Three lawyers and their two firms appeal from an order imposing sanctions entered in the Southern District of New York (Kaplan, /.). The lawyers represented plaintiff ATSI Communications, Inc. (“ATSI”) in a lawsuit alleging
(inter
alia) that Knight Capital Markets, LLC (“Knight”), the principal market-maker in ATSI stock on the American Stock Exchange (“AMEX”) (along with a collection of hedge funds and individual defendants) participated in market manipulation in violation of federal securities laws. The district court dismissed the case as against all defendants, and we affirmed.
The chief question presented on appeal is whether the rule established in
In re Pennie & Edmonds LLP,
BACKGROUND
More detailed factual background is provided in our previous opinion in this case,
ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
ATSI describes itself as a firm which was “founded in December of 1993 to capitalize on the opportunities anticipated by trends towards deregulation and privatization of telecommunications markets within Mexico and other Latin American countries.” In 1999, needing capital,
2
ATSI issued four series of convertible preferred stock (“Preferred Stock”), shares of which were convertible, with minimal restrictions, to ATSI common shares in increasing amounts as the price of ATSI common shares declined. Because there was no limit on the number of common shares into which the Preferred Stock could convert, securities such as these are called “floor-less” convertibles.
ATSI I,
Between July 1999 and 2002, ATSI share prices gyrated between $1 and $9 per share, but closed on August 16, 2002 at $0.09. ATSI alleged that these price fluctuations were the result of manipulation by some purchasers of the Preferred Stock, including Shaar Fund and Rose Glen. On the basis of the trading volume and price movements around the time that the Shaar Fund and Rose Glen converted their shares of Preferred Stock, ATSI believed that these defendants and others engaged in a scheme to cause a “death spiral” in ATSI’s share price. It is alleged that the scheme worked as follows:
The [defendant] would short sell the victim’s common stock to drive down its price. He then converts his convertible securities into common stock and uses that common stock to cover his short position. The convertible securities allow a manipulator to increase his profits by allowing him to cover with discounted common shares not obtained on the open market, to rely on the convertible securities as a hedge against the risk of loss, and to dilute existing common shares, resulting in a further decline in stock price.
Id. at 96 (footnote omitted).
ATSI sued a host of defendants in October 2002, alleging misrepresentations in connection with securities transactions, and market manipulation in violation of § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. However, ATSI’s complaint alleged no specific acts of short selling, and instead relied on circumstan
*148
tial allegations: past similar practice by Shaar Fund and Rose Glen, and clearinghouse records showing that in a 10-trad-ing-day period (December 31, 2002 to January 14, 2003), over eight million shares were traded in excess of settlement, which (ATSI claimed) could only have resulted from “sham” trading.
ATSI I,
In a First Amended Complaint filed in March 2003, ATSI added a claim of market manipulation against Knight Capital Markets LLC, f/k/a Trimark Securities Inc., (hereinafter “Knight”), the principal AMEX market-maker for ATSI stock.
3
ATSI failed to serve Knight. Judge Kaplan dismissed the complaint without prejudice as against Shaar Fund and Rose Glen on the ground that its allegations of manipulation were “conclusory,” “offer[ed] no particulars,” and failed to meet the requirements of Rule 9(b).
ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
No. 02 Civ. 8726(LAK),
ATSI then filed a Second and Third Amended Complaint. The Third Amended Complaint’s sole allegations concerning Knight were as follows:
220. Trimark Securities, a/k/a Knight Securities Group, Inc. (“Knight”) was the principal declared market maker in ATSI stock. Most ATSI trades (including, upon information and belief, the 8,257,493 shares that [were traded in excess of settlement]) were traded through Knight.
221. Any manipulation which took place would have involved Knight, who knew or should have known that they were prohibited from engaging in the activity complained of in paragraphs 184 through 219 [which purported to allege manipulation by other defendants].
222. ATSI believes that Knight was a cooperating broker-dealer with the defendants listed herein engaging in similar trades on behalf of the defendants.
Third Amended Complaint ¶¶ 220-22.
All or most of the defendants, including Knight, moved to dismiss the Third Amended Complaint. In February 2005, the district court granted the motions with prejudice on the ground that the complaint failed to “allege sufficient facts to link this [market] data to any of the defendants.”
ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
At the end, that order referenced the mandatory sanctions provision of the PSLRA, and “invited” the parties to make submissions as to sanctions. Id. at 721. The court explained that the PSLRA requires a district court, at the conclusion of private actions brought under federal securities laws, to “include in the record specific findings regarding compliance by each party and each attorney representing any party with each requirement of Rule 11(b).” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(l). If a vio *149 lation is found, sanctions are mandatory. Id. at § 78u-4(c)(2).
Multiple defendants — including Knight — moved for Rule 11 sanctions. In opposition, ATSI submitted affidavits from its counsel, James Wes Christian of Christian Smith & Jewell, LLP (a Houston, Texas firm), and its local counsel, Carl S. Koerner, of Koerner, Silberberg & Weiner, LLP, detailing the steps they took prior to bringing suit, and arguing that they had no subjective bad faith. By order dated July 28, 2005, the district court denied the sanctions motions without prejudice to reinstatement pending the appeal of the underlying dismissal.
By opinion dated July 11, 2007, we affirmed the district court’s dismissal.
ATSI I,
The complaint is plainly insufficient in alleging that [Knight] engaged in market manipulation. It only alleges that [Knight] was the principal market maker in ATSI’s stock, that [Knight] knew or should have known of the manipulation, and that ATSI “believes” that [Knight] was a cooperating broker-dealer. Wholly absent are particular facts giving rise to a strong inference that [Knight] acted with scienter in manipulating the market in ATSI’s common stock and any allegations of specific acts by [Knight] to manipulate the market, much less how those actions might have affected the market.
Id. at 104-05 (footnote omitted).
After our mandate issued, ATSI entered into settlements with all defendants except Knight, and Knight’s motion for sanctions was reinstated. By order dated March 27, 2008, the district court imposed sanctions on the ground that the ATSI attorneys “lacked any reasonable factual basis” for bringing suit against Knight:
The third amended complaint makes abundantly clear that plaintiffs counsel lacked any reasonable factual basis for asserting that Knight had violated the federal securities laws----The only basis for the claim against Knight was that Knight was the principal market maker, that it therefore must have known that the [other] defendants were engaged in manipulation, and that it therefore must have been complicit. But that is simply ridiculous. Even assuming that Knight was the principal market maker, all that it “must have known” is that some person or persons were engaged in large sales of ATSI common [stock].
ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
No. 02 Civ. 8726(LAK),
*150 DISCUSSION
A district court’s imposition of sanctions under the PSLRA and Rule 11 is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
Simon DeBartolo Group, L.P. v. Richard E. Jacobs Group, Inc.,
I
Rule 11(b)(3) provides in pertinent part that, by presenting a complaint to the court, the attorney signing or filing the complaint “certifies that to the best of the person’s knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circumstances, ... the factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if specifically so identified, are likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 11(b)(3). Since the inquiry must be “reasonable under the circumstances,” liability for Rule 11 violations “requires only a showing of objective unreasonableness on the part of the attorney or client signing the papers.”
Ted Lapidus, S.A. v. Vann,
In
In re Pennie & Edmonds LLP,
submissions that they honestly believe have plausible evidentiary support for fear that a trial judge, perhaps at the conclusion of a contentious trial, will erroneously consider their claimed belief to be objectively unreasonable. This risk is appropriately minimized, as the Advisory Committee contemplated, by applying a “bad faith” standard to submissions sanctioned without a “safe harbor” opportunity to reconsider.
Id.
at 91.
Pennie
stopped short, however, of a blanket rule that the subjective bad faith standard applied whenever there was no longer a safe harbor, finding it sufficient in that case that the court
sua sponte
initiated sanctions proceedings “long after” the lawyer had an opportunity to amend or withdraw.
Pennie
drew a sharp dissent, which argued that all Rule 11 violations should be assessed under the standard of objective reasonableness, and that the majority over-read the intent of the Advisory Committee.
8
And some circuits have declined to follow
Pennie. See Young v. City of Providence ex reL. Napolitano,
In this case, the ATSI attorneys’ principal argument is that, because the sanctions against them were initiated by the court at a time when the ATSI attorneys no longer had an opportunity to amend or withdraw the pleading, Pennie barred imposition of sanctions without a finding of subjective bad faith.
*152
This case is distinguishable from
Pennie
because the statutory wording of the PSLRA puts private securities litigants on sufficient notice that their actions will be the subject of Rule 11 findings. The statute
requires
district courts, at the conclusion of private actions arising under federal securities laws, to make Rule 11 findings as to each party and each attorney, 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(l); and if a Rule 11 violation is found, the statute
requires
courts to impose sanctions, 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(2). Such statutory notice is the functional equivalent of the forewarning given litigants by the pendency of a Rule 11 finding. The express congressional purpose of the PSLRA provision was to increase the frequency of Rule 11 sanctions in the securities context, and thus tilt the “balance” toward greater deterrence of frivolous securities claims. “Recognizing what it termed ‘the need to reduce significantly the filing of meritless securities lawsuits without hindering the ability of victims of fraud to pursue legitimate claims,’ and commenting that the ‘[ejxisting Rule 11 has not deterred abusive securities litigation,’ the 104th Congress included in the [PSLRA] a measure intended to put ‘teeth’ in Rule 11.”
Simon DeBartolo,
The PSLRA sanctions provision forecloses the kind of safe harbor afforded in Rule 11(c)(2). The PSLRA explicitly directs courts to make Rule 11 findings “upon final adjudication of the action,” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(l), and it is well-settled that no safe harbor could apply retroactively.
See Pennie,
In sum, the mandate of the PSLRA obviates the need to find bad faith prior to the imposition of sanctions. At the same time, the concerns identified in Pennie have some bearing in the PSLRA context. As will be discussed in Part III, the ex post nature of PSLRA sanctions may influence whether an opposing party’s fees are reasonable under the circumstances; it could not have been Congress’s intent to incentivize undue delay, or discourage lawyers from promptly filing their own Rule 11 motions simply because the court will automatically make Rule 11 findings at the end of a litigation.
II
In the alternative, the ATSI attorneys argue that their actions were reasonable even under an objective standard: “if there was [market] manipulation, it was not unreasonable to impute knowledge of it to Knight.” Appellants’ Br. at 26. They rely on the role of a market-maker in the securities industry, and argue that market-makers should have “special knowledge” of irregular trading in their assigned securities, especially in thinly traded securities such as ATSI. They also point out that there have been viable claims against market-makers for engaging in manipulation.
*153
See In re Blech Sec. Litig.,
No. 94 Civ. 7696(RWS),
That some market-makers have engaged in manipulation proves nothing. The cases relied upon by the ATSI attorneys are distinguishable in critical respects. In
In re Blech,
claims against a market-maker survived summary judgment because plaintiffs marshaled specific evidence that a market-maker participated in an underwriter’s scheme to artificially inflate certain stock prices.
The ATSI attorneys’ reliance on the opportunity of a market-maker to manipulate the market reinforces the conclusion that ATSI’s complaint against Knight relied on speculation. ATSI has made no sufficient, specific allegation as to why Knight would have been aware of manipulation based on the declines in ATSI share price and assorted other irregularities, let alone who was creating these anomalies, or why. As the District Court explained:
There would have been no reason [for Knight, as market-maker,] to suppose that the seller or sellers were holders of the convertible preferred, let alone that the object of the sales was to depress the price of the common in order to improve the conversion ratio. And even if that could have been supposed, it is hard to see how a market maker, by executing the transactions, thereby would have become a culpable participant in that scheme.
The ATSI attorneys also offer a textual argument — that all of their specific factual allegations (such as that Knight was the principal ATSI market-maker) were true, and their legal claim was phrased conditionally: “Any manipulation which took place would have involved Knight, who knew or should have known that they were prohibited from engaging in the activity complained of in paragraphs 184 through 219.” Complaint ¶ 221. According to the ATSI attorneys, the district court imposed sanctions for the inference — drawn by the district court but never alleged in so many words — that Knight knew or should have known of the other defendants’ manipulation.
We disagree. The “inference” that Knight knew or should have known of any manipulation is sufficiently drawn from the fact that ATSI
sued
Knight for manipulation. ATSI could not have sued Knight without alleging overtly or by implication that Knight knew of the manipulation by other defendants, because a claim of market manipulation requires
scienter. ATSI I,
Even assuming it was objectively reasonable for ATSI’s attorneys to think that ATSI was the victim of a “death spiral” scheme that violated the federal securities laws, it was not objectively reasonable to sue Knight on no basis other than that Knight had the opportunity to participate in such a scheme. 11
Ill
The district court imposed monetary sanctions in the amount of $64,656.69, explaining that “[i]t is undisputed that Knight spent $64,656.69 in defending this case, all of it occasioned by plaintiffs frivolous allegations.”
Although the concerns identified in
Pennie
do not require a finding of bad faith, they may bear on the question of the
reasonableness
of Knight’s fees. As we noted in
Pennie,
one purpose of the 21-day safe harbor is to provide an incentive to opposing attorneys to file Rule 11 motions promptly: delay past the point at which a pleading or motion may be amended or withdrawn may work a forfeiture of Rule 11 remedies.
See Pennie,
The PSLRA’s mandatory sanctions provision can operate to reverse this incentive. By directing a district court to make findings “upon final adjudication of *155 the action,” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(l), the statute might discourage the filing of prompt Rule 11 motions, allowing lawyers to dither, or even wait on purpose in order to increase costs that can be shifted onto sanctioned counsel. Such a delay would waste judicial resources, and impose unfair burdens. Nothing in the PSLRA prevents an adversary from filing a Rule 11 motion at an earlier point in the litigation, before heavy costs have accrued. Even in the context of the PSLRA, a Rule 11 letter from an opposing counsel may bring new facts to light, or prompt a challenged attorney to reconsider. 13 Thus, in determining whether a party’s fees are “reasonable” under 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(3), a district court should consider whether the opposing party’s failure to move for Rule 11 sanctions more promptly may have unnecessarily increased the costs, and thereby unnecessarily increased the sanctions. If so, a “reasonable” award might be only the amount of fees that would likely have been incurred if a Rule 11 motion had been promptly made.
In this case, Knight did not move for Rule 11 sanctions until it was invited to do so by the district court, after the Third Amended Complaint had been dismissed. We have no reason, on this record, to think that Knight’s failure to move for Rule 11 sanctions at an earlier stage was the product of undue delay, or a bad faith tactic to shift additional fees and costs onto ATSI. 14 Nevertheless, the district court should have the opportunity to consider in the first instance whether Knight’s failure to move for Rule 11 sanctions at an earlier stage had any bearing on whether its fees were “reasonable.” 15
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm that part of the district court’s order imposing sanctions, but we vacate the amount of the award and remand for further consideration in light of this opinion.
Notes
. Subsequent to the filing of the instant appeal, ATSI’s attorneys and Knight entered into a settlement agreement, the execution of which was made contingent upon vacatur of the district court’s judgment, and of two related orders issued by the district court. The parties jointly moved in this Court for an order vacating the judgment and the orders.
See ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. The Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
. ATSI feared that it would not be able to "raise money on any acceptable terms.”
ATSI I,
. SEC regulations define a "market-maker” as "a dealer who, with respect to a particular security, (i) regularly publishes bona fide, competitive bid and offer quotations in a recognized interdealer quotation system; or (ii) furnishes bona fide competitive bid and offer quotations on request; and, (iii) is ready, willing and able to effect transactions in reasonable quantities at his quoted prices with other brokers or dealers.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.15c3-1(c)(8).
. In addition, the district court granted motions by various other defendants to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. The Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
No. 02 Civ. 8726(LAK),
. Knight did not seek recovery of an additional $100,000 it claimed to have incurred in connection with ATSI’s appeal. See Appellee’s Br. at 8 n. 4.
. The day after issuing its sanctions order on *150 March 28, 2008, the district court issued a further order explaining why it had sanctioned James Wes Christian (of Christian Smith & Jewell, LLP) notwithstanding that Knight had not sought sanctions against him. The court explained that Christian was on ample notice (in light of the other defendants’ motions for sanctions against him); and that, under the PSLRA’s mandatory sanction provision, the court is not bound by the defendant's notice of motion, but rather must make specific findings as to “each party and each attorney representing any party.” See 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(l).
. We wrote: "It is arguable, as [appellant] contends, that a 'bad faith’ standard should apply to all court-initiated Rule 11 sanctions because no 'safe harbor’ protection is available and because the Advisory Committee contemplated such sanctions for conduct akin to contempt. However, we need not make so broad a ruling in the pending case.”
. Judge Underhill, sitting by designation, argued that Rule 11 liability should be consistently assessed under the objective reasonableness standard because that standard is set forth in Rule 11(b): "The fundamental flaw in the majority’s interpretation of Rule 11 is that it seeks to use procedural distinctions drawn in section (c), regarding
how
sanctions can be imposed with and without a motion, to modify the substantive requirements of section (b), which controls
whether
a violation of Rule 11 has occurred. Under a plain reading of Rule 11, the procedural distinctions set forth in section (c) have no bearing whatsoever on the state-of-mind requirement of section (b).”
. Instead of requiring subjective bad faith, other circuits have urged district courts to use extra care in imposing sanctions after a lawyer has lost the opportunity to amend or withdraw the challenged claim.
See, e.g., Hunter v. Earthgrains Co. Bakery,
. The PSLRA heightened the pleading requirements for scienter.
See
15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2) ("In any private action arising under this chapter ... the complaint shall, with respect to each act or omission alleged to violate this chapter, state with particularity facts giving rise to a
strong inference
that the defendant acted with the required state of
*154
mind.”) (emphasis added);
Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd.,
. One possibility, not discussed below, is that ATSI sued Knight in order to obtain access to discovery that would have been more difficult to obtain from a third-party. But such a tactic would expose ATSI to Rule 11 liability for presenting a complaint for an improper purpose under Rule 11(b)(1).
See, e.g., In re Kunstler,
. If a Rule 11 violation is contained in a responsive pleading or dispositive motion, instead of a complaint, the rebuttable presumption is that an appropriate sanction is “an award to the opposing party of the reasonable attorneys’ fees and other expenses incurred as a direct result of the violation.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(3)(A)(i).
Under the statute, these presumptions "may be rebutted only upon proof by the party or attorney against whom sanctions are to be imposed that — (i) the award of attorneys’ fees and other expenses will impose an unreasonable burden on that party or attorney and would be unjust, and the failure to make such an award would not impose a greater burden on the party in whose favor sanctions are to be imposed; or (ii) the violation of Rule 11(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure was de minimis.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(c)(3)(B).
. The statutory notice in the PSLRA is an all-purpose reminder, whereas an opposing party may point to a specific aspect of a claim that it believes violates Rule 11.
. Indeed, Knight did not waste much time in filing a motion to dismiss. Knight was served with the Third Amended Complaint on September 29, 2004, and filed its motion to dismiss on November 5, 2004.
. The PSLRA’s rebuttable presumption that an appropriate sanction is an award of the opposing party’s fees (under § 78u-4(c)(3)(A)(i) or (ii)) does not appear to preclude a court from imposing a greater sanction, with the remainder going to the court. This way, a district court may impose as great a monetary sanction as it deems necessary (in light of the seriousness of the Rule 11 violation), without impairing the defendant’s incentive to act promptly to reduce overall litigation costs.
