DENISE COTE, District Judge:
BACKGROUND .......................................................................459I. Fannie and Freddie .......................................................461II. The Life of a Mortgage Loan ..............................................461 A. Underwriting ...........................................................461 B. Sampling ...............................................................462 C. Defendants' Representations to Purchasers ..............................462 D. Repurchase Obligations .................................................463 E. GSEs' Pre-Purchase Access to Security-Specific Information .............463 1. GSEs Did Not Trade on Material Non-Public Information, Including Loan Files ..............................................463 2. The GSEs' Access to Loan-Level Information .........................464 F. GSEs' Post-Purchase Analyses ...........................................465 1. Anti-Predatory Lending Reviews .....................................465 2. Performance Monitoring .............................................465III. Originator Reviews .......................................................467IV. Aggregator Reviews .......................................................469 A. Goldman Sachs ..........................................................469 B. HSBC ...................................................................469 C. Nomura .................................................................470 D. RBS ....................................................................470V. The GSEs Were Aware of the Risk of Defective Loans .......................470 A. GSEs Had Extensive Experience With Subprime Loans Through Single Family Purchases ...............................................470 B. Knowledge of the Risks of Low- and No-Documentation Loans ..............471 C. General Knowledge of the Subprime Marketplace ..........................471 D. Risk that Originator Defects Might Reach Supporting Loan Groups ........471 E. Risk of Inaccuracies in Defendants' Representations ....................472 1. The GSEs' Pre-Purchase Credit Risk Analyses ........................473 2. Appraisal Bias .....................................................473VI. Single Family Discovery Rulings ..........................................474VII. FHFA's Allegations and the Instant Motion ................................475DISCUSSION .......................................................................476I. Relevant Standards .......................................................478 A. Summary Judgment Standard ..............................................478
B. Elements of Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) Claims ............................478 C. Actual Knowledge .......................................................480 II. FHFA's Burden ............................................................481III. The GSEs Did Not Have Actual Knowledge of Falsity ........................481 A. The GSEs' General Knowledge ............................................484 B. The GSEs Actually Believed Certain Representations Were Inaccurate .....486 C. GSEs Believed Some Defective Loans Might Reach SLGs ....................487 1. Mortgage Loans May Reflect Origination Practices ...................487 2. Expectation "Inherent" in GSEs' Business Practices .................488 3. Defendants' Use of Sampling ........................................489 4. Repurchase Obligations .............................................490 D. Limits on Discovery ....................................................491CONCLUSION .......................................................................493
Plaintiff Federal Housing Finance Agency ("FHFA"), as conservator for the Federal National Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae") and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac") (together, the Government-Sponsored Enterprises or "GSEs"), brought these actions against financial institutions involved in the packaging, marketing, and sale of residential mortgage-backed securities ("RMBS") purchased by the GSEs between 2005 and 2007, alleging among other things that Defendants
FHFA urges that no reasonable jury could find that the GSEs knew these statements were false; accordingly, FHFA requests partial summary judgment on Defendants' knowledge defense under 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a) ("Section 11") and the absence-of-knowledge element of FHFA's claims under 15 U.S.C. § 77l(a)(2) ("Section 12(a)(2)") and similar provisions of D.C.'s and Virginia's Blue Sky laws. See D.C.Code § 31-5606.05(a)(1)(B) ("D.C. Blue Sky law"); Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-522(A)(ii) ("Virginia Blue Sky law," and together with the D.C. Blue Sky law, the "Blue Sky Laws"). For the reasons set forth below, FHFA's motion is granted.
FHFA brought sixteen related actions in this district alleging misstatements in the Offering Documents for certain RMBS certificates purchased by the GSEs between 2005 and 2007 (the "Certificates"). All but four actions have settled. The remaining actions concern 65 residential mortgage-backed securities issued or underwritten by Defendants (the "Securities"), which the GSEs purchased for more than $19 billion.
RMBS are securities entitling the holder to income payments from pools of residential
Within a given securitization, the loans were placed into one or more Supporting Loan Groups. For example, Goldman Sachs's INDX 2005-AR18 securitization, offered through a Prospectus Supplement of September 2, 2005, was comprised of twenty-three classes of Certificates and two Supporting Loan Groups with an aggregated stated principal balance of over $2.4 billion. Goldman Sachs represented that the original principal balances of the loans in one group "conform[ed] to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines" that set maximum initial loan balances, and made no such guarantee about the loans in the second group.
The trust then issued certificates to Defendants, who in turn sold them to the GSEs, which entitled the holder to a stream of income from borrowers' payments on the loans in a particular Supporting Loan Group. Thus, a certificate's value depended on the ability of mortgagors to repay the loan principal and interest and the adequacy of the collateral in the event of default.
The certificates linked to each SLG were further subdivided into tranches of varying seniority. Holders of the most senior certificates for a given SLG were paid first, after which holders of the next-most-senior certificates received payment, and so on. Thus, should some borrowers in an SLG default on their loans, certificates in the junior-most tranche would absorb all or most of the shortfall before payments to more senior certificates were affected. Accordingly, the most senior certificates were subject to less risk than were more junior certificates. By apportioning risk in this way, Defendants were able to create AAA-rated securities from Alt-A and subprime loans. The GSEs purchased senior Certificates — often only the most senior — with the highest credit ratings.
The Defendants raise arguments about the GSEs' knowledge concerning many facets of the origination and securitization process. Below are the principal facts linked to Defendants' major arguments, as well as needed context for those facts. All reasonable inferences are drawn in favor of Defendants, as nonmovants. Where Defendants offered a litany of similar examples, the Court has attempted to select the strongest or most illustrative. For reasons given in the Discussion section, the Court finds that many of these facts have little bearing on the question at issue here:
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are government-sponsored enterprises created to ensure liquidity in the mortgage market. Fannie Mae was established in 1938, Freddie Mac in 1970. Their primary business is to purchase mortgage loans from originators that conform to the GSEs' standards ("conforming loans") and then either hold those loans on their own books or securitize them for offer to the public. This side of their business is known as the "Single Family" side. In 2000, the GSEs began to purchase quantities of Alt-A and subprime loans as well and securitizing some of those purchases. Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Past, Present and Future (2009), in 11 Cityscape: J. Pol'y Dev. & Res. 231, 236-37 (2009).
Each GSE also conducts a second business. The GSEs purchase and hold private-label mortgage-backed securities (PLS), although this is a substantially smaller portion of their activities. It is the PLS that the GSEs purchased from the Defendants that prompt the claims in these lawsuits. The GSEs held approximately $100 billion in PLS in 2002, with roughly $35 billion in subprime and $3 billion in Alt-A PLS; at their peak, in 2005, the GSEs' PLS holdings had grown to approximately $350 billion, with roughly $145 billion in subprime and $40 billion in Alt-A PLS. Cong. Budget Office, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Role in the Secondary Mortgage Market 10 (Dec.2010);
The process that created a private-label security, whether followed faithfully or not, generally worked as follows.
A loan file that contained the documents assembled by an originator for a given Mortgage Loan was reviewed in a process called "underwriting" at one or more times before the Loan was placed in a securitization. In the first instance, the originator underwrote each Loan it approved, confirming that it met applicable underwriting guidelines, was valued reasonably and accurately, and was not fraudulent. Originators sometimes made case-by-case exceptions to their underwriting guidelines when a loan application failed to meet a certain guideline but appeared to nonetheless qualify for a mortgage program based on compensating factors.
Defendants, who functioned as "aggregators" of the Mortgage Loans, acquired loans from Originators in order to pool them into Supporting Loan Groups that would be tied to securities. Before purchasing these loans and issuing securities backed by them, the GSEs understood that Defendants — or third-party vendors on Defendants' behalf — conducted due diligence review of the loan pools to confirm that the loans met the relevant underwriting guidelines as well as to confirm other characteristics of the loans that were described
As the Defendants described their due diligence practices to one or both GSEs, when Defendants conducted due diligence review of a pool of loans, they often reunderwrote a sample of the loans. HSBC, for example, disclosed to PLS investors that it reunderwrote the loan file against not only the originator's underwriting guidelines but also HSBC's own eligibility standards. It employed a "10% minimum adverse and random sample" for prime and Alt-A loans, and "25% minimum adverse and random sample" (20% adverse and 5% random) for subprime loans. "An adverse sample ... [wa]s selected based on the layered risks inherent in the loans (i.e., those posing the greatest default and loss [risk] in the pool)." This adverse sample was created by a "proprietary model, which w[ould] risk-rank the mortgage loans in the pool" based on a dozen indicia of credit risk. The selection of the sample depended as well on HSBC's evaluation of the "[o]verall risk level of the mortgage pool," "[p]rior transaction due diligence results," and the "[f]inancial standing of the seller."
A 2006 Freddie Mac review of Goldman Sachs reported that Goldman Sachs's "due diligence sampling model ... relies primarily on adverse selection to ensure they see the loans with the highest probabilities of default." The review found that Goldman Sachs's "Alt A and Subprime sample levels depend on seller"; the sample size was "[t]ypically 50%" but could be "20-25% for more seasoned sellers." These samples were "typically 85-90% adversely selected."
Similarly, Fannie Mae reported in a 2006 review that RBS's "typical sample size" for non-prime loans was 25%, "predominantly adversely selected." For prime and Alt-A loans, "sampling size [wa]s determined by a statistical calculation intended to obtain a 95 percent confidence interval, a less than 10 percent error rate, and precision of five percent or greater." RBS "require[d] additional adverse selection for compliance [red flags], high loan balance, low FICO [credit] score, seasoning, or other abnormal loan characteristics."
A Freddie Mac report on Nomura's diligence practices in March 2006 found that Nomura conducted property and compliance due diligence on 100% of loans. Nomura conducted credit due diligence on 100% of loans in pools with amounts less than $25 million, and on 20% of loans in pools with greater amounts.
In the offering documents for each security, Defendants made representations to
For instance, with respect to Supporting Loan Group I in Goldman Sachs's Securitization FFML 2006-FF13,
Many of the Offering Documents for the Securities at issue included a repurchase provision requiring Originators or Defendant sponsors to buy back a "defective" loan in certain circumstances. In many cases, the Originator or sponsor was obligated to repurchase a loan if it was originated as a result of fraud, negligence, or a misrepresentation or omission. For example, with respect to FFML 2006-FF13, First Franklin Financial Corp. ("First Franklin"), as Originator, or Goldman Sachs, as sponsor, was "obligated to repurchase, or substitute for, [any] mortgage loan" should it happen that, "with respect to [that] mortgage loan[,] any of [First Franklin's or Goldman Sachs's] representations and warranties ... are breached in any material respect as of the date made."
Given federal securities laws prohibiting insider trading, the GSEs understood that their PLS traders and any others involved in purchase decisions could not be privy to material nonpublic information about the Securities. In addition to purchasing PLS, the GSEs purchased mortgage loans directly through the Single Family side of their businesses. But, because of the securities laws, "there was a firewall between [each GSE's PLS business] and [its] single family" business. For example, Fannie Mae's Single Family Counterparty
The GSEs' PLS traders were often given access only to aggregated information concerning a securitization or supporting loan group as a whole. This information typically included the distributions of LTV and CLTV ratios, owner-occupancy rates, FICO credit scores, no- and low-documentation loans, mortgage type (e.g., fixed-rate or amortizing adjustable rate), and Alt-A and subprime loans.
There is no evidence that the GSEs were ever given pre-purchase access to the loan files for the Mortgage Loans. But, in at least one PLS deal in March 2006, HSBC sent Paul Norris ("Norris"), who was responsible for Fannie Mae's PLS portfolio, loan-level information including each loan's originator, LTV ratio, and property street address.
The only evidence with respect to Freddie Mac indicates that loan-level information, including property street addresses, was not provided to PLS traders, although others at both GSEs had access to loan-level information to review the extent to which loans would meet affordable housing goals set for the GSEs by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and to request that loans that did not meet housing goals be removed from a prospective Supporting Loan Group.
The GSEs made efforts to discourage predatory lending practices such as prepayment penalties and excessive fees and points, or lending without regard to a borrower's ability to repay the loan. But, "because of SEC related restrictions related to public securities, the [pre-purchase] loan level due diligence [for anti-predatory lending compliance] [wa]s managed by the seller of securities, not Fannie Mae Legal." These sellers were required to make representations and extend warranties about compliance with these anti-predatory policies. The GSEs had the right to "put back" any loans that violated the "reps and warranties." Consequently, Fannie Mae's Legal Department took steps after the purchase of a PLS certificate to confirm that the PLS sellers had complied with Fannie Mae's anti-predatory lending policy. The Legal Department undertook operational reviews of Originators after the settlement date of PLS purchases and required transaction-specific due diligence 90 days after the settlement date. These reviews were not shared with Fannie Mae's PLS traders.
As of May 2005, Fannie Mae's anti-predatory lending review was conducted as follows. Once Fannie Mae's Supporting Loan Group was finalized, and prior to settlement, Fannie Mae required that the issuer or underwriter have its due diligence provider "generate a Fannie Mae compliance exception report" ("Fannie Mae Exception Report"). Loans identified as exceptions had to be cleared with the diligence provider or removed from the SLG prior to settlement. Ninety days after settlement, the Fannie Mae Exception Report was sent to Fannie Mae's Legal Department. The Legal Department would review the Report and require immediate repurchase of any loan exceptions that remained in the SLG.
Defendants have submitted two such Fannie Mae Exception Reports. The first, issued in April 2006 concerning Goldman Sachs Securitization GSAMP 2006-FM1, noted that the "borrower does not have sufficient ability to pay" in 10 loans (1% of the sample reviewed), as well as several other compliance violations, including excessive finance charges or certain documents missing from the loan file. The second, issued in July 2005 concerning a securitization not at issue in these actions underwritten by RBS, did not find that any borrowers had insufficient ability to repay the loan.
After purchasing RMBS, the GSEs monitored the performance of their Securities. They received monthly "remittance reports" that reflected delinquencies and early payment defaults ("EPDs") in the underlying Mortgage Loans. Freddie Mac created a "Weakest Deals Report" listing struggling securities and a "Mortgage ABS Portfolio Report" that tracked delinquency rates by loan type. Similarly, Fannie Mae created a monthly "Watch List" identifying poorly performing PLS deals. Several of the GSEs' former employees testified that EPDs may suggest
In the late summer and fall of 2006, the GSEs saw an increase in EPDs, including in the PLS they held. On August 25, 2006, a Fannie Mae weekly email sent by PLS trader Shayan Salahuddin ("Salahuddin") concerning news in the subprime market noted that H & R Block, the parent of Option One Mortgage ("Option One"), took losses "due to an increase in early payment defaults on Option One originations." Salahuddin continued:
Salahuddin testified that "in late 2006 ... the increase in defaults in deals in general was ... concerning." A December 15, 2006 email from Kin Chung ("Chung"), Fannie Mae's Director of PLS Surveillance, noted, based on preliminary data, that "our 2006 vintage [of PLS] is showing much faster ramping in delinquencies than previous vintages" and that "the 2006Q2 [second-quarter 2006] vintage is performing significantly worse than the 2006Q1 vintage."
In November 2006, an internal Freddie Mac document titled "Summary of Freddie Non-Agency Portfolio and the Subprime Market" reported, with respect to the "2006 Vintage" of loans, that "2006 60 + day delinquencies (`DQ') [i.e., loans where monthly payments are more than 60 days past due] are greater than all other vintages at comparable seasoning, including 2000 which was the worst vintage of this decade." In particular, the summary notes that the 60+ day DQ rate was equivalent to 90 basis points ("bps") for the 2003 vintage, 160 bps for the 2005 vintage, and 240 bps for the 2006 vintage. It also reports that "more leveraged 2nd liens and high LTV loans have performed worse in 2006 relative to any other vintage," that there is a "significant incidence of foreclosure in the 2006 vintage at such an early stage," and that "there has been a noticeable decline in underwriting standards (higher CLTVs, lower FICOs)." The summary states that "[u]nderwriting is a major concern as originators are stretching for volume." With respect to EPDs in particular, the summary reported that "[e]arly payment defaults are up significantly, especially for loans with piggyback seconds [second mortgages]," with "Option One, Accredited and WAMU hav[ing] reported significantly higher levels of EPD."
Freddie Mac's December 2006 "MABS [Mortgage Asset Backed Securities] Industry Review" reported "a pervasive loosening of credit standards in originators' underwriting guidelines." It determined that "the combination of lower HPA [home price appreciation] and aggressive underwriting practices ha[d] begun to show up in delinquency and EPD figures." The review noted that Fitch projected that "2006 vintage subprime mortgages will perform substantially worse in 2007, with cumulative lifetime losses ultimately reaching 7%, the worst collateral losses of any vintage to date," and that "[s]erious subprime delinquencies ha[d] increased almost 50% year-over-year."
These trends continued in 2007. For example, a June 8, 2007 Fannie Mae "PLS Credit Trend Report" for the month of May noted that "Fannie Mae 2006 investments continue to demonstrate the higher delinquency rate as well as cumulative
The GSEs' Single Family businesses investigated and approved originators before purchasing mortgage loans from them. The PLS operations at the GSEs relied on those reviews, or the results of those reviews, from the Single Family operations in making their trading decisions.
As of August 2006, Fannie Mae required PLS to confirm, among other things, that any originator of more than 10% of the underlying mortgage loans was on a list of Fannie Mae approved originators. Its SFCPRM was tasked with approving originators. SFCPRM reviews, some of which included on-site visits, primarily assessed "[c]ounterparty risk," which was "the risk of financial loss to Fannie Mae resulting from [the counterparty]'s failure to meet its contractual obligation[s]," including inability to meet repurchase obligations. SFCPRM also examined originators' underwriting protocols, appraisal practices, and fraud detection. In some instances SFCPRM, itself or through a third-party vendor, conducted loan-level reviews of a sample of the originators' loans.
Pre-approval from Freddie Mac's Alternative Market Operations Group ("AMO") was required for any originator that originated loans constituting more than 1% of the unpaid principal balance of Freddie's PLS portfolio. AMO was part of Freddie's Single Family business. AMO's counterparty reviews of originators examined, among other things, the originator's adherence to its underwriting guidelines and its appraisal protocols. AMO originator reviews typically included on-site visits and reunderwriting of fifty loan files. While PLS traders at Freddie Mac had access to AMO's originator reviews, it appears that Fannie Mae's traders were only given a list of approved originators.
SFCPRM conducted an on-site operational review of Originator First Franklin on May 24 and 25, 2006.
Reviewing the performance of older First Franklin loans, SFCPRM found that First Franklin
On SFCPRM's behalf, diligence vendor Clayton reviewed 450
Other Originator reviews were less positive. For example, Freddie Mac's AMO reviewed Residential Mortgage Assurance Enterprise, LLC ("ResMae") in April 2004 and gave it an overall rating of "Marginal" and recommended that Freddie Mac "Proceed With Caution." Defendants list ResMae as a "major originator" in one of the 65 Securities at issue, which Freddie Mac purchased on April 30, 2007. AMO found that ResMae's "credit philosophy is marginal, and closely resembles the traditional `story loan' approach formerly used in subprime," which approves loans based "more on the borrower's individual story than ... on objective lending criteria." AMO also found that "[q]uality control is inadequate, as it relies entirely on investor due diligence."
One of the most extreme examples is AMO's review of First NLC Mortgage Corporation ("First NLC"), which Defendants name as a "major originator" in three of the 65 Securities at issue, purchased by Freddie Mac December 29, 2005, August 31, 2006, and January 31, 2007. AMO's review, conducted on January 31 and February 1, 2005, awarded First NLC an overall rating of "Poor." AMO found that First NLC "allow[ed] almost
The GSEs reviewed and approved aggregators as well as originators. Their reviews of the four aggregators whose Securities are at issue reflect the following assessments.
AMO reviewed Goldman Sachs's conduit program
AMO issued a review of Goldman Sachs as an aggregator generally on June 15, 2006, rating its due diligence "Satisfactory" and rating it "Above Average" overall. As noted above, Goldman Sachs's "due diligence sampling model ... relie[d] primarily on adverse selection to ensure they see the loans with the highest probabilities of default," with sample sizes "[t]ypically 50%." With respect to appraisal review in particular, AMO noted that "Goldman Sachs takes a proactive and unique approach to the appraisal review process that starts in their adverse sample selection." AMO explained that "GS closely monitors national trends and looks for pockets of weakness in the national real estate markets, these areas are identified by zip codes and become a part of their adverse selection sample." Goldman "runs an AVM on the entire sample selection," which it selected "based on ... the `robustness' of data provided by the AVM vendor." Moreover, AMO reported that "GS views vacant and listed properties as major risks" and thus uses "zip code tables and other internal adverse indicators" to identify properties on which to "order occupancy checks and run MLS listings to verify the status." A credit approval processed in May 2007 shows that AMO rated Goldman Sachs as an aggregator as "Above Average."
Fannie Mae issued a counterparty credit review of HSBC (HASCO) on May 3, 2007. The review found that HSBC's "subprime shelf is acceptable based upon (1) the quality and quantity of loan file due diligence and (2) strong pool performance of the bonds over a period of two years and 17 deals." Concerning HSBC's diligence processes, Fannie Mae found that HSBC:
Fannie Mae did note, however, that "[a]lthough [HSBC] claim[s] to conduct intensive and rigorous counterparty due diligence, they have a track record of buying collateral from some poorly capitalized companies including New Century." The report recommended approving HSBC as a PLS aggregator.
Freddie Mac's AMO issued an aggregator operational review of Nomura on March 14, 2006. "Based upon the combination of good due diligence methodologies, reasonable valuation processes and sound controls, AMO rate[d] Nomura subprime as Satisfactory overall." AMO found that "Nomura's due diligence program is well managed," and "found no issues with Nomura['s] appraisal process, which is solid." AMO noted that "Nomura takes the property evaluation process seriously and places a high priority on collateral valuation."
Fannie Mae issued an aggregator review of RBS Greenwich Capital in November 2006.
The GSEs' Single Family businesses bought a large number of subprime and Alt-A mortgage loans directly from Originators. The GSEs purchased these loans either in bulk ("bulk purchases") or individually, through a "flow" of single loans ("flow purchases"). In some instances, the GSEs performed pre-purchase due diligence on the loans. Defendants have identified documents showing that Fannie Mae conducted pre-purchase due diligence on bulk purchases of subprime loans since 2006.
For example, on September 11, 2006, Fannie Mae purchased 779 subprime loans with an unpaid principal balance of approximately $120 million directly from Originator First Franklin. Later that month,
Because of disclosures made in documents provided to the GSEs prior to their purchase of PLS, they were informed that some of the SLGs contained low- and no-documentation mortgage loans, and thus, stated-income stated-asset ("SISA") loans and no-income no-asset ("NINA") loans. The GSEs understood that low- and no-documentation loans posed heightened risks of borrower fraud, and considered the percentage of these loans in the Supporting Loan Groups when making PLS purchase decisions.
In addition to the knowledge gained through the GSEs' first-hand experience in the Alt-A and subprime loan markets, the GSEs received a number of articles in 2006 and 2007 about weakness in the subprime market. Some of these articles reported a rise in borrower fraud and less rigorous underwriting by originators. Fannie Mae PLS traders drafted "subprime weekly updates" that summarized news concerning the subprime market.
Some of the GSEs' former employees testified about the risks of defective loans being sold to the aggregators and reaching Supporting Loans Groups. Michael Aneiro ("Aneiro"), Freddie Mac's Vice President of Non-Agency Portfolio Management, who headed Freddie Mac's PLS portfolio, agreed that, "if an originator was not following its own guidelines and was contributing loans to the collateral for a pool, [he] would expect that loans not underwritten to the originator's guidelines would then end up in the collateral for a pool." Aneiro also agreed that it "would be [his] general expectation" that "when an originator contributed collateral to a PLS deal ... the collateral reflected the originator's general origination practices."
Aneiro's counterpart at Fannie Mae, Norris, agreed when asked if he would "expect the loans backing PLS [he was] buying to be reflective of an originator's general underwriting practices." Norris also testified that Fannie Mae's "process basically relied on the dealers and originators providing [it] with reps and warrant[ie]s as to the validity of how these loans were underwritten." Norris explained that, after receiving a report prepared within the Single Family business that Originator New Century may not have been following its own guidelines, Fannie Mae's PLS division did not investigate whether New Century was following their guidelines "as to originations in PLS," because Fannie insisted on "reps and warrant[ie]s on every deal that we purchase."
The attorney in Fannie Mae's Legal Department who headed its anti-predatory lending reviews, John Ingram, testified that if the Legal Department saw "a trend... with a particular originator," it may have "let the trading desk know that we don't want to see any more deals with that originator." Ingram also testified that "the issuer would have been engaged with the due diligence provider in looking at the anti-predatory lending results and removing loans presettlement directly with the due diligence provider," because "[t]hat was their responsibility."
Perri Henderson ("Henderson"), a Freddie Mac PLS trader, when asked if she would "expect the loans backing [a] PLS deal to generally reflect th[e] originator's practices," answered, "Unless they stated otherwise I would assume that." Henderson was not the PLS trader responsible for any of the Certificates purchased from the Defendants.
Speaking about Freddie Mac's own use of sampling to review prospective bulk loan purchases for the Single Family business, Ronald Feigles ("Feigles"), the Freddie Mac employee responsible for due diligence on Freddie's bulk purchases of Alt-A mortgage loans, agreed that one could "reasonably assume" that at least some of the unsampled loans contained defects. And Feigles agreed that it was "probably accurate" that Freddie Mac would "typically... purchase between 70 and 85 percent of the loans that it looked at in the Alt-A bulk purchases." The percentage of loans purchased among those offered for sale is referred to as the "pull-through rate." A February 2006 memorandum concerning a Fannie Mae Single Family purchase from Originator New Century noted that Fannie Mae was told New Century's "standard pull through rate is 90%" and further noted that "[o]ther lenders in subprime expect pull through rate (e.g. First Franklin) in the mid and upper 90's."
There is no evidence that the GSEs ever questioned Defendants' representations about any of the Securities at issue. At a few points, however, each GSE questioned the reliability of the descriptions of certain sets of PLS loans.
First, in July 2006, a Freddie Mac credit approval analysis authored by Kevin Palmer ("Palmer") stated, concerning a security purchased from dismissed defendant UBS Americas, Inc. ("UBS"), that the "deal has about 47% of the collateral concentrated right at 80% CLTV. We believe that the dealer is not reporting true CLTV accurately and therefore we have shifted all of this collateral into the 95 + CLTV bucket for costing purposes." Palmer reported, "Even under this extreme scenario," the deal warranted approval. On August 21, 2006, Palmer wrote about another security purchased from dismissed defendant UBS that the "deal contained a high percentage of collateral right at 80% LTV, this was an indicator to us that the reported CLTV number could have been low." And in another July 2006 email, Palmer noted that Freddie Mac "requested loan level information (... ensur[ing] that this information was made available to all AAA investors who requested it)," where a Merrill Lynch SLG had "the highest CLTV's (95.99%) that we have seen in the past six months" and "a fairly high percent of NINA [no-income no-asset loans]." Palmer noted Freddie Mac was "concerned about the accuracy" of its internal risk estimates based on aggregate pool-wide
On March 26, 2007, Fannie Mae's Norris wrote regarding a pool of loans originated by New Century, "Given these are likely the last loans made by New Century, we ask that you make some liberal assumptions with regard to CLTV, income, dti, etc." The GSEs never purchased a security backed by these loans.
The GSEs' pre-purchase credit analysis often included modeling multiple scenarios to determine a Certificate's risk profile. For instance, as of April 2007, Fannie Mae's pre-purchase review included a "50 scenario analysis." As Caijiao Zhao ("Zhao"), the Director of PLS Analytics, testified, "[t]here's always the best case analysis, which is using the tape [with Defendants' representations], using the corporate approved model, but there's another set of alternative ... `what if' analys[e]s," where "[w]e say, okay, what if LTV is 10 points higher than what's reported to us and things like that." Similarly, Palmer testified that Freddie Mac conducted "scenario analysis ... illustrating what the performance would be if [certain loan characteristics, like] CLTVs were different" than as described by sellers. As Palmer explained, "our assumption of the LTVs [wa]s that the information provided to us was accurate," but Freddie Mac considered "how the [Certificate] would perform under different LTVs" as an exercise in "prudent risk management."
The GSEs were generally aware of the risk of appraisal bias, which, if uncorrected, can distort reported LTV and CLTV ratios. For example, Gary Kain ("Kain"), the Vice President of Freddie Mac's Mortgage Investments and Strategy Group responsible for overseeing both Single Family and PLS activities, was asked if he became concerned in 2006 and 2007 about the risk of appraisal bias in PLS. He testified that "at some point in this process" he "became ... aware" that "there was potentially an issue with appraisal bias." In an August 2005 memorandum, the Vice President of Mortgage Credit Risk Management at Fannie Mae, Shelley Poland, listed as a "risk factor[] and practice[] prevalent in today's mortgage credit environment" the "general degrading of appraisal quality as well as the proliferation of automated appraisal valuations."
By 2005, Fannie Mae's Single Family Research & Analytics group created quarterly "Lender Valuation Bias Reports" that reported appraisal bias by region and by originator for the top twenty-five originators, based on a comparison of originator reported values for loans purchased by Fannie Mae's Single Family business against values generated by the GSE's Retrospective Property Valuation System (RPS). The report for the second quarter of 2007 found that the total median valuation bias for all originators was 6.2% and the total median valuation bias for Originator Countrywide, for example, was 7.5%.
The risk of appraisal bias, generally, appears not to have been separately accounted for in the GSEs' models, at least by Fannie Mae.
Defendants complain in their opposition to FHFA's motion that the limits the Court imposed on discovery in these actions, particularly in connection with the GSEs' Single Family businesses, have prejudiced their ability to establish actual knowledge. The parties litigated the proper scope of Single Family discovery over several years, beginning with a conference in July 2012. After treating these issues in six subsequent conferences over the course of the next year, the Court received briefing and issued an opinion on June 28, 2013 (the "June 28 Opinion"), in which it set out the appropriate limits. FHFA v. UBS Americas Inc., 11cv5201 (DLC), 2013 WL 3284118, at *14-15 (S.D.N.Y. June 28, 2013). The June 28 Opinion includes a lengthy description of the history of these disputes as of that date, which is incorporated by reference here. The Opinion set out a procedure for the parties to follow in the event they needed to request further targeted discovery. Id. at *25. Defendants moved for reconsideration on July 12, which the Court denied on September 25, 2013. FHFA v. JPMorgan Chase & Co., 11cv6188 (DLC), 2013 WL 5354212 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 25, 2013).
These issues were raised again on several occasions. For instance, they were raised in the context of the Defendants' requests for certain discovery from Clayton, a due diligence vendor. This past December, they were raised in the context of expansive demands for additional discovery from the GSEs themselves. After a lengthy conference with the parties on December 9, 2013, certain of the Defendants issued further subpoenas to third parties in an effort to obtain the type of material that the Court had already ruled was not properly discoverable in these actions. On December 18, the Court ordered that "defendants cease efforts to obtain from third parties the types of documents and information that this Court has previously ruled they may not obtain from the GSEs or others." Most recently, these issues returned in January of this year when Defendants argued that they should be permitted to use Single Family discovery barred in these actions but produced in connection with a related case in California. An Order of January 8, 2014, prohibited the use of such documents.
As the record before the Court on the instant motion attests, Defendants were granted extensive discovery of the GSEs' Single Family businesses. FHFA produced three categories of documents from the Single Family side: (1) "documents considered in connection with the purchases at issue," (2) "documents held by custodians who were required to give the PLS traders such information," and (3) "documents that went to the GSEs' risk management committees with supervisory responsibility over the PLS trading." 2013 WL 3284118, at *3. As detailed in the June 28 Opinion, the general categories of documents produced to the Defendants also encompass a broad array of documents concerning Originators:
Id. at *10.
The June 28 Opinion also outlined the production of documents from GSE committees and custodians who had responsibility for Single Family operations:
Id.
Fact discovery closed on December 6, 2013. FHFA and the GSEs produced more than 19 million pages of documents in discovery; defendants in the sixteen related actions produced more than 212 million pages, and third parties produced more than 14 million pages. Defendants took depositions over 46 days, questioning 29 GSE and FHFA witnesses.
FHFA alleges misstatements and omissions in the Offering Documents concerning four attributes of the Securities: (1) the Originators' adherence to applicable underwriting guidelines in originating the Mortgage Loans; (2) the LTV ratios and CLTV ratios of the Mortgage Loans; (3) the owner-occupancy rates of the properties securing the Mortgage Loans; and (4) the credit ratings of the purchased Certificates, which correspond to particular tranches of the Securities. For instance, in connection with Nomura's securitization NHELI 2007-3,
FHFA claims that these misrepresentations and omissions caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac when the Mortgage Loans experienced defaults and delinquencies at a higher rate than they would have had the Mortgage Loans been as the Offering Documents described.
FHFA brings its claims for these alleged misstatements and omissions under Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 (the "Securities Act"), as well under substantially identical provisions of the D.C. and Virginia Blue Sky Laws. To prevail on these claims, FHFA must prove that the Securities' registration statements (for Section 11) or prospectuses (for Section 12(a)(2) and the Blue Sky Laws) contained an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact. See 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a); id. at § 77l (a)(2); D.C.Code § 31-5606.05(a)(1)(B); Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-522(A)(ii). Defendants are not liable, however, if the GSEs knew of the untruth or omission. Under Section 11, the burden is on Defendants to prove the GSEs' knowledge as a defense to liability; under Section 12(a)(2) and the Blue Sky Laws, the burden is on FHFA to prove the absence of the GSEs' knowledge as an element of its claims.
On April 22, 2014, FHFA brought the instant motion for partial summary judgment on the ground that no reasonable jury could find that the GSEs knew of the scores of alleged misstatements in the Defendants' Offering Documents. The motion was fully submitted on June 24. Defendants contend that sufficient evidence exists to permit a jury to find the GSEs knew that conditions existed in the marketplace — particularly in regard to the Originators' underwriting practices — that created a risk of false representations appearing in the Offering Documents.
Defendants contend that the GSEs' knowledge of origination practices and of the subprime market — including the rise of EPDs among 2006 loans in the GSEs' own PLS, first identified in late summer 2006 — suffices to support a finding that the GSEs actually knew of the "very matters" that FHFA asserts made the Mortgage Loans false. In particular Defendants identify seven categories of information that, they argue, constitute circumstantial evidence that the GSEs were "well aware of information FHFA" now claims rendered the Defendants' Offering Documents "misleading":
As described below, this evidence could not support a finding of the GSEs' actual knowledge of falsity of the alleged false statements in the Offering Documents, and is insufficient to raise a question of fact that would prevent summary judgment.
Fatal to most of Defendants' knowledge theories is the simple fact that, whatever the GSEs' knowledge of an Originator's general practices, the Offering Documents contained specific representations about particular sets of Mortgage Loans. These were Mortgage Loans that the Defendants had purchased and chosen to populate the Supporting Loan Groups for a Certificate. The Defendants' study and selection of that set allowed them to describe the quality of these loans in detail. The level of detail included the percentage of loans in a Supporting Loan Group with an original LTV ratio of 80% or lower and the percentage with an original CLTV ratio of 80% or lower. For instance, Nomura represented in the NHELI 2007-3 Offering Documents that 58.49% of the loans (and 59.31% of the pool by aggregate remaining principal balance) had an original LTV ratio of 80% or lower, and that 18.88% of the loans (and 27.05% of the pool by remaining balance) had an original CLTV ratio of 80% or lower. Thus, whatever the GSEs' knowledge of general practices or trends, neither of them had access to the files or data that would give them knowledge that those detailed representations about the Mortgage Loans in a Supporting Loan Group were false. As described below, the Defendants have identified no evidence — either direct or circumstantial — of the extremely improbable scenario they posit: the GSEs, when investing billions of dollars in Securities, knew of the falsity of Defendants' specific representations about the Mortgage Loans in the Supporting Loan Groups underlying the Certificates at issue.
Instead, Defendants argue in generalities about the GSEs' knowledge concerning, among other things, weaknesses in some Originators' underwriting practices and a rise in early payment defaults and foreclosures among loans in the GSEs' PLS originated in 2006 and 2007. Such general knowledge could not support a finding that, for example, Freddie Mac actually knew that, contrary to Nomura's representations concerning Supporting Loan Group I in the NHELI 2007-3 Offering Documents, it was not the case that 58.49% of the loans (and 59.31% of the pool by aggregate remaining principal balance) had an original LTV ratio of 80% or lower. Defendants offer no evidence suggesting that Freddie Mac actually knew that the true percentage of loans with such an LTV ratio was other than 58.49%, or that Freddie Mac knew the true percentage could not be 58.49%, as opposed to say, for instance, 50% or 70%.
Defendants' failure to raise arguments concerning the specific representations at issue for each Certificate presents a challenge to the Court in properly construing Defendants' arguments. Defendants' joint counterstatement of material facts is comprised of 461 paragraphs, many of them setting out specific bits of information that are never discussed in Defendants' briefs or linked to specific Certificates at issue. The Court has endeavored to adequately credit Defendants' general arguments while holding Defendants to the specific evidence proffered here and applying these arguments to the specific representations at issue.
Summary judgment may not be granted unless all of the submissions taken together "show[ ] that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). The moving party bears the burden of demonstrating the absence of a material factual question, and in making this determination, the court must view all facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Technical Servs., Inc., 504 U.S. 451, 456, 112 S.Ct. 2072, 119 L.Ed.2d 265 (1992); Holcomb v. Iona Coll., 521 F.3d 130, 132 (2d Cir.2008). Once the moving party has asserted facts showing that the non-movant's claims cannot be sustained, the opposing party must "set out specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial," and cannot "rely merely on allegations or denials" contained in the pleadings. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e); see also Wright v. Goord, 554 F.3d 255, 266 (2d Cir.2009). Nor may a party "rely on mere speculation or conjecture as to the true nature of the facts to overcome a motion for summary judgment," as "[m]ere conclusory allegations or denials cannot by themselves create a genuine issue of material fact where none would otherwise exist." Hicks v. Baines, 593 F.3d 159, 166 (2d Cir.2010) (citation omitted). "A submission in opposition to (or in support of) summary judgment need be considered only to the extent that it would ... be[] admissible at trial." Doe ex rel. Doe v. Whelan, 732 F.3d 151, 157 (2d Cir.2013) (citation omitted). Only disputes over material facts — "facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law" — will properly preclude the entry of summary judgment. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986).
This Court has previously discussed at length the structure and aims of
To establish a claim under Section 11, a plaintiff must prove that it:
In re Morgan Stanley Information Fund Sec. Litig., 592 F.3d 347, 358-59 (2d Cir. 2010) (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a)). "Issuers are subject to virtually absolute liability under section 11." Id. at 359 (citation omitted).
In defense, a defendant may "prove[] that at the time of such acquisition [the purchaser] knew of such untruth or omission." 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a). Non-issuers may also prove that, "after reasonable investigation, [they had] reasonable ground to believe and did believe, at the time such part of the registration statement became effective, that the statements therein were true and that there was no omission to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading." Id. at § 77k(b)(3). The "standard of reasonableness" is "that required of a prudent man in the management of his own property." Id. at § 77k(c).
Similarly, to make out a prima facie case under Section 12(a)(2), a plaintiff must prove:
In re Morgan Stanley, 592 F.3d at 359 (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 77l (a)(2)). Where the burden is on a defendant to prove the purchaser's knowledge as a defense to liability under Section 11, under Section 12(a)(2) and the Blue Sky Laws, the burden is on the purchaser to prove the absence of its knowledge as an element of its claims. 15 U.S.C. § 77l (a)(2); D.C.Code § 31-5606.05(a)(1)(B); Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-522(A)(ii). Plaintiffs bringing Section 11 and 12(a)(2) claims need not establish
The standard for actual knowledge under Sections 11 and 12(a)(2), as well as the Blue Sky Laws,
The "[a]vailability elsewhere of truthful information cannot excuse untruths or misleading omissions in the prospectus." Dale v. Rosenfeld, 229 F.2d 855, 858 (2d Cir.1956). The Second Circuit has rejected the idea that "merely available, as opposed to widely known, public information" could establish a plaintiff's knowledge, as Section 11's affirmative defense requires that "the defendant ... prove actual knowledge." New Jersey Carpenters Health Fund v. Royal Bank of Scotland Grp., 709 F.3d 109, 127 n. 12 (2d Cir.2013).
The June 28 Opinion explained that "the GSEs were entitled to rely on the representations made in the offering documents and to believe that the work done by defendants and their diligence firms made the resulting Supporting Loan Group stronger than the general set of loans being sold by a particular Originator." 2013 WL 3284118, at *18. Accordingly, there was "no necessary connection between an Originator's general way of doing business and the characteristics of a particular group of loans that have been examined and assembled into a securitization by a defendant entity." Id. at *19. Thus, the GSEs' "kn[owledge] of problems with an Originator will not establish that the GSEs had actual knowledge that the specific representations in the prospectus supplements issued by the defendants were false." Id. at *18.
More fundamentally, knowledge about a general population — here, the set of all loans generated by a particular Originator — cannot be conflated with knowledge concerning a specific subset of that population, like loans from that Originator selected and securitized into a particular Supporting Loan Group by a Defendant. For example, the Second Circuit recently held that YouTube's internal estimates showing that 75-80% of video streams it hosted contained copyrighted material were "insufficient, standing alone, to create a triable issue of fact as to whether YouTube actually knew ... [of] the existence of particular instances of infringement" for purposes of copyright infringement claims against it. Viacom Int'l, Inc. v. YouTube, Inc., 676 F.3d 19, 32-33 (2d Cir.2012).
A plaintiff under Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) is under no duty to investigate a seller's representations. Accordingly, "[c]onstructive knowledge cannot bar a purchaser's recovery" under Sections 11 or 12(a)(2), Casella v. Webb, 883 F.2d 805, 809 (9th Cir.1989) (Section 12(a)(2)); see N.J. Carpenters Health Fund, 709 F.3d at 127 n. 12 (similar for Section 11). While circumstantial evidence of actual knowledge can be just as probative as direct evidence, see Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa, 539 U.S. 90, 100, 123 S.Ct. 2148, 156 L.Ed.2d 84 (2003), that evidence must be directed to actual knowledge; a case for constructive knowledge, on a record that establishes no actual knowledge, will not suffice.
FHFA bears the burden on its Section 12(a)(2) and Blue Sky Law claims to show that the GSEs possessed no actual knowledge that the specific representations of the Defendants in the Offering Documents were false. To carry this burden it has relied on testimony of the GSEs' former employees, who uniformly stated that they did not know of any false statements in the Offering Documents and many of whom said they relied on Defendants' representations. FHFA has relied as well on a comprehensive written record comprised of 19 million pages produced by FHFA and the GSEs that shows the GSEs did not receive loan files for the Mortgage Loans, did not express suspicion of Defendants' representations concerning the Securities at issue, and in fact relied on these representations in making their purchasing decisions. FHFA has presented sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that the GSEs had no actual knowledge of the falsity of the representations in the Offering Documents at issue here. For the reasons below, Defendants have not created a genuine issue of material fact on the GSEs' knowledge.
Defendants "vigorously deny" that the "Offering [Documents] contained any misrepresentations or omissions" and reject FHFA's claims that the Mortgage Loans were "riddled with underwriting defects, inflated appraisals and borrower fraud." But, "[t]o the extent these conditions existed" in the Mortgage Loans, Defendants argue that "the GSEs knew of them." That is, Defendants claim to have identified voluminous circumstantial evidence that, if it is true that the Mortgage Loans were "riddled with underwriting defects" and the like, the GSEs knew of the conditions that created those defects. Knowledge of conditions creating a risk of falsity, however, is not actual knowledge of falsity. And, despite the benefit of millions of pages of discovery, Defendants have uncovered no evidence, circumstantial or otherwise, of the GSEs' actual knowledge of the falsity of Defendants' representations. Consequently, Defendants have failed to meet their burden under Section 11 or raise a triable issue of fact with respect to the GSEs' knowledge as to Section 12(a)(2) and the Blue Sky Laws.
Instead, Defendants have amassed evidence of the GSEs' general knowledge
In addition to this general information about the marketplace and Originators, the GSEs had certain pre-purchase information about the Mortgage Loans underlying their PLS, including the descriptions contained in the Offering Documents. In the case of one PLS not at issue here, the GSEs were given detailed loan-level information, although not loan files.
Because of federal securities laws, the GSEs were not permitted to conduct pre-purchase reviews of loan files for the Supporting Loan Groups underlying the Securities. But, even if the GSEs had been permitted to investigate more fully the bona fides of the Defendants' representations in the Offering Documents, the securities laws imposed no burden on them to do so. Instead, it fell to Defendants, who purchased the loans from the Originators and determined which loans to pool into Supporting Loan Groups, to ensure that their representations in the Offering Documents were accurate. The GSEs understood that the Defendants conducted pre-securitization due diligence before making their representations about the Mortgage Loans to the market, including the GSEs. That due diligence provided Defendants with a complete defense to strict liability claims under Section 12(a)(2) if they exercised "reasonable care," and provided non-issuer Defendants with a complete defense to Section 11 claims, if the diligence met the standards of "a prudent man in the management of his own property." 15 U.S.C. § 77k(b)(3), (c); 15 U.S.C. § 77l (a)(2). The GSEs were entitled to rely on those representations, and all the evidence suggests that they did so. But, as explained above, the Securities Act and the Blue Sky Laws do not require any showing of reliance. Instead, they forbid false statements.
Defendants' arguments founder on this fact. The GSEs' knowledge of infirmities in a particular Originator's several underwriting practices does not support an inference that the GSEs knew the Defendants were placing misrepresentations in the Offering Documents about the quality of the loans they had placed in a Supporting Loan Group.
Consider, for instance, one of the strongest examples for Defendants, Nomura's NHELI 2007-3 securitization. Freddie Mac purchased a Certificate tied to NHELI 2007-3 on April 30, 2007. More than three-quarters of the underlying loans (77.61%) were originated by ResMae. After conducting due diligence (to the best of the GSEs' knowledge), Nomura represented in the NHELI 2007-3 Offering Documents that 58.49% of the loans (and 59.31% of the pool by aggregate remaining principal balance) had an original LTV ratio of 80% or lower, and that 18.88% of the loans (and 27.05% of the pool by remaining balance) had an original CLTV ratio of 80% or lower. Nomura also represented
It is true that three years earlier Freddie Mac's AMO reviewed ResMae, rating it as "Marginal" and recommending that Freddie Mac "Proceed With Caution." Defendants urge that this knowledge, together with general knowledge of weakness in the subprime market and rising early payment defaults in similar securities, can support a finding that Freddie Mac knew to be false Nomura's representation that 58.49% of NHELI 2007-3's loans had an original LTV ratio of 80% or lower. It cannot. Although Nomura emphasizes the limitations of its due diligence, Freddie Mac's AMO issued an aggregator review of Nomura a little more than a year before this purchase, finding "good due diligence methodologies, reasonable valuation processes and sound controls." AMO reported that "Nomura's due diligence program is well managed" and "found no issues with Nomura['s] appraisal process, which is solid." In particular, AMO noted that Nomura conducted property and compliance due diligence on 100% of loans and credit due diligence on 20% of pools as large as NHELI 2007-3's SLG. AMO rated Nomura "Satisfactory" across the board. There is simply no evidence that Freddie Mac actually knew — or even believed — that weaknesses in ResMae's general origination practices would render false Nomura's specific representations about the specific loans in the SLG.
Defendants offer four chief arguments in opposition to FHFA's motion, each of which is discussed below. First, Defendants argue that, despite Defendants' due diligence, the GSEs should have known — given their reviews of Originators and reports of Originator-specific appraisal bias, knowledge of the marketplace, and knowledge of the early payment default rates in 2006 for 2006 PLS purchased by the GSEs and of loans purchased by the GSEs' Single Family businesses from some of the Originators — that poorly originated loans would reach the Supporting Loan Groups. But constructive knowledge is irrelevant, and this evidence does not raise a triable issue of fact as to actual knowledge.
Defendants next argue that the GSEs actually believed that defective loans would reach the SLGs. Their evidence supports, at most, a belief of inaccuracy concerning securities not at issue in these actions. Thus, as noted below, the Court need not reach the question of whether or when a showing of belief can create a triable issue as to knowledge.
Third, Defendants argue that the GSEs were aware that the SLGs "may contain" defective loans. The GSEs were, of course, aware of the risk that any of Defendants' representations might prove inaccurate, and took steps to evaluate and protect against such risk, but there is no evidence they actually knew any particular representation was false concerning any of the Certificates at issue. In particular, Defendants lean on the fact that the GSEs knew Defendants' diligence teams reviewed only a sample of the loans in a pool. Yet Defendants offer no evidence that the GSEs were concerned — let alone knew — that Defendants' use of sampling had resulted in SLGs that did not match the Offering Documents' description of the Mortgage Loans.
Finally, Defendants complain that they have not been afforded a full opportunity to take discovery concerning the Single Family side of the GSEs' businesses. Defendants have had that opportunity, and the record makes clear that the additional
Defendants argue that the GSEs' general knowledge constitutes circumstantial evidence of the GSEs' actual knowledge of the falsity of the Defendants' representations. They point to evidence of knowledge concerning some Originators and related phenomena, such as a growing recognition from August 2006 onward that their PLS portfolio was experiencing an unusual or even distressing number of early payment defaults (EPDs). The Defendants argue that courts applying the actual knowledge standard "have relied heavily on circumstantial evidence, including general knowledge," and "have found that actual knowledge of a misstatement can be inferred from a party's understanding of limited facts about the alleged misstatements." Defendants are mistaken.
Defendants principally rely on the Second Circuit's opinion in In re Initial Public Offerings Securities Litigation, 471 F.3d 24 (2d Cir.2006) ("In re IPO"). As explained in the June 28 Opinion, In re IPO is inapposite. See 2013 WL 3284118, at *15. The Second Circuit simply held that class certification was inappropriate where "widespread knowledge" of aftermarket purchase requirements among a putative class of purchasers would necessitate "individual inquiries as to the knowledge of each member of the class." In re IPO, 471 F.3d at 44. As a logical matter, aftermarket purchase requirements inflate a security's price. Thus, the court went on to note that "it would surely be at least a reasonable inference ... that a requirement to purchase in the aftermarket would artificially inflate securities prices," and consequently knowledge of the requirement established knowledge of the artificial inflation, making an individual inquiry of each class member mandatory. Id. at 44 n. 14. Here, by contrast, there is no necessary relationship between deficiencies in an Originator's underwriting practices and the falsity of a Defendant's particular representations in the Offering Documents supporting a Securitization about a set of particular Mortgage Loans that had been reviewed, purchased, and securitized by the Defendant.
Defendants have found no evidence that the GSEs even mistrusted Defendants' representations about the Mortgage Loans,
Defendants repeatedly emphasize that circumstantial evidence can be as probative as direct evidence. This is true. But, Defendants have pointed to no circumstantial evidence of actual knowledge.
Moreover, Defendants' proposed "inferences" are themselves illogical. Defendants have offered no reason the GSEs would have believed that Defendants were incapable of identifying defective loans and either eliminating them from the Supporting Loan Groups or taking their existence into account when composing their descriptions of the SLGs for the Prospectus Supplements. To the contrary, the GSEs conducted reviews of each of the Defendant aggregators and reported that they were quite capable in their diligence.
Second, Defendants' arguments bear no relation to the specific representations at issue and thus offer no reason that the GSEs' general Originator and RMBS knowledge would have caused the GSEs to doubt — let alone recognize as false — particular figures. Taking as an example the lead securitization featured in Goldman Sachs's supplemental opposition memorandum, Goldman Sachs represented that 67% of the Mortgage Loans underlying FFML 2006-FF13 had an LTV ratio below 80%. Goldman Sachs has offered no reason why 67% should have appeared improbably high to Fannie Mae in September 2006, as opposed to, say, 50% or 80%. Even if PLS traders knew of SFCPRM's operational review of the Originator of the underlying loans, First Franklin, in May 2006, it is difficult to see why SFCPRM's finding that First Franklin had "acceptable operational practices and procedures to mitigate the risk associated with the origination of Subprime collateral" would cause Fannie Mae to infer that the percentage of Mortgage Loans in FFML 2006-FF13's Supporting Loan Group with an LTV ratio below 80% was not 67%.
Third, a contradiction lies at the heart of Defendants' current litigation position. Because Defendants have found no evidence suggesting that the GSEs actually knew their representations were false, they effectively argue that poor origination practices and the declining performance of subprime and Alt-A RMBS should have made it obvious that each of the pertinent representations in the Offering Documents for the Defendants' 65 Securitizations was false. At the same time, however, Defendants continue to contend that each of these representations was true, and that their due diligence defense will shield them, in part, from liability from any inaccuracy that may have crept into the Offering Documents. Although Defendants are perfectly entitled to plead and argue in the alternative, their positions here are inconsistent. It bears emphasis that at this late stage — long after the close of fact discovery and as the parties prepare their Pretrial Orders for three of these four cases — Defendants continue to argue both that their representations were true and that underwriting defects, inflated appraisals and borrower fraud were so endemic as to render their representations obviously false to the GSEs. Using the example just given, Goldman Sachs argues both that Fannie Mae knew that the percentage of loans with an LTV ratio below 80% was not 67%, but also that the true figure was, in fact, 67%.
Defendants proffer evidence that, they argue, supports a finding that beginning in mid-2006, "GSE personnel believed that the data provided by issuers of PLS might not be wholly accurate." A belief that issuers' data, as a whole, "might" not be "wholly" accurate, is a far cry from actual knowledge that a specific representation made by the Defendants in a particular Offering Document is false. Indeed, Defendants have found no evidence of suspicion concerning the Securities at issue in the above-captioned actions, much less any evidence sufficient to support a finding of actual knowledge that Defendants' specific representations were false.
Defendants' chief evidence on this front, two documents authored by Palmer, concern securities no longer at issue in these actions, as they were purchased from dismissed defendant UBS. Palmer's July 2006 credit approval analysis explains, "[w]e believe that the dealer is not reporting true CLTV accurately" because the "deal has about 47% of the collateral concentrated right at 80% CLTV." As a result, Palmer modeled the deal with an assumption of 95% or greater CLTV to show that "[e]ven under this extreme scenario," credit approval was appropriate. On August 21, 2006, Palmer wrote about another UBS security that the "deal contained a high percentage of collateral right at 80% LTV, [and] this was an indicator to us that the reported CLTV number could have been low." (Emphasis added.)
These documents suggest that Freddie Mac was wary about deals with a high concentration of loans with a reported CLTV of exactly 80% and that Freddie recognized the risk that some of these loans contained silent second mortgages which reduced their credit quality. Freddie modeled "extreme scenario[s]" to account for such risks. Far from raising a question
The gap between the GSEs' precautions and any actual knowledge of falsity is nicely illustrated in some of the other documents cited by Defendants. For instance, Norris instructed that analysts in March 2007 "make some liberal assumptions with regard to CLTV, income, dti,
Likewise, in April 2007, Fannie Mae's Director of PLS Surveillance, Chung, expressed concern about "`liar loans' and biased appraisals" and asked for models that could calculate "what severity increment [i.e., what magnitude of negative effects from these factors] is needed to break a bond."
Defendants point to a handful of statements from former GSE employees indicating that, in general, they expected loans backing PLS to "reflect" an Originator's general underwriting practices. Many of these statements are ambiguous. And no one testified that they believed a material number of defective loans would be present in particular Supporting Loan Groups, or so much as suggested that such an expectation caused them to doubt any of Defendants' representations about specific SLGs. These statements do not support a finding that the GSEs actually knew the Defendants' representations to be false.
Defendants' strongest employee testimony came from Aneiro, Freddie Mac's Vice President of Non-Agency Portfolio Management. Aneiro was asked, "[I]f an originator
Aneiro was then asked, "[W]hen an originator contributed collateral to a PLS deal, was it your understanding that the collateral reflected the originator's general origination practices?" He agreed that that "would be [his] general expectation, yes." This testimony concerning Aneiro's "general expectation" about a hypothetical originator's "general origination practices" does not suggest that Aneiro believed this would be true of Originators with inadequate origination practices, or that the Defendants would agree to purchase and securitize loans from such Originators, let alone that Defendants would fail to identify and remove defective loans from Supporting Loan Groups or falsely describe the SLGs.
Defendants next argue that the mere fact that the GSEs required originator reviews before purchasing PLS, and rejected certain deals because the principal originators had loose underwriting standards, shows the GSEs' belief that an originator's general underwriting practices would be reflected in the SLGS. This argument again conflates the GSEs' awareness of the risk that Defendants might let slip defective loans into the SLGs with the GSEs' actual knowledge that Defendants had slipped a material number of defective loans into any given SLG and then falsely described the SLGs in the Offering Documents. Defendants' arguments that "the GSEs knew" that certain representations in the Offering Documents "may have been incorrect" go to recognition of risk, not knowledge of falsity. (Emphasis added.)
There was, of course, a risk that Defendants' due diligence would fail to catch all defective loans in any given securitization. As purchasers of Certificates backed by those Mortgage Loans, the GSEs were exposed to that risk. Like any business, the GSEs acted to mitigate that risk, refusing to purchase securities where that risk was greatest — i.e., where the GSEs believed the originators had become too loose with their underwriting guidelines — and obtaining "reps and warranties" from PLS sellers. Far from supporting the GSEs' actual knowledge of a material number of defective loans in a given SLG, these practices show that the GSEs took affirmative steps to prevent the purchase of securities backed by defective loans. In any event, this evidence does not raise a
Defendants argue that the fact that they reviewed only a sample of loans, and that the GSEs knew this, proves that the GSEs knew some defective loans "might" reach the SLGs. An examination of the GSEs' knowledge of the Defendants' due diligence practices does not suggest that the GSEs knew the Defendants' representations in the Offering Documents were false.
First, the Defendants did not report to the GSEs that they were simply taking a random sample of a certain size. Rather, they represented to the GSEs that they employed sophisticated tools to ensure that their sampling was representative and permitted them to make representations about the loan pool with confidence. The information that the Defendants presented to the GSEs about their due diligence programs has been described above. The GSEs understood, for instance, that HSBC employed a "25% minimum adverse and random sample" — 20% adverse and 5% random — for subprime loans. This adverse sample was comprised of the loans "posing the greatest default and loss [risk]." HSBC created its adverse sample with a "proprietary model, which w[ould] risk-rank the mortgage loans in the pool" based on a dozen indicia of credit risk. The selection of the sample depended as well on HSBC's evaluation of the "[o]verall risk level of the mortgage pool," "[p]rior transaction due diligence results," and the "[f]inancial standing of the seller." Similarly, RBS determined the sample size for Alt-A loans with "a statistical calculation intended to obtain a 95 percent confidence interval."
Defendants have offered no reason, and proffered no evidence, to suggest that they led the GSEs to understand that their sampling protocols undermined Defendants' ability to accurately represent the characteristics of the SLGs. And Defendants have offered no evidence that the GSEs believed Defendants did not employ sampling correctly. Instead, Defendants collect bits of available information suggesting that, in some cases, PLS aggregators reviewed a small percentage of the loans. For instance, Norris of Fannie Mae testified in 2013 that although he did not have "specific[]" knowledge about the way aggregators employed sampling, he recalled that aggregators' sample sizes varied and "remember[ed] a range, possibly 10 percent to 50 percent," of loans in a Supporting Loan Group were reviewed. This testimony was untethered to the practices of the Defendants and does not contradict the contemporaneous descriptions which the Defendants gave to the GSEs of the due diligence practices during the period 2005 to 2007. For the reasons explained above, this does not suggest actual knowledge that Defendants' representations in the Offering Documents were false.
Defendants also point to testimony from Feigles, the Freddie Mac employee responsible for due diligence on Freddie's Alt-A bulk purchases, about Freddie Mac's own use of sampling to review prospective bulk loan purchases for its Single Family business. Feigles agreed one could "reasonably assume" that at least some of the loans contained defects. Feigles did not suggest, however, that a material number of loans would contain defects. Nor does he suggest that, if the rate of defects was unusually large in a given sample, that Freddie Mac would not enlarge its sample size so as to keep defects for the whole loans it was purchasing within tolerance levels. Much less does it suggest that Freddie Mac expected that the Defendants would fail to scrutinize
Defendants also assert that "[f]rom the GSEs' conversations with Originators, they understood that the `pull through rate' during subprime due diligence typically was 70-85% — meaning the majority of most pools were deemed suitable for purchase by issuers." As an initial matter, the evidence cited by Defendants does not support this assertion. Defendants cite only to testimony from Feigles that it was "probably accurate" that Freddie Mac would "typically ... purchase between 70 and 85 percent of the loans that it looked at in the Alt-A bulk purchases" for its Single Family business. Feigles did not testify that he understood this rate to be typical for purchases by aggregators for their securitization business, or that it arose from any "conversations with Originators."
Elsewhere, Defendants cite evidence that Fannie Mae's Single Family side learned in February 2006 from New Century that "their standard pull through rate is 90%" and knew that "[o]ther lenders in subprime expect pull through rate (e.g. First Franklin) in the mid and upper 90's." Defendants do not identify evidence of a particular pull-through rate with respect to any of the Securitizations at issue here, or the GSEs' knowledge of such a rate.
In any case, the pull-through rate should depend upon many factors, such as the parameters a purchaser chose for its buying program, the price a purchaser was willing to pay for the loans, the quality of the loans reviewed, and the purpose for which the loans were purchased — for instance, whether they were to be held or securitized. The Defendants have not pointed to evidence that a particular pull-through rate implies, by itself, that a material number of defective loans were "pulled through" into Supporting Loans Groups of the Securitizations.
Defendants have identified no evidence that the GSEs mistrusted the Defendants' representations because of their use of sampling, let alone actually knew any one of those many representations to be false. Accordingly, the fact that the GSEs knew Defendants employed sampling in their due diligence does not support a finding of actual knowledge of the falsity of Defendants' particular representations.
Similarly, the repurchase obligations included in many of the Certificates' Offering Documents, which required the Originator or sponsor to repurchase a loan if any of Defendants' representations were materially false as to that loan, could not support a finding of actual knowledge of the falsity of particular representations. The GSEs' recognition of the risk that some defective loans might reach a Supporting Loan Group is not the same as actual knowledge that Defendants' representations concerning the loan pool as a whole were false. Defendants' arguments concerning risk disclosures in the Offering Documents fail for the same reasons.
Individuals purchase accident and travel insurance every day not because they know they will be in a car crash or that illness will prevent them from flying away for vacation, but because they recognize that risk exists and seek to protect themselves from the financial consequences of the realization of that risk. Ensuring that sellers of PLS provided "reps and warranties" for the Mortgage Loans reflects the same prudence.
Considering all of the evidence put forward by the parties, both singly and together, Defendants have not raised a genuine issue of material fact as to the GSEs'
On the final page of their joint thirty-five page brief, Defendants argue that "the limitations on discovery in these Actions have foreclosed defendants from obtaining discovery that would further show the GSEs' knowledge of the alleged defects."
Pursuant to Rule 56(d), Fed.R.Civ. P., where a party opposing summary judgment "shows by affidavit or declaration that, for specified reasons, it cannot present facts essential to justify its opposition, the court may: (1) defer considering the motion or deny it; [or] (2) allow time to... take discovery." That declaration must detail, among other things, "what facts are sought" and "how these facts are reasonably expected to create a genuine issue of material fact." Miller v. Wolpoff & Abramson, LLP, 321 F.3d 292, 303 (2d Cir.2003). A court is free to reject a non-movant's Rule 56(d) requests "if the evidence sought would be cumulative or if the request is based only on speculation as to what potentially could be discovered; and a bare assertion that the evidence supporting [non-movant]'s allegations is in the hands of the moving party is insufficient to justify the denial of summary judgment." In re Dana Corp., 574 F.3d 129, 148-49 (2d Cir.2009) (citation omitted).
The Defendants' effort to avoid summary judgment by reference to additional discovery fails for two related reasons. First, they rest their assertion that additional discovery would have been of aid to them upon an incomplete and even misleading description of the fulsome discovery they did take and never confront their failure to discover evidence suggesting actual knowledge from that body of material. Second, they fail to meet the Rule 56(d) standard.
Document discovery in these actions has been massive: FHFA and the GSEs produced more than 19 million pages of documents in discovery. Defendants received all relevant Single Family documents. Defendants are incorrect when they charge that they were "almost entirely precluded from obtaining information related to the GSEs' Single Family businesses." Defendants were granted extensive discovery concerning the GSEs' Single Family businesses, including all "documents considered in connection with the purchases at issue," "documents held by custodians who were required to give the PLS traders such information," and "documents that went to the GSEs' risk management committees
The Defendants complain in their joint opposition brief about a second, related and unsuccessful request that they made for Single Family individual loan records. They complain that FHFA successfully resisted producing, "on grounds of burden," evaluations by the Single Family businesses of individual loans that they rejected and which ended up instead as loans populating the SLGs. The Defendants are correct; the Court upheld FHFA's objection to this production. Like their other request for transaction records of the loans that the GSEs actually purchased, these documents would have been of absolutely no assistance to the Defendants in resisting this motion for summary judgment. The Defendants' request for this production was rejected not only on the ground of the enormous burden it would impose on FHFA to attempt to locate such records, but also because any records that might be located would be utterly irrelevant.
The Defendants speculated that some number of loans in the SLGs might have been previously offered to the GSEs' Single Family businesses for purchase and rejected for failure to meet underwriting guidelines. There were roughly 1.1 million loans in the SLGs in the coordinated cases pending in this district, and it would have been a herculean (and perhaps impossible) task to determine whether any of them had previously been offered to and rejected by the GSEs' Single Family businesses. Since the GSEs had their own guidelines for their buying programs, however, there was also no reason to believe that the reasons for rejection would have told us anything about the issues at stake here. But assuming there might be some overlap in the standards causing rejection of the loan by the GSEs and the alleged misrepresentations by the Defendants in the Offering Documents, there was no reason to believe that the GSEs had in their possession any record of their reason for rejecting the loan, much less had any requirement to record each and every reason for rejecting a loan. But, most significantly, from the perspective of the GSEs' traders who decided to purchase the PLS, they did not know which loans populated the SLGs and therefore could not have drawn any conclusions about the accuracy of the representations in the Offering Document, which were in any event representations about the characteristics of the set of loans that populated the SLGs and not representations about a single loan.
Defendants also complain that limitations on depositions left them with "no testimony from some individuals whose understanding of the risks of the Securitizations could establish knowledge." Defendants took depositions over 46 days, questioning 29 GSE and FHFA witnesses. None of that testimony so much as suggested actual knowledge that Defendants' representations were false. Because an understanding "of the risks" would not
Nor have the Defendants met their burden under Rule 56(d). This attempted showing comes after the conclusion of discovery, not in the midst of it. It comes after many lengthy conferences and countless submissions in which the Defendants were given an opportunity to be heard and to explain their requests for further discovery. The June 28 Opinion provided a roadmap for the Defendants to follow in the event they wished to renew any discovery request and once again explained the legal standards that underlay the Court's decisions to grant some of the parties' requests and to deny others. Against that background, Defendants' declaration fails to establish how the requested discovery would be "reasonably expected to create a genuine issue of material fact" as required by Rule 56(d). Miller, 321 F.3d, at 303. Two examples will suffice.
The Defendants complain that UBS, the defendant scheduled to go to trial first, was given authority over the timing of the FHFA depositions, and that those depositions were therefore scheduled before FHFA had completed the production of its documents. The declaration, however, does not point to any later-produced document that entitled them to reopen a deposition, and a denial of a request to do so.
The declaration complains about missing documents. It explains that Fannie Mae failed to produce all of its operational reviews of Nomura and Goldman Sachs and that Freddie Mac had not retained all of its email for the period before November 2007. To the extent that the Defendants believed that there was any sanctionable discovery abuse by FHFA, they had the opportunity to raise that issue through the appropriate application during the discovery period. They did not do so then, and they have not done so now.
The declaration argues that the operational reviews would have shown that Fannie Mae was aware that Nomura performed 20% credit diligence on large bulk pools and that Goldman Sachs performed due diligence on a sample of the loans that it securitized. Both of those points were captured in the operational reviews that FHFA did locate and produce in discovery and have been described in this Opinion. As for the missing Freddie Mac emails, the declaration speculates that the email destruction has deprived Defendants of "potentially important" evidence relating to the GSE's purchase of Certificates and its actual knowledge of false statements in the Offering Documents. This naked speculation falls far short of the showing required by Rule 56(d). As described above, the Defendants have failed to raise a question of fact regarding Freddie Mac's actual knowledge of false statements based on all of the voluminous discovery provided in this lawsuit. The absence of a complete repository of Freddie Mac emails for the relevant period of time does not cast doubt on that finding, nor does it suggest that reopening the discovery period would cure the problem.
FHFA's April 22, 2014 motion for summary judgment on the element and affirmative defense concerning the GSEs' knowledge is granted.
SO ORDERED.