0000921671
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DEF 14A
0000921671
2023-04-05
2023-04-05
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xbrli:shares
xbrli:pure
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment No. )
Filed by Registrant ☒
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant ☐
Check the appropriate box:
☐ |
Preliminary Proxy Statement |
☐ |
Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) |
☒ |
Definitive Proxy Statement |
☐ |
Definitive Additional Materials |
☐ |
Soliciting Material Pursuant to Sec. 240.14a-12 |
The Gabelli Multimedia Trust Inc.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if
other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
☒ |
No fee required |
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☐ |
Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11. |
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1) |
Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies: |
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Aggregate number of securities
to which transaction applies: |
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3) |
Per unit price or other underlying
value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11(set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state
how it was determined): |
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4) |
Proposed maximum aggregate value
of transaction: |
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5) |
Total fee paid: |
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☐ |
Fee paid previously with preliminary materials. |
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☐ |
Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2)
and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement
number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing. |
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1) |
Amount Previously Paid: |
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2) |
Form, Schedule or Registration
Statement No.: |
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3) |
Filing Party: |
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4) |
Date Filed: |
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THE GABELLI MULTIMEDIA TRUST INC.
One Corporate Center Rye,
New York 10580-1422
(914) 921-5070
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
To Be Held on May 22, 2023
To the Stockholders of
THE GABELLI MULTIMEDIA TRUST INC.
Notice is hereby given that the
Annual Meeting of Stockholders of The Gabelli Multimedia Trust Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “Fund”), will
be held on Monday, May 22, 2023, at 9:30 a.m., ET, at Indian Harbor Yacht Club, 710 Steamboat Road, Greenwich, Connecticut, 06830 and virtually by Internet webcast (the “Meeting”), and at any
adjournments or postponements thereof for the following purposes:
| 1. | To elect four (4) Directors of the Fund to be elected by the holders of the Fund’s common stock
and holders of its Series C Auction Rate Cumulative Preferred Stock, 5.125% Series E Cumulative Preferred Stock and 5.125% Series G Cumulative
Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class; and |
| 2. | To consider and vote upon such other matters, including adjournments, as may properly come before said
Meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof. |
These items are discussed in greater detail in the attached Proxy Statement.
We are conducting a “hybrid”
meeting - you may attend in person or virtually. Whether or not you plan to attend the Meeting in person, stockholders must register
in advance by submitting the required information to the Fund at: http://Gabelli.com/CEFAnnualMeeting. Following registration,
a stockholder will be provided with instructions regarding how to access the virtual Meeting, including the link for the Meeting.
Requests for registration must
be received no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on May 21, 2023. Stockholders will receive an email confirming their registration and providing
instructions for participating in the Meeting. Any questions should be directed to CEFProxy@gabelli.com.
The close of business on March 28,
2023, has been fixed as the record date for the determination of stockholders entitled to notice of and to vote at the Meeting and any
adjournments or postponements thereof.
YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT REGARDLESS
OF THE SIZE OF YOUR HOLDINGS IN THE FUND. WE ENCOURAGE YOU TO VOTE YOUR PROXY IN ADVANCE OF THE MEETING, EVEN IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE
MEETING. STOCKHOLDERS MAY AUTHORIZE THEIR PROXY BY TELEPHONE OR THE INTERNET. ALTERNATIVELY, STOCKHOLDERS MAY SUBMIT VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
BY SIGNING AND DATING THE PROXY CARD AND RETURNING IT IN THE ACCOMPANYING POSTAGE-PAID ENVELOPE.
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By Order of the Board of Directors, |
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PETER GOLDSTEIN |
|
Secretary |
April 12, 2023
INSTRUCTIONS FOR SIGNING PROXY CARDS TO BE RETURNED
BY MAIL
The following general rules for signing proxy cards may
be of assistance to you and avoid the time and expense to the Fund involved in validating your vote if you fail to properly sign your
proxy card.
| 1. | Individual Accounts: Sign your name exactly as it appears in the registration on the proxy card. |
| 2. | Joint Accounts: Either party may sign, but the name of the party signing should conform exactly
to the name shown in the registration. |
| 3. | All Other Accounts: The capacity of the individual signing the proxy card should be indicated unless
it is reflected in the form of registration. For example: |
Registration |
Valid Signature |
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Corporate Accounts |
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(1) |
ABC Corp. |
ABC Corp., by John Doe, Treasurer |
(2) |
ABC Corp. |
John Doe, Treasurer |
(3) |
ABC Corp. |
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c/o John Doe, Treasurer |
John Doe |
(4) |
ABC Corp., Profit Sharing Plan |
John Doe, Trustee |
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Trust Accounts |
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(1) |
ABC Trust |
Jane B. Doe, Trustee |
(2) |
Jane B. Doe, Trustee |
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u/t/d 12/28/78 |
Jane B. Doe |
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Custodian or Estate Accounts |
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(1) |
John B. Smith, Cust. |
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f/b/o John B. Smith, Jr. UGMA |
John B. Smith |
(2) |
John B. Smith, Executor |
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Estate of Jane Smith |
John B. Smith, Executor |
INSTRUCTIONS FOR TELEPHONE/INTERNET VOTING
Instructions for authorizing your proxy to vote your
shares by telephone or Internet are included with the Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials and the proxy card.
THE GABELLI MULTIMEDIA TRUST INC.
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
May 22, 2023
PROXY STATEMENT
This Proxy Statement is furnished
in connection with the solicitation of proxies by the Board of Directors (the “Board,” the members of which
are referred to as “Directors”) of The Gabelli Multimedia Trust Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “Fund”),
for use at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Fund to be held on Monday, May 22, 2023, at 9:30 a.m., ET, at Indian Harbor Yacht Club, 710 Steamboat Road, Greenwich, Connecticut, 06830 and virtually by Internet
webcast (the “Meeting”), and at any adjournments or postponements thereof. A Notice of Internet Availability
of Proxy Materials will first be mailed to stockholders on or about April 12, 2023.
We are conducting a “hybrid” meeting - you may attend in person or virtually. Whether or not you plan to attend the Meeting in person, stockholders must register in advance by submitting the required information to the Fund at: http://Gabelli.com/CEFAnnualMeeting.
Following registration, a stockholder will be provided with instructions regarding how to access the virtual Meeting, including the link
for the Meeting.
Requests for registration must
be received no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on May 21, 2023. Stockholders will receive an email confirming their registration and providing
instructions for participating in the Meeting. Any questions should be directed to CEFProxy@gabelli.com.
In addition to the solicitation
of proxies by mail, officers of the Fund and officers and regular employees of Computershare Trust Company, N.A. (“Computershare”),
the Fund’s transfer agent, and affiliates of Computershare or other representatives of the Fund may also solicit proxies by telephone,
Internet, or in person. In addition, the Fund has retained Morrow Sodali LLC to assist in the solicitation of proxies for an estimated
fee of $1,000 plus reimbursement of expenses. The Fund will pay the costs of the proxy solicitation and the expenses incurred in connection
with preparing, printing, and mailing the Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials and/or Proxy Statement and its enclosures.
If requested, the Fund will also reimburse brokerage firms and others for their expenses in forwarding solicitation materials to the beneficial
owners of its shares.
The Fund’s most recent
annual report, including audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022, is available upon request, without
charge, by writing to the Secretary of the Fund, One Corporate Center, Rye, New York 10580-1422, calling the Fund at 800-422-3554, or
via the Internet at www.gabelli.com.
If the proxy is properly executed
and returned in time to be voted at the Meeting, the shares represented thereby will be voted “FOR” the election
of the nominees as Directors as described in this Proxy Statement, unless instructions to the contrary are marked thereon, and at the
discretion of the proxy holders as to the transaction of any other business that may properly come before the Meeting. Any stockholder
who has submitted a proxy has the right to revoke it at any time prior to its exercise either by attending the Meeting and voting his
or her shares or by submitting a letter of revocation or a later dated proxy to the Fund at the above address prior to the date of the
Meeting.
A “quorum”
is required in order to transact business at the Meeting. A quorum of stockholders is constituted by the presence or representation by
proxy of stockholders of the Fund entitled to cast at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast at the Meeting. Whether or not
a quorum is present, the chairperson of the Meeting may adjourn the Meeting indefinitely, or from time to time, to a date not more than
120 days after the original record date, without notice other than announcement at the Meeting. Absent the establishment of a subsequent
record date and the giving of notice to the holders of record thereon, the adjourned meeting must take place not more than 120 days after
the original record date. At such adjourned meeting at which a quorum shall be present, any business may be transacted which might have
been transacted at the Meeting as originally notified. The Fund may postpone or cancel a meeting of shareholders, and if it does the Fund
will make a public announcement of such postponement or cancellation prior to the meeting. The postponed meeting may not be held more
than 120 days after the initial record date.
The close of business on March 28,
2023, has been fixed as the record date for the determination of stockholders entitled to notice of and to vote at the Meeting and all
adjournments or postponements thereof.
The Fund has two classes of stock
outstanding: common stock, par value $0.001 per share (“Common Stock”), and preferred stock consisting of (i)
Series C Auction Rate Cumulative Preferred Stock (“Series C Preferred”), (ii) 5.125% Series E Cumulative Preferred
Stock (“Series E Preferred”), and (iii) 5.125% Series G Cumulative Preferred Stock (“Series G Preferred”),
each having a par value of $0.001 per share (collectively, “Preferred Stock”). The holders of the Common Stock and
Preferred Stock are each entitled to one vote on each matter to properly come before the Meeting for each full share held. See “Additional Information–Maryland Control Share Acquisition
Act” for a discussion of the ability of holders of Common Shares and Preferred Shares that are “control shares” to vote
such shares. On the record
date, there were 27,809,225 shares of Common Stock, 10 shares of Series C Preferred, 1,791,311 shares of Series E Preferred, and
1,606,876 shares of Series G Preferred, outstanding.
Set forth below is information as
to those stockholders to the Fund’s knowledge that beneficially own 5% or more of a class of the Fund’s outstanding voting
securities as of the record date.
Name
and Address of Beneficial Owner(s) |
|
Title of Class |
|
Amount of Shares and
Nature of Ownership |
|
Percent of Class |
GAMCO Investors, Inc.
and affiliates |
|
Common |
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2,564,692 (beneficial)* |
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9.2% |
One Corporate Center |
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Rye, NY 10580-1422 |
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Fidelity & Guaranty Life Insurance
Co. |
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Preferred |
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360,482 |
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10.6% |
1001 Fleet Street |
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Baltimore, MD 21202 |
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Louisiana Workers Compensation Corporation |
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Preferred |
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328,495 (beneficial) |
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9.7% |
2237 South Acadian Thruway |
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Baton Rouge, LA 70808 |
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Americo Financial Life & Annuity |
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Preferred |
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280,000 (beneficial) |
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8.2% |
P.O. Box 410288 |
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Kansas City, MO 64141 |
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| * | The shares reported are comprised of 977,315 shares of Common Stock owned by Mario J. Gabelli; 1,148,000 shares owned by GGCP, Inc. (GGCP),
of which Mr. Gabelli is the Chief Executive Officer, a director, and the controlling shareholder; 436,459 shares owned by Associated Capital
Group, Inc. (ACG), of which Mr. Gabelli is the Executive Chair and controlling shareholder; 2,918 shares owned by Gabelli & Company
Investment Advisers, Inc. (GCIA), a majority owned subsidiary of Associated Capital Group, Inc. Mr. Gabelli has less than a 100% interest
in each of these entities and disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares owned by these entities which are in excess of his indirect
pecuniary interest. |
SUMMARY OF VOTING RIGHTS ON PROXY PROPOSALS
Proposal |
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Common Stockholders |
|
Preferred Stockholders |
Election of Directors |
|
Common and Preferred Stockholders, voting together as a single class, vote to elect four Directors: |
|
Common and Preferred Stockholders, voting together as a single class, vote to elect four Directors: |
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Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr., |
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Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr., |
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Werner J. Roeder, |
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Werner J. Roeder, |
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Salvatore J. Zizza, and |
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Salvatore J. Zizza, and |
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Daniel E. Zucchi |
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Daniel E. Zucchi |
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Other Business |
|
Common and Preferred Stockholders, voting together as a single class |
PROPOSAL: TO ELECT FOUR (4) DIRECTORS OF THE FUND
Nominees for the Board of Directors
The Board currently consists
of twelve Directors, ten of whom are not “interested persons” of the Fund (as defined in the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”)). The Fund divides the Board into three classes, each
class having a term of three years. Each year, the term of office of one class will expire. Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr., Werner J.
Roeder, Salvatore J. Zizza, and Daniel E. Zucchi have each been nominated by the Board for election to serve for a three year term
to expire at the Fund’s 2026 Annual Meeting of Stockholders or until their successors are duly elected and qualified. Salvatore J.
Zizza, Mario J. Gabelli, and James P. Conn have served as Directors of the Fund since the April 6, 1994, organizational meeting of the Fund. Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr. became a Director of the Fund on August 18, 1999; Werner J. Roeder became a Director of the Fund on November 17, 1999; Kuni
Nakamura became a Director of the Fund on August 15, 2012; Christopher J. Marangi became a Director of the Fund on March 21, 2013;
John Birch and Daniel E. Zucchi became Directors of the Fund on August 20, 2019; and Calgary Avansino, Elizabeth C. Bogan, and Anthony S.
Colavita became Directors of the Fund on March 25, 2021. All of the Directors of the Fund are also directors or trustees of other
investment companies for which Gabelli Funds, LLC (the “Adviser”) or its affiliates serve as investment
adviser. The classes of Directors are
indicated below:
Nominees to Serve Until 2026 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr.
Werner J. Roeder
Salvatore J. Zizza
Daniel E. Zucchi
Directors Serving Until 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
Mario J. Gabelli
Calgary Avansino
Anthony S. Colavita
Christopher J. Marangi
Directors Serving Until 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
John Birch
Elizabeth C. Bogan
James P. Conn
Kuni Nakamura
Under the Fund’s Charter and
the 1940 Act, holders of the Fund’s outstanding Preferred Stock, voting as a separate class, are entitled to elect two Directors,
and holders of the Fund’s outstanding Common Stock and Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class, are entitled to elect
the remaining Directors. The holders of the Fund’s outstanding Preferred Stock would be entitled to elect the minimum number of
additional Directors that would represent a majority of the Directors in the event that dividends on the Fund’s Preferred Stock
become in arrears for two full years and until all arrearages are eliminated. No dividend arrearages exist as of the date of this Proxy
Statement. Messrs. Anthony S. Colavita and James P. Conn are currently the Directors elected solely by the holders of the Fund’s
Preferred Stock, and their terms as Directors are scheduled to expire at the Fund’s 2025 and 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders,
respectively. Therefore, they are not standing for election at this meeting.
Unless instructions are provided
to the contrary, it is the intention of the persons named in the proxy to vote the proxy “FOR” the election
of the nominees named above. Each nominee has indicated that he has consented to serve as a Director if elected at the Meeting. If, however,
a designated nominee declines or otherwise becomes unavailable for election, the proxy confers discretionary power on the persons named
therein to vote in favor of a substitute nominee or nominees. Each nominee is qualified to serve as a Director under the Fund’s
governing documents.
Information about Directors and Officers
Set forth in the table below
are the existing Directors, including those Directors who are not considered to be “interested persons,” as
defined in the 1940 Act (the “Independent Directors”), four of whom are nominated for re-election to the Board
of the Fund, and officers of the Fund, including information relating to their respective positions held with the Fund, a brief statement
of their principal occupations, and, in the case of the Directors, their other directorships during the past five years (excluding other
funds managed by the Adviser), if any.
Name, Position(s),
Address(1)
and Year of Birth |
|
Term of
Office and
Length of
Time
Served(2) |
|
Principal Occupation(s)
During Past Five Years |
|
Other Directorships
Held by Director |
|
Number of
Portfolios in
Fund Complex(3)
Overseen
by Director |
|
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INTERESTED
DIRECTORS(4): |
|
Mario J. Gabelli
Chairman and
Chief Investment Officer
1942 |
|
Since
1994** |
|
Chair, Co-Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Investment Officer – Value Portfolios of GAMCO Investors, Inc. and Chief Investment Officer – Value Portfolios of Gabelli Funds, LLC and GAMCO Asset Management Inc.;
Director/Trustee or Chief Investment Officer of other registered investment companies within the Gabelli Fund Complex; Chief Executive Officer of GGCP, Inc.; Executive Chair of Associated Capital Group, Inc. |
|
Director of Morgan Group Holding Co. (holding company) (2001-2019); Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of LICT Corp. (multimedia and communication services company); Director of CIBL, Inc. (broadcasting and wireless communications); Director of ICTC Group Inc. (communications) (2013-2018) |
|
31(10) |
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Christopher J. Marangi
Director
1974 |
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Since
2013** |
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Managing Director and Co-Chief Investment Officer of the Value team of GAMCO Investors, Inc.; Portfolio
Manager for Gabelli Funds, LLC and GAMCO Asset Management Inc. |
|
— |
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6 |
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INDEPENDENT
DIRECTORS/NOMINEES(5): |
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Calgary Avansino(7)
Director
1975 |
|
Since
2021** |
|
Chief Executive Officer,
Glamcam (2018-2020) |
|
Trustee, Cate School; Trustee, the E.L. Wiegand Foundation; Member, the Common Sense Media Advisory Council |
|
5 |
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John Birch(7)
Director
1950 |
|
Since
2019*** |
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Partner, The Cardinal Partners Global; Chief Operating Officer of Sentinel Asset Management and Chief Financial Officer and Chief Risk Officer of Sentinel Group Funds (2005-2015) |
|
— |
|
9 |
|
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Elizabeth C. Bogan
Director
1944 |
|
Since
2021*** |
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Former
Senior Lecturer in Economics at Princeton University |
|
— |
|
12 |
|
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Anthony S. Colavita(6)(7) Director
1961 |
|
Since
2021** |
|
Attorney, Anthony S. Colavita,
P.C.; Supervisor, Town of
Eastchester, NY |
|
— |
|
23 |
|
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James P. Conn(6)
Director
1938 |
|
Since
1994*** |
|
Former Managing Director and
Chief Investment Officer of
Financial Security Assurance Holdings, Ltd. (1992-1998) |
|
— |
|
23 |
|
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Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr.(7) Director
1939 |
|
Since
1999* |
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Co-Chairman of the Commission on Presidential Debates; Former President and Chief Executive Officer of the American Gaming Association (1995-2013); Former Chairman of the Republican National Committee (1983-1989) |
|
Director of First Republic Bank (banking); Director of Eldorado Resorts, Inc. (casino entertainment company) |
|
11 |
Name, Position(s),
Address(1)
and Year of Birth |
|
Term of
Office and
Length of
Time
Served(2) |
|
Principal Occupation(s)
During Past Five Years |
|
Other Directorships
Held by Director |
|
Number of
Portfolios in
Fund Complex(3)
Overseen
by Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kuni Nakamura
Director
1968 |
|
Since
2012*** |
|
President of Advanced Polymer, Inc. (chemical manufacturing company); President of KEN Enterprises, Inc. (real estate); Trustee on Long Island University Board of Trustees; Trustee on Fordham Preparatory School Board of Trustees |
|
— |
|
37 |
|
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|
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Werner J. Roeder
Director
1940 |
|
Since
1999* |
|
Retired physician; Former Vice President of Medical Affairs (Medical Director) of New York Presbyterian/Lawrence Hospital (1999-2014) |
|
— |
|
20 |
|
|
|
|
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Salvatore J. Zizza(7)(8) Director
1945 |
|
Since
1994* |
|
President, Zizza & Associates Corp. (private holding company); Chairman of Bergen Cove Realty Inc. (residential real estate) |
|
Director and Chairman of Trans-Lux Corporation (business services); Director and Chairman of Harbor Diversified Inc. (pharmaceuticals) (2009-
2018); Retired Chairman of BAM (semiconductor and aerospace manufacturing); Director of Bion Environmental Technologies, Inc. |
|
35 |
|
|
|
|
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|
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Daniel E. Zucchi
Director
1940 |
|
Since
2019* |
|
President of Zucchi & Associates (general business consulting); Senior Vice President of Hearst Corp. (1984- 1995) |
|
Cypress Care LLC (health care) (2001-2009); Director, PMV Consumer Acquisition Corp |
|
3 |
OFFICERS:
Name, Position(s),
Address(1)
and Year of Birth |
|
Term of
Office and
Length of
Time
Served(9) |
|
Principal Occupation(s)
During Past Five Years |
|
|
|
|
|
John C. Ball
President, Treasurer, and Principal Financial and Accounting Officer
1976 |
|
Since
2017 |
|
Senior
Vice President (since 2018) and other positions (2017-2018) of GAMCO Investors, Inc.; Chief Executive Officer, G. Distributors, LLC
since 2020; Officer of registered investment companies within the Gabelli Fund Complex since 2017; Vice President and Assistant
Treasurer of AMG Funds, 2014-2017 |
|
|
|
|
|
Peter Goldstein
Secretary and
Vice President
1953 |
|
Since
2020 |
|
General Counsel, GAMCO Investors, Inc. and Chief Legal Officer, Associated Capital Group, Inc. since 2021; General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer, Buckingham Capital Management, Inc. (2012-2020); Chief Legal Officer and Chief Compliance Officer, The Buckingham Research Group, Inc. (2012-2020) |
|
|
|
|
|
Richard J. Walz
Chief Compliance Officer
1959 |
|
Since
2013 |
|
Chief Compliance Officer of registered investment companies within the Gabelli Fund Complex since 2013 |
|
|
|
|
|
Laurissa M. Martire
Vice President
1976 |
|
Since
2004 |
|
Vice
President and/or Ombudsman of closed-end funds within the Gabelli Fund Complex; Senior Vice President (since 2019) and other
positions (2003-2019) of GAMCO Investors, Inc. |
|
|
|
|
|
Carter W. Austin
Vice President and
Ombudsman
1966 |
|
Since
2010 |
|
Vice
President and/or Ombudsman of closed-end funds within the Gabelli Fund Complex; Senior Vice President (since 2015) and Vice
President (1996-2015) of Gabelli Funds, LLC |
(1) | Address: One Corporate Center, Rye, NY 10580-1422. |
(2) | The Fund’s Board of Directors is divided into three classes, each class having a term of three years.
Each year the term of office of one class expires and the successor or successors elected to such class serve for a three year term. |
(3) | The “Fund Complex” or the “Gabelli Fund Complex” includes
all the U.S. registered investment companies that are considered part of the same fund complex as the Fund because they have common or
affiliated investment advisers. |
(4) | “Interested person” of the Fund as defined in the 1940 Act. Messrs. Gabelli
and Marangi are each considered to be an “interested person” of the Fund because of their affiliation with the
Fund’s Adviser. |
(5) | Directors who are not considered to be “interested persons” of the Fund as defined
in the 1940 Act are considered to be “Independent” Directors. None of the Independent Directors (with the possible
exceptions as described in this proxy statement) nor their family members had any interest in the Adviser or any person directly or indirectly
controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the Adviser as of December 31, 2022. |
(6) | Director elected solely by holders of the Fund’s Preferred Stock. |
(7) | Mr. Anthony S. Colavita’s father, Anthony J. Colavita, and Mr. Fahrenkopf’s daughter, Leslie
F. Foley, serve as directors of other funds in the Gabelli Fund Complex. Ms. Avansino is the daughter of Raymond C. Avansino, Jr., who
is a Director of GAMCO Investors, Inc., the parent company of the Fund’s Adviser. Mr. Zizza is an independent director of Gabelli
International Ltd., and Mr. Birch is a director of Gabelli Merger Plus+ Trust Plc, GAMCO International SICAV, Gabelli Associates Limited,
and Gabelli Associates Limited II E, both of which may be deemed to be controlled by Mario J. Gabelli and/or affiliates and in that event
would be deemed to be under common control with the Fund’s Adviser. |
(8) | On September 9, 2015, Mr. Zizza entered into a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the “SEC”) to resolve an inquiry relating to an alleged violation regarding the making of false statements
or omissions to the accountants of a company concerning a related party transaction. The company in question is not an affiliate of, nor
has any connection to, the Fund. Under the terms of the settlement, Mr. Zizza, without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings and
allegation, paid $150,000 and agreed to cease and desist committing or causing any future violations of Rule 13b2-2 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “1934 Act”). The Board has discussed this matter and has determined that
it does not disqualify Mr. Zizza from serving as an Independent Director. |
(9) | Includes time served in prior positions with the Fund. Each officer will hold office for an indefinite
term until the date he or she resigns or retires or until his or her successor is elected and qualifies. |
(10) | As of December 31, 2022, there are a total of 49 registered investment companies in the Fund Complex.
Of the 49 registered investment companies, Mr. Gabelli serves as a director or trustee for 31 funds, sole portfolio manager of 5
funds, and part of the portfolio management team of 15 funds. |
* | Nominee to serve, if elected, until the Fund’s 2026 Annual Meeting of Stockholders or until his successor is duly elected and
qualifies. |
** | Term continues until the Fund’s 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders or until his or her successor
is duly elected and qualifies. |
*** | Term continues until the Fund’s 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders or until his or her successor
is duly elected and qualifies. |
The Board believes that each Director’s
experience, qualifications, attributes or skills on an individual basis and in combination with those of other Directors lead to the conclusion
that each Director should serve in such capacity. Among the attributes or skills common to all Directors are their ability to review critically
and to evaluate, question and discuss information provided to them, to interact effectively with the other Directors, the Adviser, the
sub-administrator, other service providers, counsel, and the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm, and to exercise
effective and independent business judgment in the performance of their duties as Directors. Each Director’s ability to perform
his duties effectively has been attained in large part through the Director’s business, consulting, or public service positions
and through experience from service as a member of the Board and one or more of the other funds in the Fund Complex, public companies,
non-profit entities, or other organizations as set forth above and below. Each Director’s ability to perform his duties effectively
also has been enhanced by his education, professional training, and other experience.
Interested Directors
Mario J. Gabelli, CFA. Mr.
Gabelli is Chair of the Board of Directors and Chief Investment Officer of the Fund. He serves in the same capacities for other funds
in the Fund Complex. Mr. Gabelli is a member of the Fund’s ad hoc Pricing Committee. Mr. Gabelli is Chair, Co-Chief Executive
Officer, and Chief Investment Officer–Value Portfolios of GAMCO Investors, Inc. (“GAMI”), an OTC-listed asset manager and financial services company. He is the Chief Investment Officer of
Value Portfolios of Gabelli Funds, LLC and GAMCO Asset Management, Inc., each of which are asset management subsidiaries of GAMI. In addition,
Mr. Gabelli is Chief Executive Officer, Chief Investment Officer, a director and the controlling shareholder of GGCP, Inc. (“GGCP”),
a private company that holds a majority interest in GAMI, and the Chair of MJG Associates, Inc., which acts as an investment manager
of various investment funds and other accounts. He is Executive Chair of Associated Capital Group, Inc., a public company that provides
alternative management and institutional research services, and is a majority-owned subsidiary of GGCP. Mr. Gabelli has served as Chair
of LICT Corporation (“LICT”), a public company engaged in broadband transport and other communications services,
since 2004 and has been the CEO of LICT since December 2010. He has also served as a director of CIBL, Inc. (“CIBL”),
a public holding company that was spun-off from LICT in 2007, since 2007 and as Executive Chair since February 2020. He served as the
Chair of Morgan Group Holding Co., a public holding company, from 2001 to October 2019 and as the CEO from 2001 to November 2012. Mr.
Gabelli serves as Overseer of the Columbia University Graduate School of Business and as a trustee of Boston College and Roger Williams
University. He serves as director of the Winston Churchill Foundation, The E.L. Wiegand Foundation, The American-Italian Cancer Foundation,
and The Foundation for Italian Art and Culture. He is Chair of the Gabelli Foundation, Inc., a Nevada private charitable trust. Mr.
Gabelli
serves as Co-President of Field Point Park Association, Inc. Mr. Gabelli received his Bachelor’s degree from Fordham University, MBA from Columbia
Business School, and honorary Doctorates from Fordham University and Roger Williams University.
Christopher J. Marangi. Mr.
Marangi is a Managing Director and Co-Chief Investment Officer of the Value team of GAMI. In addition to the Fund, he is a portfolio manager
on GAMCO’s institutional and high net worth separate accounts team and for several other open- and closed-end funds in the Gabelli
Fund Complex. He joined GAMI in 2003 as a research analyst covering companies in the cable, satellite, and entertainment sectors. He began
his career as an investment banking analyst with J.P. Morgan & Company and later joined the private equity firm, Wellspring Capital
Management. Mr. Marangi graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa with a Bachelor’s degree in Political Economy from Williams
College and holds an MBA with honors from the Columbia Business School.
Independent Directors/Nominees
Calgary Avansino. Ms. Avansino
was CEO of Glamcam from 2018-2020, a social commerce app focusing on the Gen Z market. She also began serving on the Boards of Trustees
of the Cate School in 2017 and the E.L. Wiegand Foundation in 2018. She became a member of the Common Sense Media Advisory Council in
2019. Previously, beginning in 2014, she was a Contributing Vogue Editor in order to launch her eponymous wellness company, and in 2016,
she published the nutrition book entitled Keep It Real, launched a website, and was a prolific public speaker on wellness trends.
From 2009-2013, Ms. Avansino was Executive Fashion Director and Digital Project Director at British Vogue. Ms. Avansino is a graduate
of Cate Preparatory School ’93 and Georgetown University ’98, with a major in English Literature and a minor in Women’s
Studies.
John Birch. Mr. Birch
is a Partner of The Cardinal Partners Global, a strategic advisory firm, providing strategic advice and distribution support to
international investment managers. He is a member of the Fund’s ad hoc Pricing Committee. Mr. Birch serves on board
committees with respect to other funds in the Fund Complex on whose boards he sits. He is also a director of the GAMCO International
SICAV and the Gabelli Merger Plus+ Trust Plc. From 2005 to 2015, Mr. Birch served as the Chief Operating Officer of Sentinel Asset
Management and Chief Financial Officer, and Chief Risk Officer of the Sentinel Group Funds. His other experience includes his roles
as Vice President of Transfer Agency at State Street Bank in Luxembourg; Chief Operating Officer and Senior Vice President of
American Skandia Investment Services, Inc.; Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President (Partner) of International Fund
Administration, Ltd.; Chief Administrative Officer and Senior Vice President – Mutual Funds Division and Managing Director of
Gabelli Funds, Inc.; and senior roles at Kansallis Banking Group and Privatbanken A/S. Mr. Birch received his Master of Tax from
Metropolitan University College (Copenhagen) and attended the Program for Management Development at the Harvard Graduate School of
Business.
Elizabeth C. Bogan, Ph.D. Dr.
Bogan was formerly Senior Lecturer in Economics at Princeton University from 1992 until 2020. She was formerly Chair of the Economics
and Finance Department, Fairleigh Dickinson University, and a member of the Executive Committee for the College of Business
Administration. Dr. Bogan serves on committees for other funds in the Fund Complex. She received a Bachelor’s degree in
Economics from Wellesley College, an MA degree in Quantitative Economics from the University of New Hampshire, and a Ph.D. degree in
Economics from Columbia University.
Anthony S. Colavita, Esq. Mr.
Colavita has been a practicing attorney with Anthony S. Colavita, P.C. since February 1988. Mr. Colavita serves on board committees with
respect to other funds in the Fund Complex on whose boards he sits. He has been Town Supervisor of the Town of Eastchester, New York since
January 2004, with responsibilities for the review, adoption, and administration of a $35 million budget. He has also served as a board
member for multiple not-for-profit corporations and was previously counsel to the New York State Senate. Additionally, Mr. Colavita was
an Eastchester Town Councilman from 1998 to 2003. He has been active on the boards of several community based programs. Mr. Colavita received
his Bachelor of Arts from Colgate University and his Juris Doctor from Pace University School of Law.
James P. Conn. Mr. Conn is
the Lead Independent Director of the Fund and a member of the Fund’s ad hoc Proxy Voting and ad hoc Pricing Committees.
Mr. Conn serves on comparable or other board committees with respect to other funds in the Fund Complex on whose boards he sits. He was
a senior business executive of Transamerica Corp., an insurance holding company, for much of his career, including service as Chief Investment
Officer. Mr. Conn has been a director of several public companies in banking and other industries, and was lead director and/or chair
of various committees. He received his Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from Santa Clara University.
Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr. Mr.
Fahrenkopf is the Co-Chairman of the Commission on Presidential Debates, which is responsible for the widely-viewed Presidential debates
during the quadrennial election cycle. He also served as Chairman of the Republican National Committee for six years during Ronald Reagan’s
presidency. Additionally, he serves as a board member of the International Republican Institute, which he founded in 1984. Mr. Fahrenkopf
serves on the boards of other funds in the Gabelli Fund Complex. Mr. Fahrenkopf is the former President and Chief Executive Officer of
the American Gaming Association (“AGA”), the trade group for the hotel-casino industry. He served for many years
as Chairman of the Pacific Democrat Union and Vice Chairman of the International Democrat Union, a worldwide association of political
parties from the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Japan, Australia, and twenty other nations. Prior to becoming
the AGA’s first chief executive in 1995, Mr. Fahrenkopf was a partner in the law firm of Hogan & Hartson, where he chaired the
International Trade Practice Group and specialized in regulatory, legislative, and corporate matters for multinational, foreign, and domestic
clients. Mr. Fahrenkopf is the former Chairman of the Finance Committee of the Culinary Institute of America and remains a member of the
board. For more than 30 years, Mr. Fahrenkopf has served on the Board of First Republic Bank and serves as Chairman of the Corporate Governance
and Nominating Committee and as a member of the Compensation Committee. He is also a member of the Board of Eldorado Resorts, Inc., which
owns and operates 19 casinos in 10 states. Mr. Fahrenkopf received his Bachelor’s degree from the University of Nevada, Reno and
Juris Doctor from Boalt Hall School of Law, U.C. Berkeley.
Kuni Nakamura. Mr. Nakamura
is the president of Advanced Polymer, Inc., a chemical manufacturing company, and president of KEN Enterprises, Inc., a real estate company.
He is the Chairman of the Fund’s Audit and Nominating Committees, a member of the Fund’s ad hoc Pricing and ad hoc
Proxy Voting Committees, and has been designated as the Fund’s Audit Committee Financial Expert. Mr. Nakamura serves on comparable
or other board committees with respect to other funds in the Fund Complex on whose boards he sits. Mr. Nakamura was previously a board
member of The LGL Group, Inc., a diversified manufacturing company. He serves on the Board of Trustees of Long Island University in Brookville,
NY and the Fordham Preparatory School. He is involved in various capacities with The University of Pennsylvania and The Guiding Eyes for
the Blind. Mr. Nakamura is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania – The Wharton School with a Bachelor’s degree in Economics
and Multinational Management.
Werner J. Roeder, M.D. Dr.
Roeder is a retired physician with over forty-five years of experience and former Vice President of Medical Affairs (Medical
Director) of New York Presbyterian/Lawrence Hospital in Bronxville, New York. As Vice President of Medical Affairs at New York
Presbyterian/Lawrence Hospital, he was actively involved in personnel and financial matters concerning the hospital’s $140
million budget. He is a member of the Fund’s Audit Committee and both multi-fund ad hoc Compensation Committees. He
serves on comparable or other board committees with respect to other funds in the Fund Complex on whose boards he sits. Dr. Roeder
is board certified as a surgeon by The American Board of Surgery and previously served in a consulting capacity to Empire Blue
Cross/Blue Shield. He obtained his Doctorate in Medicine from New York Medical College.
Salvatore J. Zizza. Mr. Zizza
is the President of Zizza & Associates Corp., a private holding company that invests in various industries. He also serves or has
served as Chairman to other companies involved in manufacturing, recycling, real estate, technology, and pharmaceuticals. He is a member
of the Fund’s Audit, Nominating, and ad hoc Pricing Committees, and a member of both multi-fund ad hoc Compensation
Committees. Mr. Zizza serves on comparable or other board committees with respect to other funds in the Fund Complex on whose boards he
sits. In addition to serving on the boards of other funds in the Fund Complex, Mr. Zizza is currently and has previously been a director
of other public companies. He was also the President, Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Financial Officer of a large NYSE-listed construction
company. Mr. Zizza received his Bachelor’s degree and MBA in Finance from St. John’s University, which awarded him an Honorary
Doctorate in Commercial Sciences.
Daniel E. Zucchi. Mr.
Zucchi is President of Zucchi & Associates, a marketing and communications consulting firm. Mr. Zucchi serves on the boards of
other funds in the Gabelli Fund Complex. Mr. Zucchi served as a board member and an investor in Anduro Holdings Inc., a manufacturer
of consumer packaging. He served as a board member and was one of the initial investors in Cypress Care LLC, a pharmacy benefit
management company. In addition, Mr. Zucchi was a Senior Executive at Time Warner and the Hearst Corporation for over thirty years.
In the public sector, Mr. Zucchi has served as a locally-elected government official, and most recently, since 2009, as a member of
the Westchester County Executive’s task force. Mr. Zucchi is a graduate of the University of Connecticut and attended the
Harvard AAAA program during his tenure at Time Warner. He resides in Jupiter, Florida.
Directors – Leadership Structure and Oversight Responsibilities
Overall responsibility for general
oversight of the Fund rests with the Board. The Board has appointed Mr. Conn as the Lead Independent Director. The Lead Independent Director
presides over executive sessions of the Directors and also serves between meetings of the Board as a liaison with service providers, officers,
counsel, and other Directors on a wide variety of matters including scheduling agenda items for Board meetings. Designation as such does
not impose on the Lead Independent Director any obligations or standards greater than or different from other Directors. The Board has
established a Nominating Committee and an Audit Committee to assist the Board in the oversight of the management and affairs of the Fund.
The Board also has an ad hoc Proxy Voting Committee that exercises beneficial ownership responsibilities on behalf of the Fund
in selected situations. From time to time, the Board establishes additional committees or informal working groups, such as an ad hoc
Pricing Committee related to securities offerings by the Fund, to address specific matters or assigns one of its members to work with
directors or trustees of other funds in the Fund Complex on special committees or working groups that address complex-wide matters, such
as the multi-fund ad hoc Compensation Committee relating to the compensation of the Chief Compliance Officer for all the funds
in the Fund Complex and a separate multi-fund ad hoc Compensation Committee relating to the compensation of certain other officers
of the closed-end funds in the Fund Complex.
All of the Fund’s Directors,
other than Messrs. Mario J. Gabelli and Christopher J. Marangi, are Independent Directors, and the Board believes it is able to provide
effective oversight of the Fund’s service providers. In addition to providing feedback and direction during Board meetings, the
Independent Directors meet regularly in executive session and chair all committees of the Board.
The Fund’s operations entail
a variety of risks, including investment, administration, valuation, and a range of compliance matters. Although the Adviser, the sub-administrator,
and the officers of the Fund are responsible for managing these risks on a day-to-day basis within the framework of their established
risk management functions, the Board also addresses risk management of the Fund through its meetings and those of the committees and working
groups. As part of its general oversight, the Board reviews with the Adviser at Board meetings the levels and types of risks, including
options risk being undertaken by the Fund, and the Audit Committee discusses the Fund’s risk management and controls with the independent
registered public accounting firm engaged by the Fund. The Board reviews valuation policies and procedures and the valuations of specific
illiquid securities. The Board also receives periodic reports from the Fund’s Chief Compliance Officer regarding compliance matters
relating to the Fund and its major service providers, including results of the implementation and testing of the Fund’s and such
providers’ compliance programs. The Board’s oversight function is facilitated by management reporting processes designed to
provide visibility to the Board regarding the identification, assessment and management of critical risks, and the controls and policies
and procedures used to mitigate those risks. The Board reviews its role in supervising the Fund’s risk management from time to time
and may make changes at its discretion at any time.
The Board has determined that its
leadership structure is appropriate for the Fund because it enables the Board to exercise informed and independent judgment over matters
under its purview, allocates responsibility among committees in a manner that fosters effective oversight, and allows the Board to devote
appropriate resources to specific issues in a flexible manner as they arise. The Board periodically reviews its leadership structure as
well as its overall structure, composition, and functioning, and may make changes at its discretion at any time.
Beneficial Ownership of Shares Held in the Fund and the Family of Investment
Companies for each Director and Nominee for Election as Director
Set forth in the table below is
the dollar range of equity securities in the Fund beneficially owned by each Director and nominee for election as Director and the aggregate
dollar range of equity securities in the Fund Complex beneficially owned by each Director and nominee for election as Director.
Name of Director/Nominee |
|
Dollar Range
of Equity
Securities Held
in the Fund*(1) |
|
Aggregate
Dollar Range of Equity
Securities Held in the
Family of Investment Companies*(1)(2) |
INTERESTED DIRECTORS: |
|
|
|
|
Mario J. Gabelli |
|
E |
|
E |
Christopher J. Marangi |
|
D |
|
E |
INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS/NOMINEES: |
|
|
|
|
Calgary Avansino |
|
A |
|
A |
John Birch |
|
C |
|
E |
Elizabeth C. Bogan |
|
A |
|
E |
Anthony S. Colavita |
|
A |
|
A |
James P. Conn |
|
C |
|
E |
Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr. |
|
A |
|
E |
Kuni Nakamura |
|
D |
|
E |
Werner J. Roeder |
|
A |
|
E |
Salvatore J. Zizza |
|
D |
|
E |
Daniel E. Zucchi |
|
A |
|
E |
| A. | None |
| B. | $1 – $10,000 |
| C. | $10,001 – $50,000 |
| D. | $50,001 – $100,000 |
| E. | Over $100,000 |
All shares were valued as of December 31, 2022.
(1) | This information has been furnished by each Director and nominee for election as Director as of December
31, 2022. “Beneficial Ownership” is determined in accordance with Rule 16a-l(a)(2) of the 1934 Act. |
(2) | The term “Family of Investment Companies” includes two or more registered funds
that share the same investment adviser or principal underwriter and hold themselves out to investors as related companies for purposes
of investment and investor services. Currently, the registered funds that comprise the “Fund Complex” are identical
to those that comprise the “Family of Investment Companies.” |
Set forth in the table below, with respect to each Director,
nominee for election as Director and executive officer of the Fund, is the amount of shares beneficially owned by such person.
|
|
Amount and Nature of |
|
Percent of Shares |
Name of Director/Nominee/Officer |
|
Beneficial Ownership(1) |
|
Outstanding(2) |
|
|
|
|
|
INTERESTED DIRECTORS: |
|
|
|
|
Mario J. Gabelli |
|
2,564,692(3) |
|
9.3% |
Christopher J. Marangi |
|
1,107 |
|
* |
|
|
2,000 Series E Preferred |
|
* |
|
|
2,000 Series G Preferred |
|
* |
|
|
|
|
|
INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS/NOMINEES: |
|
|
|
|
Calgary Avansino |
|
0 |
|
* |
John Birch |
|
4,560 |
|
* |
Elizabeth C. Bogan |
|
0 |
|
* |
Anthony S. Colavita |
|
0 |
|
* |
James P. Conn |
|
3,350 |
|
* |
Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr. |
|
0 |
|
* |
Kuni Nakamura |
|
16,103 |
|
* |
Werner J. Roeder |
|
0 |
|
* |
Salvatore J. Zizza |
|
8,829 |
|
* |
|
|
900 Series E Preferred(4) |
|
* |
Daniel E. Zucchi |
|
0 |
|
* |
|
|
|
|
|
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS: |
|
|
|
|
John C. Ball |
|
0 |
|
* |
Peter Goldstein |
|
0 |
|
* |
Richard J. Walz |
|
0 |
|
* |
(1) | This information has been furnished by each Director, including each nominee for election as Director,
and executive officer as of December 31, 2022. “Beneficial Ownership” is determined in accordance with Rule
13d-3 of the 1934 Act. Reflects ownership of Common Stock unless otherwise noted. |
(2) | An asterisk indicates that the ownership amount constitutes less than 1% of the total shares outstanding.
The ownership of the Directors, including nominees for election as Director, and executive officers as a group constitutes 9.4% of the
total Common Stock outstanding and less than 1.0% of the total Preferred Stock outstanding. |
(3) | Includes 977,315 shares of Common Stock owned by Mr. Gabelli; 1,148,000 shares owned by GGCP, Inc. (GGCP),
of which Mr. Gabelli is the Chief Executive Officer, a director, and the controlling shareholder; 436,459 shares owned by Associated Capital
Group, Inc. (ACG), of which Mr. Gabelli is the Executive Chair and controlling shareholder; 2,918 shares owned by Gabelli & Company
Investment Advisers, Inc. (GCIA), a majority owned subsidiary of Associated Capital Group, Inc. Mr. Gabelli has less than a 100% interest
in each of these entities and disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares owned by these entities which are in excess of his indirect
pecuniary interest. |
(4) | All 900 Series E Preferred Stock are owned by Mr. Zizza’s spouse. |
Set forth in the table below is
the amount of interests beneficially owned by each Independent Director, nominee for election as an Independent Director or his or her
family member, as applicable, in a person, other than a registered investment company, that may be deemed to be controlled by the Fund’s
Adviser and/or affiliates (including Mario J. Gabelli) and in that event would be deemed to be under common control with the Fund’s
Adviser.
Name of Independent
Director/Nominee |
|
Name of Owner and
Relationships to
Director/Nominee |
|
Company |
|
Title of Class |
|
Value
of
Interests(1) |
|
Percent of
Class(2) |
James P. Conn |
|
Same |
|
PMV Consumer Acquisitions Corp. |
|
Warrants |
|
$ |
11 |
|
* |
Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr. |
|
Same |
|
Gabelli Associates Limited II E |
|
Membership Interests |
|
$ |
1,551,295 |
|
1.39% |
Kuni Nakamura |
|
Same |
|
The LGL Group, Inc. |
|
Common Stock |
|
$ |
7,031 |
|
* |
Kuni Nakamura |
|
Same |
|
The LGL Group, Inc. |
|
Warrants |
|
$ |
347 |
|
* |
Kuni Nakamura |
|
Same |
|
M-Tron Industries Inc. |
|
Common Stock |
|
$ |
7,595 |
|
* |
Werner J. Roeder |
|
Same |
|
Gabelli Associates Fund II |
|
Membership Interests |
|
$ |
753,665 |
|
* |
Salvatore J. Zizza |
|
Same |
|
Gabelli Associates Fund |
|
Limited
Partner Interests |
|
$ |
3,014,341 |
|
1.55% |
Salvatore J. Zizza |
|
Same |
|
Gabelli Performance Partnership L.P. |
|
Limited Partner Interests |
|
$ |
337,362 |
|
* |
(1) | This information has been furnished as of December 31, 2022. |
(2) | An asterisk indicates that the ownership amount constitutes less than 1% of the total interests outstanding. |
The Fund pays each Independent
Director an annual retainer of $6,000 plus $500 for each Board meeting attended and each Independent Director is reimbursed by the
Fund for any out-of-pocket expenses incurred in attending meetings. All Board committee members receive $1,000 per meeting attended,
the Audit Committee Chairman receives an annual fee of $3,000, and the Nominating Committee Chairman and the Lead Independent
Director each receive an annual fee of $2,000. A Director may receive a single meeting fee, allocated among the participating funds,
for participation in certain meetings on behalf of multiple funds. The aggregate remuneration (excluding out-of-pocket expenses)
paid by the Fund to such Directors during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022, amounted to $86,000. During the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2022, the Directors of the Fund met four times, all of which were regular quarterly Board meetings. Each Director then
serving in such capacity attended at least 75% of the Board meetings and of any committee of which he or she is a member.
The Audit Committee and Audit Committee Report
The role of the Fund’s Audit
Committee is to assist the Board of Directors in its oversight of (i) the quality and integrity of the Fund’s financial statement
reporting process and the independent audit and reviews thereof; (ii) the Fund’s accounting and financial reporting policies and
practices, its internal controls, and, as appropriate, the internal controls of certain of its service providers; (iii) the Fund’s
compliance with legal and regulatory requirements; and (iv) the independent registered public accounting firm’s qualifications,
independence, and performance. The Audit Committee also is required to prepare an audit committee report pursuant to the rules of the
SEC for inclusion in the Fund’s annual proxy statement. The Audit Committee operates pursuant to the Audit Committee Charter (the
“Audit Charter”) that was most recently reviewed and approved by the Board of Directors on February 15, 2023.
The Audit Charter is available in the Closed-End Funds – Corporate Governance section on the Fund’s website at www.gabelli.com.
Pursuant to the Audit Charter, the
Audit Committee is responsible for conferring with the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm, reviewing annual financial
statements, approving the selection of the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm, and overseeing the Fund’s
internal controls. The Audit Charter also contains provisions relating to the pre-approval by the Audit Committee of audit and non-audit
services to be provided by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (“PricewaterhouseCoopers”) to the Fund and to the Adviser
and certain of its affiliates. The Audit Committee advises the full Board with respect to accounting, auditing, and financial matters
affecting the Fund. As set forth in the Audit Charter, management is responsible for maintaining appropriate systems for accounting and
internal control, and the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm is responsible for planning and carrying out proper
audits and reviews. The independent registered public accounting firm is ultimately accountable to the Board of Directors and to the Audit
Committee, as representatives of stockholders. The independent registered public accounting firm for the Fund reports directly to the
Audit Committee.
In performing its oversight function,
at a meeting held on February 13, 2023, the Audit Committee reviewed and discussed with management of the Fund and PricewaterhouseCoopers,
the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ended December
31, 2022, the audited financial statements of the Fund as of and for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022, and the conduct of the audit
of such financial statements.
In addition, the Audit Committee discussed with PricewaterhouseCoopers
the accounting principles applied by the Fund and such other matters brought to the attention of the Audit Committee by PricewaterhouseCoopers
as required by PCAOB auditing standards and rules. The Audit Committee also received from PricewaterhouseCoopers the written disclosures
and statements required by the SEC’s independence rules, delineating relationships between PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Fund, and discussed
the impact that any such relationships might have on the objectivity and independence of PricewaterhouseCoopers as the independent registered
public accounting firm.
As set forth above, and as more
fully set forth in the Charter, the Audit Committee has significant duties and powers in its oversight role with respect to the Fund’s
financial reporting procedures, internal control systems, and the independent audit process.
The members of the Audit
Committee are not, and do not represent themselves to be, professionally engaged in the practice of auditing or accounting and are
not employed by the Fund for accounting, financial management, or internal control purposes. Moreover, the Audit Committee relies on
and makes no independent verification of the facts presented to it or representations made by management or the Fund’s
independent registered public accounting firm. Accordingly, the Audit Committee’s oversight does not provide an independent
basis to determine that management has maintained appropriate accounting and/or financial reporting principles and policies, or
internal controls and procedures designed to assure compliance with accounting standards and applicable laws and regulations.
Furthermore, the Audit Committee’s considerations and discussions referred to above do not provide assurance that the audit of
the Fund’s financial statements has been carried out in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB or that the financial
statements are presented in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
Based on its consideration of the
audited financial statements and the discussions referred to above with management and PricewaterhouseCoopers, and subject to the limitations
on the responsibilities and role of the Audit Committee set forth in the Audit Charter and those discussed above, the Audit Committee
recommended to the Fund’s Board of Directors that the Fund’s audited financial statements be included in the Fund’s
Annual Report for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022.
Submitted by the Audit Committee of the Fund’s Board of Directors
Kuni Nakamura, Chairman
Werner J. Roeder, M.D.
Salvatore J. Zizza
February 13, 2023
The Audit Committee met two times
during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022. The Audit Committee is composed of three of the Fund’s Independent Directors, namely
Messrs. Nakamura (Chairman), Roeder, and Zizza. Each member of the Audit Committee has been determined by the Board of Directors to be
financially literate, and independent as independence is defined in the listing standards of the NYSE. Mr. Nakamura has been designated
as the Fund’s audit committee financial expert, as defined in Items 407(d)(5)(ii) and (iii) of Regulation S-K.
Nominating Committee
The Board of Directors has a Nominating
Committee composed of two Independent Directors, Messrs. Nakamura (Chairman) and Zizza, who are each independent as independence is determined under
the guidelines of the NYSE. The Nominating Committee met once during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022. The Nominating
Committee is responsible for identifying and recommending qualified candidates to the Board in the event that a position is vacated or
created. The Nominating Committee will consider recommendations by stockholders if a vacancy arises. In considering candidates
submitted by stockholders, the Nominating Committee will take into consideration the needs of the Board, the qualifications of the candidate,
and the interests of stockholders. The Nominating Committee may also take into consideration the number of shares held by the recommending
stockholder and the length of time that
such shares have been held. To recommend a candidate for consideration by
the Nominating Committee, a stockholder must submit the recommendation in writing and must include the following information:
| • | The name of the stockholder and evidence of the stockholder’s ownership of shares of the Fund, including
the number of shares owned and the length of time of ownership; |
| • | The name of the candidate, the candidate’s resume or a listing of his or her qualifications to be
a Director of the Fund, and the person’s consent to be named as a Director if selected by the Nominating Committee and nominated
by the Board of Directors; and |
| • | If requested by the Nominating Committee, a completed and signed director’s questionnaire. |
The stockholder recommendation and
information described above must be sent to the Fund’s Secretary, c/o Gabelli Funds, LLC, One Corporate Center, Rye, NY 10580-1422,
and must be received by the Secretary no less than 120 days, and no more than 150 days prior to the first anniversary of the date of the
proxy statement for the preceding year’s annual meeting, or, if the meeting has moved by more than thirty days from the first anniversary
of the date of the preceding year’s annual meeting, no less than ten days following the date on which public announcement of the
date of such annual meeting is first made.
The Nominating Committee
believes that the minimum qualifications for serving as a Director of the Fund are that the individual demonstrate, by significant
accomplishment in his or her field, an ability to make a meaningful contribution to the Board of Directors’ oversight of the
business and affairs of the Fund and have an impeccable record and reputation for honest and ethical conduct in both his or her
professional and personal activities. In addition, the Nominating Committee examines a candidate’s specific experiences and
skills, time availability in light of other commitments, potential conflicts of interest, and independence from management and the
Fund.
The Nominating Committee also considers
the overall composition of the Board, bearing in mind the benefits that may be derived from having members who have a variety of experiences,
qualifications, attributes or skills useful in overseeing a publicly traded, highly regulated entity such as the Fund. The Fund believes
a nominee for Director should be at least twenty-one years of age and not older than such maximum age, if any, as the Directors may determine,
and shall not be under legal disability. The Directors have not determined a maximum age. The Nominating Committee does not have a formal
policy regarding the consideration of diversity in identifying trustee candidates. For a discussion of experiences, qualifications, attributes,
or skills supporting the appropriateness of each Director’s service on the Fund’s Board, see the biographical information
of the Directors above in the section entitled “Information about Directors and Officers.”
The Fund’s Nominating Committee
adopted a charter on May 12, 2004, and amended the charter on November 17, 2004. The charter is available in the Closed-End Funds –
Corporate Governance section on the Fund’s website at www.gabelli.com.
Other Board Related Matters
The Board of Directors has established
the following procedures in order to facilitate communications among the Board and the stockholders of the Fund and other interested parties.
Receipt of Communications
Stockholders and other interested
parties may contact the Board or any member of the Board by mail or electronically. To communicate with the Board or any member of the
Board, correspondence should be addressed to the Board or the Board member(s) with whom you wish to communicate by either name or title.
All such correspondence should be sent to The Gabelli Multimedia Trust Inc., c/o Gabelli Funds, LLC, One Corporate Center, Rye, NY 10580-1422.
To communicate with the Board electronically, stockholders may go to the corporate website at www.gabelli.com under the heading “Contact
Us/Contact Information/Email/Board of Directors (Gabelli Closed-End Funds).”
Forwarding the Communications
All communications received will
be opened by the office of the General Counsel of the Adviser for the sole purpose of determining whether the contents represent a message
to one or more Directors. The office of the General Counsel will forward promptly to the addressee(s) any contents that relate to the
Fund and that are not in the nature
of advertising, promotions of a product or service, or patently offensive
or otherwise objectionable material. In the case of communications to the Board of Directors or any committee or group of members of the
Board, the General Counsel’s office will make sufficient copies of the contents to send to each Director who is a member of the
group or committee to which the envelope or e-mail is addressed.
The Fund does not expect Directors or nominees for election
as Director to attend the Meeting. No Director or nominee for election as Director attended the Fund’s annual meeting of stockholders
held on May 9, 2022.
The following table sets forth certain information regarding
the compensation of the Directors by the Fund and officers, if any, who were compensated by the Fund rather than the Adviser for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2022.
COMPENSATION TABLE
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2022
Name of Person and Position |
| Aggregate Compensation from the Fund |
| Aggregate
Compensation from the Fund
and Fund Complex Paid to Directors* |
INTERESTED DIRECTORS: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mario J. Gabelli |
|
$ |
0 |
|
|
$ |
0 |
(0) |
|
Chairman and Chief Investment Officer |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Christopher J. Marangi |
|
$ |
0 |
|
|
$ |
0 |
(0) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS/NOMINEES: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Calgary Avansino |
|
$ |
8,000 |
|
|
$ |
49,000 |
(5) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
John Birch |
|
$ |
8,000 |
|
|
$ |
40,000 |
(8) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Elizabeth C. Bogan |
|
$ |
8,000 |
|
|
$ |
153,000 |
(12) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Anthony S. Colavita |
|
$ |
8,000 |
|
|
$ |
168,000 |
(22) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James P. Conn |
|
$ |
10,000 |
|
|
$ |
279,000 |
(23) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr. |
|
$ |
8,000 |
|
|
$ |
157,000 |
(11) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kuni Nakamura |
|
$ |
9,500 |
|
|
$ |
351,125 |
(36) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Werner J. Roeder |
|
$ |
9,000 |
|
|
$ |
160,500 |
(20) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Salvatore J. Zizza |
|
$ |
9,500 |
|
|
$ |
323,000 |
(34) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Daniel E. Zucchi |
|
$ |
8,000 |
|
|
$ |
32,000 |
(3) |
|
Director |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
OFFICER: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Carter W. Austin |
|
$ |
64,981 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vice President and Ombudsman |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* | Represents the total compensation paid to such persons during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022,
by investment companies (including the Fund) or portfolios that are part of the Fund Complex. The number in parentheses represents the
number of such investment companies and portfolios. |
Required Vote
The election of each of the listed
nominees for Director of the Fund requires the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the applicable class or classes of shares
of the Fund present or represented by proxy at the Meeting, provided a quorum is present.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS, INCLUDING
THE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS, UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT THE STOCKHOLDERS VOTE “FOR” THE ELECTION OF EACH APPLICABLE
NOMINEE.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Independent Registered Public Accounting
Firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers, 300 Madison
Avenue, New York, New York 10017, has been selected to serve as the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm for the
fiscal year ending December 31, 2023. PricewaterhouseCoopers acted as the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022. The Fund knows of no direct financial or material indirect financial interest of PricewaterhouseCoopers
in the Fund. A representative of PricewaterhouseCoopers will not be present at the Meeting, but will be available by telephone and will
have an opportunity to make a statement, if asked, and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.
Set forth in the table below are
audit fees and non-audit related fees billed to the Fund by PricewaterhouseCoopers for professional services received during and for the
fiscal years ended December 31, 2021 and 2022, respectively.
Fiscal Year Ended |
|
|
|
Audit |
|
|
|
|
December 31 |
|
Audit Fees |
|
Related Fees |
|
Tax Fees* |
|
All Other Fees |
2021 |
|
$45,049 |
|
— |
|
$4,335 |
|
$33,000 |
2022 |
|
$47,301 |
|
— |
|
$4,550 |
|
— |
* | “Tax Fees” are those fees billed by PricewaterhouseCoopers in connection with
tax compliance services, including primarily the review of the Fund’s income tax returns. |
The Fund’s Audit Charter requires
that the Audit Committee pre-approve all audit and non-audit services to be provided by the independent registered public accounting firm
to the Fund, and all non-audit services to be provided by the independent registered public accounting firm to the Fund’s Adviser
and service providers controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the Fund’s Adviser (“affiliates”)
that provide ongoing services to the Fund (a “Covered Services Provider”), if the engagement relates directly
to the operations and financial reporting of the Fund. The Audit Committee may delegate its responsibility to pre-approve any such audit
and permissible non-audit services to the Chairman of the Audit Committee, and the Chairman must report his decision(s) to the Audit Committee
at its next regularly scheduled meeting after the Chairman’s pre-approval of such services. The Audit Committee may also establish
detailed pre-approval policies and procedures for pre-approval of such services in accordance with applicable laws, including the delegation
of some or all of the Audit Committee’s pre-approval responsibilities to other persons (other than the Adviser or the Fund’s
officers). Pre-approval by the Audit Committee of any permissible non-audit services is not required so long as: (i) the aggregate amount
of all such permissible non-audit services provided to the Fund, the Adviser, and any Covered Services Provider constitutes not more than
5% of the total amount of revenues paid by the Fund to its independent registered public accounting firm during the year in which the
permissible non-audit services are provided; (ii) the permissible non-audit services were not recognized by the Fund at the time of the
engagement to be non-audit services; and (iii) such services are promptly brought to the attention of the Audit Committee and approved
by the Audit Committee or the Chairman prior to the completion of the audit. All of the audit, audit related, and tax services described
above for which PricewaterhouseCoopers billed the Fund fees for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2021 and December 31, 2022, were pre-approved
by the Audit Committee. All other fees for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021, reflected in the table above relate to services provided
in review of the registration statement.
For the fiscal years ended December
31, 2021 and 2022, PricewaterhouseCoopers has represented to the Fund that it did not provide any non-audit services (or bill any fees
for such services) to the Adviser or any Covered Services Provider.
The Audit Committee was not required
to consider whether the provision of non-audit services that were rendered to the Adviser or Covered Service Providers that were not pre-approved
was compatible with maintaining PricewaterhouseCoopers’ independence.
The Investment Adviser and Administrator
Gabelli Funds, LLC is the Fund’s
Adviser and Administrator and its business address is One Corporate Center, Rye, New York 10580-1422.
Delinquent Section 16(a) Reports
Section 16(a) of the 1934 Act and
Section 30(h) of the 1940 Act, and the rules thereunder, require the Fund’s executive officers and Directors, executive officers
and directors of the Adviser, certain other affiliated persons of the Adviser, and persons who own more than 10% of a registered class
of the Fund’s securities to file reports of ownership and changes in ownership with the SEC and the NYSE and to furnish the Fund
with copies of all Section 16(a) forms they file. Based solely on the Fund’s review of Forms 3 and 4 and amendments thereto filed
electronically with the SEC during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022, the Fund believes that during that year such persons complied
with all such applicable filing requirements.
Broker Non-Votes and Abstentions
For purposes of determining the
presence of a quorum for transacting business related to the Proposal at the Meeting, abstentions, if any, will be treated as shares that
are present. Accordingly, for purposes of counting votes, shares represented by abstentions will have the same effect as votes against
the Proposal, for which the required vote is a majority of all the votes present for each nominee. Since banks and brokers will have discretionary
authority to vote shares in the absence of voting instructions from stockholders with respect to the Proposal, there will be no broker
“non-votes” (that is, proxies from brokers or nominees indicating that such persons have not received instructions
from the beneficial owner or other persons entitled to vote shares on a particular matter with respect to which the brokers or nominees
do not have discretionary voting power).
The affirmative vote of a majority
of votes present for each nominee at the Meeting or represented by proxy, at which a quorum is present, is necessary for the election
of a Director. Abstentions will have the same effect as votes against as to the election of each Director-nominee, although they will
be considered present for the purpose of determining the presence of a quorum.
Stockholders of the Fund will be
informed of the voting results of the Meeting in the Fund’s Semiannual Report for the six months ending June 30, 2023.
“Householding”
Please note that only one document
(i.e., an annual or semiannual report or set of proxy soliciting materials) may be delivered to two or more stockholders of the
Fund who share an address, unless the Fund has received instructions to the contrary. To request a separate copy of a document, or for
instructions regarding how to request a separate copy of these documents or regarding how to request a single copy if multiple copies
of these documents are received, stockholders should contact the Fund at the address and phone number set forth above.
Maryland Control Share Acquisition
Act
On February 16,
2023, the Fund elected, by resolution unanimously adopted by the Board of Directors of the Fund in accordance with Section
3-702(c)(4) of the MGCL, to be subject to the Maryland Control Share Acquisition Act (the “Control Share Act”),
effective immediately. The Control Share Act only applies to acquisitions of Fund shares on or after February 16, 2023.
Under
the MGCL, the Control Share Act provides that a holder of control shares of a Maryland corporation acquired in a control share acquisition
has no voting rights with respect to those shares except to the extent approved by a vote of two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast
on the matter. Shares owned by the acquiror, by officers or by directors who are employees of the corporation are excluded from shares
entitled to vote on the matter. Control shares are voting shares of stock which, if aggregated with all other shares of stock owned by
the acquiror or in respect of which the acquiror is able to exercise or direct the exercise of voting power (except solely by virtue
of a revocable proxy), would entitle the acquiror to exercise voting power in electing directors within one of the following ranges of
voting power:
• | one-tenth or more but less than one-third; |
| |
• | one-third or more but less than a majority; or |
| |
• | a majority or more of all voting power. |
The
requisite shareholder approval must be obtained each time an acquiror crosses one of the thresholds of voting power set forth above.
Control shares do not include shares the acquiring person is then entitled to vote as a result of having previously obtained shareholder
approval. A control share acquisition means the acquisition of issued and outstanding control shares, subject to certain exceptions.
A
person who has made or proposes to make a control share acquisition may compel the board of directors of the corporation to call a
special meeting of shareholders to be held within 50 days of demand to consider the voting rights of the shares. The right to compel
the calling of a special meeting is subject to the satisfaction of certain conditions, including an undertaking to pay the expenses
of the meeting. If no request for a meeting is made, the corporation may itself present the question at any shareholders
meeting.
If voting
rights are not approved at the meeting or if the acquiring person does not deliver an acquiring person statement as required by the statute,
then the corporation may redeem for fair value any or all of the control shares, except those for which voting rights have previously
been approved. The right of the corporation to redeem control shares is subject to certain conditions and limitations, including, compliance
with the 1940 Act. Fair value is determined, without regard to the absence of voting rights for the control shares, as of the date of
the last control share acquisition by the acquiror or of any meeting of shareholders at which the voting rights of the shares are considered
and not approved. If voting rights for control shares are approved at a shareholders meeting and the acquiror becomes entitled to vote
a majority of the shares entitled to vote, all other shareholders may exercise appraisal rights. The fair value of the shares as determined
for purposes of appraisal rights may not be less than the highest price per share paid by the acquiror in the control share acquisition.
The
Control Share Act does not apply (a) to shares acquired in a merger, consolidation or share exchange if the corporation is a party
to the transaction or (b) to acquisitions approved or exempted by the charter or bylaws of the corporation. In connection with the
Fund’s election to be subject to the Control Share Act, the Fund’s Board of Directors amended the Fund’s bylaws to
exempt the Fund’s preferred stock from the Control Share Act. This exemption applies to the Fund’s outstanding preferred
stock and to any preferred stock it may issue in the future.
The foregoing
is only a summary of the material terms of the Control Share Act. Shareholders should consult their own counsel with respect to the application
of the Control Share Act to any particular circumstance. Some uncertainty around the general application under the 1940 Act of state
control share statutes exists as a result of recent court decisions. Additionally, in some circumstances uncertainty may also exist in
how to enforce the control share restrictions contained in state control share statutes against beneficial owners who hold their shares
through financial intermediaries.
OTHER MATTERS TO COME BEFORE THE MEETING
The Directors of the Fund do not
intend to present any other business at the Meeting, nor are they aware that any stockholder intends to do so. If, however, any other
matters are properly brought before the Meeting, the persons named in the accompanying proxy will vote thereon in accordance with their
discretion.
STOCKHOLDER NOMINATIONS AND PROPOSALS
All proposals by stockholders of
the Fund that are intended to be presented at the Fund’s next Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held in 2024 (the “2024
Annual Meeting”) must be received by the Fund for consideration for inclusion in the Fund’s 2024 proxy statement and
proxy relating to that meeting no later than December 14, 2023. Rule 14a-8 under the 1934 Act (“Rule 14a-8”),
specifies a number of procedural and eligibility requirements to be satisfied by a stockholder submitting a proposal for inclusion in
the Fund’s proxy materials pursuant to this Rule. Any stockholder contemplating submissions of such a proposal is referred to Rule
14a-8.
The Fund’s By-Laws require
stockholders that wish to nominate Directors or make proposals to be voted on at an Annual Meeting of the Fund’s Stockholders (and
which are not proposed to be included in the Fund’s proxy materials pursuant to Rule 14a-8 under the 1934 Act) to provide timely
notice of the nomination or proposal in writing. To be considered timely for the 2024 Annual Meeting, any such notice must be delivered
to or mailed and received at the principal executive offices of the Fund at the address set forth on the first page of this proxy statement
no earlier than 9:00 a.m. Eastern time on November 14, 2023, and no later than 5:00 p.m. Eastern time on December 14, 2023; provided, however, that if the 2024 Annual Meeting
is to be held on a date that is earlier than April 22, 2024, or later
than June 21, 2024, such notice must be received by the Fund
no later than 5:00 p.m. Eastern time on the tenth day following the date on which public announcement of the date of the 2024 Annual Meeting
was first made. Any such notice by a stockholder shall set forth the information required by the Fund’s By-Laws with respect to
each nomination or matter the stockholder proposes to bring before the 2024 Annual Meeting.
IT IS IMPORTANT THAT PROXIES BE RETURNED PROMPTLY.
STOCKHOLDERS MAY PROVIDE THEIR
VOTE BY TELEPHONE OR THE INTERNET BY FOLLOWING THE INSTRUCTIONS ACCOMPANYING THE PROXY CARD, VOTING INSTRUCTION FORM OR SET FORTH IN THE
NOTICE OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS.
April 12, 2023
(This Page Intentionally Left Blank.)
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