of their Target Fund shares solely for Acquiring Fund Shares in the Reorganization;
(e) under Section 358 of the Code, the aggregate basis of Acquiring Fund Shares received by each Target Fund Shareholder pursuant to the Reorganization will be the same as the aggregate basis of the Target Fund shares exchanged therefor by such shareholder;
(f) under Section 1223(1) of the Code, the holding period of Acquiring Fund Shares to be received by each Target Fund Shareholder pursuant to the Reorganization will include the holding period of the Target Fund shares exchanged therefor, provided that the Target Fund Shareholder held the Target Fund shares as capital assets at the time of the Reorganization;
(g) under Section 362(b) of the Code, the basis of each Asset transferred to the Acquiring Fund in the Reorganization will be the same in the hands of the Acquiring Fund as the basis of such Asset in the hands of the Target Fund immediately prior to the transfer; and
(h) under Section 1223(2) of the Code, the holding period of each of the Assets in the hands of the Acquiring Fund will include the holding period of each such Asset when held by the Target Fund.
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Such opinion shall be based on customary assumptions and such representations as Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP may reasonably request, and the Corporation, on behalf of each of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund, will cooperate to make and certify the accuracy of such representations. Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund, may not waive the condition set forth in this paragraph 8.6.
ARTICLE IX
EXPENSES
Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Agreement, the Adviser or its affiliates shall bear the direct and indirect expenses incurred by the Corporation, the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund, each in connection with the transactions contemplated by the provisions of this Agreement, including all direct and indirect expenses and out-of-pocket costs but not any transaction costs incurred pursuant to paragraph 1.2 hereof or any transaction costs incurred in connection with the sale of any of the Target Fund’s portfolio securities in connection with the Reorganization. Notwithstanding any of the foregoing, expenses will in any event be paid by the party directly incurring such expenses if and to the extent that the payment by another person of such expenses would result in the disqualification of such party as a “regulated investment company” within the meaning of Section 851 of the Code or would prevent the Reorganization from qualifying as a tax-free reorganization.
ARTICLE X
ENTIRE AGREEMENT; SURVIVAL OF WARRANTIES
10.1 No party has made to the other party any representation, warranty and/or covenant not set forth herein in connection with the subject matters covered hereby and this Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties with respect thereto.
10.2 The representations and warranties of the parties hereto set forth in this Agreement shall not survive the consummation of the transactions contemplated herein.
ARTICLE XI
TERMINATION
11.1 This Agreement may be terminated by the mutual agreement of the Corporation, on behalf of each of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund. In addition, the Corporation, on behalf of the Acquiring Fund and the Target Fund, may at its option terminate this Agreement at or before the Closing Date due to:
(a) a material breach of any representation, warranty or agreement contained herein to be performed at or before the Closing Date, if not cured within 30 days; or
(b) a condition herein expressed to be precedent to the obligations of the terminating party or both parties that has not been met if it reasonably appears that it will not or cannot be met.
11.2 In the event of any such termination, in the absence of willful default, there shall be no liability for damages on the part of the Corporation or the Board of Directors, or officers, to any other party. In the event of willful default, all remedies at law or in equity of the party adversely affected shall survive.
ARTICLE XII
AMENDMENTS
This Agreement may be amended, modified or supplemented in such manner as may be agreed upon in writing by the officers of the Corporation as specifically authorized by the Board of Directors; provided, however, that, following the meeting of the Target Fund Shareholders called by the Corporation, on behalf of the Target Fund, pursuant to paragraph 4.1(r) of this Agreement, no such amendment may have the effect of changing the provisions for determining the number of Acquiring Fund Shares to be issued to the Target Fund Shareholders under this Agreement to the detriment of the Target Fund Shareholders without their further approval.
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ARTICLE XIII
HEADINGS; COUNTERPARTS; GOVERNING LAW; ASSIGNMENT; LIMITATION OF LIABILITY
13.1 The article and paragraph headings contained in this Agreement are for reference purposes only and shall not affect in any way the meaning or interpretation of this Agreement.
13.2 This Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original.
13.3 This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Maryland.
13.4 This Agreement shall bind and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto and their respective successors and assigns, but, except as provided in this paragraph, no assignment or transfer hereof or of any rights or obligations hereunder shall be made by any party without the written consent of the other party. Nothing herein expressed or implied is intended or shall be construed to confer upon or give any person, firm or corporation, other than the parties hereto and their respective successors and assigns, any rights or remedies under or by reason of this Agreement.
ARTICLE XIV
NOTICES
Any notice, report, statement or demand required or permitted by any provisions of this Agreement shall be in writing and shall be deemed duly given if delivered by hand (including by FedEx or similar express courier) or transmitted by facsimile or three days after being mailed by prepaid registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund, 2919 Allen Parkway, Houston, Texas 77019, Attention: John Genoy, President, with a copy to SunAmerica Asset Management, LLC, Harborside 5, 185 Hudson Street, Suite 3300, Jersey City, NJ 07331, Attention: Gregory Bressler, General Counsel, or to any other address that the Acquiring Fund or the Target Fund shall have last designated by notice to the other party. Whenever any notice is required or permitted to be given by any provisions of this Agreement, a written waiver of such notice, signed by the party entitled to said notice, or a waiver by electronic transmission by the party entitled to said notice, shall be deemed equivalent to such required or permitted notice.
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have duly executed this Agreement, all as of the date first written above.
, on behalf of its series,
Fund
By: | | | | | ||
| | Name: | | | ||
| | Title: | | |
, on behalf of its series,
Fund
By: | | | | | ||
| | Name: | | | ||
| | Title: | | |
The Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company,
solely with respect to Article IX
By: | | | | | ||
| | Name: | | | ||
| | Title: | | |
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SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED NOVEMBER 20, 2020
VALIC COMPANY I
Core Equity Fund
Large Cap Core Fund
Systematic Core Fund
2919 Allen Parkway
Houston, Texas 77019
(800-445-7862)
PART B
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
[•], 2020
This Statement of Additional Information (the “SAI”) relates to the proposed reorganization (“Reorganization”) of each of the Core Equity Fund and the Large Cap Core Fund (each, a “Target Fund” and together, the “Target Funds”), each a series of VALIC Company I (“VC I”), into the Systematic Core Fund (the “Acquiring Fund” and together with the Target Funds, the “Funds” and each, a “Fund”), a series of VC I.
This SAI contains information which may be of interest to shareholders of each Target Fund relating to the applicable Reorganization, but which is not included in the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement dated [•] (the “Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement”). As described in the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement, each Reorganization would involve the transfer of all of the assets and liabilities of the relevant Target Fund in exchange for shares of the Acquiring Fund. Each Target Fund will distribute the Acquiring Fund shares it receives to its shareholders in complete liquidation of the Target Fund.
This SAI is not a prospectus, and should be read in conjunction with the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement. The Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement has been filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), and is available upon request and without charge by writing to the Acquiring Fund, c/o VALIC Company I, 2919 Allen Parkway, Houston, Texas 77019 or by calling 800.445.7862.
Capitalized terms used in this SAI and not otherwise defined herein have the meanings given them in the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement.
For each Fund: Incorporated by reference is the Statement of Additional Information for VC I in the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of VC I dated October 1, 2020, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
For each Fund, this SAI incorporates by reference the Annual Report of VC I with respect to each Fund for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2020, which has been filed with the SEC. The Annual Report contains historical financial information regarding the Funds. The financial statements and the report of the independent registered public accounting firm in the Annual Report of VC I with respect to each Fund (filed via EDGAR on August 7, 2020, Accession No. 0001193125-20-212746) are incorporated herein by reference.
The information under this section is intended to comply with the requirements for voluntary early adoption of Rule 6-11 under Regulation S-X. Rule 6-11(d)(2) requires that, with respect to any fund acquisition, registered investment companies must provide certain supplemental financial information in lieu of pro forma financial statements required by Regulation S-X. For this reason, pro forma financial statements of the Acquiring Fund are not included in this SAI.
A table showing the fees of the Acquiring Fund and each Target Fund, and the fees and expenses of the Acquiring Fund on a pro forma basis after giving effect to the proposed Reorganizations, is included in the section entitled “Summary – Fees and Expenses” of the Combined Prospectus/Proxy Statement.
Each Reorganization will not result in a material change to a Target Fund’s investment portfolio due to the investment restrictions of the Acquiring Fund. As a result, a schedule of investments of each Target Fund modified to show the effects of the change is not required and is not included. Notwithstanding the foregoing, changes may be made to a Target Fund’s portfolio in advance of the Reorganization and/or the Acquiring Portfolio’s portfolio following the Reorganization.
There are no material differences in accounting policies of the Target Funds as compared to those of the Acquiring Fund.
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PART C
OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 15. INDEMNIFICATION
Article IX of the Registrant’s Restated Articles
(a) The Corporation shall indemnify or advance any expenses to Directors and officers to the extent permitted or required by Section 2-418 of the Maryland General Corporation Law, provided, however, that the Corporation shall only be required to indemnify or advance expenses to any person pursuant to Section 2-418(j)(3) of the Maryland General Corporation Law to the extent specifically approved by resolution adopted by the Board of Directors.
(b) The indemnification provided hereunder shall continue as to a person who has ceased to be a Director or officer, and shall inure to the benefit of the heirs, executors and administrators of such a person.
(c) Nothing contained in this Article shall be construed to protect any Director or officer of the Corporation against any liability to the Corporation or its security holders to which he would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duties involved in the conduct of his office (“Disabling Conduct”). The means for determining whether indemnification shall be made shall be (i) a final decision on the merits by a court or other body before whom the proceeding was brought that the person to be indemnified (“Indemnitee”) was not liable by reason of Disabling Conduct, or (ii) in the absence of such a decision, a reasonable determination, based upon a review of the facts, that the Indemnitee was not liable by reason of Disabling Conduct, by (a) the vote of a majority of a quorum of Directors who are neither “interested persons” of the Corporation nor parties to the proceeding (“Disinterested Non-Party Directors”), or (b) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.
(d) Nothing contained in this Article shall be construed to permit the advancement of legal expenses for the defense of a proceeding brought by the Corporation or its security holders against a Director or officer of the Corporation unless an undertaking is furnished by or on behalf of the Indemnitee to repay the advance unless it is ultimately determined that he is entitled to indemnification, and the Indemnitee complies with at least one of the following conditions: (i) the Indemnitee shall provide a security for his undertaking, (ii) the Corporation shall be insured against losses arising by reason of any lawful advances, or (iii) a majority of a quorum of the Disinterested Non-Party Directors, or an independent legal counsel in a written opinion, shall determine, based on a review of readily available facts (as opposed to a full trial-type inquiry), that there is reason to believe that the Indemnitee ultimately will be found entitled to indemnification.
Article XI of the Registrant’s By-laws
To the maximum extent permitted by Maryland law in effect from time to time, the Corporation shall indemnify and, without requiring a preliminary determination of the ultimate entitlement to indemnification, shall pay or reimburse reasonable expenses in advance of final disposition of a proceeding to (a) any individual who is a present or former Director or officer of the Corporation and who is made or threatened to be made a party to the proceeding by reason of his or her service in that capacity or (b) any individual who, while a Director or officer of the Corporation and at the request of the Corporation, serves or has served as a Director, officer, partner, trustee, member or manager of another corporation, real estate investment trust, limited liability company, partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other enterprise and who is made or threatened to be made a party to the proceeding by reason of his or her service in that capacity. The rights to indemnification and advance of expenses provided by the charter of the Corporation and these Bylaws shall vest immediately upon election of a Director or officer. The Corporation may, with the approval of its Board of Directors, provide such indemnification and advance for expenses to an individual who served a predecessor of the Corporation in any of the capacities described in (a) or (b) above and to any employee or agent of the Corporation or a predecessor of the Corporation. Any indemnification or advance of expenses made pursuant to this Article XI shall be subject to applicable requirements of the Investment Company Act and of the charter of the Corporation. The indemnification and payment or reimbursement of expenses provided in these Bylaws shall not be deemed exclusive of or limit in any way other rights to which any person seeking indemnification or payment or reimbursement of expenses may be or may become entitled under any bylaw, resolution, insurance, agreement or otherwise.
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Neither the amendment nor repeal of this Article XI, nor the adoption or amendment of any other provision of the charter of the Corporation or these Bylaws inconsistent with this Article XI, shall apply to or affect in any respect the applicability of the preceding paragraph with respect to any act or failure to act which occurred prior to such amendment, repeal or adoption.
Registrant has purchased and maintains liability insurance on behalf of any officer, director, employee or agent against any liabilities arising from such status. In this regard, Registrant maintains a Directors’ & Officers’ Professional Liability Insurance Policy of $50 million in the aggregate.
Section 3 of the Investment Advisory Agreement (the “Agreement”) between the Registrant and VALIC provides that VALIC shall not be liable to the Registrant, or to any shareholder of the Registrant, for any act or omission in rendering services under the Agreement, or for any losses sustained in the purchase, holding or sale of any portfolio security, so long as there has been no willful misfeasance, bad faith, negligence or reckless disregard of obligations or duties on the part of VALIC.
ITEM 16. EXHIBITS
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| | (w) | | | | | |||
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| | (ee) | | | | | Form of Articles of Amendment to the Articles of Incorporation, effective September 28, 2016. Incorporated herein by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 74 to the Registrant’s Form N-1A registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on September 23, 2016 (File No. 2-83631). | ||
| | (ff) | | | | | |||
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ITEM 17. UNDERTAKINGS
(1) The undersigned registrant agrees that prior to any public reoffering of the securities registered through the use of a prospectus which is a part of this registration statement by any person or party who is deemed to be an underwriter within the meaning of Rule 145(c) of the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.145c], the reoffering prospectus will contain the information called for by the applicable registration form for the reofferings by persons who may be deemed underwriters, in addition to the information called for by the other items of the applicable form.
(2) The undersigned registrant agrees that every prospectus that is filed under paragraph (1) above will be filed as a part of an amendment to the registration statement and will not be used until the amendment is effective, and that, in determining any liability under the 1933 Act, each post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement for the securities offered therein, and the offering of the securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering of them.
(3) The undersigned registrant agrees to file, by post-effective amendment, an opinion of counsel supporting the tax consequences of the reorganizations within a reasonably prompt time after receipt of such opinion.
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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been signed on behalf of the Registrant, in the City of Jersey City and State of New Jersey, on the 20th day of November, 2020.
| | VALIC Company I, on behalf of Systematic Core Fund | ||||
| | | | |||
| | By: | | | /s/ John T. Genoy | |
| | | | John T. Genoy President |
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
Signature | | | Title | | | Date | |||
| | | | | |||||
/s/ John T. Genoy | | | President (Principal Executive Officer) | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
John T. Genoy | | ||||||||
| | | | | | ||||
/s/ Gregory R. Kingston | | | Treasurer (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer) | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Gregory R. Kingston | | ||||||||
| | | | | | ||||
* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Thomas J. Brown | | ||||||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Yvonne Montgomery Curl | | | | | |||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Judith Craven | | ||||||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Timothy J. Ebner | | ||||||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Gustavo E. Gonzales, Jr. | | ||||||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Peter A. Harbeck | | ||||||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Kenneth J. Lavery | | ||||||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
Eric S. Levy | | ||||||||
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* | | | Director | | | November 20, 2020 | |||
John E. Maupin, Jr. | | ||||||||
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*By: | | | /s/ Christopher J. Tafone | | | | | November 20, 2020 | |
| | Christopher J. Tafone Attorney-in-Fact | | | | |