Morgan Keegan & Co., Inc. and Morgan Asset Management, Inc. v. Purdue Avenue Investors LP, Mary Ann Howard and Dana Howard, as Trustee of the Molly A. Howard Trust ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                   ACCEPTED
    05-15-00369-CV
    FIFTH COURT OF APPEALS
    DALLAS, TEXAS
    9/8/2015 6:10:20 PM
    LISA MATZ
    CLERK
    FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    DALLAS, TEXAS
    __________________________________              FILED IN
    5th COURT OF APPEALS
    DALLAS, TEXAS
    No. 05-15-00369-CV            9/8/2015 6:10:20 PM
    ______________________________              LISA MATZ
    Clerk
    MORGAN KEEGAN & CO., INC. MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT INC.,
    Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
    VS.
    PURDUE AVENUE INVESTORS LP, MARY ANN HOWARD AND DANA
    HOWARD, AS TRUSTEE OF THE MOLLY A HOWARD TRUST,
    Appellees/Cross-Appellants.
    __________________________________
    APPEAL FROM THE 101ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS
    Cause No. DC-09-14448
    ___________________________________
    APPENDIX SUPPORTING BRIEF FOR APPELLEES
    PART ONE OF THREE
    ____________________________________
    Braden W. Sparks
    S.B.N. 18874500
    8333 Douglas Avenue, Ste. 1000
    ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED             Dallas, TX 75225
    214.750.3372 – Tel.
    214.696-5971 -- Fax
    brady@sparkslaw.com
    Attorney for Appellees
    Page 1 of 181
    Tab    Title of Document                                         Date
    1    Plaintiffs’ First Amended Petition (excerpts) (CR 3288-
    3307)
    2    Overstated ABS – Understated MBS Chart (CR 4397-
    4400)
    3    Email dated July 23, 2014 from Peter Fruin to Brady
    Sparks regarding underlying prospectus (CR 4454)
    4    Defendants Request for Amended and Additional
    Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law (excerpts)
    (CR 8378, 8381-8382)
    5    Affidavit of Peter Fruin dated January 21, 2015 (CR
    8446-8447)
    6    2005 Annual Report (excerpts) (Jt. 13)
    7    Strategic Underwriting Agreement (excerpts) (Jt. 20)
    8    Strategic Administration Agreement (excerpts) (Jt. 22)
    9    Strategic Additional Compensation Agreement (Jt. 21)
    10   Advantage Underwriting Agreement (excerpts) (Jt. 23)
    11   Advantage Additional Compensation Agreement (Jt. 24)
    12   Advantage Administration Agreement (excerpts) (Jt. 25)
    13   Regions Morgan Keegan: The Abuse of Structured
    Finance, Craig McCann, PhD, CFA (excerpts) (Jt. 43)
    14   Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series
    2004-HE3 (excerpts) (Jt. 45)
    15   Corrected Order Making Findings And Imposing
    Remedial Sanctions And A Cease-And-Desist Order
    Pursuant To Section 15(B) Of The Securities Exchange
    Act Of 1934, Sections 203(E), 203(F) And 203(K) Of
    The Investment Advisers Act Of 1940, And Sections
    9(B) And 9(F) Of The Investment Company Act Of
    1940, And Imposing Suspension Pursuant To Section 4c
    Of The Securities Exchange Act Of 1934 And Rule
    102(E)(1)(Iii) Of The Commission’s Rules Of Practice
    (excerpts) (Pl. 12)
    16   Joint Notice of Intention to Revoke (excerpts) (Pl. 17)
    17   MBS Listed as ABS – 2005 Annual Report for RSF and
    RMA (Pl. 23)
    Page 22of 181
    18   Expert Report of Craig McCann, Phd, CFA, (excerpts)
    (Pl. 25)
    19   Curriculum Vitae of Craig McCann, PhD, CFA (Pl. 25a)
    20   Powerpoint Presentation of Craig McCann (Pl. 26)
    21   Organizational Chart (excerpts) (Pl. 54)
    22   Damage Analysis of Craig McCann, (excerpts) (Pl. 106)
    23   Trial Transcript, Vol. 5 (excerpts)
    24   Trial Transcript, Vol. 6 (excerpts)
    25   Trial Transcript, Vol. 7 (excerpts)
    26   1001 McKinney Ltd. v. Credit Suisse First Boston Mortg.
    Capital, 
    192 S.W.3d 20
    , 28 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
    Dist.] 2005, pet. denied).
    27   Aguilar v. Anderson, 
    855 S.W.2d 799
    , 801 (Tex.App.--El
    Paso 1993, writ denied).
    28   Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey, 
    488 U.S. 153
    , 
    109 S. Ct. 439
    , 448, 
    102 L. Ed. 2d 445
    (1988)
    29   Brown v. Am. Transfer & Storage Co., 
    601 S.W.2d 931
    ,
    936 (Tex. 1980), cert. denied, 
    449 U.S. 1015
    (1980)).
    30   Burrow v. Arce, 
    997 S.W.3d 229
    (Tex. 1999)
    31   Chapa v. Wells Fargo Brokerage Servs., LLC, 
    315 S.W.3d 109
    , 119 (Tex. App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 2010)
    32   Childs v. Haussecker, 
    974 S.W.2d 31
    , 44 (Tex. 1998));
    33   City of Brownsville v. Alvarado, 
    897 S.W.3d 750
    (Tex.
    1995)
    34   City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 827 (Tex. 2005).
    35   Darocy v. Abildtrup, 
    345 S.W.3d 129
    , 137 (Tex. App.-
    Dallas 2011, no pet.).
    36   Davis v. Jordan, 
    305 S.W.3d 895
    (Tex. App.—Amarillo,
    2010, pet. denied)
    37   Dow Chemical Co. v. Francis, 
    46 S.W.3d 237
    , 240 (Tex.
    2001).
    38   Downer v. Aquamarine Operators, Inc., 
    701 S.W.2d 238
    ,
    241-42 (Tex.1985).
    39   Duperier v. Tx. State Bank, 
    28 S.W.3d 740
    , 745 (Tex.
    App. – Corpus Christi 2000, pet. dism’d by agr.).
    40   Edgar v. K.L., 
    93 F.3d 256
    , 258-59 (7th Cir. 1996).
    Page 33of 181
    41   ERI Consulting Eng’rs, Inc. v. Swinnea, 
    318 S.W.3d 867
         (Tex. 2012)
    42   FDIC v. Lenk, 
    361 S.W.3d 602
    , 604 (Tex. 2012).
    43   Formosa Plastics Corp. USA v. Presidio Eng’rs &
    Contractors, Inc., 
    960 S.W.2d 41
    , 48 (Tex. 1998).
    44   Frank v. Bear, Stearns & Co., 
    11 S.W.3d 380
    , 384 (Tex.
    App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 2000, pet. denied)
    45   Galvan v. Downey, 
    933 S.W.2d 316
    , 321 (Tex. App.-
    Houston [14th Dist.] 1996, writ denied)
    46   Gee v. Liberty Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 
    765 S.W.2d 394
    ,
    396 (Tex. 1989)
    47   Gould v. American-Hawaiian S.S. Co., 
    535 F.2d 761
    , 780
    (3d Cir. 1976).
    48   Greil v. Geico, 
    184 F. Supp. 2d 541
    , 544-45 (N.D. Tex.
    2002
    49   Highland Capital Mgmt., L.P. v. Ryder Scott Co., 
    402 S.W.3d 719
    , 743 (Tex. App.-Houston 2012, no pet.).
    50   In re Blech Secs. Litig., No. 94 Civ. 7696, 2003 U.S. Dist.
    LEXIS 559, at *29 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 26, 2003).
    51   In re Enron Corp. Sec., Derivative & "ERISA'' Litig., 
    490 F. Supp. 2d 784
    (S.D. Tex. 2007)
    52   In re Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. Research Report Secs.
    Litig., 
    218 F.R.D. 76
    (S.D.N.Y. 2003)
    53   In re Tenet Healthcare Corp. Secs. Litig., No. 02-8426,
    
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 97821
    , at *9 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 5,
    2007)
    54   Intec Sys., Inc. v. Lowrey, 
    230 S.W.3d 913
    (Tex. App.—
    Dallas 2007, no pet.)
    55   Kniatt v. State, 
    239 S.W.3d 910
    , 920 (Tex. App.-Waco
    2007);
    56   Koral Industries, Inc. v. Security-Connecticut Life Ins.
    Co., 
    788 S.W.3d 136
    , 142 (Tex. App. – Dallas (holding
    failure to exercise due diligence is not a defense to fraud),
    writ denied, 
    802 S.W.2d 650
    (Tex. 1990) (per curiam).
    57   Lewis Constr., Inc. v. Harrison, 
    70 S.W.3d 778
    , 782 (Tex.
    2001).
    Page 44of 181
    58   Lipsky v. Commonwealth United Corp., 
    551 F.2d 887
    (2d
    Cir. 1976)
    59   Lozano v. State, 
    359 S.W.3d 790
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    2012, pet. ref’d)
    60   McCullough v. Scarbrough, Medlin & Associates, Inc.,
    
    435 S.W.3d 871
    (Tex. App. – Dallas 2014, pet. denied)
    61   McGuire v. Commercial Union Ins. Co. of New York,
    
    431 S.W.2d 347
    , 352 (Tex. 1968)
    62   Nairn v. Killeen Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    366 S.W.3d 229
    , 250
    (Tex. App.-El Paso 2012, no pet.)
    63   New Jersey Turnpike Authority v. PPG Indus., Inc., 
    197 F.3d 96
    (3rd Cir. 1999)
    64   Option Resource Group v. Chambers Development Co.,
    Inc., 
    967 F. Supp. 846
    (W.D. Pa. 1996)
    65   Ortiz v. Jones, 
    917 S.W.2d 770
    , 772 (Tex.1996).
    66   Pagare v. Pagare, 
    344 S.W.3d 575
    , 582 (Tex. App.-
    Dallas 2011)
    67   Rubinstein v. Collins, 
    20 F.3d 160
    , 167-68 (5th Cir.
    1994)).
    68   Santiagos v. Novastar Mortg., Inc., 
    443 S.W.3d 462
    , 472
    (Tex. App. -- Dallas 2014).
    69   SEC v. Pentagon Capital Mgmt. PLC, 
    722 F. Supp. 2d 440
         (S.D.N.Y. 2010)
    70   Service Corp. Intern. v. Guerra, 
    348 S.W.3d 221
    , 235
    (Tex. 2011).
    71   Sommers v. Concepcion, 
    20 S.W.3d 27
    , 43 (Tex. App.-
    Houston [14th Dist.] 2000);
    72   Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, 
    708 S.W.2d 432
    , 434 (Tex.
    1986)
    73   Sterling Trust Co. v. Adderley, 
    168 S.W.3d 835
    , 839
    (Tex. 2005) (
    74   Summers v. WellTech, Inc., 
    935 S.W.3d 228
    , 234 (Tex.
    App. – Houston [1st Dist.] 1996, no writ)
    Page 55of 181
    75   Tex. R. Evid. 803
    76   Texas Dept. of Pub. Safety v. Kaspar, 
    369 S.W.3d 172
           (Tex. 2012)
    77   Texas Dept. of Pub. Safety v. Todd, 05-13-01198-CV,
    
    2014 WL 2628139
    (Tex. App.—Dallas June 12, 2014,
    no pet.)
    78   Texas Dept. of Public Safety v. Caruana 
    363 S.W.3d 558
    ,
    559 (Tex. 2012). .
    79   Texas Dept. of Transp. v. Able, 
    35 S.W.3d 608
    (Tex.
    2000)
    80   Texas Securities Act, art. 581-33, TEX. REV. STAT. ANN.
    81   Venegas v. State, 2015 BL 19080 (Tex. App.-Dallas Jan.
    27, 2015)
    82   WordPerfect Corp. v. Financial Services Marketing
    Corp., 
    85 F.3d 619
    (1996) (unpublished opinion), 
    1996 WL 254830
    (5th Cir. 1996
    83   Yeldell v. Goren, 
    80 S.W.3d 634
    , 637 (Tex. App.-Dallas
    2002, no pet.)
    Respectfully submitted,
    BRADEN W. SPARKS, P.C.
    /s/ Braden W. Sparks
    Braden W. Sparks
    S.B.N 18874500
    8333 Douglas Avenue
    Suite 1000
    Dallas, TX 75225
    Page 66of 181
    (214)750-3372
    (214) 696-5971 Facsimile
    brady@sparkslaw.com
    SHEPHERD, SMITH, EDWARDS & KANTAS,
    L.L.P.
    /s/ Samuel B. Edwards
    Samuel B. Edwards
    Texas Bar No. 24031634
    California Bar No. 237500
    Michigan Bar No. P72583
    1010 Lamar, Suite 900
    Houston, TX 77002
    (713) 227-2400
    (713) 227-7215 Facsimile
    sedwards@sseklaw.com
    Attorneys for Appellees
    Page 77of 181
    Certificate of Service
    I certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing has been served on
    counsel for the parties to this appeal on this the 8th day of September, 2015.
    Kenneth C Johnston
    Kane Russell Coleman & Logan PC
    1601 Elm Street, Ste 3700
    Dallas, TX 75201
    214-777-4200                                         Via eservice, email
    214-777-4299 (fax)                                   and/or facsimile
    kjohnston@krcl.com
    Attorney for Cross-Appellee Morgan
    Keegan & Co., Inc.
    Peter S. Fruin
    Maynard Cooper & Gale, PC
    1901 Sixth Avenue North
    2400 Regions Harbert Plaza
    Birmingham, AL 35203
    205-254-1068                                         Via eservice, email
    205-254-1999 (fax)                                   and/or facsimile
    pfruin@maynardcooper.com
    Attorney for Cross-Appellee Morgan
    Asset Management Inc.
    /s/ Braden W. Sparks___________
    Braden W. Sparks
    Page 88of 181
    TAB 1
    Page 9 of 181
    FILED
    DALLAS COUNTY
    6/16/20144:48:16 PM
    GARY FITZSIMMONS
    DISTRICT CLERK
    CAUSE NO. DC-09-14448
    PURDUE AVENUE INVESTORS LP,                            §      IN THE DISTRICT COURT
    MARY ANN HOWARD, AND DANA                              §
    HOWARD, AS TRUSTEE OF THE                              §
    MOLLY A.HOWARDTRUST,                                   §
    PLAINTIFFS,                                        §
    §
    VS.                                                    §      DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS
    §
    MORGAN KEEGAN & CO.,                                   §
    INC., MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT,                         §
    INC., JAMES C. KELSOE, JR. AND                         §
    THOMAS ORR.                                            §
    DEFENDANTS.                                     §    lOlST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    PLAINTIFFS' FIRST AMENDED ORIGINAL PETITION
    TO THE HONORABLE JUDGE OF SAID COURT:
    COME NOW Plaintiffs, Purdue Avenue Investors, L.P., Mary Ann Howard, and Dana
    Howard, Trustee of the Molly A. Howard Trust (collectively, "Plaintiffs"), and file this, their First
    Amended Original Petition, and in support, would show the Court as follows:
    I.
    DISCOVERY CONTROL PLAN
    1.     Plaintiffs intend to conduct discovery under Level 3 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure
    190.4 because this is a relatively document-intensive case.
    II.
    NATURE OF THE CASE
    2.     This is an action by family members and family-owned entities - a husband's and wife's
    family limited partnership, their daughter'S educational trust, and the estate of the husband's
    3288
    Page 10 of 181                       TAB 1, p.1 of 14
    Defendants will surely now claim, but rather, because of the funds' concentrated holdings of low-
    priority tranches in risky structured finance deals, backed by uncertain assets, which were acquired
    by the funds without full disclosure to investors.
    13.    Defendants knew or should have known of the truth, yet they omitted, concealed, failed to
    disclose and/or misrepresented many material facts regarding the funds, including: 1) the nature
    of the risk being assumed by an investment in the funds; 2) the illiquidity of the securities in which
    the funds were invested; 3) that the funds were so over-invested in the securities at issue that they
    were devalued, over-priced or could not be accurately priced or "fair valued"; 4) that the funds
    were not sufficiently or properly subjected to "fair value" procedures; 5) the extent to which the
    values of such securities, and consequently, the Net Asset Values ("NAVs") of the funds were
    based on erroneous estimates, as well as failing to disclose the uncertainties and illogical
    assumptions inherent in such estimates; 6) the unrevealed and inappropriately high concentrations
    of investments in the mortgage industry, and in derivatives and other structured securities related
    thereto, which amplified the risks even further; 7) that the six funds sold to investors had the same
    overlapping, underlying investments, thereby further increasing risk, rendering "fair valuation"
    difficult or impossible, and reducing or eliminating true diversification between funds; and 8) as
    time went on, that the funds began using principal rather than interest to pay dividends,
    exacerbating the funds' losses while keeping investors in the dark.
    14.    Morgan Keegan failed to disclose to the Plaintiffs and other investors the funds' high
    allocations of collateralized bond obligations ("CBOs"), collateralized loan obligations ("CLOs"),
    and collateralized mortgage obligations ("CMOs"), collectively called collateralized debt
    obligations ("CD Os"), and other Asset Backed Securities. The CDOs lost substantial value when
    the sub-prime market collapsed. This event caused the value ofthe Morgan Keegan bond funds to
    3292
    Page 11 of 181                        TAB 1, p.2 of 14
    plummet, resulting in significant losses for anyone who held interests in these funds, including
    Plaintiffs. Further, more losses were revealed when MAM sold the RMK Funds to Hyperion in
    July 2008. Upon taking over day-to-day management and pricing, a large percentage of the bonds
    were written down to zero in market value by Hyperion, underscoring the ongoing over-valuation
    and false representations made to investors by the Defendants prior to the sale.
    15.    Investors have lost over $2 billion in the six proprietary RMK bond funds (four closed-end
    and two open-end funds) (collectively herein, the "RMK Funds") during the last few years. The
    four closed-end funds began with a cumulative value of $1.6 billion in net assets as of December
    21, 2006. Morgan Keegan was lead underwriter for these funds and was responsible to the
    investing public, including the Plaintiffs, for full disclosure of all material risks. Together, the
    closed-end funds lost $1 billion in market value in 2007 and more in 2008. Plaintiffs invested in
    two of the closed-end funds - the RMK Advantage Income Fund ("RMA") and the RMK Strategic
    Income Fund ("RSF"). RMA lost over $281 million and RSF lost almost $377 million in market
    value in 2007, more in 2008. Virtually all of the losses were in the funds' holdings of low-priority
    asset-backed securities and resulted from risks not adequately disclosed to investors. The
    continuation of losses throughout 2008 resulted in even larger losses, a change in fund managers
    and in the value of each of the funds falling below $1 per share in NAV.
    16.    As their value fell, Defendants attempted to claim that the losses were from a "flight to
    quality" or a "mortgage meltdown" in the industry. These assertions were material and false. A
    comparison between the values of the RMK Funds with the RMK Funds' claimed benchmarks
    shows that RMK's closed-end funds' precipitous losses in value, including RMA and RSF, were
    clearly not the result of a collapse in the high yield bond market or a "mortgage meltdown."
    17.    The RMK Funds, including RMA and RSF, were represented and sold as high-yield bond
    3293
    Page 12 of 181                       TAB 1, p.3 of 14
    addition to being understated, the asset-backed securities held by the funds were subordinated for
    almost all securities held. RMK misrepresented preferred shares and CDOs as preferred stock. For
    example, in the case of Webster CDO I Preferred Shares, and as corporate bonds in the case of
    Eirles Two Ltd. 263. Defendants also misclassified others, five of which were reclassified as
    below-investment-grade on March 31,2008. The undisclosed risks to Plaintiffs and other investors
    included the funds' purchases of illiquid, low-priority preference shares, purchase of all or almost
    all oflower-Ievel tranches, purchases of notes with face values far in excess of market value, and
    acquisition of highly leveraged investments in other highly leveraged investments subordinated to
    other indebtedness.
    23.    The RMK Funds' prospectuses contained other material misrepresentations, including a
    comparison of the RMK Funds' performance to the Lehman Ba index, an index that is not a valid
    benchmark because it contains only corporate bonds, and none of the structured finance securities
    that were the Funds' primary holdings. These materials also failed to disclose that at least 47.3%
    to 59.4% of the RMK Funds' portfolios' holdings were asset-backed or other structured finance
    based on the Funds' annual reports; that almost all of these holdings were at or near the bottom of
    the investment's capital structure; failed to reflect the true NAV of portfolio holdings; failed to
    disclose the misleading nature of the prospectuses' diversification claims; failed to disclose that
    the funds were leveraged up many times over by complex capital structures; and failed to disclose
    that the funds were actually exposing investors to ten or more times the credit risk of the
    underlying, already risky debt, in exchange for only 1% or 2% higher returns than a diversified,
    transparent high-yield bond portfolio would have earned.
    24.    Defendants made false material representations of fact to Plaintiffs, investors and the U.S.
    Securities & Exchange Commission ("SEC") by telling them that it did "in-depth evaluations" of
    3295
    Page 13 of 181                       TAB 1, p.4 of 14
    false emphasis on the credit markets, widening spreads, economic uncertainty, the deteriorating
    housing market, high energy prices, investor uncertainty, downgrades, uncertainty in the real estate
    market in general, illiquidity and value perceptions. These claims merely masked the primary
    reasons for the RMK Funds’ deterioration.
    30.    In a January 24, 2008 release to shareholders, Kelsoe was still advising investors that
    outside forces were to blame, and he took no responsibility for the poor choices that he and the
    other Defendants made in creating, selecting investments for, marketing and administering the
    RMK Funds.
    31.    The intended effect of these and other of Kelsoe’s statements after losses were incurred in
    the funds was to give Plaintiffs false assurances, i.e., to provide them with false hope and reason
    to believe that the RMK Funds’ investments were likely to rebound along with other corporate
    bonds as the market rebounded.
    VII.
    PLAINTIFFS’ INVESTMENTS IN RMA AND RSF
    32.    Based on the aforementioned misrepresentations and omissions made by the Defendants,
    Plaintiffs invested approximately $120,552 in RMA and $2,464,854 in RSF from April 2004
    through August 2005, as follows:
    Shares               Purchase Date       Unit Cost           Cost Basis
    Purchased by Purdue Avenue Investors LLP:
    RMA              4500             01/20/05                   15.926              71,668
    RSF              60,000           07/08/05                   16.453              987,150
    20,000           07/27/05                   16.298              325,950
    30,000           07/27/05                   16.295              488.841
    10,000           08/02/05                   16.415              164,150
    15,000           08/02/05                   16.42               246,300
    Total                                                                            $2,284,059
    Page 14 of 181                      TAB 1, p.5 of 
    14
    Purchased by Mary Ann Howard
    RSF             6,400                    04123/04            14.8820              95,245
    7,000                    07/29/04            15.422               107,954
    Total                                                                             $203,199
    Purchased by Molly A. Howard Trust
    RMA              3,000           07/06105                    16.295               48,884
    RSF              3,000           07/06105                    16.442               49,264
    Total                                                                             $98,148
    As a result of the actions referred to hereinabove, Plaintiffs have incurred cumulative realized
    losses of$2,423,481, including $2,142,110 (Purdue), $91,433 (Molly's Trust) and $198,938 (Mary
    Ann's Estate).
    VIII.
    MISREPRESENTATIONS AND OMISSIONS
    33.    In connection with these inappropriate and unsuitable actions, Morgan Keegan used sales
    and marketing materials including prospectuses and updates that were misleading, marketed the
    funds with inadequate and misleading risk disclosures, was complicit in manipulating the pricing
    and return data of the funds, made claims of stable NAV values that were misleading, and marketed
    the funds using exaggerated credit rating averages. Morgan Keegan, MAM, Kelsoe and others
    made numerous misrepresentations and omissions of material facts necessary in order to make the
    statements that were made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
    misleading. Such statements or omissions were made to the Plaintiffs andlor their agents and
    included, but were not limited to, the following:
    a) Failure to disclose the true risks and speculative natures of the securities sold to them
    in the RMK Funds;
    b) Investing at least 47.3% to 59.4% ofRMK Funds' assets in the "same industry" CABS)
    in direct violation of the prospectuses' Investment Limitation clause which stated that no
    more than 25% of the Funds' assets would be invested in "companies whose principal
    business activities are in the same industry"
    3299
    Page 15 of 181                       TAB 1, p.6 of 14
    c) Failure to disclose that the RMK Funds' manager would not be properly supervised;
    d) Failure to disclose that the RMK Funds contained a substantial amount of over-lapping
    and duplicative collateral;
    e) Failure to disclose the extent ofleverage involved in the RMK Funds;
    f) Failure to fully and properly disclose the full extent of fees, commissions and profits
    being realized by Defendants in the sale of the proprietary bond funds and in the sale of
    the RMK Funds sold to the Plaintiffs;
    g) Failure to disclose in its SEC filings the risks to which it was exposing investors by
    investing the majority of its bond funds' portfolios in subordinated tranches of asset-
    backed securities;
    h) Misrepresenting hundreds of millions of dollars of asset-backed securities as corporate
    bonds and preferred stocks in its SEC filings, thereby making the funds seem less risky;
    i) Using the same method, making the funds seem more diversified than they really were;
    j) Misleading investors in its SEC filings and marketing materials by comparing its funds
    to the Lehman Brothers Ba Index, which contains only corporate bonds and no asset-
    backed securities;
    k) Claiming that the funds were "diversified;"
    I) Failing to disclose the illiquid nature of many of its investments;
    m) Failing to disclose that the funds were not sufficiently subjected to fair value
    procedures;
    n) Failing to disclose that the NAV values of the securities were based on inaccurate
    estimates or estimates with undisclosed uncertainties, resulting in faulty or unreliable
    NAVs;
    0) Failing to reveal the high concentration of investments in the mortgage industry and in
    derivatives and other structured securities related thereto;
    p) Failing to disclose the impact of the six funds' investments in the same overlapping
    underlying investments, thereby reducing or eliminating diversification;
    q) Blaming the loss in value of the funds on a "market meltdown," a "mortgage
    meltdown" or a "flight to quality," or other market factors, in order to induce investors
    not to sell, or to purchase more shares as values plummeted;
    r) Failing to use reasonable estimates of market prices in calculations of value;
    3300
    Page 16 of 181                        TAB 1, p.7 of 14
    s) Mischaracterizing the funds as corporate bond funds, and misrepresenting the amount
    of structured finance securities held in the funds by comparing them to such funds;
    t) Failing to disclose the impact of the funds' purchase of all or most of subordinated
    tranches in various already risky investments; and
    u) Failing to disclose that the funds were using principal to pay interest, thereby falsely
    inducing investors into believing they were getting a higher rate of return; and
    v) Misrepresenting and misreporting to the SEC the impact of structured debt obligations,
    low-priority tranches, risk calculations, and their effect in causing redistribution of credit
    risks.
    34.    Defendants also violated NASD Rule 2310 (Suitability Considerations), NASD Notice to
    Members 93-73 (Members' Obligations to Customers When Selling Collateralized Mortgage
    Obligations), NASD Notice to Members 04-30 (reminder from NASD of sales practice obligations
    related to sale of bonds and bond funds), FINRA Notice to Members 08-81 (reminder from FINRA
    as to sales practice obligations in a high yield environment), NASD Rule 2210 (Communications
    with the Public), NASD 1M 2310-2 (Fair Dealing with Customers), and ignored the obvious import
    ofNASD Investor Literacy Research which advised members that 71 % of investors understood
    the concept of a bond, only about half (51 %) knew the definition of a "junk bond," and only 40%
    understood the relationship between bond prices and interest rates. Defendants also ignored
    NASD Rule 3010 (supervisory duties) and NASD NTM 04-30 (supervisory duties related to the
    sale of bonds and bond funds).
    IX.
    CLAIMS
    COUNT ONE
    (Violations of Texas Securities Act; Aiding and Abetting; Control Persons)
    35.    Plaintiffs re-allege all preceding paragraphs herein.
    36.    The Defendants' offer and sale of the RMK Funds constitutes the offer and sale of a
    3301
    Page 17 of 181                        TAB 1, p.8 of 14
    security under the Texas Securities Act (the "State Act"). Defendants' statements, as set forth
    above, constitute untrue statements of material facts and omissions of material facts necessary in
    order to make the statements that were made, in light of the circumstances under which they were
    made, not misleading. These statements and omissions included the prospectuses, statements of
    additional understanding, public statements of the Defendants, including Kelsoe and others, and
    marketing materials and other materials submitted to the Plaintiffs which contain or were based
    upon further untrue statements of material facts, and which omit to state material facts necessary
    in order to make the statements that were made, in light of the circumstances under which they
    were made, not misleading.
    37.     The Defendants controlled, conspired with and aided and abetted one another in connection
    with the misrepresentations made by them.
    38.     Defendants are jointly and severally liable to Plaintiffs under the Texas Securities Act
    ("TSA"), art. 581-33, TEx. REv. STAT. ANN. Plaintiffs are entitled to recover the consideration
    paid by them, plus interest. Alternatively, Plaintiffs are entitled to damages, interest, and attorneys'
    fees.
    COUNT TWO
    (Aider and Abettor Liability)
    39.     Plaintiffs re-allege all preceding paragraphs herein.
    40.     Defendants are persons who "materially aidEed] a seller, buyer, or issuer of a security"
    having acted "with intent to deceive or defraud or with reckless disregard for the truth or the law."
    TEX. REV.    elv. STAT. art. 581-33F(2) (Vernon Supp.2004-2005). Each rendered assistance in
    the face of a perceived risk that his or its assistance would facilitate untruthful or unlawful activity
    by the primary violator(s) and each possessed a general awareness that his role was part of an
    3302
    Page 18 of 181                         TAB 1, p.9 of 14
    overall activity that is improper. Although neither had direct contact with the Plaintiffs, "the TSA
    does not require the aider to have had direct dealing with the defrauded party; indeed, a person
    who 'materially aids the seller' may have had no contact at all with investors." Sterling Trust Co.
    v. Adderly, 
    168 S.W.3d 835
    ,843 (Tex. 2005), citing TEX. REv. STAT. ANN. art. 581-33F(2). As a
    result, Defendants are jointly and severally liable for the offer, sale and delivery of the securities
    in issue and the losses that ensued.
    41.     Defendants are jointly and severally liable to Plaintiffs under the Texas Securities Act
    ("TSA"), art. 581-33, TEX. REv. STAT. ANN. Plaintiffs are entitled to recover the consideration
    paid by them, plus interest. Alternatively, Plaintiffs are entitled to damages, interest, and attorneys'
    fees.
    COUNT THREE
    (Control Person Liability)
    42.     Defendants are liable as control persons. Under art. 581-33F(1) of the TSA, "[a] person
    who directly or indirectly controls a seller, buyer, or issuer of a security is liable under Section
    33A, 33B, or 33C jointly and severally with the seller, buyer, or issuer, and to the same extent as
    if he were the seller, buyer, or issuer, unless the controlling person sustains the burden of proof
    that he did not know, and in the exercise of reasonable care could not have known, of the existence
    of the facts by reason of which the liability is alleged to exist."
    43.     Under the TSA, control "is used in the same broad sense as in federal securities law" and
    means "the possession, direct or indirect, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the
    management or policies of a person, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by
    contract, or otherwise." Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 581-33F cmt.; Barnes v. SWS Financial
    Services, 
    97 S.W.3d 759
    , 763 (Tex.App.-Dallas 2003). The rationale for control person liability
    3303
    Page 19 of 181                      TAB 1, p.10 of 14
    is that “a control person is in a position to prevent the violation and may be able to compensate the
    injured investor when the primary violator (e.g. a corporate issuer which has gone bankrupt) is
    not." Summers v. WellTech, Inc., 
    935 S.W.2d 228
    , 231 (Tex.App. —Houston [1 Dist.] 1996)
    (quoting commentary to art. 581-33F); Texas Capital Securities Management, Inc. v. Sandefer, 
    80 S.W.3d 260
    , 268 (Tex.App. —Texarkana 2002). ). Defendants had the possession, direct or
    indirect, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management or policies of the sellers
    and issuer of the securities, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract, or
    otherwise.
    44.     Defendants are jointly and severally liable to Plaintiffs under the Texas Securities Act
    (“TSA”), art. 581-33, TEX. REV. STAT. ANN. Plaintiffs are entitled to recover the consideration
    paid by them, plus interest. Alternatively, Plaintiffs are entitled to damages, interest, and attorneys’
    fees.
    COUNT FOUR
    (Common Law Fraud)
    45.     Plaintiffs re-allege all preceding paragraphs herein.
    46.     Defendants misrepresented material facts or failed to disclose material facts or conspired
    with persons misrepresenting material facts in order to cause the Plaintiffs purchase the RMA and
    RSF bond funds. Plaintiffs relied upon Defendants’ representations to their detriment and were
    damaged thereby. Plaintiffs are entitled to recover from Defendants the consideration paid by
    them, plus interest. Alternatively, Plaintiffs are entitled to damages.
    47.     The Defendants controlled, conspired with and aided and abetted one another in
    connection with the misrepresentations made by them.
    Defendants’ conduct is of the type that should be punished by an award of exemplary damages to
    Page 20 of 181                     TAB 1, p.11 of 3304
    14
    Plaintiffs.
    48.        Defendants are jointly and severally liable.
    x.
    PRAYER
    WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs pray that Defendants be cited to appear and answer, and, upon
    the trial hereof, that Plaintiffs have and recover from each of the Defendants, jointly and severally,
    each of the following:
    1.      Actual consequential damages;
    2.      Exemplary damages;
    3.      Attorney's fees;
    4.      Costs of court; and
    5.      General relief.
    Respectfully submitted,
    SPARKS MACLEOD, PLLC
    /s/ Braden W Sparks
    Braden W. Sparks
    S.B.N 18874500
    8333 Douglas Avenue
    Suite 1000
    Dallas, TX 75225
    (214)750-3372
    (214) 696-5971 Facsimile
    brady@sparkslaw.com
    SHEPHERD, SMITH, EDWARDS & JUNTAS, L.L.P.
    /s/ Samuel B. Edwards
    Samuel B. Edwards
    Texas Bar No. 24031634
    California Bar No. 237500
    Michigan Bar No. P72583
    3305
    Page 21 of 181                    TAB 1, p.12 of 14
    101O Lamar, Suite 900
    Houston, TX 77002
    (713) 227-2400
    (713) 227-7215 Facsimile
    sedwards@sseklaw.com
    THE FRANKOWSKI FIRM
    Richard S. Frankowski
    S.B.N. ASB-1734H70F
    231 22nd Street South
    Suite 203
    Birmingham, AL 35233
    (205) 533-1968
    (205) 390-1001 Facsimile
    Richard@frankowskifirm.com
    ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFFS
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that on the 16th day of June, 2014, I served a copy of this document upon
    the individuals listed below as indicated.
    Kenneth C Johnston
    Kane Russell Coleman & Logan PC
    1601 Elm Street, Ste 3700
    Dallas, TX 75201
    214-777-4200
    214-777-4299 (fax)
    kjohnston@krcl.com                                              Via ECF System, email
    and/or facsimile
    Attorney for Morgan Keegan & Company
    Inc and Thomas Orr
    3306
    Page 22 of 181                    TAB 1, p.13 of 14
    Peter S. Fruin
    Maynard Cooper & Gale, PC
    1901 Sixth Avenue North
    2400 Regions Harbert Plaza
    Birmingham, AL 35203
    Via ECF System, email
    205-254-1068
    and/or facsimile
    205-254-1999 (fax)
    pfruin@maynardcooper.com
    Attorney for Morgan Asset Management
    Inc. and James C. Kelsoe, Jr.
    /s/ Braden W. Sparks
    Braden W. Sparks
    3307
    Page 23 of 181         TAB 1, p.14 of 14
    TAB 2
    Page 24 of 181
    OVERSTATED ASS-UNDERSTATED
    ABS-UNDERSTATED MBS
    2005 RMK Advantage Income Fund, Inc.
    ##of
    of Assets          Category1
    Asset Categoryl            Asset         Claimed ABS              Actual ABS    Claimed MBS        Actual MBS
    Percentage
    2              Commercial Loans           7.7%
    4              Home Equity Loans (Non-    4.9%
    High Loan to Value)
    7              Manufactured Housing       7.3%
    Loans                                       70.8%                   35.4%           1.9%              37.3%
    14             Home Equity Loans (Non-    14.5%
    High Loan to Value)
    1              Manufactured Housing       1.0%
    Loans
    28                                        35.4%
    2005 RMK Strategic Income Fund, Inc.
    ##of
    of Assets    Asset Category             Asset         Claimed ABS              Actual ABS    Claimed MBS        Actual MBS
    Percentage
    11             Home Equity Loans (Non-    9.2%
    High Loan to Value
    1              Manufactured Housing       1.3%
    Loans
    13             Commercial Loans           14.9%
    87.3%                    34.9%          3.3%              55.7%
    20             Home Equity Loans          15.4%
    18             Manufactured Housing       11.6%
    Loans
    63                                        52.4%
    !
    1
    1   In each chart in the Asset Category column please note these assets are claimed as ABS but in actuality they are MBS.
    Page 23l of 1693
    EXHIBIT 18.
    18, page 1
    Tab 2, p. 1 of 4
    Page 25 of 181                                                          4397
    ABS-UNDERSTATED MBS
    OVERSTATED ASS-UNDERSTATED
    2006 RMK Advantage Income Fund, Inc.
    # of Assets
    #of           Asset Category              Asset        Claimed ABS            Actual ABS   Claimed MBS    Actual MBS
    Percentage                                                                     I
    6                          Loans (Non-
    Home Equity loans           4.6%
    Loan to Value}
    High loan    Value)
    1             Manufactured Housing        0.4%
    17                                ~Non-
    Loans {Non-
    Home Equity loans           12.2%
    Loan to Value
    High loan                                  64.4%                  46.4%         3.3%          49.7%
    5             Manufactured Housing        0.5%
    Loans
    loans
    29                                        17.7%
    2006 RMK Strategic Income Fund, Inc.
    # of Assets
    #of           Asset Category              Asset        Claimed ABS            Actual ABS   Claimed MBS   Actual MBS
    Percentage
    9             Home Equity Loans
    loans (Non-    4.6%
    High loan
    Loan to Value)
    Value}
    1             Manufactured Housing        0.5%
    Loans
    loans
    3             Commercial Loans
    loans           1.2%
    55.1%                   36.1%       20.8%          56.9%
    17            Home Equity Loans
    loans (Non-    9.6%
    High Loan
    loan to Value)
    Value}
    9             Manufactured Housing        3.3%
    Loans
    loans
    39                                        19.2%
    -
    Page 2~ of 1693
    EXHIBIT 18, page 2
    Tab 2, p. 2 of 4
    Page 26 of 181                                                    4398
    OVERSTATED ABS-UNDERSTATED
    ASS-UNDERSTATED MBS
    2007 RMK Advantage Income Fund, Inc.
    ##of
    of Assets   Asset Category            Asset        Claimed ABS           Actual ABS   Claimed MBS   Actual MBS
    Percentage
    Percentage
    8             Home Equity Loans (Non-   4.0%
    High Loan to Value)
    15            Home Equity Loans~Non-    6.5%
    High Loan to Value)                      19.7%                   8.7%       19.5%          28.2%
    1             Manufactured Housing      0.1%
    Loans
    24                                      10.6%
    2007 RMK Strategic Income Fund, Inc.
    ##of
    of Assets   Asset Category            Asset        Claimed ABS           Actual ABS   Claimed MBS   Actual MBS
    Percentage
    10            Home EquityLoans (Non-    3.6%
    High Loan to Value)
    1             Manufactured Housing      0.25%
    17            Home Equity Loans (Non-   4.7%
    High Loan to Value)                      54.2%                 45.2%         9.6%          54.8%
    2             Manufactured Housing      0.1%
    Loans
    30                                      8.65%
    Page 2~
    Page 2~ of
    of 1693
    1693
    EXHIBIT 18, page 3
    Tab 2, p. 3 of 4
    Page 27 of 181                                                   4399
    ASS-UNDERSTATED MBS
    OVERSTATED ABS-UNDERSTATED
    2008 RMK Advantage Income Fund, Inc.
    #of
    # of Assets   Asset Category             Asset        Claimed ABS           Actual ABS   Claimed MBS   Actual MBS
    Percentage
    4             Home Equity loans (Non-    1.9%
    High loan
    Loan to Value)
    1             Manufactured Housing       2.7%
    Loans
    loans
    8             Home Equity loans
    Loans (Non-   2.1%
    loan to Value)
    High Loan                                 41.4%                 34.4%        22.1%          56.5%
    1             Manufactured Housing       0.1%
    Loans
    14                                       6.8%
    2008 RMK Strategic Income Fund, Inc.
    # of Assets
    #of           Asset Category             Asset        Claimed ABS           Actual ABS   Claimed MBS   Actual MBS
    Percentage
    3             Home Equity Loans          3.4%
    1             Manufactured Housing       2.1%
    Loans
    10            Home Equity loans          0.7%
    39.2%                  29.4%       35.4%          64.8%
    1             Manufactured Housing       0.1%
    Loans
    15                                       6.3%
    Page 2~ of 1693
    EXHIBIT 18, page 4
    Tab 2, p. 4 of 4
    Page 28 of 181                                                   4400
    TAB 3
    Page 29 of 181
    Deborah Beaty
    From:                              Peter Fruin < PFruin@maynardcooper.com>
    PFruin@maynardcooper.com >
    Sent:                                               23, 2014 6:08 PM
    Wednesday, July 23/
    To:                                Brady Sparks; Kenneth Johnston; Katy Eldridge; Sam Edwards; Henry Simpson
    (hsimpson@buschllp.com); Robert W. Gifford (RGifford@krcl.com); Michelle Macleod
    Cc:                                Deborah Beaty
    Subject:                           RE: PUrdue
    Brady,
    Are you asking for all the Prospecti and offering circulars for all the underlying holding of the funds? Assuming we had
    these, it would be several thousand documents many of which are more than 500 pages in length.
    Kelsoe has testified on numerous occasions that hard copies of these documents were not kept as they were available
    electronically at the time. See for example footnotes 2-5 of McCann's expert report which demonstrates that some are
    still available on Edgar today. Moreover, McCann has testified many many time that he already has these documents.
    If I am mistaken as to what you are requesting, please let me know.
    Thanks
    Peter
    Peter S. Fruin
    Office 205.254.1068
    Cell 205.563.1068
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Brady Sparks [mailto:brady@sparkslaw.com]
    Sent: Wednesday, July 23, 2014 1:49 PM
    To: Peter Fruin; Kenneth Johnston; Katy Eldridge; Sam Edwards; Henry Simpson (hsimpson@buschllp.com); Robert W.
    Gifford (RGifford@krcl.com); Michelle Macleod
    Cc: Deborah Beaty
    Subject: RE: PUrdue
    Peter,
    I'll ask Craig when he is available. Would you please (quickly) produce PDFs ofofthe
    the prospectuses, offering circulars,
    promissory notes and other instruments evidencing the underlying assets held by Advantage and Strategic? Not all the
    documents, just the offering documents or promissory notes, COOs, CMOs, CLO   ClO These may all be in your 6. 6.7
    7 mil.
    Documents of production, but if so, we can't find them all. I'd appreciate it if you could do so right away, in part because
    Craig may need some ofthem. I don't know for sure, but he may.
    Brady
    Page 288 of 1693
    Tab 3
    EXHIBIT 27, page 1
    Page 30 of 181                                              4454
    TAB 4
    Page 31 of 181
    Q. Did you have any set ideas as to how much of the fund would be invested in -
    - other than the parameters of the fund, the fund had certain parameters of where
    you could be with regards to stocks and things of that nature. Was there any set
    amount that you believed or ideas you had with regard to how much would be in
    corporate bonds versus how much would be in asset-backed securities?
    A. No.
    Testimony of James Kelsoe, 15:2-15, attached hereto as Exhibit D. Therefore, the statement that
    “Kelsoe knew and intended that the Funds would pursue a strategy of investing primarily in
    deeply subordinated tranches of structured, asset-based securities such as mortgage-backed
    securities, collateralized mortgage obligations, and collateralized debt obligations” cannot be
    true. Thus, the Court should eliminate the first sentence of Finding of Fact No. 19.
    Finding of Fact No. 20. The Court should amend Finding of Fact No. 20 because it is
    contrary to the evidence presented at trial for two reasons. First, for the reasons set forth above
    regarding No. 19, a finding that “Mr. Kelsoe intended to invest the Funds” in “asset-backed
    securities” is contrary to the testimony of Mr. Kelsoe. Second, the evidence does not support the
    finding that the asset-backed securities in which the Funds invested were “far riskier than even
    ‘junk’-grade corporate bonds.”            The evidence in the record demonstrated that prior to the
    financial crisis, the default rate for below investment grade asset-backed securities was lower
    than the default rate for below investment grade corporate bonds. Thus, the Court should
    eliminate Finding of Fact No. 20 as it is contrary to the evidence.
    Findings of Fact Nos. 21 and 22. The Court should amend Findings of Fact Nos. 21 and
    22 to remove the phrase “the quantities Kelsoe would purchase” from each of the findings. As
    set forth above, Mr. Kelsoe testified that at the time the prospectuses were issued he did not
    know the specific securities he was going to purchase. Therefore, it would be impossible to
    know the exact quantities of securities that were going to be purchased. The Court acknowledged
    DEFENDANTS’ REQUEST FOR AMENDED AND ADDITIONAL FINDINGS OF FACTS AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW                 5
    Tab 4, p. 1 of 3
    Page 32 of 181                                      8378
    finding of fact is inadequate in that it fails to identify the specific material information that was
    misrepresented, omitted and concealed.               Finally, this finding must be amended because it
    assumes Defendants were the issuers of the prospectuses, which as set forth above, is factually
    inaccurate and a fact that Plaintiffs do not dispute. Thus, based upon the facts in evidence, the
    Court should eliminate Finding of Fact No. 25.
    Finding of Fact No. 26. The Court should amend Finding of Fact No. 26 as there is no
    evidence in the record that Defendants caused Plaintiffs’ damages. Thus, the Court should
    eliminate this finding.
    Findings of Fact Nos. 27 and 28. The Court should remove or amend Findings of Fact
    Nos. 27 and 28. First, the findings are unnecessary to support the judgment. Second, to
    categorically suggest that all of Defendants’ expert’s testimony was not credible, not relevant,
    and not reliable is wholly inappropriate and contrary to the record. There can be no dispute that
    the testimony provided by Defendants’ expert was relevant to the claims in controversy as it
    related directly to issues in dispute and dealt in significant part with statements made by
    Plaintiffs’ expert. Moreover, to categorically suggest that the testimony was not credible or
    reliable when much of that testimony was the introduction and explanation of industry accepted
    and/or government reports makes the categorization unsupportable. Thus, to the extent the Court
    does not remove the inappropriate and unnecessary findings, it should amend them to identify
    those specific portions of the testimony that the Court found to be not relevant, not credible, or
    not reliable.
    II.      CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
    A.       Additional Conclusion of Law.
    Defendants request that the Court make the following additional conclusion of law:
    DEFENDANTS’ REQUEST FOR AMENDED AND ADDITIONAL FINDINGS OF FACTS AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW                 8
    Tab 4, p. 2 of 3
    Page 33 of 181                                      8381
    1. Plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the statute of limitations.
    As set forth above, Mr. Howard testified that he knew or should have known that the Funds
    invested more than 70% in asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities by the time the 2004
    Semi-Annual report for the Funds was issued. Plaintiffs did not file their Original Petition until
    October 23, 2009—approximately five years later. Under the Texas Securities Act, “[n]o person
    may sue under Section 33A(2), 33C, or 33F so far as it relates to 33A(2) or 33C: (a) more than
    three years after discovery of the untruth or omission, or after discovery should have been made
    by the exercise of reasonable diligence.” Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 581-33H(2)(a). Without
    question, Mr. Howard should have made discovery of the alleged omission more than three years
    prior to the filing of the Petition, and this conclusion of law should be added.
    B.       Amended Conclusions of Law.
    Conclusion of Law No. 29. The Court should amend Conclusion of Law No. 29 because
    it is not supported by the evidence. First, a primary violation of the securities laws under the
    Texas Securities Act Section 33C is not supported because the clear evidence—as noted above—
    was that the Funds, not Defendants, were the issuers of the securities and thus are the only
    entities that could be held liable under this section. Second, there are no findings of fact and no
    evidence in the record necessary to support a finding of secondary liability. Accordingly, the
    Court should eliminate this Conclusion of Law.
    Conclusion of Law No. 30. The Court should amend and eliminate Conclusion of Law
    No. 30 because there are no findings of fact to support this conclusion, and the evidence did not
    support this conclusion.
    Conclusion of Law No. 31. The Court should amend and eliminate Conclusion of Law
    No. 31 because there are no findings of fact to support the conclusion that Defendants were
    DEFENDANTS’ REQUEST FOR AMENDED AND ADDITIONAL FINDINGS OF FACTS AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW                 9
    Tab 4, p. 3 of 3
    Page 34 of 181                                      8382
    TAB 5
    Page 35 of 181
    Cause No.
    Cause No. DC-09-14448
    AVENUE INVESTORS, LP,
    PURDUE AVENUE                         )                         IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
    MARY ANN
    ANN HOWARD,
    HOWARD, INDIVIDUALLY,
    INDIVIDUALLY, )
    AND DANAHOWARD,
    AND DANA    HOWARD,AS  ASTRUSTEE
    TRUSTEEOF
    OF )                              DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS
    THE MOLLY
    MOLLY A.  A. HOWARD TRUST,        )
    ))                            lOlsT JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    101ST
    Plaintiffs,                      )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )
    MORGAN    KEEGAN &
    MORGAN KEEGAN       & COMPANY,
    COMPANY,INC.,
    INC., )
    MORGAN ASSET
    ASSET MANAGEMENT,
    MANAGEMENT,INC.,
    INC., )
    JAMES C. KELSOE, JR., and              )
    THOMAS ORR,                            )
    )
    Defendants.                       )
    AFFIDAVIT OF PETER FRUIN
    AFFIDAVIT
    THE STATE OF ALABAMA                          ))
    COUNTY OF JEFFERSON                            ))
    BEFORE ME,
    BEFORE         undersigned Notary
    ME, the undersigned Notary Public,    this day
    Public, on this day personally
    personally appeared
    appeared Peter
    Peter
    Fruin, a person whose
    Fruin,          whose identity
    identity is
    is known
    known to
    to me.         administered an
    me. After I administered an oath to him, upon his
    to him,
    oath he said:
    1.
    1.                        Fruin. I am over
    My name is Peter Fruin.      over 18
    18 years
    years of
    of age
    age and
    and am
    am competent
    competent to
    make this
    make      affidavit. I have personal
    this affidavit.        personal knowledge
    knowledge of the facts set
    the facts set forth
    forth herein,
    herein, and
    and those
    those
    facts are true and correct to my personal knowledge.
    2.            currently an attorney
    I am currently    attorney at Maynard,
    Maynard, Cooper
    Cooper & Gale PC,
    & Gale PC, the law firm
    retained to
    retained to represent
    represent Defendants
    Defendants in
    in this
    this litigation.
    litigation. II represented
    represented Defendants
    Defendants at the trial,
    of trial, Tuesday, October, 14,
    including on the first day of                          14,2014.
    2014.
    3.
    3.              close of
    At the close of the
    the first
    first day
    day of
    oftrial,
    trial, on
    on October
    October 14,
    14, 2014,
    2014, Judge
    Judge Lowy
    Lowy
    counsel of record to his
    called counsel              his office.
    office. During
    During that meeting,
    meeting, I personally
    personally heard the Judge
    03130889.1
    AFFIDAVIT  OF PETER
    AFFIDAVIT OF  PETER FRUIN
    FRUIN                           Page 1
    Tab 5, p. 1 of 2
    Page 36 of 181                                        8446
    EXHIBIT F
    "I will not
    state, "I      not say
    say this on the record but I am a student of the
    the financial
    financial crisis.
    crisis. II would
    would
    spend much
    not spend much time
    time talking
    talking about
    about credit
    credit ratings                                      of
    ratings because the rating agencies are part of
    the problem, no one should have relied upon their ratings."
    sayeth not.
    Further, affiant sayeth
    Peter Fruin
    SUBS ~BED AND
    SUBSC&IBED        AND SWORN
    SWORN TO TO by Peter Fruin before me, the undersigned
    undersigned authority,
    authority,
    on this the ~         of January, 2015.
    <9\ I day of
    s ow4,,
    'NOtary
    Notary Public
    In and For the State of a~a
    lcaLaihti9,_
    g,?.:
    c
    ``
    1-1-zbyri
    ... q -1--1---2D\;11
    03130889.1
    03130889.1
    AFFIDAVIT OF
    AFFIDAVIT  OF PETER
    PETER FRUIN
    FRUIN                       Page 2
    Tab 5, p. 2 of 2
    Page 37 of 181                                         8447
    EXHIBIT F
    TAB 6
    Page 38 of 181
    Annual R       ort
    Marc~   31   2005
    Page 39 of 181       Tab 6, p. 1 of 7
    Jt.13-Page 1                  MKfPURDUE00537
    RMK ADVANTAGE I NCOM E F UND, I NC.
    Portfolio of Investlllents
    Marc h 3 1, 2005
    Principal                                                  NRSRO
    Amount /                                                   Rating                          Market
    Shares        Description                               (Un audited)       Cost          Value (b)
    ASSET BACKED SECURITIES - INVESTMENT GRADE - 15.6% OF NET ASSETS
    C!/Iatem/ized Bond ONigalj{m -2.51'/0
    2.000.000     E-Tradc2004- 1A COM! ,
    2.00% 1/ 10/40                              BBB          $ 1.99{).062     $ 1.99{).000
    4,200,000     Restructured Asset Backed 2003-
    3A A3, 2.56% 1/29122 (a)                    AA -           3.356,057        3,344,250
    5,000,000     Witherspoon 2004- 1A COM 1,
    11. 50% 9/ 15/39                            BBB+           5,000,000        5,000,000
    $ 10,346, 11 9   $ 10,334,250
    Cmnmercial Lonns - OAu/o
    2,000,000      H 'CA Secured Lending 1998- 1
    DI , 7.8 1% 1/ 18/17 (aJ                   BBB-            1,58 1,650      1.580,000
    Equipment Lenses - 6.8°;',
    8,586,169     AERCO 2A A3, 2.863 % 7/ 15/25               BBB            6,408,440        6,343 ,033
    11 ,750,000    Aircraft Finance Trust 1999- IA
    A 1, 2.883 % 5/ 15124                       BBB             8,208,671       8, 136,875
    3,000,000     AviaLion Ca pilu12000-1 A A I ,
    3.07% 11 / 15125 (a)                        B88            2,25 1,788       2,272,080
    15,000,000     Lease Investment Fli ght Trust I
    A 1, 2.49% 7/ 1513 1                        BSB            10,356,145      10,575 ,000
    $27,225,044      $27,326,988
    Home f.quily Loans (Non-Higll Lonn-To-Vaille) -     4.9%
    7,6 13,000    Ace Securities 2oo4- HE3 Mil ,
    5.46% 11125/34                              BBB-           6,240, 150       6,927,830
    3,000,000     Ace. Securities 2oo4-H E4 M J J,
    5.694% 12125/34                             BBB-           2,405,756        2,807,820
    2,000,000     First Franklin 2004-FF5,
    8.594% 8125/34 Ca)                          BBB            2,000,000        2,000,000
    8,375,2 14    Long Beac.h Mo rtgage 200 1-1 M2.
    2.9 1% 412 1/3 1                            A              8, 132,764       8,097,827
    5 18,778,670     5 19,833,477
    Mrlllujacilired HOI/sing Loans -1.0"/0
    4,500,000     Green T ree Financ ia l 1996-9 M I,
    7.63% 1/ 15/28                              B88            4,045,739        4,097,295
    Total Asset Dacked Securities - Investment Grade                        $61,977,222      S63, 172,010
    ASSET BACKED SECURITfES - NON-INVESTMENT GRADE - 55 .2% OF
    NET ASSETS
    CerNJicale-Backed Oblign/i(lITs - 2.4%
    5,000,000      INeA PS Funding 2003-2A S IN ,
    10.00% 1/ 15/34 (a)                        Non-rated      4,85 1,929       4,850,000
    6
    Page 40 of 181                              Tab 6, p. 2 of 7
    Jt.13-Page 8                                          MKiPURDU E00544
    RMK ADVANTAGE I NCOME FUND, I NC.
    Portfolio of Investlllents
    March 3 1, 2005
    Princi pal                                                 NRSRO
    Amount /                                                   Rating                          Marke t
    Shares        Descripti on                           (Unaudiled)         Cost            Vallie (b)
    15,664 ,982    Pegasus A vialion 2000- 1 A I ,
    3.275% 3/25115 Cal                      B-           $ 8,388,683          S 8,282,859
    18,000,000     PegasLis Av iation 200 1- 1A A2,
    2.667 % 5110/3 1 (a)                    BS+               9,297,734         9,225,000
    538,743,57 1         $38,502,429
    Fm/lcllisc Loalls -7.4%
    5.000,000      ACLB Business Tmsl 1999- 1 A3,
    7.385% 811 5120 cal                     B+                4,389,886         4,475,450
    2,723,04 1    Captee Pranchisc 1999- 1 A2,
    7.278% 4/2..<;11 1 (a)                  SB                2,607,099         2,704.633
    5,000,000      Cuptee Franchise 2000-\ A2.
    8.155% 6/ 15/1 3 (a)                    BB-               4,432,205         4,33 1,200
    1,6 17,000    Falcon Franch ise 2001-1 F.
    6.50% 115/23                            B                 1,204,639         1,066, 137
    12,927,024     FM AC Loan Trust 1996-8 A I ,
    7.629% 1111 5/ 18 (a)                   D                 9,593,456         9,303 ,980
    1,425, 163    FMAC Loan Trust 1998-A A2,
    6.50% 911 5/20 (a)                      C                  934, 177           932,655
    10,289,956     PMAC Loan T ru st 1998-BA A2,
    6.74% 11115/20 Ca)                      C                 7,4 14,985        7,080,550
    530,576,447          529,894,605
    HOllie Equity Loaus (NOli-High Loall-To-Vnluc ) - 14.5%
    9,950,000      Ace SecuritieS 2004- H E3 11 ,
    5.459% 11 /25/34 (a)                    BB+               7,535,03 1        8,557,000
    2,000,000     Ace Securities 2004-H E4 B,
    5.694% 12125/34 (a)                     Non-rated         \ ,426,39 \       1.722,820
    4,463,000      Ace Securities 2005-tIE2 8 1,
    6.06% 4/25/35 (a)                       Non-rated         3,709,858         3.709.646
    2,000,000     Eq ui firs t Mortgage 2004-3 81 ,
    5.708% 12125/34 (a)                     BB+               1,65 1,725        1,800,000
    7,038,000      Equifirs t Mortgage 2004-3 8 2,
    5.708% 12125/34 (a)                     BB                5,502,49 1        6, 123,060
    1,000,000     Equifirst M ortgage 2005- 1 B3.
    6.08% 4/25/35 Cal                       BB-                827,626            827,500
    1,757,000     EquifirSt Mortgage 2005- 1 8 4,
    6.08% 4/25135 Ca)                       Non-rated         1,453,04 1        1,452,828
    6,778,000      First Franklin 2004-PFII B \ ,
    5.43 1% 1125/35 (a)                     Non-rated         5,500.496         6. 134.090
    6,778,000      Firs t Franklin 2004-FFll B2,
    5.43 1% 1/25/35 (a)                     Non-rated         5,302,262         5,947 ,695
    2,000,000     GSAM P Trust 2004-A R \ 8 5,
    5.00% 6/25134 (a)                       Non-rated         1,552,348         1,550,000
    4,097,78 1     Long Beach Mortgage 200 1-4 M 3,
    4.683% 3125132                          CCC+              3,658,258         3,483 , 11 4
    8
    Page 41 of 181                                Tab 6, p. 3 of 7
    Jt.13-Page 10                                              MKJPURDU E00546
    RMK ADVANTAGE INCOME FUND, INC.
    Portfolio of In vestlllents
    M,I(c h J 1,2005
    Principa l                                                N RSRO
    Am ount /                                                 Ra ting                              Market
    Shares         Description                             (Unaud ited)       Cost               Va lue (b)
    Tobacco - 0.9%
    4,7 15,000      North Atlantic Trading,
    9.25 % Bond 3/1112                       ccc           S   4,533,054      S    3,536,250
    TrnJlsporinlimt - 0.4%
    1.630,000       Greyhound Lines,
    I 1.50% Bond 4/15/07                     ccc-              1,630,549            1,638, 150
    Trnve/ -O.5%
    2,000,000       Worlds pan Financia l,
    9.024% Bond 2/15/ 11 (a)                 ccc+              1,990. 124           1.940,000
    Total Corporate Bonds - Non-Investment
    Grade                                                                  5 113,90 1,25 1    5 109,015,385
    MORTGAGE BACKED SECURITIES -1.9% OF NET ASSETS
    Co/ln/t>rn/iu d Mortgage Ohligalinn - 1.9°;;,
    l larborv icw Mortgage 2004-8 X,
    1.446% 11 / 19/34 interest-only
    sl.rips                                  AAA               5,662,626           5,637,94 1
    2.3 10,000      Sasc() Net Interesl 2004·6XS B,
    5.00% 3128{34 Ca)                        BS+               2,11 0,40 1         2, 107,875
    Total Mortgage Backed Securities                                       S   7,773,027      S    7,745,8 16
    MUNICIPAL SECURITIES - 0.2% OF NET ASSETS
    1,250,000       Pima County Arizona IDA Health
    Care, 8.50% 11 / 15/32                                       78 1,29 1           774,825
    COMMON STOCKS - 7,9% OF NET ASSETS
    48,400       American Capital S trate-gies, Ltd.                        1,552,4 13           1,520,244
    6 1,710      Andrx Corporation (c)                                      1,246,878            1,398,966
    54,600       Anthrac ite Capital , I.nc.                                  605,776              608,244
    6, 100     Bank o r America Corpora tion                                276,28 1             269,0 10
    7,000       Best Buy Co., Lnc.                                           37 1,4 16            378.070
    17,300       Cirnarcx Energy Co. (c)                                      663,08 1             674,700
    5 1,800      Cisco Syste ms, Inc. (c)                                     929,234              926,702
    4.600       Cooper Cameron Corporation (c)                               256,469              263, 166
    14,000       Cree, Inc. (c)                                               300,495              304,500
    15,300       Exxon Mobil Corporation                                      8 18,697             9 11 ,880
    7,400      First Data Corporatio n                                      296,338              290,894
    13_800       Fron tline Ltd.                                              668,5 11             676,200
    34,900       Intcrsil Corpo ration                                        526,478              604,468
    44.000       iSha rcs Russell 3000 Value Index
    Fu nd                                                      3,668,540           3,766,840
    14,600       Kerr-McGee Corporation                                       909,87 1          1, 143 ,6 18
    10. 100      Kinder Morgan Energy Partners,
    L.P.                                                         448,617              454,500
    47,800       Limited Brand s, Inc.                                      1, 133,666           1,16 1,540
    /2
    Page 42 of 181                                Tab 6, p. 4 of 7
    Jt.13-Page 14                                                MKJPURDUE00550
    RMK STRATEGIC I NCOME F UND, INC.
    Portfolio of Investlllen ts
    Marc h ;\ L 2005
    Principal                                                  NRSRO
    Amount /                                                   Rating                          Market
    Shares        Descripti on                              (Un audited)       Cost          Value (b )
    ASSET BACKED SECURITIES - INVESTMENT GRADE - 26.2% OF
    NET ASSETS
    Cit/laterized O£'/J/ Obligation - 5.0%
    11.398,932     Divers ified AsSeL Securiti zation I A
    A I,7.873 % 9/15/35                            AA        $ 11,762, 18 1   $ 1 1,940,38 1
    4,000,000       E-Trade 2004- 1A COM I,
    2.00% 1110/40                                 BBB         3,980, 105       3,980,000
    2,40Q,000      Restructured Asset Backed 2003-
    '3A A3, 2.56% 1129122 (a)                      AA·          1,917,747        1,9 11,000
    $ 17 ,660,033    5 17,831.38 1
    COlllmercial L,){lns - 4.3%
    11,483 ,386    A thert on fo'ranchisee 1999-A A2,
    7.23%4/ 15/ 12 (a)                             A+         11 ,633,639      11 ,660,839
    1,000,000     H CA Secured Lend ing 1998- J
    DI , 7.8 1% 11 15/17 (a)                      BBB·          790,825          790,000
    3,000,000      GMAC Commercial Mortgage
    1998-C I P, 7.096% 511 5/30                    BBB·        2,949, 149       3,048,630
    S I5,373,61 3    5 15,499,469
    Equipment Len:;('S - 4.9%
    8,586,169      AE RCO 2A A3, 2.86% 7/1 5125                   BBB         6,408,440        6,343 ,033
    6,000,000      Airc raft Finance Trust \ 999- 1A
    A 1, 2.883 % 5/1 5/24                          BBB         4, 193,875       4, 155,000
    3,000,000      Aviation Capital Group 2oo0- IA
    A I, 3.07% 1111 5/25 (a)                       BBB         2,25 1,788       2,272,080
    7,000,000      Lease Investment Flight Trust I
    A I, 2.87% 7/15/3 1                            BBB         4,900,605        4,935 ,000
    $ 17,754,708     5 17,705, 11 3
    Frallchise LO(lns ~ 1.5%
    FMAC Loan Trust 1997-C AX ,
    2.355 % 121 15/ 19 interest-o nly
    SlripS (a)                                     BBB         2,778.749        2.7 19,888
    3,000,000      Franch ise Loan Trust 1998-1 A3 ,
    6.74% 7/15/20 (a)                              BBB         2,7 16,093       2,776,320
    $ 5,494,842      S 5.496,208
    Home Equily Lm!1ls (N(m-High Loall -T(I~Valut:) - 9.2%
    1,336,869     Aarnes Mo rtgage Trust 200 1-3 13 ,
    7.13 % 11125/3 1                         BBB                1,229, 177       1,296.763
    3,450,000      Ace Securities 2oo4-HE2 B I,
    5.3 11 % 10/25/34                        BBB               2,76 1,803       3,346,500
    2,000,000     Ace Securities 2004- HE4 M il ,
    5.694% 12125/34                          BBB-               1,603,838        1,87 1,880
    36
    Page 43 of 181                            Tab 6, p. 5 of 7
    Jt.13-Page 38                                              MKJPURDU E00574
    RMK STRATEGIC I NCOME F UND, INC.
    Portfolio of Investlllents
    Marc h J 1, 2005
    Principal                                                             NRSRO
    Amoun t/                                                              Rating                         Market
    Shares         Descripti on                                        (Un audited)      Cost          Vallie (b)
    1,487,000      Ace Securilies 2004- 1-1 5 I M6,
    4.59% 2/25134                                        BBB-          S 1,446,598     S 1,486,976
    2,057,073      Amrcsco Residen tial Sec uri ties
    1999- 1 B, 5.09% 11/25/29                            BBB             1,950,824       1,946,505
    2,700,000      First Franklin Mortgage 2004-FP2
    N3, 8.835% 4/25/34 (a)                               BBB             2,700,000       2,7 13.500
    2,750,000      First Franklin Mortgage 2004-FFS
    M9, 4.47% 8125/34                                    BBB·            2.446,7 13      2,557.500
    5,000,000      Long Beach Mortgage 2004-4
    M I D, 4.6 15% 10/25/34                              BBB+            4,607,452       5,050,000
    1,700,000      Nova$lar 1lome Eq uity 2004-384,
    5.238% 12125/34                                      BBB             1,562,857       1,627,750
    10 ,500,000     O pliull Dill::   Mu rl gag~   2004-2 M7,
    4.65 % 5/25134                                       BBB             8,9 10, 197     9,975 ,000
    1,4 17,882     Sail NcI2D04-SA B,
    6.75 % 6/27/34 (al                                   BBB             1,383,703       1,382,846
    $30,603, 162    $33,255,220
    M,11l11factu red Housing Loa/ls - 1.3%
    4,995,000      Green T ree Financ ial 1996-9 M I,
    7.63 % 1/ 15/28                                      B88             4,403.379       4,547,997
    Total Asset Hacked Securities - tUl'es'ment Grade                                  $9 1,289,737    594,335,388
    ASSET BACKED SECURlTrES - NON·INVESTMENT GRADE · 61.1% OF
    NET ASSETS
    Cerl ijirnll!-Bnckerl Obligalions - 3.31..
    1,000,000      M.\1 Community Funding II ,
    3.50% 12/ 15/3 1 (al                                 Non-rated         938,903         937,500
    2,000.000      M.\1 community Funding IX.
    10.00% 511133 (a)                                    Non-rated       1,94 1,063      1,940,000
    2,000,000      Prefcrrcd Tcon Securities IV,
    6.98% 6/24/34 (a)                                    88              2,029,762       2,030,000
    1,000.000      Preferred Term Securities XV,
    9/26/34 (al (0                                       Non-rated       1,000,000       1.055.900
    4,000,000      Preferred Tem1 Securi ties XV I,
    3/23/35 (al (0                                       Non-rated       4,000,000       4,079,440
    1,000,000      US Capital Fund ing II ,
    6.90% 8/ 1/34                                        Non-rated       1,000,000       1,000,000
    1,000.000      US Capital Fund ing III.
    14.00% 1211/35                                       Non-rated       1,000,000       I.OOO,DOO
    $ 11 ,909,728   $ 12,042,840
    Cfl lla lL'ri::erl Dell i O/!/igali(J1l - 4.1 'Yo
    2,000,000      Crest 2000- 1A 0 , 10.00% 813 1/36                   BS              1,400,295       1,405 ,000
    3,000.000      Hewett' s Island 2004- 1A COM ,
    12115/ 16   en                                       SB              3.000.000       3.000.000
    37
    Page 44 of 181                                Tab 6, p. 6 of 7
    Jt.13-Page 39                                               MKiPURDU E00575
    RMK STRATEGIC I NCOME F UND, INC.
    Portfolio of Investlllents
    M,I(c h 3 1, 2005
    Principal                                                     NRSRO
    Am ount /                                                 Rating                            Market
    Shares       Description                               (Un audited)          Cost         Value (b)
    Travel- 0.3%
    1,000,000     Worldspan Financial, 9.024%
    Bond 2/ 15/ 11 (a)                            ccc+         S    997,620     S     970,000
    Total Corporate Bonds - Non-In vcstment Grade                            597,306,977      593,078,045
    MORTGAGE BACKED SECURITIES -INVESTMENT GRADE - 3.3% OF
    NET ASSETS
    Collakrnlized MiJtlgage Ob/igalion - 3.3'YI1
    Harborv icw Mortgagc2004. J X,
    1.90% 4/19/34 interest-on ly strips           AAA              2.736.980        1.841,475
    Harborview Mortgage 2004-8 X,
    0.50% ll1L9/34 intcrcst-on ly strips          AAA              2.864.456        2,8 18,97 1
    Mcllon Residentia l 2004-TBC I X,
    0.716% 2126/34 interest-only
    strips (a)                                    AAA              1.384.555        1,222.989
    2.960,648     Structu red Asset Securities 1999-
    SPl , 9.00% 5125129                           BBB              3,003,256        2,962,9 19
    3.651 .000    Structured Asset Securities 2004-8
    B2, 5.00% 9/25/34                             BBB·             3, 105,982       3 ,075 , 164
    Total Mortgage   Ba{~kcd   Secur ities - lnvestment Grade                $ 13.095.229     5 11 .92 1.5 18
    GOVERNMENT AGENCY SECURITIES - 2.1% OF NET ASSETS
    Fannie Mae 1998-M7 N,
    1.057% 5/25/36 intcrcst-only strips (c)       Non-ruted        3,707,404        2,553.225
    GNMA 2003-64 XA, 1.20 % 8/16/43
    interest-only strips (c)                      Non-r,lIed       9,699,772        4,873,072
    Total Government Agency Securities                                       5 13,407, 176    57,426.297
    MUNICIPAL SECURITIES - 0,2% OF NET ASSETS
    1,000.000     Pima County Arizona LOA Healt h
    Car;!, 8.50% I 1/ 15/32                       Non-rated         625,032           619,860
    COMMON STOCKS -13.1% OF NET ASSETS
    75.562      American Capital S trategies, Ltd.                             2.284.869        2.373,402
    87,000      Andrx Corporation (d)                                          1,729,944        1,972,290
    85.800      Anthracitc Capita l, Inc.                                        974,2 14         955.8 12
    8.800      Bank o f America Corporation                                     350.245          388,080
    10,800      Best Buy Co., Inc.                                               572,234          583.308
    2.400      BP Prudhoe Bay Royalty Trust                                      94.360          167,520
    27.000      Cimarex Energy Co. (d)                                         1,035.565        1.053 .000
    79,900      Cisco Systcms, Inc. (d)                                        1,429,540        1,429,41 1
    6,900      Cooper Camcron Corporation (d)                                   384.52 1         394,749
    2 1.800     ere;!, tne. (d)                                                  467,913          474, 150
    10,800      Devon Energy Corporatio n                                        389.070          5 15,700
    24.200      Ellxon Mobil Corporatio n                                      1,299,447        1,442,320
    44
    Page 45 of 181                              Tab 6, p. 7 of 7
    Jt.13-Page 46                                                 MKJPURDUE00582
    TAB 7
    Page 46 of 181
    RMK Strategic Income Fund, Inc.
    (a Maryland Corporation)
    21,000,000 Shares of Common Stock
    Par Value $.0001 Per Share
    UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT
    March 18, 2004
    Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc.
    01
    50 North Front Street, 19 Floor
    Memphis, TN 38103
    Ladies and Gentlemen:
    RMK Strategic Income Food, Inc., a Maryland corporation (the "Fund"), and the Fund's
    investment.adviser, Morgan Asset Management, loc., a Tennessee corporation (the "Adviser"),
    each confinns its agreement with Morgan Keegan & Company, Iilc. (<--
    Authorized Signatory
    For itself and as Representatives of the other
    Underwriters named in Schedule A bereto.
    2S
    Page 52 of 181                          Tab 7, p. 6 of 6
    Jt.20-Page 25                                      MKiPURDUE03484
    TAB 8
    Page 53 of 181
    ADMINISTRATlQN AGREEMENT
    THIS ADMINlSTRATION AGREEMENT ("Agreement") is made this 18" day of
    November 2004 by and between RMK STRATEGIC INCOME FUND, INC. (the "Fund"), a
    Maryland corporc1tion. having its principal place of business at Fifty North Front Street.
    Memp)lis, Tennessee 38103, and MORGAN KEEGAN & COMPANY, INC. (the
    "Administrator"), a Tennessee corporation. having its principal place of business at Fifty North
    Front Street. Memphis. Tennessee 38103.
    WHEREAS. the Fund, a closed-end, diversified management investment company
    registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"). wishes to
    retain the Administrator to provide administrative services to the Fund; and
    WHEREAS, the Administrator is willing to furnisb such services on the             tCIlllS   and
    conditions hereinafter set forth;
    NOW, THEREFORE. in consideration of the promises and mutual covenants herein
    contained. it is agreed as follows:
    1.      Aooointment of the Administrator. The Fund hereby appoints the Administrator
    to act as the administrator for the Fund for the period, in the manner, and on the tenus set forth in
    this Agreement. The Administrator hereby accepts such appointment and agrees during such
    period to render the services and to assume the obligations herein set forth. The Administrator
    shall for all purposes herein be deemed to be an independent contractor and shan, except as
    expressly provided or authorized (whether herein or otherwise), have no authority to act for or
    represent the Fund in any way or othetWise be deemed an agent of the Fund
    2.     Administrative Services. As administrator. and subject to the supervision and
    control of the Board of Directors of the Fund., the Administrator shall perform (or supervise the
    perfonnance by others) and will provide facilities. equipment and personnel, to carry out the
    fonowing administrative services [or operation ofthc business and affairs of the Fund:
    (i)       furnish without cost to the Fund, or pay the cost of, such office space, office
    equipment and office facilities as are adequate for the needs of the Fund;
    (ii)     provide, without remuneration from or other cost to the Fund,. the services of
    individuals competent to perfonn all of the executive, administrative and"clerical
    functions of the Fund that are not performed by employees or other agents
    engaged by the Fund or by the Administrator acting in some other capacity
    pursuant to a separate agreement or arrangement with the Fund;
    (iii)    assist the Fund in selecting and coordinating the activities of the other agents
    engaged by the Fund, including the Fund's dividend disbursing agent, custodian,
    independent public accountants and legal counsel;
    (iv)     authorize and pennit the Administrator"s directors, officers or employees who
    iX:-611049Y2 030761 S~IOO
    Page 54 of 181                         Tab 8, p. 1 of 4
    Jt.22-Page 1                                           MKJPURDUE03491
    may be elected or appointetl as officers of the Eund or directors of the Fund to
    serve in such capacities, without remuneration from or other cost to the Fund;
    (v)       assUIe that all financial, accounting and other records required to be maintained
    and preservcd by the Fund are inaintained and preserved by it or on its behalf in
    accordance with applicable laws and regulations;
    (vi)     assist in the preparation of (but not pay for) all periodic reports by the Fund to
    stockholders of the Fund and all reports and filings requir~ to maintain the
    registration, qualification and listing on a national securities exchange of the Fund
    and the shares of the Fund, or to meet other regulatory or tax requirements
    applicable to the Fund or the shares of the Fund. under federal and state securities
    and tax laws;
    (vii)    respond to telephonic and in-peISOn inquiries from existing stockholders or their
    representatives requesting infonnation regarding matters such as stockholder
    account or transaction status, net asset value of Fund shares, and Fund
    performance, Fund services, plans and options, Fund investment policies~ Fund
    portfolio holdings, and Fund distributions and classification thereof for tax
    pwposes;
    (viii)   handle stockholder complaints and correspondence directed to or brought to the
    attention of the Administrator; generate or develop and distribute special data.
    notices, reports, programs and literature required by large stockholders, by
    stockholders with specialized infonnational needs, or by stockholders generally in
    light of developments, such as changes in tax laws; and
    (ix)     provide such other services required by the FWld as the parties may from time to
    time agree in writing are appropriate to be provided under this Agreement.
    3.      Books and Records. The Administrator shall maintain customary records in
    connection with its duties as specified in this Agreement. Any records required to be maintained
    and preserved. pursuant to Rules 31a-l and 31a-2 under the 1940 Act which are prepared or
    maintained by the Administrator on behalf of the Fund shall be the property of the Fund and will
    be made available or surrendered to the FWld promptly upon request. hi the case of any request
    or demand for the inspection of such records by another party, the Administrator shall notify the
    Fund and follow the Fund's instructions as to pennitting or refusing such inspection.
    4.      Reports. The Administrator shall furnish to or place at the diS(X>sal of the Fund
    such infonnation, evaluations, analyses and opinions fotnlulated or obtained by the
    Administrator in the discharge of its duties as the FWld may, from time to time, reasonably
    request. The Fund shall furnish the Administrator with such documents and infonnation with
    . regard to its affairs as the Administrator may, at any time or from time to time, reasonably
    request in order to discharge its obligations under this Agreement.
    S.       Fund Personnel.      The Administrator agrees to permit individuals who are
    2
    .. -   _._- - - -- -
    Page 55 of 181                          Tab 8, p. 2 of 4
    Jt.22-Page 2                                          MKJPURDUE03492
    I
    directors, officers or employees of the Administrator to serve (if duly appointed or elected) as
    directors, officers or employees of the Fund, without remuneration from or other cost to the
    Fund.
    6.      EXDcnses. The Administrator shall be responsible for expenses incurred in
    providing office space. equipment and personnel as may be necessary or convenient to provide
    administrative services to the Fund, including the payment of all fees. expenses and salaries of
    the directors, officers or employees of the Fund who are directors, officers or employees of the
    Administrator. The Fund shall bear the expense of its operation. except those specrnca1ly
    allocated to the Administrator under this Agreement or under any separate agreement between
    the Fund and the Administrator. Subject to any separate agreement or arrangement between the
    Fund and the Administrator. the expenses hereby allocated to the Fund, and not to the
    Administrator, include, but are not limited to: (i) organizational expenses; (ii) legal and audit
    expenses; (iii) borrowing expenses; (iv) interest; (v) taxes; (vi) governmental fees; (vii) fees,
    voluntary assessments and other expenses incurred in cormection with membership in invesbnent
    company organizations; (viii) the cost (including brokerage commissions or charges, if any) of
    securities pW'Chased or sold by the Fund and any losses incurred in connection therewith; (ix)
    fees of custodians. transfer agents, registrars or other agents; (x) expenses of preparing share
    certificates; (xi) expenses relating to the redemption or repurchase of shares; (xii) expenses of
    registering and qualifying shares for sale under applicable federal law and maintaining such
    registrations and qualifications; (xiii) expenses of preparing, setting in print, printing and
    distributing prospectuses, proxy statements, reports. notices and dividends to stockholders; (xiv)
    cost of stationery; (xv) costs of stockholders and other meetings of the Fund; (xvi) compensation
    and expenses of the independent directors of the Fund: (xvii) the Fund's portion of premiums of
    any fidelity bond and other insurance covcring the Fund and its officers and directors; and (xviii)
    the fees and other expenses of listing and maintaining the Fund's shares on the New York Stock
    Exchange or any other national stock exchange.
    7.      Comoensation. As compensation for the services performed hereunder, the
    Administrator shall receive from the Fund an administration fee at the annual rate of 0.15% of
    the Fund's average daily total assets minus liabilities (other than the aggregate indebtedness
    entered. into for purposes of leverage) ("Managed Assets"). This administration fee shall be
    payable monthly as soon as practicable after the last day of each month based on the average of
    the daily values placed on the Managed Assets of the Fund as detennined at the close of business
    on each day throughout the month. The Managed Assets of the Fund wiU be valued as of the
    close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m .• Eastem time) on
    each business' day throughout the month or, if the Fund lawfully determines the value of its
    Managed Assets as of some other time on each business day. as of such time. The first payment
    of such fee shall be made as promptly as possible at the end of the month next succeecling the
    effective date of this Agreement In the event that the Administrator's right to such fee
    commences on a date other than the first day of the month. the fee for such month shall be based
    on the average daily Managed Assets of the Fund in that period from the date of commencement
    to the last day of the month. If the Fund determines the value of its Managed Assets more than
    once on any business day, the last such determination on that day shall be deemed to be the sole
    detennination on that day. The value of the Managed Assets shall be detennined pursuant to the
    applicable provisions of the Fund's Articles of Incorporation, its By-Laws and the 1940 Act. If,
    3
    Page 56 of 181                         Tab 8, p. 3 of 4
    Jt.22-Page 3                                        MKiPURDUE03493
    IN WITNESS WHEREOf the pies have ~aused., this instrument to be signed. on their
    behalf by their respective officers thereunto duly authorized. all "as of the date first written above.
    RMK STRATEGIC INCOME FUND, INC.
    BY~           f) /7lavy01
    Name: Charles D. Maxwell
    Title: Secretary and Assistant Treasurer
    MORGAN KEEGAN & COMPANY, INC.
    BY£&tIC~D.2~&1j
    Title: Assistant Treasurer   d Assistant Secretary
    7
    Page 57 of 181                           Tab 8, p. 4 of 4
    Jt.22-Page 7                                           MK/PURDUE03497
    TAB 9
    Page 58 of 181
    ADDITIONAL COMPENSATION AGREEMENT
    ADDmONAL COMPENSATION ACRUMENT (the " Agreement"), dated as of March 18, 2004,
    between Morgan Asset Management, Inc. (the "lnvestment Advisor'') and Morgan Keegan & Company.
    Inc. ("Morgan Keegan'").
    WR£R£AS, RMK Stnttegic Income Fund, Inc. (the "Ftmd") is a newly-organized, diversified,
    c1osed~d  management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
    amended, and ita common shares are registered under the Securities Act of 1933. as amended;
    WHEREAS, Morgan Keegan is acting as lead undetwriter in an offering (the "OtTering', of the
    Fund's conunon shares;
    WHEREAS, the Investment Advisor desires to provide additional compensation to Morgan
    Keegan for acting as lead underwriter in the Offering; and
    WHEREAS, the Invesbnent Advisor desires to retain Morgan Keegan to provide after-market
    support services designed to maintain the visibility of the Fund on an ongoing basis, and Morgan Keegan
    is willing to render such services.
    NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual terms and conditions set forth below. the
    parties hereto agree as follows :
    SECDON 1.
    (a)     The Investment Advisor hereby employs Morgan Keegan, for the period and on the tenns
    and conditions set forth herein, to provide the following services at the reasonable request of the
    Investment Advisor: (i) to provide after-market support services designed to maintain the visibility of the
    Fund on an ongoing basis; (ii) to provide relevant infonnation, studiC1 or reports regarding general trends
    in the closed-end investment company and asset management industries, if reasonably obtainable, and
    consult with representatives of the Investment Advisor in connection therewith; and (iii) to provide
    infonnation to and consult with the Investment Advisor with respect to applicable strategies designed to
    address market value discounts, if any.
    (b)     At the request of the Investment Advisor, Morgan Keegan shall limit or cease any action
    or service provided hereunder to the extent and for the time period requested by the Investment Advisor;
    provided, however, that pending tennination of this Agreement as provided for in Section S hereof. any
    such limitation or cessation shall not relieve the Investment Advisor of its payment obligations punuant
    to Section 2 hereof.
    (c)    Morgan Keegan will promptly notify the Investment Advisor if it learns of any matcriaI
    inaccuracy or misstatement in, or material omission from. any written information. as of the date such
    infonnatiop was published. provided by Morgan Keegan to the: InvesUDCnt Advisor in connection with the
    performance of semccs by Morgan Keegan under this Agreement.
    SECTION Z. TIle Investment Advisor shall pay Morgan Keegan a fee payable quarterly at an
    armualizcd rate of 0.10% of the Fund's managed assets (the "Additional Fcc") for a term as descnbc:d in
    Section S hereof; provided that, the total amount of the Additional Fee payable by the Investment Advisor
    hereunder, plus the amount of any expense reimbursement payable by the Investment Advisor or the Fund
    to the Underwriters pursuant to the Undenvriting Agreement (defined below), will not exceed 4.5% of the
    total priee to the public ("Maximum Compensation Amount'') of the Fund's common shares (including all
    1
    Page 59 of 181                            Tab 9, p. 1 of 2
    Jt.21-Page 1                                            MKJPURDUE03498
    IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have duly executed this Additional Compensation
    Agreement as of the date ftrSt above written.
    MORGAN KEEGAN &: COMPANY, INC.
    ``D8M11.~
    Title: Managing Director
    MORGAN AssETMANAG
    By:~Mi:-~1``
    Carter
    Name:         E. Anthony
    Title: President
    4
    5053595.2
    Page 60 of 181                       Tab 9, p. 2 of 2
    Jt.21-Page 4                                    MKiPURDUE03501
    TAB 10
    Page 61 of 181
    RMK Advantage [Dcome Fund, [oc.
    (a Maryland Corporation)
    24,000,000 Shares o[Common Stock
    Par Value $.0001 Per Share
    UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT
    November 8, 2004
    Morgan Keegan & Company, me.
    Legg Mason Wood Walker, Incorporated
    Oppenheimer & Co., Inc.
    RBC Capital Markets Corporation
    Stifel, Nicolaus & Company. Incorporated
    SunTrust Capital Markets, Inc.
    Advest. Inc.
    BB&T Capital Markets, a division of Scott & Stringfellow, Inc.
    Stephens Inc.
    Wedbush Morgan Securities, lnc.
    clo Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc.
    50 North Front Street, 19lh Floor
    Memphis, TN 38103
    Ladies and Gentlemen:
    RMK Advantage Income Fund, Inc., a Maryland corporation (the "Fund"), and the
    Fund's investment adviser, Morgan Asset Management, Inc., a .Tennessee corporation (the
    "Adviser"), each confinns its agreement with Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc. ("Morgan
    Keegan") and Legg Mason Wood Walker, Incorporated, Oppenheimer & Co., Inc. , RBe Capital
    Markets Corporation, Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated, SunTrust Capital Markets. Inc.,
    Advest, Inc., BB&T Capital Markets, a divi::;ion of Scott & Stringfellow, Inc., Stephens Inc.,
    Wedbush Morgan Securities, inc. and each of the other Underwriters named in Schedule A
    hereto (cotlectively, the "Underwriters"), for whom Morgan Keegan and Legg Mason Wood
    Walker, Incorporated, Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., RBe Capital Markets Corporation, Stifel.
    Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated, SunTrust Capital Markets, Inc., Advest, Inc., BB&T Capital
    Markets, a division of Scott & Stringfellow, Inc., StephenS, Inc., Wedbush Morgan Securities,
    Inc. are acting as representatives (in such capacity, the "Representatives" ), with respect to the
    issue and sale by the Fund and the purchase by the Underv.'riters, acting severally and not jointly,
    of the respective number of shares of common stock, par value $.0001 per share, of the Fund
    ("Common Shares") set forth in Schedule A hereof, and with respect to the grant by the Fund to
    the Underwriters, acting severally and not jointly, of the option described in Section 2(b) hereof
    to purchase all or any part of 3,600,000 additional Common Shares to cover over-allotments, if
    any. The aforesaid 24,000,000 Cornman Shares (the "Primary Shares") to be purchased by the
    Underwriters and all or any part of the 3,600,000 Common Shares subject to the option described
    in Section 2(b) hereof (the "Option Shares") are collectively referred to as the "Shares."
    The Fund understands that the Underwriters propose to make a public offering of the
    Shares as soon as the Representatives deem advisable after this Agreement has been executed
    and delivered.
    Page 62 of 181                       Tab 10, p. 1 of 6
    Jt.23-Page 1                                       MKJPURDUE03502
    [
    The Fund has filed with the Securities and Exchahge Conunission (the "Commission") a
    registration statement on Fonn N-2 (File Nos. 333-118846 and 811-21631) covering the
    registration of the Shares under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act"),
    including the related preliminary prospectus or prospectuses, and a notification on Fonn N-SA of
    registration of the Fund as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940,
    as amended (the "1940 Act"), and the rules and regulations of the Commission under the 1933
    Act and the 1940 Act (the "Rules and Regulations"). Promptly after execution and delivery of
    this Agreement, the Fund will either (i) prepare and file a prospectus in accordance with the
    provisions of Rule 430A ("Rule 430A") and paragraph (e) or (h) of Rule 497 ("Rule 497") under
    the 1933 Act or (ii) if the Fund has elected to rely upon Rule 434 ("Rule 434") under the 1933
    Act, prepare and tile a tenn sheet (a "Tenn Sheet") in accordance with the provisions of Rule
    434 and Rule 497. The infoIDlation included in any such prospectus, that was omitted from such
    registration statement at the time it became effective but that is deemed to be part of such
    registration statement at the time it became effective, if applicable, (a) pursuant to paragraph (b)
    of Rule 430A is referred to as "Rule 430A lnfonnation" or (b) pursuant to para,graph (d) of Rule
    434 is referred to as "Rule 434 Information." Each prospectus used before such registration
    statement became effective, and any prospectus that omitted, as applicable, the Rule 430A
    Infannalion or the Rule 434 fnfonnation, that was used after such effectiveness and prior to the
    execution and delivery of this Agreement, including in each case any statement of additional
    infonnation incorporated therein by reference, is herein called a "preliminary prospectus." Such
    registration statement, including the exhibits and schedules thereto at the time it became effective
    and including the Rule 430A Infonnation or the Rule 434 Infonnation, as applicable, is herein
    called the "Registration Statement." Any registration statement filed pursuant to Rule 462(b)
    under the 1933 Act is herein referred to as the "Rule 462(b) Registration Statement," and the
    term "Registration Statement" shall include any Rule 462(b) Registration Statement that shall
    have been filed. The final prospectus in the form first fUll1.ished to the Underwriters for use in
    connection with the offering of the Shares, including the statement of additional infonnalion
    incorporated therein by reference, is herein called the "Prospectus." If Rule 434 is relied on, the
    term "Prospectus" shall refer to the preliminary prospectus, including the statement of additional
    infonnalion incorporated therein by reference, together with the Tenn Sheet and all references in
    this Agreement to the date of the Prospectus shall mean the date of the Term Sheet. For
    purposes of this Agreement, all references to the Registration Statement, any preliminary
    prospectus, the Prospectus or any Term Sheet or any amendment or supplement to any of the
    foregoing shall be deemed to include the copy filed with the Commission pursuant to its
    Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval system ("EDGAR").
    All references in this Agreement to financial statements and schedules and other
    information which is "contained," "included" or "stated" in the Registration Statement, any
    preliminary prospectus or the Prospectus (or other references of like import) shall be deemed to
    mean and include all such financial statements and schedules and other information which arc
    incorporated by reference in the Registration Statement, any preliminary prospectus or the
    Prospectus, as the case may be.
    SECTION I. REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES.
    (a)     Representations and Warranties by the Fund and the Adviser. The Fund and the
    Adviser represent and warrant to each UndelWriter as of the date hereof, as of the Closing Time
    2
    Page 63 of 181                       Tab 10, p. 2 of 6
    Jt.23-Page 2                                      MK/PURDUE03503
    referred to in Section 2(c) hereof, and ~ of each Date of Delivery (if any) referred to in Section
    2(b) hereof, and agree with each Underwriter, as follows:
    (i)     Compliance with Registration Requirements. Each of the Registration
    Statement and any Rule 462(b) Registration Statement has become effective under the
    1933 Act and no stop order suspending the effectiveness of the Registration Statement or
    any Rule 462(b) Registration Statement has been issued under the 1933 Act, or order of
    suspension or revocation ofregistration pursuant to Section 8(e) of the 1940 Act, and no
    proceedings for any such purpose, have been instituted or are pending or, to the
    knowledge of the Fund or the Adviser, are contemplated by the Commission, and any
    request on the part of the Commission for additional information has been complied with.
    At the respective times the Registration Statement, any R~le 462(b) Registration
    Statement and any post-effective amendment thereto (filed before the Closing Time)
    became effective and at the Closing Time, as hereinafter defined (and, if any Option
    Shares are purchased, at the Date of Delivery), the Registration Statement, the Rule
    462(b) Registration Statement, the notification of Form N-SA and all amendments and
    supplements thereto complied and will comply in all material respects with the
    requirements of the 1933 Act, the 1940 Act and the Rules and Regulations and did not
    and will not contain an untrue statement ofa material fact or omit to state a material fact
    required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading.
    Neither the Prospectus nor any amendment or supplement thereto, at the time the
    Prospectus or any such amendment or supplement was issued and at the Closing Time
    (and, if any Option Shares are purchased, at the Date of Delivery), included or will
    include an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted or will omit to state a material
    fact necessary in order to make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances
    under which they were made, not misleading. If Rule 434 is used, the Fund will comply
    with the requirements of Rule 434 and the Prospectus shall not be "materially different,"
    as such tenn is used in Rule 434, frOIl1 the prospectus included in the Registration
    Statement at the time it became effective. The representations and warranties in this
    subsection shall not apply to statements in or omissions from the Registration Statement
    or Prospectus made in reliance upon and in confonnity with information furnished to the
    Fund by or on behalf of any Underwriter for use in the Registration Statement or
    Prospectus.
    Each preliminary prospectus and the prospectus filed as part of the Registration
    Statement as originally filed or as part of any amendment thereto, or filed pursuant to
    Rule 497 under the 1933 Act, complied when so filed in all material respects with the
    Rules and Regulations and each preliminary prospectus and the Prospectus delivered to
    the Underwriters for use in connection with this offering was identical to the
    electronically transmitted copies thereof filed with the Commission pursuant to EDGAR,
    except to the extent permitted by Regulation S-T.
    If a Rule 462(b) Registration Statement is required in connection with the offering and
    sale of the Shares, the Fund has complied or will comply with the requirements of Rule
    III under the 1933" Act and the rules and regulations relating to the payment of filing
    fees thereof.
    3
    Page 64 of 181                      Tab 10, p. 3 of 6
    Jt.23-Page 3                                      MK/PURDUE03504
    (ii)      Independent Accountants". The accountants who certified the statement of
    assets and liabilities included in the Registration Statement have con finned to the Fund
    their status 3.<; independent public accountants as required by the 1933 Act and the Rules
    and Regulations and the Fund and the Adviser have no reason to believe that they are not
    independent public accountan(s.
    (iii)  Financial Statements. The statement of assets and liabilities included in
    the Registration Statement and the Prospectus, together with the related notes, presents
    f!>ued
    or proceedings therefor initiated · or, to the Fund's knowledge, threatened by the
    Commission.
    (viii) Officers and Directors. No person is serving or acting as an officer,
    director or investment adviser of the Fund except in accordance with the provisions of the
    1940 Act and the Rules and Regulations and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as
    amended (the "Advisers Act"), and the rules and regulations of the Commission
    promulgated under the Advisers Act (the "Advisers Act Rules and Regulations"). Except
    as disclosed in the Registration Statement or Prospectus, to the Fund's knowledge after
    4
    Page 65 of 181                      Tab 10, p. 4 of 6
    Jt.23-Page 4                                      MK/PURDUE03505
    (including exhibits fileq therewith of incorporated.by reference therein) and signed copies
    of all consents and certificates of experts; aitd will also deliver to the Representatives,
    without charge, a conformed copy of the Registration Statement as originally filed and of
    each amendment (except any post-effective amendment required by Rule 8b-16 of the
    1940 Act which is filed with the Commission after the later of (x) one year from the date
    of this Agreement or (y) the date on which the distribution of the Shares is completed)
    thereto (without exhibits) for each of the Underwriters. The copies of the Registration
    Statement and each amendment thereto furnished to the Underwriters will be identical to
    the electronically transmitted copies thereof filed with the Commission pursuant to
    EDGAR, except to the extent permitted by Regulation S-T.
    (iv)    Delivery of Prospectuses. The Fund has delivered to each Underwriter,
    without charge, as many copies of each preliminary prospectus as such Underwriter
    reasonably requested, and the Fund hereby consents to the use of such copies for
    purposes permitted by the 1933 Act. The Fund will furnish to each Underwriter, without
    charge, during the period when the Prospectus is requfred to be delivered under the 1933
    Act or the 1934 Act, such number of copies of the Prospectus (as amended or
    supplemented) as such Underwriter may reasonably request. The Prospectus and any
    amendments or supplements thereto furnished to the Underwriters will be identical to the
    electronically transmitted copies thereof filed with the Commission pursuant to EDGAR,
    except to the extent permitted by Regulation S-T.
    (v)     Continued Compliance with Securities Laws. If at any time when a
    prospectus is required by the 1933 Act to be delivered in connection with sales of the
    Shares, any event shall occur or condition shall exist as a result of which it is necessary,
    in the reasonable opinion of counsel for the Underwriters or for the Fund, to amend the
    Registration Statement or amend or supplement the Prospectus in order that the
    Prospectus will not include any untrue statements of a material fact or omit to state a ·
    material fact necessary in order to make the statements therein not misleading in the light
    of the circumstances existing at the time it is delivered to a purchaser, or if it shall be
    necessary, in the opinion of such counsel, at any such time to amend the Registration
    Statement or amend or supplement the Prospectus in order to comply with the
    requirements of the 1933 Act or the Rules and Regulations, the Fund will promptly
    prepare and file with the Commission, subject to Section 3(a)(ii), such amendment or
    supplement as may be necessary to correct such statement or omission or to make the
    Registration Statement or the Prospectus comply with such requirements, and the Fund
    will furnish to the Underwriters such number of copies of such amendment or supplement
    as the Underwriters may reasonably request.
    (vi)    Blue Sky Qualifications. The Fund will use its best efforts; in cooperation
    with the Underwriters, to qualify the Shares for offering and sale under the applicable
    securities laws of such states and other jurisdictions of the United States as the
    Representatives may designate and to maintain such qualifications in effect so long as
    required for the distribution of the Shares; provided, however, that the foregoing shall not
    apply to the extent that the Shares are "covered securities" that are exempt from state
    regulation of securities offerings pursuant to Section 18 of the 1933 Act; and provided,
    further, that the Fund shall not be obligated to file any general consent to service of
    process or to qualify as a foreign corporation or as a dealer in securities in any
    13
    Page 66 of 181                      Tab 10, p. 5 of 6
    Jt.23-Page 13                                       MK/PURDUE03514
    cu                  I
    r
    Very truly   yO UfS,
    Rl\lK ADVANTAGE INCOME FuND,INC.
    BY:Name:
    ~B~  Charles D. Max ell
    Title: Secretary and AssIstant Treasurer
    MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC.
    By:~.~-&/f~
    Name: Charles D. Maxw611
    Title: Secretary and Treasurer
    COJ'l.'FlRM[O AND ACCEPn: D,
    as of the dale ftrst above written:
    Morgan Keegan & Company. Inc.
    Legg Mason Wood Walker, lncOIporated
    Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.
    RBe Capital Markets Corporation
    Stifel, Nico laus & Company, Incorporated
    SunTNst Capital Markets, mc.
    Advest, Inc.
    BB&T CapitaLMarkets. a division ofScotl & Stringfellow, Inc.
    Stephens Inc.
    Wedbush Morgan Securities Inc.
    By: MORGAN KEEGAN & COMPANY, INC.
    By:   'h.cpJ~\.L ~
    si ory
    Authorized
    For itself and as Representatives of the other
    Underwriters named in Schedule A hereto.
    26
    Page 67 of 181                       Tab 10, p. 6 of 6
    Jt.23-Page 26                                   MKiPURDUE03527
    TAB 11
    Page 68 of 181
    ADDITIONAL COMPENSA'fJON AGREEMENT
    ADDITIONAL COMPENSATION AGREEMENT (the "Agreement"). dated as of November
    12, 2004, between Morgan Asset Management, Inc. (the "Investment Advisor") and Morgan
    Keegan & Company, Inc. ("Morgan Keegan").
    WHEREAS, RMK Adyantage Income Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is a newly organized,
    diversified, closed-end management investment company registered under the 1nvestment
    Company Act of 1940, as amended, and its shares of common stock (the "Common Shares") arc
    registered under the Securities Aet of 1933, as amended;
    WHEREAS, Morgan Keegan is acting as lead undelWriter in an offering (the "Offering")
    ofthe Fund':!> Common Shares;
    WHEREAS, the Investment Advisor desires to provide additional compensatioll to Morgan
    Keegan for acting as lead underwriter in the Offering; and
    WHEREAS, the Investment Advisor desires to retain Morgan Keegan to provide after-
    market support services designed to maintain the visibility of the Fund on an ongoing basis, and
    Morgan Keegan is wi lling to render such services.
    Now, TUEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual terms and conditions set forth below,
    the parties hereto agree as follows:
    SECTION 1.
    (a)    The Investment Advisor hereby employs Morgan Keegan, for the period and on
    the tenns and conditions set forth herein, to provide the following services at the reasonable
    request of the Investment Advisor: (i) to provide after-market support services designed to
    maintain the visibility of the Fund on an ongoing basis; (ii) to provide relevant information,
    stlldies or reports regarding general trends in the closed-end investment company and asset
    management industries, if reasonably obtainable, and consult with representatives of the
    . Investment Advisor in connection therewith; (iii) to provide information to and consult w ith the
    Investment Advisor with respect to applicable strategies designed to address market value
    discounts, if any; and (iv) to provide assistance with answering questions from broker-dealers
    and investors concerning the Fund.
    (b)    At the request of the Investment Advisor, Morgan Keegan shall limit or cease any
    action or service provided hereunder to the extent and for the time period requested by the
    Investment Advisor; provided, however, that pending tennination of this Agreement as provided
    for in Section 5 hereof, any such limitation or cessation shall not relieve the Investment Advisor
    of its payment obligations pursuant to Section 2 hereof.
    (c)     Morgan Keegan will promptly notify the Investment Advisor if it learns of any
    material inaccuracy or misstatement in, or material omission from, any written information, as of
    Page 69 of 181                        Tab 11, p. 1 of 2
    Jt.24-Page 1                                         MKiPURDUE03534
    l-
    IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have duly executed this Additional
    Compensation Agreement as of the date first above written.
    MORGAN KEEGAN & COMPANY, INC.
    BY:Rn``
    Name: Bradley arber
    Title: Senior Vice President
    MORGAN AsSET MANAGEMENT, INC.
    BY:&u.4       [)~
    Name: Charles D. Maxw?1I
    Title: Secretary and Treasurer
    5
    5066154. 1
    Page 70 of 181                        Tab 11, p. 2 of 2
    Jt.24-Page 5                                    MK/PURDUE03538
    TAB 12
    Page 71 of 181
    ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT
    THIS ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT ("Agreement") is made this 18" day of
    November 2004 by and between RMK ADVANTAGE INCOME FUND, INC. (the "Fund"), a
    Maryland corporation. having its principal place of business at Fifty North Front Street,
    Memphis, Tennessee 38103, and MORGAN KEEGAN & COMPANY, INC. (the
    "Administrator"). a Tennessee corporation, having its principal place of business at Fifty North
    Front Street, Memphis. Termessee 38103.
    WHEREAS, the Fund, a closed-end, diversified management investment company
    registered under the lnvestment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the " 1940 Act"), wishes to
    retain the Administrator to provide administrative services to the Fund; and
    WHEREAS, the Administrator is willing to furnish such services on the terms and
    conditions hereinafter st.!t forth;
    NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the promises and mutual covenants herein
    contained, it is agreed a.. follows:
    1.     Appointmcnt of the Administrator. The Fund hereby appoints the Admi nistrator
    to act as the admi nistrator for the FWld for the period, in the manner, and on the terms set forth in
    this Agreement. The Administrator hereby accepts such appointment and agrees during such
    period to render the services and to assume the obligations herein set forth. The Administrator
    shall for all purposes hcrein be deemed to be an independent contractor and shall, except as
    expressly provided or authorized (whether herein or otherwise), have no authority to act for or
    represent the Fund in any way or otherwise be deemed an agent of the Fund
    2.     Administrative Services. As administrator, and subject to the supervision and
    control of the Board of Directors of the Fund, the Administrator shall perform (or supervise the
    perfonnance by others) and will provide facilities, equipment and personnel to cany out the
    following administrative services for operation of the business and affairs of the Fund:
    (1)       furnish without cost to thc Fund, or pay the cost of, such office space. office
    equipment and office facilities as are adequate for the needs of the Fund;
    (ii)     provide, without remuneration from or other cost to the FWld, the services of
    individuals competent to perfonn all of the executive, administrative and clerical
    functions of the Fund that are not perfonned by employees or other agents
    engaged by the Fund or by the Administrator acting in some other capacity
    pursuant to a separate agreement or arrangement with the Fund;
    (iii)    assist the Fund in se lecting and coordinating the activities of lite other agents
    engaged by the Fund, including the Fund's dividend disbursing agent, custodian,
    independent public accountants and legal counsel;
    (iv)     authorize and permit the Administrator's directors, officers or employees who
    OC-672759 v2 0)07977.0]00
    Page 72 of 181                          Tab 12, p.1 of 4
    Jt.25-Page 1                                          MKIPURDUE03539
    may be elected or appointed as officers    hfthe Fun~ or directors of the Fund to
    serve in such capacities, without remuneration from or other cost to the Fund;
    (v)      assure that all financial, accounting and other records required to be maintained
    and preserved by the Fund are maintained and preserved by it or on its behalf in
    accordance with applicable laws and regulations;
    (vi)     assist in the preparation of (but not pay for) all periodic r.eports by the Fund to
    stockholders of the Fund and aU reports and filings required to maintain the
    registration, qualification and listing on a national securities exchange of the Fund
    and the shares of the Fund, or to meet other regulatory or tax requirements
    applicable to the Fund or the shares of the Fund, under federal and state securities
    and tax laws;
    (vii)    respond to telephonic and in-person inquiries from existing stockholders or their
    representatives requesting infonnation regarding matters such as stockholder
    account or transaction status, net asset value of Fund shares, and Fund
    perfonnance, Fund services, plans and options, Fund investment policies, Fund
    portfolio holdings, and Fund distributions and classification thereof for tax
    purposes;
    (viii)   handle stockholder complaints and correspondence directed to or brought to the
    attention of the Administrator; generate or develop and distribute special data,
    notices, reports, programs and literature required by large stockholders, by
    stockholders with specialized informational needs, or by stockholders generally in
    light of developments, such as changes in tax laws; and
    (ix)     provide such other services required by the Fund as the parties may fTOm time to
    time agree in writing are appropriate to be provided under this Agreement.
    3.     Books and Records. The Administrator shall maintain customary records 10
    connection with i~s duties as specified in this Agreement. Any records required to be maintained
    and preserved pursuant to Rules 31a-1 and 31a-2 under the 1940 Act which are prepared or
    maintained by the Administrator on behalf of the Fund shall be the property of the Fund and will
    be made available or surrendered to the Fund promptly upon request. In the case of any request
    or demand for the inspection of such records by another party, the Administrator shall notify the
    Fund and follow the Fund's instructions as to pcnnitting or refusing such inspection.
    4.     Reports. The Administrator shall furnish to or place at the disposal of the Fund
    such information, evaluations, analyses and opinions formulated or obtained by the
    Administrator in the discharge of its duties as the Fund may, from time to time, reasonably
    request. The Fund shall fumish the Administrator with such documents and infonnation with
    regard to its affairs as the Administrator may, at any time or from time to time, reasonably
    request in order to discharge its obligations under this Agreement.
    5.       Fund Personnel.      The Administrator agrees to pennit individuals who are
    2
    Page 73 of 181                          Tab 12, p.2 of 4
    Jt.25-Page 2                                         MK/PURDUE03540
    I
    directors, officers or employees of the Administrator to serve (if duly appointed or electtxl) as
    directors, officers or employees of the Fund. without remuneration from or other cost to the
    Fund.
    6.       Expenses. The Administrator shall be responsible for expenses incurred in
    providing office space, equipment and personnel as may be necessary or convenient to provide
    administrative services to the Fund. including the payment of all fees, expenses and salaries of
    the directors, officcrx or employees of the Fund who are directors, officers or employees of the
    Administrator. The Fund shall bear the expense of its operation, except those specifically
    allocated to the Administrator under this Agreement or under any separate agreement between
    the Fund and the Administrator. Subject to any separate agreement or arrangement between the
    Fund and the Administrator, the expenses hereby allocated to the Fund, and not to the
    Administrator, include, but arc not limited to: (i) organizational expenses; (ii) legal and audit
    expenses; (iii) borrowing expenses; (iv) interest; (v) taxes; (vi) governmental fees; (vii) fees,
    voluntary assessments and other expenses incurred in connection with membership in investment
    company organizations; (viii) the cost (including brokerage commissions or charges, if any) of
    securities purchased or sold by the Fund and any losses incurred in connection therewith; (ix)
    fees of custodians, transfer agents, registrars or olher agents; (x) expenses of preparing share
    certificates; (xi) expenses relating to the redemption or repurchase of shares; (xii) expenses of
    registering and qualifying shares for sale under applicable federal law and maintaining such
    registrations and qualifications; (xiii) expenses of preparing. setting in print, printing and
    distributing prospectuses, proxy statements, reports, notices and dividends to stockholders; (xiv)
    cost of stationery; (xv) costs of stockholders and other meetings of the Fund; (xvi) compensation
    and expenses of the independent directors of the Fund; (xvii) the Fund's portion of premiums of
    any fidelity bond and other insurance covering the Fund and its officers and directors; and (xviii)
    the fees and other expenses of listing and maintaining the Fund's shares on the New York Stock
    Exchange or any other national stock exchange.
    7.      Compensation. As compensation for the services perfonned hereunder, the
    Administrator shall receive from the Fund an administration fee at the annual rate of 0.15% of
    the Fund's average daily total assets minus liabilities (other than the aggregate indebtedness
    entered into for purposes of leverage) ("Managed Assets"). This administration fee shall be
    payable monthly as soon as practicable after the last day of each month based on the average of
    the daily values placed on the Managed Assets of the Fund as determined at the close of business
    on each day throughout the month. The Managed Assets of the Fund will be valued as of the
    close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on
    each business day throughout the month or, if the Fund lawfully determines the value of its
    Managed Assets as of some other time on each business day, as of such time. The first payment
    of such fee shall be made as promptly as possible at the end of the month next succeeding the
    effective date of this Agreement. In the event that the Administrator's right to such fee
    commences on a date other than the first day of the month, the fee for such month shall be based
    on the average daily Managed Assets of the Fund in that period from the date of commencement
    to the last day of the month. If the Fund detennines the value of its Managed Assets more than
    once on any business day, the last such determination on that day shall be deemed to be the sole
    detennination on that day. The value of the Managed Assets shall be determined pursuant to the
    applicable provisions of the Fund's Articles of Incorporation, its By-Laws and the 1940 Act. If,
    3
    Page 74 of 181                         Tab 12, p.3 of 4
    Jt.25-Page 3                                        MK/PURDUE03541
    I
    IN WlTNESS WHEREOF the parties have caused this instrument 10 be signed on their
    beha lf by their respective officers thereunto duly authorized all as of the date first written above.
    RMK ADVANTAGE INCOME FUND, INC.
    BY:``~r&
    Name: Charles D. Maxwel
    Tit le: Secretary and Assistant Treasurer
    MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC.
    O)'~@                @r4
    Name: Charles D. Maxwell
    Title: Assistant Treasurer and Assistant Secretary
    7
    Page 75 of 181                          Tab 12, p.4 of 4
    Jt.25-Page 7                                           MKiPURDUE03545
    TAB 13
    Page 76 of 181
    r*·.
    slcg '.
    SECURITIES LITIGATION
    & CONSULTING GROUP
    Regions Morgan Keegan:
    The Abuse of Structured Finance
    Craig McCann, PhD, CFA l
    Innovations in financial engineering have allowed investment banks to
    create securities backed by other securities rather than by bricks and
    mortar and business plans. These innovations have increased funding
    available to homeowners and businesses and provided investors with more
    varied opportunities. As these structured securities become more complex
    and opaque though, they allow advisors and managers including mutual
    funds to take on significant, undisclosed risks.
    Investors in six Regions Morgan Keegan ("RMK") bond funds lost $2
    billion in 2007. This paper explains how the funds were able to generate
    higher returns than their competitors but ultimately collapsed in 2007.2
    The RMK funds suffered massive losses because they held
    concentrated holdings of low-priority tranches in structured finance deals
    backed by risky assets. RMK diJ410t disclose the risks it was taking until
    after the losses had occurred. (lJn fact, it misrepresented hundreds of
    millions of dollars of leveraged asset-backed securities as corporate bonds
    and preferred stocks thereby making the funds seem more diversified and
    less risky than they were. It appears that RMK was smoothing the returns
    of its mutual funds by smoothing the valuation of its portfolio holdings.
    We illustrate our findings for the six funds by detailing our findings for
    the Multi-Sector High Income fund (RHY).
    I. Introduction
    Six RMK bond funds - four closed-end funds (RMH, RHY, RMA and RSF) and
    two open-end funds (MKHIX and MKlBX) - collapsed spectacularly in 2007. The six
    funds had higher returns and yields than their peers in years prior to 2007, but lost 62%
    on average in 2007 while their peers had positive returns or only modest losses. 3
    1 © 2008 Securities Litigation and Consulting Group, Inc., 3998 Fair Ridge Drive, Suite 250, Fairfax, VA
    22033. www.slcg.com.
    Dr. McCann is the primary author of this report but the research was conducted by a team of professionals
    at SLCG including Dr. Hongwei Wang, Dr. Sherry Liu, Dr. Geng Deng, Dana Lin and Sandy Eng. Dr.
    Edward O'Neal, Paul Meyer and Lily Chu provided helpful comments and suggestions. Copy editing
    provided by Kristian@yourbriefeditor.com. Dr. McCann can be reached at 703-246-9381 or
    crai emccann@slcg.com.
    2 This paper focuses on Regions Morgan Keegan bond funds. Companion working papers analyze similar
    r0rtfolio holdings and losses in First Trust Portfolios' bond funds and Charles Schwab's YieldPlus fund.
    These losses in the RMK funds relative to their peers in the mutual fund and closed end fund universe are
    explored in more detail in "The Implosion of High Yield Funds 2007 - 2008" by Edward O'Neal, available
    at www.s\cg.com.
    Tab 13, p. 1 of 5
    Page 77 of 181                                       3XUGXH 
    Jt.43-Page 1
    2
    The apparent superior performance of these funds in earlier years and the
    spectacular losses in 2007 resulted from the funds' holdings of hundreds of low-priority                 .,
    tranches of structured finance deals. These low-priority tranches significantly leveraged
    up investors' exposure to credit risk. The structured finance deals held by the Regions
    Morgan Keegan funds included collateralized debt obligations (CDOs)~llateralized
    mortgage obligations (CMOs), and asset-backed securities (ABS)(jtThe funds'
    prospectuses did not disclose the extraordinary amount of credit risk to which fund
    shareholders were exposed as a result of the low-priority tranches the funds' portfolio
    manager was purchasing.
    Section II describes the six funds and illustrates their reported returns. Section III
    explains why the structured finance securities purchased by the Regions Morgan Keegan
    bond funds were dramatically more risky than investors were led to believe from the
    disclosures in the funds' filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Section
    IV provides a few examples of the securities held in the Multi-Sector High Income
    (RHY) fund. Section V highlights some of the deficiencies in RHY's public filings.
    II. Regions Morgan Keegan Bond Funds
    A. Returns
    The six Regions Morgan Keegan bond funds that collapsed in 2007 are listed in
    Table 1. The four closed-end funds were initially offered between June 24, 2003 and
    January 19, 2006 and had net assets of $1.6 billion as of December 31, 2006. The two
    open-end funds were issued on March 22, 1999 and had net assets of $2.2 billion as of
    December 31, 2006. The closed-end funds lost $1 billion in market value in 2007. The
    open-end funds net assets declined even more although some of the decline was due to
    investors redeeming their shares.
    Table 1
    Regions Morgan Keegan Bond Funds
    Fund Name           Ticker   Inception         Net Assets            2007 Returns
    12/31/2006 12/3112007     Capital     Total
    Appreciation Return
    Closed-end Funds
    High Income      RMH     6/24/2003     $311.6 m   $115.5 m     -70.7%      -65.5%
    Strategic Income     RSF     311S/2004     $366.0m    $134.2m      -72.1%      -67.2%
    Advantage Income      RMA     Il1S/2004     $423.Sm    $161.9m      -71.6%      -66.S%
    M-S High Income       RHY     1119/2006     $47S.Sm    $159.5 m     -722%       -65.4%
    $1,5S0.2 m   $571.1 m
    Open-end Funds
    Select High Income     MKHIX 3/2211999      $1,251.6 m   $156.7m                  -5S.4%
    Select Intermediate   MKlBX 3/2211999       $913.Sm     $16S.7m                  -49.6%
    $2,165.4m    $325.4m
    $3,745.6m    $S96.5m
    Tab 13, p. 2 of 5
    Page 78 of 181                                   3XUGXH 
    RMK.: The Abuse of Structured Finance
    Jt.43-Page 2
    11
    The M tranche in our illustration had 10 to 15 times as much credit risk as the
    underlying bonds. Even the B tranche in our illustration had 6 times as much credit risk
    as the underlying bond portfolio. As we will see ne~ virtually all of the RMK holdings
    had as much leveraged credit risk as the B and M tranches - and some of RMK holdings
    had as much credit risk as in the EquiD' tranche - in our exam-p-Ie
    IV.      Multi-Sector High Income Fund's Portfolio Holdings
    A. Introduction
    We have analyzed the portfolio holdings for the six Regions Morgan Keegan
    bond funds and determined that they all held high concentrations of heavily leveraged,
    low-quality debt. RMK purchased low-priority tranches in asset and mortgage-backed
    securities deals. These tranches are virtually always the smallest slices in a deal because
    they issuer is trying to create larger slices of the more marketable senior slices. RMK
    frequently purchased all or almost all these relatively small, unique tranches. As a result
    of the mutual funds' ortfolio manager's investment decisions, the funds' holdings were
    illiquid and could not be valued by reference to market prices of substantially similar
    assets. We also found that Regions Morgan Keegan misrepresented the true nature of a
    /;;\                 significant portion of their portfolios' assets.
    ~ (" ~                       We illustrate our findings with the Multi-Sector High Income (RHY) fund's
    ~ ~ ~                   reported holdings as of March 31, 2007. Regions Morgan Keegan reported RHY's
    ~l--~
    '(,'-     ~
    I .....
    rur )   portfolio holdings on March 31, 2007 as summarized in Table 4. RHY's net assets could
    be, and were, leveraged 33%. Thus, investors in RHY were exposed to leveraged credit
    ~ u                     risk imj!licit in the portfolio's asset-backed securities holdings, further leveraged by the
    ~i6       explicit borrowings.
    ?                                                                Table 4
    RHY Holdings as of March 31, 2007
    As Reported by RMK              Corrected
    Asset-backed Securities     $364,472,540     77.7%    $431,970,558      92.10/0
    Corporate Bonds             $174,108,322     37.1%    $129,527,163      27.6%
    Common Stocks                $54,977,849     11.7%     $54,977,849      11.7%
    Preferred Stocks             $25,436,859      5.4%      $2,520,000       0.5%
    Cash                          $2,202,458      0.5%      $2,202,458       0.5%
    Gross Assets                $621,198,028    132.5%     $621,198,028     132.5%
    Margin Debt               $(152,319,346)    -32.5%   $(152,319,346)     -32.5%
    Net Assets                  $468,878,682    100.0%    $468,878,682      100.0%
    \ ') RMK significantly ~erstated the extent of RHY's holdings of asset-backed and
    mortgage-backed securities~67 million of the $200 million RMK classified as corporate
    bonds or preferr~stocks on March 31, 2007 were actually asset-backed or mortgage-
    backed securitie~irtually all of the securities RMK classified as "Corporate Bonds -
    Tab 13, p. 3 of 5
    Page 79 of 181                                   3XUGXH 
    Securities Litigation and Consulting Group, Inc. © 2008.
    Jt.43-Page 11
    23
    Neither reference to tranching in the SAl tells investors that RHY will be
    concentrated in the lowest priority, highly-leveraged tranches in deals backed by assets
    with significant credit risk and that as a result investors will be exposed to extraordinary
    credit risk.
    c.   Semi-Annual Reports
    RMK filed a semi-annual report for RHY as of September 30, 2006 wherein it
    22
    describes the fund's risks as follows.
    INVESTMENT RISKS: Bond funds tend to experience smaller
    fluctuations in value than stock funds. However, investors in any bond fund
    should anticipate fluctuations in price. Bond prices and the value of bond funds
    decline as interest rates rise. Longer-term funds generally are more vulnerable to
    interest rate risk than shorter-term funds. Below investment grade bonds involve
    greater credit risk, which is the risk that the issuer will not make interest or
    principal payments when due. An economic downturn or period of rising interest
    rates could adversely affect the ability of issuers, especially issuers of below
    investment grade debt, to service primary obligations and an unanticipated default
    could cause the Fund to experience a reduction in value of its shares. The value of
    U.S. and foreign equity securities in which the Fund invests will change based on
    changes in a company's financial condition and in overall market and economic
    conditions. Leverage creates an opportunity for an increased return to common
    stockholders, but unless the income and capital appreciation, if any, on securities
    acquired with leverage proceeds exceed the costs of the leverage, the use of
    leverage will diminish the investment performance of the Fund's shares. Use of
    leverage may also increase the likelihood that the net asset value of the Fund and
    market value of its common shares will be more volatile, and the yield and total
    return to common stockholders will tend to fluctuate more in response to changes
    in interest rates and creditworthiness.
    This description of investment risks is typical of each of the other RMK funds.
    Nowhere in this description is there any mention of the leveraged credit risk investors
    were exposed to as a result of the fund's concentration in low-priority tranches in
    structured securities. In the same semi-annual report as September 30, 2006, RMK
    described the fund's recent returns as follows.
    During the first half of RMK Multi-Sector High Income Fund, Inc.' s fiscal year
    2007, which ended September 30, 2006, the Fund had a total return of 15.39%,
    based on market price and reinvested dividends. For the six months ended
    September 30, 2006, the Fund had a total return of 6.16%, based on net asset
    value and reinvested dividends. For the six months ended September 30, 2006, the
    Lehman Brothers Ba U.S. High Yield Index 1 had a total return of 4.12%. The
    22 RHY's self-descriptions for the periods ending September 30,2006, March 31, 2007 and September 30,
    2007 are excerpted in Appendix 1.
    Tab 13, p. 4 of 5
    Page 80 of 181                                  3XUGXH 
    Securities Litigation and Consulting Group, Inc. © 2008.
    Jt.43-Page 23
    25
    Even these belated disclosures do not accurately reflect what happened to
    investors in RHY and the other RMK funds. RMK invested a substantial majority of the
    portfolios in low-priority tranches. It is not that these securities may increase credit risk,
    these securities        tic y 0 mcrease ere t ns.           so, as        ac ow e ges        t
    the 2007 losses were suffered because of the subordinated structured securities it held, it
    says for the first time that its prior returns were due to investments in the same risky
    structured securities. lbis leveraged credit risk was not Hreviously disclosed to investors
    but would be well known to the p-ortfolio managers who ran the funds.
    Finally RMK gets closer to full disclosure a few months later when it filed the
    December 31, 2007 semi-annual report for its Select High Income fund .
    . .. The structured finance category has taken the hardest hit so far due to the
    implicit (i.e., built into the structures) and explicit (i.e., financed, or bought on
    margin) leverage employed for this asset category. ...
    This aJll!ears to be the :first disclosure by RMK that it was investing in securities
    that had the effect of leveraging up the credit risk investors in its funds faced.
    VI.     Conclusion
    Investors in Regions Morgan Keegan's six bond funds lost two billion dollars in
    2007 because of losses on poor-quality debt, leveraged up many times over by complex
    asset-backed structures. A rudimentary analysis of the type Regions Morgan Keegan
    claimed to perform on its holdings would have determined that it was exposing investors
    to as much as 10 times the credit risk of the underlying, already risky, debt in exchange
    for 1% or 2% higher returns than a diversified, transparent high-yield bond portfolio
    would have earned.
    Regions Morgan Keegan did not fully or accurately inform investors in its bond
    funds of the risks of the subordinated tranches the funds held until well after the losses
    had occurred. Moreover, prior to March 31, 2008 Regions Morgan Keegan affirmatively
    misrepresented hundreds of millions of dollars of risky securities it held in these
    portfolios as corporate bonds and preferred stocks.
    Tab 13, p. 5 of 5
    Page 81 of 181                             3XUGXH 
    Securities Litigation and Consulting Group, Inc. @ 2008.
    Jt.43-Page 25
    TAB 14
    Page 82 of 181
    7/22/2014                                 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt
    
    424B5
    1
    c34179_424b5.txt
    
    Filed Pursuant to Rule 424(b)(5)
    File Number: 333-110039
    Prospectus            Supplement           dated October 28, 2004 (to Prospectus                                 dated November 5,
    2003)
    $1,090,119,000 (APPROXIMATE)
    ACE SECURITIES CORP. HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2004-HE3
    ASSET BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES
    ACE SECURITIES CORP.
    Depositor
    WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
    Servicer
    WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
    Master Servicer
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    YOU SHOULD CONSIDER CAREFULLY THE RISK FACTORS BEGINNING ON PAGE S-9 IN THIS
    PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
    This prospectus supplement may be used to offer and sell the Offered
    Certificates only if accompanied by the prospectus.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    OFFERED CERTIFICATES                       The trust created for the Series 2004-HE3 certificates
    will hold a pool of first and second lien fixed-rate and
    adjustable-rate,   one- to    four-family,   residential
    mortgage loans. The trust will issue seventeen classes
    of Offered Certificates. You can find a list of these
    classes,   together with their     initial   certificate
    principal balances and pass-through rates, in the table
    below.   Credit enhancement for all of the Offered
    Certificates will be provided in the form of excess
    interest, overcollateralization and subordination. In
    addition, the Offered Certificates may benefit from a
    series of interest rate cap payments pursuant to two
    separate cap agreements which are intended partially to
    mitigate interest rate risk.
    
    INITIAL CERTIFICATE CLASS PRINCIPAL BALANCE(1) Page 391 of 1693 PASS-THROUGH RATE Tab 14, p. 1 of 34 Page 83 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 1 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 1/390 Jt.45-Page 1 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt RISK FACTORS THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION, WHICH YOU SHOULD CONSIDER CAREFULLY, IDENTIFIES SIGNIFICANT RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH AN INVESTMENT IN THE CERTIFICATES. THE MORTGAGE LOANS WERE UNDERWRITTEN TO STANDARDS WHICH DO NOT CONFORM TO THE STANDARDS OF FANNIE MAE OR FREDDIE MAC. The underwriting standards of the originators are intended to assess the ability and willingness of the mortgagor to repay the debt and to evaluate the adequacy of the property as collateral for the mortgage loan. The originators consider, among other things, a mortgagor's credit history, repayment ability and debt service-to-income ratio, as well as the value, type and use of the mortgaged property. As further described in this prospectus supplement, the underwriting standards of the originators do not conform to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines. In addition, mortgage loans originated by the originators generally bear higher rates of interest than mortgage loans originated in accordance with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines and may experience rates of delinquency, foreclosure and bankruptcy that are higher, and that may be substantially higher, than those experienced by mortgage loans underwritten in accordance with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines. Furthermore, changes in the values of mortgaged properties may have a greater effect on the delinquency, foreclosure, bankruptcy and loss experience of the Mortgage Loans than on mortgage loans originated in accordance with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines. No assurance can be given that the values of the related mortgaged properties have remained or will remain at the levels in effect on the dates of origination of the related Mortgage Loans. SEE "THE MORTGAGE POOL--UNDERWRITING STANDARDS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT. MORTGAGE LOANS WITH HIGH COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS LEAVE THE RELATED MORTGAGOR WITH LITTLE OR NO EQUITY IN THE RELATED MORTGAGED PROPERTY. Approximately 39.15% of the Group I Mortgage Loans and approximately 42.68% of the Group II Mortgage Loans, in each case, by the related aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, had a combined loan-to-value ratio at origination in excess of 80%. No Mortgage Loan had a combined loan-to-value ratio at origination in excess of 100%. An overall decline in the residential real estate market, a rise in interest rates over a period of time and the condition of a mortgaged property, as well as other factors, may have the effect of reducing the value of the mortgaged property from the appraised value at the time the Mortgage Loan was originated. If there is a reduction in the value of the mortgaged property, the combined loan-to-value ratio may increase over what it was at the time the Mortgage Loan was originated. Such an increase may reduce the likelihood of liquidation or other proceeds being sufficient to satisfy the Mortgage Loan, and any losses to the extent not covered by the credit enhancement may affect the yield to maturity of your certificates. There can be no assurance that the value of a mortgaged property estimated in any appraisal or review is equal to the actual value of that mortgaged property at the time of that appraisal or review. Investors should note that the values of the mortgaged properties may be insufficient to cover the outstanding principal balance of the Mortgage Loans. Page 405 of 1693 There can be no assurance that the combined loan-to-value ratio of any Mortgage Loan determined at any time after origination will be less than or equal Tab 14, p. to2 ofits 34 Page 84 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 15 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 15/390 Jt.45-Page 15 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt combined loan-to-value ratio at origination. S-9 DEVELOPMENTS IN SPECIFIED STATES COULD HAVE A DISPROPORTIONATE EFFECT ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS DUE TO THE GEOGRAPHIC CONCENTRATION OF THE MORTGAGED PROPERTIES. Approximately 45.55% of the Group I Mortgage Loans and approximately 71.63% of the Group II Mortgage Loans, in each case, by the related aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are secured by mortgaged properties located in the State of California. Approximately 0.59% of the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date, are located in a single California zip code, which is the largest concentration of Mortgage Loans in a single zip code. If the California residential real estate market should experience an overall decline in property values after the dates of origination of the Mortgage Loans, the rates of delinquencies, foreclosures, bankruptcies and losses on the Mortgage Loans may increase over historical levels of comparable type loans, and may increase substantially. In addition, properties located in California may be more susceptible than homes located in other parts of the country to certain types of uninsured hazards, such as earthquakes, hurricanes, as well as floods, mudslides and other natural disasters. Various hurricanes during the 2004 hurricane season may have adversely affected any mortgaged properties located in the southeast portion of the United States. The Mortgage Loan Seller will make a representation and warranty that each mortgaged property is free of material damage and in good repair as of the closing date. In the event that a mortgaged property is materially damaged as of the closing date due to hurricanes occurring during the 2004 hurricane season and such damage materially and adversely affects the value or the interests of the certificateholders in such Mortgage Loan, the Mortgage Loan Seller will be required to repurchase the related Mortgage Loan from the trust. Damage to mortgaged properties as a result of the hurricanes occurring during the 2004 season may or may not be covered by the related hazard insurance policies. Approximately 3.65% of the Group I Mortgage Loans and approximately 2.11% of the Group II Mortgage Loans, in each case, by the related aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are located in areas which may have been affected by hurricanes occurring during the 2004 hurricane season. In addition, no assurance can be given as to the effect of these events on the rate of delinquencies and losses on the Mortgage Loans secured by mortgaged properties that may have been affected by hurricanes during the 2004 hurricane season. Any adverse impact as a result of this event may be borne by the holders of the offered certificates, particularly if the Mortgage Loan Seller fails to repurchase any Mortgage Loan that breaches this representation and warranty. SECOND LIEN MORTGAGE LOANS RISK. Approximately 7.04% of the Group I Mortgage Loans and approximately 9.82% of the Group II Mortgage Loans, in each case, by the related aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are secured by second liens on the related mortgaged properties. The proceeds from any liquidation, insurance or condemnation proceedings will be available to satisfy the outstanding balance of such Mortgage Loans only to the extent that the claims of the related senior mortgages have been satisfied in full, including any related foreclosure costs. Page 406 of 1693 In circumstances when it has been determined to be uneconomical to foreclose on the mortgaged property, the servicer may write off the entire balance Tab 14,of p. 3 such of 34 Page 85 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 16 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 16/390 Jt.45-Page 16 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Mortgage Loan as a bad debt. The foregoing considerations will be particularly applicable to Mortgage Loans secured by second liens that have high combined loan-to-value ratios because it is comparatively more likely that the servicer would determine foreclosure to be uneconomical in the case of such Mortgage Loans. The rate of default of second lien Mortgage Loans may be greater than that of Mortgage Loans secured by first liens on comparable properties. BALLOON MORTGAGE LOAN RISK. Mortgage Loans that are balloon loans pose a risk because a borrower must make a large lump sum payment of principal at the end of the loan term. If the borrower is unable to pay the lump sum or refinance such amount, the servicer will not be obligated to advance the principal portion of S-10 that lump sum payment, you may suffer a loss. Approximately 4.99% of the Group I Mortgage Loans and approximately 9.36% of the Group II Mortgage Loans, in each case, by related aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are balloon loans. INTEREST ONLY MORTGAGE LOAN RISK. Approximately 8.42% the Group I Mortgage Loans and approximately 27.30% of the Group II Mortgage Loans, in each case, by related aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, require the borrowers to make monthly payments only of accrued interest for the first two, three or five years following origination. After such interest-only period, the borrower's monthly payment will be recalculated to cover both interest and principal so that the Mortgage Loan will amortize fully prior to its final payment date. If the monthly payment increases, the related borrower may not be able to pay the increased amount and may default or may refinance the related Mortgage Loan to avoid the higher payment. Because no principal payments may be made or advanced on such Mortgage Loans for two, three or five years following origination, the certificateholders will receive smaller principal distributions during such period than they would have received if the related borrowers were required to make monthly payments of interest and principal for the entire lives of such Mortgage Loans. This slower rate of principal distributions may reduce the return on an investment in the Offered Certificates that are purchased at a discount. THE MEZZANINE CERTIFICATES WILL BE MORE SENSITIVE TO LOSSES ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS THAN THE CLASS A CERTIFICATES BECAUSE THEY ARE SUBORDINATE TO THE CLASS A CERTIFICATES. The weighted average lives of, and the yields to maturity on, the Class M-1, Class M-2, Class M-3, Class M-4, Class M-5, Class M-6, Class M-7, Class M-8, Class M-9, Class M-10 and Class M-11 Certificates will be progressively more sensitive, in that order, to the rate and timing of mortgagor defaults and the severity of ensuing losses on the Mortgage Loans. If the actual rate and severity of losses on the Mortgage Loans is higher than those assumed by an investor in these certificates, the actual yield to maturity of these certificates may be lower than the yield anticipated by the investor based on such assumption. The timing of losses on the Mortgage Loans will also affect an investor's actual yield to maturity, Page 407 ofif even 1693the rate of defaults and severity of losses over the life of the mortgage pool are consistent with anTab 14, p. 4 of 34 investor's Page 86 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 17 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 17/390 Jt.45-Page 17 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt expectations. In general, the earlier a loss occurs, the greater the effect on an investor's yield to maturity. Realized losses on the Mortgage Loans, to the extent they exceed the amount of excess interest, overcollateralization and the aggregate certificate principal balance of the Class B Certificates, following distributions of principal on the related Distribution Date, will reduce the certificate principal balances of the Mezzanine Certificates beginning with the class of Mezzanine Certificates then outstanding with the lowest payment priority. As a result of such reductions, less interest will accrue on each such class of Mezzanine Certificates than would otherwise be the case. However, the amount of any realized losses allocated to the Mezzanine Certificates may be distributed to the holders of those certificates according to the priorities set forth under "Description of the Certificates--Overcollateralization Provisions" in this prospectus supplement. THE MEZZANINE CERTIFICATES GENERALLY WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO RECEIVE PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS UNTIL NOVEMBER 2007 WHICH MAY RESULT IN A GREATER RISK OF LOSS RELATING TO THESE CERTIFICATES. Unless the aggregate certificate principal balance of the Class A Certificates has been reduced to zero, the Mezzanine Certificates will not be entitled to any principal distributions until at least November 2007 or a later date as provided in this prospectus supplement or during any period in which delinquencies on the Mortgage Loans exceed the levels set forth under "Description of the Certificates--Principal Distributions on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates" in this prospectus supplement. As a result, the weighted average lives of the Mezzanine Certificates will be longer than would be the case if distributions of principal were allocated among all of the certificates at the same time. As a result of the longer weighted average lives of the Mezzanine Certificates, the S-11 holders of these certificates have a greater risk of suffering a loss on their investments. Further, because such certificates might not receive any principal if the delinquency levels set forth under "Description of the Certificates--Principal Distributions on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates" in this prospectus supplement are exceeded, it is possible for such certificates to receive no principal distributions on a particular Distribution Date even if no losses have occurred on the mortgage pool. THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES WILL BE LIMITED OBLIGATIONS SOLELY OF THE TRUST FUND AND NOT OF ANY OTHER PARTY. The Offered Certificates will not represent an interest in or obligation of the depositor, the servicer, the master servicer, the securities administrator, the originators, the trustee or any of their respective affiliates. Neither the Offered Certificates nor the underlying Mortgage Loans will be guaranteed or insured by any governmental agency or instrumentality, or by the depositor, the servicer, the master servicer, the securities administrator, the originators, the trustee or any of their respective affiliates. Proceeds of the assets included in the trust will be the sole source of payments on the Offered Certificates, and there will be no recourse to the depositor, the servicer, the originators, the master servicer, the securities Page 408 administrator, the trustee or any other of 1693 in the event that these proceeds entity are insufficient or otherwise unavailable to make all payments provided Tab 14, p. 5 offor 34 Page 87 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 18 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 18/390 Jt.45-Page 18 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt under the Offered Certificates. THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE PASS-THROUGH RATES ON THE CLASS A CERTIFICATES AND MEZZANINE CERTIFICATES AND THE MORTGAGE RATES ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS MAY RESULT IN INTEREST SHORTFALLS ON SUCH CERTIFICATES. The yield to maturity on the Class A Certificates and the Mezzanine Certificates may be affected by the resetting of the mortgage rates on the adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans included in the mortgage pool on their related adjustment dates. In addition, because the mortgage rate for approximately 77.26% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, adjusts based on Six-Month LIBOR plus a fixed percentage amount, such rate could be higher than prevailing market interest rates, and this may result in an increase in the rate of prepayments on such Mortgage Loans after their adjustments. Finally, the mortgage rates on such adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans are based on Six-Month LIBOR while the pass-through rates on the Class A Certificates and the Mezzanine Certificates are based on one-month LIBOR. Consequently, the application to such certificates of the rate cap, which is generally equal to the weighted average coupon on the Mortgage Loans, net of certain fees of the trust, could adversely affect the yield to maturity on such certificates. In addition, the rate cap will decrease if Mortgage Loans with relatively high mortgage rates prepay at a faster rate than Mortgage Loans with relatively low mortgage rates. If the pass-through rates on the Class A Certificates or the Mezzanine Certificates are limited for any Distribution Date, the resulting interest shortfalls may be recovered by the holders of these certificates on the same Distribution Date or on future Distribution Dates on a subordinated basis to the extent that on such Distribution Date or future Distribution Dates there are available funds remaining after certain other distributions on the Offered Certificates, the Class B Certificates and the payment of certain fees and expenses of the trust. SEE "YIELD ON THE CERTIFICATES--SPECIAL YIELD CONSIDERATIONS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT. THE RATE AND TIMING OF PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE CLASS A CERTIFICATES AND THE MEZZANINE CERTIFICATES WILL BE AFFECTED BY PREPAYMENT SPEEDS AND BY THE PRIORITY OF PAYMENT ON SUCH CERTIFICATES. The rate and timing of distributions allocable to principal on the Class A Certificates and the Mezzanine Certificates will depend, in general, on the rate and timing of principal payments (including prepayments and collections upon defaults, liquidations and repurchases) on the Mortgage Loans and the allocation thereof to pay principal on such certificates as described in "Description of the Certificates--Principal Distributions on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates" in this S-12 prospectus supplement. As is the case with mortgage backed pass-through certificates generally, the Offered Certificates are subject to substantial inherent cash-flow uncertainties because the Mortgage Loans may be prepaid at any time. However, with respect to approximately 78.76% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date, a prepayment may subject the relatedPagemortgagor 409 of 1693 to a prepayment charge. A Tab 14,related prepayment charge may or may not act as a deterrent to prepayment of the p. 6 of 34 Page 88 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 19 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 19/390 Jt.45-Page 19 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Mortgage Loan. SEE "THE MORTGAGE POOL" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT. Generally, when prevailing interest rates are increasing, prepayment rates on mortgage loans tend to decrease; a decrease in the prepayment rates on the Mortgage Loans will result in a reduced rate of return of principal to investors in the Class A Certificates and the Mezzanine Certificates at a time when reinvestment at such higher prevailing rates would be desirable. Conversely, when prevailing interest rates are declining, prepayment rates on mortgage loans tend to increase; an increase in the prepayment rates on the Mortgage Loans will result in a greater rate of return of principal to investors in the Class A Certificates and Mezzanine Certificates at a time when reinvestment at comparable yields may not be possible. Distributions of principal will be made to the holders of the Mezzanine Certificates according to the priorities described in this prospectus supplement. The timing of commencement of principal distributions and the weighted average life of each such class of certificates will be affected by the rates of prepayment on the Mortgage Loans experienced both before and after the commencement of principal distributions on such classes. For further information regarding the effect of principal prepayments on the weighted average lives of the Offered Certificates, SEE "YIELD ON THE CERTIFICATES" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT, INCLUDING THE TABLE ENTITLED "PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING AT THE SPECIFIED PERCENTAGES OF THE PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION." THE YIELD TO MATURITY ON THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES WILL DEPEND ON A VARIETY OF FACTORS. The yield to maturity on the Offered Certificates will depend on: o the applicable pass-through rate thereon; o the applicable purchase price; o the rate and timing of principal payments (including prepayments and collections upon defaults, liquidations and repurchases) and the allocation thereof to reduce the certificate principal balance of the Offered Certificates; and o the rate, timing and severity of realized losses on the Mortgage Loans, adjustments to the mortgage rates on the adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans included in the mortgage pool, the amount of excess interest generated by the Mortgage Loans and the allocation to the Offered Certificates of certain interest shortfalls. In general, if the Offered Certificates are purchased at a premium and principal distributions thereon occur at a rate faster than anticipated at the time of purchase, the investor's actual yield to maturity will be lower than that assumed at the time of purchase. Conversely, if the Offered Certificates are purchased at a discount and principal distributions thereon occur at a rate slower than that anticipated at the time of purchase, the investor's actual yield to maturity will be lower than that originally assumed. The proceeds to the Depositor from the sale of the Offered Certificates were determined based on a number of assumptions, including a prepayment assumption of 28% CPR with respect to Page the410 of 1693 Tab 14, p. 7 of 34 Page 89 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 20 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 20/390 Jt.45-Page 20 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt S-13 adjustable- rate Mortgage Loans and 100% PPC with respect to the fixed-rate Mortgage Loans as described in this prospectus supplement under "Yield on the Certificates" and weighted average lives corresponding thereto. No representation is made that the Mortgage Loans will prepay at such rate or at any other rate. The yield assumptions for the Offered Certificates will vary as determined at the time of sale. THE YIELD TO MATURITY ON THE MEZZANINE CERTIFICATES WILL BE PARTICULARLY SENSITIVE TO THE RATE OF PREPAYMENTS ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS. The multiple class structure of the Mezzanine Certificates causes the yield of these classes to be particularly sensitive to changes in the rates of prepayment of the Mortgage Loans. Because distributions of principal will be made to the holders of such certificates according to the priorities described in this prospectus supplement, the yield to maturity on such classes of certificates will be sensitive to the rates of prepayment on the Mortgage Loans experienced both before and after the commencement of principal distributions on such classes. The yield to maturity on such classes of certificates will also be extremely sensitive to losses due to defaults on the Mortgage Loans (and the timing thereof), to the extent these losses are not covered by excess cashflow otherwise payable to the Class CE Certificates, to the Class B Certificates or to a class of Mezzanine Certificates with a lower payment priority. Furthermore, as described in this prospectus supplement, the timing of receipt of principal and interest by the Mezzanine Certificates may be adversely affected by losses even if these classes of certificates do not ultimately bear such loss. VIOLATION OF CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS MAY RESULT IN LOSSES ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS AND YOUR CERTIFICATES. Applicable state laws generally regulate interest rates and other charges, require certain disclosure, and require licensing of the originators. In addition, other state laws, public policy and general principles of equity relating to the protection of consumers, unfair and deceptive practices and debt collection practices may apply to the origination, servicing and collection of the Mortgage Loans. The Mortgage Loans are also subject to federal laws, including: o the Federal Truth-in-Lending Act and Regulation Z promulgated thereunder, which require certain disclosures to the mortgagors regarding the terms of the Mortgage Loans; o the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation B promulgated thereunder, which prohibit discrimination on the basis of age, race, color, sex, religion, marital status, national origin, receipt of public assistance or the exercise of any right under the Consumer Credit Protection Act, in the extension of credit; o the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which regulates the use and reporting of information related to the mortgagor's credit experience; and o the Depository Institutions Page 411 of 1693 Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980, which preempts certain state usury laws. Tab 14, p. 8 of 34 Page 90 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 21 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 21/390 Jt.45-Page 21 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Violations of certain provisions of these federal and state laws may limit the ability of the servicer to collect all or part of the principal of or interest on the Mortgage Loans and in addition could subject the trust to damages and administrative enforcement. In particular, the failure of the originators to comply with certain requirements of the Federal Truth-in-Lending Act, as implemented by Regulation Z, could subject the trust to monetary penalties, and result in the mortgagors' S-14 rescinding the Mortgage Loans against the trust. In addition to federal law, some states have enacted, or may enact, laws or regulations that prohibit inclusion of some provisions in Mortgage Loans that have interest rates or origination costs in excess of prescribed levels, and require that mortgagors be given certain disclosures prior to the consummation of the Mortgage Loans and restrict the servicer's ability to foreclose in response to mortgagor defaults. The failure of the originators to comply with these laws could subject the trust to significant monetary penalties, could result in the mortgagors rescinding the Mortgage Loans against the trust and/or limit the servicer's ability to foreclose upon the related mortgaged properties in the event of mortgagor defaults. The mortgage loan seller will represent that, as of the Closing Date, each Mortgage Loan is in compliance with applicable federal and state laws and regulations. In the event of a breach of such representation, the mortgage loan seller will be obligated to cure such breach or repurchase or replace the affected Mortgage Loan in the manner described in the prospectus. If the mortgage loan seller is unable or otherwise fails to satisfy such obligations, the yield on the Offered Certificates may be materially and adversely affected. THE TRANSFER OF SERVICING MAY RESULT IN HIGHER DELINQUENCIES AND DEFAULTS WHICH MAY ADVERSELY AFFECT THE YIELD ON YOUR CERTIFICATES. Although the servicer has agreed to act as primary servicer pursuant to the terms and provisions of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, the transfer of the primary servicing obligations with respect to all of the Mortgage Loans was not completed as of the cut-off date. The primary servicing obligations are expected to transfer from the originators (or other parties that are currently servicing a portion of the Mortgage Loans) to the servicer no later than December 1, 2004. All transfers of servicing involve the risk of disruption in collections due to data input errors, misapplied or misdirected payments, system incompatibilities and other reasons. As a result, the rate of delinquencies and defaults is likely to increase at least for a period of time. There can be no assurance as to the extent or duration of any disruptions associated with the transfer of servicing or as to the resulting effects on the yield on your certificates. INTEREST GENERATED BY THE MORTGAGE LOANS MAY BE INSUFFICIENT TO MAINTAIN OR RESTORE OVERCOLLATERALIZATION. The Mortgage Loans are expected to generate more interest than is needed to pay interest owed on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates and to pay certain fees and expenses of the trust. Any remaining interest Page 412 generated by the Mortgage Loans will then beof 1693 used to absorb losses that occur on the Mortgage Loans. After these financial obligations of the trust are Tab 14, p. 9 of 34 covered, Page 91 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 22 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 22/390 Jt.45-Page 22 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt available excess interest generated by the Mortgage Loans will be used to maintain or restore the overcollateralization. We cannot assure you, however, that enough excess interest will be generated to maintain or restore the required level of overcollateralization. The factors described below will affect the amount of excess interest that the Mortgage Loans will generate: o Every time a Mortgage Loan is prepaid in full, excess interest may be reduced because such Mortgage Loan will no longer be outstanding and generating interest or, in the case of a partial prepayment, will be generating less interest. o Every time a Mortgage Loan is liquidated or written off, excess interest may be reduced because such Mortgage Loan will no longer be outstanding and generating interest. o If the rates of delinquencies, defaults or losses on the Mortgage Loans are higher than expected, excess interest will be reduced by the amount necessary to compensate for S-15 any shortfalls in cash available to make required distributions on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates. o The adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans have mortgage rates that adjust less frequently than, and on the basis of an index that is different from the index used to determine, the pass-through rates on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates, and the fixed-rate Mortgage Loans have mortgage rates that do not adjust. As a result, the pass-through rates on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates may increase relative to mortgage rates on the Mortgage Loans, requiring that a greater portion of the interest generated by the Mortgage Loans be applied to cover interest on such certificates. INTEREST PAYMENTS ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS MAY BE INSUFFICIENT TO PAY INTEREST ON YOUR CERTIFICATES. When a Mortgage Loan is prepaid in full, the mortgagor is charged interest only up to the date on which payment is made, rather than for an entire month. This may result in a shortfall in interest collections available for payment on the next Distribution Date. The servicer is required to cover a portion of the shortfall in interest collections that are attributable to prepayments in full on the Mortgage Loans, but only up to the servicing fee payable to the servicer for the related interest accrual period. If the credit enhancement is insufficient to cover this shortfall in excess of the amount the servicer covers, you may incur a loss. In addition, the servicer will not cover shortfalls in interest collections due to bankruptcy proceedings or the application of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (the "Relief Act") or similar state or local laws. On any Distribution Date, any shortfalls resulting from the application of the Relief Act or similar state or local laws and any prepayment interest shortfalls to the extent not covered by compensating interest paid by the servicer will be allocated, first, toPage the413 Class of 1693 CE-1 Certificates, second, to the Class B Certificates, third, to the Class M-11 Certificates, fourth,Tab 14, p. to 10 ofthe 34 Page 92 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 23 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 23/390 Jt.45-Page 23 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Class M-10 Certificates, fifth, to the Class M-9 Certificates, sixth, to the Class M-8 Certificates, seventh, to the Class M-7 Certificates, eighth, to the Class M-6 Certificates, ninth, to the Class M-5 Certificates, tenth, to the Class M-4 Certificates, eleventh, to the Class M-3 Certificates, twelfth, to the Class M-2 Certificates, thirteenth, to the Class M-1 Certificates and fourteenth, to the Class A Certificates, on a PRO RATA basis, based on their respective senior interest distribution amounts for such Distribution Date before such reduction. The holders of the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates will be entitled to reimbursement for any such interest shortfalls but only to the extent of available funds and in the order of priority set forth under "Description of the Certificates--Overcollateralization Provisions." If these shortfalls are allocated to the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates the amount of interest paid to those certificates will be reduced, adversely affecting the yield on your investment. THE LIQUIDITY OF YOUR CERTIFICATES MAY BE LIMITED. The Underwriter has no obligation to make a secondary market in the classes of Offered Certificates. There is therefore no assurance that a secondary market will develop or, if it develops, that it will continue. Consequently, you may not be able to sell your certificates readily or at prices that will enable you to realize your desired yield. The market values of the certificates are likely to fluctuate; these fluctuations may be significant and could result in significant losses to you. The secondary markets for asset-backed securities have experienced periods of illiquidity and can be expected to do so in the future. Illiquidity can have a severely adverse effect on the prices of securities that are especially sensitive to prepayment, credit or interest rate risk, or that have been structured to meet the investment requirements of limited categories of investors. S-16 THE CAP AGREEMENTS ARE SUBJECT TO COUNTERPARTY RISK The assets of the trust include the Cap Agreements which will require the counterparty thereunder to make certain payments for the benefit of the holders of the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates. To the extent that distributions on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates depend in part on payments to be received by the trustee under the Cap Agreements, the ability of the trustee to make such distributions on the Offered Certificates and the Class B Certificates will be subject to the credit risk of the counterparty to the Cap Agreements. Although there is a mechanism in place to facilitate replacement of the Cap Agreements upon the default or credit impairment of the counterparty, there can be no assurance that any such mechanism will result in the ability of the trustee to obtain suitable replacement Cap Agreements. THE RETURN ON YOUR CERTIFICATES COULD BE REDUCED BY SHORTFALLS DUE TO THE APPLICATION OF THE RELIEF ACT. The Relief Act and similar state or local laws provide relief to Page 414 of 1693 mortgagors who enter active military service and to mortgagors in reserve status who are called to active military service after the origination Tab 14,of p. 11 of 34 their Page 93 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 24 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 24/390 Jt.45-Page 24 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt mortgage loans. The ongoing military operations of the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan have caused an increase in the number of citizens in active military duty, including those citizens previously in reserve status. Under the Relief Act the interest rate applicable to a mortgage loan for which the related mortgagor is called to active military service will be reduced from the percentage stated in the related mortgage note to 6.00%. This interest rate reduction and any reduction provided under similar state or local laws could result in an interest shortfall because neither the master servicer nor the servicer will be able to collect the amount of interest which otherwise would be payable with respect to such Mortgage Loan if the Relief Act or similar state or local law was not applicable thereto. This shortfall will not be paid by the mortgagor on future due dates or advanced by the master servicer or the servicer and, therefore, will reduce the amount available to pay interest to the certificateholders on subsequent Distribution Dates. We do not know how many Mortgage Loans in the mortgage pool have been or may be affected by the application of the Relief Act or similar state or local law. POSSIBLE REDUCTION OR WITHDRAWAL OF RATINGS ON THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES. Each rating agency rating the Offered Certificates may change or withdraw its initial ratings at any time in the future if, in its judgment, circumstances warrant a change. No person is obligated to maintain the ratings at their initial levels. If a rating agency reduces or withdraws its rating on one or more classes of the Offered Certificates, the liquidity and market value of the affected certificates is likely to be reduced. SUITABILITY OF THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES AS INVESTMENTS. The Offered Certificates are not suitable investments for any investor that requires a regular or predictable schedule of monthly payments or payment on any specific date. The Offered Certificates are complex investments that should be considered only by investors who, either alone or with their financial, tax and legal advisors, have the expertise to analyze the prepayment, reinvestment, default and market risk, the tax consequences of an investment and the interaction of these factors. ALL CAPITALIZED TERMS USED IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT WILL HAVE THE MEANINGS ASSIGNED TO THEM UNDER "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES--GLOSSARY" OR IN THE PROSPECTUS UNDER "INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS." S-17 USE OF PROCEEDS DB Structured Products, Inc. (the "Mortgage Loan Seller"), will sell the Mortgage Loans to Ace Securities Corp. (the "Depositor") and the Depositor will convey the Mortgage Loans to the trust fund in exchange for and concurrently with the delivery of the certificates. Net proceeds from the sale of the Offered Certificates will be applied by the Depositor to the purchase of the Mortgage Loans from the Mortgage Loan Seller. Such net proceeds together with certain classes of certificates not offered by this prospectus supplement will represent the purchase price to be paid by the Depositor to the Mortgage Loan Seller for the Mortgage Loans. The Mortgage Loans were previously purchased by the Mortgage Page 415 of 1693 Loan Seller directly from the originators. Tab 14, p. 12 of 34 Page 94 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 25 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 25/390 Jt.45-Page 25 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt THE MORTGAGE POOL GENERAL The pool of mortgage loans (the "Mortgage Pool") will consist of approximately 5,906 conventional, one- to four-family, first and second lien, fixed-rate and adjustable-rate mortgage loans (the "Mortgage Loans") on residential real properties (the "Mortgaged Properties") and having an aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date of approximately $1,105,596,756, after application of scheduled payments due on or before the Cut-off Date whether or not received, and subject to a permitted variance of plus or minus 5%. The Mortgage Loans have original terms to maturity of not greater than approximately 30 years. For purposes of calculating interest and principal distributions on the Class A Certificates, the Mortgage Loans have been divided into two loan groups, designated as the "Group I Mortgage Loans" and the "Group II Mortgage Loans." The Group I Mortgage Loans consist of 4,325 fixed-rate and adjustable-rate mortgage loans having an aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date of approximately $638,781,694, after application of scheduled payments due on or before the Cut-off Date whether or not received, and subject to a permitted variance of plus or minus 5%. The principal balances of the Group I Mortgage Loans at origination conformed to Fannie Mae loan limits. The Group II Mortgage Loans consist of 1,581 fixed-rate and adjustable-rate mortgage loans having an aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date of approximately $466,815,062, after application of scheduled payments due on or before the Cut-off Date whether or not received, and subject to a permitted variance of plus or minus 5%. The principal balances of the Group II Mortgage Loans at origination may or may not have conformed to Fannie Mae loan limits. Approximately 76.77% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, provide for level monthly payments in an amount sufficient fully to amortize the Mortgage Loans over their terms or, in the case of adjustable rate Mortgage Loans, monthly payments that will be adjusted to an amount that will amortize such Mortgage Loans fully over their terms. Approximately 6.83% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are balloon loans (the "Balloon Loans"), which require the related mortgagors to make balloon payments on the maturity date of such Balloon Loans that are larger than the monthly payments made by such mortgagors on prior due dates in order to amortize such Balloon Loans fully over their terms. Approximately 16.39% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are interest only loans (the "Interest Only Loans") which require the related mortgagors to make monthly payments of only accrued interest for the first two, three or five years following origination. After such interest-only period, the mortgagor's monthly payment will be recalculated to cover both interest and principal so that such Mortgage Loan will amortize fully on or prior to its final payment date. Approximately 91.79% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are secured by first mortgages or deeds of trust or other similar security instruments creating first liens on residential properties ("First Lien Mortgage Loans"). Approximately 8.21% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are secured by second S-18 Page 416 of 1693 Tab 14, p. 13 of 34 Page 95 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 26 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 26/390 Jt.45-Page 26 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt mortgages or deeds of trust or other similar security instruments creating second liens on residential properties ("Second Lien Mortgage Loans"). The Mortgaged Properties consist of attached, detached or semi-detached, one to four-family dwelling units, individual condominium units and individual units in planned unit developments. References to percentages of the Mortgage Loans, unless otherwise noted, are calculated based on the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date. The mortgage rate (the "Mortgage Rate") on each Mortgage Loan is the per annum rate of interest specified in the related mortgage note as reduced by application of the Relief Act or similar state or local laws and bankruptcy adjustments. Approximately 22.74% of the Mortgage Loans are fixed-rate mortgage loans and approximately 77.26% of the Mortgage Loans are adjustable-rate mortgage loans. The adjustable-rate mortgage loans are referred to herein as "ARM Loans". All of the ARM Loans provide for semi-annual adjustment to the Mortgage Rates applicable thereto based on Six-Month LIBOR (as described below). The first adjustment with respect to each ARM Loan will not occur until after an initial period of six months or two, three or five years from the date of origination thereof (each, a "Delayed First Adjustment Mortgage Loan"). In connection with each Mortgage Rate adjustment, the ARM Loans have corresponding adjustments to their monthly payment amount, in each case on each applicable adjustment date (each such date, an "Adjustment Date"). On each Adjustment Date, the Mortgage Rate on each ARM Loan will be adjusted generally to equal the sum of Six-Month LIBOR and a fixed percentage amount (the "Gross Margin") for that ARM Loan specified in the related mortgage note. The Mortgage Rate on each ARM Loan, however, including each Delayed First Adjustment Mortgage Loan, will not increase or decrease by more than the initial periodic rate cap (the "Periodic Rate Cap") specified in the related mortgage note on the initial Adjustment Date or increase or decrease by more than the subsequent periodic rate cap (the "Subsequent Periodic Rate Cap") specified in the related mortgage note on any subsequent Adjustment Date and will not exceed a specified maximum mortgage rate (the "Maximum Mortgage Rate") over the life of the ARM Loan or be less than a specified minimum mortgage rate (the "Minimum Mortgage Rate") over the life of the ARM Loan. The weighted average initial Periodic Rate Cap and Subsequent Periodic Rate Cap for the ARM Loans is approximately 2.170% per annum and 1.002% per annum, respectively. Effective with the first monthly payment due on each ARM Loan after each related Adjustment Date, the monthly payment amount will be adjusted to an amount that will fully amortize the outstanding principal balance of the related ARM Loan over its remaining term and pay interest at the Mortgage Rate as so adjusted. Due to the application of the Periodic Rate Caps and the Maximum Mortgage Rates, the Mortgage Rate on each ARM Loan, as adjusted on any related Adjustment Date, may be less than the sum of the Index, calculated as described in this prospectus supplement, and the related Gross Margin. See "--The Index" in this prospectus supplement. None of the ARM Loans permit the related mortgagor to convert the adjustable Mortgage Rate thereon to a fixed Mortgage Rate. Substantially all of the Mortgage Loans have scheduled monthly payments due on the first day of the month (with respect to each Mortgage Loan, the "Due Date"). Each Mortgage Loan will contain a customary "due-on-sale" clause which provides that the Mortgage Loan must be repaid at the time of a sale of the related Mortgaged Property or assumed by a creditworthy purchaser of the related Mortgaged Property. Page 417 of 1693 Approximately 78.76% of the Mortgage Loans provide Tab 14, p. by for payment 14 ofthe 34 Page 96 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 27 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 27/390 Jt.45-Page 27 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt mortgagor of a prepayment charge (a "Prepayment Charge") in limited circumstances on certain prepayments as provided in the related mortgage note. Each such Mortgage Loan provides for payment of a Prepayment Charge on certain partial prepayments and all prepayments in full made up to five years from the date of origination of the Mortgage Loan, as provided in the related mortgage note. The amount of the Prepayment Charge is as provided in the related mortgage note, but, in most cases, is equal to six months' interest on any amounts prepaid in excess of 20% of the original principal balance of the related Mortgage Loan in any 12 month period, as permitted by law. The holders of the S-19 Class P Certificates will be entitled to all Prepayment Charges received on the Mortgage Loans, and these amounts will not be available for distribution on the other classes of certificates. Under the limited instances described under the terms of the pooling and servicing agreement, the servicer may waive the payment of any otherwise applicable Prepayment Charge with respect to the Mortgage Loans. As of July 1, 2003, the Alternative Mortgage Parity Act of 1982 (the "Parity Act"), which regulates the ability of originators to impose prepayment charges, was amended, and as a result, the originators will be required to comply with state and local laws in originating mortgage loans with prepayment charge provisions with respect to loans originated on or after July 1, 2003. The Depositor makes no representations as to the effect that the prepayment charges and the recent amendment of the Parity Act may have on the prepayment performance of the Mortgage Loans. However, the recent amendment of the Parity Act does not retroactively affect loans originated before July 1, 2003. Investors should conduct their own analysis of the effect, if any, that the Prepayment Charges, decisions by the servicer with respect to the waiver of the Prepayment Charges and the recent amendment to the Parity Act, may have on the prepayment performance of the Mortgage Loans. The Depositor makes no representation as to the effect that the Prepayment Charges, decisions by the servicer with respect to the waiver of the Prepayment Charges and the recent amendment to the Parity Act, may have on the prepayment performance of the Mortgage Loans. See "Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans-Enforceability of Prepayment and Late Payment Fees" in the prospectus. MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS The average principal balance of the Mortgage Loans at origination was approximately $187,372. No Mortgage Loan had a principal balance at origination greater than approximately $850,000 or less than approximately $4,500. The average principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date was approximately $187,199. No Mortgage Loan had a principal balance as of the Cut-off Date greater than approximately $849,286 or less than approximately $3,440. The Mortgage Loans had Mortgage Rates as of the Cut-off Date ranging from approximately 4.625% per annum to approximately 13.125% per annum, and the weighted average Mortgage Rate was approximately 7.190% per annum. As of the Cut-off Date, the ARM Loans had Gross Margins ranging from approximately 1.000% per annum to approximately 9.750% per annum, Minimum Mortgage Rates ranging from approximately 3.250% per annum to approximately 12.000% per annum and Maximum Mortgage Rates ranging from approximately 8.375% per annum to approximately Page 418 the 18.625% per annum. As of the Cut-off Date, of 1693weighted average Gross Margin was approximately 5.874%, the weighted average Minimum MortgageTab 14, Ratep. 15 ofwas 34 Page 97 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 28 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 28/390 Jt.45-Page 28 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt approximately 6.874% per annum and the weighted average Maximum Mortgage Rate was approximately 13.313% per annum. The latest first Adjustment Date following the Cut-off Date on any ARM Loan occurs on October 1, 2009 and the weighted average next Adjustment Date for all of the ARM Loans following the Cut-off Date is November 2, 2006. The weighted average combined loan-to-value ratio of the Mortgage Loans at origination was approximately 82.37%. At origination, no Mortgage Loan had a combined loan-to-value ratio greater than approximately 100.00% or less than approximately 17.24%. The weighted average remaining term to stated maturity of the Mortgage Loans was approximately 344 months as of the Cut-off Date. None of the Mortgage Loans will have a first due date prior to January 1, 2000 or after November 1, 2004 or will have a remaining term to stated maturity of less than 42 months or greater than 360 months as of the Cut-off Date. The latest maturity date of any Mortgage Loan is October 1, 2034. As of the Cut-off Date, the weighted average FICO Score for the Mortgage Loans that were scored is approximately 640. No Mortgage Loan which was scored had a FICO Score as of the Cut-off Date greater than 900 or less than 500. S-20 The Mortgage Loans are expected to have the following additional characteristics as of the Cut-off Date (the sum in any column may not equal the total indicated due to rounding): S-21 COLLATERAL TYPE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF COLLATERAL TYPE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fixed - 5 Year ............... 1 $ 3,440 0.00% Fixed - 15 Year .............. 100 10,501,546 0.95 Fixed - 20 Year .............. 21 2,221,645 0.20 Fixed - 30 Year .............. 995 163,114,904 14.75 Balloon - 20/30 .............. 7 271,977 0.02 Balloon - 15/30 .............. 1,210 75,278,126 6.81 ARM - 6 Month ................ 11 2,644,884 0.24 ARM - 2 Year/6 Month ......... 2,729 608,106,352 55.00 ARM - 2 Year/6 Month - IO .... 506 163,444,909 14.78 ARM - 3 Year/6 Month ......... 156 34,059,374 3.08 ARM - 3 Year/6 Month - IO .... 6 1,445,352 0.13 ARM - 5 Year/6 Month ......... 115 28,163,925 2.55 ARM - 5 Year/6 Month - IO .... 49 16,340,322 1.48 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906Page 419 of$1693 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== Tab 14, p. 16 of 34 ====== Page 98 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 29 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 29/390 Jt.45-Page 29 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt LIEN PRIORITY OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LIEN PRIORITY LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- First Lien ................... 4,410 $ 1,014,783,288 91.79% Second Lien .................. 1,496 90,813,468 8.21 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-22 PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AT OUTSTANDING AT AT ORIGINATION ($) LOANS ORIGINATION ORIGINATION -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0.01 - 50,000.00 ...... 754 $ 26,162,322 2.36% 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ...... 1,297 95,612,325 8.64 100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ...... 945 118,138,388 10.68 150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ...... 732 127,997,121 11.57 200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ...... 604 135,837,674 12.28 250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ...... 433 119,080,795 10.76 300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ...... 349 113,575,423 10.26 350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ...... 260 97,352,659 8.80 400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ...... 170 72,595,521 6.56 450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ...... 137 65,553,066 5.92 500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ...... 79 41,561,160 3.76 550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ...... 64 36,936,487 3.34 600,000.01 - 650,000.00 ...... 34 21,328,808 1.93 650,000.01 - 700,000.00 ...... 20 13,464,860 1.22 700,000.01 - 750,000.00 ...... 16 11,782,011 1.06 750,000.01 - 800,000.00 ...... 7 5,462,400 0.49 800,000.01 - 850,000.00 ...... 5 4,178,500 0.38 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,106,619,520 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-23 PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER Page OF 420 PRINCIPAL of 1693 BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF Tab 14, p. 17 OUTSTANDING ASof 34 OF Page 99 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 30 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 30/390 Jt.45-Page 30 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE ($) LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0.01 - 50,000.00 ...... 754 $ 26,111,070 2.36% 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ...... 1,300 95,829,396 8.67 100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ...... 944 118,023,947 10.68 150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ...... 732 127,970,161 11.57 200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ...... 602 135,301,588 12.24 250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ...... 433 118,972,182 10.76 300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ...... 349 113,485,108 10.26 350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ...... 261 97,676,826 8.83 400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ...... 171 73,035,599 6.61 450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ...... 135 64,601,724 5.84 500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ...... 79 41,522,387 3.76 550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ...... 64 36,898,771 3.34 600,000.01 - 650,000.00 ...... 34 21,307,368 1.93 650,000.01 - 700,000.00 ...... 20 13,455,314 1.22 700,000.01 - 750,000.00 ...... 16 11,773,906 1.06 750,000.01 - 800,000.00 ...... 7 5,456,420 0.49 800,000.01 - 850,000.00 ...... 5 4,174,990 0.38 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-24 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF THE MORTGAGED PROPERTIES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LOCATION LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- California ................... 2,627 $ 625,353,356 56.56% Florida ...................... 420 57,345,975 5.19 New York ..................... 184 45,473,605 4.11 Illinois ..................... 254 37,675,624 3.41 Maryland ..................... 199 34,772,113 3.15 Texas ........................ 297 31,102,351 2.81 Nevada ....................... 174 30,147,238 2.73 Virginia ..................... 180 28,221,217 2.55 Arizona ...................... 182 23,810,076 2.15 New Jersey ................... 107 22,956,145 2.08 Washington ................... 97 15,234,943 1.38 Connecticut .................. 68 14,115,162 1.28 Massachusetts ................ 65 13,598,951 1.23 Colorado ..................... 82 12,062,185 1.09 Pennsylvania ................. 96 11,701,230 1.06 Georgia ...................... 88 11,588,406 1.05 Ohio ......................... 91 9,127,536 0.83 Hawaii ....................... 35 8,942,572 0.81 Michigan ..................... 79 7,850,428 0.71 Louisiana .................... 90 6,833,801 0.62 Oregon ....................... 40 6,164,187 0.56 Rhode Island ................. 27Page 421 of 1693 5,096,637 0.46 North Carolina ............... 46 4,888,846 Tab 14, p. 18 of 34 0.44 Page 100 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 31 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 31/390 Jt.45-Page 31 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Tennessee .................... 42 4,290,919 0.39 District of Columbia ......... 21 4,214,708 0.38 Indiana ...................... 49 4,084,614 0.37 Montana ...................... 27 3,947,997 0.36 Missouri ..................... 38 3,298,246 0.30 Utah ......................... 31 3,246,162 0.29 Minnesota .................... 19 2,650,186 0.24 New Mexico ................... 15 1,996,927 0.18 South Carolina ............... 16 1,691,238 0.15 New Hampshire ................ 12 1,641,325 0.15 Delaware ..................... 9 1,443,224 0.13 Oklahoma ..................... 15 1,323,790 0.12 Mississippi .................. 14 1,276,034 0.12 Idaho ........................ 17 1,187,780 0.11 Kentucky ..................... 13 1,185,111 0.11 Wisconsin .................... 12 1,087,738 0.10 Arkansas ..................... 9 657,138 0.06 Maine ........................ 3 594,933 0.05 Kansas ....................... 5 554,373 0.05 Iowa ......................... 4 313,667 0.03 West Virginia ................ 3 276,305 0.02 Alaska ....................... 1 224,841 0.02 Wyoming ...................... 1 214,291 0.02 Alabama ...................... 1 75,887 0.01 Nebraska ..................... 1 56,737 0.01 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-25 MORTGAGE RATES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF MORTGAGE RATE (%) LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4.500 - 4.999 .............. 14 $ 5,214,393 0.47% 5.000 - 5.499 .............. 73 21,422,971 1.94 5.500 - 5.999 .............. 487 139,767,048 12.64 6.000 - 6.499 .............. 572 151,462,195 13.70 6.500 - 6.999 .............. 1,209 310,448,348 28.08 7.000 - 7.499 .............. 584 129,286,907 11.69 7.500 - 7.999 .............. 781 157,104,705 14.21 8.000 - 8.499 .............. 281 47,420,132 4.29 8.500 - 8.999 .............. 423 47,949,972 4.34 9.000 - 9.499 .............. 122 12,249,129 1.11 9.500 - 9.999 .............. 456 30,831,367 2.79 10.000 - 10.499 .............. 124 7,882,956 0.71 10.500 - 10.999 .............. 484 30,855,322 2.79 11.000 - 11.499 .............. 77 3,875,132 0.35 11.500 - 11.999 .............. 98 4,723,338 0.43 12.000 - 12.499 .............. 32Page 422 of 1693 1,565,015 0.14 12.500 - 12.999 .............. 88 3,488,449 Tab 14, p. 19 of 34 0.32 Page 101 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 32 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 32/390 Jt.45-Page 32 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 13.000 - 13.499 .............. 1 49,378 0.00 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== ORIGINAL TERM OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF ORIGINAL TERM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 60 months ................... 1 $ 3,440 0.00% 180 months ................... 1,310 85,779,672 7.76 240 months ................... 28 2,493,622 0.23 360 months ................... 4,567 1,017,320,022 92.02 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-26 REMAINING TERM TO STATED MATURITY OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE REMAINING TERM MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF TO STATED MATURITY LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 - 60 months .............. 1 $ 3,440 0.00% 121 - 180 months ............. 1,310 85,779,672 7.76 181 - 240 months ............. 28 2,493,622 0.23 301 - 360 months ............. 4,567 1,017,320,022 92.02 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== PROPERTY TYPES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF PROPERTY TYPE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Single Family Residence ...... 4,224 $ 783,458,393 70.86% PUD .......................... 798 146,272,345 13.23 Condominium .................. 548 97,323,992 8.80 2-4 Family ................... 336 78,542,025 7.10 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% =====Page 423 of=============== 1693 ====== Tab 14, p. 20 of 34 Page 102 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 33 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 33/390 Jt.45-Page 33 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt ORIGINAL COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE ORIGINAL COMBINED MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%) LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Less than or equal to 50.00 .. 96 $ 12,348,361 1.12% 50.01 - 55.00 ............... 54 10,362,259 0.94 55.01 - 60.00 ............... 83 15,467,875 1.40 60.01 - 65.00 ............... 123 24,547,367 2.22 65.01 - 70.00 ............... 207 42,745,622 3.87 70.01 - 75.00 ............... 274 66,587,869 6.02 75.01 - 80.00 ............... 2,020 484,226,587 43.80 80.01 - 85.00 ............... 456 104,596,389 9.46 85.01 - 90.00 ............... 735 165,964,792 15.01 90.01 - 95.00 ............... 446 86,566,138 7.83 95.01 - 100.00 ............... 1,412 92,183,495 8.34 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-27 DOCUMENTATION TYPE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF DOCUMENTATION TYPE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Full/Alternative Documentation .............. 3,383 $ 605,387,443 54.76% Stated Income Documentation .. 2,045 391,638,651 35.42 Limited/Lite Documentation ... 473 107,731,672 9.74 No Income Documentation ...... 5 838,990 0.08 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== FICO SCORE FOR THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF FICO SCORE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 500 - 524 .................... 99 $ 16,447,273 1.49% 525 - 549 .................... 244 44,043,211 3.98 550 - 574 .................... 396 83,118,445 7.52 575 - 599 .................... 584 111,608,079 10.09 600 - 624 .................... 1,021Page 424 of 1693 193,617,600 17.51 625 - 649 .................... 1,179 210,604,439 Tab 14, p. 21 of 34 19.05 Page 103 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 34 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 34/390 Jt.45-Page 34 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 650 - 674 .................... 920 166,032,839 15.02 675 - 699 .................... 614 116,883,843 10.57 700 - 724 .................... 352 66,808,648 6.04 725 - 749 .................... 256 47,263,950 4.27 750 - 774 .................... 172 35,686,535 3.23 775 - 799 .................... 62 11,908,892 1.08 800 - 824 .................... 6 1,485,687 0.13 Greater than or equal to 900 . 1 87,314 0.01 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== LOAN PURPOSE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LOAN PURPOSE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Purchase ..................... 3,292 $ 553,143,875 50.03% Refinance - Cashout .......... 1,994 428,296,723 38.74 Refinance - Rate Term ........ 620 124,156,158 11.23 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-28 OCCUPANCY STATUS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OCCUPANCY STATUS LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Primary ...................... 5,452 $ 1,031,590,011 93.31% Investment ................... 358 57,190,969 5.17 Second Home .................. 96 16,815,776 1.52 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== The occupancy status of a Mortgaged Property is as represented by the mortgagor in its loan application. NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATES FOR THE ARM LOANS INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATE ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE Page 425 of 1693 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- December 2004 ................ 1 $ 31,222 Tab 14, p. 22 of 34 0.00% Page 104 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 35 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 35/390 Jt.45-Page 35 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt January 2005 ................. 1 114,203 0.01 February 2005 ................ 3 564,869 0.07 March 2005 ................... 8 2,151,276 0.25 August 2005 .................. 2 239,951 0.03 September 2005 ............... 1 47,064 0.01 December 2005 ................ 1 85,051 0.01 January 2006 ................. 1 80,260 0.01 February 2006 ................ 4 539,436 0.06 April 2006 ................... 3 838,349 0.10 May 2006 ..................... 3 418,221 0.05 June 2006 .................... 15 3,517,834 0.41 July 2006 .................... 67 17,896,974 2.10 August 2006 .................. 633 161,983,508 18.96 September 2006 ............... 2,474 579,752,085 67.87 October 2006 ................. 29 5,935,841 0.69 May 2007 ..................... 1 187,239 0.02 June 2007 .................... 1 186,951 0.02 July 2007 .................... 5 1,196,222 0.14 August 2007 .................. 34 7,732,516 0.91 September 2007 ............... 120 26,037,798 3.05 October 2007 ................. 1 164,000 0.02 July 2009 .................... 5 2,225,202 0.26 August 2009 .................. 34 8,943,709 1.05 September 2009 ............... 124 32,921,336 3.85 October 2009 ................. 1 414,000 0.05 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 3,572 $ 854,205,118 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-29 GROSS MARGINS OF THE ARM LOANS INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF GROSS MARGIN (%) ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1.000 - 1.499 ................ 2 $ 178,798 0.02% 3.000 - 3.499 ................ 2 554,350 0.06 3.500 - 3.999 ................ 115 34,196,896 4.00 4.000 - 4.499 ................ 24 5,914,136 0.69 4.500 - 4.999 ................ 218 57,587,742 6.74 5.000 - 5.499 ................ 911 208,743,099 24.44 5.500 - 5.999 ................ 624 166,978,527 19.55 6.000 - 6.499 ................ 682 171,782,150 20.11 6.500 - 6.999 ................ 470 106,027,738 12.41 7.000 - 7.499 ................ 247 53,189,353 6.23 7.500 - 7.999 ................ 163 31,664,014 3.71 8.000 - 8.499 ................ 100 15,842,050 1.85 8.500 - 8.999 ................ 12 1,277,920 0.15 9.000 - 9.499 ................ 1 83,268 0.01 9.500 - 9.999 ................ 1 185,077 0.02 -----Page 426 of--------------- 1693 ------ Total ................... 3,572 $ 854,205,118 Tab 14, p. 23 of 34 100.00% Page 105 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 36 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 36/390 Jt.45-Page 36 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt ===== =============== ====== MAXIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE ARM LOANS INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF MAXIMUM MORTGAGE RATE (%) ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8.000 - 8.499 .............. 1 $ 215,000 0.03% 10.000 - 10.499 .............. 1 175,359 0.02 10.500 - 10.999 .............. 1 129,911 0.02 11.000 - 11.499 .............. 22 7,069,395 0.83 11.500 - 11.999 .............. 109 29,114,588 3.41 12.000 - 12.499 .............. 478 137,256,368 16.07 12.500 - 12.999 .............. 527 141,264,995 16.54 13.000 - 13.499 .............. 872 228,239,859 26.72 13.500 - 13.999 .............. 548 124,525,400 14.58 14.000 - 14.499 .............. 508 107,560,035 12.59 14.500 - 14.999 .............. 236 42,339,534 4.96 15.000 - 15.499 .............. 164 25,137,054 2.94 15.500 - 15.999 .............. 62 7,507,007 0.88 16.000 - 16.499 .............. 26 2,650,517 0.31 16.500 - 16.999 .............. 9 586,191 0.07 17.000 - 17.499 .............. 3 193,029 0.02 17.500 - 17.999 .............. 4 209,655 0.02 18.500 - 18.999 .............. 1 31,222 0.00 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 3,572 $ 854,205,118 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-30 MINIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE ARM LOANS INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF MINIMUM MORTGAGE RATE (%) ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3.000 - 3.499 .............. 1 $ 309,550 0.04% 4.000 - 4.499 .............. 3 587,036 0.07 4.500 - 4.999 .............. 23 7,297,664 0.85 5.000 - 5.499 .............. 75 21,544,015 2.52 5.500 - 5.999 .............. 460 132,363,092 15.50 6.000 - 6.499 .............. 447 120,187,493 14.07 6.500 - 6.999 .............. 962 256,187,071 29.99 7.000 - 7.499 .............. 446 103,384,793 12.10 7.500 - 7.999 .............. 598 128,099,177 15.00 8.000 - 8.499 .............. 211 38,643,672 4.52 8.500 - 8.999 .............. 206 31,218,783 3.65 9.000 - 9.499 .............. 68 7,882,703 0.92 9.500 - 9.999 .............. 43Page 427 of 1693 4,694,692 0.55 10.000 - 10.499 .............. 15 1,121,084 Tab 14, p. 24 of 34 0.13 Page 106 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 37 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 37/390 Jt.45-Page 37 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 10.500 - 10.999 .............. 9 492,623 0.06 11.000 - 11.499 .............. 1 44,184 0.01 11.500 - 11.999 .............. 3 116,264 0.01 12.000 - 12.499 .............. 1 31,222 0.00 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 3,572 $ 854,205,118 100.00% ===== =============== ====== INITIAL PERIODIC RATE CAPS OF THE ARM LOANS INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF INITIAL PERIODIC RATE CAP (%) ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1.000 ........................ 48 $ 8,614,710 1.01% 1.125 ........................ 1 123,154 0.01 1.160 ........................ 2 193,117 0.02 1.497 ........................ 1 539,547 0.06 1.500 ........................ 1,958 460,745,066 53.94 1.987 ........................ 1 157,170 0.02 2.000 ........................ 96 30,919,146 3.62 2.115 ........................ 1 155,612 0.02 3.000 ........................ 1,417 336,869,701 39.44 5.000 ........................ 47 15,887,895 1.86 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 3,572 $ 854,205,118 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-31 SUBSEQUENT PERIODIC RATE CAPS OF THE ARM LOANS INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE SUBSEQUENT NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF PERIODIC RATE CAP (%) ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0.750 ........................ 1 $ 301,880 0.04% 1.000 ........................ 3,548 850,688,122 99.59 1.500 ........................ 19 2,560,108 0.30 2.000 ........................ 4 655,007 0.08 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 3,572 $ 854,205,118 100.00% ===== =============== ====== LIFETIME RATE CAPS OF THE ARM LOANS INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LIFETIME RATE CAP (%) Page 428 THE ARM LOANS of 1693CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE Tab 14, p. 25 of 34 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Page 107 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 38 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 38/390 Jt.45-Page 38 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 5.000 - 5.499 ................ 1 $ 175,359 0.02% 6.000 - 6.499 ................ 800 155,217,331 18.17 6.500 - 6.999 ................ 2,668 666,295,461 78.00 7.000 - 7.499 ................ 103 32,516,967 3.81 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 3,572 $ 854,205,118 100.00% ===== =============== ====== PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF AT ORIGINATION LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0 ............................ 1,448 $ 234,877,550 21.24% 6 ............................ 1 103,930 0.01 12 ........................... 206 50,504,229 4.57 24 ........................... 3,129 642,046,852 58.07 36 ........................... 1,121 177,756,920 16.08 60 ........................... 1 307,275 0.03 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-32 ORIGINATORS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF ORIGINATORS LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WMC .......................... 4,483 $ 866,889,947 78.41% People's Choice .............. 1,145 199,782,410 18.07 Other ........................ 278 38,924,399 3.52 ----- --------------- ------ Total ................... 5,906 $ 1,105,596,756 100.00% ===== =============== ====== S-33 GROUP I MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS Approximately 25.77% of the Group I Mortgage Loans are fixed-rate mortgage loans and approximately 74.23% of the Group I Mortgage Loans are ARM Loans (the "Group I ARM Loans"), in each case, by aggregate principal balance of the Group I Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date. PageI429 Approximately 92.96% of the Group of 1693 Mortgage Loans are First Lien Mortgage Loans and approximately 7.04% of the Group I Mortgage Loans are Second Tab 14, p. 26 Lien of 34 Page 108 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 39 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 39/390 Jt.45-Page 39 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Mortgage Loans, in each case, by aggregate principal balance of the Group I Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date. Approximately 4.99% of the Group I Mortgage Loans are Balloon Loans and approximately 8.42% of the Group I Mortgage Loans are Interest Only Loans, in each case, by aggregate principal balance of the Group I Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date. The average principal balance of the Group I Mortgage Loans at origination was approximately $147,843. No Group I Mortgage Loan had a principal balance at origination greater than approximately $590,750 or less than approximately $13,200. The average principal balance of the Group I Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date was approximately $147,695. No Group I Mortgage Loan had a principal balance as of the Cut-off Date greater than approximately $589,826 or less than approximately $13,197. The Group I Mortgage Loans had Mortgage Rates as of the Cut-off Date ranging from approximately 4.925% per annum to approximately 12.990% per annum, and the weighted average Mortgage Rate was approximately 7.277% per annum. As of the Cut-off Date, the Group I ARM Loans had Gross Margins ranging from approximately 1.000% per annum to approximately 8.000% per annum, Minimum Mortgage Rates ranging from approximately 4.925% per annum to approximately 11.990% per annum and Maximum Mortgage Rates ranging from approximately 11.125% per annum to approximately 17.990% per annum. As of the Cut-off Date, the weighted average Gross Margin was approximately 5.966%, the weighted average Minimum Mortgage Rate was approximately 7.012% per annum and the weighted average Maximum Mortgage Rate was approximately 13.431% per annum. The latest first Adjustment Date following the Cut-off Date on any Group I ARM Loan occurs on September 1, 2009 and the weighted average next Adjustment Date for all of the Group I ARM Loans following the Cut-off Date is October 29, 2006. The weighted average combined loan-to-value ratio of the Group I Mortgage Loans at origination was approximately 81.48%. At origination, no Group I Mortgage Loan had a combined loan-to-value ratio greater than approximately 100.00% or less than approximately 17.24%. The weighted average remaining term to stated maturity of the Group I Mortgage Loans was approximately 347 months as of the Cut-off Date. None of the Group I Mortgage Loans will have a first due date prior to November 1, 2003 or after November 1, 2004, or will have a remaining term to stated maturity of less than 168 months or greater than 360 months as of the Cut-off Date. The latest maturity date of any Group I Mortgage Loan is October 1, 2034. As of the Cut-off Date, the weighted average FICO Score for the Group I Mortgage Loans that were scored is approximately 634. No Group I Mortgage Loan which was scored had a FICO Score as of the Cut-off Date greater than 814 or less than 500. The Group I Mortgage Loans are expected to have the following additional characteristics as of the Cut-off Date (the sum in any column may not equal the total indicated due to rounding): S-34 Page 430 of 1693 COLLATERAL TYPE OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS Tab 14, p. 27 of 34 Page 109 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 40 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 40/390 Jt.45-Page 40 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF COLLATERAL TYPE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fixed-15 Year ................ 93 $ 9,414,646 1.47% Fixed-20 Year ................ 11 1,390,006 0.22 Fixed-30 Year ................ 876 121,930,643 19.09 Balloon-15/30 ................ 740 31,860,784 4.99 ARM - 6 Month ................ 8 1,494,592 0.23 ARM - 2 Year/6 Month ......... 2,139 379,790,970 59.46 ARM - 2 Year/6 Month-IO ...... 222 48,581,100 7.61 ARM - 3 Year/6 Month ......... 127 22,457,956 3.52 ARM - 5 Year/6 Month ......... 87 16,672,185 2.61 ARM - 5 Year/6 Month-IO ...... 22 5,188,812 0.81 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== LIEN PRIORITY OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LIEN PRIORITY LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- First Lien ................... 3,335 $ 593,806,980 92.96% Second Lien .................. 990 44,974,714 7.04 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AT OUTSTANDING AT AT ORIGINATION ($) LOANS ORIGINATION ORIGINATION -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0.01 - 50,000.00 ...... 688 $ 23,909,186 3.74% 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ...... 955 68,245,729 10.67 100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ...... 761 95,204,957 14.89 150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ...... 658 115,220,946 18.02 200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ...... 574 129,124,110 20.19 250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ...... 412 113,412,808 17.74 300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ...... 218 69,282,874 10.84 350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ...... 24 8,992,835 1.41 400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ...... 19 8,053,400 1.26 450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ...... 11 5,220,375 0.82 500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ...... 2 1,032,000 0.16 550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ...... 3 1,722,357 0.27 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325Page 431 of 1693 $ 639,421,577 100.00% ===== ============= Tab 14, p. 28 of 34 ====== Page 110 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 41 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 41/390 Jt.45-Page 41 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt S-35 PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE ($) LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0.01 - 50,000.00 ...... 688 $ 23,864,153 3.74% 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ...... 957 68,384,179 10.71 100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ...... 760 95,061,510 14.88 150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ...... 659 115,357,221 18.06 200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ...... 572 128,591,123 20.13 250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ...... 412 113,309,171 17.74 300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ...... 218 69,224,744 10.84 350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ...... 25 9,383,054 1.47 400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ...... 18 7,643,290 1.20 450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ...... 11 5,213,288 0.82 500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ...... 2 1,029,309 0.16 550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ...... 3 1,720,652 0.27 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== S-36 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF THE MORTGAGED PROPERTIES OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LOCATION LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- California ................... 1,603 $ 290,973,161 45.55% Florida ...................... 369 43,748,611 6.85 Illinois ..................... 230 31,600,188 4.95 New York ..................... 128 29,183,696 4.57 Texas ........................ 243 23,062,251 3.61 Maryland ..................... 148 21,720,293 3.40 Virginia ..................... 142 19,456,244 3.05 Nevada ....................... 142 18,884,458 2.96 Arizona ...................... 125 13,839,221 2.17 New Jersey ................... 78 13,048,728 2.04 Pennsylvania ................. 91 10,457,924 1.64 Washington ................... 76 10,358,273 1.62 Massachusetts ................ 54 10,245,868 1.60 Georgia ...................... 81 9,661,760 1.51 Colorado ..................... 71Page 432 of 1693 8,761,936 1.37 Connecticut .................. 50 8,628,604 Tab 14, p. 29 of 34 1.35 Page 111 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 42 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 42/390 Jt.45-Page 42 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Hawaii ....................... 32 7,855,791 1.23 Ohio ......................... 86 7,601,553 1.19 Michigan ..................... 74 7,122,175 1.11 Louisiana .................... 84 6,273,604 0.98 Rhode Island ................. 27 5,096,637 0.80 Tennessee .................... 38 3,972,507 0.62 North Carolina ............... 39 3,520,063 0.55 Oregon ....................... 30 3,510,282 0.55 District of Columbia ......... 18 3,169,522 0.50 Montana ...................... 24 2,985,352 0.47 Indiana ...................... 35 2,941,329 0.46 Missouri ..................... 32 2,646,008 0.41 Utah ......................... 29 2,447,804 0.38 Minnesota .................... 14 2,212,588 0.35 New Hampshire ................ 12 1,641,325 0.26 New Mexico ................... 11 1,600,866 0.25 Delaware ..................... 9 1,443,224 0.23 Oklahoma ..................... 15 1,323,790 0.21 Mississippi .................. 13 1,192,766 0.19 Idaho ........................ 17 1,187,780 0.19 Wisconsin .................... 12 1,087,738 0.17 South Carolina ............... 11 920,692 0.14 Arkansas ..................... 9 657,138 0.10 Kentucky ..................... 6 636,158 0.10 Maine ........................ 3 594,933 0.09 Kansas ....................... 5 554,373 0.09 Iowa ......................... 4 313,667 0.05 Alaska ....................... 1 224,841 0.04 Wyoming ...................... 1 214,291 0.03 West Virginia ................ 2 144,944 0.02 Nebraska ..................... 1 56,737 0.01 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== S-37 MORTGAGE RATES OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF MORTGAGE RATE (%) LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4.500 - 4.999 .............. 6 $ 1,437,096 0.22% 5.000 - 5.499 .............. 42 9,130,557 1.43 5.500 - 5.999 .............. 303 64,521,185 10.10 6.000 - 6.499 .............. 411 84,565,910 13.24 6.500 - 6.999 .............. 885 173,964,719 27.23 7.000 - 7.499 .............. 473 84,977,188 13.30 7.500 - 7.999 .............. 637 104,054,254 16.29 8.000 - 8.499 .............. 217 29,446,668 4.61 8.500 - 8.999 .............. 300 31,170,768 4.88 9.000 - 9.499 .............. 94Page 433 of 1693 8,810,606 1.38 9.500 - 9.999 .............. 304 17,104,722 Tab 14, p. 30 of 34 2.68 Page 112 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 43 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 43/390 Jt.45-Page 43 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 10.000 - 10.499 .............. 106 6,129,496 0.96 10.500 - 10.999 .............. 321 15,422,278 2.41 11.000 - 11.499 .............. 50 2,022,789 0.32 11.500 - 11.999 .............. 76 2,723,011 0.43 12.000 - 12.499 .............. 24 816,746 0.13 12.500 - 12.999 .............. 76 2,483,702 0.39 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== ORIGINAL TERM OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF ORIGINAL TERM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 180 months ................... 833 $ 41,275,430 6.46% 240 months ................... 11 1,390,006 0.22 360 months ................... 3,481 596,116,258 93.32 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== S-38 REMAINING TERM TO STATED MATURITY OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE REMAINING TERM MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF TO STATED MATURITY LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 121 - 180 months ............. 833 $ 41,275,430 6.46% 181 - 240 months ............. 11 1,390,006 0.22 301 - 360 months ............. 3,481 596,116,258 93.32 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== PROPERTY TYPES OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF PROPERTY TYPE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Single Family Residence ...... 3,120 $ 451,169,016 70.63% PUD .......................... 523 71,466,064 11.19 2-4 Family ................... 282 59,463,250 9.31 Condominium .................. 400Page 434 of 1693 56,683,364 8.87 ----- ------------- Tab 14, p. 31 of 34 ------ Page 113 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 44 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 44/390 Jt.45-Page 44 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== ORIGINAL COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE ORIGINAL COMBINED MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%) LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Less than or equal to 50.00 .. 90 $ 11,215,903 1.76% 50.01 - 55.00 .............. 44 6,726,269 1.05 55.01 - 60.00 .............. 75 12,209,731 1.91 60.01 - 65.00 .............. 108 19,002,656 2.97 65.01 - 70.00 .............. 173 30,035,926 4.70 70.01 - 75.00 .............. 214 38,221,054 5.98 75.01 - 80.00 .............. 1,476 271,317,936 42.47 80.01 - 85.00 .............. 360 65,559,252 10.26 85.01 - 90.00 .............. 538 90,025,198 14.09 90.01 - 95.00 .............. 315 47,995,606 7.51 95.01 - 100.00 .............. 932 46,472,164 7.28 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== S-39 DOCUMENTATION TYPE OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF DOCUMENTATION TYPE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Full/Alternative Documentation 2,526 $ 365,007,772 57.14% Stated Income Documentation .. 1,510 228,630,447 35.79 Limited/Lite Documentation ... 289 45,143,476 7.07 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== FICO SCORE FOR THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF FICO SCORE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 500 - 524 .................... 88 $ 12,245,883 1.92% 525 - 549 .................... 207 31,318,734 4.90 550 - 574 .................... 325 57,052,011 8.93 575 - 599 .................... 476Page 435 of 1693 72,793,462 11.40 600 - 624 .................... 759 114,831,003 Tab 14, p. 32 of 34 17.98 Page 114 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 45 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 45/390 Jt.45-Page 45 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 625 - 649 .................... 824 115,022,234 18.01 650 - 674 .................... 652 91,112,625 14.26 675 - 699 .................... 429 61,910,096 9.69 700 - 724 .................... 238 35,114,962 5.50 725 - 749 .................... 179 25,219,708 3.95 750 - 774 .................... 102 14,798,822 2.32 775 - 799 .................... 43 6,566,108 1.03 800 - 824 .................... 3 796,047 0.12 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== LOAN PURPOSE OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF LOAN PURPOSE LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Purchase ..................... 2,264 $ 291,249,329 45.59% Refinance - Cashout .......... 1,558 266,823,635 41.77 Refinance - Rate Term ........ 503 80,708,730 12.63 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== S-40 OCCUPANCY STATUS OF THE GROUP I MORTGAGE LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE MORTGAGE OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OCCUPANCY STATUS LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Primary ...................... 3,936 $ 586,641,697 91.84% Investment ................... 318 42,744,677 6.69 Second Home .................. 71 9,395,320 1.47 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 4,325 $ 638,781,694 100.00% ===== ============= ====== The occupancy status of a Mortgaged Property is as represented by the mortgagor in its loan application. NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATES FOR THE GROUP I ARM LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATE ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE Page 436 of 1693 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- January 2005 ................. 1 $ 114,203 Tab 14, p. 33 of 34 0.02% Page 115 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 46 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 46/390 Jt.45-Page 46 7/22/2014 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt February 2005 ................ 3 564,869 0.12 March 2005 ................... 4 815,520 0.17 December 2005 ................ 1 85,051 0.02 April 2006 ................... 2 428,849 0.09 May 2006 ..................... 3 418,221 0.09 June 2006 .................... 11 1,999,532 0.42 July 2006 .................... 39 7,001,187 1.48 August 2006 .................. 423 80,753,903 17.03 September 2006 ............... 1,865 334,914,573 70.63 October 2006 ................. 17 2,770,753 0.58 May 2007 ..................... 1 187,239 0.04 June 2007 .................... 1 186,951 0.04 July 2007 .................... 4 651,196 0.14 August 2007 .................. 29 5,667,710 1.20 September 2007 ............... 92 15,764,860 3.32 July 2009 .................... 2 366,073 0.08 August 2009 .................. 21 3,782,097 0.80 September 2009 ............... 86 17,712,827 3.74 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 2,605 $ 474,185,615 100.00% ===== ============= ====== S-41 GROSS MARGINS OF THE GROUP I ARM LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF GROSS MARGIN (%) ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1.000 - 1.499 ................ 2 $ 178,798 0.04% 3.500 - 3.999 ................ 58 11,824,303 2.49 4.000 - 4.499 ................ 2 321,164 0.07 4.500 - 4.999 ................ 133 26,506,990 5.59 5.000 - 5.499 ................ 705 123,604,314 26.07 5.500 - 5.999 ................ 433 86,780,361 18.30 6.000 - 6.499 ................ 495 93,818,733 19.79 6.500 - 6.999 ................ 371 65,733,243 13.86 7.000 - 7.499 ................ 198 34,253,890 7.22 7.500 - 7.999 ................ 135 21,355,743 4.50 8.000 - 8.499 ................ 73 9,808,075 2.07 ----- ------------- ------ Total ................... 2,605 $ 474,185,615 100.00% ===== ============= ====== MAXIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE GROUP I ARM LOANS AGGREGATE % OF AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE PRINCIPAL BALANCE NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING AS OF OUTSTANDING AS OF MAXIMUM MORTGAGE RATE (%) ARM LOANS THE CUT-OFF DATE THE CUT-OFF DATE Page 437 of 1693 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11.000 - 11.499 .............. 7 $ 1,555,533 Tab 14, p. 34 of 34 0.33% Page 116 of 181 EXHIBIT 39, page 47 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt 47/390 Jt.45-Page 47 TAB 15 Page 117 of 181 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Before the SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 Release No. 64720 / June 22, 2011 INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT OF 1940 Release No. 3218 / June 22, 2011 INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 Release No. 29704 / June 22, 2011 ACCOUNTING AND AUDITING ENFORCEMENT Release No. 3296 / June 22, 2011 ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDING File No. 3-13847 C OR R E C T E D OR DE R M A K I NG F I NDI NG S In the Matter of AND I M POSI NG R E M E DI AL SANC T I ONS AND A C E ASE -AND-DE SI ST OR DE R MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT, PUR SUANT T O SE C T I ON 15(b) OF T H E INC.; MORGAN KEEGAN & SE C UR I T I E S E X C H A NG E AC T OF 1934, COMPANY, INC.; SE C T I ONS 203(e), 203(f) AND 203(k) OF T H E JAMES C. KELSOE, JR.; and I NV E ST M E NT ADV I SE R S AC T OF 1940, JOSEPH THOMPSON WELLER, AND SE C T I ONS 9(b) AND 9(f) OF T H E CPA, I NV E ST M E NT C OM PANY AC T OF 1940, AND I M POSI NG SUSPE NSI ON PUR SUANT Respondents. T O SE C T I ON 4C OF T H E SE C UR I T I E S E X C H ANG E AC T OF 1934 A ND R UL E 102(e)(1)(iii) OF T H E C OM M I SSI ON’ S R UL E S OF PR AC T I C E I. On April 7, 2010, the Commission instituted public administrative and cease-and-desist proceedings pursuant to Section 8A of the Securities Act of 1933 (“Securities Act”), Section 21C of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”), and Sections 9(b) and 9(f) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“Investment Company Act”) against Morgan Asset Management, Inc. (“Morgan Asset”); Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc. (“Morgan Keegan”); Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12 Cause No. 09-14448 Page 7 of 26 Page Exhibit A 118 of 181 Tab 15, p. 1 of 11 James C. Kelsoe, Jr. (“Kelsoe”); and Joseph Thompson Weller, CPA (“Weller”); pursuant to Section 15(b)(4) of the Exchange Act against Morgan Keegan; pursuant to Section 15(b)(6) of the Exchange Act against Morgan Asset, Kelsoe and Weller; pursuant to Sections 203(e) and 203(k) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (“Advisers Act”) against Morgan Asset and Morgan Keegan; pursuant to Sections 203(f) and 203(k) of the Advisers Act against Kelsoe and Weller; and pursuant to Section 4C of the Exchange Act and Rule 102(e)(1)(iii) of the Commission’s Rules of Practice against Weller. Respondents Morgan Asset, Morgan Keegan, Kelsoe and Weller (collectively “Respondents”) have submitted an Offer of Settlement which the Commission has determined to accept. II. Solely for the purpose of these proceedings and any other proceedings brought by or on behalf of the Commission, or to which the Commission is a party, and without admitting or denying the findings herein, except as to the Commission’s jurisdiction over them and the subject matter of these proceedings, which are admitted, Respondents consent to the entry of this Order Making Findings and Imposing Remedial Sanctions and a Cease-and-Desist Order Pursuant to Sections 4C and 15(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Sections 203(e), 203(f) and 203(k) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, and Sections 9(b) and 9(f) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, and Imposing Suspension Pursuant to Section 4C of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 102(e)(1)(iii) of the Commission’s Rules of Practice (“Order”), as set forth below. III. On the basis of this Order and Respondent’s Offer, the Commission finds 1 that, A. RESPONDENTS 1. Morgan Asset, incorporated in Tennessee on April 10, 1986, has been an investment adviser registered with the Commission at all relevant times. Morgan Asset’s principal place of business is in Birmingham, Alabama. Morgan Asset is a wholly-owned subsidiary of MK Holding, Inc., which in turn is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Regions Financial Corporation. 2. Morgan Keegan, incorporated in Tennessee on June 27, 1969, has been registered with the Commission as a broker-dealer at all relevant times and as an investment adviser since July 27, 1992. During the relevant time period, Morgan Keegan served as the principal 1 The findings herein are made pursuant to Respondentsಬ Offer of Settlement and are not binding on any other person or entity in this or any other proceeding. Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12 Cause No. 09-14448 Page 8 of 26 Page 119 of 181 Tab 15, p. 2 of 11 C. FACTS Overview 10. Morgan Asset, through Kelsoe, as Portfolio Manager, managed the Helios Select Fund, Inc., the Helios High Income Fund, Inc., the Helios Multi-Sector High Income Fund, Inc., the Helios Strategic Income Fund, Inc., and the Helios Advantage Income Fund, Inc. (collectively, the “Funds”) from at least November 2004 through July 29, 2008. 11. Respondent Morgan Keegan, a registered broker-dealer and registered investment adviser,, was the pprincipal p underwriter and distributor of shares of the open-ended p Funds. Each of the Funds’ Boards of Directors was responsiblep for pricing the Funds’ securities in accordance with the Funds’ valuation policies p and procedures p ((“valuation pprocedures”). ) Although g the Funds’ pprospectuses p stated that Morgan g Asset would price p the securities,, each Fund’s Board of Directors delegated g the pricing p g responsibility p y too Morgan g Keegan. g Morgan g Keegan g priced p each Fund’s securities and calculated the Fund’s daily net asset value 2 (“NAV”) through its Fund Accounting Department pa (“Fund ( Accounting”). g ) Weller was an officer and treasurer of the Funds. Weller,, g Keegan’s Morgan g Controller,, alongg with other Morgang Keegan g ppersonnel,, staffed a “Valuation Committee” that oversaw Fund Accounting’s processes and evaluated the prices assigned to securities. MMorgan Keegan and Weller failed to adequately fulfill Morgan Keegan’s responsibilities, as delegated to it by the Funds’ Boards of Directors, to price the Funds’ securities in accordance with their valuation policies and procedures regarding valuation. For example, at various times from Januaryy 2007 through g July y 2007,, Fund Accounting g accepted p unsubstantiated “price adjustments,” submitted by Kelsoe, that inaccurately inflated the prices of certain securities, contrary to the Funds’ valuation procedures. Fund Accounting failed to document justifications for such pricing adjustments. 12. The Funds’ valuation policies and procedures required the comparison of fair values to prices provided by other sources. Pursuant to that requirement, Fund Accounting periodically obtained broker-dealer price confirmations for certain fair valued securities. Unbeknownst to Fund Accountingg and the Funds’ independentp auditor (“Independent ( p Auditor”), the Portfolio Manager, g , Kelsoe,, activelyy screened and influenced a broker-dealer to change the price confirmations that Fund Accountingg and the Independent p Auditor obtained from the broker- dealer. Kelsoe also failed to advise Fund Accountingg or the Funds’ Boards of Directors when he received information indicating that the Funds’ prices for certain securities should be reduced. 2 The “net asset value” or “NAV” of an investment company is the company’s total assets minus its total liabilities. An investment company calculates the NAV of a single share (or the “per share NAV”) by dividing its NAV by the number of shares that are outstanding. Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12 Cause No. 09-14448 Page 10 of 26 Page 120 of 181 Tab 15, p. 3 of 11 13. Each of the Funds held,, in varying y g amounts,, securities backed byy subprime p g g , and the market for such securities deteriorated in the first half of 2007 mortgages, 2007. Morgan g Keegan g utilized practices which were not reasonably y designed g to determine that the Funds’ NAVs were accurate. Morgan Asset, through Kelsoe, engaged in actions that forestalled declines in the NAVs of the Funds that would have occurred as a result of the deteriorating market, absent his intervention. 14. Many of the securities that were held by the Funds and backed by subprime mortgages lacked readily available market quotations and, as a result, were required by the Investment Company Act to be priced by the Funds’ Boards of Directors, using “fair value” methods. Under Section 2(a)(41)(B) of the Investment Company Act, the Funds were required to use market values for portfolio securities with readily available market quotations and use fair value for all other portfolio assets, as determined in good faith by the board of directors. The fair value of securities for which market quotations are not readily available is the price the Funds would reasonably expect to receive on a current sale of the securities. 3 15. The Funds adopted p valuation procedures p for ppricing g the Funds’ portfolio securities and d assigned the task of following those procedures to Morgan Keegan. The Funds’ valuation procedures for fair-valued securities mandated that such securities should be valued in “good faith” by the Valuation Committee, considering a series of general and specific factors including, among others, “fundamental analytical data relating to the investment,” “an evaluation of the forces which influence the market in which the securities are purchased or sold” and “events affecting the security.” The procedures required the Valuation Committee to maintain a written report “documenting the manner in which the fair value of a security was determined and the accuracy of the valuation made based on the next reliable public price quotation for that security.” The procedures also required that values assigned to securities be periodically validated through, among other means, broker-dealer price confirmations. Fund Accounting also used broker-dealer price confirmations to set current values. The procedures specified that prices obtained from a broker-dealer could only be overridden when there was “a reasonable basis to believe that the price provided [did] not accurately reflect the fair value of the portfolio security.” Whenever a price was overridden, the procedures mandated the basis for overriding the price to be “documented and provided to the Valuation Committee for its review.” 16. g with the Commission,, the Funds stated that the fair value of securities In filings would be determined by y Morgan g Asset’s Valuation Committee usingg procedures p adopted p by y the Funds’ board of directors. In fact,, the responsibility p y was delegated g to Morgan g Keegan,g , which primarily staffed the Valuation Committee. Morgan Keegan and the Valuation Committee did not 3 See AICPA Audit and Accounting Guide - Investment Companies (Sect. 2.35-2.39), which incorporates Accounting Series Release No. 118 (“ASR 118”). The Commission has provided interpretative guidance related to financial reporting in the Accounting Series Releases, which is included in the Codification of Financial Reporting Policies. Thus, conformity with the ASR 118 is required by Commission rules and complies with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”). See also Articles 1-01(a) and 6.03 of Regulation S-X. Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12 Cause No. 09-14448 Page 11 of 26 Page 121 of 181 Tab 15, p. 4 of 11 reasonably satisfy their responsibilities underr the the Funds’ procedures in several ways. Among other things: (i) the Valuation Committee left pricing decisions to lower level employees in Fund Accounting who did not have the training or qualifications to make fair value pricing determinations; (ii) Fund Accounting personnel relied on Kelsoe’s “price adjustments” to determine the prices assigned to portfolio assets, without obtaining a reasonable basis for or documentation supporting the price adjustments or applying the factors set forth in the procedures; (iii) Fund Accounting personnel gave Kelsoe discretion beyond the parameters of the valuation procedures in validating the prices of portfolio securities by allowing him to determine which dealer price confirmations to use and which to ignore, without obtaining documentation to support his adjustments; and (iv) the Valuation Committee and Fund Accounting did not ensure that the fair value prices assigned to many of the portfolio securities were periodically re-evaluated, allowing them to be carried at stale values for months at a time. 17. Morgan g Asset adopted p its own pprocedures to determine the actual fair value to assign to portfolio securities and to “validate” those values “periodically.” Among other things, those procedures provided that “[q]uarterly reports listing all securities held by the Funds that were fair valued during the quarter under review, along with explanatory notes for the fair values assigned g to the securities,, shall be ppresented to the Board for its review.” Morgan Asset failed to fully implement this provision of its pricing policy. 18. At various times between January 2007 and July 2007, Kelsoe had his assistant send “price adjustments” to Fund Accounting. The adjustments were communications by Kelsoe to Fund Accounting concerning the values of specific portfolio securities. In many instances, these adjustments were arbitrary and did not reflect fair value. The price adjustments were routinely entered upon receipt by the staff accountant into a spreadsheet used to calculate the NAVs of the Funds. 19. Fund Accountingg did not generally g y request, and Kelsoe did not generally supply, supporting documentation for his price adjustments. Fund Accounting and the Funds did not record which securities had been assigned values by Kelsoe. 20. As part of the Funds’ valuation procedures, Fund Accounting sometimes requested third party broker-dealer price confirmations as a means to validate the values it had assigned to the Funds’ fair valued securities. The Funds’ Independent Auditor used similar requests for third party broker-dealer price confirmations as part of its annual year-end audits of the Funds. Fund Accounting or the Independent Auditor would periodically send such requests to broker-dealers asking them to provide price confirmations for various portfolio securities. 21. During the period from January through July 2007, when month-end dealer price confirmations were received by Fund Accounting, an employee of Fund Accounting performed a review to estimate whether they contained any securities prices that varied from current portfolio values by more than five percent. If so, then Kelsoe determined whether the current values should be maintained or a new value—which may or mayy not have been the pricep given g byy the broker- dealer—should be assigned to the security. Thus, Fund Accounting generally allowed Kelsoe to Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12 Cause No. 09-14448 Page 12 of 26 Page 122 of 181 Tab 15, p. 5 of 11 determine whether broker-dealer price confirmations were used or ignored. In some instances, when price p confirmations were received that were substantiallyy lower than current pportfolio values, Fund Accounting g personnel, p , actingg at the direction of Kelsoe,, lowered values of bonds over a pperiod of days, y , in a series of pre-planned reductions to values at or closer to, but still above, the price confirmations. As A a result, during the interim days, Fund Accounting did not price those bonds at their current fair value. 22. During the period from January through July 2007, Fund Accounting failed to record which bond values were not adjusted in response to dealer price confirmations at Kelsoe’s direction. 23. The head of Fund Accounting reported to Weller, and Weller was a member of the Valuation Committee. He knew, or was reckless in not knowing, of the deficiencies in the implementation of the valuation procedures set forth above, and failed to remedy them or otherwise make sure fair-valued securities were accurately priced and the Funds’ NAVs were accurately calculated. During the period from January through July 2007, Weller was aware that: (i) the Valuation Committee did not adequately supervise Fund Accounting’s application of the valuation factors; (ii) Kelsoe was supplying fair value price adjustments for specific securities to Fund Accounting but the members of the Valuation Committee did not generally know which securities Kelsoe supplied fair values for or what those fair values were, and did not generally receive supporting documentation for those values; and (iii) the only other pricing test regularly applied by the Valuation Committee was a “look back” test, which compared the sales price of any security sold by a Fund to the valuation of that security used in the NAV calculation for the five business days preceding the sale. The test only covered securities after they were sold; thus, at any given time, the Valuation Committee never knew how many securities’ prices could ultimately be validated by it. Weller nevertheless signed the Funds’ annual and semi-annual financial reports on Forms N-CSR, filed with the Commission, including certifications pursuant to Sections 302 and 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. 24. During g the pperiod from January y 2007 through g Julyy 2007,, Morgan g Keegan, g , actingg g Weller and Fund Accounting, through g, failed to employ p y reasonable procedures p to price p the Funds’ pportfolio securities and,, as a result of that failure,, did not calculate current NAVs for the Funds. Despite p these failures,, Morgan g Keegan g ppublished daily y NAVs of the Funds which it could not know were accurate and,, as distributor of the open-end portfolios, sold and redeemed shares to investors based on those NAVs. 25. On various dates from January y 2007 through g July y 2007,, Morgan g Asset,, through g Kelsoe, screened and influenced the price confirmations obtained from at least one broker-dealer (“the Submitting Firm”). Among other things, the Submitting Firm was induced to provide interim price confirmations that were lower than the values at which the Funds were valuing certain bonds, but higher than the initial confirmations that the Submitting Firm had intended to provide. The interim price confirmations enabled the Funds to avoid marking g down the value of securities to reflect current fair value. Kelsoe was aware that use of the interim price p confirmations was inconsistent with the valuation procedures and did not reflect fair value, that the Submitting Firm Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12 Cause No. 09-14448 Page 13 of 26 Page 123 of 181 Tab 15, p. 6 of 11 would be providing lower price confirmations in response to future pricing validation requests, and that the Funds would be required q to further mark down the value of the securities to reflect their alreadyy diminished value,, but that information was not disclosed to Fund Accounting, g, the Funds’ Boards of Directors or the Independent p Auditor. In some instances,, even after causingg the Submittingg Firm to increase its pprice confirmations,, Kelsoe subsequently q y provided p price p adjustments j to Fund Accountingg that were higher g than even the Submittingg Firm’s increased price confirmations. These adjustments were not consistent with the Funds’ procedures. In other instances, the Submitting Firm was induced to not provide price confirmations to Fund Accounting (or, depending on the period, to the Independent Auditor), where those price confirmations would have been significantly lower than the Funds’ current valuations of the relevant bonds. Fund Accounting and the Funds’ Boards were not advised that the Submitting Firm had proposed price confirmations which were lower than the current valuations recorded by the Funds, and that the Submitting Firm had refrained from submitting price confirmations to Fund Accounting or had submitted price confirmations at higher prices than it had originally planned. 26. In each of the Funds’ annual and semi-annual reports filed with the Commission on Forms N-CSR during the relevant period (including, among others, the Annual Report for the Morgan Keegan Select Fund, Inc. for the year-ended June 30, 2007 filed with the Commission on October 4, 2007), Kelsoe included a signed g letter to investors reporting p g on the Funds’ pperformance “based on net asset value.” In fact,, the pperformance reported p was materiallyy misstated. Untrue statements of material fact concerningg the Funds’ performance p were made in the Funds’ annual and semi-annual a semi -annual reports p filed with the Commission on Forms N-CSR. Morgan g Asset,, through g Kelsoe,, also provided p a quarterly q y valuation packet p reflectingg inflated prices p for certain securities to the Funds’ Boards,, failed to disclose to the Funds’ Boards information r indicatingg that the Funds’ NAVs were inflated and that broker-dealer pricep confirmations were beingg screened and caused to be altered, and provided Fund Accounting with unsubstantiated price adjustments. In addition, the prospectuses incorrectly described Morgan Asset as responsible for fair valuation of the Funds’ portfolios. D. VIOLATIONS 27. Investment advisers owe their clients, including investment company clients, a fiduciary duty. Transamerica Mortgage Advisers, Inc. v. Lewis, 444 U.S.11,, 17 (1979); ( ); SEC v. Capital p Gains Research Bureau, Inc. 375 U.S. 180
    ,, 195-97 (1963).
    (    ) Misstatements or omissions of
    fact by
    y an investment adviser,, such as those made to the Funds’ boards,, violate an adviser’s
    fiduciary    y and constitute fraud when theyy are material. Similarly,
    y duty                                                       y, the failure to disclose to the
    Funds’ boards that Morgan
    g Asset and Morgan  g Keegang were not complying
    p y g with stated valuation
    procedures constitutes fraud. In addition, the knowing or reckless failure to value securities, for
    which market quotations are not readily available, consistent with fair value requirements
    q             under the
    Investment Company Act and that materially affects a fund’s NAV    V constitutes fraud. See, In re
    Piper Capital Management, Inc., Exch. Act. Rel.48409 (August 26, 2003). Section 206(1) of the
    Advisers Act makes it unlawful for an investment adviser to employ any device, scheme or artifice
    to defraud any client or prospective client. Section 206(2) makes it unlawful for an investment
    adviser to engage in any transaction, practice or course of business that operates as a fraud or
    deceit upon any client or prospective client. As a result of the conduct described above,
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12
    Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 14 of 26
    Page 124 of 181                       Tab 15, p. 7 of 11
    Respondent
    p       t Morgan
    g Asset willfullyy violated,, and Kelsoe willfully aided and abetted and caused
    violations of, Sections 206(1) and 206(2) of the Advisers Act.
    28.     Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act prohibits fraudulent, deceptive or manipulative
    practices or courses of business by an investment adviser. Rule 206(4)-7 requires investment
    advisers to “[a]dopt and implement written policies and procedures reasonably designed to prevent
    violation” of the Advisers Act and the rules thereunder by their supervised persons. An adviser’s
    failure “to have adequate compliance policies and procedures in place will constitute a violation of
    our rules independent of any other securities law violation.” Compliance Programs of Investment
    Companies and Investment Advisers, Advisers Act Release No. 2204, 68 F.R. 74714, 74715 (Dec.
    24,, 2003)) (“Compliance
    (     p      Programs
    g      Release”).
    ) As a result of the conduct described above,,
    Respondent
    p        Morgan
    g Asset willfullyy violated,, and Respondent
    p        Kelsoe willfully
    y aided and abetted
    and caused violations of, Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act and Rule 206(4)-7 thereunder.
    29.      Section 34(b) of the Investment Company Act prohibits untrue statements of
    material fact or omissions to state facts necessary in order to make the statements made, in the
    light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, in any registration
    statement, report or other document filed pursuant to the Investment Company Act or the
    keeping of which is required pursuant to Section 31(a) of the Investment Company Act. Any
    person who makes a material misrepresentation concerning a Fund’s performance in the Fund’s
    annual and semi-annual reports filed with the Commission, or in the records required to be
    maintained by the Fund, or submits inflated prices to be included in the Fund’s NAV calculations
    and the records forming the basis for the Fund’s financial statements,, violates Section 34(b).
    ( As
    a result of the conduct described above,, Respondents
    p         Morgan
    g Asset and Kelsoe willfully  y
    violated,, and Respondent
    p       Morgan
    g Keegan g willfully aided, abetted, and caused violations of,
    Section 34(b) of the Investment Company Act.
    30.     Rule 22c-1 under the Investment Company Act prohibits the sale or redemption of
    shares in a registered investment company “except at a price based on the current net asset value of
    such security which is next computed after receipt of a tender of such security for redemption or of
    an order to purchase or sell such security.” For an NAV to be deemed current, Section 2(a)(41) of
    the Investment Company Act and Rule 2a-4 thereunder require portfolio securities for which
    market qquotations are not readily
    y available to be valued at fair value. As a result of the conduct
    described above,, Respondent
    p        Morgan
    g Keegang willfully y violated,, 4 and Respondents
    p          Morgan
    g Asset,
    Kelsoe and Weller willfullyy aided and abetted and caused violations of, Rule 22c-1 promulgated
    under the Investment Company Act.
    31.      Rule 38a-1 under the Investment Company Act requires that a registered
    investment company adopt and implement written policies and procedures reasonably designed to
    prevent violation of the federal securities laws by the fund and to provide for oversight of
    compliance by the fund’s investment adviser. Failure of a fund to have adequate compliance
    4
    A willful violation of the securities laws means merely “‘that the person charged with the duty
    knows what he is doing.’” Wonsover v. SEC, 
    205 F.3d 408
    , 414 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (quoting
    Hughes v. SEC, 
    174 F.2d 969
    , 977 (D.C. Cir. 1949)).
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12
    Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 15 of 26
    Page 125 of 181                    Tab 15, p. 8 of 11
    policies and procedures in place and/or to implement them will constitute a violation of Rule 38a-1
    independent
    p        of anyy other securities law violations. Compliance
    p       Programs
    g       Release. Morgan
    g
    Keegan
    g and Morgan  g Asset knowingly  g y and substantially
    y assisted the Funds’ failure to implement
    p
    fair valuation pprocedures,, which resulted in prices
    p      that did not reflect current NAVs. Morgang
    Keegan,
    g , Morgan
    g Asset,, Kelsoe and Weller thereby willfully aided and abetted and caused the
    Funds’ violations of Rule 38a-1.
    UNDE R T A K I NG S
    32.     Respondent Morgan Keegan undertakes as follows:
    A.        Morgan Keegan shall not, for a period of three years from the date of the Order, be
    involved in, or responsible for, recommending to, or determining on behalf of, a registered
    investment company’s board of directors or trustees or such company’s valuation committee, the
    value of any portfolio security for which market quotations are not readily available.
    B.      If, after three years but within six years from the date of the Order, Morgan Keegan
    becomes involved in, or responsible for, determining or recommending determinations to a
    registered investment company’s board of directors or trustees or valuation committee of the value
    of any portfolio security for which market quotations are not readily available and which are held
    by or on behalf of such registered investment company, Morgan Keegan shall promptly notify
    Commission counsel identified below or his successor and within 30 days of beginning such
    valuation activity, shall hire, at its expense, an Independent Consultant (“Consultant”) not
    unacceptable to the Commission’s staff, to review the valuations provided by Morgan Keegan to
    any registered investment company for the next two quarters following the beginning of such
    valuation activity, and make an Initial Report with recommendations thereafter on Morgan
    Keegan’s policies, procedures and practices with regard to such valuations. The Initial Report
    shall describe the review performed and the conclusions reached, and will include any
    recommendations deemed necessary to make the policies, procedures, and practices adequate and
    consistent with GAAP and the Investment Company Act. Morgan Keegan shall cooperate fully
    with the Consultant and shall provide the Consultant with access to its files, books, records, and
    personnel as reasonably requested for the review. Morgan Keegan shall cause the review to begin
    no later than 60 days after beginning such valuation activity.
    C.     At the end of that review, and in no event more than 200 days from after
    beginning such valuation activity, to require the Consultant to submit the report and
    recommendations to Morgan Keegan and to William P. Hicks of the Commission’s Atlanta
    Regional Office or his successor.
    D.      Within 30 days of receipt of the Initial Report, Morgan Keegan shall in
    writing respond to the Initial Report. In such response, Morgan Keegan shall advise the Consultant
    and the Commission’s staff of the recommendations from the Initial Report that it has determined
    to accept and the recommendations that it considers to be unduly burdensome. With respect to any
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12
    Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 16 of 26
    Page 126 of 181                    Tab 15, p. 9 of 11
    1.      a preparer or reviewer, or a person responsible for the preparation or review,
    of any public company’s financial statements that are filed with the Commission. Such an
    application must satisfy the Commission that Respondent Weller’s work in his practice before the
    Commission will be reviewed either by the independent audit committee of the public company for
    which he works or in some other acceptable manner, as long as he practices before the
    Commission in this capacity; and/or
    2.        an independent accountant. Such an application must satisfy the
    Commission that:
    (a)      Respondent Weller, or the public accounting firm with which he is
    associated, is registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (“Board”) in
    accordance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, and such registration continues to be effective;
    (b)     Respondent Weller, or the registered public accounting firm with
    which he is associated, has been inspected by the Board and that inspection did not identify any
    criticisms of or potential defects in the Respondent’s or the firm’s quality control system that
    would indicate that the Respondent will not receive appropriate supervision;
    (c)     Respondent Weller has resolved all disciplinary issues with the
    Board, and has complied with all terms and conditions of any sanctions imposed by the Board
    (other than reinstatement by the Commission); and
    (d)      Respondent Weller acknowledges his responsibility, as long as
    Respondent appears or practices before the Commission as an independent accountant, to comply
    with all requirements of the Commission and the Board, including, but not limited to, all
    requirements relating to registration, inspections, concurring partner reviews and quality control
    standards.
    The Commission will consider an application by Respondent Weller to resume appearing
    or practicing before the Commission provided that his state CPA license is current and he has
    resolved all other disciplinary issues with the applicable state boards of accountancy. However, if
    state licensure is dependent on reinstatement by the Commission, the Commission will consider an
    application on its other merits. The Commission’s review may include consideration of, in
    addition to the matters referenced above, any other matters relating to Respondent’s character,
    integrity, professional conduct, or qualifications to appear or practice before the Commission.
    K.     Respondents
    p        Morgan
    g Keegan g and Morgan  g Asset shall jointly
    j      y and severallyy pay
    p
    disgorgement
    g g       of $20,500,000
    , ,      and pprejudgment
    j g       interest of $4,500,000
    , ,       to the Securities and
    g Commission,, and a civil penalty
    Exchange                           p     y of $75,000,000
    , ,        to the Securities and Exchange
    Commission, within ten (10) business days of the entry of this Order.
    L.    Respondent Kelsoe shall pay a civil penalty of $250,000 to the Securities and
    Exchange Commission, within ten (10) days of this Order.
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12
    Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 24 of 26
    Page 127 of 181                   Tab 15, p. 10 of 11
    M.    Respondent Weller shall pay a civil penalty of $50,000 to the Securities and
    Exchange Commission, within ten (10) days of this Order.
    N. All payments pursuant to paragraphs IV. K, L and M, above, shall be made by
    certified check, bank cashier's check, or United States postal money order payable to the
    Securities and Exchange Commission. The payment shall be delivered or mailed to the Office of
    Financial Management, Accounts Receivable, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F
    Street, NE, Stop 6042, Washington DC 20549, and shall be accompanied by a letter identifying
    Respondent as a respondent in these proceedings; setting forth the file number of these
    proceedings; and specifying that payment is made pursuant to this Order, a copy of which cover
    letter and money order or check shall be sent to William P. Hicks, Associate Regional
    Administrator, Securities and Exchange Commission, 3475 Lenox Rd., N.E., Suite 500, Atlanta,
    GA 30326-1232. If timely payment is not made, additional interest shall accrue pursuant to 31
    U.S.C. § 3717 and/or SEC Rule of Practice 600.
    Pursuant to Section 308(a)
    ( ) of the Sarbanes-Oxleyy Act of 2002,, as amended,, a Fair Fund is
    created for the disgorgement,
    g g       , interest,, and ppenalties described in Paragraphs
    g p IV. K,, L and M and
    anyy funds ppaid in connection with related actions ppursuant to Paragraph
    g p III. 36,, above. Regardless
    g
    of whether anyy such distribution is made from suchh Fair Fund,, amounts ordered to be paid  p as civil
    money  y ppenalties pursuant
    p        to this Order shall be treated as penalties paid to the government for all
    purposes, including all tax purposes. To  T preserve the deterrent effect of the civil penalty,
    Respondents agree that in any Related Investor Action, they shall not argue that they are entitled
    to, nor shall they benefit by, offset or reduction of any award of compensatory damages by the
    amount of any part of Respondent’s payment of a civil penalty in this action ("Penalty Offset"). If
    the court in any Related Investor Action grants such a Penalty Offset, Respondents agree that any
    Respondent receiving such offset shall, within 30 days after entry of a final order granting the
    Penalty Offset, notify the Commission's counsel in this action and pay the amount of the Penalty
    Offset to the United States Treasury or to a Fair Fund, as the Commission directs. Such a payment
    shall not be deemed an additional civil penalty and shall not be deemed to change the amount of
    the civil penalty imposed in this proceeding. For purposes of this paragraph, a "Related Investor
    Action" means a private damages action brought against any of the Respondents by or on behalf of
    one or more investors based on substantially the same facts as alleged in the Order instituted by the
    Commission in this proceeding.
    O.       The disgorgement, interest, civil penalties, and any other funds which may be
    paid to the Fair Fund through or as the result of related actions, shall be aggregated in the Fair
    Fund, which shall be maintained in an interest-bearing account, and shall be distributed pursuant
    to a distribution plan (the "Plan") to be administered in accordance with the Commission Rules
    on Fair Fund and Disgorgement Plans. A Fund Administrator (the    ( “Administrator”)) shall be
    appointed
    pp         by
    y the Commission. The Administrator shall identifyy the investors in the Funds who
    suffered losses as a result of the violations determined herein,, evaluate investor claims and
    ppropose
    p    and effectuate a plan
    p to distribute the Fair Fund resulting g from this order. The Fair Fund
    shall be used to compensate
    p        injured
    j     customers for their loss. Under no circumstances shall any
    part of the Fair Fund be returned to Morgan Keegan, Morgan Asset, Kelsoe or Weller.
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 12
    Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25 of 26
    Page 128 of 181                   Tab 15, p. 11 of 11
    TAB 16
    Page 129 of 181
    The Alabama Securities Commission
    The Kentucky Department of Financial Institutions
    The Mississippi Secretary of State's Office
    The South Carolina Office of the Attorney General
    In the matter of                                               )
    )     Joint Administrative
    )     Proceeding
    MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC., a                               )     File Nos.
    wholly owned subsidiary of MK HOLDING, INC.,                   )     Alabama: SC·2010·0016
    a wholly owned subsidiary of REGIONS                           )     Kentucky: 2010·AH-021
    FINANCIAL CORPORATION; MORGAN                                  )     Mississippi: S-08-0050
    KEEGAN & COMPANY, Inc., a wholly owned                         )     South Carolina: 08011
    subsidiary of REGIONS FINANCIAL                                )
    CORPORATION; JAMES C. KELSOE, JR.;                             )
    BRIAN B. SULLIVAN; GARY S. STRINGER;                           )
    and MICHELE F. WOOD,                                           )
    )
    Respondents                                     )
    JOINT NOTICE OF INTENT TO REVOKE REGISTRATION
    AND
    IMPOSE ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTY
    COME NOW, Joseph P. Borg, Director, Alabama Securities Commission; Charles A. Vice,
    Commissioner, Kentucky Department of Financial Institutions; Tanya G. Webber., Assistant
    Secretary of State for the Mississippi Secretary of State Securities and Charities Division; and
    Tracy A. Meyers, Assistant Attorney General for the State of South Carolina (collectively the
    "Agencies") and issue this Joint Notice of Intent to Revoke Registration and Impose
    Administrative Penalty against Morgan Asset Management, Inc. and Morgan Keegan &
    Company, Inc. for violating provisions of the Alabama Securities Act, the Kentucky Securities
    Act, the Mississippi Securities Act, and the South Carolina Securities Act.
    The Agencies also seek to bar the individual Respondents, James C. Kelsoe, Jr., Brian B.
    Sullivan, Gary S. Stringer, and Michele F. Wood from further participation in the securities
    industry for violations of the above listed State Securities Acts.
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 17              Tab 16, p. 1 of 4
    Page 130 of 181
    Cause    no. 09-14448                         Exhibit A
    Page 88 of 1793
    In support thereof the Agencies respectfully submit as follows:
    I. JURISDICTION AND VENUE
    I.     Each of the Agencies is authorized to administer its Securities Act. Further, each
    Agency is authorized to participate in and prosecute violations of their Acts
    jointly with other state securities regulators.
    2.      Alabama is specifically authorized to administer the Alabama Securities Act
    pursuant to Code of Alabama 1975, § 8-6-50.
    3.      Kentucky is specifically authorized to administer the Kentucky Securities Act
    pursuant to KRS § 292.500(1).
    4.      Mississippi is specifically authorized to administer the Mississippi Securities Act
    pursuant to the Mississippi Securities Act § 75-71-107.
    5.      The Attorney General of South Carolina is specifically authorized to administer
    the South Carolina Uniform Securities Act of 2005 (the uSC Act") pursuant to
    S.C. Code Ann. § 35-1-601(a).
    6.      Venue is appropriate in any state represented by the participating Agencies.
    Further,   Regions    Financial    Corporation      (URFC")   is   headquartered    in
    Birmingham, Alabama. All Respondents are wholly owned subsidiaries of RFC
    or subsidiaries of other companies which are wholly owned by RFC.
    7.      All Agency Plaintiffs are authorized and empowered on behalf of their respective
    states and the citizens of their states to regulate the offer and sale of securities in
    or from their states, including the registration of broker-dealers and their agents
    and investment advisers and their representatives.
    II. INTRODUCTION
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 17                  Tab 16, p. 2 of 4
    Page 131 of 181
    Cause    no. 09-14448
    Page 89 of 1793
    27.   James C. Kelsoe, Jr. ("Kelsoe") (CRD No. 2166416) was Senior Portfolio
    Manager of the Funds and was responsible for selecting and purchasing the
    holdings for the Funds. Kelsoe was an employee of MAM.
    28.   Brian B. Sullivan ("Sullivan") (CRD No. 2741207) was President and Chief
    Investment Officer of MAM.           Sullivan was responsible for the overall
    management of MAM including oversight of the Funds.
    29.   Gary S. Stringer ("Stringer") (CRD No. 2917717) was Director of Investments
    for WMS. Stringer was responsible for overseeing the due diligence performed
    on products included on MKC's "Select List."      The Select List was a list of
    products, including mutual funds, separate account managers, and alternative
    investments, which MKC represented as having passed due diligence screening
    and appropriate for use in client portfolios. The Select List was available to MKC
    FAs and was found to have been used by MKC FAs when making investment
    recommendations to their clients.     In addition, WMS, under the direction of
    Stringer, created and maintained mutual fund allocation portfolios to be used in
    the discretionary and non-discretionary platforms used by the FAs.
    30.   Michele F. Wood ("Wood") (CRD No. 4534832) served as Chief Compliance
    Officer of the Funds, Chief Compliance Officer of MAM, and Senior Attorney
    and First Vice President of MKC.
    V. INVESTIGATION
    31.   Between March 31, 2007 and March 31, 2008, the Funds lost appro x imately
    Two Billion Dollars ($2,000,000,000.00). Fund losses are calculated from the
    Annual and Semi-Annual Shareholder Reports (Forms N-CSR and N-CSRS filed
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 17               Tab 16, p. 3 of 4
    Page 132 of 181
    Cause    no. 09-14448
    Page 96 of 1793
    with the SEC) and are summarized and attached as Exhibit 9.                  Based on
    complaints regarding the losses. thirteen (13) state securities regulators formed a
    task   force   to    investigate    the ' management,         sales    practices,    and
    supervisory/compliance procedures related to the Funds.
    32.   The task force coordinated and conducted investigations into Respondents'
    management, marketing, sales, and supervision of the Funds. The state regulators
    conducted nine (9) on-site branch exams in seven (7) states, interviewed
    approximately eighty (80) present and former sales representatives, managers, and
    officers,   interviewed   customers,     and       reviewed    thousands     of     e-mail
    communications, reports, and other records provided by Respondents:
    VI. FINDINGS OF FACT
    A. MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT
    33.   MAM, the investment adviser, is a wholly owned subsidiary of MK Holding, Inc.,
    which, in tum, is a wholly owned subsidiary of RFC, which is headquartered in
    Alabama.
    34.   Prior to the 2001 acquisition of MKC by RFC, MAM was a wholly owned
    subsidiary of MKC, the broker-dealer.          Subsequent to the acquisition, MAM
    became a wholly owned subsidiary of MK Holding, Inc., a wholly owned
    subsidiary of RFC.
    35.   Pursuant to investment adviser agreements between MAM and Morgan Keegan
    Select Fund, Inc., MAM was responsible for the overall investment management
    of the open-end Funds. Pursuant to similar investment adviser agreements with
    each of the closed-end funds, MAM was also responsible for the overall
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 17                      Tab 16, p. 4 of 4
    Page 133 of 181
    Cause    no. 09-14448
    Page 97 of 1793
    TAB 17
    Page 134 of 181
    MBS LISTED AS ABS - 2005 ANNUAL REPORT FOR RSF
    N ame Listed in Annual Report                                              Description                              Cost
    Aames Mortgage Trust 2001-3B, 7.13% 11/25/31                               Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,229,177.00
    Ace Securities 2004-HE1 B, 4.60% 2/25/34                                   Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $7,590,644.00
    Ace Securities 2004-HE2 B1, 5.311% 10/25/34                                Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,761,803.00
    Ace Securities 2004-HS1 M6, 4.59% 2/25/34                                  Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,446,598.00
    Ace Securities 2004-OPI B, 4.60% 4/25/34                                   Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $8,915,409.00
    Ace Securities 2004-RM1 B2, 1.436% 7/25/34 (a)                             Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $3,329,187.00
    Ace Securities 2004-RM1 B3, 1.436% 7/25/34 (a)                             Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,545,452.00
    ACE Securities Corp. 2004-HE4 M11, 5.694% 12/25/34                         Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,603,838.00
    ACE Securities Corp. 2004-HE4 M11, 8.318% 12/25/34                         Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,603,838.00
    Amresco Residential Securities 1999-1 B, 5.09% 11/25/29                    Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,950,824.00
    BankAmerica Manufactured Housing 1997-1 B1, Zero Coupon Bond 6/10/21 (d)   Manufactured Housing Loans                 $632,746.00
    Bombardier Capital Mortgage 1999-B M1, 8.12% 12/51/29                      Manufactured Housing Loans                 $564,981.00
    Conseco Finance 2000-5 M2, 9.03% 2/1/32                                    Manufactured Housing Loans                 $555,181.00
    Conseco Finance 2001-1 M1, 7.75% 6/15/27                                   Manufactured Housing Loans                 $720,482.00
    Crest 2000-1A D, 10.00% 8/31/36                                            Collateralized Mortage Obligation         $1,400,295.00
    CS First Boston 1998-C2 H, 6.75% 11/11/30 (a) (Commercial Loan)            Commercial Loans                          $4,075,779.00
    CS First Boston Mortgage 1995-WF1 G, 8.488% 12/21/27 (Commercial Loan)     Commercial Loans                          $1,763,536.00
    Delta Funding Home Equity 2000-4B, 7.15% 2/15/31                           Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value   $463,339.00
    Enterprise Mortgage 1998-1 A2, 6.38% 1/15/25 (a) (commercial loan)         Commercial Loans                          $2,462,297.00
    Enterprise Mortgage 1998-1 A3, 6.63% 1/15/25 (a) (commercial Loan)         Commercial Loans                          $6,952,973.00
    Enterprise Mortgage 1999-1 A2, 6.90% 10/15/25 (a) (commercial loan)        Commercial Loans                          $3,075,793.00
    Enterprise Mortgage 2000-1 A1, 7.575% 1/15/27 (a) (commercial loan)        Commercial Loans                         $11,912,253.00
    Enterprise Mortgage 2000-1 A2, 7.505% 1/15/27 (a) (Commercial Loan)        Commercial Loans                          $9,904,055.00
    Equifirst Mortgage 2004-2 B1, 4.74% 7/25/34 (a)                            Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,724,383.00
    Equifirst Mortgage 2004-2 B2, 4.74% 7/25/34 (a)                            Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,163,288.00
    Equifirst Mortgage Loan Trust 2005-1 B3, 6.08% 4/25/35 (a)                 Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value   $827,626.00
    First Franklin Mortgage 2004-FF2 N3, 8.835% 4/25/34 (a)                    Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,700,000.00
    First Franklin Mortgage 2004-FF5 B, 4.47% 8/25/34 (a)                      Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,212,318.00
    First Franklin Mortgage 2004-FFH2 B2, 4.25% 6/25/34 (a)                    Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,429,741.00
    First Franklin Mortgage 2004-FFH3 B1, 5.10% 10/25/34 (a)                   Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,073,450.00
    GMAC Commercial Mortgage 1997-C2 F, 6.75% 4/15/29                          Commercial Loans                          $2,775,676.00
    GMAC Commercial Mortgage 1998-C1 F, 7.096% 5/15/30                         Commercial Loans                          $2,949,149.00
    GMAC Commercial Mortgage 2000-C1 H, 7.00% 3/15/33 (a)                      Commercial Loans                          $2,700,483.00
    Tab 17, p. 1 of 5
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 23
    Page 135 of 181                                    Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 1 of 5
    MBS LISTED AS ABS - 2005 ANNUAL REPORT FOR RSF
    Green Tree Financial 1996-4 M1, 7.75% 6/15/27                            Manufactured Housing Loans                $2,897,139.00
    Green Tree Financial 1996-5 B1, 8.10 % 7/15/27                           Manufactured Housing Loans                 $355,708.00
    Green Tree Financial 1996-9 M1, 7.63% 1/15/28                            Manufactured Housing Loans                $4,403,379.00
    Green Tree Financial 1997-8 M1, 7.02% 10/15/27                           Manufactured Housing Loans                $5,389,409.00
    Green Tree Financial 1999-4 M1, 7.60% 5/1/31                             Manufactured Housing Loans                $1,927,632.00
    Green Tree Financial 1999-5 M1, 8.05% 3/1/30                             Manufactured Housing Loans                $5,137,388.00
    Greenpoint Manufactured Housing 1999-5 M2, 9.23% 12/15/29                Manufactured Housing Loans               $10,590,407.00
    Greenpoint Manufactured Housing 2000-1 M2, 8.780% 3/20/30                Manufactured Housing Loans                 $838,157.00
    Greenpoint Manufactured Housing 2000-3 IM1, 9.01% 6/20/31                Manufactured Housing Loans                $4,682,138.00
    GS Mortgage 1998-C1 H, 6.00% 10/18/30 (a)                                Commercial Loans                          $2,892,654.00
    Long Beach Mortgage 2001-4 M3, 4.683% 3/25/32                            Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,178,233.00
    Long Beach Mortgage 2004-2 B, 5.50% 6/25/34 (a)                          Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $2,416,943.00
    Long Beach Mortgage 2004-4 M10, 4.615% 10/25/34                          Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $4,607,452.00
    Madison Avenue Manufactured Housing 2002-A B2, 4.34% 3/25/32             Manufactured Housing Loans                $3,785,222.00
    Merit Securities 12-1 1M2, 7.35% 7/28/33                                 Manufactiured Housing Loans               $4,040,926.00
    Merit Securities 13 M2, 7.88% 12/28/33                                   Manufactured Housing Loans                $3,184,837.00
    Meritage Mortgage 2004-2 B2, 4.829% 1/25/35 (a)                          Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,569,483.00
    Merril Lynch Mortgage 2005-SL1 B5, 6.27% 1/25/35 (a)                     Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,784,852.00
    Merrill Lynch Mortgage 1998-C1 F, 6.25% 11/15/26                         Commercial Loans                          $1,779,887.00
    MM Community Funding II, 3.50% 12/15/31 (a)                              Certificate Backed Obligations             $938,903.00
    MM Community Funding IX, 10.00% 5/1/33(a)                                Certificate Backed Obligations            $1,941,063.00
    NovaStar Home Equity 2004-3 B4, 5.238% 12/25/34                          Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,562,857.00
    Oakwood Mortgage 2002-A M1, 7.76% 3/15/32                                Manufactured Housing Loans                 $511,694.00
    Oakwood Mortgage 2002-B M1, 7.62% 6/15/32                                Manufactured Housing Loans                $3,751,543.00
    Option One Mortgage 2004-2 M7, 4.65% 5/25/34                             Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan-to Value $8,910,197.00
    Preferred Term Securities IV, 6.98% 6/24/34 (a)                          Certificate Backed Obligations            $2,029,762.00
    Preferred Term Securities XV, 9/26/34 (a) (f)                            Certificate Backed Obligations            $1,000,000.00
    Preferred Term Securities XVI, 3/23/35 (a) (f)                           Certificate Backed Obligations            $4,000,000.00
    Sail Net 2004-5A B, 6.75% 6/27/34 (a)                                    Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,383,703.00
    Salomon Brothers Mortgage 2000-C2 J, 6.308% 7/18/33                      Commercial Loans                          $1,715,984.00
    Terwin Mortgage 2004-16SL B3, 6.34% 10/25/34                             Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value  $1,505,447.00
    UCFC Manufactured Housing Contract 1997-2 B1, Zero Coupon Bond 2/15/18   Manufactured Housing Loans                 $844,012.00
    US Capital Funding II, 6.90% 8/1/34                                      Certificate Backed Obligations            $1,000,000.00
    US Capital Funding III, 14.00% 12/1/35                                   Certificate Backed Obligations            $1,000,000.00
    Tab 17, p. 2 of 5
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 23
    Page 136 of 181                                  Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 2 of 5
    MBS LISTED AS ABS - 2005 ANNUAL REPORT FOR RSF
    First Franklin 2004-FF5 M9, 4.47% 8/25/34                                    Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value     $2,446,713.00
    Terwin Mortgage Trust 2005-3SL B6, 11.500% 3/25/35 interest-only strips      Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value     $4,028,611.00
    Meritage Mortgage 2004-2 B1, 4.829% 1/25/35 (a)                              Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value     $2,428,120.00
    Tab 17, p. 3 of 5
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 23
    Page 137 of 181                                   Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 3 of 5
    MBS LISTED AS ABS -2005 ANNUAL REPORT FOR RMA
    N ame Listed in Annual Report                                  Description                                Cost
    ACE Securities 2004-HE3 B, 5.549% 11/25/34 (a)                 Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $7,535,031.00
    ACE Securities 2004-HE4 B, 5.694% 12/25/34 (a)                 Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $1,426,391.00
    ACE Securities Corp. 2004-HE3 M11, 5.46% 11/25/34              Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $6,240,150.00
    ACE Securities Corp. 2005-HE2 B1, 6.06% 4/25/35 (a)            Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $3,709,858.00
    Bombardier Capital 2000-A A2, 7.575% 6/15/30                   Manufactured Housing Loans                    $11,548,921.00
    Equifirst Mortgage Loan Trust 2004-3 B1, 5.708% 12/25/34 (a)   Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $1,651,725.00
    Equifirst Mortgage Loan Trust 2004-3 B2, 5.708% 12/25/34 (a)   Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $5,502,491.00
    Equifirst Mortgage Loan Trust 2005-1 B4, 6.08% 4/25/35 (a)     Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value        $827,626.00
    First Franklin 2004-FF11 B1, 5.431% 1/25/35 (a)                Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $5,500,496.00
    First Franklin 2004-FF11 B2, 5.431% 1/25/35 (a)                Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $5,302,262.00
    Green Tree Finacial 1998-8 M1, 6.98% 9/1/30                    Manufactured Housing Loans                     $5,946,692.00
    Green Tree Financial 1996-7 B1, 7.70% 10/15/27                 Manufactured Housing Loans                      $963,156.00
    Green Tree Financial 1998-3 M1, 6.86% 3/1/30                   Manufactured Housing Loans                     $7,464,186.00
    GSAMP Trust 2004-AR1 B5, 5.000% 6/25/34 (a)                    Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $1,552,348.00
    Lease Investment Flight Trust 1 A1, 2.49% 7/15/31              Commercial Loans                              $10,356,145.00
    Long Beach Mortgage 2001-1 M2, 2.91% 4/21/31                   Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $8,132,764.00
    Merrill Lynch 2004-WMC1 B4, 5.181% 10/25/34 (a)                Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $7,928,270.00
    Oakwood Mortgage 2001-C A4, 7.405% 12/15/30                    Manufactured Housing Loans                     $2,965,719.00
    Preferred Term Securities XVII, 6/23/35 (a) €                  Certificate Backed Obligations                 $3,000,000.00
    Terwin Mortgage Trust 2005-3SL B6, 5.50% 3/25/35 interest-     Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $3,021,458.00
    only strips
    Long Beach Mortgage 2001-4 M3, 4.683% 3/25/32                  Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $3,658,258.00
    Enterprise Mortgage 2000-1 A2, 7.505% 1/15/27 (a)              Commercial Loans                              $18,630,691.00
    Equifirst Mortgage Loan Trust 2005-1 B3, 6.08% 4/25/35 (a)     Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value        $827,626.00
    Equifirst Mortgage Loan Trust 2005-1 B4, 6.08% 4/25/35 (a)     Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value       $1,453,041.00
    Green Tree Financial 1996-9 M1, 7.63% 1/15/28                  Manufactured Housing Loans                     $4,045,739.00
    Green Tree Financial 1999-4 M1, 7.60% 5/1/31                   Manufactured Housing Loans                     $1,462,777.00
    GS Mortgage 1998-C1 H, 6.00% 10/15/30 (a) (Commercial Loan)    Commercial Loans                               $4,821,091.00
    Merrill Lynch 2005-SL1 B5, 6.27% 1/25/35 (a)                   Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value          $1,784,853.00
    US Capital Funding III, 14.00% 12/1/35 (a)                     Certificate Backed Obligations                    $2,000,000.00
    Tab 17, p. 4 of 5
    1                                              Pltf. Trial Exhibit 23
    Page 138 of 181                                        Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 4 of 5
    MBS LISTED AS ABS -2005 ANNUAL REPORT FOR RMA
    ACE Securities Corp. 2004-HE4 M11, 5.694% 12/25/34             Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value   $2,405,756.00
    First Franklin 2004-FF5, 8.594% 8/25/34 (a)                    Home Equity Loans Non-High Loan to Value   $2,000,000.00
    Terwin Mortgage Trust 2005-3SL B6, 5.50% 3/25/35 interest-     Home Equity Loan Non-High Loan to Value    $7,553,646.00
    only strips
    Tab 17, p. 5 of 5
    2                                       Pltf. Trial Exhibit 23
    Page 139 of 181                               Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 5 of 5
    TAB 18
    Page 140 of 181
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT
    DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS
    101st JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    Purdue Avenue Investors LP, Mary Ann Howard, and Dana Howard, as
    Trustee of the Molly A. Howard Trust,
    v.
    Morgan Keegan & CO. Inc., Morgan Asset Management,
    Inc., James C. Kelsoe, Jr. and Thomas Orr.
    Expert Report of
    Craig J. McCann, Ph.D., CFA
    July 15, 2014
    I.      Qualifications and Remuneration
    A.    Qualifications
    1.    I am the President of Securities Litigation and Consulting Group,
    Inc. (“SLCG”). Prior to founding SLCG, I was a Director at LECG, a business
    unit of Navigant Consulting, Inc. Prior to joining LECG, I was Managing
    Director, Securities Litigation at KPMG LLP for two years.
    2.    I was a senior financial economist in the Office of Economic
    Analysis at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) from 1992 to
    1993 and from 1994 to 1995. While at the Commission, I worked on several
    securities fraud investigations including allegations of material omissions and
    misrepresentations. These projects included analysis of materiality, causation,
    illegal profits, losses avoided and monetary penalties.
    3.    I earned a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of California,
    at Los Angeles. My dissertation examined the incidence of golden parachutes
    and their effect on stock prices using an event study. Financial economists use
    event studies to determine whether information released was material and was
    Tab 18, p. 1 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 141 of 181              Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 1 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    previously non-public. I hold the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA)
    designation. Four years of practical investment management experience and
    the successful completion of a series of three day-long exams are required to
    receive the CFA designation.
    4.     I have taught graduate investment management at Georgetown
    University and at the University of Maryland, College Park. These courses
    include extensive discussions of securities valuation, portfolio construction
    and performance monitoring. I have held Series 7 and Series 63 National
    Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”) registrations.
    5.     My consulting work over the nineteen years since I left the SEC
    has primarily involved the analysis of investments, including the valuation of
    securities. I have spoken at length at continuing legal education programs put
    on by Bar Associations around the country and by the North American
    Securities Administrators Association, the United States Securities and
    Exchange Commission, and the Texas Securities Commission. I have been
    hired as a consultant and expert witness in investigations by many state and
    federal agencies including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and
    the Department of Justice.
    6.     My research has been published in peer-reviewed journals such
    as the Journal of Alternative Investments, Journal of Applied Corporate
    Finance, Journal of Asset Management, Journal of Business Valuation and
    Economic Loss Analysis, Journal of Derivatives, Journal of Derivatives &
    Hedge Funds, Journal of Financial Transformation, Harvard Business
    Review, Journal of Index Investing, Journal of Investing, Journal of Legal
    Economics, Journal of Retirement and Journal of Risk.
    Page 2 of 24                    Tab 18, p. 2 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 142 of 181                 Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 2 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    7.     My resume, which includes a list of all publications authored by
    me within the last 10 years and the cases in which I have testified as an expert
    at trial or by deposition within the last four years, is attached as Exhibit 1.
    B.     Remuneration
    8.     SLCG is being compensated for its time and expenses. My
    hourly rate is $475. Other SLCG personnel working on this matter have billing
    rates of $100 to $475 per hour.
    II.   Materials Relied Upon
    9.     I have relied on the following materials:
    a.     Plaintiffs’ Original Petition;
    b.     Defendant Morgan Asset Management, Inc.’s First Amended
    Answer to Plaintiffs’ Original Petition;
    c.     Defendant Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc.’s First Amended
    Answer to Plaintiffs’ Original Petition;
    d.     Defendant James C. Kelsoe, Jr.’s Special Appearance and
    Objection to Personal Jurisdiction;
    e.     Public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission
    including Prospectuses, Annual Reports, Semi-annual Reports
    and Quarterly Reports for the RMK Advantage Income Fund,
    RMK High Income Fund and RMK Strategic Income Fund;
    f.     Prospectuses for securities held by the RMK Advantage Income
    Fund, RMK High Income Fund and RMK Strategic Income
    Fund;
    g.     Deposition transcripts with exhibits;
    h.     Other documents produced in discovery;
    i.     Bloomberg and publicly available sources as cited below; and
    j.     Materials identified in footnotes herein.
    10.    Discovery in this action and my work on this matter are ongoing
    and therefore I reserve the right to present rebuttal and supplemental
    testimony and/or amend or supplement my report based on issues raised by
    Page 3 of 24                    Tab 18, p. 3 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 143 of 181                 Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 3 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    Defendants or other experts or any other information made available through
    discovery or otherwise.
    III.   Assignment
    11.   I have been asked by Counsel for the Plaintiffs to review the
    Plaintiffs’ investments in the RMK Advantage Income Fund, RMK High
    Income Fund and RMK Strategic Income Fund (“the RMK Funds”). I have
    been asked to identify any material misrepresentations or omissions in the
    RMK Funds’ SEC filings and to calculate damages suffered by the Plaintiffs
    as a result of those misrepresentations.
    IV.    Summary of Findings
    12.   Based on my review of the documents, I have determined the
    following to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty. The RMK Funds’
    Prospectuses, Annual Reports, Semi-annual Reports and Quarterly Reports
    contained many, repeated misrepresentations. Those included:
    • After defining what was meant by “mortgage-backed securities” and
    “asset-backed securities” in the Prospectus for each Fund, the
    Defendants report many mortgage-backed securities as asset-backed
    securities in the Funds’ SEC filings. The Funds’ direct and indirect
    exposure to commercial and residential mortgages was thus not limited
    to amounts listed in the Funds’ SEC filings.
    • The Funds claimed to be diversified across debt sectors. In fact, the
    Funds were overwhelmingly exposed to commercial and residential
    mortgages. The Fund’s undisclosed concentration in mortgage-backed
    securities grew over time and ultimately caused the losses suffered by
    the Plaintiffs.
    • The Defendants attributed the stability of the Funds’ net asset values
    relative to the Lehman Brothers Ba Index to diversification across debt
    sectors when the Defendants, in fact, knew the Funds’ relatively stable
    net asset values were due to the Defendants’ undisclosed practice of not
    updating the market values of many of the Funds’ portfolio holdings on
    a daily basis.
    Page 4 of 24                    Tab 18, p. 4 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 144 of 181                 Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 4 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    • In Annual and Semi-annual Reports filed with the SEC, the Defendants,
    without qualification or equivocation, told investors that daily net asset
    values reported were based on daily closing market prices. This
    assertion, coupled with other language in the Annual and Semi-annual
    Reports and in the Prospectuses falsely implied that the Funds were
    holding securities for which daily closing prices were available and that
    “fair valuing” was done properly.
    • Despite the Funds’ minimal holdings of corporate bonds and
    overwhelming exposure to residential and commercial mortgages, the
    Defendants repeatedly compared the Funds’ returns to the Lehman
    Brothers Ba Index, an index containing only corporate bonds.
    • The Plaintiffs suffered out of pocket losses of $1,435,352, capital losses
    of $2,253,039 and market adjusted losses of $1,851,506 as a result of
    the Defendants’ misrepresentations. See Exhibit 2.
    V.   The Defendants Understated the Funds’ Holdings of Mortgage-
    Backed Securities
    13.      The Funds’ Prospectuses define two of the debt sectors the Funds
    will diversify across: “mortgage-backed securities” and “asset-backed
    securities”. The Prospectus language cited below makes clear the distinction
    is whether the underlying collateral is mortgages or something else. The funds
    then have separate mortgage-backed securities and asset-backed securities
    sections of portfolio holdings with a lot of the asset-backed securities holdings
    actually backed by mortgages.
    14.      The following paragraphs from the 2004 Advantage Income
    Fund Prospectus at p. 14 state the fund will be diversified across types of debt
    and separately identifies asset-backed securities and mortgage-backed
    securities.1
    1
    For brevity, here and throughout I will refer to language in the section of the 2005 Annual Report dealing
    with the RMK Advantage Income Fund. Similar language, evidencing the same misrepresentations
    identified herein, can be found in the Prospectuses and Annual and Semi-Annual Reports for the RMK
    High Income Fund and for the RMK Strategic Income Fund.
    Page 5 of 24                          Tab 18, p. 5 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 145 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 5 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    In managing the Fund's portfolio, the Adviser will
    employ an active management approach that will
    emphasize the flexibility to allocate assets across a
    wide range of asset classes and thereby provide the
    advantages of a widely diversified high income
    portfolio. The Adviser's fixed-income research team
    will search a broad array of asset categories and
    sectors to identify the most attractive relative value
    prospects. In addition to the traditional below
    investment grade corporate market, the Adviser will
    strategically utilize asset-backed securities,
    mortgage-backed securities and other structured
    finance vehicles as well as convertible securities,
    preferred stock and other equity securities. The
    Adviser believes that the opportunity to acquire a
    diverse set of assets will contribute to higher total
    returns and a more stable net asset value for the Fund
    than would result from investing in a single sector of
    the debt market such as below investment grade
    corporate bonds. The Adviser will sell securities that
    it believes no longer offer potentially better yield
    or total return than other available securities.
    (Emphasis added)
    15.   Two pages later in the 2004 Prospectus, these two debt market
    segments are described as:
    MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES. Mortgage-backed securities
    represent direct or indirect participations in, or are
    secured by and payable from, mortgage loans secured by
    real property and include single- and multi-class
    pass-through securities and collateralized mortgage
    obligations. U.S. government mortgage-backed
    securities include mortgage-backed securities issued
    or guaranteed as to the payment of principal and
    interest (but not as to market value) by Ginnie Mae
    (also known as the Government National Mortgage
    Association), Fannie Mae (also known as the Federal
    National Mortgage Association), Freddie Mac (also
    known as the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation)
    or other government-sponsored enterprises. Other
    mortgage-backed securities are issued by private
    issuers. Private issuers are generally originators of
    and investors in mortgage loans, including savings
    associations, mortgage bankers, commercial banks,
    investment bankers and special purpose entities.
    Payments of principal and interest (but not the market
    Page 6 of 24                    Tab 18, p. 6 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 146 of 181                 Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 6 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    value) of such private mortgage-backed securities may
    be supported by pools of mortgage loans or other
    mortgage-backed securities that are guaranteed,
    directly or indirectly, by the U.S. government or one
    of its agencies or instrumentalities, or they may be
    issued without any government guarantee of the
    underlying mortgage assets but with some form of non-
    government credit enhancement. Non-governmental
    mortgage-backed securities may offer higher yields
    than those issued by government entities, but may also
    be subject to greater price changes than governmental
    issues.
    Some mortgage-backed securities, such as
    collateralized mortgage obligations, make payments of
    both principal and interest at a variety of intervals;
    others make semiannual interest payments at a
    predetermined rate and repay principal at maturity
    (like a typical bond). Stripped mortgage-backed
    securities are created when the interest and principal
    components of a mortgage-backed security are separated
    and sold as individual securities. In the case of a
    stripped mortgage-backed security, the holder of the
    principal- only, or "PO," security receives the
    principal payments made by the underlying mortgage,
    while the holder of the interest-only, or "IO,"
    security receives interest payments from the same
    underlying mortgage.
    Mortgage-backed securities are based on different
    types of mortgages including those on commercial real
    estate or residential properties. These securities
    often have stated maturities of up to thirty years
    when they are issued, depending upon the length of the
    mortgages underlying the securities. In practice,
    however, unscheduled or early payments of principal
    and interest on the underlying mortgages may make the
    securities' effective maturity shorter than this, and
    the prevailing interest rates may be higher or lower
    than the current yield of the Fund's portfolio at the
    time the Fund receives the payments for reinvestment.
    ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES. Asset-backed securities
    represent direct or indirect participations in, or are
    secured by and payable from, pools of assets such as,
    among other things, motor vehicle installment sales
    contracts, installment loan contracts, leases of
    various types of real and personal property, and
    receivables from revolving credit (credit card)
    Page 7 of 24                   Tab 18, p. 7 of 24
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    agreements or a combination of the foregoing. These
    assets are securitized through the use of trusts and
    special purpose corporations. Credit enhancements,
    such as various forms of cash collateral accounts or
    letters of credit, may support payments of principal
    and interest on asset-backed securities. Although
    these securities may be supported by letters of credit
    or other credit enhancements, payment of interest and
    principal ultimately depends upon individuals paying
    the underlying loans or accounts, which payment may be
    affected adversely by general downturns in the
    economy. Asset-backed securities are subject to the
    same risk of prepayment described below with respect
    to mortgage-backed securities. The risk that recovery
    on repossessed collateral might be unavailable or
    inadequate to support payments, however, is greater
    for asset-backed securities than for mortgage-backed
    securities. (emphasis added)
    16.    The Prospectus for each Fund thus defined “mortgage-backed
    securities” as securities backed by mortgages - whether on commercial or
    residential properties, whether issued by quasi-governmental agencies or
    private issuers, whether structured or pass through – and “asset-backed
    securities” as securities backed by other types of collateral. This distinction is
    important since real-estate values are a distinct risk - and a risk that dominated
    the Funds.
    17.    The Defendants thereafter significantly under-report the amount
    of mortgage-backed securities in every SEC filing. For example on page 4 of
    the Funds’ March 31, 2005 Annual Report the Defendants provide this
    distribution for the Advantage Income Fund. See Figure 1.
    Page 8 of 24                    Tab 18, p. 8 of 24
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    Figure 1: Advantage Income Fund 2005 Annual Report Excerpt
    18.     Given the Prospectuses’ definition of mortgage-backed
    securities and asset backed securities, the table above makes it appear that
    only 1.8% of the Advantage Income Fund portfolio consisted of mortgage-
    backed securities as of March 31, 2005. Later in the Annual Report, the
    Harborview Mortgage 2004-8 Class X, interest only strip is the only security
    listed under “Mortgage-backed Securities”. In fact, the amount of securities
    backed by mortgages in the portfolio was much, much higher than the 1.8%
    the Funds reported.
    19.     The 16.9% identified as “Home Equity Loans” must be added to
    the 1.8% identified as “Mortgage-Backed Securities”. The securities the
    Defendants identify as “Home Equity Loans” are not backed by traditional
    home equity loans. Instead, they are backed by first lien loans to subprime
    borrowers. For example, Ace Securities 2004-HE3 M11 and Ace Securities
    2004-HE4 M11 – both listed as investment grade asset-backed securities in
    the 2005 Annual Report – are the bottom offered tranches in deals backed by
    first lien loans to subprime borrowers.2 Also, some or all of the 7.2% identified
    2
    The Prospectus for Ace Securities 2004-HE3 can be found here
    www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005014/c34179_424b5.txt
    And the Prospectus for Ace Securities 2004-HE4 can be found here
    http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1063292/000093041304005571/c34511_424b5.txt.
    Page 9 of 24                      Tab 18, p. 9 of 24
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    as “Manufactured Housing Loans” should be added to the “Mortgage-Backed
    Securities” allocation. For example, Green Tree Financial 1996-9 M1 is
    backed by mortgages on manufactured housing and residential real estate.3
    20.     Given the Prospectuses definition of mortgage-backed securities,
    25.9% should have been listed as mortgage-backed securities, far exceeding
    the 2005 Annual Report’s 1.8% claimed allocation. However, even this 25.9%
    though would understate the exposure to mortgage-backed securities in the
    Advantage Income Fund. Other portfolio holdings in addition to those
    identified as “Home Equity Loans” and “Manufactured Housing Loans” are
    mortgage-backed securities as defined in the Funds’ Prospectuses.
    21.     For example, on page 8 of the 2005 Annual Report, there is a
    section in the Advantage Income Fund holdings table that starts “Asset-
    Backed Securities – Non-Investment Grades – 55.2% of Net Assets”. Within
    that section is “Commercial Loans” and listed therein is GS Mortgage 1998
    C-1 H. See Figure 2.
    3
    www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/890175/0000950131-96-005294.txt
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    Figure 2: Advantage Income Fund 2005 Annual Report Excerpt
    22.     The GS Mortgage 1998 C-1 H is clearly a security backed by
    mortgages not a security backed by commercial loans.4 The Defendants also
    list the Merrill Lynch 204(sic)-WMC3 B45 mortgage-backed security in the
    “Asset-Backed Security – Commercial Loan” category. This mortgage-
    backed security is incorrectly listed in the holdings table as an “Asset-Backed
    Security – Commercial Loan” and as a “Commercial Loan” in the summary
    asset allocation table. This misclassification understated the concentration in
    mortgage-backed securities and made the portfolio seem more diversified than
    it actually was.
    4
    The Prospectus for GS Mortgage 1998 C-1 H is available at
    www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1004158/0000950136-98-02349.txt.
    5
    www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/809940/000095012304006256/y97242e424b5.txt.
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    23.   This misrepresentation is important because the funds were
    much more concentrated in housing and housing finance risk than the
    Prospectuses and other SEC filings disclosed. The Defendants told investors
    what “mortgage-backed securities” meant in the Funds’ Prospectuses.
    Therefore, regardless of how some other firm or an issuer, classified these
    assets, they should not have been classified by the Funds as asset backed
    securities which the Fund defined to be backed by non-mortgage collateral
    “such as, among other things, motor vehicle installment sales contracts,
    installment loan contracts, leases of various types of real and personal
    property, and receivables from revolving credit (credit card) agreements or a
    combination of the foregoing.”
    VI. The Prospectuses, Annual Reports and Semi-Annual Reports
    Misrepresented the Liquidity of the Funds’ Holdings
    24.   The Prospectuses state that the Funds will value the portfolios’
    holdings at market prices and where closing market prices are not available
    the Funds will value the holdings at fair value in good faith. At the bottom of
    the NAV table which ends on page 7 of the 2005 Annual Report there is this
    note:
    (1) Net asset value is calculated after the close of
    the exchanges each day by taking the closing market
    value of all securities owned plus all other assets
    such as cash, subtracting all liabilities, then
    dividing the result (total net assets) by the total
    number of shares outstanding. The market price is the
    last reported price at which a security was sold on an
    exchange.
    25.   This note in the 2005 Annual Report is untrue since most of the
    Funds’ securities did not have a market price. The NAVs reported in the table
    on page 5 of the 2005 Annual Report were largely determined at the
    Defendants’ discretion.
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    26.   Sixty pages later in the notes to the financial statements there is
    a Note 2 which reads.
    NOTE 2: SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
    The following is a summary of significant accounting
    policies consistently followed by the Funds in the
    preparation of their financial statements. These
    policies are in conformity with accounting principles
    generally accepted in the United States of America.
    INVESTMENT VALUATIONS--Investments in securities that
    trade on national securities exchanges are stated at
    the last reported sales price on the day of valuation.
    Securities traded in the over-the-counter market and
    listed securities for which no sale was reported on
    that date are stated at the last quoted bid price. The
    Funds normally obtain market values for their
    securities from an independent pricing service or from
    the use of an internal matrix system that derives
    value based on comparable securities. Debt securities
    with remaining maturities of 60 days or less are
    valued at amortized cost, or original cost plus
    accrued interest, both of which approximate market.
    When a Fund believes that a market quote does not
    reflect a security's true value, the Fund may
    substitute for the market value a fair value estimate
    made according to methods approved by the Board of
    Directors. The values assigned to fair value
    investments are based on available information and do
    not necessarily represent amounts that might
    ultimately be realized, since such amounts depend on
    future developments inherent in long-term investments.
    Further, because of the inherent uncertainty of
    valuation, such estimated values may differ
    significantly from the values that would have been
    used had a ready market for the investments existed,
    and the differences could be material.
    27.   Based on the note to the NAV table on page 7 and Note 2 to the
    financial statements at the end of the 2005 Annual Report investors are led to
    believe that NAVs reported at least to March 31, 2005 were based on actual
    market prices. In fact, there were no “closing market values” for most of the
    holdings and the Funds placed the same value on many of the securities it held
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    every day for months at a time because there were not readily available
    transaction prices or quotes.
    28.    This valuation was inconsistent with the Prospectuses and while
    it may have not caused the NAV to be systematically too high or too low on
    any given day it did cause the funds’ NAVs to be smoothed. In fact, for large
    swaths of the portfolios, the Defendants just left the price unchanged for
    months at a time. This all resulted in the Funds appearing more stable and
    their holdings more liquid to investors than the reality of the underlying
    investments, misrepresenting the true risks of the Funds.
    VII. The Defendants Use of Stale Prices Was Inconsistent With
    Prospectus Disclosures
    29.    The Prospectuses acknowledge that the market price of illiquid
    securities is more volatile than of liquid securities. At page 20:
    ILLIQUID AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES. Illiquid
    investments are investments that cannot be sold or
    disposed of in the ordinary course of business at
    approximately the prices at which they are valued.
    Investments currently considered by the Adviser to be
    illiquid include repurchase agreements not entitling
    the holder to repayment of principal and payment of
    interest within seven days, non-government stripped
    fixed-rate mortgage-backed securities, and over-the-
    counter options. In the absence of readily available
    market quotations a committee appointed by the Fund's
    Board will price illiquid investments at a fair value
    as determined in good faith. Valuing illiquid
    securities typically requires greater judgment than
    valuing securities for which there is an active
    trading market. The market price of illiquid
    securities generally is more volatile than that of
    more liquid securities, which may adversely affect the
    price that the Fund pays for or recovers upon the sale
    of illiquid securities.
    Investment of the Fund's assets in illiquid securities
    may restrict the Fund's ability to take advantage of
    market opportunities. The risks associated with
    Page 14 of 24                 Tab 18, p. 14 of 24
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    illiquid securities may be particularly acute in
    situations in which the Fund's operations require cash
    and could result in the Fund borrowing to meet its
    short-term needs or incurring losses on the sale of
    illiquid securities.
    30.   At page 36:
    NET ASSET VALUE
    The Fund calculates net asset value for its common
    shares every day the NYSE is open when regular trading
    closes (normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time).
    For purposes of determining the net asset value of a
    common share, the value of the securities held by the
    Fund plus any cash or other assets (including interest
    accrued but not yet received) minus all liabilities
    (including accrued expenses and indebtedness) is
    divided by the total number of common shares
    outstanding at such time. Expenses, including the fees
    payable to the Adviser, are accrued daily.
    The Fund generally will value its portfolio securities
    using closing market prices or readily available
    market quotations. The Fund may use a pricing service
    or a pricing matrix to value some of its assets.
    Securities for which the primary market is on an
    exchange (domestic or foreign) will be valued at the
    last sale price on such exchange on the day of
    valuation or, if there was no sale on such day, at the
    last quoted bid price.
    Securities traded primarily in the Nasdaq Stock Market
    are normally valued by the Fund at the Nasdaq Official
    Closing Price ("NOCP") provided by Nasdaq each
    business day. The NOCP is the most recently reported
    price as of 4:00:02 p.m. Eastern Time, unless that
    price is outside the range of the "inside" bid and
    asked price(i.e., the bid and asked prices that
    dealers quote to each other when trading for their own
    accounts); in that case, Nasdaq will adjust the price
    to equal the inside bid or asked price, whichever is
    closer. Because of delays in reporting trades, the
    NOCP may not be based on the price of the last trade
    to occur before the market closes. Securities that are
    traded in the over-the-counter market will be valued
    at the last quoted bid price. Debt securities with
    remaining maturities of 60 days or less will be valued
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    at amortized cost or original cost plus accrued
    interest, both of which approximate market value.
    Foreign securities are translated from the local
    currency into U.S. dollars using current exchange
    rates. Foreign securities markets may be open on days
    when the U.S. markets are closed. For this reason, the
    value of any foreign securities owned by the Fund
    could change on a day a stockholder cannot buy or sell
    shares of the Fund. When closing market prices or
    market quotations are not available or are considered
    by the Adviser to be unreliable, the Fund may use a
    security's fair value. Fair value is the valuation of
    a security determined on the basis of factors other
    than market value in accordance with procedures
    approved by the Fund's Board. The use of fair value
    pricing by the Fund may cause the net asset value of
    its shares to differ from the net asset value that
    would be calculated using closing market prices.
    31.    The Funds, in fact, placed the same price on many (most) of the
    securities it held every day for months at a time because there were not readily
    available transaction prices or quotes. This valuation was inconsistent with
    the Prospectus and while it may have not caused the NAV to be systematically
    too high or too low on any given day it did cause the funds’ NAVs to be
    smoothed.
    VIII. The Defendants Use of Stale Prices Misled Third-Party Vendors of
    Fund Rankings
    32.    The Funds provided return information to Morningstar, Lipper
    and others for purposes of being ranked, rated or compared. The Funds also
    compared their returns to other funds or to indexes in their filings and
    marketing materials. Having said the Funds would provide data to
    Morningstar and others and advertise the rankings thus generated, it was false
    and misleading to not also tell investors the Funds were going to smooth the
    NAVs to get higher rankings or “Star” ratings. There is nothing in the
    prospectus disclosure that warns investors that the Funds would leave
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    unchanged for a year or longer the values the Funds placed on much of their
    holdings, thus making the low volatility of their NAV completely artificial
    and the accolades they received from services like Morningstar unearned.
    33.   Also, the Funds said they would compare their returns to indexes
    and that this information should be considered in light of similarities to the
    index and current market conditions. They then repeatedly compared their
    returns in the Annual and Semi-annual Reports to the Lehman Ba index which
    contains none of the securities which dominate the Funds’ returns.
    34.   At page 53 of the first Statement of Additional Information
    attached to the prospectus for the Advantage Income Fund:
    PERFORMANCE-RELATED, COMPARATIVE AND OTHER INFORMATION
    The Fund may quote certain performance-related
    information and may compare certain aspects of its
    portfolio and structure to other similar funds as
    categorized by Lipper, Inc., Morningstar Inc. or other
    independent services.
    Comparison of the Fund to an alternative investment
    should be made with consideration of differences in
    features and expected performance. The Fund may obtain
    and report data from sources or reporting services,
    such as Bloomberg Financial and Lipper, Inc. that the
    Fund believes to be generally accurate.
    From time to time, the Fund and/or the Adviser may
    report to Stockholders or to the public in
    advertisements concerning the Adviser's performance as
    an adviser to Regions Morgan Keegan mutual funds and
    other clients, or concerning the comparative
    performance or standing of the Adviser in relation to
    other investment advisers. Comparative information may
    be compiled or provided by independent ratings
    services or by news organizations. Advertisements may
    refer to opinions or rankings of the Adviser's overall
    investment management performance or the Fund's
    performance contained in third-party reports or
    publications. Performance information for the Fund or
    for other Regions Morgan Keegan funds or accounts
    managed by the Adviser may also be compared to various
    unmanaged indices or to other benchmarks, some of
    Page 17 of 24                 Tab 18, p. 17 of 24
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    which may not be available for direct investment. Any
    performance information, whether related to the Fund
    or the Adviser, should be considered in light of the
    Fund's investment objectives and policies, the
    characteristics and quality of the Fund, and the
    market conditions during the time period indicated,
    and it should not be considered to be representative
    of what may be achieved in the future. The Adviser may
    provide its opinion with respect to general economic
    conditions including such matters as trends in default
    rates or economic cycles.
    The Fund's advertising materials may reference the
    history of the Adviser and its affiliates or
    information concerning key investment and managerial
    personnel including the portfolio manager. These
    materials may make reference to certain other open-end
    investment companies managed by the Adviser.
    35.   The first paragraph of the management discussion on page 3 in
    the 2005 Annual Report reads:
    RMK Advantage Income Fund, Inc.
    Portfolio Commentary
    March 31, 2005
    MANAGEMENT DISCUSSION OF FUND PERFORMANCE
    RMK Advantage Income Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") began
    trading on November 8, 2004 under the ticker symbol
    RMA after an initial public offering at $15 per share.
    The Fund had a total return of 7.30% for the period
    ended March 31, 2005, based on market price and
    reinvested dividends. The Fund had a total return of
    3.53% for the period ended March 31, 2005, based on
    net asset value and reinvested dividends. From
    November 8, 2004 until March 31, 2005, the LEHMAN
    BROTHERS BA U.S. HIGH YIELD INDEX had a total return
    of -0.56%. The Fund's strong performance was primarily
    attributable to the Fund's relative yield advantage as
    evidenced by the monthly dividend distributions and
    the relative net asset value stability produced by the
    Fund's allocation in a wide variety of asset types.
    (Emphasis added)
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    36.    The Funds misled investors by comparing the funds returns to
    the Lehman Ba Index which contains no mortgage backed securities – only
    corporate bonds. The Funds also falsely state that their relative NAV stability
    was due to their diversification when in fact the NAV stability was due to not
    marking to market their portfolios daily.
    IX. Comparisons to the Lehman Ba Index Misrepresented the RMK
    Funds’ Risk
    37.    The Funds’ Annual and Semi-annual Reports repeatedly
    compared their returns to the Lehman Brothers’ Ba High Yield index despite
    that index containing no mortgage backed securities, no asset backed
    securities and no structured finance.
    38.    As the Securities and Exchange Commission found in In Re
    Piper Jaffray, it is false and misleading to claim diversification benefits when
    the particular structure of the securities purchased by the fund aggravates the
    underlying risks so dramatically that the particular sub-segment of the fixed
    income asset class invested in and which generated the unlevered risk is not
    material.
    39.    In the Piper Capital Management (PCM) case, the SEC
    Administrative Law Judge found:
    Further, the report states that PJIGX "is invested in more than 200
    different securities which offset one another and help the fund to perform
    well in a variety of economic scenarios" …, again implying diversification
    in the familiar sense. Further undermining PCM's reliance on technical
    accuracy is the fact that Bruntjen's unorthodox strategy of purchasing a
    variety of CMO derivative securities at a discount and actively managing
    the cash flows as they accreted to par … mystified even peer fund
    managers.
    Page 19 of 24                  Tab 18, p. 19 of 24
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    … Finally, it was affirmatively misleading to characterize Bruntjen's cash
    flow management "diversification" and Fund leverage as risk/volatility
    hedges. …
    40.    PCM did not challenge the ALJ’s conclusion on the materially
    misleading nature of PCM’s diversification claims for PJIGX and so the
    Commission accepted the ALJ’s findings on this point. The Defendants’
    repeated claims that the Funds were diversified rise and fall on the same failed
    hyper-technical defenses PCM advanced before the SEC. As with PJIGX,
    these Funds placed highly leveraged bets on credit risk – interest rate risk in
    the case of PJIGX - and were not “diversified” in the sense that the
    Prospectuses of these Funds represented.
    41.    In addition to the common structural features in most of the
    securities in the Funds, the assets ultimately underlying most of these Fund’s
    holdings were housing and housing finance related. The Defendants did not
    analyze the portfolio holding sufficiently well prior to 2007 to justify the
    claimed diversification. After investors like the Plaintiffs lost billions of
    dollars in the RMK funds in 2007, the Defendants attempted to determine the
    nature of the underlying assets and found that the fund was more than 57%
    housing and housing finance.
    42.    In the case identified above, the SEC found that PCM’s
    comparison of one of PJIGX’s returns to an index that contained none of the
    asset type that dominated its holdings was materially false and misleading.
    43.    Piper Jaffray marketed PJIGX in the early 1990s to investors who
    wanted to invest in short and intermediate term fixed-income securities issued
    by the U.S. government and government agencies. Many of the securities
    PJIGX held were Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs) including
    Page 20 of 24                 Tab 18, p. 20 of 24
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    inverse floaters. These securities were especially poorly described by the risk
    characteristics Piper Jaffray reported to investors.
    44.     The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found that Piper Capital
    Management’s choice of benchmark was material to investors and was
    misleading because it didn’t contain the same type of securities as the mutual
    fund held and because the comparison implied a lower interest rate risk than
    the portfolio actually had.
    “Similar reasoning would apply to PCM's use of the Merrill Lynch 3-5
    Year Treasury Bond Index as a benchmark for Fund performance. PJIGX
    annual/Semi-annual Reports to shareholders systematically compared
    Fund performance to that index. … PJIGX marketing materials and sales
    presentations made similar comparisons. … I find and conclude that
    expressly comparing Fund performance to the Merrill Lynch 3-5 Year
    Treasury Bond Index establishes a substantial likelihood that reasonable
    investors would consider the comparisons important in making PJIGX
    investment decisions and would view the comparisons as significantly
    altering the total mix of available information. It follows that
    PPJIGX/Merrill Lynch 3-5 Year Treasury Bond Index comparisons were
    material to investors.
    The record casts doubt on PCM's claim that the Merrill Lynch 3-5 Year
    Treasury Bond Index was an appropriate risk/performance benchmark for
    PJIGX. The Fund's distinguishing feature was an extremely high
    proportion of CMO derivative securities. … The Merrill Lynch 3-5 Year
    Treasury Bond Index contained no CMOs/CMO derivative securities
    whatsoever. … Moreover, the record indicates that PJIGX exhibited
    multiples of the interest rate sensitivity exhibited by the Merrill Lynch 3-5
    Year Treasury Bond Index. …” 6
    45.     The Securities and Exchange Commission affirmed the ALJ’s
    findings in a strongly worded Opinion that included the following.
    PCM further misled investors by comparing the Fund's performance to the
    Merrill Lynch three- to five-year Treasury Bond Index. The Merrill Lynch
    three- to five-year Treasury Bond Index, unlike the Fund, did not include
    CMOs. Thus, the Fund's increasing proportion of CMOs exposed it to
    6
    In the Matter of Piper Capital Management, Inc., et al. Initial Decision Release No. 175 File
    No. 3-9657 November 30, 2000 available at
    www.sec.gov/litigation/aljdec/id175hpy.htm#P218_14823
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    interest-rate sensitivity not exhibited by the Merrill Lynch three- to five-
    year Treasury Bond Index. 7
    46.     Similarly in this case, more than 50% of the Funds’ portfolio
    holdings were mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities and other
    structured finance and virtually all of these securities were at or near the
    bottom of the various investments’ capital structure. The Lehman Ba index
    contained only corporate bonds. The current Defendants’ comparison of the
    Funds to the Lehman Ba index in Annual Reports is identically analogous in
    all material respects to PCM’s comparison of PJIGX’s returns to the Merrill
    Lynch 3-5 Year Treasury Bond Index which the SEC found was materially
    false and misleading.
    X.      The Defendants Misrepresented the Volatility of the Funds
    47.     In the Annual Reports, the Defendants compared the Fund’s net
    asset volatility to the Lehman Brothers Ba Index. This comparison was
    grossly false and misleading because the Defendants did not mark–to-market
    much of the Funds’ portfolio holdings. By using stale and unchanging values
    for the fund’s holdings, the Defendants understated changes from day to day
    in the Funds’ net asset values. The Defendants then calculated volatilities
    based on the artificially smoothed net asset values, thereby significantly
    understating the fund’s volatility.
    48.     The Defendants were smoothing fluctuations in the market
    values of the securities held in the Funds by not marking–to-market a large
    portion of its portfolio on a daily basis. A mutual fund’s Net Asset Value is
    simply the sum of the value of the fund’s portfolio holdings divided by the
    number of fund units. By keeping constant the value placed each day on a
    7
    In the Matter of Piper Capital Management, Inc., et al., Securities Act of 1933 Release No.
    8276, August 26, 2003 available at http://www.sec.gov/litigation/opinions/33-8276.htm.
    Page 22 of 24                    Tab 18, p. 22 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 162 of 181                     Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 22 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    number of the fund’s holdings, the Defendants smoothed daily changes in the
    NAV which in turn misrepresented the volatility of the Funds.
    XI.   Damages
    49.     Between January 2005 and February 2010, the Plaintiffs invested
    $2,534,777 in the Funds and received $281,630 in sales proceeds from the
    sale of shares purchased after January 1, 2005. The Fund shares still held by
    the Plaintiffs on February 28, 2010 were worth $108. The Plaintiffs thus
    suffered capital losses of $2,253,039.
    50.     The Plaintiffs received dividends distributions from the Fund
    shares purchased after January 1, 2005 of $762,847 and capital gains
    distributions of $54,840 and thus suffered net out-of-pocket losses of
    $1,435,352.
    51.     If the identical cash investments and withdrawals had been made
    in a true high yield bond fund instead of the Funds, the Plaintiffs would have
    had a gain of $416,154 up through February 28, 2010 and so its losses adjusted
    for high yield bond market conditions are $1,851,506.
    XII. Comments
    52.     The misrepresentations and omissions listed above are
    illustrative, not exhaustive. The Funds’ Prospectuses repeatedly misclassified
    and failed to disclose the magnitude of the Funds’ investments in mortgage-
    backed securities and in asset-backed securities and the attendant risks. It is
    my understanding that discovery is still ongoing. My understanding of the
    facts in this case is based upon a preliminary assessment of the documents
    available to date. I am continuing to review these documents. To the extent
    that the facts of the case (after further review of the documents or further fact
    discovery) differ from my current understanding, my findings may change.
    Page 23 of 24                 Tab 18, p. 23 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 163 of 181                 Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 23 of 97
    Expert Report of Craig J. McCann, PhD, CFA
    CF A
    Page 24 of24                 Tab 18, p. 24 of 24
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25
    Page 164 of 181                 Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 24 of 97
    TAB 19
    Page 165 of 181
    Craig McCann, Ph.D., CFA
    Principal
    CRAIGMCCANN@SLCG.COM
    703-246-9381
    Key Qualifications
    Dr. McCann is Principal, Securities Litigation and Consulting
    Group, Inc. He is experienced in securities class action litigation,
    financial analysis, investment management and valuation. Dr. McCann
    has taught graduate investment management at Georgetown
    University and at the University of Maryland, College Park. He held a
    Series 7 and a Series 63 NASD. Dr. McCann is a Chartered Financial
    Analyst.
    Dr. McCann received a B.A. and an M.A. in Economics from the University of Western
    Ontario and a Doctorate degree in Economics from the University of California, at Los Angeles.
    Dr. McCann’s fields of graduate study were industrial organization, mathematical economics and
    information and uncertainty. His dissertation examined the incidence of golden parachutes and their
    effect on stock prices. After receiving his doctorate degree, Dr. McCann taught economics at the
    University of South Carolina.
    Prior to founding Securities Litigation and Consulting Group, Dr. McCann was Director at
    LECG and Managing Director, Securities Litigation at KPMG. Dr. McCann was a senior financial
    economist at the Securities and Exchange Commission. There he focused on investment
    management issues and contributed financial analysis to numerous investigations involving alleged
    insider trading, securities fraud, personal trading abuses and broker-dealer misconduct.
    Dr. McCann was a Senior Consultant at a consulting firm where he managed projects
    involving alleged securities fraud, insider trading, and market manipulation. These projects included
    analysis of materiality, causation, damages and class certification. In addition, he has consulted on
    transfer pricing, breach of contract, labor and antitrust cases as well as on various regulatory matters.
    Dr. McCann has published in the Journal of Alternative Investments, Journal of Applied Corporate
    Finance, Journal of Asset Management, Journal of Business Valuation and Economic Loss Analysis, Journal of
    Derivatives, Journal of Derivatives & Hedge Funds, Journal of Financial Transformation, Harvard Business
    Review, Journal of Index Investing, Journal of Investing, Journal of Legal Economics, Journal of Retirement and the
    Journal of Risk. He has testified in state and federal court, in NASD, NYSE, JAMS and AAA
    arbitration proceedings and before the United States Senate and has been quoted in the New York
    Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, the Bond Buyer, American Banker, Money
    Magazine, Kiplinger Retirement Report and Crain’s Investment News.
    Tab 19, p. 1 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 166 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Professional Experience
    SECURITIES LITIGATION AND CONSULTING GROUP, INC.
    2000 -         Principal
    Provides expert consulting and testifying in securities class actions, investment management,
    labor and valuation disputes.
    Navigant Consulting, Inc. / LECG
    1999-2000     Director
    Provided expert consulting and testifying in complex litigation.
    KPMG llp
    1997-1999       Managing Director, Securities Litigation
    Directed projects in complex litigation.
    UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK
    1995-1998    Adjunct Professor of Finance
    Taught graduate investment management.
    GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
    1996       Adjunct Professor of Finance
    Taught graduate investment management.
    NATIONAL ECONOMIC RESEARCH ASSOCIATES
    1995-1997   Senior Consultant
    Directed projects in the economics of complex securities litigation.
    VIRGINIA TECH
    1995-1997     Adjunct Professor of Economics
    Taught graduate managerial economics.
    U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    1994-1995      Professional Fellow and Acting Associate Chief Economist for Policy
    Reviewed Commission initiatives and coordinated research in support of Chief Economist.
    Conducted research into portfolio performance, personal trading and quantitative risk measures.
    Provided financial analysis in support of enforcement.
    ECONOMIC ANALYSIS CORPORATION
    1993-1994   Senior Economist
    Directed projects involving analysis of vertical and horizontal practices, mergers, and general
    business damages.
    U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    1992-1993      Academic Fellow
    Conducted research into the valuation and expensing of employee stock options, reviewed policy
    proposals and supported enforcement actions.
    UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
    1987-1992     Assistant Professor
    Taught economics, antitrust and public policy towards business at undergraduate, masters, MBA and
    doctorate levels.
    Tab 19, p. 2 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 167 of 181                      Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Education
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
    1989         Ph.D., Economics
    1986         M.A., Economics
    UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO
    1983         M.A., Economics
    1982         B.A., Economics
    Chartered Financial Analyst
    Series 7 NASD Registration (1997-1999)
    Series 63 NASD Registration (1997-1999)
    Professional Activities
    American Economic Association
    American Finance Association
    Chartered Financial Analyst Institute
    Washington Society of Investment Analysts
    Testimony, Depositions, Reports and Affidavits
    Federal Court
    Patsy Chambers, et al v North American Company for Life, United States District Court for the Southern
    District of Iowa Central Division, No. 4:11-CV-00579-JAJ-CFB
    Expert Report, March 17, 2014.
    Vida F. Negrete, et al v. Allianz Life Insurance Company, United States District Court, Central District of
    California, Case No: CV 05-6838
    Declaration, November 1, 2013.
    Deposition, May 1, 2012.
    Expert Report, March 9, 2012.
    Declaration, September 15, 2011.
    Deposition, May 27, 2011.
    Supplemental Declaration, March 31, 2011
    Deposition, October 29, 2008.
    Declaration, July 25, 2008.
    Second Supplemental Declaration, September 18, 2006.
    Supplemental Declaration, July 16, 2006.
    Declaration, May 26, 2006.
    The Municipal Corporation of Bremanger, et al v Citigroup, Inc.et al. United States District Court, Southern
    District of New York, Civil Action, Civil Action No. 09-CV-7058.
    Declaration, July 13, 2012.
    Deposition, April 18, 2012.
    Rebuttal Expert Report, March 28, 2012.
    Expert Report, February 29, 2012.
    Tab 19, p. 3 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 168 of 181                        Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Bank of America, N.A. v JB Hanna et al. United States District Court, Western District of Arkansas,
    Civil Action, Civil Action No. 10-5220
    Deposition, April 16, 2012.
    Expert Report, March 19, 2012.
    In re: Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. (Freddie Mac) Securities Litigation, United States District Court,
    Southern District of New York, Civil Action 09-MD-2072 (MGC)
    Hearing Testimony, October November December 2011.
    Rebuttal Expert Report, September 14, 2011.
    Deposition, August 2, 2011.
    Expert Report, June 30, 2011.
    Susan Antilla v. L. J. Altfest & Co., Inc.,, United States District Court, District of Connecticut, No. 3:09-
    CV-2128-VLB.
    Deposition, December 20, 2011
    Expert Report, August 12, 2011.
    In re : International Management Associates, LLC, United States Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of Georgia,
    Atlanta Division, Case No. 06-62966.
    Declaration, December 16, 2011.
    Expert Report, July 7, 2011.
    Thomas Todd Martin, III et al v Wachovia Bank, NA et al, United States District Court, Northern District of
    Alabama, Case No.: CV-09-902464
    Expert Report, June 17, 2011.
    Corporate America Credit Union v Joseph Herbst, et al , United States District Court, Northern District of
    Alabama, Case No.: CV-09-J-2126-S
    Rebuttal Expert Report, May 23, 2011.
    Sierra-Sonora Enterprises, Inc. et al v Domino’s Pizza, LLC et al, United States District Court, District of
    Arizona, NO. 2:10-cv-00105-JAT
    Expert Report, August 24, 2010.
    Houston Police Officer’s Pension System v. State Street Bank and Trust Company and State Street Global Advisors, Inc.
    United States District Court, Southern District of Texas, Houston Division, No. 08-05442-RJH
    Declaration, July 1, 2010.
    Deposition, May 10, 2010.
    Rebuttal Expert Report, March 19, 2010
    Expert Report, January 15, 2010.
    Akanthos Capital Management, LLC, et al. v CompuCredit Holdings Corporation, United States District Court,
    Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division, No. 1:10-CV-844-TCB
    Declaration, May 7, 2010.
    Securities and Exchange Commission v. Kederio Ainsworth et al, United States District Court, central District of
    California, Eastern Division, Civil Action No. EDCV08-1350 VAP(OPx)
    Deposition, February 2, 2010.
    Supplemental Expert Report, January 5, 2010
    Expert Report, December 11, 2009.
    Florence Smith v National Western Life Insurance Company United States District Court, Middle District of
    Pennsylvania, Civil Action no. 08-2119
    Expert Report, January 4, 2010.
    Tab 19, p. 4 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 169 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    City of Cedar Rapids and Cedar Rapids/Linn county Solid Waste Agency v. Wells Fargo Brokerage Services, LLC.
    United States District Court, Northern District of Iowa, Cedar Rapids Division, No. ___
    Rebuttal Expert Report, December 2, 2009.
    Expert Report, September 3, 2009.
    Daniel G. Schmidt, III v Wachovia Bank, N.A. United States District Court, Southern District of Texas,
    Houston Division, No. 08-05442-RJH
    Deposition, February 25, 2010.
    Expert Report, October 30, 2009.
    In Re Midland National Insurance Co. Annuity Sales Practices Litigation, United States District Court, Central
    District of California, No. MDL No. 07-1825 CAS (MANx).
    Deposition, September 12, 2009.
    Supplemental Declaration, June 19, 2009.
    Deposition, January 8, 2008.
    Declaration, October 31, 2007.
    Deposition, July 27, 2007.
    Declaration, July 16, 2007.
    Declaration, July 2, 2007.
    Declaration, June 29, 2007.
    Securities and Exchange Commission v. Biovail Corporation et al, United States District Court, Southern District
    of New York, Civil Action No. 08 CIV 02979 (LAK)
    Expert Report, July 2, 2009.
    CountryMark Cooperative, LLP, v Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc., United States District Court, Southern
    District of Indiana, Case No: 1:08-cv-00118-RLY-JMS
    Expert Report, April 6, 2009
    Amy J. Straily et al v UBS Financial services, Inc., United States District Court, District of Colorado, Case
    No: 07-cv-00884-REB-KMT
    Deposition, February 22, 2009.
    Supplemental Expert Report, January 16, 2009
    Expert Report, January 16, 2009
    Securities and Exchange Commission v. Competitive Technologies, et al, United States District Court, District of
    Connecticut, Civil Action No. 304-CV-1331 JCH.
    Trial Testimony, October 7, 2008.
    Trial Testimony, November 15, 2007.
    Deposition, February 22, 2006.
    Expert Report, January 30, 2006.
    In Re American Equity Annuity Practices and Sales Litigation, United States District Court, Central District of
    California, No. MDL No. CV-05-6735-CAS (MANx).
    Deposition, July 24, 2008.
    Declaration, April 21, 2008.
    In re Alstom SA Securities Litigation, United States District Court, Southern District of New York, Case
    No: 03-CV-6595 (VM).
    Affidavit, January 4, 2008.
    Vida F. Negrete, et al v. Fidelity and Guaranty Life Insurance Company, United States District Court, Central
    District of California, Case No: CV 05-6837.
    Declaration, January 22, 2008.
    Declaration, December 26, 2007.
    Tab 19, p. 5 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 170 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Deposition, August 28, 2007.
    Declaration, July 23, 2007.
    Youxin (Kevin) Ma et al v Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. and Irene S. Ng, United States District Court, Southern
    District of New York, Case No. 06 CV 15497.
    Expert Report, December 24, 2007.
    Dale Sakai v Merrill Lynch Life Insurance Company, United States District Court, Northern District of
    California, Case No: CV 06-2581.
    Deposition, December 10, 2007.
    Expert Report, October 26, 2007.
    Securities and Exchange Commission v. Louis E. Rivelli, et al, United States District Court, District of
    Colorado, Civ. 05-CV-1039 RPM-MJW
    Deposition, March 3, 2008.
    Expert Report, October 8, 2007.
    Kevin Lamkin, et al v. UBS PaineWebber, Inc., United States District Court, Southern District of Texas, Civil
    Action No. H-02-0851
    Deposition, February 28, 2007.
    Expert Report, June 1, 2006.
    Carmen Migliaccio, et al. v. Midland National Life Insurance Company, United States District Court, Central
    District of California, Case No: CV 05-6838.
    Deposition, February 13, 2007.
    Declaration, December 28, 2006.
    Gary Yokoyama, et al. v. Midland National Life Insurance Company, United States District Court, District of
    Hawaii, Case No. 05-00303 MS KSC.
    Deposition, November 20, 2006.
    Declaration, November 10, 2006.
    Declaration, May 4, 2006.
    Samuel Cooper, et al v. Pacific Life Insurance Company et al, United States District Court, Southern
    District of Georgia, Case No. CV 203-131
    Deposition, September 12, 2006.
    Expert Report, July 5, 2006.
    United States of America v. Jamie Olis, United States District Court, Southern District of Texas,
    Criminal Number H-03-217.
    Expert Report, December 23, 2005.
    David Henderlight and Christine Henderlight v AmSouth Bank, United States District Court, Eastern
    District of Tennessee, Knoxville Division Civil Action No: 3:02-CV-169.
    Deposition Testimony, July 7, 2005.
    Expert Report, January 18, 2005.
    United States of America v. Bernard J. Ebbers United States District Court, Southern District of New
    York, Docket S4 02 Cr. 1144 (BSJ).
    Expert Report June 8, 2005.
    In Re: Kaiser Group International, Inc. et al., United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of
    Delaware, Case Nos. 00-2263 to 00-2301 (MFW).
    Declaration, May 29, 2005.
    Tab 19, p. 6 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 171 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    United States of America v. Shawn P. McGhee United States District Court, District of Eastern
    Virginia, Docket 04-495.
    Expert Report March 4, 2005.
    Walnut Capital Partners et al. v Key Bank / McDonald Investments, Inc., United States District Court,
    Western District of Pennsylvania, Case No. 03-CV-0284.
    Affidavit, February 14, 2005.
    Deposition Testimony, September 8, 2004.
    Supplemental Expert Report July 2, 2004
    Expert Report June 1, 2004
    Securities and Exchange Commission v. David Gane et al United States District Court, Southern
    District of Florida Miami Division, Civil Action No:03-61553.
    Trial Testimony, December 10, 2004.
    Deposition Testimony August 2, 2004.
    Expert Report July 20, 2004.
    Simon Falic et al v Legg Mason Wood Walker, Inc., United States District Court, Southern District of
    Florida, West Palm Beach Division Civil Action No. 03-80377.
    Expert Report, October 19, 2004.
    Securities and Exchange Commission v. David W. Butler United States District Court, Western District
    of Pennsylvania, Civil Action No. 00-1827.
    Trial Testimony September 21, 2004.
    Expert Report January 9, 2003.
    Deposition Testimony, October 26, 2001.
    Expert Report October 15, 2001.
    United States of America v. Franklin C. Brown United States District Court, Middle District of
    Pennsylvania CR-02-146-02.
    Trial Testimony, August 6, 2004.
    Expert Report July 19, 2004.
    United States of America v. Jeffry R. Anderson United States District Court, District of Eastern
    Virginia, Docket 1:03-CR-444.
    Expert Report January 2, 2004.
    United States of America v. Scott H. Miller United States District Court, District of Eastern Virginia,
    Docket No. 03-443-A.
    Expert Report December 3, 2003.
    In re: World Access, Inc. Securities Litigation, United States District Court, Northern District of
    Georgia Atlanta Division, 1:99-CV-0043-ODE.
    Rebuttal Expert Report August 8, 2003.
    Expert Report June 27, 2003.
    In re: Pediatric Services of America, Inc. Securities Litigation, United States District Court, Northern
    District of Georgia Atlanta Division.
    Expert Report November 19, 2001.
    Affidavit, October 13, 2000.
    United States of America v. Paul F. Polishan United States District Court, Middle District of
    Pennsylvania No.3: CR-96-274.
    Trial Testimony November 15, 2001.
    Expert Report November 5, 2001.
    Tab 19, p. 7 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 172 of 181                          Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Kantishna Mining Company, Inc. et al v. Gail Norton et al United States District Court, District of
    Alaska F98-007 CV.
    Declaration, June 1, 2001.
    Expert Report and Declaration, April 17, 2001.
    H. James Griggs et al v. Pace American Group, Inc., Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P., et al United States
    District Court, District of Arizona.
    Trial Testimony, March 13, 2001.
    Deposition Testimony, December 4, 2000.
    Expert Report, November 14, 2000.
    David Lesser, et al v Quadramed Corporation United States District Court, District of Eastern Virginia
    No: 00 Civ. 606-A.
    Expert Report, September 8, 2000.
    John Tenaglia and The Tenaglia Family Partnership v. A.F. Best Securities et al, United States District
    Court, Southern District of Florida.
    Expert Report, March 31, 2000.
    UMG Recordings, Inc. et al v. MP3.com, Inc., United States District Court, Southern District of New
    York, No:00 Civ. 0472.
    Expert Report, August 8, 1999.
    Jonathan Bekhor et al v. Josephthal Holdings et al, United States District Court, Southern District of
    New York, No: 96 Civ. 4156.
    Deposition Testimony, September 30, 1999.
    Expert Report, August 20, 1999.
    John Shane and Beth Goodman v. Tokai Bank, United States District Court, Southern District of
    New York, No:96 Civ. 5187.
    Trial Testimony, October 23, 24 1997.
    Deposition Testimony, October 19, 1997.
    Expert Report, October 18, 1997.
    State Court
    Francis P. Maybank v BB&T Corporation, et al, State of South Carolina, County of Greenville,
    Court of Common Pleas, C.A. No. 2011-CP-23-8578.
    Deposition, February 7, 2014
    Robert L. McDonald v Camarind, Mogey & Fife et al, In The Court of Common Pleas of
    Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, Case No. CD-11-016862.
    Expert Report, July 11, 2013.
    Commonwealth v. Brett B. Weinstein, Esquire, et al. No. 239 M.D. 2006, Commonwealth v. Estate
    Planning Advisors Corp, et al. No. 740 M.D. 2004, and Commonwealth v. Brett B. Weinstein,
    Esquire, et al. No. 576 M.D. 2001, Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
    Expert Report, April 8, 2013.
    Firefighters Retirement System v Regions Bank et al, State of Louisiana, Nineteenth Judicial District
    Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Docket No. 56874, Division 25.
    Expert Report, November 1, 2012.
    Expert Report, July 20, 2012.
    Tab 19, p. 8 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 173 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    C. Randall Lewis, Receiver v. Steve Taylor, District Court, Denver County, Co., Case No.
    2011CV2071.
    Affidavit, November 1, 2012.
    Expert Report, October 8, 2012.
    In Re International Textile Group, Inc. Merger Litigation, State of South Carolina, County of
    Greenville, Court of Common Pleas, C.A. No. 2009-CP-23-3346.
    Deposition, October 24, 2012.
    Supplemental Expert Report, October 19, 2012
    Supplemental Expert Report, July 27, 2012.
    Deposition Testimony, December 8, 2011.
    Expert Report, July 20, 2011.
    Deposition Testimony, May 13 and May 14, 2011
    Expert Report, April 1, 2011.
    Lennar Corporation et al v Briarwood Capital, LLC et al Circuit Court, Miami-Dade County,
    CACE 08-55741 CA 40
    Deposition Testimony, September 18, 2012.
    Expert Report, August 16, 2012
    Susan W. Gore v Robert Gore et al Chancery Court, Delaware, C.A. No. 4237-VCN
    Rebuttal Expert Report, September 7, 2012.
    Expert Report, June 27, 2012.
    Woodbridge Holdings, LLC v Prescott Group Aggressive Small Cap Master Fund et al, Circuit Court,
    Broward County, CACE 09-64811.
    Trial Testimony, May 31, 2012.
    Rebuttal Report, May 23, 2011.
    Deposition Testimony, May 4, 2012.
    Rebuttal Report, April 24, 2011.
    Expert Report, April 2, 2011.
    Pursuit Partners, LLC and Pursuit Management, LLC v. UBS AG Securities LLC et al, Superior
    Court, Judicial District of Stamford-Norwalk at Stamford No. X05-CV-08-4013452-S
    Deposition Testimony, June 7, 2011.
    Expert Report, May 5, 2011.
    Petition of Bank One Trust Company, N.A. For Instruction and Construction of Trust, District Court,
    Tulsa County, State of Oklahoma, Case No. PT-2006-013
    Trial Testimony, April 19 and May 19, 2011.
    Supplemental Expert Report, November 16, 2009.
    Deposition Testimony, December 15, 2008.
    Expert Report, June 13, 2008.
    BB&T Asset Management, Inc., et al v Frederick V. Martin, Virginia Circuit Court for the City of
    Norfolk Case No. CL07006153-00
    Expert Report, August 15, 2008.
    Ross Gampel et al v Northern Trust Bank of Florida, Circuit Court, Broward County, CACE 05-
    18352 CA 31,
    Deposition Testimony, April 17, 2008.
    Tab 19, p. 9 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 174 of 181                      Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Cynthia Weiss v Robert Sturman, et al In The Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County,
    August Term, 2006 NO. 3332
    Expert Report January 23, 2008.
    Salix Affiliates et al v Lattimore, Black, Morgan & Cain, P.C., Chancery Court, Tennessee Case No.
    06-1500-IV
    Deposition Testimony, December 5, 2007.
    Expert Report, September 21, 2007.
    Tafazzoli Family Limited, et al v. TradeStation Group, Inc. et al Circuit Court, Miami-Dade County,
    CACE 03-19815 CA 40.
    Deposition Testimony, September 18, 2007.
    Glenn Wall, et al v. James F. Bottoms, et al State Court of Fulton County, Georgia, Case No.
    06VS091950F.
    Deposition Testimony, June 19, 2007.
    Andrew A. Allen Family Limited Partnership v. TradeStation et al Circuit Court, Broward County,
    CACE 03-014229.
    Trial Testimony, May 4, 2007.
    Deposition Testimony, February 20, 2007.
    Remmora Investments v Robert Orr, Circuit Court of Fairfax County, VA No. 187948
    Trial Testimony, November 20, 2006.
    Deposition Testimony, October 9, 2006.
    Gerardo Martin Demerutis Chaul, et al, v. Mohammed Abu-Ghazaleh, et al Circuit Court, Miami-Dade
    County, CACE 02-31670 CA 32.
    Trial Testimony, November 6, 2006.
    Deposition Testimony, October 11, 2005.
    Expert Report July 15, 2005.
    Calomiris v Calomiris, District of Columbia Superior Court, Civil Action No. XX-XXXXXXX
    Deposition Testimony, October 11, 2006.
    Jack Holtsberg and Elaine M. Holtsberg v. Citigroup et al Circuit Court, Palm Beach County, CACE 50
    2004CA000837
    Affidavit, August 28, 2006.
    Majestic Enterprises v. Northern Trust Bank of Florida Circuit Court, Broward County, CACE 03-
    19243.
    Deposition Testimony, July 26, 2006.
    San Carlos Apache Tribe Government Employee’s 401(K) v. A. Thomas Ullmann et al, Superior Court of
    Arizona, Case No. CV2005-005942.
    Supplemental Expert Report, July 24, 2006.
    Expert Report, June 30, 2006.
    Patrick T. Noonan and Nancy J. Noonan v. Hackett Investment Advisors, Inc. et al, Superior Court of
    Arizona, No. CV2005-010186.
    Deposition Testimony, June 21, 2006.
    Stephen F. Johnston et al v Baran Group et al, Superior Court of Fulton County, State of Georgia,
    Case No. 2004CV89313.
    Deposition Testimony, June 28, 2006.
    Expert Report June 9, 2006.
    Tab 19, p. 10 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 175 of 181                       Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Carol Pomerantz et al v. Northern Trust Bank of Florida, et al Circuit Court, Broward County, CACE
    02-015246-08,
    Deposition Testimony, October 5 and October 12, 2005.
    Carney Family Irrevocable Trust of 1999 v State Street Global Advisors, et al Superior Court of
    Commonwealth of Massachusetts, CIV. 03-2716 BLS 2
    Deposition Testimony, June 21, 2005.
    Trust Estate of Emanuel Rosenfeld, Settlor In The Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County,
    Orphans’ Court Division, O.C. NO. 1664 IV OF 2002
    Trial Testimony, May 3, 2005.
    Expert Report April 8, 2005.
    Evi U. Chamness et al v. Northern Trust Bank of Florida, et al Circuit Court, Broward County, CACE
    03-001939-12,
    Deposition Testimony, February 17 and February 18, 2005.
    Affidavit, November 19, 2004.
    Ponswamy Rajalingham et al v Urecoats International, Inc. et al, Circuit Court, Broward County, CACE
    02-009324,
    Deposition Testimony, March 1, 2004.
    William J. Kerley v. McCullough, Sherrill LLP, et al State Court of Fulton County, State of Georgia,
    Civil Action No. 02VS028870E,
    Affidavit, March 12, 2004.
    Deposition Testimony, September 11, 2003.
    Plantation Sales, Inc. dba Plantation Nissan/Volvo v Northern Trust Bank of Florida, Circuit Court,
    Broward County, CACE 02-006761 (05),
    Deposition Testimony, February 19, 2004.
    Century Business Services v Victor C. Moore, Court of Common Pleas, Cuyahoga County, Case No.
    469291,
    Trial Testimony, February 9, 2004.
    Deposition Testimony, January 19, 2004.
    Michael B. Holt, as Trustee of the Mark E. Munro Charitable Remainder Unitrust, v. Merrill Lynch Trust
    Co., et al Superior Court of New Jersey, Docket # ESX-L-6713-02
    Deposition Testimony, January 15, 2004.
    Expert Report, September 8, 2003.
    Jack E. Forbes v. A.G. Edwards, et al Circuit Court of Monongalia County, State of West Virginia,
    Civil Action No. 01-C-325
    Trial Testimony, December 11, 2003.
    Deposition Testimony, September 30, 2003.
    In re: Thompsons vs. Glenmede Trust Company, Court of Common Pleas Philadelphia County,
    Pennsylvania February Term 2002, 004428
    Expert Report, August 25, 2003.
    In re: Moutsatsos vs. Glenmede Trust Company, Court of Common Pleas Philadelphia County,
    Pennsylvania May Term 2001, 003659
    Expert Report, July 7, 2003.
    Nancy J. Needham et al v. Advanced Communications et al Circuit Court of Florida, Fifteenth Judicial
    Circuit, Case No.: 00-0067-CA-HDH
    Affidavit, May 15, 2003.
    Tab 19, p. 11 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 176 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    JDN Realty et al v. McCullough, Sherrill LLP, et al Superior Court of the State of Georgia, Civil
    Action No. 01-CV-39193,
    Deposition Testimony, April 8, 2003.
    Dezendorf v Riggs Bank, District of Columbia Superior Court, Civil Action No. 00502-01
    Deposition Testimony, April 24, 2002.
    Ratcliff Family Charitable Remainder Trust et al v. Appletree Capital Management et al Circuit Court of
    Collier County, Florida Case No.: 00-0067-CA-HDH
    Affidavit, August 22, 2001.
    Mahvash Sabet v. Olde Discount Corporation et al, Superior Court of Arizona
    Affidavit, July 31, 2001.
    Trial Testimony, April 24 and April 25, 2001.
    Deposition Testimony, January 22 and January 23, 2001.
    Supplemental Expert Report, October 11, 2000.
    Expert Report, August 31, 2000.
    Affidavit, February 17, 2000.
    Pierce v van Beuren, Circuit Court of Rappahannock County, VA
    Trial Testimony, January 24, 2001.
    Jason A. Forge et al v. National Semiconductor Corp. et al, Superior Court of the State of California,
    County of Santa Clara CV 770082
    Deposition Testimony, May 18, 2000.
    International
    In the Matter of Jowdat Waheed and Bruce Walter, before the Ontario Securities Commission
    Expert Report, December 24, 2012.
    In the Matter of Biovail Corporation et al, before the Ontario Securities Commission
    Trial Testimony, April 9, 2009.
    Expert Report, February 27, 2009.
    AAA and JAMS Arbitrations
    Randal Golden v Genspring, AAA Arbitration
    Expert Report, November 1, 2013.
    Richard Golden v Genspring, AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, June 6, 2012.
    Rebuttal Expert Report, May 21, 2012.
    Expert Report, April 6, 2012.
    St. Anthony Foundation vs. SCM Advisors, LLC AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, March 8, 2011.
    Stephen Tigerman v Heller Capital Resources, Inc. et al JAMS Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, February 9, 2011.
    Deposition, January 6, 2011.
    Peter Fusco v Fisher Investments, Inc. AAA Arbitration,
    Trial Testimony, September 16, 2010.
    Elliott C. Levinthal al v. First Republic Securities Company LLC et al AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, April 7, 2010.
    Tab 19, p. 12 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 177 of 181                         Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Matthew Schoenberg et al v Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. et al AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, January 11, 2010.
    Deposition, January 5, 2010.
    Expert Report, December 11, 2009.
    Robert Tandler et al v. First Republic Securities Company LLC et al AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, August 25, 2009.
    CRG Partners, Inc. et al v Genesis Technology Group, AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, December 4 and December 23, 2008.
    Deposition Testimony, November 26, 2008 and December 19, 2008.
    Supplemental Expert Report, December 18, 2008.
    Expert Report, November 24, 2008.
    Anthony Ostlund & Baer, P.A. et al v Vigilant Investors L.P. et al. AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, October 30, 2008.
    Dominion Terminal Associates v. CSX Transportation, Inc., AAA Arbitration
    Deposition Testimony, June 23, 2006.
    Expert Report, May 17, 2006.
    Declaration, February 9, 2006.
    Bradley Markham and John Truchanowicz v Black Box Inc., AAA Arbitration
    Trial Testimony, June 4, 2002.
    Expert Report, May 22, 2002.
    Douglas Millar et al v Merrill Lynch, et al JAMS Arbitration.
    Trial Testimony, May 9, 2002
    Supplemental Expert Report, April 10, 2002.
    Expert Report, March 23, 2002.
    Raymond H. Stanton II and Raymond H. Stanton III v. Cendant Corporation, AAA Arbitration,
    Trial Testimony, October 16 and 18, 2000.
    Expert Report, February 9, 2000.
    NASD, NYSE and FINRA Arbitrations
    Dr. McCann has testified before more than 250 NASD, NYSE, and FINRA arbitrations.
    Miscellaneous Testimony
    In the Matter of Focus Capital and Nicolas Rowe. Respondent. State of New Hampshire, Secretary of
    State, Bureau of Securities Regulation
    Expert Report, December 7, 2012.
    In the Matter of: UBS Financial Services, Inc. Respondent. State of New Hampshire, Secretary of
    State, Bureau of Securities Regulation
    Expert Report, February 17, 2011.
    South Beach Securities Inc. before the National Securities Clearing Corporation,
    Hearing Testimony February 9, 2000.
    Expert Report January 31, 2000.
    Report on The Adequacy of the SIPC Fund to the Board of Directors of Securities Investor
    Protection Corporation, April 22, 1998.
    Tab 19, p. 13 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 178 of 181                      Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    Before the Subcommittee on Securities of the Senate Banking Housing and Urban Affairs
    Committee, “How (and Why) Companies Should Value Their Employee Stock Options” Senate
    Hearings No. 103-359, October 21, 1993.
    Publications and Working Papers (available at www.slcg.com)
    “A Primer on Non-Traded REITs and Other Alternative Real Estate Investments” with Tim Husson
    and Carmen Taveras, forthcoming Alternative Investment Analyst Review, 2014.
    “Dual Directional Structured Products” with Geng Deng, Tim Dulaney and Tim Husson, 2014.
    forthcoming Journal of Derivatives and Hedge Funds.
    “Efficient Valuation of Equity-Indexed Annuities Under Levy Processes Using Fourier-Cosine Series”
    with Geng Deng, Tim Dulaney and Mike Yan, 2014, submitted.
    “Structured Certificates of Deposit: Introduction and Valuation”, with Geng Deng, Tim Dulaney and
    Tim Husson, 2013, forthcoming Financial Services Review.
    “Ex-post Structured Product Returns: Index Methodology and Analysis” with Geng Deng, Tim
    Dulaney, Tim Husson and Mike Yan, 2014, forthcoming Journal of Index Investing.
    “Valuation of Structured Products” with Geng Deng and Tim Husson, 2014, Journal of Alternative
    Investments Spring 2014, Vol. 16, No. 4: pp. 71–87
    "Modeling a Risk-Based Criterion for a Portfolio with Options” with Geng Deng and Tim Dulaney,
    2014, forthcoming Journal of Risk.
    “Valuation of Reverse Convertibles in the Variance Gamma Economy” with Geng Deng and Tim
    Dulaney, 2014, forthcoming Journal of Derivatives and Hedge Funds.
    “Structured Product Based Variable Annuities” with Geng Deng, Tim Dulaney and Tim Husson, 2014,
    forthcoming Journal of Retirement.
    “Crooked Volatility Smiles: Evidence from Leveraged and Inverse ETF Options” with Geng Deng, Tim
    Dulaney and Mike Yan, 2014, forthcoming Journal of Derivatives and Hedge Funds.
    “Private Placement Real Estate Valuation” with Timothy Husson, Edward O’Neil and Carmen Taveras,
    2014, forthcoming Journal of Business Valuation and Economic Loss Analysis.
    “Robust Portfolio Optimization with Value-at-Risk Adjusted Sharpe Ratios,” 2013 with Geng Deng,
    Tim Dulaney and Olivia Wang forthcoming Journal of Asset Management.
    “The Fall of Willow” with Geng Deng, 2014.
    “Using EMMA to Assess Municipal Bond Markups” with Geng Deng, 2013.
    “Municipal Bond Markups” with Geng Deng, 2013, submitted.
    “Optimizing Portfolio Liquidation Under Risk-Based Margin Requirements” with Geng Deng and Tim
    Dulaney, Journal of Finance and Investment Analysis, vol. 2, no. 1, 2013, 121-153.
    “The Priority Senior Secured Income Fund,” with Tim Dulaney and Tim Husson, 2013.
    “Large Sample Valuations of Tenancies-in-Common” with Timothy Husson, Edward O’Neil and
    Carmen Taveras, 2013.
    “What is a TIC Worth?” with Tim Husson and Carmen Taveras, 2013.
    “The Rise and Fall of Apple-linked Structured Products” with Geng Deng, Tim Dulaney and Mike Yan,
    2013.
    Tab 19, p. 14 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 179 of 181                   Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    “Are VIX Futures ETPs Effective Hedges?” with Geng Deng and Olivia Wang, 2012, Journal of Index
    Investing, 3(3):35-48, Winter 2012.
    “The Properties of Short Term Investing in Leveraged ETFs” with Geng Deng, Journal of Financial
    Transformation.
    “Leveraged Municipal Bond Arbitrage: What Went Wrong?” with Geng Deng, 2012, Journal of Alternative
    Investments, Spring 2012, Vol. 14, No. 4: pp. 69–78.
    “Isolating the Effect of Day-Count Conventions on the Market Value of Interest Rate Swaps” with
    Geng Deng, Tim Dulaney and Tim Husson, 2012.
    “CLOs, Warehousing, and Banc of America’s Undisclosed Losses” with Tim Husson and Olivia Wang,
    2012.
    “Using Monte-Carlo Simulation Techniques to Value Partial Interests in Trusts and Assess the Prudent
    Investor Standard” with Geng Deng and Tim Husson, 2012.
    “Rethinking the Comparable Companies Valuation Method” with Paul Godek, Dan Simundza and
    Carmen Taveras, 2011.
    “The Anatomy of Principal Protected Absolute Return Barrier Notes” with Geng Deng, Ilan Guedj and
    Joshua Mallett, 2011, Journal of Derivatives, Winter 2011, Vol. 19, No. 2: pp. 61-70.
    “Modeling Autocallable Structured Products” with Geng Deng and Joshua Mallett, 2011, Journal of
    Derivatives & Hedge Funds 17, 326–340.
    “What Does a Mutual Fund’s Term Tell Investors?” with Geng Deng and Edward O’Neal, Journal of
    Investing Summer 2011 vol. 20.
    “The VXX ETN and Volatility Exposure” with Tim Husson, 2011.
    “Futures-Based Commodities ETFs” with Ilan Guedj and Guohua Li, Journal of Index Investing, Summer
    2011 vol. 2, no. 1.
    “What Does a Mutual Fund’s Average Credit Quality Tell Investors?” with Geng Deng and Edward
    O’Neal, Journal of Investing Winter 2010 vol. 19, no. 4.
    “Leveraged ETFs, Holding Periods and Investment Shortfalls” with Ilan Guedj and Guohua Li, 2010,
    Journal of Index Investing Winter 2010 vol. 1, no. 3.
    “Charles Schwab YieldPlus” with Geng Deng, and Edward O’Neal, 2010.
    “What TiVo and JP Morgan teach us about Reverse Convertibles”, with Geng Deng, Edward O’Neal,
    and Guohua Li, 2010.
    “The Risks of Preferred Stock Portfolios,” with Guohua Li and Edward O’Neal, 2010.
    “Auction Rate Securities” with Edward O’Neal, 2010.
    “Structured Products in the Aftermath of Lehman Brothers” with Geng Deng and Guohua Li, 2009.
    “Oppenheimer Champion Income Fund” with Geng Deng and Joshua Mallett, 2009.
    “Regions Morgan Keegan and the Abuse of Structured Finance”, 2009.
    “An Economic Analysis of Equity-Indexed Annuities”, 2008.
    “A CMO Primer: The Law of Conservation of Structured Securities Risk”, 2007.
    “Are Structured Products Suitable for Retail Investors?” with Dengpan Luo, 2006.
    “An Overview of Equity-Indexed Annuities” with Dengpan Luo, 2006.
    Tab 19, p. 15 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 180 of 181                   Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    “Annuities” with Kaye A. Thomas, 2005.
    “Optimal Exercise of Employee Stock Options and Securities Arbitrations” with Kaye A. Thomas, 2005.
    “Concentrated Investments, Uncompensated Risk and Hedging Strategies” with Dengpan Luo, , 2004.
    “The Use of Leveraged Investments to Diversify a Concentrated Position” with Dengpan Luo, Securities
    Arbitration 2004 Handbook PLI.
    “Detecting Personal Trading Abuses”, 2003.
    “Churning Revisited: Trading Costs and Control” with Dengpan Luo, Securities Arbitration 2003 Handbook
    PLI.
    “The Suitability of Exercise and Hold,” with Dengpan Luo, Securities Arbitration 2002 Handbook, PLI.
    “Spreads, Markups, Sales Credits and Trading Costs,” with Richard Himelrick, Esq.
    “The Prudent Investor Rule, Uniform Prudent Investor Act and Financial Theory,” 2000.
    “Economic Analysis in Broker Customer Disputes Involving Allegations of Churning,” Journal of Legal
    Economics 9:1 Spring/Summer 1999.
    “A Comment on Accelerated Trading Models Used in Securities Class Action Lawsuits,” with David
    Hsu, Journal of Legal Economics 8:3 Winter 1998-1999.
    “How (and Why) Companies Should Value Their Employee Stock Options,” Journal of Applied Corporate
    Finance Summer 1994, Volume 7 number 2, page 91.
    “Perspectives: Taking Account of Stock Options,” Harvard Business Review January-February 1994,
    Volume 72 number 1, page 27.
    “Golden Parachutes: A Theoretical and Empirical Investigation,” unpublished Ph.D. dissertation,
    UCLA, 1989.
    Presentations at Conferences and Colloquia
    Dr. McCann has been invited to speak on prudent investment management practices, financial
    analysis in securities arbitrations, securities class action lawsuits and antitrust litigation on more
    than 50 continuing legal education panels around the country.
    May 14, 2014
    Tab 19, p. 16 of 16
    Pltf. Trial Exhibit 25A
    Page 181 of 181                       Cause No. 09-14448
    Page 25-40 of 97
    

    Document Info

    Docket Number: 05-15-00369-CV

    Filed Date: 9/8/2015

    Precedential Status: Precedential

    Modified Date: 9/29/2016

    Authorities (43)

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    Summers v. WellTech, Inc. , 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 5431 ( 1996 )

    in-the-matter-of-james-r-edgar-governor-of-illinois-and-ann-patla , 93 F.3d 256 ( 1996 )

    Kniatt v. State , 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9522 ( 2007 )

    Securities & Exchange Commission v. Pentagon Capital ... , 722 F. Supp. 2d 440 ( 2010 )

    In Re Enron Corp. Securities, Derivative &" ERISA" ... , 490 F. Supp. 2d 784 ( 2007 )

    Service Corp. International v. Guerra , 54 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1191 ( 2011 )

    gerald-lipsky-under-the-will-of-walden-robert-cassotto-aka-bobby , 551 F.2d 887 ( 1976 )

    Intec Systems, Inc. v. Lowrey , 230 S.W.3d 913 ( 2007 )

    Texas Department of Public Safety v. Caruana , 55 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 479 ( 2012 )

    Sterling Trust Co. v. Adderley , 48 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 887 ( 2005 )

    McGuire v. Commercial Union Insurance Co. of New York , 11 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 518 ( 1968 )

    Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, Inc. , 29 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 280 ( 1986 )

    new-jersey-turnpike-authority-v-ppg-industries-inc-natural-products , 197 F.3d 96 ( 1999 )

    Sommers v. Concepcion , 20 S.W.3d 27 ( 2000 )

    Gee v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Co. , 32 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 217 ( 1989 )

    Wonsover v. Securities & Exchange Commission , 205 F.3d 408 ( 2000 )

    Galvan v. Downey , 933 S.W.2d 316 ( 1996 )

    Duperier v. Texas State Bank , 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 5740 ( 2000 )

    Koral Industries v. Security-Connecticut Life Insurance Co. , 34 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 45 ( 1990 )

    View All Authorities »