Common use of No Agency Cross Transactions Clause in Contracts

No Agency Cross Transactions. From time to time, the Adviser or brokers or dealers affiliated with it may find themselves in a position to buy for certain of their brokerage clients (each an “Account”) securities which the Adviser’s investment advisory clients wish to sell, and to sell for certain of their brokerage clients securities which advisory clients wish to buy. Where one of the parties is an advisory client, the Adviser or the affiliated broker or dealer cannot participate in this type of transaction (known as a cross transaction) on behalf of an advisory client and retain commissions from one or both parties to the transaction without the advisory client’s consent. This is because in a situation where the Adviser is making the investment decision (as opposed to a brokerage client who makes his own investment decisions), and the Adviser or an affiliate is receiving commissions from both sides of the transaction, there is a potential conflicting division of loyalties and responsibilities on the Adviser’s part regarding the advisory client. The SEC has adopted a rule under the Advisers Act which permits the Adviser or its affiliates to participate on behalf of an Account in agency cross transactions if the advisory client has given written consent in advance. Neither the Adviser nor its affiliates may participate in agency cross transactions involving an Account without the prior written consent of the Board of Directors, which consent the Board of Directors may give, withhold, delay or condition for any reason or no reason in its sole discretion.

Appears in 5 contracts

Samples: Investment Advisory Agreement (Princeton Capital Corp), Settlement Agreement (Princeton Capital Corp), Settlement Agreement (Capital Point Partners, L.P.)

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.