January 25, 2016
2015 YEAR-END SECURITIES LITIGATION UPDATE
To Our Clients and Friends:
The year was yet another eventful one in securities litigation, from the Supreme Court's gamechanging opinion in Omnicare regarding liability for opinion statements, to several significant
opinions out of the Delaware courts regarding, among other things, financial advisor liability and the
apparent end to disclosure-only settlements. The year-end update highlights what you most need to
know in securities litigation developments and trends for the last half of 2015:
•
Delaware courts put an end to so-called disclosure-only settlements, criticizing and then
withholding approval for settlement agreements that provide a broad release of claims in
exchange for additional disclosures (and, of course, fees for plaintiffs' lawyers). That message
was just recently reinforced by the Chancery Court's opinion in In re Trulia Inc. Stockholder
Litig.
Whether, as many predict, this development will lead to a decline in merger objection
litigation remains to be seen.
•
Delaware courts issued several opinions that should be considered a warning to financial
advisors that their disclosures of potential conflicts and their conduct in advising and informing
boards throughout a sales process may be subject to increased scrutiny in Delaware.
•
The Chancery Court found merger prices to be fair value in a trio of notable appraisal cases this
year, rejecting management and expert cash-flow projections as unreliable.
•
As for federal securities law developments, we highlight the Tenth Circuit's opinion applying
Omnicare – the only appellate court opinion to have reached opinion statement liability since
the Supreme Court issued its opinion. We also highlight district court opinion applying the
Omnicare analysis and note the circuits where post-Omnicare appeals are poised for resolution
in 2016.
•
In a similar vein, we analyze post-Halliburton II opinions below, including the Halliburton
district court's opinion and an issue posed for a possible Halliburton III.
•
The Supreme Court heard oral argument in a challenge to the scope of Section 27 and whether
a state court had jurisdiction over purported state law claims brought to enforce liability or
duties created by the Exchange Act or rules and regulations thereunder. The briefs and oral
argument are discussed in detail below.
.
We highlight these and other notable developments in securities litigation in our 2015 Year-End
Securities Litigation Update below.
I.
Filing and Settlement Trends
New securities class action filings in 2015 showed a marked increase over prior years, and indeed
represented the largest number of securities class actions filed in a single year since 2008. According
to a recent study by NERA Economic Consulting ("NERA"), 234 class actions were filed in 2015,
second only to the 247 cases filed in 2008. The mix of cases filed in 2015 also shifted heavily towards
the technology sector, which experienced a 90% increase in new case filings versus the prior year
total. The number of "merger objection" cases filed in 2015 also increased over the prior year, and
represented approximately 18% of total cases filed in the federal courts.
Cases naming financial
institutions as the primary defendants were at the lowest level in this decade--only 10% of new cases
filed, compared to the high-water mark of 2008, when 38% of all new cases named a financial
institution as the primary defendant.
With respect to settlement trends, median settlements in 2015 were slightly higher than in 2014, while
average settlement amounts increased dramatically. A wide range of cases, both big and small,
comprised the population of settled cases: almost 60% of 2015 settlements were under $10 million,
while roughly 20% were over $50 million. Most significantly, median settlement amounts as a
percentage of investor losses continue to reflect a pattern that has persisted for decades.
In the last ten
years, median settlement amounts have never exceeded about 3% of total investor losses. In 2015, the
percentage declined once again to 1.6%, or roughly half the ten-year high.
A.
Filing Trends
Overall filing rates are reflected in Figure 1 below (all charts courtesy of NERA). Two hundred thirtyfour cases were filed in 2015.
This figure does not include the many such class suits filed in state
courts or the increasing number of state court derivative suits, including many such suits filed in the
Delaware Court of Chancery. Those state court cases, however, represent a "force multiplier" of sorts
in the dynamics of securities litigation in the United States today.
2
. Figure 1:
B.
Mix of Cases Filed in 2015
1.
Filings By Industry Sector
New case filings in 2015 reflect an enormous percentage increase in cases filed against companies in
the technology sector, which led all industry sectors with 22% of all cases filed. The healthcare sector
ranked second with 19% of all new cases, followed by the financial sector with 12%. Cases against
defendants in the healthcare and finance sectors actually dropped year-over-year. The biggest
percentage increase in new case filings in 2015 was in the transportation sector, where new filings
more than doubled from their 2014 levels.
See Figure 2 below.
3
. Figure 2:
2.
Merger Cases
As shown in Figure 3, "merger objection" cases filed in federal court increased slightly from 39 cases
in 2014 to 43 cases in 2015. Note, however, that this statistic only tracks cases filed in federal courts.
The real action in M&A litigation is in state court, particular the Delaware Chancery Court. But as
discussed below in our discussion of "Merger & Acquisition and Proxy Disclosure Litigation Trends,"
the Delaware Court of Chancery has begun to express deep skepticism about these cases, and has
started to reject settlements of M&A cases with no real substance.
4
. Figure 3:
C.
Settlement Trend
As Figure 4 shows, median settlements were $7.3 million in 2015, slightly higher than in 2014. One
can speculate about what may account for the up-and-down trend in median settlements in the last few
years. In any given year, of course, the statistics can mask a number of important factors that
contribute to settlement value, such as (i) the amount of D&O insurance; (ii) the presence of parallel
proceedings, including government investigations and enforcement actions; (iii) the nature of the
events that triggered the suit, such as the announcement of a major restatement; (iv) the range of
provable damages in the case; and (v) whether the suit is brought under Section 10(b) of the Exchange
Act or Section 11 of the Securities Act. Median settlement statistics also can be influenced by the
timing of one or more large settlements, any one of which can skew the numbers.
In 2015, for
example, the number of settlements above $100 million increased from 6% to 13% of all settlements.
At the same time, the number of settlements below $10 million remained flat. This fact partially
explains the overall increase in median settlement values in 2015.
5
. Figure 4:
Whatever the variables, year-over-year movements in median settlement amounts do not necessarily
indicate any long-term trend. Indeed, in the last decade, median settlement amounts have dropped in
six out of ten years, and increased in four out of ten years.
Perhaps all that can be said of overall settlement trends is that plaintiffs' lawyers continue to thrive.
According to NERA, total attorneys' fee awards in 2015 were in excess of $1 billion, representing a big
increase from 2014's total of $672 million. These astronomical amounts have become the "new
normal," as total fees over the last decade have ranged from a low of $671 million to a high of $1.7
billion, with the amounts in seven out of ten years exceeding $1 billion.
II.
Delaware/Derivative Litigation Developments
The year 2015 continued to be an eventful one for Delaware courts, the state legislature, and derivative
litigation generally. As discussed in our Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update, there were important
6
.
legal developments in the first half of the year regarding the defenses corporations and their directors
have to breach of fiduciary duty claims, and several significant rulings concerning the standing of
creditors to pursue derivative claims; director and officer advancement rights; and the ability to settle
shareholder derivative claims by paying a special dividend to shareholders. Additionally, we noted
that Delaware corporations are experiencing a new wave of shareholder "inspection demands" over socalled "dead hand proxy puts."
Delaware developments picked up even more steam in the second half of this year with several
significant developments, including rulings concerning financial advisor liability for aiding and
abetting a director's breach of a fiduciary duty, the difficulty of showing control before a transaction
will be subject to the heightened entire fairness standard, and the Delaware Court of Chancery strongly
signaled that stockholder class actions attacking mergers may no longer be resolved by a corporate
defendant providing additional disclosures to stockholders (with payment of a fee to plaintiffs'
lawyers) in exchange for a broad release of claims against all defendants. Finally, the trend of merger
price as "fair value" in appraisal cases continued in the latter half of 2015.
A.
Delaware Courts Clarify Financial Advisor Liability for Aiding and Abetting a
Director's Breach of a Fiduciary Duty
1.
The Rural/Metro Case
In a highly anticipated ruling, the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed a Chancery Court decision that
directors breached their duty of care in connection with a sales process and that the Board's financial
advisor aided and abetted the breach. RBC Capital Markets, LLC v.
Jervis ("Rural/Metro"), No. 140,
2015, C.A. No.
6350-VCL (Del. Nov. 30, 2015).
The Chancery Court found fault in a special
committee electing to put the company "in play" without the prior approval of the full board and with
the board's failure to properly supervise its financial advisor. In addition, the Chancery Court faulted
the financial advisor for following its own financial interest in pursuing buy-side financing to impact
the sales process, failing to adequately inform the board of the potential conflict, and providing a
flawed financial analysis. The Chancery Court concluded that even though the directors would have
been exculpated from liability for breaches of fiduciary duties, the financial advisor still could be held
liable for aiding and abetting a breach.
The Supreme Court affirmed the principal holdings of the Chancery Court decision, offering several
key takeaways.
First, when directors breach their fiduciary duties in a sales process, the breach may be
a sufficient predicate for aiding and abetting liability post-closing, even if the underlying breach of
fiduciary duty cannot result in money damages under an exculpatory provision in the company's
charter. Second, while the Supreme Court's decision provided no roadmap for a financial advisor's
disclosure of potential conflicts, the decision follows a long line of recent cases analyzing such
conflicts. Thus, the decision follows other Delaware decisions that incentivize financial advisors to
disclose all potential and actual conflicts of interest to boards both at the outset and throughout the
engagement, and for boards to carefully scrutinize such conflicts.
The decision makes clear that
financial advisors do not have a "free pass" to engage in self-interested conduct at the expense of the
board or company, even if the board consents to the conflict or potential conflict. Finally, the Supreme
7
. Court's decision makes clear that while financial advisors must be careful not to create an
"informational vacuum" that may lead the board to breach a fiduciary duty, the advisor does not act as
a "gatekeeper" for the board in a sales process. In so ruling, the Supreme Court limited a principal
(and much discussed) holding of the Chancery Court concerning the "gatekeeper" role of the financial
advisor, but still ruled that financial advisors must ensure that boards are fully informed and
proceeding on accurate information, and that an intentional failure to do so may provide the sufficient
level of scienter to support an aiding and abetting claim.
2.
The Tibco Case
In another decision addressing the duties of financial advisors in transactions, the Court of Chancery in
In re Tibco Software Inc. Stockholders Litig., C.A. No.
10319-CB (Del. Ch. Oct.
20, 2015) elected not
to dismiss a stockholder's claim against Tibco Software Inc.'s financial advisor for aiding and abetting
the board's breach of the duty of care despite dismissing the underlying claim against the board. The
court held that the plaintiff alleged facts that could support a non-exculpated claim for aiding and
abetting, namely that the financial advisor knew the board was breaching its duty of care and
participated in the breach by creating an informational vacuum.
The case arose out of a private equity firm's agreement to purchase Tibco for $24 per share. In arriving
at the share price, both parties relied on inaccurate information as to the number of fully diluted Tibco
shares.
Due to the miscalculation, the implied equity value of the deal was worth $100 million less to
Tibco than both parties expected. After discovering the error, the board met with its financial advisor
to reconsider its recommendation to stockholders and to consider possible re-negotiation with the
buyer. According to the complaint, when the Tibco board was considering taking action, the financial
advisor knew that the Tibco board had not adequately informed itself concerning the circumstances of
the error and failed to disclose material information that the board could have used in its decision on
how to proceed.
The complaint alleged that the financial advisor did so in order to protect its fee in the
transaction.
Like the Rural/Metro decision, Tibco serves as yet another reminder of increased scrutiny of financial
advisors in Delaware and the heightened importance of financial advisors disclosing potential conflicts
and keeping boards fully informed throughout a sales process.
B.
The Beginning of the End of Disclosure-Only Settlements in Delaware
In a series of decisions issued during the second half of 2015, the Delaware Court of Chancery strongly
signaled that stockholder class actions attacking mergers may no longer be resolved by a corporate
defendant providing additional disclosures to stockholders (with payment of a fee to plaintiffs'
lawyers) in exchange for a broad release of claims against all defendants. These cases likely signal the
end to what had been common practice in stockholder litigation routinely challenging mergers. As
Vice Chancellor Glasscock put it in one recent ruling, expectations that the Court will approve such
broad releases in exchange for additional disclosures "will be diminished or eliminated going
forward." In re Riverbed Technologies, Inc.
Stockholders Litigation, C.A. No. 10484-VCG (Del.
Ch.
Sept. 17, 2015). These decisions will significantly impact the landscape of merger litigation in
8
.
Delaware, possibly resulting in fewer strike suits filed in that jurisdiction and rendering such cases
more difficult to resolve quickly and without motion practice.
In the first of this line of cases, Acevedo v. Aeroflex Holding Corp. et al., C.A. No.
9730-VCL (Del.
Ch. Jul. 8, 2015), Vice Chancellor J.
Travis Laster rejected a proposed settlement in which the
defendant made additional disclosures, lowered the break-up fee, and reduced the matching rights
period in exchange for a full release, finding that these changes did not increase the likelihood of a
topping bid and therefore did not produce value for the shareholder class. On the same day, Vice
Chancellor Noble in In re InterMune, Inc. Stockholder Litigation, C.A.
No. 10086-VCN (Del. Ch.
Jul.
8, 2015) deferred ruling on whether to approve a settlement based on additional disclosures and
attorney's fees in exchange for a full release after expressing concern that the breadth of the release
exceeded the scope of the plaintiffs' claims.
Shortly following the Acevedo opinion, yet another order came down regarding challenges to a
disclosure-only settlement. In re Riverbed Technologies, Inc. Stockholders Litigation, C.A.
No.
10484-VCG (Del. Ch. Sept.
17, 2015) involved a settlement of litigation concerning a going-private
transaction. While approving the settlement at issue because of "the reasonable reliance of the parties
on formerly settled practice in this Court," Vice Chancellor Glasscock warned that similar settlements–
where the class obtained arguably minimal benefit in exchange for a global release–would not be
approved going forward because such releases extend "beyond the claims asserted and the results
achieved."
Next, in In re Aruba Networks, Inc. Stockholder Litigation, C.A.
No. 10785-VCL (Del. Ch.
Oct. 9,
2015), the court rejected a proposed class action settlement stemming from Hewlett Packard's purchase
of Aruba Networks. The Vice Chancellor characterized the case as a "harvesting-of-a-fee opportunity"
because it lacked merit when filed, and he criticized the plaintiffs' attorneys for failing to conduct
sufficient investigation to determine whether there were actual problems with the
transaction.
Addressing disclosure-only settlements in general, Vice Chancellor Laster stated that "I
think that we have reached a point where we have to acknowledge that settling for disclosure only and
giving the type of expansive release that has been given has created a real systemic problem." While
acknowledging that he might have approved a settlement that released only disclosure-related claims,
he rejected the settlement because the agreement would have released non-disclosure claims.
In re Silicon Image, Inc., C.A. No. 10601-VCG (Del.
Ch. Dec. 9, 2015) the Chancery Court explicitly
acknowledged its own altered approach to approving disclosure-only settlements.
Vice Chancellor
Glasscock approved a disclosure-only settlement in exchange for a broad release of claims, but
described the matter as "a dying breed of cases" that is unlikely to receive Court approval in the future.
He reiterated his view that equity should recognize parties' reasonable expectations by evaluating
settlements reached prior to the line of cases described in this update, but that settlements reached after
these decisions will receive far greater scrutiny.
Finally and just days ago, in In re Trulia, Inc. Stockholder Litigation, C.A. No.
10020-CB (Del. Ch.
Jan. 22, 2016), the Chancery Court dealt what may be the final blow to disclosure-only
settlements.
Chancellor Bouchard rejected a disclosure-only settlement stemming from Zillow's
9
. takeover of Trulia last year, explaining that "none of the supplemental disclosures were material or
even helpful to Trulia's stockholders," and therefore the settlement did not afford the plaintiffs "any
meaningful consideration to warrant providing a release of claims to the defendants." Chancellor
Bouchard noted that Trulia's stockholders would not receive any financial benefit from the settlement,
and that the only money that would change hands would be Zillow's payment of fees to the plaintiffs'
lawyers. The decision likely signals the end of routine disclosure-only settlements in Delaware, as
Chancellor Bouchard warned that the Chancery Court "will be increasingly vigilant in scrutinizing the
'give' and the 'get' of such settlements to ensure that they are genuinely fair and reasonable to absent
class members."
C.
The Difficulty of Showing Control
A recent decision of the Delaware Supreme Court made clear the need to plead specific facts
demonstrating the existence of a controlling stockholder before a transaction will be subject to the
heightened entire fairness standard. In Corwin v. KKR Financial Holdings LLC, No.
629, 2014 (Del.
Oct. 2, 2015), the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Chancery's dismissal of a class
action by stockholders challenging the stock-for-stock acquisition of KKR Financial Holdings LLC
("Financial Holdings") by KKR & Co ("KKR"). The plaintiff argued that the entire fairness standard of
review presumptively applied to the transaction because KKR was a controlling stockholder of
Financial Holdings since Financial Holdings' primary business was financing KKR's leveraged buyout
activities and Financial Holdings was managed by an affiliate of KKR under a management
agreement.
In dismissing the plaintiff's claim, the Court held that the plaintiff failed to plead facts to support an
inference that KKR was a controlling stockholder.
The Court's ruling was grounded on the fact that
KKR owned less than 1% of Financial Holdings' stock, had no right to appoint directors, and had no
contractual veto right. Financial Holdings had real assets, an independent board, and investors that
were fully informed of its unusual business structure. Without facts sufficient to establish the
existence of a controlling stockholder, the Court held that the business judgment rule applied to the
merger.
The Court further concluded that the business judgment rule also applied because the
transaction was approved by a fully-informed, uncoerced vote of the majority of disinterested
shareholders.
D.
Merger Price as Fair Value Continues to Hold in Appraisal Cases
In our 2015 Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update, we discussed a series of stockholder appraisal
cases in which the Chancery Court found that the "fair value" of stockholders' shares following a
corporate sale was the transaction price per share. In those cases--Merlin Partners LP v. AutoInfo Inc.,
C.A.
No. 8509-VCN (Del. Ch.
Apr. 30, 2015) and Longpath Capital LLC v. Ramtron Int'l, C.A.
No.
8094-VCP (Del. Ch. June 30, 2015)--the Chancery Court rejected both management and expert cashflow projections as unreliable, and looked to the merger price itself to determine fair value.
This trend continued in the latter half of 2015, most recently with Merion Capital LP and Merion
Capital II LP v.
BMC Software, Inc., C.A. No. 8900-VCG (Del.
Ch. Oct. 21, 2015), which arose from
10
.
the sale of BMC to a group of investment firms led by Bain Capital, LLC. Merion Capital LP and
Merion Capital II LP acquired stock in BMC for the sole purpose of seeking appraisal in connection
with the sale. Vice Chancellor Glasscock considered both sides' expert appraisals and even conducted
his own DCF analysis, but found none of them to be sufficiently accurate because all were based on
"historically problematic" management projections with no reliable means of revision. The Court
therefore found the executed merger price to be the best indicator of BMC's fair value.
This case
reaffirms that where the court determines that a deal price was "generated by a process that likely
provided market value," the burden will be on any party challenging that valuation "to point to
evidence in the record showing that the price must be adjusted from market value to 'fair' value."
Particularly where there is reason to doubt other means of valuation, the Chancery Court is likely to
continue to rely on a fairly determined deal price as an indicator of fair value.
III.
False Statements of Opinion Under Section 11 and Beyond: Omnicare and Its
Ramifications
As we described in our 2015 Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update, in March the Supreme Court
issued its long-anticipated opinion in Omnicare, Inc. v. Laborers District Council Construction
Industry Pension Fund, 135 S.
Ct. 1318 (2015). There, as also discussed in our client alert, the Court
resolved a circuit split regarding the scope of liability for false statements of opinion under Section 11
of the Securities Act of 1933.
Section 11 imposes liability where a registration statement "contained
an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact required to be stated therein or
necessary to make the statements therein not misleading." 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a). Unlike some other
provisions of the securities laws that include a scienter requirement, Section 11 imposes essentially
strict liability on issuers, and so a plaintiff "need not prove (as he must to establish certain other
securities offenses) that the defendant acted with any intent to deceive or defraud." Omnicare, 135 S.
Ct.
at 1323.
A.
The Supreme Court's Opinion
The Supreme Court decided two questions in Omnicare: first, "when an opinion itself constitutes a
factual misstatement," and second, "when an opinion may be rendered misleading by the omission of
discrete factual representations." 135 S. Ct. at 1325.
As to the first question, all nine Justices agreed
that "a sincere statement of pure opinion is not an 'untrue statement of material fact,' regardless
whether an investor can ultimately prove the belief wrong." Id. at 1327 (majority opinion); see also id.
at 1333-34 (Scalia, J., concurring); id. at 1337 (Thomas, J., concurring).
Instead, an opinion statement
is false only when the speaker does not "actually hold[] the stated belief," or when the opinion
statement contains an "embedded statement[] of fact" that is untrue. Id. at 1325-27 (majority opinion).
As to the second question, the majority held that an omission makes an opinion statement misleading
under Section 11 where the omitted facts "conflict with what a reasonable investor would take from the
statement itself[.]" 135 S.
Ct. at 1329. That is so because "a reasonable investor may, depending on
the circumstances, understand an opinion statement to convey facts about how the speaker has formed
the opinion--or, otherwise put, about the speaker's basis for holding that view." Id.
at 1328. An
opinion statement therefore becomes misleading "if the real facts are otherwise, but not
11
. provided[.]" Id. "Thus, if a registration statement omits material facts about" the issuer's basis for its
opinion, "and if those facts conflict with what a reasonable investor would take from the [opinion]
statement itself, then § 11's omissions clause creates liability." Id. at 1329.
The Court emphasized, however, that "whether an omission makes an expression of opinion
misleading always depends on context." Id. at 1330.
And the context of an issuer's opinion statement
includes "hedges, disclaimers, and apparently conflicting information" in the registration statement, as
well as "the customs and practices of the relevant industry." Id. Moreover, a Section 11 plaintiff bears
the burden to "identify particular (and material) facts going to the basis for the issuer's opinion--facts
about the inquiry the issuer did or did not conduct or the knowledge it did or did not have--whose
omission makes the opinion statement at issue misleading[.]" Id. at 1332.
The Court noted that this "is
no small task for an investor." Id.
In a concurrence, Justice Scalia explained that he would have confined liability to situations where a
speaker subjectively intends her opinion statement to mislead investors. Id. at 1336 (Scalia, J.,
concurring).
But Justice Kagan, writing for the majority, responded that Section 11 imposes strict
liability for material misstatements and omissions, and hence "discards the common law's intent
requirement." Id. at 1331 n.11 (majority opinion). That Section 11 lacks a scienter requirement was
therefore an important factor in how Omnicare was decided.
Importantly, the Omnicare Court
otherwise left unaddressed how its opinion applies to other securities laws that do require a plaintiff to
establish scienter--for example, Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and SEC Rule
10b-5.
B.
Post-Omnicare Decisions
To date, only one court of appeals, the Tenth Circuit, has issued a substantive opinion applying
Omnicare, though appeals are pending in the Second, Fifth, and Ninth Circuits. Meanwhile, several
district courts have applied the Supreme Court's decision in the context of Section 11 and beyond.
1.
Post-Omnicare Decisions Under the Securities Act
Several district courts have applied Omnicare in cases that--like Omnicare itself--arose under
provisions of the Securities Act of 1933 that impose essentially strict liability for material false
statements or misleading omissions in offering documents.
In Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority v. Orrstown Financial Services, No.
1:12-cv00993, 2015 WL 3833849 (M.D. Pa. June 22, 2015), the plaintiffs alleged that several of the
defendants' opinion statements were misleading under Section 11, including statements that a bank
"had sound credit practices" and "had a strong balance sheet and management." Id.
at *19, *31. The
court dismissed those claims, holding that for an opinion statement to "constitute something beyond
corporate puffery," the statement "must be in some way determinate or verifiable." Id. at *31 (citing
Omnicare, 135 S.
Ct. at 1326). The plaintiffs also alleged that an auditor's statement was misleading
under Section 11's omissions clause, but that claim failed because the plaintiffs "offer[ed] little more
than the conclusory assertion that [the auditor]'s opinions expressed in the Offering Documents 'lacked
a reasonable basis.'" Id.
at *34.
12
. The plaintiffs also lost in In re Velti PLC Securities Litigation, No. 13-cv-03889-WHO, 2015 WL
5736589 (N.D. Cal. Oct.
1, 2015), appeal filed, No. 15-17398 (9th Cir. Dec.
7, 2015). There, the
plaintiffs alleged that the defendants' opinion statements about a company's bad-debt reserves were
misleading under Section 11 because the defendants had omitted information about the company's
accounts receivable in Southeastern Europe. Id.
at *21. The court dismissed that claim, holding that
"the omissions clause does not create a 'general disclosure requirement.'" Id. at *22 (quoting
Omnicare, 135 S.
Ct. at 1332).
And in Medina v. Tremor Video, Inc., No.
13-cv-8364 (PAC), 2015 WL 3540809 (S.D.N.Y. June 5,
2015), appeal filed, No. 15-2178 (2d Cir.
July 1, 2015), the court held that the defendants' registration
statement was not misleading where it contained sufficient "'hedges, disclaimers and qualifications'
addressing the risks associated with each statement of opinion." Id. at *2 (quoting Omnicare, 135 S.
Ct. at 1333).
The plaintiffs fared better in Federal Housing Finance Agency v.
Nomura Holding America, Inc., No.
11cv6201 (DLC), 2015 WL 2183875 (S.D.N.Y. May 11, 2015), appeal filed, No. 15-1874 (2d Cir.
June 10, 2015).
There, the court held that the defendants' stated belief that a company had followed
underwriting guidelines was misleading under Sections 12 and 15 of the Securities Act because the
defendants "'lacked the basis for making those statements that a reasonable investor would
expect.'" Id. at *103 (quoting Omnicare, 135 S. Ct at 1333).
2.
Post-Omnicare Decisions Under Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act
Several courts have applied Omnicare to claims brought under other securities laws, including Section
10(b) and Rule 10b-5, which, like Section 11, prohibit misleading statements and omissions.
Unlike
Section 11, however, a Section 10(b) claim can range far beyond the offering documents and,
critically, also requires a plaintiff to prove that a defendant acted with scienter. In re Kingate Mgmt.
Ltd. Litig., 784 F.3d 128, 137 n.12 (2d Cir.
2015); see also Omnicare, 135 S. Ct. at 1323.
As we reported in our 2015 Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update, the Tenth Circuit applied
Omnicare to a Section 10(b) claim in Nakkhumpun v.
Taylor, 782 F.3d 1142 (10th Cir. 2015), holding
that "[a]n opinion is considered false if the speaker does not actually or reasonably hold that
opinion." Id. at 1159.
The Tenth Circuit, which remains the only court of appeals to have interpreted
Omnicare, then held that the plaintiff was unable to establish scienter because the plaintiff had "not
alleged any facts that would cast doubt on the sincerity or reasonableness of [the defendant]'s statement
of his opinion." Id. (citing Omnicare, 135 S. Ct.
at 1328-29). Thus, the court appears to have used
Omnicare, which dealt with the question of when an opinion statement is objectively misleading under
Section 11, to interpret Section 10(b)'s scienter requirement, which turns on a defendant's subjective
state of mind.
In Firefighters Pension & Relief Fund v. Bulmahn, Nos.
13-3935, 13-6083, 13-6084, 2015 WL
7454598 (E.D. La. Nov.
23, 2015), appeal filed, No. 15-31094 (5th Cir. Dec.
23, 2015), however, the
court expressed doubt that Omnicare applied to the Section 10(b) claim before it: "That Omnicare
concerned a strict liability statute suggests that the Supreme Court's reasoning--which contemplates
13
. liability for statements of opinions that are genuinely held but misleading to a reasonable investor-does not directly apply to" Section 10(b). Id. at *25. Nevertheless, the court said that it would use
Omnicare "as guidance" and "consider the relevant principles articulated in the Supreme Court's
decision." Id.
at *26. The court then held that the plaintiffs had failed to show that the defendants
knew or were reckless in not knowing that their opinions were incorrect (i.e., the defendants lacked
scienter). Id.
at *30; see also, e.g., City of Westland Police & Fire Ret. Sys. v.
Metlife, Inc., No. 12-cv0256 (LAK), 2015 WL 5311196, at *16 (S.D.N.Y. Sept.
11, 2015) (holding that opinion statements
about life-insurance reserves were not misleading where the plaintiff failed to show that the defendants
calculated the reserves in a manner different from what a reasonable investor would have expected); In
re Amarin Corp., No. 13-CV-6663 (FLW) (TJB), 2015 WL 3954190, at *7 n.14 (D.N.J. June 29, 2015)
(holding that an omitted fact did not conflict with what a reasonable investor would have taken from
opinion statements and "assuming, without deciding, that Omnicare applies in the Section 10(b)
context").
In several other Section 10(b) cases, the plaintiffs convinced courts that defendants' opinion statements
were potentially misleading under Omnicare.
For example, in In re Lehman Brothers Securities &
ERISA Litigation, No. 09-md-2017 (LAK), 2015 WL 5514692 (S.D.N.Y. Sept.
18, 2015), the court
held that Omnicare's "reasoning applies with equal force to other provisions of the federal securities
laws, including … Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5[.]" Id. at *5 n.48. The court then held that whether
an auditor's opinion statements about Lehman's financial filings were misleading under Omnicare was
one for the jury.
Id. at *10. The court reasoned that "red flags" at Lehman could conceivably permit a
jury to infer that the auditor did not actually believe the statements when it made them, or that its
opinions were misleading to investors absent disclosure of the purported "red flags." Id.
In an
apparent acknowledgement of the tension between Omnicare and Section 10(b), the court noted that
whether a defendant's statements "are made with the requisite scienter is, of course, another
question." Id. at *10 n.103; see also, e.g., In re Bioscrip, Inc. Sec.
Litig., 95 F. Supp.3d 711, 730
(S.D.N.Y. 2015) (holding that a reasonable investor could read a company's statement of substantial
compliance with the law as a guarantee that the company was unaware of serious investigations into its
conduct); In re Petrobras Sec.
Litig., No. 14-cv-9662 (JSR), 2015 WL 4557364, at *10 (S.D.N.Y. July
30, 2015) (holding that where defendants were aware of extensive corruption, plaintiffs' allegations
were sufficient to infer that defendants did not believe their stated opinion that internal controls were
effective); In re Merck & Co., Inc.
Sec., Derivative & "ERISA" Litig., Nos. 05-1151 (SRC), 05-2367
(SRC), 2015 WL 2250472, at *20-21, *23 (D.N.J. May 13, 2015) (holding that undisclosed data made
the defendants' opinion statements misleading under Omnicare and that Omnicare "illuminate[d]" the
court's Section 10(b) scienter analysis); In re Genworth Fin.
Inc. Sec. Litig., No.
3:14-cv-682, 2015
WL 2061989, at *15 (E.D. Va. May 1, 2015) (holding that defendants' reliance on outdated data made
their opinion statements misleading under Omnicare).
We will continue to monitor closely Omnicare's application, and in particular its application in claims
beyond Section 11, as we expect that courts will continue to grapple with this issue in 2016.
Although
most of the post-Omnicare activity has been at the district court level, appeals are now pending in the
Second, Fifth, and Ninth Circuits that could provide greater clarity on the implications of Omnicare in
other contexts.
14
. IV.
Class Actions Post-Halliburton II: What Halliburton II Means in Practice and the Path to
Possible Halliburton III
Through our three previous updates (here, here, and here), Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc.,
134 S.
Ct. 2398 (2014) (Halliburton II), remained the "case to watch." In upholding the decades-old
fraud-on-the-market doctrine enunciated in Basic Inc. v.
Levinson, 485 U.S. 224 (1988), the Supreme
Court made it clear that plaintiffs in securities class actions can still invoke the rebuttable presumption
of reliance for class certification purposes, despite vigorous arguments by Halliburton and amici
challenging the viability of the presumption in light of recent academic literature casting doubt on
various theories about the efficiency of stock prices. See Halliburton II, 134 S.
Ct. at 2408–10. But
the Court also held that defendants in securities class actions have the opportunity to rebut the
presumption of reliance by showing at the class certification stage that an alleged misrepresentation did
not impact the defendant company's stock price, id.
at 2414, giving defendants an important tool to
narrow the issues and limit exposure early on. Yet, the Court left open some key questions related to
how the decision should be implemented. These questions include: whether traditional burden
shifting under Fed.
R. Evid. 301 applies, and if so, which party carries the burden of persuasion, what
evidence is sufficient to show a lack of price impact, and whether the court can consider challenges to
corrective disclosures in order to show lack of price impact.
In July 2015, the Halliburton district court issued its long-awaited decision on plaintiff's motion to
certify a class after considering both sides' expert opinions and conducting a full-day hearing.
We
provided an overview of that decision in our July 29, 2015 client alert. To recap, the district court
certified the class as to only one of six alleged corrective disclosures. See Erica P.
John Fund, Inc. v.
Halliburton Co., 309 F.R.D. 251, 280 (N.D.
Tex. 2015). This decision gave Halliburton a hard-fought
victory and proved that the Supreme Court's holding has teeth.
As many predicted, the hearing was a
battle of experts. The district court began its analysis by first considering two threshold legal issues-"(1) who has the burden of production and persuasion; and (2) whether [it] should, as part of the price
impact inquiry, rule as a matter of law that particular disclosures are corrective." Id. at 257–58.
After
lengthy analysis, the district court placed both the burdens of production and persuasion on the
defendant and determined that it could not consider whether an alleged corrective disclosure was, in
fact, corrective at the class certification stage. See id. at 260, 262.
However, using expert evidence,
Halliburton was able to avoid class certification on five out of six alleged corrective disclosures. Id. at
280.
As with many Supreme Court rulings, it may take some time for the lower courts to fully comprehend
the implications of Halliburton II, but Halliburton's experience on remand suggests that the opinion
can be used to defeat class certification where the expert's event study and opinions demonstrate that
an alleged misstatement did not affect the price of the stock.
Since the Supreme Court's decision, the
district court's recent decision on remand represents one of several lower courts that have begun the
process of interpreting Halliburton II. Also, the Fifth Circuit granted yet another Rule 23(f)
interlocutory review to consider the Halliburton district court's class certification as to the one
remaining alleged corrective disclosure, which could possibly lead to Halliburton III. These decisions
are beginning to shed light on some of the key questions surrounding how to implement Halliburton II.
15
.
A.
"That was Not a 'Corrective Disclosure'"--Path to Possible Halliburton III
Halliburton argued on remand that "each of the alleged corrective disclosures were not, in fact
corrective." Halliburton, 309 F.R.D. at 260. The district court characterized that part of Halliburton's
argument as "a veiled attempt to assert the 'truth on the market' defense," which it concluded was
relevant to materiality and not ripe for consideration at the class certification stage. Id.
at 261. Instead,
it rendered its decision assuming that "the asserted misrepresentations were, in fact,
misrepresentations, and assum[ing] that the asserted corrective disclosures were [in fact] corrective of
the alleged misrepresentations." Id. at 262.
The district court's interpretation is arguably at odds with the Supreme Court's mandate to consider
"any showing that severs the link" between the alleged misrepresentation and the stock price, but at
least two other district courts to date have considered and rejected the same argument post-Halliburton
II.
See In re Goldman Sachs Grp., Inc. Sec. Litig., No.
10 Civ. 3461, 2015 WL 5613150, at *6
(S.D.N.Y. Sept.
24, 2015); Aranaz v. Catalyst Pharm. Partners, Inc., 302 F.R.D.
657, 670–71 (S.D.
Fla. 2014). In contrast, courts have generally been more receptive to arguments that the alleged
corrective disclosure was already known to and digested by the market, regardless of the truth or
falsity of the statement, than arguments that the alleged corrective disclosure did not actually correct a
prior misstatement.
The Supreme Court explicitly identified a showing that an alleged corrective
disclosure was not "new" as a possible avenue to show a lack of price impact, Halliburton II, 134 S.
Ct. at 2416–17, and the Halliburton district court itself found no price impact based on the market's
knowledge prior to the alleged correction, 309 F.R.D. at 272, 274 (finding no price impact where there
was no announcement "that was not already impounded in the market price of the stock" before the
alleged correction and where "[p]ublic announcements preceded Halliburton's [allegedly corrective]
press release"); see also In re Vivendi Universal, S.A.
Sec. Litig., No. 02-cv-5571, --- F.
Supp. 3d ---,
2015 WL 4758869, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Aug.
11, 2015) (citing Basic, 485 U.S. at 248) (observing that the
showing that the defendant's "statement correcting the misrepresentation was [already] made to, and
digested by, the market" suffices to sever the link of price impact).
The Fifth Circuit is now set to weigh in on whether an argument that an alleged corrective disclosure
was not, in fact, corrective of a prior misstatement is appropriate at the class certification stage. See
Order Granting Mot.
for Leave to Appeal under Fed. R. Civ.
P. 23(f), Erica P. John Fund, Inc.
v.
Halliburton Co., No. 3:02-cv-1152 (N.D. Tex.
Nov. 4, 2015), ECF No. 625.
Notably, though, Judge
Dennis explained in his concurrence why the district court was correct in light of Erica P. John Fund,
Inc. v.
Halliburton Co., 563 U.S. 804, 131 S. Ct.
2179 (2011) (Halliburton I) and Amgen, Inc. v. Conn.
Ret.
Plans & Trust Funds, 133 S. Ct. 1184 (2013), and stated that he concurred in granting leave to
appeal so that "future litigants [can] benefit from the added clarity that [the court] can provide on this
issue."
How courts deal with alleged corrective disclosures is also at issue in the Best Buy case, as we
discussed in our 2015 Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update.
Best Buy appealed--and the Eighth
Circuit granted interlocutory review on--the class certification in IBEW Local 98 Pension Fund v. Best
Buy Co., Inc., No. 11–429 (DWF/FLN), 2014 WL 4746195 (D.
Minn. Aug. 6, 2014).
One of the
issues raised by Best Buy is whether an alleged misrepresentation was "corrective" where there is no
16
. factual nexus between the alleged corrective disclosure and the prior allegedly false or misleading
statement. See Best Buy Br. for Permission to Appeal at 19–22, IBEW Local 98 Pension Fund v. Best
Buy Co., No.
14-8020 (8th Cir. Aug. 19, 2014), appeal accepted, No.
14-3178 (8th Cir.). The Best Buy
court heard oral argument on October 22, 2015, but it has yet to issue an opinion. As discussed in our
2015 Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update, we also await the Second Circuit's decision related to loss
causation in In re Vivendi Universal, S.A.
Sec. Litig., No. 15-108 (2d Cir.).
Oral argument is scheduled
for March 3, 2016. We will provide updates on these upcoming cases as they develop.
B.
Does Traditional Burden Shifting Apply to Rebutting the Fraud-on-the-Market
Presumption?
As mentioned above, the Halliburton district court placed both the burdens of production and
persuasion on Halliburton, despite Halliburton's argument that Federal Rule of Evidence 301 directs
that the burden of persuasion rests with plaintiff; the court reasoned that the fraud-on-the-market
presumption, which is unique to securities class action litigation, entitles the plaintiff to prove price
impact indirectly, and the court could not reconcile a literal application of Rule 301 with the Basic
presumption. Halliburton, 309 F.R.D.
at 259–60 (reasoning that literal application of Rule 301 would
eviscerate the fraud-on-the-market presumption, requiring plaintiff to prove reliance without the aid of
the presumption and dooming class certification). The Halliburton district court is not alone in
reaching this conclusion. See, e.g., City of Sterling Heights Gen.
Emps.' Ret. Sys. v.
Prudential Fin.,
Inc., No. 12–5275, 2015 WL 5097883, at *12 (D.N.J. Aug.
31, 2015) (explaining that the presumption
provides plaintiffs "an indirect way of showing price impact" which is inconsistent with placing burden
on plaintiffs).
A few other courts have mentioned the standard for rebutting the presumption, without elaboration, but
no clear standard has emerged describing defendant's burden to "rebut" the fraud-on-the-market
presumption by showing lack of price impact. See, e.g., In re Goldman Sachs, 2015 WL 5613150, at
*4 n.3 ("Defendants must demonstrate a lack of price impact by a preponderance of the evidence.");
Wallace v. Intralinks, 302 F.R.D.
310, 317–18 (S.D.N.Y. 2014) (observing that "[d]efendants bear the
burden to show a lack of price impact" and rejecting defendant's rebuttal attempt where "Defendant has
not shown that unrelated factors account for the[] price movements"); Aranaz, 302 F.R.D. at 673
(defendant failed to show "no unexpected events negatively affect[ed] .
. . stock price"
"[n]otwithstanding that Defendants have the burden of rebutting the presumption of price impact");
McIntire v.
China MediaExpress Holdings, Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 415, 434 (S.D.N.Y.
2014) ("The
defendant bears the burden to prove a lack of price impact.").
Despite these early decisions, the allocation of the burden of persuasion should not be considered
established. The Eighth Circuit is poised to weigh in on this debate and to possibly shed light on what
plaintiffs would be required to do to carry the burden of persuasion in its forthcoming decision in the
Best Buy case. There, Best Buy argued "[b]ecause the plaintiff has the ultimate burden of
demonstrating that Rule 23's requirements are met, [Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
v. Dukes, 131 S. Ct.
2541,
2551 (2011)], once the defendant produces evidence to rebut the presumption of reliance, class
certification must be denied unless the plaintiff shows by a preponderance of the evidence price impact
of the alleged misstatements." Best Buy Br. for Permission to Appeal, supra, at 13.
17
. C.
What Evidence Demonstrates a Lack of Price Impact?
There is no set playbook for making a "showing that severs the link between the alleged
misrepresentation and either the price received (or paid) by the plaintiff, or his decision to trade at a
fair market price," see Halliburton II, 134 S. Ct. at 2408 (citing Basic, 485 U.S. at 248) (internal
quotation marks omitted), but recent cases provide some guidance.
Detailed and statistically reliable
event studies will be the key tool. See Carpenters Pension Trust Fund of St. Louis v.
Barclays PLC,
310 F.R.D. 69, 86, 94–97 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (observing that "an event study or other rebuttal evidence"
would be "required" in the defendant's rebuttal of the presumption and noting the defendant's failure to
submit its own event study in holding that the defendant failed to rebut the presumption); see also
Halliburton, 309 F.R.D.
at 264–65 (analyzing experts' event studies before concluding that the
defendant rebutted the presumption as to five out of six alleged corrective disclosures). But there is
more to keep in mind for securities-litigation defendants.
Defendants have been most successful by addressing all of the possible stock price movements
associated with plaintiffs' alleged misrepresentations to show that the alleged misrepresentations
carried no price impact and not merely pointing out potential alternative causes of a stock price
change. Likewise, merely attacking plaintiff expert's failure to show price movement on the alleged
misrepresentation date is likely insufficient.
See Barclays, 310 F.R.D. at 95 (explaining that "the
failure of an event study to disprove the null hypothesis with respect to an event does not prove that the
event had no impact on the stock price"). In the Halliburton II remand, the defendant's expert report
provided extensive analysis of the alleged price declines on the corrective disclosure dates and
successfully demonstrated lack of price impact for five out of six dates.
See Halliburton, 309 F.R.D. at
262–64 (describing Halliburton expert's extensive studies and findings). Her analysis used economic
principles that generally apply to securities class actions, along with complex statistical analyses that
are sometimes required by particular situations.
See Jorge Baez et al., NERA Economic Consulting,
Update on Economic Analysis of Price Impact in Securities Class Actions Post-Halliburton II (Aug.
12, 2015), http://www.nera.com/publications/archive/2015/update-on-economic-analysis-of-priceimpact-in-securities-class-.html. By contrast, one district court recently held that defendants failed to
rebut the presumption because they "cannot show that the total decline in the stock price on the
corrective disclosure dates is attributable simply to the market reaction to [alternative causes of stock
price change proffered] and not to the revelation to the market that [the defendant] had made material
misstatements about its conflicts of interest policies and business practices." In re Goldman Sachs,
2015 WL 5613150, at *6; see also Barclays, 310 F.R.D. at 95 (rejecting a defendant's argument that
the plaintiff's expert's "failure to show price impact .
. . is sufficient evidence to show lack of price
impact").
Significantly, Halliburton's expert on remand did not just attack the plaintiff's expert's
methodology and conclusions; she affirmatively showed the court a lack of price impact. See
Halliburton, 309 F.R.D. at 269–80.
Defendants have been less successful with no-price-impact arguments that hinge on a plaintiff's failure
to show loss causation or materiality.
See Halliburton I, 131 S. Ct. at 2183 (plaintiff need not prove
loss causation at the class certification stage to invoke the fraud-on-the-market presumption); Amgen,
133 S.
Ct. at 1191 (same for materiality); see also City of Sterling Heights, 2015 WL 5097883, at *11
18
. (rejecting the defendant's argument that the stock price drop was caused by other contemporaneous
disclosures as an argument that hinges on loss causation, which is distinct from price impact).
Despite this early guidance from lower courts, what Halliburton II means in practice is not set in
stone. We will keep an eye out for further developments.
V.
U.S. Supreme Court Prepares to Decide Circuit Split Over Whether Federal Courts Have
Jurisdiction Over State Law Claims Related to "Naked" Short Sales
As we reported in our 2015 Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update, on June 30, 2015, the Supreme
Court continued its recent trend of taking up important securities law issues and agreed to hear the
appeal in Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v.
Manning, which concerns the jurisdictional
scope of Section 27 of the Exchange Act. The case originated in New Jersey Superior Court, where
plaintiffs alleged that a group of financial institutions violated New Jersey state laws by engaging in
"naked" short-selling of shares of Escala Group, Inc. Although the complaint did not assert a claim
under the federal securities laws, it referenced Regulation SHO, the SEC's rule on shortselling.
Defendants removed the case to federal court, arguing that Section 27 grants federal courts
exclusive jurisdiction over suits alleging violations of the Exchange Act, and that the instant suit was
necessarily premised upon enforcement of the Exchange Act despite asserting only state law
claims. The district court agreed with defendants and denied plaintiffs' motion to remand, but the
Third Circuit reversed, holding that plaintiffs had not alleged a violation of Regulation SHO or the
Exchange Act and no question of federal law was necessarily implicated by plaintiffs' suit. Manning v.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 772 F.3d 158 (3d Cir.
2014). Defendants petitioned the
Supreme Court for certiorari. Presented with a split over the proper interpretation of Section 27
between the Second and Third Circuits, on one hand, and the Fifth and Ninth Circuits, on the other, the
Supreme Court agreed to consider this procedural and jurisdictional question.
Defendants-Petitioners filed their brief with the Supreme Court on September 3, 2015.
Petitioners
relied extensively on Section 27's plain language, which states that federal courts "shall have exclusive
jurisdiction" over suits brought to enforce any liability or duty created by the Exchange Act or the rules
and regulations thereunder, to argue that state courts are barred from hearing these claims. Brief of
Petitioner-Appellant at 19-20, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v.
Manning, No. 14-1132
(Sept. 3, 2015).
The complaint alleged violations of Regulation SHO--although it did not assert an
independent claim on that basis--and petitioners thus argued that federal courts alone must hear
plaintiffs' case. Petitioners also likened Section 27 to similar language in other statutes already found
to grant jurisdiction, which state that federal courts "shall have jurisdiction." Id. at 28-29.
In addition,
petitioners argued that the legislative intent behind Section 27 was to ensure that federal courts provide
uniform interpretation of the Exchange Act, which could occur only if federal courts were granted
exclusive jurisdiction over suits raising Exchange Act issues. Id. at 25.
Finally, petitioners refuted
respondents' argument from an earlier brief that the jurisdiction granted by Section 27 was entirely
subsumed within the standard "federal question" jurisdiction granted by 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Id.
at 3334. In petitioners' view, Section 1331 has been interpreted narrowly to avoid inundating federal courts
with questions of state law, but Section 27 evinces a different, broader federal interest in placing
Exchange Act issues exclusively with federal courts. Id.
at 35-36.
19
. Plaintiffs-Respondents filed their brief on October 23, 2015. Respondents' central argument was that
their suit presented only state law claims and Section 27 does not strip a state court of jurisdiction over
those claims because of a "mere possibility" that an issue related to the Exchange Act might
arise. Brief of Appellee-Respondent at 26-27, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v.
Manning, No.
14-1132 (Oct. 23, 2015). Moreover, respondents maintained that any reference in the
complaint to Regulation SHO was offered as evidence to support their state malfeasance and RICO
claims, and not to assert an actual violation of federal law.
Id. at 30-31. In other words, simply
referencing a federal regulation in the complaint does not turn a state law claim into a federal
one.
Respondents also noted that many states have laws paralleling the federal securities laws, and a
plaintiff could properly choose to invoke the state form of relief without necessarily raising questions
of federal law and invoking federal jurisdiction. Id. at 31-32.
Finally, respondents contested
petitioners' distinctions between Section 27 and Section 1331, contending that Supreme Court
precedent has repeatedly established their synonymous meaning. Id. at 37.
On December 1, the Supreme Court heard oral argument.
Many of the justices--across the political
spectrum--skeptically questioned petitioners' counsel about why a case belongs in federal court if the
face of the complaint only references federal law and does not assert any federal claim. Justice
Kennedy also expressed concern that petitioners' position could burden district court judges by
requiring them to conduct searching examinations of state law claims to determine if they included
violations of the Exchange Act. Justice Breyer noted that the SEC did not join petitioners' arguments,
suggesting that the U.S.
government did not have an interest in having state law claims like those
asserted by respondents heard in federal court. Respondents' arguments also met with some skepticism
by the Court. While respondents urged the Court to leave state courts to adjudicate issues of state law,
the Court pressed respondents about why they included references to Regulation SHO in the complaint
if they only sought to enforce state law.
Respondents' counsel explained that the references to the
regulation were intended to preclude petitioners from asserting a preemption defense. Specifically,
respondents wanted to ensure that petitioners could not try to argue that because they had complied
with Regulation SHO, state law remedies were conflict-preempted and the case, therefore, had to be
dismissed.
If the Court rules in defendants-petitioners' favor, the jurisdiction of federal courts could be
meaningfully expanded, as the relevant language used in Section 27 is also present in other federal
statutes, such as the Natural Gas Act and the Federal Power Act. Plaintiffs could also find it
increasingly difficult to have claims that even arguably implicate the Exchange Act heard in state
court.
By contrast, if the Court finds in favor of plaintiffs-respondents, there is a risk that plaintiffs
may engage in increased forum shopping and artful pleading in attempts to avoid federal court. State
courts may also develop a patchwork of conflicting precedent on issues that concern the Exchange Act
and the SEC's related regulations, subjecting future defendants to uncertain risks of liability.
VI.
Fifth Circuit Decision in Ludlow v. BP: An End to Securities Class Claims Based on
Materialization-of-the-Risk Theory?
A recent federal court of appeals opinion dealt a blow to securities class action plaintiffs, casting
significant doubt on the viability of class claims based on the materialization-of-the-risk theory.
In
20
. Ludlow v. BP, P.L.C., 800 F.3d 674 (5th Cir. 2015), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
affirmed the holding of the U.S.
District Court for the Southern District of Texas that denied class
certification to one class of BP investors over alleged market losses resulting from the Deepwater
Horizon oil spill. Although the Fifth Circuit upheld the class certification of one sub-class based on a
"stock-inflation" model for investors who purchased BP stock after the oil spill, it most notably
affirmed the denial of class certification based on the "materialization-of-the-risk" model for investors
who purchased BP stock before the oil spill ("Pre-Spill plaintiffs"). The Pre-Spill plaintiffs alleged
that purported misrepresentation of the risk of a catastrophic event, such as the Deepwater Horizon oil
spill, and the company's preparedness to prevent and react to such an event, led to investor
losses.
Plaintiffs argued that these losses were measured by "the entire fall in stock prices caused by
materialization of the risk of the spill." Id. at 680. (emphasis original).
The Fifth Circuit reasoned that
misrepresentation of risk-level does not satisfy the requirement from Comcast v. Behrend, 133 S. Ct.
1425, 1433–34 (2013) that the plaintiffs' model of damages must be "susceptible of measurement
across the entire class." Ludlow, 800 F.3d at 683.
This ruling may foreclose--at least in the Fifth
Circuit--securities class actions based on "materialization-of-the-risk" theories and, more generally,
may also deter class claims alleging misleading disclosures regarding risk and uncertainty.
Under Comcast, a court must "conduct a rigorous analysis" to "establish[], before a class could be
certified, congruence between theories of damages and liability." Id. at 686 (citing Comcast, 133 S. Ct.
at 1433).
The purpose of this analysis is to ensure that the damages model "measures only those
damages attributable to [the theory of liability]." Id. (quoting Comcast, 133 S. Ct.
at 1433). As the
Fifth Circuit explained, despite the holding in Halliburton I, that plaintiffs need not prove loss
causation at the certification stage, Comcast nonetheless requires that a court evaluate the damages
model to determine if, conceptually, it could isolate economic loss directly attributable to the claimed
misstatements. See id.
at 687. Striking a balance between Comcast and Halliburton I, the Fifth Circuit
held that the Pre-Spill plaintiffs' theory could not adequately isolate the economic loss resulting from
the alleged misrepresentation. Id.
In this case, the materialization-of-the-risk theory "hinges on a
determination that each plaintiff would not have bought BP stock at all were it not for the alleged
misrepresentations--a determination not derivable as a common question, but rather one requiring
individualized inquiry." Id. at 690 (emphasis original). Key to the plaintiffs' theory of recovery in a
materialization-of-the-risk case is the materiality of the risk disclosures: the theory is that investors
would not have invested had they known the true degree of risk.
However, the court reasoned, each
plaintiff's risk tolerance may differ, and those plaintiffs that may have purchased BP stock even had
they known the "true" risk "cannot be compensated for the materialization of a risk [they] may have
been willing to take." Id. at 691. Thus, because the Pre-Spill plaintiffs' damages model could not
distinguish between those plaintiffs who would have taken a risk on BP regardless and those who
would not, "it cannot provide an adequate measure of class-wide damages under Comcast." Id.
at 690.
Plaintiffs attempted to parlay the fraud-on-the-market presumption of reliance into a related
presumption of loss causation. Id. at 691.
They "argue[d] that if the[y] . . .
prove the prerequisites of
fraud on the market--which they have done--it is presumed that the Pre-Spill Class relied on BP's
misrepresentations in purchasing the [stock] and the misrepresentations were a cause-in-fact of their
losses." Id. The Fifth Circuit rejected this theory. If Basic's requirements are satisfied, the fraud on
the market theory creates a rebuttable presumption that the plaintiffs satisfied transaction causation-21
.
that they relied on the alleged misrepresentation in entering into the securities transaction. But even
assuming the class relied on the risk disclosures, that reliance did not necessarily result in economic
loss. Id. The court went so far as to posit that the materialization-of-the-risk theory would necessarily
rebut the presumption of reliance.
Fraud-on-the-market presumes that "the market price of shares
traded on well-developed markets reflects all publicly available information, and, hence, any material
misrepresentations," id. at 681, and that "investors typically make investment decisions based upon
price and price alone." Id. at 691 (emphasis in original).
Plaintiffs' materialization-of-the-risk theory
urges on the other hand that investors relied on the risk disclosures in deciding to purchase the
security. As the Fifth Circuit explained, the plaintiffs' own theory undermined the presumption's
rationale. Id.
The Fifth Circuit's decision in Ludlow provides a clear victory against purported class actions based on
materialization-of-the risk theories and should be instructive to litigants in other securities fraud
cases.
If Ludlow's well-reasoned analysis will have a broader application to other theories where
plaintiffs allege misleading disclosures involving future uncertainty, only time will tell.
VII.
SLUSA after Chadbourne
In our February 2014 client alert, we discussed Chadbourne & Parke LLP v. Troice, 134 S. Ct.
1058
(2014), in which the Supreme Court clarified the standard for applying the Securities Litigation
Uniform Securities Act ("SLUSA") to bar state law claims based on "a misrepresentation or omission
of a material fact in connection with the purchase or sale of a covered security." 15 U.S.C. §
78bb(f)(1) (emphasis added). In Troice, the Court held that the phrase "in connection with" required
that the misrepresentation or omission must be "material to a decision by one or more individuals
(other than the fraudster) to buy or sell a 'covered security.'" 134 S.
Ct. at 1066. In this year's MidYear Securities Litigation Update, we discussed the Second Circuit's narrowing of the scope of
SLUSA preemption in In re Kingate Management Limited Litigation, 784 F.3d 128 (2d Cir.
2015),
which applied a "necessary component" test for preemption, requiring courts "to inquire whether the
allegation [of misrepresentation or omission] is necessary to or extraneous to liability under the state
laws." Since that time, courts have continued to consider the contours of SLUSA preclusion.
The Second Circuit recently turned to the issue of SLUSA preclusion again in R.W. Grand Lodge of
Free & Accepted Masons of Pennsylvania v. Meridian Capital Partners, Inc., No.
15-1064-CV, 2015
WL 8731547 (2d Cir. Dec. 15, 2015).
In Meridian Capital, the appellant purchased shares in a fund of
hedge funds offered by the appellees, who ultimately lost these funds in the Madoff Ponzi
scheme. Although the appellant had brought individual claims that would not otherwise have been
barred by SLUSA, the Second Circuit upheld the district court's dismissal of state and common law
claims under SLUSA, holding that the appellant's claims were "part of a 'covered class action' because
they were 'joined, consolidated, [and] otherwise proceed[ed] as a single action' with a covered class
action after they were officially consolidated by the district court in a consolidation order." Id. at *3
(quoting 15 U.S.C.
§ 78bb(f)(5)(B)(ii)). Moreover, following the decision in Kingate, the court found
the claims precluded because the appellant's state law claims also were "premised on false
representations Appellees are alleged to have made in connection with its due diligence procedures"
concerning funds which purported to invest in covered securities. Id.
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.
The United States District Court for Southern District of New York also recently decided another case
arising out of the Madoff Ponzi scheme. In Anwar v. Fairfield Greenwich Ltd., No. 09 Civ.
118 (VM),
2015 WL 4610406, at *2-4 (S.D.N.Y. Jul. 29, 2015), the court first examined the relevant standard of
review for SLUSA dismissal, finding that the issue should be considered under the standard for
determining subject matter jurisdiction.
Under that standard, the court found that claims for breach of
fiduciary duty and negligence were not precluded by SLUSA because defendants' failure to abide by
generally accepted accounting principles or to conduct proper due diligence did not necessarily involve
misrepresentations. Id. at *8-10, *14-17.
Because the negligent misrepresentation and fraud claims,
however, "necessarily turn[ed] on some false conduct," the court found that those claims were
precluded by SLUSA. Id. at *9-10, *18.
As in the Meridian Capital case, the court also considered
whether groups of lawsuits consolidated by a MDL Panel could be considered a "covered class action"
and found that even cases that were not deliberately brought collectively, but instead were consolidated
through an MDL, could be precluded by SLUSA. Id. at *13-14.
The court subsequently granted the
defendants' motion for reconsideration in part, dismissing certain allegations predicated on false
conduct supporting breach of fiduciary duty claims, noting that there were still surviving due diligence
claims independent of any duty to disclose investment risk. No. 09 Civ.
118 (VM), 2015 WL
9450503, at *1-2 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 28, 2015).
In Henderson v.
Bank of New York Mellon Corp., No. CV 15-10599-PBS, 2015 WL 7432329, at *1
(D. Mass.
Nov. 23, 2015), the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts considered
a claim brought by an income beneficiary of a trust against a trustee for investing trust assets "almost
exclusively in proprietary mutual funds . .
. [for its] own financial benefit rather than the best interests
of the trust beneficiaries." Noting that "[a]fter Troice, a mere coincidence of fraud with a transaction
in covered securities will no longer suffice for SLUSA preemption," the court found that, because the
alleged "fraud was not in connection with the purchase or sale of the covered securities except by the
fraudster, i.e. the trustee," the claim was not preempted by SLUSA.
Id. at *3-4. The defendant has
moved the court to certify for interlocutory appeal.
No. CV 15-10599-PBS (D. Mass.
Dec. 23, 2015).
In Lim v. Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., No.
15-CV-02074-RS, 2015 WL 7996475, at *1 (N.D. Cal.
Dec. 7, 2015), the United States District Court for the Northern District of California analyzed claims
brought by investors against their retail broker, Charles Schwab, and UBS.
The complaints alleged
that Schwab, who promised its investors to provide the "best execution" for their trades, violated that
promise by routing over 95% of trades to UBS. Id. at *2.
The court found that the misrepresentation
prong of SLUSA was satisfied because by failing to deliver services it had promised, Schwab had
either misrepresented or omitted to state that best execution would not occur. Id. at *6.
The court
found that the "in connection with" element was also satisfied because Schwab's false promise was "(1)
directed at Schwab's clients (2) in order to induce them to purchase or sell securities through Schwab
for a fee, and (3) caused losses directly resulting from what clients believed to be legitimate securities
transactions." Id. at *7. The court likewise found claims against UBS to be precluded because UBS's
"manipulation" of prices in its "dark pool" occurred "in connection" with the purchase or sale of
covered securities.
Id. at *8.
Finally, since our 2015 Mid-Year Securities Litigation Update, the Southern District of New York and
the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey reached different conclusions in
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. considering SLUSA preclusion issues arising out of the same alleged fraudulent activity on motions to
remand to state court. In May of 2009, the AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company introduced a
"volatility management strategy" for certain investment accounts without properly obtaining approval
from the New York State Department of Financial Services ("DFS"). Investor-plaintiffs brought
separate suits in both the D.N.J. and the S.D.N.Y.
In Shuster v. AXA Equitable Life Ins. Co., No.
148035 (RBK/JS), 2015 WL 4314378, at *7-8 (D.N.J. Jul. 14, 2015), the D.N.J.
utilized the factors set
forth in the Third Circuit's pre-Troice decision Rowinski v. Salomon Smith Barney Inc., 398 F.3d 294
(3d Cir.2005), to hold that, because the defendant could not establish that the purchasers would have
necessarily had to alter their investments if the strategies had been submitted for approval to the DFS,
the misrepresentation lacked the requisite connection with the "purchase or sale of covered securities"
necessary for SLUSA preclusion. In contrast, in Zweiman v.
AXA Equitable Life Ins. Co., No. 14-CV5012 (VSB), 2015 WL 7431191, at *7-9 (S.D.N.Y.
Sept. 30, 2015), the S.D.N.Y. found the same
misrepresentations were "in connection with" the purchase or sale of a covered security.
There the
plaintiff argued that because she bought her securities before the implementation of the strategy and
the misleading disclosure to DFS was not public, it could not have induced her to buy, sell or hold
securities. Id. at *9.
Noting that "holder claims fall within SLUSA's parameters," the court found that
the fact that plaintiff paid a premium for certain guarantee benefits created a sufficient connection to
the purchase or sale of a covered security, regardless of the temporal distance. Id. at *10.
Moreover,
even if plaintiff was not aware of the misrepresentation, because "[a]bsent DFS approval, AXA would
not have been legally permitted to introduce the ATM strategy to Plaintiff's variable annuity policy,"
the court found that defendant's misrepresentations to the DFS were sufficiently connected to the
purchase or sale of a covered security to warrant SLUSA preclusion. Id. at *11-12.
The decision on
the motion to remand is currently on appeal to the Second Circuit.
The following Gibson Dunn lawyers assisted in preparing this client update: Jonathan Dickey,
Monica Loseman, Mark Perry, George Brown, Marshall King, Dan Floyd, Jennifer Conn, Alex
Mircheff, Brian Lutz, Jenna Yott, Matt Gregory, Lissa Percopo, Holly Rooke, Jin Yoo, Jefferson Bell,
Leesa Haspel, Michael Kahn, Kat McClain, Olivia Adendorff, Zak Kravat, Mary Kwon, Vivek
Gopalan, Nick Scheiner, Josh Rosario, Noah Stern, and Eva Michaels.
Gibson Dunn lawyers are available to assist in addressing any questions you may have regarding
these developments. Please contact the Gibson Dunn lawyer with whom you usually work, or any of
the following members of the Securities Litigation Practice Group Steering Committee:
Jonathan C. Dickey - Co-Chair, New York/Palo Alto (212-351-2399, 650-849-5370,
jdickey@gibsondunn.com)
Robert F.
Serio - Co-Chair, New York (212-351-3917, rserio@gibsondunn.com)
Meryl L. Young - Co-Chair, Orange County (949-451-4229, myoung@gibsondunn.com)
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. Thad A. Davis - Co-Chair, San Francisco (415-393-8251, tadavis@gibsondunn.com)
George H. Brown - Palo Alto (650-849-5339, gbrown@gibsondunn.com)
Jennifer L. Conn - New York (212-351-4086, jconn@gibsondunn.com)
Ethan Dettmer - San Francisco (415-393-8292, edettmer@gibsondunn.com)
Barry R.
Goldsmith - New York (212-351-2440, bgoldsmith@gibsondunn.com)
Mark A. Kirsch - New York (212-351-2662, mkirsch@gibsondunn.com)
Gabrielle Levin - New York (212-351-3901, glevin@gibsondunn.com)
Monica K. Loseman - Denver (303-298-5784, mloseman@gibsondunn.com)
Brian M.
Lutz - San Francisco/New York (415-393-8379/212-351-3881, blutz@gibsondunn.com)
Jason J. Mendro - Washington, D.C. (202-887-3726, jmendro@gibsondunn.com)
Alex Mircheff - Los Angeles (213-229-7307, amircheff@gibsondunn.com)
Wayne Smith - Orange County (949-451-4108, wsmith@gibsondunn.com)
Robert C.
Walters - Dallas (214-698-3114, rwalters@gibsondunn.com)
Aric H. Wu - New York (212-351-3820, awu@gibsondunn.com)
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