[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 122 (Tuesday, June 25, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29892-29903]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-13413]


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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. 34-86157; File No. SR-CboeBZX-2019-047]


Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of 
Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt BZX Rule 14.11(k) To Permit 
the Listing and Trading of Managed Portfolio Shares

June 19, 2019.
    Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 
(the ``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given 
that on June 6, 2019, Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc. (``Exchange'' or ``BZX'') 
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the 
proposed rule change as described in Items I, II, and III below, which 
Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The Commission is publishing 
this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change from 
interested persons.
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    \1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
    \2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance 
of the Proposed Rule Change

    The Exchange proposes a rule change to adopt BZX Rule 14.11(k) to 
permit the listing and trading of Managed Portfolio Shares, which are 
shares of actively managed exchange-traded funds for which the 
portfolio is disclosed in accordance with standard mutual fund 
disclosure rules.
    The text of the proposed rule change is also available on the 
Exchange's website (http://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/regulation/rule_filings/bzx/), at the Exchange's Office of the Secretary, and at 
the Commission's Public Reference Room.

II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and 
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change

    In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements 
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and 
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The 
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in 
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in 
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such 
statements.

A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and 
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change

1. Purpose
    The Exchange proposes to add new Rule 14.11(k) for the purpose of 
permitting the listing and trading, or trading pursuant to unlisted 
trading privileges, of Managed Portfolio Shares, which are securities 
issued by an actively managed open-end investment management 
company.\3\
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    \3\ A Managed Portfolio Share is a security that represents an 
interest in an investment company registered under the Investment 
Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C.80a-1) (``1940 Act'') organized as an 
open-end management investment company or similar entity that 
invests in a portfolio of securities selected by its investment 
adviser consistent with its investment objectives and policies. The 
basis of this proposal is an application for exemptive relief that 
was filed on April 4, 2019 (the ``Application'') and for which 
public notice was issued on April 8, 2019 (the ``Notice'') (File No. 
812-14405) and subsequent order granting certain exemptive relief to 
Precidian Funds LLC (``Precidian''); Precidian ETFs Trust and 
Precidian ETF Trust II; and Foreside Fund Services, LLC issued on 
May 20, 2019 (the ``Order'' and, collectively, with the Application 
and the Notice, the ``Exemptive Order''). The Order specifically 
notes that ``granting the requested exemptions is appropriate in and 
consistent with the public interest and consistent with the 
protection of investors and the purposes fairly intended by the 
policy and provisions of the Act. It is further found that the terms 
of the proposed transactions, including the consideration to be paid 
or received, are reasonable and fair and do not involve overreaching 
on the part of any person concerned, and that the proposed 
transactions are consistent with the policy of each registered 
investment company concerned and with the general purposes of the 
Act.'' See Investment Company Act Release Nos. 33440 and 33477.
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Proposed Listing Rules
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(1) provides that the Exchange will consider 
for trading, whether by listing or pursuant to unlisted trading 
privileges, Managed Portfolio Shares that meet the criteria of Rule 
14.11(k).
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2) provides that Rule 14.11(k) is applicable 
only to Managed Portfolio Shares and that, except to the extent 
inconsistent with Rule 14.11(k), or unless the context otherwise 
requires, the rules and procedures of the Exchange's Board of Directors 
shall be applicable to the trading on the Exchange of such securities. 
Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2) provides further that Managed Portfolio 
Shares are included within the definition of ``security'' or 
``securities''

[[Page 29893]]

as such terms are used in the Rules of the Exchange.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(A) provides that the Exchange will file 
separate proposals under Section 19(b) of the Act before the listing 
and trading of a series of Managed Portfolio Shares. For each series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares, a ``Verified Intraday Indicative Value'' will 
be disseminated in one second intervals during Regular Trading Hours. 
Such Verified Intraday Indicative Value is ``verified'' in that the 
Investment Company's pricing verification agent compares no fewer than 
two calculations of the intraday indicative value for the series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(B) provides that transactions in Managed 
Portfolio Shares will occur only during Regular Trading Hours.\4\
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    \4\ As defined in Rule 1.5(w), the term ``Regular Trading 
Hours'' means the time between 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time.
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    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(C) provides that the Exchange will 
implement and maintain written surveillance procedures for Managed 
Portfolio Shares. As part of these surveillance procedures, the 
Investment Company's investment adviser will make available daily to 
FINRA and the Exchange the portfolio holdings of each series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(D) provides that Authorized Participants 
(as defined in the Investment Company's Form N-1A filed with the SEC) 
creating or redeeming Managed Portfolio Shares will sign an agreement 
with an agent (``AP Representative'') to establish a confidential 
account for the benefit of such Authorized Participant (``AP'') that 
will deliver or receive all consideration to or from the issuer in a 
creation or redemption. An AP Representative may not disclose the 
consideration delivered or received in a creation or redemption.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(E) provides that, if the investment 
adviser to the Investment Company issuing Managed Portfolio Shares is 
registered as a broker-dealer or is affiliated with a broker-dealer, 
such investment adviser will erect and maintain a ``fire wall'' between 
the investment adviser and personnel of the broker-dealer or broker-
dealer affiliate, as applicable, with respect to access to information 
concerning the composition and/or changes to such Investment Company 
portfolio. Personnel who make decisions on the Investment Company's 
portfolio composition must be subject to procedures designed to prevent 
the use and dissemination of material nonpublic information regarding 
the applicable Investment Company portfolio.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(F) provides that, if an AP 
Representative, the custodian, pricing verification agent, reporting 
authority, distributor, or administrator for an Investment Company 
issuing Managed Portfolio Shares, or any other entity that has access 
to information concerning the composition, changes to such Investment 
Company's portfolio, and/or the consideration associated with creating 
or redeeming shares of a series of Managed Portfolio Shares, is 
registered as a broker-dealer or affiliated with a broker-dealer, such 
AP Representative, custodian, pricing verification agent reporting 
authority, distributor, or administrator or other entity will erect and 
maintain a ``fire wall'' between such AP Representative, custodian, 
pricing verification agent, reporting authority, distributor, 
administrator or other entity and personnel of the broker-dealer, 
broker-dealer affiliate, or the personnel who have knowledge of changes 
to the portfolio, as applicable, with respect to access to information 
concerning the composition and/or changes to such Investment Company 
portfolio. Personnel who have access to information regarding decisions 
on the Investment Company's portfolio composition and/or changes to the 
portfolio must be subject to procedures designed to prevent the use and 
dissemination of material nonpublic information regarding the 
applicable Investment Company portfolio.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(3)(A) defines the term ``Managed Portfolio 
Share'' as a security that (a) represents an interest in a registered 
investment company (``Investment Company'') organized as an open-end 
management investment company, that invests in a portfolio of 
securities selected by the Investment Company's investment adviser 
consistent with the Investment Company's investment objectives and 
policies; (b) is issued in a specified aggregate minimum number of 
shares equal to a Creation Unit, or multiples thereof, in return for a 
designated portfolio of securities (and/or an amount of cash) with a 
value equal to the next determined net asset value which the AP 
Representative will provide through a confidential account; and (c) 
when aggregated in the same specified aggregate number of shares equal 
to a Redemption Unit, or multiples thereof, may be redeemed at the 
request of an Authorized Participant (as defined in the Investment 
Company's Form N-1A filed with the SEC), which Authorized Participant 
will be paid through a confidential account established for its benefit 
a portfolio of securities and/or cash with a value equal to the next 
determined net asset value (``NAV'').\5\
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    \5\ For purposes of this filing, references to a series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares are referred to interchangeably as a series 
of Managed Portfolio Shares or as a ``Fund'' and shares of a series 
of Managed Portfolio Shares are generally referred to as the 
``Shares''.
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    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(3)(B) defines the term ``Verified Intraday 
Indicative Value'' (``VIIV'') as estimated indicative value of a 
Managed Portfolio Share based on all of the holdings of a series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares as of the close of business on the prior 
business day and, for corporate actions, based on the applicable 
holdings as of the opening of business on the current business day, 
priced and disseminated in one second intervals during Regular Trading 
Hours by the Reporting Authority. The Verified Intraday Indicative 
Value is monitored by an Investment Company's pricing verification 
agent responsible for processing Consolidated Tape best bid and offer 
quotation information into at least two ``Calculation Engines,'' each 
of which then calculates a separate intraday indicative value for 
comparison by the pricing verification agent based on the mid-point 
between the current NBB and NBO for the portfolio constituents of a 
series of Managed Portfolio Shares, one of which will be deemed by the 
Investment Company's investment adviser as the Primary Intraday 
Indicative Value and the other the Secondary Intraday Indicative Value. 
The pricing verification agent will continuously compare the Primary 
Intraday Indicative Value against the Secondary Intraday Indicative 
Values to which the pricing verification agent has access. Where the 
pricing verification agent has verified the Primary Intraday Indicative 
Value as compared to the Secondary Intraday Indicative Value, the 
Primary Intraday Indicative Value will be used as the Verified Intraday 
Indicative Value and will be disseminated publicly during Regular 
Trading Hours for each series of Managed Portfolio Shares.\6\
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    \6\ Each Calculation Engine is a computer that receives data 
from a real-time quote feed, calculates a price for the securities 
in the portfolio, and aggregates the weights of the securities in 
the portfolio to produce an intra-day indicative value.
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    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(3)(C) defines the term ``Creation Unit'' as 
a specified minimum number of Managed Portfolio Shares issued by an 
Investment Company at the request of an AP in return for a designated 
portfolio of securities (and/or an amount of cash) specified each day 
consistent with the

[[Page 29894]]

Investment Company's investment objectives and policies.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(3)(D) defines the term ``Redemption Unit'' 
as a specified minimum number of Managed Portfolio Shares that may be 
redeemed to an Investment Company at the request of an AP in return for 
a portfolio of securities and/or cash.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(3)(E) defines the term ``Reporting 
Authority'' in respect of a particular series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares as the Exchange, the exchange that lists a particular series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares (if the Exchange is trading such series 
pursuant to unlisted trading privileges), an institution, or a 
reporting service designated by the issuer of a series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares as the official source for calculating and reporting 
information relating to such series, including, the NAV, the VIIV, or 
other information relating to the issuance, redemption or trading of 
Managed Portfolio Shares. A series of Managed Portfolio Shares may have 
more than one Reporting Authority, each having different functions.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(3)(F) provides that the term ``Normal Market 
Conditions'' includes, but is not limited to, the absence of trading 
halts in the applicable financial markets generally; operational issues 
(e.g., systems failure) causing dissemination of inaccurate market 
information; or force majeure type events such as natural or manmade 
disaster, act of God, armed conflict, act of terrorism, riot or labor 
disruption or any similar intervening circumstance.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4) sets forth initial and continued listing 
criteria applicable to Managed Portfolio Shares. Proposed Rule 
14.11(k)(4)(A)(i) provides that, for each series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares, the Exchange will establish a minimum number of Managed 
Portfolio Shares required to be outstanding at the time of commencement 
of trading on the Exchange. In addition, proposed Rule 
14.11(k)(4)(A)(ii) provides that the Exchange will obtain a 
representation from the issuer of each series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares that the NAV per share for the series will be calculated daily 
and that the NAV will be made available to all market participants at 
the same time.\7\ Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(A)(iii) provides that all 
Managed Portfolio Shares shall have a stated investment objective, 
which shall be adhered to under normal market conditions.
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    \7\ Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(iii) provides that if the 
Exchange becomes aware that the NAV with respect to a series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares is not disseminated to all market 
participants at the same time, it will halt trading in such series 
until such time as the NAV is available to all market participants.
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    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B) provides that each series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares will be listed and traded subject to application of 
the following continued listing criteria. Proposed Rule 
14.11(k)(4)(B)(i) provides that the VIIV for Managed Portfolio Shares 
will be widely disseminated by the Reporting Authority and/or by one or 
more major market data vendors every second during Regular Trading 
Hours and will be disseminated to all market participants at the same 
time. Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(ii) provides that the Exchange will 
consider the suspension of trading in, and will commence delisting 
proceedings under Rule 14.12 for, a series of Managed Portfolio Shares 
under any of the following circumstances: (a) If, following the initial 
twelve-month period after commencement of trading on the Exchange of a 
series of Managed Portfolio Shares, there are fewer than 50 beneficial 
holders of the series of Managed Portfolio Shares; (b) if the value of 
the VIIV is no longer calculated or available to all market 
participants at the same time; (c) if the holdings of a series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares are not made available on a quarterly basis as 
required under the 1940 Act or are not made available to all market 
participants at the same time; (d) if the Investment Company issuing 
the Managed Portfolio Shares has failed to file any filings required by 
the Commission or if the Exchange is aware that the Investment Company 
is not in compliance with the conditions of any exemptive order or no-
action relief granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission to the 
Investment Company with respect to the series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares; (e) if any of the continued listing requirements set forth in 
Rule 14.11(k) are not continuously maintained; (f) if any of the 
applicable Continued Listing Representations for the issue of Managed 
Fund Shares are not continuously met; or (g) if such other event shall 
occur or condition exists which, in the opinion of the Exchange, makes 
further dealings on the Exchange inadvisable.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(iii) provides that, upon notification 
to the Exchange by the Investment Company or its agent that: (i) the 
intraday indicative values calculated by more than one Calculation 
Engines differ by more than 25 basis points for 60 seconds in 
connection with pricing of the Verified Intraday Indicative Value; (ii) 
the Verified Intraday Indicative Value of a series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares is not being calculated or disseminated in one-second intervals, 
as required; or (iii) 10% or more of a series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares' portfolio holdings have become subject to a trading halt or 
otherwise do not have readily available market quotations, the Exchange 
shall halt trading in the Managed Portfolio Shares as soon as 
practicable. Such halt in trading shall continue until the Investment 
Company or its agent notifies the Exchange that the intraday indicative 
values calculated by the Calculation Engines no longer differ by more 
than 25 basis points for 60 seconds, that the Verified Intraday 
Indicative Value is being calculated and disseminated as required, or 
that less than 10% of the portfolio holdings are subject to a trading 
halt or otherwise do not have readily available market quotations. The 
Investment Company or its agent shall be responsible for monitoring 
that the Verified Intraday Indicative Value is being priced and 
disseminated as required and whether the intraday indicative values to 
be calculated by more than one Calculation Engines differ by more than 
25 basis points for 60 seconds. In addition, if the Exchange becomes 
aware that the net asset value with respect to a series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares is not disseminated to all market participants at the 
same time, the holdings of a series of Managed Portfolio Shares are not 
made available on a quarterly basis as required under the 1940 Act, or 
such holdings are not made available to all market participants at the 
same time, it will halt trading in such series until such time as the 
net asset value or the holdings are available to all market 
participants.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(iv) provides that, upon termination of 
an Investment Company, the Exchange requires that Managed Portfolio 
Shares issued in connection with such entity be removed from Exchange 
listing.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(v) provides that voting rights shall 
be as set forth in the applicable Investment Company prospectus.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(5), which relates to limitation of Exchange 
liability, provides that neither the Exchange, the Reporting Authority, 
nor any agent of the Exchange shall have any liability for damages, 
claims, losses or expenses caused by any errors, omissions, or delays 
in calculating or disseminating any current portfolio value; the 
current value of the portfolio of securities required to be deposited 
to the open-end management investment company in connection with 
issuance of Managed Portfolio Shares; the VIIV; the amount of any 
dividend equivalent

[[Page 29895]]

payment or cash distribution to holders of Managed Portfolio Shares; 
NAV; or other information relating to the purchase, redemption, or 
trading of Managed Portfolio Shares, resulting from any negligent act 
or omission by the Exchange, the Reporting Authority or any agent of 
the Exchange, or any act, condition, or cause beyond the reasonable 
control of the Exchange, its agent, or the Reporting Authority, 
including, but not limited to, an act of God; fire; flood; 
extraordinary weather conditions; war; insurrection; riot; strike; 
accident; action of government; communications or power failure; 
equipment or software malfunction; or any error, omission, or delay in 
the reports of transactions in one or more underlying securities.
Key Features of Managed Portfolio Shares
    While funds issuing Managed Portfolio Shares will be actively-
managed and, to that extent, similar to Managed Fund Shares, Managed 
Portfolio Shares differ from Managed Fund Shares in the following 
important respects.\8\ First, in contrast to Managed Fund Shares, which 
are actively-managed funds listed and traded under Rule 14.11(i) \9\ 
and for which a ``Disclosed Portfolio'' is required to be disseminated 
at least once daily,\10\ the portfolio for a series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares will be disclosed quarterly in accordance with normal 
disclosure requirements otherwise applicable to open-end investment 
companies registered under the 1940 Act.\11\ The composition of the 
portfolio of a series of Managed Portfolio Shares would not be 
available at commencement of Exchange listing and/or trading. Second, 
in connection with the creation and redemption of shares in ``Creation 
Unit'' or ``Redemption Unit'' size (as described below), the delivery 
of any portfolio securities in kind will be effected through a 
``Confidential Account'' (as described below) for the benefit of the 
creating or redeeming AP (as described further below in ``Creation and 
Redemption of Shares'') without disclosing the identity of such 
securities to the AP.
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    \8\ The Exchange notes that these unique components of Managed 
Portfolio Shares were addressed in the Exemptive Order (specifically 
in the Application and Notice). Specifically, the Notice stated that 
the Commission ``believes that the alternative arbitrage mechanism 
proposed by Applicants can also work in an efficient manner to 
maintain an ActiveShares ETF's secondary market prices close to its 
NAV. The Commission recognizes, however, that the lack of full 
transparency may cause the ActiveShares ETFs to trade with spreads 
and premiums/discounts that are larger than those of comparable, 
fully transparent ETFs. Nonetheless, as long as arbitrage continues 
to keep the ActiveShares ETF's secondary market price and NAV close, 
and does so efficiently so that spreads remain narrow, the 
Commission believes that investors would benefit from the 
opportunity to invest in active strategies through a vehicle that 
offers the traditional benefits of ETFs.''
    \9\ The Commission approved a proposed rule change to adopt 
generic listing standards for Managed Fund Shares. See Securities 
Exchange Act Release No. 78396 (July 22, 2016), 81 FR 49698 (July 
28, 2016 (SR-BATS-2015-100) (order approving proposed rule change to 
amend Rule 14.11(i) to adopt generic listing standards for Managed 
Fund Shares).
    \10\ BZX Rule 14.11(i)(3)(B) defines the term ``Disclosed 
Portfolio'' as the identities and quantities of the securities and 
other assets held by the Investment Company that will form the basis 
for the Investment Company's calculation of NAV at the end of the 
business day. Rule 14.11(i)(4)(B)(ii)(a) requires that the Disclosed 
Portfolio will be disseminated at least once daily and will be made 
available to all market participants at the same time.
    \11\ A mutual fund is required to file with the Commission its 
complete portfolio schedules for the second and fourth fiscal 
quarters on Form N-CSR under the 1940 Act, and is required to file 
its complete portfolio schedules for the first and third fiscal 
quarters on Form N-Q under the 1940 Act, within 60 days of the end 
of the quarter. Form N-Q requires funds to file the same schedules 
of investments that are required in annual and semi-annual reports 
to shareholders. These forms are available to the public on the 
Commission's website at www.sec.gov.
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    For each series of Managed Portfolio Shares, an estimated value--
the VIIV--that reflects an estimated intraday value of a fund's 
portfolio will be disseminated. Specifically, the VIIV will be based 
upon all of a series' holdings as of the close of the prior business 
day and, for corporate actions, based on the applicable holdings as of 
the opening of business on the current business day, and will be widely 
disseminated by the Reporting Authority and/or one or more major market 
data vendors every second during Regular Trading Hours. The 
dissemination of the VIIV will allow investors to determine the 
estimated intra-day value of the underlying portfolio of a series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares and will provide a close estimate of that 
value throughout the trading day.
    The Exchange, after consulting with various Lead Market Makers 
(``LMMs'') \12\ that trade exchange-traded funds (``ETFs'') on the 
Exchange, believes that market makers will be able to make efficient 
and liquid markets priced near the VIIV as long as a VIIV is 
disseminated every second,\13\ and market makers employ market making 
techniques such as ``statistical arbitrage,'' including correlation 
hedging, beta hedging, and dispersion trading, which is currently used 
throughout the financial services industry, to make efficient markets 
in exchange-traded products.\14\ This ability should permit market 
makers to make efficient markets in an issue of Managed Portfolio 
Shares without precise knowledge of a fund's underlying portfolio.\15\
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    \12\ As defined in Exchange Rule 11.8(e)(1)(B), the term LMM 
means a Market Maker registered with the Exchange for a particular 
LMM Security that has committed to maintain Minimum Performance 
Standards in the LMM Security.
    \13\ The Exchange notes that the Commission reached the same 
conclusion in the Notice, specifically stating: ``The Commission 
believes that the alternative arbitrage mechanism proposed by 
Applicants can also work in an efficient manner to maintain an 
ActiveShares ETF's secondary market prices close to its NAV.'' See 
the Notice at 19.
    \14\ Statistical arbitrage enables a trader to construct an 
accurate proxy for another instrument, allowing it to hedge the 
other instrument or buy or sell the instrument when it is cheap or 
expensive in relation to the proxy. Statistical analysis permits 
traders to discover correlations based purely on trading data 
without regard to other fundamental drivers. These correlations are 
a function of differentials, over time, between one instrument or 
group of instruments and one or more other instruments. Once the 
nature of these price deviations have been quantified, a universe of 
securities is searched in an effort to, in the case of a hedging 
strategy, minimize the differential. Once a suitable hedging proxy 
has been identified, a trader can minimize portfolio risk by 
executing the hedging basket. The trader then can monitor the 
performance of this hedge throughout the trade period making 
correction where warranted. In the case of correlation hedging, the 
analysis seeks to find a proxy that matches the pricing behavior of 
a fund. In the case of beta hedging, the analysis seeks to determine 
the relationship between the price movement over time of a fund and 
that of another stock.
    Dispersion trading is a hedged strategy designed to take 
advantage of relative value differences in implied volatilities 
between an index and the component stocks of that index.
    \15\ APs that enter into their own separate Confidential 
Accounts shall have enough information to ensure that they are able 
to comply with applicable regulatory requirements. For example, for 
purposes of net capital requirements, the maximum Securities Haircut 
applicable to the securities in a Creation Basket, as determined 
under Rule 15c3-1, will be disclosed daily on each Fund's website.
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    To protect the identity and weightings of the portfolio holdings, a 
series of Managed Portfolio Shares would sell and redeem their shares 
in creation units to APs only through an unaffiliated broker-dealer 
acting on an agency basis, as further described below. As such, on each 
``Business Day'' (as defined below), before commencement of trading in 
Shares on the Exchange, each series of Managed Portfolio Shares will 
provide to an AP Representative of each AP the identities and 
quantities of portfolio securities that will form the basis for a 
Fund's calculation of NAV per Share at the end of the Business Day, as 
well as the names and quantities of the instruments comprising a 
``Creation Basket'' or the ``Redemption Instruments'' and the estimated 
``Balancing Amount'' (if any) (as described below), for that day (as 
further described below). This information will permit APs to purchase

[[Page 29896]]

``Creation Units'' or redeem ``Redemption Units'' through an in-kind 
transaction with a Fund, as described below.
    Using various trading methodologies such as statistical arbitrage, 
both APs and other market participants will be able to hedge exposures 
by trading correlative portfolios, securities or other proxy 
instruments, thereby enabling an arbitrage functionality throughout the 
trading day. For example, if an AP believes that Shares of a Fund are 
trading at a price that is higher than the value of its underlying 
portfolio based on the VIIV, the AP may sell Shares short and purchase 
securities that the AP believes will track the movements of a Fund's 
portfolio until the spread narrows and the AP executes offsetting 
orders or the AP enters an order with its AP Representative to create 
Fund Shares. Upon the completion of the Creation Unit, the AP will 
unwind its correlative hedge. Similarly, a non-AP market participant 
would be able to perform an identical function but, because it would 
not be able to create or redeem directly, would have to employ an AP to 
create or redeem Shares on its behalf.
    APs can engage in arbitrage by creating or redeeming Shares if the 
AP believes the Shares are overvalued or undervalued. As discussed 
above, the trading of a Fund's Shares and the creation or redemption of 
portfolio securities may bring the prices of a Fund's Shares and its 
portfolio assets closer together through market pressure.
    The AP Representative's execution of a Creation Unit in a 
Confidential Account,\16\ combined with the sale of Fund Shares in the 
secondary market by the AP, may create downward pressure on the price 
of Shares and/or upward pressure on the price of the portfolio 
securities, bringing the market price of Shares and the value of a 
Fund's portfolio securities closer together. Similarly, an AP could buy 
Shares and instruct the AP Representative to redeem Fund Shares and 
liquidate underlying portfolio securities in a Confidential Account. 
The AP's purchase of a Fund's Shares in the secondary market, combined 
with the liquidation of the portfolio securities from its Confidential 
Account by an AP Representative, may also create upward pressure on the 
price of Shares and/or downward pressure on the price of portfolio 
securities, driving the market price of Shares and the value of a 
Fund's portfolio securities closer together.
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    \16\ A Confidential Account is a restricted account owned by an 
AP and held at a broker-dealer who will act as an AP Representative 
(execution agent acting on agency basis) on their behalf. The 
restricted account will be established and governed via contract and 
used solely for creation and redemption activity, while protecting 
the confidentiality of the portfolio constituents. For reporting 
purposes, the books and records of the Confidential Account will be 
maintained by the AP Representative and provided to the appropriate 
regulatory agency as required. The Confidential Account will be 
liquidated daily, so that the account holds no positions at the end 
of day.
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    The Exchange understands that traders use statistical analysis to 
derive correlations between different sets of instruments to identify 
opportunities to buy or sell one set of instruments when it is 
mispriced relative to the others. For Managed Portfolio Shares, market 
makers may use the knowledge of a Fund's means of achieving its 
investment objective, as described in the applicable Fund registration 
statement (the ``Registration Statement''), to construct a hedging 
proxy for a Fund to manage a market maker's quoting risk in connection 
with trading Fund Shares. Market makers can then conduct statistical 
arbitrage between their hedging proxy (for example, the Russell 1000 
Index) and Shares of a Fund, buying and selling one against the other 
over the course of the trading day. They will evaluate how their proxy 
performed in comparison to the price of a Fund's Shares, and use that 
analysis as well as knowledge of risk metrics, such as volatility and 
turnover, to enhance their proxy calculation to make it a more 
efficient hedge.
    Market makers have indicated to the Exchange that there will be 
sufficient data to run a statistical analysis which will lead to 
spreads being tightened substantially around the VIIV. This is similar 
to certain other existing exchange traded products (for example, ETFs 
that invest in foreign securities that do not trade during U. S. 
trading hours), in which spreads may be generally wider in the early 
days of trading and then narrow as market makers gain more confidence 
in their real-time hedges.
Creations and Redemptions of Shares
    In connection with the creation and redemption of Creation Units 
and Redemption Units, the delivery or receipt of any portfolio 
securities in-kind will be required to be effected through a separate 
confidential brokerage account (i.e., a Confidential Account) with an 
AP Representative,\17\ which will be a bank or broker-dealer such as 
broker-dealer affiliates of JP Morgan Chase, State Street Bank and 
Trust, or Bank of New York Mellon, for the benefit of an AP.\18\ An AP 
must be a Depository Trust Company (``DTC'') Participant that has 
executed a ``Participant Agreement'' with the applicable distributor 
(the ``Distributor'') with respect to the creation and redemption of 
Creation Units and Redemption Units and formed a Confidential Account 
for its benefit in accordance with the terms of the Participant 
Agreement. For purposes of creations or redemptions, all transactions 
will be effected through the respective AP's Confidential Account, for 
the benefit of the AP without disclosing the identity of such 
securities to the AP.
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    \17\ Each AP shall enter into its own separate Confidential 
Account with an AP Representative.
    \18\ In the event that an AP Representative is a bank, the bank 
will be required to have an affiliated broker-dealer to accommodate 
the execution of hedging transactions on behalf of the holder of a 
Confidential Account.
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    Each AP Representative will be given, before the commencement of 
trading each Business Day (defined below), the ``Creation Basket'' (as 
described below) for that day. This information will permit an AP that 
has established a Confidential Account with an AP Representative, to 
instruct the AP Representative to buy and sell positions in the 
portfolio securities to permit creation and redemption of Creation 
Units and Redemption Units.
    In the case of a creation, the AP would enter into an irrevocable 
creation order with a Fund and then direct the AP Representative to 
purchase the necessary basket of portfolio securities. The AP 
Representative would then purchase the necessary securities in the 
Confidential Account. In purchasing the necessary securities, the AP 
Representative would be required, by the terms of the Confidential 
Account Agreement, to obfuscate the purchase by use of tactics such as 
breaking the purchase into multiple purchases and transacting in 
multiple marketplaces. Once the necessary basket of securities has been 
acquired, the purchased securities held in the Confidential Account 
would be contributed in-kind to the applicable Fund.
    The Funds will offer and redeem Creation Units and Redemption Units 
on a continuous basis at the NAV per Share next determined after 
receipt of an order in proper form. The NAV per Share of each Fund will 
be determined as of the close of regular trading each business day. 
Funds will sell and redeem Creation Units and Redemption Units only on 
Business Days.
    In order to keep costs low and permit Funds to be as fully invested 
as possible, Shares will be purchased and redeemed in Creation Units 
and Redemption Units and generally on an

[[Page 29897]]

in-kind basis. Accordingly, except where the purchase or redemption 
will include cash under the circumstances described in the Registration 
Statement, APs will be required to purchase Creation Units by making an 
in-kind deposit of specified instruments (``Deposit Instruments''), and 
APs redeeming their Shares will receive an in-kind transfer of 
specified instruments (``Redemption Instruments'') through the AP 
Representative in their Confidential Account.\19\ On any given Business 
Day, the names and quantities of the instruments that constitute the 
Deposit Instruments and the names and quantities of the instruments 
that constitute the Redemption Instruments will be identical, and these 
instruments may be referred to, in the case of either a purchase or a 
redemption, as the ``Creation Basket.''
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    \19\ Funds must comply with the federal securities laws in 
accepting Deposit Instruments and satisfying redemptions with 
Redemption Instruments, including that the Deposit Instruments and 
Redemption Instruments are sold in transactions that would be exempt 
from registration under the 1933 Act.
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    As noted above, each AP will be required to establish a 
Confidential Account with an AP Representative and transact with each 
Fund through that Confidential Account.\20\ Therefore, before the 
commencement of trading on each Business Day, the AP Representative of 
each AP will be provided, on a confidential basis and at the same time 
as other AP Representatives, with a list of the names and quantities of 
the instruments comprising a Creation Basket, as well as the estimated 
Balancing Amount (if any), for that day. The published Creation Basket 
will apply until a new Creation Basket is announced on the following 
Business Day, and there will be no intra-day changes to the Creation 
Basket except to correct errors in the published Creation Basket. The 
instruments and cash that the purchaser is required to deliver in 
exchange for the Creation Units it is purchasing are referred to as the 
``Portfolio Deposit.''
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    \20\ Transacting through a Confidential Account is designed to 
be very similar to transacting through any broker-dealer account, 
except that the AP Representative will be bound to keep the names 
and weights of the portfolio securities confidential. Each service 
provider that has access to the identity and weightings of 
securities in a Fund's Creation Basket or portfolio securities, such 
as a Fund's Custodian or pricing verification agent, shall be 
restricted contractually from disclosing that information to any 
other person, or using that information for any purpose other than 
providing services to the Fund. To comply with certain recordkeeping 
requirements applicable to APs, the AP Representative will maintain 
and preserve, and make available to the Commission, certain required 
records related to the securities held in the Confidential Account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    APs will enter into an agreement with an AP Representative to open 
a Confidential Account, for the benefit of the AP. The AP 
Representative will serve as an agent between a Fund and each AP and 
act as a broker-dealer on behalf of the AP. Each day, the Custodian 
(defined below) will transmit the applicable Fund constituent file to 
each AP Representative and, acting on execution instructions from the 
AP,\21\ the AP Representative may purchase or sell the securities 
currently held in a Fund's portfolio for purposes of effecting in-kind 
creation and redemption activity during the day.\22\
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    \21\ An AP will issue execution instructions to the AP 
Representative and be responsible for all associated profit or 
losses. Like a traditional ETF, the AP has the ability to sell the 
basket securities at any point during Regular Trading Hours.
    \22\ Each Fund will identify one or more entities to enter into 
a contractual arrangement with the Fund to serve as an AP 
Representative. In selecting entities to serve as AP 
Representatives, a Fund will obtain representations from the entity 
related to the confidentiality of the Fund's Creation Basket and 
portfolio securities, the effectiveness of information barriers, and 
the adequacy of insider trading policies and procedures. In 
addition, as a broker-dealer, Section 15(g) of the Act requires the 
AP Representative to establish, maintain, and enforce written 
policies and procedures reasonably designed to prevent the misuse of 
material, nonpublic information by the AP Representative or any 
person associated with the AP Representative.
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    Other market participants will not have the ability to create or 
redeem shares directly with a Fund. Rather, if other market 
participants wish to create or redeem Shares in a Fund, it will have to 
do so through an AP.
Placement of Purchase Orders
    Each Fund will issue Shares through the Distributor on a continuous 
basis at NAV. The Exchange represents that the issuance of Shares will 
operate in a manner substantially similar to that of other ETFs. Each 
Fund will issue Shares only at the NAV per Share next determined after 
an order in proper form is received.
    The Distributor will furnish acknowledgements to those placing 
orders that the orders have been accepted, but the Distributor may 
reject any order which is not submitted in proper form, as described in 
a Fund's prospectus or Statement of Additional Information (``SAI''). 
The NAV of each Fund is expected to be determined once each Business 
Day at a time determined by the Trust's Board of Directors (``Board''), 
currently anticipated to be as of the close of the regular trading 
session on the NYSE (ordinarily 4:00 p.m. E.T.) (the ``Valuation 
Time''). Each Fund will establish a cut-off time (``Order Cut-Off 
Time'') for purchase orders in proper form. To initiate a purchase of 
Shares, an AP must submit to the Distributor an irrevocable order to 
purchase such Shares after the most recent prior Valuation Time.
    Purchases of Shares will be settled in-kind and/or cash for an 
amount equal to the applicable NAV per Share purchased plus applicable 
``Transaction Fees,'' as discussed below.
    Generally, all orders to purchase Creation Units must be received 
by the Distributor no later than the end of Regular Trading Hours on 
the date such order is placed (``Transmittal Date'') in order for the 
purchaser to receive the NAV per Share determined on the Transmittal 
Date. In the case of custom orders made in connection with creations or 
redemptions in whole or in part in cash, the order must be received by 
the Distributor, no later than the Order Cut-Off Time.\23\ The 
Distributor will maintain a record of Creation Unit purchases and will 
send out confirmations of such purchases upon receipt.\24\
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    \23\ A ``custom order'' is any purchase or redemption of Shares 
made in whole or in part on a cash basis, as provided in the 
Registration Statement.
    \24\ An AP Representative will provide information related to 
creations and redemption of Creation Units and Redemption Units to 
the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (``FINRA'') upon 
request.
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Purchases of Shares--Secondary Market
    Only APs will be able to acquire Shares at NAV directly from a Fund 
through the Distributor. The required payment must be transferred in 
the manner set forth in a Fund's SAI by the specified time on the 
Transmittal Date. These investors and others will also be able to 
purchase Shares in secondary market transactions at prevailing market 
prices.
Redemption
    Beneficial Owners may sell their Shares in the secondary market. 
Alternatively, investors that own enough Shares to constitute a 
Redemption Unit or multiples thereof may redeem those Shares through 
the Distributor, which will act as the Trust's representative for 
redemption. The size of a Redemption Unit will be subject to change. 
Redemption orders for Redemption Units or multiples thereof must be 
placed by or through an AP.
Authorized Participant Redemption
    The Shares may be redeemed to a Fund in Redemption Unit size or 
multiples thereof as described below. Redemption orders of Redemption 
Units must be placed by or through an AP (``AP Redemption Order''). 
Each Fund will establish an Order Cut-Off Time for redemption orders of 
Redemption Units

[[Page 29898]]

in proper form. Redemption Units of a Fund will be redeemable at their 
NAV per Share next determined after receipt of a request for redemption 
by the Trust in the manner specified below before the Order Cut-Off 
Time. To initiate an AP Redemption Order, an AP must submit to the 
Distributor an irrevocable order to redeem such Redemption Unit after 
the most recent prior Valuation Time but not later than the Order Cut-
Off Time.
    In the case of a redemption, the AP would enter into an irrevocable 
redemption order, and then instruct the AP Representative to sell the 
underlying basket of securities that it will receive in the redemption. 
As with the purchase of securities, the AP Representative would be 
required to obfuscate the sale of the portfolio securities it will 
receive as redemption proceeds using similar tactics.
    Consistent with the provisions of Section 22(e) of the 1940 Act and 
Rule 22e-2 thereunder, the right to redeem will not be suspended, nor 
payment upon redemption delayed, except for: (1) Any period during 
which the Exchange is closed other than customary weekend and holiday 
closings, (2) any period during which trading on the Exchange is 
restricted, (3) any period during which an emergency exists as a result 
of which disposal by a Fund of securities owned by it is not reasonably 
practicable or it is not reasonably practicable for a Fund to determine 
its NAV, and (4) for such other periods as the Commission may by order 
permit for the protection of shareholders.
    It is expected that redemptions will occur primarily in-kind, 
although redemption payments may also be made partly or wholly in cash. 
The Participant Agreement signed by each AP will require establishment 
of a Confidential Account to receive distributions of securities in-
kind upon redemption.\25\ Each AP will be required to open a 
Confidential Account with an AP Representative in order to facilitate 
orderly processing of redemptions.
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    \25\ The terms of each Confidential Account will be set forth as 
an exhibit to the applicable Participant Agreement, which will be 
signed by each AP. The terms of the Confidential Account will 
provide that the trust be formed under applicable state laws; the 
custodian may act as AP Representative of the Confidential Account; 
and the AP Representative will be paid by the AP a fee negotiated 
directly between the APs and the AP Representative(s).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    After receipt of a Redemption Order, a Fund's custodian 
(``Custodian'') will typically deliver securities to the Confidential 
Account with a value approximately equal to the value of the Shares 
\26\ tendered for redemption at the Cut-Off time. The Custodian will 
make delivery of the securities by appropriate entries on its books and 
records transferring ownership of the securities to the AP's 
Confidential Account, subject to delivery of the Shares redeemed. The 
AP Representative of the Confidential Account will in turn liquidate 
the securities based on instructions from the AP.\27\ The AP 
Representative will pay the liquidation proceeds net of expenses plus 
or minus any cash balancing amount to the AP through DTC.\28\ The 
redemption securities that the Confidential Account receives are 
expected to mirror the portfolio holdings of a Fund pro rata. To the 
extent a Fund distributes portfolio securities through an in-kind 
distribution to more than one Confidential Account for the benefit of 
the accounts' respective APs, each Fund expects to distribute a pro 
rata portion of the portfolio securities selected for distribution to 
each redeeming AP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ If the NAV of the Shares redeemed differs from the value of 
the securities delivered to the applicable Confidential Account, the 
applicable Fund will receive or pay a cash balancing amount to 
compensate for the difference between the value of the securities 
delivered and the NAV.
    \27\ An AP will issue execution instructions to the AP 
Representative and be responsible for all associated profit or 
losses. Like a traditional ETF, the AP has the ability to sell the 
basket securities at any point during Regular Trading Hours.
    \28\ Under applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, 
the AP is expected to be deemed a ``substantial owner'' of the 
Confidential Account because it receives distributions from the 
Confidential Account. As a result, all income, gain or loss realized 
by the Confidential Account will be directly attributed to the AP. 
In a redemption, the AP will have a basis in the distributed 
securities equal to the fair market value at the time of the 
distribution and any gain or loss realized on the sale of those 
Shares will be taxable income to the AP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    If the AP would receive a security that it is restricted from 
receiving, for example if the AP is engaged in a distribution of the 
security, a Fund will deliver cash equal to the value of that security. 
APs and non-AP market participants will provide the AP Representative 
with a list of restricted securities applicable to the AP or non-AP 
market participants on a daily basis, and a Fund will substitute cash 
for those securities in the applicable Confidential Account.
    To address odd lots, fractional shares, tradeable sizes or other 
situations where dividing securities is not practical or possible, the 
adviser may make minor adjustments to the pro rata portion of portfolio 
securities selected for distribution to each redeeming AP on such 
Business Day.
    The Trust will accept a Redemption Order in proper form. A 
Redemption Order is subject to acceptance by the Trust and must be 
preceded or accompanied by an irrevocable commitment to deliver the 
requisite number of Shares. At the time of settlement, an AP will 
initiate a delivery of the Shares plus or minus any cash balancing 
amounts, and less the expenses of liquidation.
Pricing Calculations
    According to the Notice, the pricing verification agent, on behalf 
of each Fund, will utilize two separate calculation engines to 
calculate intra-day indicative values (``Calculation Engines''), based 
on the mid-point between the current national best bid and offer 
disseminated by the Consolidated Quotation System (``CQS'') and 
Unlisted Trading Privileges Plan Securities Information Processor,\29\ 
to provide the estimated real-time value on a per Share basis of each 
Fund's holdings every second during the Exchange's Regular Trading 
Hours.\30\ The Custodian will provide, on a daily basis, the identities 
and quantities of portfolio securities that will form the basis for the 
applicable Fund's calculation of NAV at the end of the Business 
Day,\31\ plus any cash in the portfolio, to the pricing verification 
agent for purposes of calculating the VIIV.\32\
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    \29\ According to the Exemptive Order, all Commission-registered 
exchanges and market centers send their trades and quotes to a 
central consolidator where the Consolidated Tape System (CTS) and 
CQS data streams are produced and distributed worldwide. See https://www.ctaplan.com/index. Although there is only one source of market 
quotations, each Calculation Engine will receive the data directly 
and calculate an indicative value separately and independently from 
each other Calculation Engine.
    \30\ Dissemination of VIIV at one second intervals (as compared 
to every fifteen seconds for existing ETFs) helps to strike a 
balance between providing all investors with useable information at 
a rate that can be processed by retail investors, does not provide 
so much information so as to allow market participants to accurately 
determine the constituents, and their weightings, of the portfolio, 
can be accurately calculated and disseminated, and still provides 
professional traders with per second data.
    \31\ Trades made on the prior Business Day (T) will be booked 
and reflected in the NAV on the current Business Day (T+1). Thus, 
the VIIV calculated throughout the day will be based on the same 
portfolio as is used to calculate the NAV on that day.
    \32\ The Commission opined in the Notice that Precidian has 
addressed the concerns previously noted by the Commission with 
respect to reliance on the typical 15-second intraday indicative 
value for arbitrage purposes, by creating a VIIV that: (i) would be 
calculated and disseminated every second; and (ii) has precise and 
uniform parameters for calculation across all Funds, including that 
the Funds and their respective adviser take responsibility for its 
calculation. The Notice additionally highlights that arbitrage is 
further facilitated and those concerns are addressed because each 
Fund also will only invest in certain securities that trade on a 
U.S. exchange, contemporaneously with the Fund's Shares. Because the 
securities are exchange traded, Precidian asserted that the AP 
Representative would be able to promptly buy or sell the basket 
securities that it exchanges with the Funds on behalf of an AP upon 
receiving an order to enter into a creation or redemption 
transaction. The portfolio holdings' secondary market, moreover, 
would provide reliable price inputs for the VIIV calculation.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 29899]]

    According to the Notice, it is anticipated that each Calculation 
Engine could be using some combination of different hardware, software 
and communications platforms to process the CQS data. Different 
hardware platforms' operating systems could be receiving and 
calculating the CQS data inputs differently, potentially resulting in 
one Calculation Engine processing the indicative value in a different 
time slice than another Calculation Engine's system, thus processing 
values in different sequences. The processing differences between 
different Calculation Engines will most likely be in the sub-second 
range. Consequently, the frequency of occurrence of out of sequence 
values among different Calculation Engines due to differences in 
operating system environments should be minimal. Other factors that 
could result in sequencing that is not uniform among the different 
Calculation Engines are message gapping, internal system software 
design, and how the CQS data is transmitted to the Calculation Engine. 
While the expectation is that the Primary Intraday Indicative Value and 
Secondary Intraday Indicative Value will generally match, having dual 
streams of redundant data that must be compared by the pricing 
verification agent will provide an additional check that the resulting 
VIIV is accurate.
    According to the Notice, each Fund's Board has a responsibility to 
oversee the process of calculating an accurate VIIV and to make an 
affirmative determination, at least annually, that the procedures used 
to calculate the VIIV and maintain its accuracy are, in its reasonable 
business judgment, appropriate. These procedures and their continued 
effectiveness will be subject to the ongoing oversight of each Fund's 
chief compliance officer. The specific methodology for calculating the 
VIIV will be disclosed on each Fund's website. While each Fund will 
oversee the calculation of the VIIV, a Fund will utilize at two 
Calculation Engines.
Availability of Information
    As noted above, a mutual fund is required to file with the 
Commission its complete portfolio schedules for the second and fourth 
fiscal quarters on Form N-CSR under the 1940 Act, and is required to 
file its complete portfolio schedules for the first and third fiscal 
quarters on Form N-Q under the 1940 Act, within 60 days of the end of 
the quarter. Form N-Q requires funds to file the same schedules of 
investments that are required in annual and semi-annual reports to 
shareholders. The Trust's SAI and each Fund's shareholder reports will 
be available free upon request from the Trust. These documents and 
forms may be viewed on-screen or downloaded from the Commission's 
website at www.sec.gov.
    Information regarding market price and trading volume of the Shares 
will be continually available on a real-time basis throughout the day 
on brokers' computer screens and other electronic services. Information 
regarding the previous day's closing price and trading volume 
information for the Shares will be published daily in the financial 
section of newspapers. Quotation and last sale information for the 
Shares will be available via the Consolidated Tape Association 
(``CTA'') high-speed line. In addition, the VIIV, as defined in 
proposed Rule 14.11(k)(3)(B) and as described further below, will be 
widely disseminated by the Reporting Authority and/or one or more major 
market data vendors every second during Regular Trading Hours.
Dissemination of the VIIV
    The VIIV, which is approximate value of each Fund's investments on 
a per Share basis, will be disseminated every second during Regular 
Trading Hours. The VIIV should not be viewed as a ``real-time'' update 
of NAV because the VIIV may not be calculated in the same manner as 
NAV, which is computed once per day.
    The VIIV for each Fund will be disseminated by the Reporting 
Authority and/or one or more major market data vendors in one-second 
intervals during Regular Trading Hours. Each Fund will adopt procedures 
governing the calculation of the VIIV. For purposes of the VIIV, 
securities held by a Fund will be valued throughout the day based on 
the mid-point between the disseminated current national best bid and 
offer. If the adviser for a Fund determines that the mid-point of the 
bid/ask spread is inaccurate, a Fund will use fair value pricing based 
on the procedures described above. That fair value pricing will be 
carried over to the next day's VIIV until the first trade in that stock 
is reported unless the adviser deems a particular portfolio security to 
be illiquid and/or the available ongoing pricing information unlikely 
to be reliable. In such case, that fact will be disclosed as soon as 
practicable on each Fund's website, including the identity and 
weighting of that security in a Fund's portfolio, and the impact of 
that security on VIIV calculation, including the fair value price for 
that security being used for the calculation of that day's VIIV.
    By utilizing the mid-point pricing for purposes of VIIV 
calculation, stale prices are eliminated and more accurate 
representation of the real time value of the underlying securities is 
provided to the market. Specifically, quotations based on the mid-point 
of bid/ask spreads more accurately reflect current market sentiment by 
providing real time information on where market participants are 
willing to buy or sell securities at that point in time. Using 
quotations rather than last sale information addresses concerns 
regarding the staleness of pricing information of less actively traded 
securities. Because quotations are updated more frequently than last 
sale information especially for inactive securities, the VIIV will be 
based on more current and accurate information. The use of quotations 
will also dampen the impact of any momentary spikes in the price of a 
portfolio security.
    The pricing verification agent will continuously compare the 
Primary Intraday Indicative Value against a non-public Secondary 
Intraday Indicative Value to which the pricing verification agent has 
access. Where the pricing verification agent has verified the Primary 
Intraday Indicative Value as compared to the Secondary Intraday 
Indicative Value, the Primary Intraday Indicative Value will be used as 
the Verified Intraday Indicative Value and will be disseminated 
publicly during Regular Trading Hours for each series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares. Upon notification to the Exchange by the issuer of a 
series of Managed Portfolio Shares or its agent that the Primary 
Intraday Indicative Value and the Secondary Intraday Indicative Value 
differ by more than 25 basis points for 60 seconds, the Exchange will 
halt trading as soon as practicable in a Fund until the discrepancy is 
resolved.\33\ Each Fund's Board will review the procedures used to 
calculate the VIIV and maintain its accuracy as appropriate, but not 
less than annually. The specific methodology for

[[Page 29900]]

calculating the VIIV will be disclosed on each Fund's website.
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    \33\ Any small divergence of less than 25 basis points would be 
lower than the average bid/ask spread for actively managed ETFs, and 
relatively immaterial to the overall indicative value. A continuous 
deviation for sixty seconds could indicate an error in the feed or 
in a Calculation Engine.
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Trading Rules
    The Exchange deems the Shares to be equity securities, thus 
rendering trading in the Shares subject to the Exchange's existing 
rules governing the trading of equity securities. Shares will trade on 
the Exchange only during Regular Trading Hours as provided in proposed 
Rule 14.11(k)(2)(B). As provided in BZX Rule 11.11(a), the minimum 
price variation for quoting and entry of orders in securities traded on 
the Exchange is $0.01, with the exception of securities that are priced 
less than $1.00, for which the minimum price variation for order entry 
is $0.0001.
Surveillance
    The Exchange believes that its surveillance procedures are adequate 
to properly monitor the trading of Managed Portfolio Shares on the 
Exchange during all trading sessions and to deter and detect violations 
of Exchange rules and the applicable federal securities laws. Trading 
of Managed Portfolio Shares through the Exchange will be subject to the 
Exchange's surveillance procedures for derivative products, including 
Managed Portfolio Shares. The Exchange will require the issuer of each 
series of Managed Portfolio Shares listed on the Exchange to represent 
to the Exchange that it will advise the Exchange of any failure by a 
Fund to comply with the continued listing requirements, and, pursuant 
to its obligations under Section 19(g)(1) of the Exchange Act, the 
Exchange will surveil for compliance with the continued listing 
requirements. If a Fund is not in compliance with the applicable 
listing requirements, the Exchange will commence delisting procedures 
under Exchange Rule 14.12.
    In addition, the Exchange also has a general policy prohibiting the 
distribution of material, non-public information by its employees.
Information Circular
    Prior to the commencement of trading of a series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares, the Exchange will inform its members in an 
Information Circular (``Circular'') of the special characteristics and 
risks associated with trading the Shares. Specifically, the Circular 
will discuss the following: (1) The procedures for purchases and 
redemptions of Shares; (2) BZX Rule 3.7, which imposes suitability 
obligations on Exchange members with respect to recommending 
transactions in the Shares to customers; (3) how information regarding 
the VIIV is disseminated; (4) the requirement that members deliver a 
prospectus to investors purchasing newly issued Shares prior to or 
concurrently with the confirmation of a transaction; (5) trading 
information; and (6) that the portfolio holdings of the Shares are not 
disclosed on a daily basis.
    In addition, the Circular will reference that Funds are subject to 
various fees and expenses described in the Registration Statement. The 
Circular will discuss any exemptive, no-action, and interpretive relief 
granted by the Commission from any rules under the Act. The Circular 
will also disclose that the NAV for the Shares will be calculated after 
4:00 p.m., E.T. each trading day.
2. Statutory Basis
    The Exchange believes that the proposal is consistent with Section 
6(b) of the Act \34\ in general and Section 6(b)(5) of the Act \35\ in 
particular in that it is designed to prevent fraudulent and 
manipulative acts and practices, to promote just and equitable 
principles of trade, to remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism 
of a free and open market and a national market system, and, in 
general, to protect investors and the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ 15 U.S.C. 78f.
    \35\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Exchange believes that proposed Rule 14.11(k) is designed to 
prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices in that the 
proposed rules relating to listing and trading of Managed Portfolio 
Shares provide specific initial and continued listing criteria required 
to be met by such securities. Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4) sets forth 
initial and continued listing criteria applicable to Managed Portfolio 
Shares. Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(A)(i) provides that, for each series 
of Managed Portfolio Shares, the Exchange will establish a minimum 
number of Managed Portfolio Shares required to be outstanding at the 
time of commencement of trading on the Exchange. In addition, proposed 
Rule 14.11(k)(4)(A)(ii) provides that the Exchange will obtain a 
representation from the issuer of each series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares that the NAV per share for the series will be calculated daily 
and that the NAV will be made available to all market participants at 
the same time.\36\ Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(A)(iii) provides that all 
Managed Portfolio Shares shall have a stated investment objective, 
which shall be adhered to under normal market conditions.
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    \36\ Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(iii) provides that if the 
Exchange becomes aware that the NAV with respect to a series of 
Managed Portfolio Shares is not disseminated to all market 
participants at the same time, it will halt trading in such series 
until such time as the NAV is available to all market participants.
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    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B) provides that each series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares will be listed and traded subject to application of 
the specified continued listing criteria, as described above. Proposed 
Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(i) provides that the VIIV for Managed Portfolio 
Shares will be widely disseminated by the Reporting Authority and/or 
one or more major market data vendors every second during Regular 
Trading Hours. Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(ii) provides that the 
Exchange will consider the suspension of trading in, and will commence 
delisting proceedings under Rule 14.12 for, a series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares under any of the following circumstances: (a) If, 
following the initial twelve-month period after commencement of trading 
on the Exchange of a series of Managed Portfolio Shares, there are 
fewer than 50 beneficial holders of the series of Managed Portfolio 
Shares; (b) if the value of the Verified Intraday Indicative Value is 
no longer calculated or available to all market participants at the 
same time; (c) if the holdings of a series of Managed Portfolio Shares 
are not made available on a quarterly basis as required under the 1940 
Act or are not made available to all market participants at the same 
time; (d) if the Investment Company issuing the Managed Portfolio 
Shares has failed to file any filings required by the Securities and 
Exchange Commission or if the Exchange is aware that the Investment 
Company is not in compliance with the conditions of any exemptive order 
or no-action relief granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission 
to the Investment Company with respect to the series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares; (e) if any of the continued listing requirements set 
forth in Rule 14.11(k) are not continuously maintained; (f) if any of 
the applicable Continued Listing Representations for the issue of 
Managed Fund Shares are not continuously met; or (g) if such other 
event shall occur or condition exists which, in the opinion of the 
Exchange, makes further dealings on the Exchange inadvisable. Proposed 
Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(iii) provides that, upon notification to the 
Exchange by the Investment Company or its agent that (i) the Primary 
Intraday Indicative Value and Secondary Intraday Indicative Value, to 
be compared by the applicable Investment Company's pricing verification 
agent, differ by more than

[[Page 29901]]

25 basis points for 60 seconds in connection with pricing of the VIIV, 
or (ii) that the VIIV of a series of Managed Portfolio Shares is not 
being calculated or disseminated in one-second intervals, as required, 
the Exchange shall halt trading in the Managed Portfolio Shares as soon 
as practicable. Such halt in trading shall continue until the 
Investment Company or its agent notifies the Exchange that the intraday 
indicative values no longer differ by more than 25 basis points for 60 
seconds or that the VIIV is being calculated and disseminated as 
required. Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(iv) provides that, upon 
termination of an Investment Company, the Exchange requires that 
Managed Portfolio Shares issued in connection with such entity be 
removed from Exchange listing. Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(4)(B)(v) provides 
that voting rights shall be as set forth in the applicable Investment 
Company prospectus.
    Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(E) provides that, if the investment 
adviser to the Investment Company issuing Managed Portfolio Shares is 
registered as a broker-dealer or is affiliated with a broker-dealer 
such investment adviser will erect and maintain a ``fire wall'' between 
the investment adviser and personnel of the broker-dealer or broker-
dealer affiliate, as applicable, with respect to access to information 
concerning the composition and/or changes to such Investment Company 
portfolio. Proposed Rule 14.11(k)(2)(F) provides that, if an AP 
Representative, the Custodian or pricing verification agent for an 
Investment Company issuing Managed Portfolio Shares, or any other 
entity that has access to information concerning the composition and/or 
changes to such Investment Company's portfolio, is registered as a 
broker-dealer or affiliated with a broker-dealer, such AP 
Representative, custodian, pricing verification agent or other entity 
will erect and maintain a ``fire wall'' between such AP Representative, 
custodian, pricing verification agent, or other entity and personnel of 
the broker- dealer or broker-dealer affiliate, as applicable, with 
respect to access to information concerning the composition and/or 
changes to such Investment Company portfolio. Personnel who make 
decisions on the Investment Company's portfolio composition must be 
subject to procedures designed to prevent the use and dissemination of 
material nonpublic information regarding the applicable Investment 
Company portfolio.\37\
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    \37\ The Exchange notes that the Order dismissed concerns raised 
by a third party related to potential violation of Section 10(b) of 
the Act, stating that ``Contrary to the contentions advanced in the 
third-party submissions, the provision of the basket composition 
information to the AP Representative or use of that information by 
the AP Representative as provided for in the Application should not 
give rise to insider trading violations under section 10(b) of the 
Exchange Act.'' The notice goes on to say that ``an unaffiliated 
broker-dealer (``AP Representative'') acting as an agent of another 
broker-dealer (``AP'')will be given information concerning the 
identity and weightings of the basket of securities that the ETF 
would exchange for its shares (but not information concerning the 
issuers of those underlying securities). The AP Representative is 
provided this information by the ETF so that, pursuant to 
instructions received from an AP, the AP Representative may 
undertake the purchase or redemption of the ETF's Shares (in the 
form of creation units) and the purchase or sale of the basket of 
securities that are exchanged for creation units. The ETFs will 
provide this information to an AP Representative on a confidential 
basis, the AP Representative is subject to a duty of non-disclosure 
(which includes an obligation not to provide this information to an 
AP), and the AP Representative may not use the information in any 
way except to facilitate the operation of the ETF by purchasing or 
selling the basket of securities and to exchange it with the ETF to 
complete an AP's orders to purchase or redeem the ETF's 
Shares.6Furthermore, section 15(g) of the Exchange Act requires an 
AP Representative, as a registered broker, to establish, maintain, 
and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably designed to 
prevent the misuse of material nonpublic information by the AP 
Representative or any person associated with the AP 
Representative.'' The Order goes on to say ``For the foregoing 
reasons, it is found that granting the requested exemptions is 
appropriate in and consistent with the public interest and 
consistent with the protection of investors and the purposes fairly 
intended by the policy and provisions of the Act. It is further 
found that the terms of the proposed transactions, including the 
consideration to be paid or received, are reasonable and fair and do 
not involve overreaching on the part of any person concerned, and 
that the proposed transactions are consistent with the policy of 
each registered investment company concerned and with the general 
purposes of the Act.''
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    The Exchange, after consulting with various LMMs that trade ETFs on 
the Exchange, believes that market makers will be able to make 
efficient and liquid markets priced near the VIIV, as long as market 
makers have knowledge of a Fund's means of achieving its investment 
objective even without daily disclosure of a fund's underlying 
portfolio.\38\ The Exchange believes that market makers will employ 
risk-management techniques to make efficient markets in exchange traded 
products. This ability should permit market makers to make efficient 
markets in shares without knowledge of a fund's underlying portfolio.
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    \38\ The Exchange notes that the Commission reached the same 
conclusion in the Notice, specifically stating: ``The Commission 
believes that the alternative arbitrage mechanism proposed by 
Applicants can also work in an efficient manner to maintain an 
ActiveShares ETF's secondary market prices close to its NAV.'' See 
the Notice at 19.
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    The Exchange understands that traders use statistical analysis to 
derive correlations between different sets of instruments to identify 
opportunities to buy or sell one set of instruments when it is 
mispriced relative to the others. For Managed Portfolio Shares, market 
makers utilizing statistical arbitrage use the knowledge of a fund's 
means of achieving its investment objective, as described in the 
applicable fund registration statement, to construct a hedging proxy 
for a fund to manage a market maker's quoting risk in connection with 
trading fund shares. Market makers will then conduct statistical 
arbitrage between their hedging proxy (for example, the Russell 1000 
Index) and shares of a fund, buying and selling one against the other 
over the course of the trading day. Eventually, at the end of each day, 
they will evaluate how their proxy performed in comparison to the price 
of a fund's shares, and use that analysis as well as knowledge of risk 
metrics, such as volatility and turnover, to enhance their proxy 
calculation to make it a more efficient hedge.
    Market makers have indicated to the Exchange that there will be 
sufficient data to run a statistical analysis which will lead to 
spreads being tightened substantially around the VIIV. This is similar 
to certain other existing exchange traded products (for example, ETFs 
that invest in foreign securities that do not trade during U. S. 
trading hours), in which spreads may be generally wider in the early 
days of trading and then narrow as market makers gain more confidence 
in their real-time hedges.
    The LMMs also indicated that, as with some other new exchange- 
traded products, spreads would tend to narrow as market makers gain 
more confidence in the accuracy of their hedges and their ability to 
adjust these hedges in real-time relative to the published VIIV and 
gain an understanding of the applicable market risk metrics such as 
volatility and turnover, and as natural buyers and sellers enter the 
market. Other relevant factors cited by LMMs were that a fund's 
investment objectives are clearly disclosed in the applicable 
prospectus, the existence of quarterly portfolio disclosure and the 
ability to create shares in creation unit size or redeem in redemption 
unit size through an AP.
    The real-time dissemination of a Fund's VIIV together with the 
right of APs to create and redeem each day at the NAV will be 
sufficient for market participants to value and trade Shares in a 
manner that will not lead to

[[Page 29902]]

significant deviations between the shares' Bid/Ask Price and NAV.
    The pricing efficiency with respect to trading a series of Managed 
Portfolio Shares will generally rest on the ability of market 
participants to arbitrage between the Shares and a fund's portfolio, in 
addition to the ability of market participants to assess a fund's 
underlying value accurately enough throughout the trading day in order 
to hedge positions in shares effectively. Professional traders can buy 
Shares that they perceive to be trading at a price less than that which 
will be available at a subsequent time, and sell Shares they perceive 
to be trading at a price higher than that which will be available at a 
subsequent time. It is expected that, as part of their normal day-to-
day trading activity, market makers assigned to Shares by the Exchange, 
off-exchange market makers, firms that specialize in electronic 
trading, hedge funds and other professionals specializing in short-
term, non-fundamental trading strategies will assume the risk of being 
``long'' or ``short'' shares through such trading and will hedge such 
risk wholly or partly by simultaneously taking positions in correlated 
assets \39\ or by netting the exposure against other, offsetting 
trading positions--much as such firms do with existing ETFs and other 
equities. Disclosure of a fund's investment objective and principal 
investment strategies in its prospectus and SAI, along with the 
dissemination of the VIIV every second, should permit professional 
investors to engage easily in this type of hedging activity.\40\
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    \39\ Price correlation trading is used throughout the financial 
industry. It is used to discover both trading opportunities to be 
exploited, such as currency pairs and statistical arbitrage, as well 
as for risk mitigation such as dispersion trading and beta hedging. 
These correlations are a function of differentials, over time, 
between one or multiple securities pricing. Once the nature of these 
price deviations have been quantified, a universe of securities is 
searched in an effort to, in the case of a hedging strategy, 
minimize the differential. Once a suitable hedging basket has been 
identified, a trader can minimize portfolio risk by executing the 
hedging basket. The trader then can monitor the performance of this 
hedge throughout the trade period, making corrections where 
warranted.
    \40\ With respect to trading in the Shares, market participants 
would manage risk in a variety of ways. It is expected that market 
participants will be able to determine how to trade Shares at levels 
approximating the VIIV without taking undue risk by gaining 
experience with how various market factors (e.g., general market 
movements, sensitivity of the VIIV to intraday movements in interest 
rates or commodity prices, etc.) affect VIIV, and by finding hedges 
for their long or short positions in Shares using instruments 
correlated with such factors. Market participants will likely 
initially determine the VIIV's correlation to a major large 
capitalization equity benchmark with active derivative contracts, 
such as the Russell 1000 Index, and the degree of sensitivity of the 
VIIV to changes in that benchmark. For example, using hypothetical 
numbers for illustrative purposes, market participants should be 
able to determine quickly that price movements in the Russell 1000 
Index predict movements in a Fund's VIIV 95% of the time (an 
acceptably high correlation) but that the VIIV generally moves 
approximately half as much as the Russell 1000 Index with each price 
movement. This information is sufficient for market participants to 
construct a reasonable hedge--buy or sell an amount of futures, 
swaps or ETFs that track the Russell 1000 equal to half the opposite 
exposure taken with respect to Shares. Market participants will also 
continuously compare the intraday performance of their hedge to a 
Fund's VIIV. If the intraday performance of the hedge is correlated 
with the VIIV to the expected degree, market participants will feel 
comfortable they are appropriately hedged and can rely on the VIIV 
as appropriately indicative of a Fund's performance.
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    With respect to trading of the Shares, the ability of market 
participants to buy and sell Shares at prices near the VIIV is 
dependent upon their assessment that the VIIV is a reliable, indicative 
real-time value for a Fund's underlying holdings. Market participants 
are expected to accept the VIIV as a reliable, indicative real-time 
value because (1) the VIIV will be calculated and disseminated based on 
a Fund's actual portfolio holdings, (2) the securities in which a Fund 
plans to invest are generally highly liquid and actively traded and 
therefore generally have accurate real time pricing available, and (3) 
market participants will have a daily opportunity to evaluate whether 
the VIIV at or near the close of trading is indeed predictive of the 
actual NAV.\41\
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    \41\ The statements in the Statutory Basis section of this 
filing relating to pricing efficiency, arbitrage, and activities of 
market participants, including market makers and APs, are based on 
statements in the Exemptive Order, representations by Precidian, and 
review by the Exchange.
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    In a typical index-based ETF, it is standard for APs to know what 
securities must be delivered in a creation or will be received in a 
redemption. For Managed Portfolio Shares, however, APs do not need to 
know the securities comprising the portfolio of a Fund since creations 
and redemptions are handled through the Confidential Account mechanism. 
In-kind creations and redemptions through a Confidential Account are 
expected to preserve the integrity of the active investment strategy 
and reduce the potential for ``free riding'' or ``front-running,'' 
while still providing investors with the advantages of the ETF 
structure.
    The proposed rule change is designed to promote just and equitable 
principles of trade and to protect investors and the public interest in 
that the Exchange will obtain a representation from the issuer of an 
issue of Managed Portfolio Shares that the NAV per share of a fund will 
be calculated daily and that the NAV will be made available to all 
market participants at the same time. Investors can also obtain a 
fund's SAI, shareholder reports, and its Form N-CSR, Form N-Q and Form 
N-SAR. A fund's SAI and shareholder reports will be available free upon 
request from the applicable fund, and those documents and the Form N-
CSR, Form N-Q and Form N-SAR may be viewed on-screen or downloaded from 
the Commission's website. In addition, a large amount of information 
will be publicly available regarding the Funds and the Shares, thereby 
promoting market transparency. Quotation and last sale information for 
the Shares will be available via the CTA high-speed line. Information 
regarding the VIIV will be widely disseminated every second throughout 
Regular Trading Hours by the Reporting Authority and/or one or more 
major market data vendors. The website for each Fund will include a 
form of the prospectus for the Fund that may be downloaded, and 
additional data relating to NAV and other applicable quantitative 
information, updated on a daily basis. Moreover, prior to the 
commencement of trading, the Exchange will inform its members in a 
Circular of the special characteristics and risks associated with 
trading the Shares.
    The proposed rule change is designed to perfect the mechanism of a 
free and open market and, in general, to protect investors and the 
public interest in that it will facilitate the listing and trading of 
an additional type of actively-managed exchange-traded product that 
will enhance competition among market participants, to the benefit of 
investors and the marketplace. As noted above, the Exchange has in 
place surveillance procedures relating to trading in the Shares and may 
obtain information via ISG from other exchanges that are members of ISG 
or with which the Exchange has entered into a comprehensive 
surveillance sharing agreement. In addition, as noted above, investors 
will have ready access to information regarding the VIIV and quotation 
and last sale information for the Shares.
    For the above reasons, the Exchange believes that the proposed rule 
change is consistent with the requirements of Section 6(b)(5) of the 
Act.

B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition

    The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will 
impose any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate 
in furtherance of the purpose of the Act. The Exchange notes that the 
proposed rule change, rather will facilitate the listing and trading of 
additional actively-managed

[[Page 29903]]

exchange-traded products that will enhance competition among both 
market participants and listing venues, to the benefit of investors and 
the marketplace.

C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed 
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others

    The Exchange has neither solicited nor received written comments on 
the proposed rule change.

III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for 
Commission Action

    Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the 
Federal Register or within such longer period up to 90 days (i) as the 
Commission may designate if it finds such longer period to be 
appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to 
which the Exchange consents, the Commission will:
    A. By order approve or disapprove such proposed rule change, or
    B. institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule 
change should be disapproved.

IV. Solicitation of Comments

    Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and 
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule 
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of 
the following methods:

Electronic Comments

     Use the Commission's internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
     Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include 
File Number SR-CboeBZX-2019-047 on the subject line.

Paper Comments

     Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities 
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.

All submissions should refer to File Number SR-CboeBZX-2019-047. This 
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To 
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently, 
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on 
the Commission's internet website (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). 
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written 
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with 
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed 
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those 
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions 
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in 
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 
3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection 
and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All comments 
received will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are 
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying 
information from comment submissions. You should submit only 
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions 
should refer to File Number SR-CboeBZX-2019-047 and should be submitted 
on or before July 16, 2019.

    For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets, 
pursuant to delegated authority.\42\
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    \42\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Vanessa A. Countryman,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-13413 Filed 6-24-19; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 8011-01-P


