Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 2D— - INVESTMENT COMPANIES AND ADVISERS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - INVESTMENT COMPANIES › § 80a–60
Makes business development companies follow most of the same capital-structure rules that closed-end investment companies follow, but with some special limits. Normally a business development company must keep asset coverage of 200 percent. It can use 150 percent only if it completes several steps: within 5 business days it posts the approval and effective date in an SEC filing and on its website; each required periodic filing shows how much senior debt it has and the asset-coverage percentage and says the lower coverage was approved and when it takes effect; if it issues common stock, its periodic filings must also tell shareholders the amount of senior securities, the related coverage ratios, and the main risks from those senior securities; and the company must approve the change either by a board vote of the required majority to take effect one year later or by a shareholder vote with more than 50 percent of votes cast to take effect the next day. If the company is not listed on an exchange, shareholders as of the approval date must be given a chance to sell their shares, with 25 percent of those shares repurchased in each of the four calendar quarters after the quarter of approval. A business development company may issue more than one class of senior debt. It may issue warrants, options, or rights under limits: they must expire within ten years, usually not be transferable, have an exercise or conversion price at or above market value (or net asset value if no market), and be authorized by shareholders and approved by the board. Special rules let the company grant such awards as part of executive compensation if extra conditions are met (nontransferable except by gift or inheritance, limits on adviser fees, and no profit-sharing plan). Guarantees of another company’s debt count toward senior securities as the maximum possible liability minus the borrower’s unencumbered asset value, except that a guarantee of a wholly owned small-business subsidiary licensed under the Small Business Investment Act is not treated as a senior security if that subsidiary’s debt was already counted as the company’s liability. The company must follow these rules as soon as it becomes subject to the related investment-company provisions.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 80a–60
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73