1 ERISA Stock Drop ERISA Stock Drop Litigation: Litigation: Recent Developments Recent Developments and a Look Forward and a Look Forward Matthew G. Allison Matthew G. Allison , Moderator , Moderator Baker & McKenzie LLP Baker & McKenzie LLP Gregory C. Braden Gregory C. Braden Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP Lawrence Zwick Lawrence Zwick Travelers Travelers
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0 ERISA Stock Drop Litigation: Recent Developments and a Look Forward Matthew G. Allison, Moderator Baker & McKenzie LLP Gregory C. Braden Morgan, Lewis.
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ERISA Stock Drop Litigation:ERISA Stock Drop Litigation: Recent Developments Recent Developments
and a Look Forwardand a Look Forward
Matthew G. AllisonMatthew G. Allison, Moderator , Moderator Baker & McKenzie LLPBaker & McKenzie LLP
Gregory C. BradenGregory C. Braden Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLPMorgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
• A major drug store chain removes from store shelves merchandise that was scheduled to be marked down, delays accounting for the expense and treats the merchandise as if it has full value in its earnings reports.
• The chain also delays disclosing that it plans to close 200 underperforming stores, and its CEO allegedly sells $5 million worth of his own stock but waits months to disclose that earnings would not meet projections. When disclosures are made, the chain’s stock drops 17 percent.
• An ERISA breach of fiduciary duty class-action suit by CVS 401(k) plan participants whose plan accounts held CVS stock between December 1, 2000 and October 30, 2001
Understanding what makes these Understanding what makes these lawsuits attractive to the lawsuits attractive to the plaintiffs’ bar is critical for:plaintiffs’ bar is critical for:
1. Understanding which cases should be litigated to a conclusion or positioned for settlement; and
2. Having an intelligent basis for evaluating plan-related documents and fiduciary conduct regarding 401(k) plans that offer company stock as an investment, employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs), or combinations of both.
Enron is perhaps the most Enron is perhaps the most notorious stock-drop case, but notorious stock-drop case, but litigation dockets include many litigation dockets include many other well-known defendantsother well-known defendants
Other Well-Known Defendants• WorldCom• Kmart• AOL Time Warner• Computer Associates• Rite Aid• Lucent Technologies• Honeywell• AIG
Section 409: a fiduciary is personally liable to make good to the plan any losses resulting from the fiduciary’s breach
Section 502(a)(2): authorizes cause of action by participant, beneficiary, or DOL for appropriate relief under 409. Action is brought derivatively “on behalf of the plan as a whole.”
Two basic claims in Stock Two basic claims in Stock Drop Cases:Drop Cases:
1. Prudence – The company stock fund became an imprudent investment alternative and plan fiduciaries breached their fiduciary duty by continuing to allow investments in the fund in the face of adverse business conditions.
2. Misrepresentation/Omission (Fraud according to Plaintiffs) – The plan fiduciaries knew or should have known about the circumstances adversely affecting the company, and they breached their fiduciary duty by affirmatively misleading or failing to warn participants of the risks.
Based on the employer stock Based on the employer stock exemption, some courts held that exemption, some courts held that company stock is a “presumptively company stock is a “presumptively prudent” investmentprudent” investment
• Moench (3d Cir.), Kuper (6th Cir.), Wright (9th Cir.) –investments in company stock are “presumptively prudent”
• Some Courts do not think the presumption applies to EIAPs (vs. ESOPs) – Schering-Plough (3d Cir.)
Even if the presumption does not Even if the presumption does not apply . . . plaintiffs must still apply . . . plaintiffs must still prove imprudenceprove imprudence
• Prudence has a procedural and substantive component
• “Prudence” must be determined in context of entire 401(k) portfolio-modern portfolio theory
• Meaning that the participant must have had the opportunity to diversify
• Causation under ERISA 409: fiduciary liable for “losses to the plan resulting from” the fiduciary’s breach
• Plaintiff must show a causal link between a fiduciary’s failure to investigate the continued prudence of the investment and the harm suffered by the plan
Fiduciary Misrepresentations Fiduciary Misrepresentations and Omissionsand Omissions
• Second broad category of fiduciary breach claims in stock-drop cases
• Broadly stated, fiduciaries have an affirmative duty to warn plan participants of material adverse information about their investments in the employer stock and/or to tell them the stock is a risky investment if the fiduciaries know it to be true
• Tension with the insider-trading prohibitions of the federal securities laws Can ERISA be construed to require disclosure of material
inside information only to plan participants (so they can avoid losses)?
DOL very active in this area; Enron amicus brief: (i) could have disclosed information to the market (“Look out below!”); (ii) eliminate employer stock as an investment option (“Look out below!”); (iii) alert the DOL and/or the SEC (“Look out below!”)
• ERISA 404(c): “In the case of a pension plan which provides for individual accounts and permits a participant or beneficiary to exercise control over the assets in his account:. . .no person who is otherwise a fiduciary shall be liable . . . for any loss, or by reason of any breach, which results from such participant’s or beneficiary’s exercise of control.”
• The 404(c) defense, if applied, relieves the plan fiduciaries – company, trustee, officers and directors – of liability if employees lose money in their 401(k) accounts because of their own poor investment decisions
• Especially helpful in employer stock misrepresentation cases
How broad is the 404(c) How broad is the 404(c) defense?defense?
• By its terms, the 404(c) defense protects the fiduciary from “any loss” or “any breach” resulting from a participant’s exercise of control over assets in an individual account plan
• The legislative history indicates that the 404(c) defense applies where the participant instructs the plan to invest “the full balance of his account in, e.g., a single stock”
Stock Drop Litigation Stock Drop Litigation UpdateUpdate
• Lay of the land through early 2006:
In the Courts of Appeals: Company stock is a presumptively prudent investment; to
state a fiduciary breach claim, plaintiffs must plead and prove a precipitous decline in stock price coupled with evidence of serious mismanagement. Moench (CTA3 1995); Kuper (CTA6 1995); Wright (9th Cir 2004);
Fiduciary breach claims based upon drop in stock price are not suitable for resolution on motions to dismiss. Lalonde (CTA1 2004)
Stock Drop Litigation Stock Drop Litigation UpdateUpdate
Presumption of prudence is not applicable if decision to offer a company stock investment is left to the discretion of plan fiduciaries (as opposed to being mandated by the plan). Schering Plough (CTA3 2005)
Stock drop damage claims can be brought “on behalf of the plan,” even if the recovery goes to a subset of plan participants. Schering Plough (CTA3 2005); Milofsky (CA5 2007); issue on appeal in Baxter (CTA1).
Stock Drop Litigation Stock Drop Litigation UpdateUpdate
• Recent court of appeals authority is very helpful to plan fiduciaries: Summers v. State Street Bank (CTA7 2006) (plaintiffs
must plead and prove that stock fund participants were subjected to “excessive risk”
Langbecker v. Electronic Data Systems (CTA5 2007) (the death knell of stock drop) (opinion suggests that class certification may never be appropriate in a stock drop case because 404(c) contemplates individualized defenses)
Stock Drop Litigation Stock Drop Litigation UpdateUpdate
Not fiduciary communications:• ChoicePoint (N.D. Ga. 2007); RCN (D.N.J. 2006)
(statements made in press conferences were not fiduciary communications); Reliant (S.D. Tex. 2006) (statements incorporated in Form S-8 sent to participants were not made in a fiduciary capacity)
Conflict with securities laws:• Avaya (D.N.J. 2006) (requiring fiduciaries to divest
company stock investment prior to any public disclosure would violate insider trading requirements)
Stock Drop Litigation Stock Drop Litigation UpdateUpdate
• Still, in 2006, many district courts were reluctant to dismiss stock drop complaints:
Agway (N.D.N.Y. 2006) (allegations of “artificial inflation” sufficient to state a claim)
Merck (D.N.J. 2006) (even if Merck stock is presumptively prudent, Merck’s potential Vioxx liability is sufficient to call the plan fiduciaries’ actions or inaction into question)
Stock Drop Litigation Stock Drop Litigation UpdateUpdate
Goodyear (N.D. Ohio 2006) (rejecting defendant’s argument that plaintiffs must plead and prove that Goodyear was on the brink of “impending collapse” in order to state a fiduciary breach claim)
General Motors (E.D. Mich. 2006) (allegations of “artificial inflation,” dire financial straits and serious mismanagement sufficient to state a claim)
ANATOMY OF A RECENT TRIALANATOMY OF A RECENT TRIALDiFelice v. US Airways, No. 1:04cv889 (E.D. DiFelice v. US Airways, No. 1:04cv889 (E.D. Va. June 26, 2006)Va. June 26, 2006)
• First post-Enron trial, certified class action
• Not a misrepresentation case
• Plaintiff claimed that fiduciaries were “imprudent” in offering company stock fund as an investment opportunity between Aug. 1, 2001 and company’s bankruptcy on Aug. 12, 2002
Anatomy of a Recent TrialAnatomy of a Recent TrialPlaintiff’s “Allegations”Plaintiff’s “Allegations”
• A prudent fiduciary would have taken these business developments into account
• These developments meant that is was “imprudent” to permit voluntary investment in US Airways by September 2001 at the latest
• A prudent fiduciary would have implemented an “orderly sale” of all US Airways stock, even if such a sale were against the wishes of the individual participants
• Damages should be paid measured by the difference between the pre-Sept. 11 stock price and the stock price at the point of the “orderly sale”
Anatomy of a Recent TrialAnatomy of a Recent Trial“Procedural” Prudence Evidence“Procedural” Prudence Evidence
• Combination of written records of plan committee and testimony of business knowledge of plan fiduciaries, demonstrated that fiduciaries took all relevant factors into account
• Fiduciaries considered business prospects of US Airways, sought attorneys’ advice on continued offering of its stock, and engaged an independent fiduciary when it became unclear after mid-May 2002 whether US Airways could avoid bankruptcy
Anatomy of a Recent TrialAnatomy of a Recent TrialThe Court’s HoldingsThe Court’s Holdings
• Though a riskier investment than others, ERISA favors inclusion of company stock in a diversified 401(k) plan
• Modern Portfolio Theory supports inclusion of company stock in a diverse portfolio. Must judge “in light of its contribution to the entire portfolio, and not in light of its individual risk.”
• Employer stock ok if 1) range of investment options; 2) true and accurate information disclosure regarding risks; 3) unfettered ability to trade in and out of investment options.
Case Management and Case Management and Settlement IssuesSettlement Issues
• Counsel should prepare a litigation budget which serves as a road map during life of the litigation. Road map should optimally include high level view of expected critical events, i.e. 12(B)(6) Motion to Dismiss, Written and Oral Discovery, Motion(s) for Summary judgment, consideration of Mediation, etc.
• Budget should also project anticipated staffing and retention of experts
Case Management and Case Management and Settlement IssuesSettlement Issues
• DiFelice shows, at least in the full disclosure context, that fiduciaries can demonstrate, based on contested “prudence” facts, that they acted appropriately after all, even when the plan sponsor eventually goes into bankruptcy
• However, important to be receptive to settlement opportunities when they arise. Even if MTD not decided. i.e. road map has off ramps
• Notwithstanding EDS, stipulate to class for settlement purposes
Case Management and Case Management and Settlement IssuesSettlement Issues
• Settlement considerations: Red flags can provide bench marks in time line to calculate
alternative loss calculations.
Efficient market theory can mitigate losses
Alternative methods to calculate loss• Plaintiffs preferred: best performing alternative• Closest available alternative• Hypothetical representative portfolio
Maximize potential coverage issues as settlement leverage with plaintiffs
Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Design and Risk AvoidanceDesign and Risk Avoidance
• Basic truth: If a company has a 401(k) plan that provides for investment in employer stock, it’s a bull’s-eye for an ERISA breach of fiduciary duty lawsuit, likely a class-action lawsuit.
• Each new wave of corporate issues triggers a response wave of shareholder and ERISA stock-drop suits (e.g., the current “option backdating” problems of, primarily, technology businesses). There’s no telling where the next problem will arise, or what type of company it will affect.
• So: What can an underwriter do to minimize potential for big claim?
Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Design and Risk AvoidanceDesign and Risk Avoidance
• Review rights to diversify out of company stock, even for matching contributions
PPA ’06 – In 2007, must permit immediate diversification of employee contributions; matching and other employer contributions after three years of participation (other than traditional ESOP); can be less restrictive – many stock-drop settlements include free diversification
Match in cash vs. stock – if permitting immediate diversification, consider matching in cash (using 404(c) protection, since even if participants can freely diversify out, stock was not their choice)
Issues re implementing new diversification right for previously “locked up” stock: Need to be prepared for spike in stock sales (cash demands within plan; impact on share price) (in practice, rarely becomes a real problem)
Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Design and Risk AvoidanceDesign and Risk Avoidance
• Make sure plan is an “EIAP” (diversification N/A)
• Make sure that employer stock (in fact, all investment funds) are “baked” into the plan document (settlor choice) instead of being selected by the plan’s investment committee (fiduciary choice)
• ESOP may be even better option for companies:
May permit higher (“clearly imprudent”) Moench standard for prudence claim related to maintenance of employer stock fund
Requires relatively small changes in most public company plans that already offer employer stock as an option and permit free diversification (e.g., voting pass-through; right to receive distribution in kind)
May permit dividends on stock in plan to be deducted
Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Design and Risk AvoidanceDesign and Risk Avoidance
• Review carefully plan’s fiduciary structure; know ways for companies to limit or avoid “imprudent monitoring/failure to disclose” claims
Leave board members and top-tier officers (those most likely to be exposed to material non-public information) off the committee
“Baking” the committee membership into the plan (e.g., by title or position) to avoid or limit “appointment/monitoring” claims; at the least, limiting the universe of appointing/monitoring fiduciaries
Retaining an outside fiduciary, especially when rough waters may be ahead
• Review content and effectiveness of education program
Are employees “getting it”? Is your approach working, particularly for the rank and file? Increased focus on targeted communications.
PPA ’06 – beginning in 2007, requires quarterly participant statements that include diversification information (including risk of holding more than 20% in a single entity,e.g., the company’s stock)
• Consider investment advice or investment management alternatives
PPA ’06 sets up safe harbor for investment advice by existing plan vendors – remains to be seen how widely these programs will be adopted (managed accounts not included; can lead the horse to water, but can’t make him drink)
May help with tension between legal/risk management (“don’t buy too much!”) and HR/shareholder relations (“Our company/stock is great!”)
Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Underwriters’ Checklist: Plan Design and Risk AvoidanceDesign and Risk Avoidance
• Review plan for 404(c) compliance
• Review plan fiduciary practices (investment policy, committee charters, minutes, how often committee meets, monitoring practices, use of outside advisors where appropriate) – make sure that company stock as an investment is evaluated periodically and appropriately by the committee (at the least, to meet the Moench standard)
• Make sure of compliance with blackout notice requirements (PPA ’06 will eventually provide 404(c) relief during blackouts if enhanced notice requirements met) and that blackout periods are as short as possible