Position of the United Trust Trustee part 2

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Trust Funds | 5 Comments »

The power is to direct the investment of the capital in such investments as the testatrix’s son may from time to time direct. Upon the language of the power as a whole, in my judgment, provided he acts in good faith, [the son] is entitled to give directions to the trustees to realise any investments constituting the trust fund which they from time to time may hold. In my judgment, upon the language of the clause, the trustees are bound to comply with those directions save that they are to satisfy themselves, the shares not being shares in which there is a free and open market, that the price which they pay for them is a reasonable and proper price at the time they make the purchase. Read the rest of this entry »

Statutory Position of Authorized Unit Trusts

Posted on May 21st, 2008 in Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

Section 84 of the Financial Services Act 1984 provides:

Any provision of the trust deed of an authorised unit trust scheme shall be void in so far as it would have the effect of exempting the manager or trustee from liability for any failure to exercise due care and diligence in the discharge of his functions in respect of the scheme.

This section only applies to authorized unit trusts. Exemption clauses in non-authorized unit trusts are not affected. Read the rest of this entry »

Unit Trust Delegation Must Know part C & D

Posted on May 16th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 5 Comments »

C. Mandatory Delegation

This covers the situation where the unit trust deed directs the appointment of agents or delegates in certain circumstances and the trustee or the manager is given no discretion. In some offshore unit trusts, the appointment of a custodian or investment adviser in certain markets or abroad may be made mandatory by the trust deed. Sometimes, an investment adviser’s contract may have been entered into prior to units being offered to the public. Thus, a property manager may have been appointed for a property trust. It is also very common for advisers to be appointed for futures and options funds, country funds, and trusts of specialized sectors. Read the rest of this entry »

Unit Trust Delegation Must Know part B

Posted on May 15th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

B. Permissive Delegation

This covers the situation where the trustee or the manager is given the discretion to delegate all or some of the duties and powers to a third party if it so wishes. In this sense, delegation permitted in equity or under the Trustee Act 1925 is permissive in nature.

For an authorized unit trust, the position is governed by regulation 7.15 of the Financial Services (Regulated Schemes) Regulations 1991. In general, subject to two broader categories of restrictions, and also subject to any restriction in the trust deed, both the trustee and the manager are permitted to delegate any of their functions to any person, including the trustee and the manager themselves. The delegation permitted by this regulation is not confined to ministerial acts but extends to any discretion. Read the rest of this entry »

Unit Trust Delegation Must Know part A

Posted on May 15th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

A. Delegation Without Express Provisions

(1) The Trustee

The contractual nature of the unit trust means that there are matters in which the trustee and the manager have interests as contracting parties. Thus, the distinction drawn by the law between beneficial and fiduciary powers is important. In relation to beneficial powers, the trustee can delegate without express authorization in the unit trust deed. I For fiduciary powers, the trustee will be in the same position as the trustees of private trusts. Read the rest of this entry »

Residual Management Powers of the Trustee

Posted on May 14th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

It is established that the powers of the manager are not delegated powers derived from the trustee; the manager is a primary source of authority, having been responsible for the set up of the unit trust. However, despite this stated position, it is submitted that the trustee has reserve powers incidental to its status as a trustee by reason of its legal ownership of the properties and equity’s imposition of duties on such an owner. The position appears to be that if the manager cannot find authority for a particular act in the express or implied powers of the unit trust deed, the manager cannot do the act. The unit trust deed is the source of the manager’s authority. Read the rest of this entry »

The Rights of a Unitholder in Underlying Assets (the first proposition) (B) continue…

Posted on May 12th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

Shortly after Charles was decided by the High Court of Australia, another fixed investment trust was the subject of taxation proceedings. This time, it was before the Supreme Court of Canada in MNR v. TransCanada Investment Corporation Ltd. The trust was a typical fixed investment trust. Under the trust deed, an administrator (i.e. the manager) was to purchase a fixed number of predetermined shares of common stock of companies to constitute a trust unit. Upon all the shares of underlying companies of a unit being vested in the trustee, the trustee would issue shares of a trust unit. Each share of a trust unit represented an undivided equal interest in the unit. Read the rest of this entry »

The Rights of a Unitholder in Underlying Assets (the first proposition) (B)

Posted on May 12th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

B. Baker v. Archer-Shee in Unit Trusts

So far, the position is this. With regard to the number of beneficiaries, the effect of Nelson v. Adamson and New Zealand Insurance Co. Ltd. v. CPD is that Baker is not limited to trusts with one beneficiary and the existence of a number of beneficiaries, whether in successionor concurrently, does not affect their respective claims to proprietary interests in the subject matter of a trust. Ironically, the expansive application of Baker was achieved in New Zealand Insurance only at the price of admitting that a beneficiary may not have a proprietary interest in the trust assets in some fixed trust situations, such as where the beneficial interest is ‘a specified sum to be provided out of an unidentified part of a body of assets‘. Read the rest of this entry »

The Nature of the Trust Corpus and the Rights in a Unit (B)

Posted on May 10th, 2008 in Small Cap Funds, Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

B. Rights in a Unit: A Preliminary Analysis and Three Propositions

A modern trust deed invariably provides that the trustee will hold the unit trust assets for the unitholders ‘on and subject to the terms and conditions of the trust deed‘ and in the case of an authorized unit trust, the regulations made under section 81 of the Financial Services Act 1986.It is always possible for the trust deed or the relevant regulations to contain hundreds of covenants or terms that may alter or add to the rights in the beneficial interests of the trust assets. With the varieties of unit trusts and the varieties of units in the market today, the significance of the qualifying statement ‘on and subject to the terms and conditions of the trust deed‘ may easily be overlooked. Read the rest of this entry »

The Nature of the Trust Corpus and the Rights in a Unit (A)

Posted on May 10th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

A. The Trust Corpus and the Cash Fund Concept

The trust is by nature a relationship fastened upon the properties of the trust. Considerable debate has been focused upon the rights of a beneficiary in the trust properties.5 In a private trust, the trust is a means of disposition of properties by way of gift. The trust corpus in the private trust, even when the settlor is one of the beneficiaries, is the subject matter of a gift. In this sense, the trust has a distributive character that makes use of equity’s recognition of a multiplicity of interests within a trust. A beneficiary’s interest is an interest in a gift. His interest is a matter of degree of ownership. If he is a beneficiary under a discretionary trust, he has nothing more than a right to be considered as a beneficiary. Read the rest of this entry »

Valuation, Pricing and Dealing - Dealing in The Shares or Units of The Fund with Investors

Posted on November 14th, 2007 in Mutual Funds, Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

Valuation

The value of a mutual fund depends on the prices or values of the underlying securities and other assets held by the fund. The manager must carry out regular valuations of the fund’s property, so that the prices at Which shares or units may be bought and sold can be calculated. Regulations usually prescribe how often Valuations must be performed. In the UK, for example, the required minimum frequency is twice each month The majority of funds are valued on a daily basis, but some managers prefer a weekly valuation, and some carry out more than one each day. Read the rest of this entry »

Mutual Funds’ Scheme Documents

Posted on November 12th, 2007 in Mutual Funds | 3 Comments »

For regulatory purposes, there are two essential scheme documents:

  1. the instrument of incorporation (if a company) or the trust deed (if a trust‘;
  2. the prospectus or offering document, also known in some jurisdictions as scheme particulars.

It is the instrument of incorporation that establishes the mutual fund, and a fund established as a company may well have a certificate of incorporation before it applies for authorisation. However, it cannot be offered to the public until it has an order of authorisation. Read the rest of this entry »

Mutual Funds Investors and Participants

Posted on November 11th, 2007 in Mutual Funds | 4 Comments »

Buying and selling

Although some funds are exchange-traded, the shares or units of most mutual funds are bought and sold by making an application to the manager. This can be in writing, by telephone or via the Internet, directly by the investor or by the investor’s adviser or agent. Many managers have pre-printed application and redemption forms and their advertisements and other promotional mailing material often include an application form. Once accepted by the manager, applications constitute a binding contract, and the manager issues a contract note stating the details of the transaction.

For purchases, payment can be included with the application. Some managers may insist on this for the initial investment of a first-time investor. Alternatively, the contract note will specify when payment is required. For large investments, the manager may be required by law to obtain confirmation of the investor’s identification and of the source or destination of money involved in the transaction: if there is any suspicion that the money is being laundered, or used to support terrorist activity, the suspicion must be reported to the authorities. Read the rest of this entry »

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