The Investment Company Act of 1940 emphasizes shareholder protection through governance standards, including requirements that a fund’s board include a minimum percentage of “uninterested” (independent) persons. The purpose is to reduce adviser dominance and mitigate conflicts that can arise when the fund’s adviser or affiliated parties effectively control oversight. “Uninterested” generally means the director has no material business relationship with the fund’s adviser, principal underwriter, or key affiliates that would compromise independent judgment. Therefore, the best description is D.
Choices A and B are plausible-sounding governance benefits, but they are not the regulatory intent being tested. The rule is not primarily about diversity of professional experience or broadening expertise; it is about independence from adviser influence. Choice C is too general and doesn’t capture the targeted problem: the Act’s board independence provisions are designed to ensure the board can objectively evaluate matters that directly affect shareholders, such as advisory contracts, fee arrangements, compliance oversight, and potential self-dealing.
On the SIE, this ties directly to the theme of conflicts of interest in investment companies. Mutual fund advisers are paid fees based on assets under management, creating incentives that might not always align with shareholders. Independent directors are intended to serve as a check by reviewing and approving key arrangements and providing meaningful oversight. The exam often connects this governance concept to broader investor protections: disclosure, fiduciary oversight, limitations on affiliated transactions, and the idea that fund boards should represent shareholder interests rather than adviser interests.