LEWIS A. KAPLAN, District Judge.
Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund has filed this securities case against MetLife, Inc., individual MetLife officers and directors, and MetLife's underwriters, purportedly on behalf of "all persons who purchased or acquired MetLife common stock [between February 2, 2010 and October 6, 2011] pursuant or traceable to the Company's August 3, 2010 public offering of 75 million shares of its common stock and MetLife's March 4, 2011 public offering of 68.5 million shares of its common stock, respectively (the `Offerings')."
All defendants have moved to dismiss the amended complaint. For the reasons discussed below, the motions are granted part and denied in part.
Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund is the alleged lead plaintiff on behalf of all members of the class.
Defendant MetLife is a multinational insurance company.
Plaintiff sues also MetLife directors Sylvia Mathews Burwell, Eduardo Castro-Wright, Cheryl W. Grisé, R. Glenn Hubbard, John M. Keane, Alfred F. Kelly, James M. Kilts, Catherine R. Kinney, Hugh B. Price, David Satcher, Kenton J. Sicchitano, and Lulu C. Wang (collectively, the "Director Defendants").
Finally, Plaintiff sues also MetLife's underwriters: Goldman Sachs & Co., Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, and HSBC Securities (USA) Inc. (collectively, the "Underwriter Defendants").
The Social Security Administration maintains a Death Master File ("SSA-DMF") in which it aggregates and publishes basic information on all deceased persons whose deaths have been reported.
Insurance companies, including MetLife, make regular use of the SSA-DMF in
MetLife has also large group and individual life insurance businesses. Historically, MetLife paid life insurance benefits to beneficiaries only upon the filing of a claim.
In order to ensure that it was properly reserved for potential liability on its life insurance policies, MetLife estimated regularly and publicly reported the amount of benefits that it anticipated it would have to pay in the future.
In 2007, MetLife allegedly cross-checked its individual life insurance records against the SSA-DMF and discovered that it held $80 million in benefits that should have, but had not been, paid because no claims for them had been filed.
The $80 million in unpaid benefits were due on individual, not group, life insurance policies. Despite allegedly knowing that a similar cross-check of the group life insurance records almost certainly would reveal similar additional liabilities, the company did not perform a cross check in 2007.
In 2009, Florida and Illinois launched a market conduct examination into insurance companies' usage of the SSA-DMF.
On August 2, 2010 Met Life issued over 86 million shares of common stock to finance a purchase of AIG's American Life Insurance Company.
On March 2, 2011, MetLife and AIG announced a large common stock offering to dispose of AIG's entire MetLife holdings.
In the months following the second offering, more states instituted investigations into life insurance companies' possible violations of unclaimed property laws.
On August 5, 2011, MetLife disclosed in its second quarter report on Form 10-Q that more than thirty U.S. jurisdictions were investigating it for compliance with unclaimed property laws.
Plaintiff alleges that this disclosure caused MetLife's stock value to drop. Between the close of the market on Thursday August 4, 2011 and the close of the market on Monday August 8, 2011, MetLife's stock dropped 11 percent.
Two months later, on October 6, 2011, MetLife announced in a Form 8-K that it was taking a one-time $115 to $135 million after-tax charge to increase reserves to account for life insurance payments it discovered needed to be made after using the SSA-DMF to identify insured deaths.
The amended complaint details a number of post class period events. For example, on December 5, 2011, the New York State Department of Financial Services issued a report claiming that insurers, including MetLife, for years had retained funds owed to the state.
In sum and substance, plaintiff's argument is that MetLife issued financial statements and made public statements about its life insurance business that were materially false and misleading as a result of the MetLife Defendants' knowing failure to use the SSA-DMF to identify group life policy holders who had died. Read in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the amended complaint alleges that MetLife had access to an accurate source of information to help determine life insurance IBNR reserves, knew that small inaccuracies in IBNR estimates had accrued over time to a material amount, failed to account for a needed increase in reserves until coming under pressure from state governments, and engaged in this conduct in order to inflate earnings and its stock price. MetLife allegedly knew also that its reported "mortality ratios," important indicators of solid underwriting, were inaccurate because they did not account for the policy holders who had died but whose beneficiaries had not made claims. As a result, every time that the MetLife Defendants made statements about IBNR reserves, mortality ratios, or the strength of the life insurance business in public filings or on earnings calls, they knew or should have known that the statements were inaccurate because the reported IBNR reserves and mortality ratios did not account for those deaths captured in the SSA-DMF but not in MetLife's estimates. The alleged misstatements in the company's public filings were incorporated into the registration statements for its August 2010
In deciding a motion to dismiss, a court ordinarily accepts as true all well pleaded factual allegations and draws all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff's favor.
The MetLife Defendants and Underwriter Defendants each move to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that plaintiff has failed to plead adequately any of the elements of the claims.
To state a claim for relief under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, a plaintiff must allege "(1) a material misrepresentation or omission by the defendant; (2) scienter; (3) a connection between the misrepresentation or omission and the purchase or sale of a security; (4) reliance upon the misrepresentation or omission; (5) economic loss; and (6) loss causation,"
Here, plaintiff's Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 claims must be dismissed for failure to allege adequately loss causation.
Read in the light most favorable to the plaintiff the amended complaint alleges that MetLife's August 5 disclosure that state investigations could result in substantial payments was the materialization or partial corrective disclosure of a concealed risk — that MetLife had understated its necessary IBNR reserves and mortality ratios and withheld money due to beneficiaries and the states. Allegedly as a result of this disclosure, MetLife's common stock dropped 11 percent in value from August 4 to August 8. The amended complaint is remarkably misleading.
The amended complaint fails to mention that Standard & Poor's downgraded the credit rating of the United States for the first time in history after the market closed on Friday August 5, 2011.
In the one trading day after MetLife's disclosure but before the U.S. credit downgrade, MetLife's stock saw a minimal decline in value. MetLife filed its Form 10-Q before the stock market opened on August 5, 2011. The stock opened up at $37.49 and closed at $36.35, just slightly below (i.e., 1.5%) the previous day's close.
While loss causation often is a fact specific question appropriate for trial, "when the plaintiff's loss coincides with a marketwide phenomenon causing comparable losses to other investors, the prospect that the plaintiff's loss was caused by the fraud decreases, and a plaintiff's claim fails when it has not adequately ple[]d facts which, if proven, would show that its loss was caused by the alleged misstatements as opposed to intervening events."
The amended complaint fails even to acknowledge the U.S. credit downgrade and the accompanying upheaval in the marketplace between August 5 and August 8. It certainly does not allege facts sufficient to allow a factfinder to ascribe any portion of the loss to the alleged misstatements. Instead, plaintiff misleadingly attempts to attribute the entire drop in stock value to the alleged corrective disclosure. Plaintiff does not address the fact that, just after the alleged corrective disclosure, MetLife stock opened on August 5 at $.59 higher than its August 4 closing price and then closed only $.55 below. Plaintiff does not provide any basis for suggesting that the market considered these investigations to be material or the cause of the price drop.
Plaintiff's loss causation allegations relating to the October 6, 2011 disclosure fail
To state a claim under Section 11, a plaintiff must allege that: "(1) she purchased a registered security, either directly from the issuer or in the aftermarket following the offering; (2) the defendant participated in the offering in a manner sufficient to give rise to liability under section 11; and (3) the registration statement `contained an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact necessary to make the statements therein not misleading.'"
To plead a sufficient claim under Section 12(a)(2), a plaintiff must allege that: "(1) the defendant is a `statutory seller'; (2) the sale was effectuated `by means of a prospectus or oral communication'; and (3) the prospectus or oral communication `include[d] an untrue statement of a material fact or omit[ted] to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.'"
The defendants argue that plaintiff has failed to allege any actionable misstatements or omissions. They contend that the alleged statements were statements of opinion, that there is no factual basis pled for concluding that the opinions expressed were not honestly held, and that any alleged omissions are not actionable because there was no duty to disclose.
In order to state a claim based on a statement of opinion, a plaintiff must allege adequately that the opinion proved inaccurate and that it was not believed by the speaker when given.
Plaintiff has alleged adequately that MetLife's IBNR reserves proved to be objectively insufficient to meet the company's life insurance policy obligations. The key question at this stage is whether plaintiff has alleged that the defendants did not actually believe the IBNR reserve estimates to be accurate estimates of needed reserves when reported "or knew that [they] had no reasonable basis for [those estimates]."
The amended complaint alleges that after running the SSA-DMF against a portion of the life insurance policies in 2007 and discovering a reserve shortfall of $80 million dollars, MetLife knew that its method for setting IBNR reserves over the previous several decades had not accounted for all deceased policy holders. As a result, the company knew that its estimated IBNR reserves were insufficient to meet the companies life insurance policy obligations, or at least was aware that it had no reasonable basis for believing the estimates.
The MetLife Defendants' reliance on City of Omaha, Neb. Civilian Emps. Ret. Sys. v. CBS Corp.
The MetLife Defendants argue that none of the alleged misstatements or omissions is actionable because "[p]laintiff has identified no law, rule, regulation or principle of accounting in effect during the putative class period that required insurance companies to affirmatively search the DMF — or any other source — for deceased policyholders, nor can it."
MetLife was obligated to report its life insurance IBNR reserves. As a result of its 2007 SSA-DMF cross-check, the company knew that its method for setting reserves ignored facts that strongly suggested that reserves were understated, i.e., knew that use of the SSA-DMF likely would have resulted in higher reserves and thus cast doubt on the reasonableness of its estimates. But it failed to make use of the database. Whether or not a law required specifically that MetLife use the SSA-DMF is irrelevant.
The amended complaint alleges that the defendants had a duty to disclose the pending state investigations prior to August 5, 2011 under Item 103 of SEC Regulation S-K.
Plaintiff next argues that FASB Accounting Standards Codification 450-20 ("ASC 450") required disclosure. That argument fails for the same reason, viz. that the state investigations were not pending or threatened litigation.
Finally, plaintiff argues that disclosure was required under Item 303 of regulation S-K.
The amended complaint alleges that states had begun to pressure MetLife to use the SSA-DMF in its life insurance business by late the summer of 2010.
A misstatement is material where "there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable [investor] would consider it important in deciding how to [act]."
Plaintiff has stated claims under Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act because, as discussed above, plaintiff has pled adequately that MetLife made misstatements in its Forms 10-K and 10-Q that were incorporated into the registration statements. The MetLife and Underwriter Defendants argue that these claims nevertheless should be dismissed for absence of loss causation.
Plaintiff is not required to allege loss causation in order to withstand a motion to dismiss claims under Sections 11 and 12(a)(2). Loss causation is an affirmative defense, the burden of proof for which rests with the defendant. It is proper, however, to dismiss a complaint where "it is apparent from the face of the complaint that the plaintiff cannot recover her alleged losses,"
While plaintiff has not pled adequately loss causation for the purposes of its Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 claims, it is not apparent from the face of the complaint that plaintiff will be unable to recover based on either the August 5 or October 6, 2011 disclosures. While defendants may prove that the drops in stock value were due to other market forces, that possibility is insufficient to defeat claims under Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) on a motion to dismiss.
Defendants Kandarian and Mullaney are not alleged to have been MetLife directors or to have signed the registration statements at issue. The Section 11 claims should be dismissed as to these defendants only.
The Individual and Director Defendants argue that the amended complaint fails to allege that they were "statutory sellers" and that the Section 12(a)(2) claims therefore should be dismissed. The Individual and Director Defendants were statutory sellers "only if they (1) directly passed title to the securities, or (2) solicited the purchase of securities out of a desire to (a) serve their own interests or (b) serve the interests of the securities' owner."
Plaintiff attempts to allege solicitation by the director defendants based on the fact that they signed the registration statements. In Citiline Holdings, Inc. v. iStar Financial Inc., Judge Sullivan held, contrary to the decisions of some courts within this district, that signing a registration statement does not itself constitute solicitation under Section 12(a)(2).
Citiline did not hold only that signing a registration statement is insufficient to constitute solicitation. It held also that high ranking corporate officers who allegedly made material misrepresentations directly to investors at a corporate investor day (as in this case) were not statutory sellers.
The Section 12(a)(2) claims against the Individual and Director Defendants are dismissed.
Plaintiff has alleged adequate Securities Act claims against the Underwriter Defendants. Neither Goldman Sachs nor Citigroup, however, underwrote the August 2010 offering. To the extent that the amended complaint makes claims against those two underwriters for the August 2010 offering, those claims should be dismissed.
Plaintiff seeks to hold the Individual Defendants and Director Defendants liable as control persons under Section 15 of the Securities Act.
As explained above, plaintiff has alleged a primary violation. It remains only to be seen whether plaintiff has alleged adequately control as to each defendant.
Plaintiff has alleged adequately that Henrickson had actual control. As an inside director and Chief Executive Officer, he had the ability to control the actions of his subordinates. In addition, he signed the financial statements, indicating that he had control over those who drafted them. And he made allegedly misleading public statements.
Plaintiff has alleged adequately that Wheeler had actual control. As Chief Financial Officer, Wheeler signed MetLife's financial statements and attested to their accuracy. He allegedly made public misstatements on earnings calls. And he is alleged to have participated in creating processes for broad use of the SSA-DMF in 2010.
Plaintiff has alleged adequately that Carlson had actual control. Carlson oversaw MetLife's accounting and signed MetLife Forms 10-Q and 10-K.
Plaintiff has alleged adequately that Kandarian had actual control. He was a high-raking corporate officer that participated in earnings calls and made certain of the alleged misstatements.
Plaintiff has alleged adequately that Mullaney had actual control. He oversaw MetLife's U.S. business operations and issued alleged misstatements on quarterly earnings calls.
Plaintiff has alleged adequately that the Director Defendants, except Eduardo Castro-Wright, had actual control. They were board members and signed various financial statements and registration statements that contained the alleged misstatements. Castro-Wright is alleged only to have served as a director, not to have signed any financial or registration
The Court has considered the plaintiff's remaining contentions and finds them to be without merit.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants the motions [DI 38, 42] to the extent they seek dismissal of the Exchange Act claims, dismissal of the Section 11 claims against Kandarian and Mullaney, dismissal of the Section 12(a)(2) claims as to the Individual and Director Defendants and dismissal of the Section 15 claim against Castro-Wright. The motions are denied in all other respects.
SO ORDERED.