Filed: Jan. 25, 2010
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: 09-0837-cv, 09-0858-cv In re Morgan Stanley Info. Fund Sec. Litig. 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 F OR THE S ECOND C IRCUIT 3 4 August Term, 2009 5 (Argued: November 13, 2009 Decided: January 25, 2010) 6 Docket Nos. 09-0837-cv, 09-0858-cv 7 (consolidated for disposition) 8 9 IN RE MORGAN STANLEY INFORMATION FUND SECURITIES LITIGATION, 10 No. 09-0837-cv, 11 James M. Lindsay, Michael J. McDermott, Stephen B. Dornak, 12 Dietmar H. Kubb, Lisette Vaessen, and Emil H. Vaessen, on 13 behalf of them
Summary: 09-0837-cv, 09-0858-cv In re Morgan Stanley Info. Fund Sec. Litig. 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 F OR THE S ECOND C IRCUIT 3 4 August Term, 2009 5 (Argued: November 13, 2009 Decided: January 25, 2010) 6 Docket Nos. 09-0837-cv, 09-0858-cv 7 (consolidated for disposition) 8 9 IN RE MORGAN STANLEY INFORMATION FUND SECURITIES LITIGATION, 10 No. 09-0837-cv, 11 James M. Lindsay, Michael J. McDermott, Stephen B. Dornak, 12 Dietmar H. Kubb, Lisette Vaessen, and Emil H. Vaessen, on 13 behalf of thems..
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09-0837-cv, 09-0858-cv
In re Morgan Stanley Info. Fund Sec. Litig.
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 F OR THE S ECOND C IRCUIT
3
4 August Term, 2009
5 (Argued: November 13, 2009 Decided: January 25, 2010)
6 Docket Nos. 09-0837-cv, 09-0858-cv
7 (consolidated for disposition)
8
9 IN RE MORGAN STANLEY INFORMATION FUND SECURITIES LITIGATION,
10 No. 09-0837-cv,
11 James M. Lindsay, Michael J. McDermott, Stephen B. Dornak,
12 Dietmar H. Kubb, Lisette Vaessen, and Emil H. Vaessen, on
13 behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated,
14 Plaintiffs-Appellants,
15 – v. –
16 Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc., Morgan Stanley
17 DW Inc., Morgan Stanley Information Fund, Morgan Stanley
18 Investment Advisors Inc., Morgan Stanley Investment
19 Management Inc., and Morgan Stanley Distributors, Inc.,
20 Defendants-Appellees.
21
1 IN RE MORGAN STANLEY TECHNOLOGY FUND SECURITIES LITIGATION,
2 No. 09-0858-cv,
3 John C. Armstrong, Nina H. Armstrong, and James Barenboim,
4 on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated,
5 Plaintiffs-Appellants,
6 – v. –
7 Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc., Morgan Stanley
8 DW Inc., Morgan Stanley Technology Fund, Morgan Stanley
9 Investment Advisors Inc., Morgan Stanley Investment
10 Management Inc., and Morgan Stanley Distributors, Inc.,
11 Defendants-Appellees. *
12
13 Before:
14 McL AUGHLIN and W ESLEY, Circuit Judges, and K AHN, ** District
15 Judge.
16 Plaintiffs appeal from a February 2, 2009 order of the
17 United States District Court for the Southern District of
18 New York (Jones, J.), which dismissed their claims relating
19 to two Morgan Stanley mutual funds brought pursuant to
20 sections 11, 12(a)(2), and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933,
21 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k, 77l(a)(2), 77o. The district court held
22 that plaintiffs had not identified any legal basis that
23 required defendants to disclose in the funds’ offering
24 documents information that related primarily to an
25 affiliated Morgan Stanley broker-dealer.
*
The Clerk of the Court is respectfully directed to amend the official
captions in both actions to conform to the captions listed above.
**
The Honorable Lawrence E. Kahn, United States District Court for the
Northern District of New York, sitting by designation.
2
1 A FFIRMED.
2
3 D ANIEL W. K RASNER (Jeffrey S. Nobel and Nancy A.
4 Kulesa, Izard Nobel LLP, Hartford,
5 Connecticut; Robert B. Weintraub, Wolf
6 Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz LLP, New
7 York, New York, on the brief), Wolf
8 Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz LLP, New
9 York, New York, for Plaintiffs-Appellants in
10 both actions.
11 R ICHARD A. R OSEN (Walter Rieman, on the brief), Paul,
12 Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, New
13 York, New York, for Defendants-Appellees in
14 both actions.
15 M ARK P ENNINGTON (David M. Becker, Mark D. Cahn, Jacob
16 H. Stillman, on the brief), for amicus curiae
17 Securities and Exchange Commission.
18
19 W ESLEY, Circuit Judge:
20 These cases concern the boundaries of disclosure
21 obligations in registration statements and prospectuses
22 filed on Form N-1A pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933
23 (“Securities Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 77a et seq. In separate but
24 substantially similar putative class actions, two groups of
25 plaintiffs brought claims under sections 11, 12(a)(2), and
26 15 of the Securities Act. In re Morgan Stanley Info. Fund
27 Sec. Litig., No. 02 Civ. 8579 (S.D.N.Y.) (“Info. Fund
28 Action”); In re Morgan Stanley Tech. Fund Sec. Litig., No.
29 02 Civ. 6153 (S.D.N.Y.) (“Tech. Fund Action”). With the
3
1 exception of the Morgan Stanley mutual fund specified in the
2 caption of each case, the defendants are identical in both
3 actions. Both groups of plaintiffs allege that defendants
4 failed to make certain disclosures relating to the mutual
5 funds that are required by the federal securities laws.
6 In a consolidated decision, the United States District
7 Court for the Southern District of New York (Jones, J.)
8 granted defendants’ motions to dismiss plaintiffs’ Second
9 Amended Consolidated Complaints. In re Morgan Stanley Tech.
10 Fund Sec. Litig.,
643 F. Supp. 2d 366, 369 (S.D.N.Y. 2009).
11 The district court held that plaintiffs’ failure to identify
12 unlawful omissions in the mutual funds’ registration
13 statements or prospectuses doomed their claims.
Id. at 381-
14 82.
15 In this appeal, plaintiffs argue that the district
16 court erred by rejecting their omissions-based legal theory.
17 However, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC” or
18 “Commission”) has appeared before us as an amicus curiae and
19 opined that neither the Securities Act nor Form N-1A
20 required defendants to disclose the information that
21 plaintiffs allege was omitted. The Commission’s position is
22 consistent with both its prior interpretations of Form N-1A
4
1 and the decision below, it is entitled to judicial
2 deference, and we find it persuasive. Moreover, a careful
3 review of plaintiffs’ allegations reveals that the true
4 object of their claims is the alleged malfeasance of the
5 mutual funds’ affiliated broker-dealer entities and not the
6 public offerings conducted by the funds themselves. We
7 decline to expand liability under sections 11, 12(a)(2), and
8 15 to require issuers and offering participants to make
9 disclosures regarding affiliates that are not otherwise
10 called for by the securities laws. Therefore, we affirm.
11 I. BACKGROUND
12 The focus of these class actions is, at least
13 nominally, two open-ended Morgan Stanley mutual funds:
14 defendant Morgan Stanley Information Fund (“Info. Fund”) and
15 defendant Morgan Stanley Technology Fund (“Tech. Fund,”
16 collectively with the Info. Fund, the “Funds”). Plaintiffs
17 have not disputed the district court’s finding that the
18 operative pleadings in these two cases are “virtually
19 identical.” In re Morgan Stanley Tech. Fund Sec. Litig.,
20 643 F. Supp. 2d at 369 n.2. We agree with that
21 characterization. The gravamen of both actions is that
22 defendants failed to disclose that the Morgan Stanley
5
1 broker-dealers affiliated with the Funds suffered from
2 internal conflicts of interest, and, because the Funds’
3 managers relied on these broker-dealers’ stock research, the
4 broker-dealers’ conflicts increased the risk to investors
5 associated with purchasing shares of the Funds.
6 A. The Parties
7 The lead plaintiffs in both actions purchased the
8 Funds’ shares during the class periods set forth in their
9 pleadings. 1 Each defendant is a commercial entity that
10 played a role in the Morgan Stanley enterprise, and each
11 action bears the title of the mutual fund to which it
12 relates.
13 Shares of the Info. Fund were publicly traded starting
14 in 1995, and shares of the Tech. Fund were available to
15 investors beginning in September 2000. In order to sell
16 their shares to the public, both Funds registered their
17 securities with the SEC by utilizing Form N-1A to file a
18 series of registration statements and prospectuses
1
The class period in the Info. Fund Action spans from
October 25, 1999 through October 25, 2002; the class period
in the Tech. Fund Action is defined as September 25, 2000
through July 31, 2002. The difference in these class
periods is immaterial to our resolution of this appeal, and
we therefore refer to them collectively as a single “Class
Period.”
6
1 (collectively, the “Offering Documents”). 2 The Info. Fund
2 made four sets of filings between July 1999 and October
3 2002; the Tech. Fund made two sets of filings between August
4 2000 and July 2002. 3
2
The SEC created Form N-1A to facilitate registration by
certain types of open-ended management investment companies
under the Securities Act and the Investment Companies Act of
1940, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-1 et seq. See SEC, Registration Form
Used by Open-Ended Management Investment Companies;
Guidelines (“Form N-1A Adopting Release”), Securities Act
Release No. 33-6479, Investment Company Act Release No.
13,436, 48 Fed. Reg. 37,928, 37,929 (Aug. 22, 1983). The
Form creates a three-part registration statement that is
also sufficient to satisfy qualifying issuers’ prospectus-
related obligations under sections 5(b)(2) and 10(a) of the
Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77e(b)(2), 77j(a). See Form N-
1A Adopting Release, 48 Fed. Reg. at 37,929. First, in
order to avoid prospectus disclosures that are “too long and
complex,” the Form calls for a streamlined, “simplified
prospectus” and a “Statement of Additional Information,” or
“SAI,” that is to be made available to investors upon
request.
Id. The purpose of the SAI is to offer issuers
“the opportunity to provide more detailed discussions of
matters required to be in the prospectus, as well as
discussions of certain matters that are not required to be
in the prospectus, but which may be of interest to at least
some investors.”
Id. Finally, the third part of Form N-1A,
referred to as “Part C,” “pertains to information that is
not required to be in the prospectus, but is required by the
registration statement.”
Id.
3
The Info. Fund’s four sets of Form N-1A filings were
submitted to the SEC on July 27, 1999, May 30, 2000, May 30,
2001, and May 30, 2002. The Tech. Fund’s two sets of Form
N-1A materials were filed on August 17, 2000 and October 31,
2001. Plaintiffs have not identified material differences
between any of these filings that are relevant to their
claims.
7
1 The Offering Documents indicate that the “Investment
2 Objective” of each Fund was to “seek[] long-term capital
3 appreciation,” which both Funds defined as “selecting
4 securities with the potential to rise in price rather than
5 pay out income.” Each Fund disclosed a slightly different
6 strategy for pursuing this objective. The Info. Fund
7 indicated that it would “normally invest at least 65% of its
8 total assets in common stocks and investment grade
9 convertible securities of companies engaged in the
10 communications and information industry located throughout
11 the world.” The Tech. Fund stated that it would “normally
12 invest at least 80% of its assets in common stock of
13 companies of any asset size engaged in technology and
14 technology-related industries.” The Funds also disclosed,
15 using nearly identical language, that their managers had
16 been granted “considerable leeway” to select both general
17 trading strategies and specific investments for the Funds’
18 portfolios.
19 The non-Fund defendants are the same in both actions.
20 Defendant Morgan Stanley is a Delaware corporation that
21 functions as a holding company and parent entity for each of
22 the non-Fund defendants. Defendant Morgan Stanley
8
1 Distributors Inc. (“MS Distributors”) served as the
2 principal underwriter for each Fund. Defendant Morgan
3 Stanley Investment Advisors Inc. (“MS Advisors”) was the
4 Funds’ principal investment manager. MS Advisors
5 subcontracted with defendant Morgan Stanley Investment
6 Management Inc. (“MS Investment”) to perform certain asset-
7 management functions for the Funds, such as the purchase and
8 sale of securities for their portfolios.
9 The final two defendants were Morgan Stanley’s primary
10 broker-dealer subsidiaries during the Class Period: Morgan
11 Stanley & Co., Inc. and Morgan Stanley DW Inc.
12 (collectively, “MS&Co.”). Each is a registered broker-
13 dealer. Both entities offered a variety of financial
14 services relating to research, institutional and retail
15 brokerage, corporate finance, and investment banking.
16 Plaintiffs allege that, during the Class Period, both
17 entities sold shares of the Funds to the public pursuant to
18 a contract with MS Distributors.
19 B. Plaintiffs’ Allegations
20 The thrust of plaintiffs’ cases is that the Funds’
21 Offering Documents unlawfully omitted certain information
22 relating to the manner in which MS&Co. conducted its
9
1 operations, and that MS&Co.’s undisclosed conduct increased
2 the risks associated with purchasing shares of the Funds.
3 The central allegations are that defendants failed to
4 disclose: (1) that there were conflicts of interest at
5 MS&Co. that could potentially taint the objectivity of its
6 stock research, and (2) that the Funds nevertheless relied
7 on MS&Co.’s research, as evidenced by the proportion of
8 securities in the Funds’ portfolios from companies that were
9 either covered by MS&Co.’s research analysts or being
10 pursued by MS&Co. as potential investment banking clients.
11 With respect to the conflicts of interest at the Funds’
12 affiliated broker-dealer, plaintiffs assert that MS&Co.
13 intentionally dismantled the “Information Barrier” between
14 its investment banking and research functions during the
15 Class Period, and that defendants unlawfully failed to
16 disclose that fact in the Offering Documents. 4 Following
4
Although plaintiffs use the term “Chinese Wall,” we use
the term “Information Barrier” and intend it to have the
same meaning. See, e.g., SEC, Self-Regulatory
Organizations; International Securities Exchange, Inc.,
Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change and Amendments No.
1 and 2 Thereto To Amend the Market Maker Information
Barrier Requirements Under ISE Rule 810, Exchange Act
Release No. 50,197, 69 Fed. Reg. 51,735, 51,735 (Aug. 13,
2004) (recommending that the phrase “Chinese Wall” be
replaced with “Information Barrier” in the rules of the
International Securities Exchange). The basic concept arose
10
1 this change, MS&Co.’s research analysts received
2 compensation based partially on MS&Co.’s generation of
3 investment banking revenue. The resulting conflicts of
4 interest allegedly led these analysts to disseminate biased
5 research reports that exaggerated the merits of investing in
6 some of the securities issued by MS&Co.’s potential
7 investment banking clients. Such reports, plaintiffs
8 contend, artificially inflated the price of those securities
9 to the detriment of the Funds (and, presumably, all
10 investors using MS&Co.’s research).
11 In addition to the conflicts of interest arising out of
12 MS&Co.’s compensation system, plaintiffs also allege that
13 “[d]efendants” (without further specification) participated
14 in “schemes” to “have research analysts issue false reports
15 in order to obtain investment banking business” and to
16 “manipulate the price of initial public offerings.” With
17 respect to their allegations of IPO manipulation, plaintiffs
out of regulatory concerns about the need to “segment the
flow of sensitive information” within broker-dealers that
provide a diverse package of financial services. See, e.g.,
SEC, Div. of Market Reg., Broker-Dealer Policies and
Procedures Designed to Segment the Flow and Prevent the
Misuse of Material Nonpublic Information, at 2 n.5 (Mar.
1990), available at http://www.sec.gov/divisions/marketreg/
brokerdealerpolicies.pdf.
11
1 incorporated into their pleadings the “specific facts” from
2 “the approximately 303 complaints” filed as part of the
3 consolidated Multi-District Litigation Panel action
4 captioned as In re IPO Securities Litigation, No. 21 M.C.
5 92.
6 Plaintiffs also incorporated by reference the SEC’s
7 allegations in an enforcement action against MS&Co. relating
8 to its lack of an Information Barrier during the Class
9 Period. In 2002, following the close of the Class Period,
10 nine brokerage firms agreed to a $1.4 billion global
11 settlement with the SEC and other regulators relating to
12 improper conflicts of interest that arose from the
13 commingling of research and investment banking functions.
14 See Press Release, Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC, NY Attorney
15 General, NASD, NASAA, NYSE and State Regulators Announce
16 Historic Agreement to Reform Investment Practices; $1.4
17 Billion Global Settlement Includes Penalties and Funds for
18 Investors, Release No. 2002-179 (Dec. 20, 2002), available
19 http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2002-179.htm. 5 As part of the
5
We may take judicial notice of the full contents of the
SEC’s filings relating to this enforcement action because
plaintiffs rely upon portions of them in their pleadings
and, in any event, these proceedings are a matter of public
record. See Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc.,
282 F.3d 147,
12
1 global settlement agreement, the implicated firms were
2 required to “sever the links between research and investment
3 banking” in order to “ensure that stock recommendations are
4 not tainted by efforts to obtain investment banking fees.”
5
Id.
6 As part of the global settlement, the SEC commenced a
7 separate enforcement action against MS&Co., which was filed
8 in the Southern District of New York on April 28, 2003. See
9 Press Release, Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Sues Morgan Stanley
10 for Research Analyst Conflicts of Interest: Firm to Settle
11 with SEC, NASD, NYSE, NY Attorney General, and State
12 Regulators (“MS&Co. Settlement Release”), Release No. 18,117
13 (Apr. 28, 2003), available at http://www.sec.gov/litigation/
14 litreleases/lr18117.htm. In that action, the SEC asserted
15 that, between approximately July 1999 and 2001:
16 Morgan Stanley engaged in acts and practices that
17 created conflicts of interest for its research
18 analysts with respect to investment banking
19 activities and considerations. . . . As a result,
20 Morgan Stanley research analysts were faced with a
21 conflict of interest between helping generate
22 investment banking business for Morgan Stanley and
152-53 (2d Cir. 2002); Kramer v. Time Warner Inc.,
937 F.2d
767, 774 (2d Cir. 1991). We do not rely on the SEC’s
allegations for their truth, but “rather to establish the
fact of such litigation and related filings.”
Kramer, 937
F.2d at 774.
13
1 their responsibilities to publish objective
2 research reports that, if unfavorable to actual or
3 potential banking clients, could prevent Morgan
4 Stanley from winning that banking business.
5 (Compl. ¶ 2, SEC v. Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc., No. 03 Civ.
6 2948 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 28, 2003).) MS&Co. consented to the
7 entry of a final judgment in that action, which directed it
8 to separate its investment banking and research functions,
9 disgorge $25 million, pay a $25 million civil penalty, and
10 spend $75 million over five years on independent research
11 consultants for use by retail brokerage customers. (Consent
12 of Morgan Stanley & Co., SEC v. Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc.,
13 No. 03 Civ. 2948 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 2003).)
14 Against this backdrop of allegations relating to
15 MS&Co., plaintiffs assert that the Funds’ reliance on
16 MS&Co.’s research introduced additional investment risks
17 associated with the purchase of the Funds’ shares.
18 Specifically, plaintiffs contend that the Funds were aware
19 of the conflicts at MS&Co. because of their status as
20 proprietary mutual funds under the Morgan Stanley umbrella,
21 but that the Funds’ managers nevertheless utilized MS&Co.’s
22 research when making investment decisions for the Funds’
23 portfolios. Plaintiffs argue that the Funds should have
24 disclosed that these circumstances led to heightened
14
1 investment risks, and that the Offering Documents contained
2 “numerous” material omissions relating to the Funds.
3 However, the majority of the omissions that are alleged to
4 have occurred relate to MS&Co., not to the Funds. Quoting
5 from the pleadings, these omissions include that:
6 • “there was no [Information Barrier] between
7 MS&Co.’s research department and its investment
8 banking department”;
9 • part of the compensation of MS&Co.’s research
10 analysts was “based upon their
11 securing/participation in investment banking
12 business for MS&Co.,” and the “objectivity of
13 [MS&Co.’s] research reports . . . was inherently
14 and materially tainted by” MS&Co.’s interest in
15 developing investment banking business;
16 • MS&Co. either had, or was seeking to develop,
17 investment banking relationships with “a material
18 number of the companies whose securities were part
19 of the [Funds’] portfolio[s]”;
20 • “MS&Co. at times issued falsely positive research
21 reports to enhance MS&Co.’s opportunity to
22 maintain and obtain investment banking business
23 from the company covered by the report”; and
24 • “defendants had inflated the market price” of
25 securities in the Funds’ portfolios “by
26 conditioning allocations of shares in [an] IPO
27 upon the requirement that customers agree to
28 purchase additional shares of that security in the
29 aftermarket, and, in some cases, to make those
30 additional purchases at pre-arranged, ever
31 escalating prices.”
32 With respect to the Funds themselves, plaintiffs’
33 principal allegation is that these events at MS&Co. made it
15
1 riskier to invest in the Funds. This is true, plaintiffs
2 contend, because — notwithstanding their legal duties to the
3 Funds’ shareholders — the Funds’ managers had an unspecified
4 “material incentive” to cause the Funds to invest in
5 “companies for which MS&Co. issued research reports and/or
6 provided or was seeking to provide investment banking
7 services.” Plaintiffs further allege that the Funds should
8 have specified in the Offering Documents that MS&Co. offered
9 research coverage regarding approximately 76% of the
10 securities in the Info. Fund’s portfolio and 85% of the
11 securities in the Tech. Fund’s portfolio, and that MS&Co.
12 had provided investment banking services for more than 30%
13 of the companies in which the Funds had invested.
14 Plaintiffs assert that defendants were required to
15 disclose all of this information in the Funds’ Offering
16 Documents under Form N-1A and the Securities Act. As to
17 Form N-1A, plaintiffs rely on Item C of the Form’s “General
18 Instructions” and Items 2 and 4 of the “Information Required
19 in a Prospectus” under Part A of the Form.
20 Item C(1)(b) of the General Instructions states:
21 The prospectus disclosure requirements in Form N-
22 1A are intended to elicit information for an
23 average or typical investor who may not be
24 sophisticated in legal or financial matters. The
16
1 prospectus should help investors to evaluate the
2 risks of an investment and to decide whether to
3 invest in a Fund by providing a balanced
4 disclosure of positive and negative factors.
5 Disclosure in the prospectus should be designed to
6 assist an investor in comparing and contrasting
7 the Fund with other funds.
8 Item C(2)(a) states, in pertinent part:
9 The purpose of the [Form N-1A] prospectus is to
10 provide essential information about the Fund in a
11 way that will help investors to make informed
12 decisions about whether to purchase the Fund’s
13 shares described in the prospectus.
14 Plaintiffs also contend that Part A of Form N-1A, which
15 relates to the “simplified prospectus” called for by the
16 Form, required defendants to disclose the allegedly omitted
17 information. Item 2, titled “Risk/Return Summary:
18 Investments, Risks, and Performance,” calls for, inter alia,
19 a “Narrative Risk Disclosure” regarding “the principal risks
20 of investing in the Fund, including the risks to which the
21 Fund’s portfolio as a whole is subject and the circumstances
22 reasonably likely to affect adversely the Fund’s net asset
23 value, yield, and total return.” Item 4, titled “Investment
24 Objectives, Principal Investment Strategies, Related Risks,
25 and Disclosure of Portfolio Holdings,” calls for similar
26 risk-related disclosures.
27 Finally, in addition to their reliance on Form N-1A,
17
1 plaintiffs argue that defendants were required by the
2 Securities Act itself to disclose the allegedly omitted
3 information in order to avoid rendering misleading the
4 statements in the Offering Documents. See 15 U.S.C. §§
5 77k(a), 77l(a)(2); see also 17 C.F.R. § 230.408. The
6 statements in the Offering Documents on which plaintiffs
7 rely in making this assertion relate to the Funds’
8 investment objectives, investment strategies, and risks.
9 Based on these contentions, plaintiffs argue that they
10 sustained damages from defendants’ omissions that are
11 measurable by a comparison of the Funds’ performance during
12 the Class Period relative to industry benchmarks such as the
13 S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite Index. In the Info. Fund
14 Action, the named plaintiffs claim that they lost
15 approximately $280,000. The named plaintiffs in the Tech.
16 Fund Action purport to have lost approximately $241,578. In
17 total, plaintiffs assert that the losses sustained by their
18 combined class of proposed claimants exceed one billion
19 dollars.
20 C. The SEC’s Amicus Brief
21 Prior to the oral argument relating to these appeals,
22 the Court requested that the SEC submit an amicus curiae
18
1 brief expressing the Commission’s opinion as to whether
2 any part of Form N-1A [gave] rise to a duty owed
3 by the defendants to disclose that: (a) the
4 [Funds’] affiliated broker-dealer[] [MS&Co.] had
5 ceased to maintain an Information Barrier between
6 [its] research and investment-banking departments;
7 and (b) the resulting organizational structure [of
8 Morgan Stanley] may affect the investment strategy
9 employed by the [Funds’] managers?
10 The Commission responded on November 12, 2009, and took
11 the position that Form N-1A did not require disclosures
12 relating to the dismantling of MS&Co.’s Information Barrier.
13 First, the SEC reasoned that the “General Instructions” to
14 Form N-1A, including Item C, are
15 not an independent source of disclosure
16 obligations. Rather, [the General Instructions]
17 are intended to provide funds with general
18 guidance as to the nature of the information they
19 should provide in responding to specific
20 disclosure items, and to the sorts of language, in
21 terms of sophistication or technicality, that they
22 should use in providing that information.
23 (Brief of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Amicus
24 Curiae, In Support of Appellees on Issue Addressed (“SEC
25 Amicus Br.”) at 8.)
26 Second, the SEC turned to the risk-focused instructions
27 cited by plaintiffs in Items 2 and 4 of the Form’s Part A.
28 The Commission characterized the risk to the Funds arising
29 out of the deterioration of MS&Co.’s Information Barrier as
19
1 “generic” and asserted that “the fact of affiliation
2 [between MS&Co. and the Funds] appears to be irrelevant” to
3 the existence of such a risk. (Id. at 8-9.) Rather,
4 “[t]his risk arises purely from the breach of the
5 [Information Barrier] and has nothing to do with whether the
6 broker-dealer is affiliated with the purchaser of the
7 securities.” (Id. at 8.) The SEC distinguished that
8 “generic” risk from
9 allegations that a fund’s investment objectives
10 included enhancing an affiliated entity’s
11 investment banking business, and that the fund’s
12 investment strategy was to achieve that goal by
13 buying securities that the affiliated entity had
14 underwritten . . . .
15 (Id. at 5-6.) With respect to this latter type of risk, the
16 agency opined that “an investment objective and strategy of
17 enhancing an affiliate’s business by buying securities that
18 the affiliate had underwritten would have to be disclosed”
19 under Form N-1A. (Id. at 6.) However, the SEC reasoned
20 that:
21 [T]he danger that analyst reports (whether from
22 affiliated or unaffiliated analysts) will be
23 tainted by undisclosed conflicts of interest or
24 actual corruption is but one of an indefinitely
25 large number of factors that could cause a fund
26 (or any other investor) to purchase overpriced
27 securities, and it would not be useful to
28 investors to require an attempt to set all of
29 those forth in the prospectus.
20
1 (Id. at 10.)
2 II. DISCUSSION
3 We review de novo a district court’s dismissal of a
4 complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). Rombach v. Chang, 355
5 F.3d 164, 169 (2d Cir. 2004). When assessing the
6 sufficiency of claims under sections 11 and 12(a)(2) of the
7 Securities Act, the structure of the analysis is guided by a
8 preliminary inquiry into the nature of the plaintiff’s
9 allegations. Where the claims are “premised on allegations
10 of fraud,” the allegations must satisfy the heightened
11 particularity requirements of Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules
12 of Civil Procedure.
Id. at 171. However, if the pleading
13 does not sound in fraud, then Rule 8(a) governs. See
id.
14 Defendants have not argued that the pleadings in these
15 cases are subject to Rule 9(b). Therefore, notice pleading
16 supported by facially plausible factual allegations is all
17 that is required — nothing more, nothing less. See Ashcroft
18 v. Iqbal,
129 S. Ct. 1937, 1949-50 (2009). The district
19 court conducted its analysis in a manner consistent with
20 these principles, and dismissed plaintiffs’ claims under
21
1 Rule 12(b)(6) because they failed to identify a legal basis
2 requiring disclosure of the allegedly omitted information.
3 For the reasons set forth below, we agree with the
4 conclusion reached below and therefore affirm.
5 A. Overview of the Applicable Law
6 Sections 11, 12(a)(2), and 15 of the Securities Act
7 impose liability on certain participants in a registered
8 securities offering when the publicly filed documents used
9 during the offering contain material misstatements or
10 omissions. Section 11 applies to registration statements,
11 and section 12(a)(2) applies to prospectuses and oral
12 communications. 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k(a), 77l(a)(2).
13 Section 15, in turn, creates liability for individuals
14 or entities that “control[] any person liable” under section
15 11 or 12.
Id. § 77o. Thus, the success of a claim under
16 section 15 relies, in part, on a plaintiff’s ability to
17 demonstrate primary liability under sections 11 and 12.
18 See, e.g., SEC v. First Jersey Sec., Inc.,
101 F.3d 1450,
19 1472-73 (2d Cir. 1996). Because the district court’s
20 dismissal of plaintiffs’ section 15 claims was predicated on
21 their failure to state claims under sections 11 and 12, the
22 latter two provisions warrant the bulk of our analysis.
22
1 Section 11 of the Securities Act prohibits materially
2 misleading statements or omissions in registration
3 statements filed with the SEC. See 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a). In
4 the event of such a misdeed, the statute provides for a
5 cause of action by the purchaser of the registered security
6 against the security’s issuer, its underwriter, and certain
7 other statutorily enumerated parties.
Id. To state a claim
8 under section 11, the plaintiff must allege that: (1) she
9 purchased a registered security, either directly from the
10 issuer or in the aftermarket following the offering; (2) the
11 defendant participated in the offering in a manner
12 sufficient to give rise to liability under section 11; and
13 (3) the registration statement “contained an untrue
14 statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material
15 fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the
16 statements therein not misleading.”
Id.
17 Section 12(a)(2) provides similar redress where the
18 securities at issue were sold using prospectuses or oral
19 communications that contain material misstatements or
20 omissions. See
id. § 77l(a)(2). Whereas the reach of
21 section 11 is expressly limited to specific offering
22 participants, the list of potential defendants in a section
23
1 12(a)(2) case is governed by a judicial interpretation of
2 section 12 known as the “statutory seller” requirement. See
3 Pinter v. Dahl,
486 U.S. 622, 643-47 & n.21 (1988); see also
4 Wilson v. Saintine Exploration & Drilling Corp.,
872 F.2d
5 1124, 1125-26 (2d Cir. 1989). An individual is a “statutory
6 seller” — and therefore a potential section 12(a)(2)
7 defendant — if he: (1) “passed title, or other interest in
8 the security, to the buyer for value,” or (2) “successfully
9 solicit[ed] the purchase [of a security], motivated at least
10 in part by a desire to serve his own financial interests or
11 those of the securities[’] owner.”
Pinter, 486 U.S. at 642,
12 647; see also Capri v. Murphy,
856 F.2d 473, 478 (2d Cir.
13 1988). 6 As a result of this interpretation and the
14 remaining statutory text, the elements of a prima facie
15 claim under section 12(a)(2) are: (1) the defendant is a
6
No defendant has argued on appeal that it is not a proper
party to any of plaintiffs’ claims. The defendants in
plaintiffs’ section 11 claims — the Funds, as issuers, and
MS Distributor, as an underwriter of the Funds’ shares —
appear to be permissible parties under the statute. See 15
U.S.C. § 77k(a). The defendants in plaintiffs’ section
12(a)(2) claims are the Funds, Morgan Stanley, MS&Co., MS
Distributor, MS Advisors, and MS Management. It is unclear
from plaintiffs’ allegations that each of these defendants
satisfies the “statutory seller” requirement, but that issue
has not been raised by the parties and we need not address
it in light of our broader holding.
24
1 “statutory seller”; (2) the sale was effectuated “by means
2 of a prospectus or oral communication”; and (3) the
3 prospectus or oral communication “include[d] an untrue
4 statement of a material fact or omit[ted] to state a
5 material fact necessary in order to make the statements, in
6 the light of the circumstances under which they were made,
7 not misleading.” 15 U.S.C. § 77l(a)(2).
8 Claims under sections 11 and 12(a)(2) are therefore
9 Securities Act siblings with roughly parallel elements,
10 notable both for the limitations on their scope as well as
11 the in terrorem nature of the liability they create. See
12
Pinter, 486 U.S. at 646; Herman & MacLean v. Huddleston, 459
13 U.S. 375, 381-82 & n.12 (1983). Issuers are subject to
14 “virtually absolute” liability under section 11, while the
15 remaining potential defendants under sections 11 and
16 12(a)(2) may be held liable for mere negligence.
17
Huddleston, 459 U.S. at 382. 7 Moreover, unlike securities
7
More specifically, section 11 provides several due
diligence defenses available to non-issuer defendants, see
15 U.S.C. § 77k(b), and section 12(a)(2) contains a
“reasonable care” defense,
id. § 77l(a)(2). Defendants may
also avoid liability under both provisions for damages based
on the depreciation in value of a security that results from
events other than misrepresentations or omissions. See
id.
§§ 77k(e), 77l(b). Generally speaking, defendants bear the
burden of demonstrating the applicability of each of these
25
1 fraud claims pursuant to section 10(b) of the Securities
2 Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 78a et
3 seq., plaintiffs bringing claims under sections 11 and
4 12(a)(2) need not allege scienter, reliance, or loss
5 causation. See
Rombach, 355 F.3d at 169 n.4. Thus, in
6 contrast to their “‘catchall’” cousin in the Exchange Act —
7 section 10(b), 15 U.S.C. § 77j(b) — sections 11 and 12(a)(2)
8 of the Securities Act apply more narrowly but give rise to
9 liability more readily. In re Fuwei Films Sec. Litig., 634
10 F. Supp. 2d 419, 433-34 (S.D.N.Y. 2009) (quoting Ernst &
11 Ernst v. Hochfelder,
425 U.S. 185, 206 (1976)); see also
12 Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores,
421 U.S. 723, 752-53
13 (1975).
14 In many cases — including this one — two issues are
15 central to claims under sections 11 and 12(a)(2): (1) the
16 existence of either a misstatement or an unlawful omission;
17 and (2) materiality. The definition of materiality is the
18 same for these provisions as it is under section 10(b) of
19 the Exchange Act: “‘[W]hether the defendants’
20 representations, taken together and in context, would have
defenses, which are therefore unavailing as a means of
defeating a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
26
1 misled a reasonable investor.’”
Rombach, 355 F.3d at 172
2 n.7 (quoting I. Meyer Pincus & Assocs. v. Oppenheimer & Co.,
3
936 F.2d 759, 761 (2d Cir. 1991)); see also DeMaria v.
4 Andersen,
318 F.3d 170, 180 (2d Cir. 2003). However,
5 because the materiality element presents “a mixed question
6 of law and fact,” it will rarely be dispositive in a motion
7 to dismiss:
8 “[A] complaint may not properly be dismissed . . .
9 on the ground that the alleged misstatements or
10 omissions are not material unless they are so
11 obviously unimportant to a reasonable investor
12 that reasonable minds could not differ on the
13 question of their importance.”
14 ECA v. JP Morgan Chase,
553 F.3d 187, 197 (2d Cir. 2009)
15 (quoting Ganino v. Citizens Utils. Co.,
228 F.3d 154, 162
16 (2d Cir. 2000)); see also United States v. Gaudin,
515 U.S.
17 506, 512 (1995); First Jersey
Sec., 101 F.3d at 1466-67.
18 The district court did not rely on materiality in its
19 decision, and the parties’ arguments regarding this issue
20 are unpersuasive at the pleadings stage. Nor have
21 plaintiffs argued that the Offering Documents contained
22 actual misrepresentations. Therefore, at the heart of this
23 appeal lies the question of whether plaintiffs have
24 identified an unlawful omission in the Funds’ Offering
25 Documents.
27
1 B. The Sufficiency of Plaintiffs’ Allegations
2 Collectively, the language of sections 11 and 12(a)(2)
3 creates three potential bases for liability based on
4 registration statements and prospectuses filed with the SEC:
5 (1) a misrepresentation; (2) an omission in contravention of
6 an affirmative legal disclosure obligation; and (3) an
7 omission of information that is necessary to prevent
8 existing disclosures from being misleading. See 15 U.S.C.
9 §§ 77k(a), 77l(a)(2). 8 This appeal relates only to
10 omissions. The question is whether, assuming the truth of
11 plaintiffs’ allegations, the Offering Documents omitted
12 information that defendants were required to disclose. See
13 Resnik v. Swartz,
303 F.3d 147, 154 (2d Cir. 2002) (“For an
14 omission to be actionable, the securities laws must impose a
8
Whereas section 11 contemplates actions based on
“[omissions of] material fact required to be stated” in
registration statements, 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a) (emphasis
added), section 12(a)(2) lacks parallel language regarding
prospectuses and oral communications,
id. § 77l(a)(2)
(prohibiting only omissions of those facts “necessary in
order to make the statements, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading”).
See Shaw v. Digital Equip. Corp.,
82 F.3d 1194, 1204 (1st
Cir. 1996), abrogated on other grounds by 15 U.S.C.
§ 78u(4)(b)(2) (the Private Securities Litigation Reform
Act). However, because we conclude that plaintiffs have not
identified a legal basis requiring disclosure, we need not
resolve the import of this distinction.
28
1 duty to disclose the omitted information.”); see also In re
2 Time Warner Inc. Sec. Litig.,
9 F.3d 259, 267 (2d Cir. 1993)
3 (“[A]n omission is actionable under the securities laws only
4 when the corporation is subject to a duty to disclose the
5 omitted facts.”). Two types of omissions can give rise to
6 liability under these provisions.
7 1. Affirmative Disclosure Obligations
8 Plaintiffs first argue that the “General Instructions”
9 of Form N-1A required defendants to disclose the allegedly
10 omitted information. In support of this contention,
11 plaintiffs rely on language from Item C of the General
12 Instructions, which states that “[t]he prospectus disclosure
13 requirements in Form N-1A are intended to elicit information
14 for an average or typical investor who may not be
15 sophisticated in legal or financial matters” and that “[t]he
16 purpose of the prospectus is to provide essential
17 information about the Fund.” The district court rejected
18 this contention, and we find no fault in its conclusion.
19 The Form’s General Instructions suggest that the Funds
20 were not precluded from providing additional information
21 beyond that called for in the more specific instructions
22 accompanying Parts A, B, and C. In addition to the language
29
1 relied on by plaintiffs, Item C(3)(b) states that “[a] Fund
2 may include, except in the Risk/Return Summary [in Items 2
3 and 3 of Part A], information in the prospectus or the SAI
4 that is not otherwise required.” Consistent with this
5 theme, Item C(1)(d) provides that “[t]he requirements for
6 prospectuses included in Form N-1A will be administered by
7 the Commission in a way that will allow variances in
8 disclosure . . . if appropriate for the circumstances
9 involved while remaining consistent with the objectives of
10 Form N-1A.” The SEC has also indicated in guidance
11 accompanying the Form that, “in order to preserve
12 registrants’ flexibility, registrants . . . are generally
13 free to include in the prospectus information in addition to
14 that required by the specific items of the Form.” See Form
15 N-1A Adopting Release, 48 Fed. Reg. at 37,929. However, it
16 is one thing to suggest that, based on this language, the
17 Funds were not prohibited from providing additional
18 information. It is entirely different to argue, as
19 plaintiffs do, that defendants were required to make
20 additional disclosures by the Form’s General Instructions.
21 The latter contention lacks support in the language of the
22 Form.
30
1 To the extent there is any doubt about this issue, our
2 conclusion is confirmed by the author of the Form. When
3 faced with ambiguity in an agency promulgation, courts can —
4 and often do — seek the interpretive opinion of the agency
5 and defer to its views. See, e.g., Press v. Quick & Reilly,
6 Inc.,
218 F.3d 121, 126-28 (2d Cir. 2000). Such deference
7 is especially prudent here in light of the SEC’s expertise
8 in administering the securities laws, its ability to seek
9 input from the public when crafting regulatory policy, and
10 its relative political accountability. See Bruh v. Bessemer
11 Venture Partners III L.P.,
464 F.3d 202, 207-08 (2d Cir.
12 2006); cf.
Resnik, 303 F.3d at 154-55 (quoting Lewis v.
13 Vogelstein,
699 A.2d 327, 332-33 (Del. Ch. 1997)).
14 We requested the SEC’s opinion with respect to whether
15 the General Instructions accompanying Form N-1A required
16 defendants to make additional disclosures in the Funds’
17 Offering Documents beyond those specified in the
18 instructions relating to Parts A, B, and C of the Form. The
19 SEC responded “no” to our inquiry, reasoning that the
20 General Instructions “are not an independent source of
21 disclosure obligations.” (SEC Amicus Br. at 8.) It cannot
22 be said that this interpretation of Form N-1A is “plainly
31
1 erroneous or inconsistent with the law.” Roth ex rel.
2 Beacon Power Corp. v. Perseus L.L.C.,
522 F.3d 242, 247 (2d
3 Cir. 2008) (citing Auer v. Robbins,
519 U.S. 452, 461-62
4 (1997)); Levy ex rel. Immunogen Inc. v. Southbrook Int’l
5 Invs., Ltd.,
263 F.3d 10, 14 (2d Cir. 2001); Press,
218 F.3d
6 at 128. Therefore, the SEC’s interpretation is entitled to
7 deference. See
Auer, 519 U.S. at 461;
DeMaria, 318 F.3d at
8 175. And, because we find the SEC’s view persuasive, we
9 need not pause to determine the precise quantum of deference
10 to which its opinion is entitled. See Cmty. Health Ctr. v.
11 Wilson-Coker,
311 F.3d 132, 137-38 (2d Cir. 2002) (declining
12 to “decide the exact molecular weight of the deference” due
13 to an agency position). Accordingly, we hold that the
14 General Instructions to Form N-1A did not require defendants
15 to disclose the allegedly omitted information identified in
16 the pleadings.
17 Plaintiffs next argue that defendants were required to
18 disclose the omitted information under Items 2 and 4 of Part
19 A of the Form, which relate to “principal risks” to be
20 disclosed in a prospectus. Here, plaintiffs present a
21 moving target of sorts, describing the allegedly omitted
22 risks only vaguely, if at all, throughout their pleadings
32
1 and briefing. In their response to the SEC’s amicus
2 submission, however, plaintiffs clarified their position to
3 some extent:
4 [O]nce the [Information Barrier] between Morgan
5 Stanley’s investment banking and research
6 operations was dismantled, the conflicts of
7 interest that infected Morgan Stanley’s research
8 and investment banking departments created a new
9 material risk in these Funds’ portfolios that
10 would have not have existed had the [Information
11 Barrier] been maintained. Instead of investing in
12 securities strictly on their merits, there was an
13 increased risk that the Funds would
14 disproportionately invest in and/or retain the
15 securities of Morgan Stanley’s investment banking
16 clients/potential clients, without regard to
17 whether they were good investments.
18 (Plaintiffs-Appellants’ Brief in Opposition to Amicus Curiae
19 Securities and Exchange Commission (“Pls.’ Supp. Br.”) at 7-
20 8.)
21 At bottom, plaintiffs argue that the dismantling of
22 MS&Co.’s Information Barrier augmented the risks associated
23 with investing in the Funds because the Funds’ managers
24 utilized MS&Co.’s research when making investment decisions
25 for the Funds’ portfolios. The district court properly
26 characterized this position as relying on the risk-related
27 instructions in Part A of the Form, and it found that there
28 were insufficient factual allegations to support an
29 inference that the Funds’ managers pursued investment
33
1 strategies that were designed to facilitate MS&Co.’s
2 generation of investment banking revenue. See In re Morgan
3 Stanley Tech. Fund Sec.
Litig., 643 F. Supp. 2d at 377.
4 Plaintiffs have not challenged that conclusion, and, absent
5 a more particularized contention, we decline to revisit this
6 aspect of the district court’s decision. See, e.g., Norton
7 v. Sam’s Club,
145 F.3d 114, 117-18 (2d Cir. 1998). As
8 such, this is not a case involving a situation in which “a
9 fund’s investment objectives included enhancing an
10 affiliated entity’s investment banking business,” which, in
11 the SEC’s view, would have to be disclosed. (SEC Amicus Br.
12 at 5.) Instead, the only question to be resolved is whether
13 Form N-1A obligated defendants to disclose the allegedly
14 omitted information as a “principal risk” of investing in
15 the Funds.
16 Form N-1A’s definition of “principal risk” is ambiguous
17 in this regard. Hence, it is prudent to look to the SEC for
18 interpretive guidance. In its amicus brief, the Commission
19 characterizes the risk disclosures sought by plaintiffs as
20 arising from “the danger that analyst reports . . . will be
21 tainted by undisclosed conflicts of interest or actual
22 corruption” at MS&Co., and asserts that “the fact of
34
1 affiliation” between MS&Co. and the other defendants
2 “appears to be irrelevant.” (Id. at 8, 10.) Based on these
3 characterizations, the SEC opines that plaintiffs have only
4 identified a “generic risk factor[] that [has] nothing to do
5 with a specific fund,” and — consistent with the decision
6 below — that defendants were not required by Form N-1A to
7 disclose this type of information. (Id. at 10.)
8 Not surprisingly, plaintiffs disagree. They first
9 argue that this aspect of the SEC’s amicus submission is
10 entitled to “little if any deference” because it constitutes
11 an “application” of Form N-1A rather than an
12 “interpretation.” (Pls.’ Supp. Br. at 2.) We are, of
13 course, mindful that the institutional considerations that
14 may lead us to defer to the SEC’s views on the
15 interpretation of its promulgations counsel a different
16 course when the question presented calls for an assessment
17 of the sufficiency of a complaint. The task of construing a
18 litigant’s pleading rests firmly with the courts.
19 Nevertheless, plaintiffs’ distinction between an agency
20 “interpretation” and an “application” is untenable and
21 without support in our case law. In Press v. Quick &
22 Reilly, Inc., for example, we afforded deference to the
35
1 SEC’s reasonable determination that the defendant broker-
2 dealers in that case had satisfied their obligation to
3 disclose third party remuneration under SEC Rule 10b-10.
4
See 218 F.3d at 128-29. We see no basis discernible from
5 Press, our other similar holdings, or this case that would
6 allow us to draw a principled line between interpretations
7 and applications of relevant agency promulgations.
8 Therefore, we continue to adhere to our prior decisions and
9 defer to the SEC’s opinion so long as it is neither plainly
10 erroneous nor contrary to law. See, e.g., Beacon Power,
522
11 F.3d at 247-48.
12 In further support of their position that the SEC’s
13 amicus submission is not entitled to judicial deference,
14 plaintiffs argue that the agency “erroneously concluded that
15 the facts omitted here . . . were not particular to the
16 defendant Funds.” (Pls.’ Supp. Br. at 4.) Instead,
17 plaintiffs argue that they “claim only that those funds
18 affiliated with full-service investment banking firms, where
19 the required Information Barrier ha[s] been dismantled and
20 there are resulting research—investment banking conflicts of
21 interest, are required to disclose these facts.” (Id. at 5
22 (emphasis in original).) However, like the district court
36
1 and the SEC, we find unconvincing plaintiffs’ attempt to
2 recast the nature of the risk they have identified by
3 limiting this case to its facts.
4 Consistent with the general guidance that accompanied
5 the 1998 amendments to the Form, the SEC asserts that Form
6 N-1A does not require disclosure of general risks that are
7 present throughout the markets. Rather, the Form’s
8 instructions call for the disclosure of only those risks “to
9 which the Fund’s particular portfolio as a whole is expected
10 to be subject.” The SEC has also indicated, outside of this
11 litigation, that it designed this requirement “to elicit
12 risk disclosure specific to that fund.” SEC, Final Rule:
13 Registration Form Used by Open-End Management Investment
14 Companies, Securities Act Release No. 7512, Exchange Act
15 Release No. 39,748, Investment Company Act Release No.
16 23,064, 63 Fed. Reg. 13,916, 13,928 n.111 (Mar. 23, 1998)
17 (emphasis added). In its amicus submission, the SEC takes
18 the view that the risks identified by plaintiffs are not
19 limited to the context presented by their factual
20 allegations, and that systemic risks relating to the
21 potential that a company’s stock price is inflated by biased
22 research coverage are present throughout the market. Put
37
1 differently, all investors, including the Funds’ managers,
2 face the risk that the research they use to make their
3 decisions may be biased or flawed, and that the prices they
4 pay for securities may not accurately reflect the
5 securities’ intrinsic value. In order to justify
6 disregarding the Commission’s conclusion, plaintiffs must
7 persuade us that the omitted risks relating to investing in
8 the Funds — not just the factual circumstances at Morgan
9 Stanley or MS&Co. — are unique. Simply put, they have not
10 done so.
11 Plaintiffs’ allegations focus on the conduct of MS&Co.
12 However, the pleadings do not suggest that there was
13 anything untoward about the relationship between MS&Co. and
14 the Funds, and there are no allegations that the internal
15 problems at MS&Co. directly affected the manner in which the
16 Funds’ managers approached investment decisions. 9 The
9
The SEC has already sanctioned MS&Co., and we do not
understand its position in this litigation to condone the
dismantling of MS&Co.’s Information Barrier. Nor do we
perceive any inconsistency between the agency’s position
here and plaintiffs’ perceptions of the SEC’s “long-standing
view of Information Barriers.” (Pls.’ Supp. Br. at 17
n.14.) Therefore, American Federation of State, County &
Municipal Employees v. American International Group, Inc.,
462 F.3d 121 (2d Cir. 2006) is inapposite. Plaintiffs’
suggestion to the contrary only serves to further illustrate
the extent to which their claims place undue focus on events
38
1 affiliation between MS&Co. and the Funds was disclosed in
2 the Offering Documents and is insufficient to bridge this
3 gap. Without more, we see no basis in Form N-1A for
4 requiring the Funds to complicate their public filings by
5 making additional disclosures about the internal workings of
6 a broker-dealer with only a limited role in the issuance of
7 the securities that are the focus of this case, i.e., the
8 Funds’ shares. “To demand more would open the door to
9 unceasing and unreasonable clamorings for all manner of
10 tutoring . . . , which would afford a bonanza to lawyers . .
11 . with no corresponding benefit to the actual investor.”
12 Greenapple v. Detroit Edison Co.,
618 F.2d 198, 211 (2d Cir.
13 1980).
14 The flaw in plaintiffs’ MS&Co.-focused tunnel vision is
15 not remedied by their allegations relating to the
16 proportions of securities in the Funds’ portfolios issued by
17 companies that were either covered by MS&Co.’s research
18 analysts or utilizing MS&Co.’s investment banking services.
19 Nothing about these facts changes the nature of the risks
20 associated with utilizing MS&Co.’s research. See Kramer v.
21 Time Warner Inc.,
937 F.2d 767, 776 (2d Cir. 1991) (“It is
at MS&Co. rather than at the Funds.
39
1 in the very nature of securities markets that even the most
2 exhaustively researched predictions are fallible.” (emphasis
3 added)). Additionally, plaintiffs have not alleged that
4 MS&Co.’s recommendations relating to these companies
5 diverged from the assessments of analysts outside of Morgan
6 Stanley, or that the Funds’ managers breached their legal
7 duties to the Funds’ shareholders by blindly and
8 uncritically following MS&Co.’s potentially tainted
9 recommendations. See In re Morgan Stanley Tech. Fund Sec.
10
Litig., 643 F. Supp. 2d at 378 n.6. Consequently, while one
11 might infer from the pleadings that conflicts of interest
12 affected MS&Co.’s research analysis of the companies in the
13 Funds’ portfolios, plaintiffs’ allegations do not support an
14 inference that the Funds’ managers made investment decisions
15 under circumstances that gave rise to unique, undisclosed
16 risks relating to the Funds.
17 In seeking to implicate the Funds merely by virtue of
18 their affiliation with MS&Co., plaintiffs also overstate the
19 import of the inference that the Funds’ managers knew that
20 MS&Co. had dismantled its Information Barrier. Assuming,
21 arguendo, that the pleadings support such an inference,
22 plaintiffs have not alleged that the Funds’ managers knew
40
1 that MS&Co.’s analysts had breached their professional
2 obligations by disseminating biased or false research or
3 manipulating IPOs. Affiliated or not, the Funds were not
4 MS&Co.’s keeper, and defendants were not obligated to
5 suggest — in the Funds’ Offering Documents — that MS&Co.’s
6 employees may have engaged in activities that might later be
7 determined to run afoul of the securities laws.
8 “[D]isclosure is not a ‘rite of confession or exercise of
9 common law pleading.’” I. Meyer Pincus & Assocs.,
936 F.2d
10 at 762 (quoting Data Probe Acquisition Corp. v. Datatab,
11 Inc.,
722 F.2d 1, 5-6 (2d Cir. 1983)). Defendants’
12 knowledge of the lack of an Information Barrier at MS&Co.
13 does not demonstrate that the allegedly omitted risks
14 relating primarily to MS&Co.’s operations — however
15 disconcerting they may be in a broader sense — were anything
16 but run-of-the-mill insofar as Form N-1A is concerned.
17 To be clear, plaintiffs are not required under sections
18 11 and 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act to allege that
19 defendants acted with scienter or intentionally omitted
20 information from the Offering Documents. See Rombach,
355
21 F.3d at 169 n.4. The allegations regarding the extent of
22 defendants’ knowledge of MS&Co.’s activities are relevant,
41
1 however, to assessing the nature of the risks that
2 plaintiffs have identified in their claims. The pleadings
3 indicate that these risks arose because the Funds’ managers
4 purchased securities “in a market artificially inflated by
5 [MS&Co.’s] falsely rosy analyst reports . . . [and] market
6 manipulations.” Plaintiffs have not persuaded us that such
7 risks were unique to investing in the Funds, and they have
8 not presented any other meritorious basis for attributing
9 error to the SEC’s opinion that defendants were not required
10 to disclose this information as an investment risk under
11 Part A of Form N-1A. Therefore, we defer to the persuasive
12 view of the SEC, and hold that Items 2 and 4 of Form N-1A’s
13 Part A did not create a disclosure obligation that supports
14 plaintiffs’ claims.
15 2. Duty to Avoid Misleading Statements
16 Our conclusion that Form N-1A did not directly require
17 defendants to disclose the allegedly omitted information
18 does not mark the end of our inquiry. Sections 11 and
19 12(a)(2) both call for the disclosure of information that is
20 necessary to avoid rendering misleading the representations
21 in registration statements and prospectuses. See 15 U.S.C.
22 §§ 77k(a), 77l(a)(2). SEC Rule 408, which applies to
42
1 filings on Form N-1A, establishes a similar requirement
2 relating only to registration statements. See 17 C.F.R. §
3 230.408.
4 Citing these provisions, plaintiffs argue that the
5 statements in the Offering Documents “concerning the Fund[s]
6 and [their] investment strategy and principal risks
7 triggered a clear duty to disclose all material information
8 on the same or related subjects.” They further contend that
9 “the boilerplate disclosures” in the Offering Documents
10 regarding the Funds’ “principal investment strategies” and
11 “principal risks” were rendered misleading by the absence of
12 the allegedly omitted information.
13 These contentions misconstrue the nature of defendants’
14 disclosure obligations and must be rejected. 10 When
15 analyzing offering materials for compliance with the
16 securities laws, we review the documents holistically and in
10
The question that we presented to the SEC as part of our
invitation to participate in this appeal as an amicus curiae
focused on Form N-1A and did not relate to the issue of
whether the alleged omissions rendered the Offering
Documents misleading under Rule 408. This is because we see
no ambiguity in the relevant language of the Securities Act
or Rule 408 with respect to this issue. Thus, although our
conclusion is consistent with the views expressed by the
Commission, we have not deferred to this aspect of its
amicus submission.
43
1 their entirety. See, e.g., Olkey v. Hyperion 1999 Term
2 Trust, Inc.,
98 F.3d 2, 5 (2d Cir. 1996). The literal truth
3 of an isolated statement is insufficient; the proper inquiry
4 requires an examination of “defendants’ representations,
5 taken together and in context.”
DeMaria, 318 F.3d at 180
6 (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, when an offering
7 participant makes a disclosure about a particular topic,
8 whether voluntary or required, the representation must be
9 “complete and accurate.” Glazer v. Formica Corp.,
964 F.2d
10 149, 157 (2d Cir. 1992) (internal quotation marks omitted).
11 Plaintiffs’ argument, however, stretches these
12 principles past their logical breaking point. The Offering
13 Documents’ disclosures did not trigger a generalized duty
14 requiring defendants to disclose the entire corpus of their
15 knowledge regarding MS&Co. See In re Time Warner Inc. Sec.
16
Litig., 9 F.3d at 267 (“[A] corporation is not required to
17 disclose a fact merely because a reasonable investor would
18 very much like to know that fact.”). The SEC designed Form
19 N-1A in an attempt to balance the costs and benefits of
20 additional disclosures in the context of a specific class of
21 issuers. Form N-1A Adopting Release, 48 Fed. Reg. at 37,928
22 (noting that the Form was intended to “provide guidance to
44
1 registrants and their counsel who may be concerned about
2 potential liability for material omissions from the
3 prospectus”). While defendants were required to make
4 complete and accurate disclosures regarding the principal
5 risks of investing in the Funds, these mandatory disclosures
6 did not obligate defendants to make disclosures relating to
7 the commonly understood risks associated with securities
8 research. See
id. Consequently, we decline to hold that
9 defendants’ disclosure of the information called for by Form
10 N-1A gave rise to a duty to make disclosures about “related
11 subjects” not called for by the Form.
12 In light of that conclusion, plaintiffs’ remaining
13 arguments give us little pause. As stated above, plaintiffs
14 have not alleged that the Funds’ managers pursued an
15 undisclosed objective or investment strategy when making
16 investment decisions for the Funds. Therefore, the Funds’
17 disclosures about these topics were not misleading.
18 Similarly, in light of our holding that plaintiffs have not
19 identified any undisclosed “principal risks” relating to the
20 Funds, it cannot be said that the Offering Documents’ risk
21 disclosures were misleading because they omitted the generic
22 risks relied on by plaintiffs. Accordingly, we hold that
45
1 the Offering Documents were not rendered misleading as a
2 consequence of the omissions that are alleged to have
3 occurred.
4 III. CONCLUSION
5 For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that
6 plaintiffs have not identified any unlawful omissions in the
7 Funds’ Offering Documents. Therefore, their claims under
8 sections 11 and 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act were properly
9 dismissed. As such, we find no error in the district
10 court’s dismissal of plaintiffs’ claims for control-person
11 liability under section 15. We have considered plaintiffs’
12 remaining arguments and find them to be without merit.
13 Accordingly, the district court’s February 2, 2009 order is
14 hereby AFFIRMED.
46