BRETT KANDELL, Derivatively on Behalf of Nominal Defendant, FXCM, Inc., Plaintiff, v. DROR NIV, WILLIAM AHDOUT, KENNETH GROSSMAN, DAVID SAKHAI, EDUARD YUSUPOV, JAMES G. BROWN, ROBIN DAVIS, PERRY FISH, ARTHUR GRUEN, ERIC LEGOFF, BRYAN REYHANI, and RYAN SILVERMAN, Defendants, and FXCM, INC., Nominal Defendant.
C.A. No. 11812-VCG
IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
September 29, 2017
GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor
Date Submitted: June 12, 2017
Kenneth J. Nachbar, Thomas P. Will, of MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Paul R. Bessette, Israel Dahan, of KING & SPALDING LLP, New York, New York; Michael J. Biles, Tyler W. Highful, S. Saliya Subasinghe, of KING & SPALDING LLP, Austin, Texas, Attorneys for Defendants and Nominal Defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor
The bulk of the Company‘s business, at the time at issue, involved retail FX trades. With retail customers, FXCM employed an agency trading model under which the Company made, on customer order, offsetting currency trades in the FX market on behalf of the customer. That is, the Company made a purchase in the market, and made a corresponding sale to the customer. As is industry practice,
FXCM‘s policy, however, entailed both business and regulatory risk. The business risk involved situations where the market became neither stable nor liquid; where customer‘s accounts were on the wrong side of such a market, FXCM could find itself liable for the large potential losses in excess of its customers’ investments. Such a situation occurred when the euro lost value in the Flash Crash. FXCM suffered large losses, as a result of which it was required to bоrrow funds under onerous conditions, and in light of which the board took a number of actions. These losses and actions are the main focus of the Plaintiff‘s Complaint. Since I conclude that a majority of the directors were independent and disinterested, and because I find no likelihood that they face a substantial threat of liability for what were (costly) business decisions, I conclude that the Plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that the
The more difficult issue here involves the legal and regulatory risk engendered by FXCM‘s business model. The Complaint points out that, at least since the time of the 2010 Dodd-Frank reforms,
Where directors knowingly cause or permit a Delaware corporation to violate positive law, they have acted in bad faith, and are liable to the corporation for resulting damages. Where, as here, the directors serve with the benefit of an exculpatory clause, they are not liable for non-compliance with law resulting from their negligence or gross negligence, however; only where they knowingly cause the violation, or knowingly ignore a duty to act, is bad faith in violation of the duty of loyalty invoked, leading to liability. Demand will bе excused only where the facts alleged, together with reasonable inferences therefrom, if true make it substantially likely that any illegality on the part of the Company arose from the directors’ bad faith.
Typically, directors are not charged with preventing illegal actions by company employees unless certain “red flags” make it inescapable that the board
I. BACKGROUND1
A. The Parties
Plaintiff Brett Kandell was a stockholder of nominal defendant FXCM, Inc. at all times relevant to this case and maintains his ownership interest today.2 The Plaintiff seeks to bring this action derivatively on behalf of FXCM.3 FXCM, a Delaware corporation, “is an online provider of foreign exchange trading and related services.”4
Defendant Dror Niv has served as Chairman of the FXCM Board of Directors since 2010, when FXCM went public.5 Beginning in 1999, Niv was also a director for FXCM‘s predecessor FXCM Holdings, LLC.6 Niv was one of the founders of FXCM, and he has served as the Company‘s CEO since 1999.7
Defendants William Ahdout, Kenneth Grossman, David Sakhai, and Eduard Yusupov were also founding partners of FXCM.8 Like Niv, these defendants have
Defendant James G. Brown has been a member of the FXCM Board since 2010 and began serving on the Holdings Board in 2008.14 “Brown is the ‘Presiding Independent Director’ and is a member of the Board‘s Audit Committee, Compensation Committee, and Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee.”15 Defendant Robin Davis has served on the FXCM Board since 2010 and is a member of the Board‘s Audit Committee.16 Defendant Arthur Gruen has been an FXCM Board member since 2010 and serves on the Audit and Compensation Committees.17 Gruen is the founder and Vice President of Broker Online Exchange (“BOX“), a startup founded in 2013.18 BOX “incurred net losses
Defendant Perry Fish was a member of FXCM‘s Board from 2010 to February 1, 2016.23 During that time, Fish chaired the Board‘s Compensation Committee and served on the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee.24 Fish worked as a lawyer “at the Law Offices of Perry Gary Fish” until 2014, and FXCM‘s 2015 annual proxy “does not indicate that Fish has been employed since 2014.”25
Defendant Bryan Reyhani has served on FXCM‘s Board since February 1, 2016.26
With the exception of Reyhani, all of these defendants signed FXCM‘s annual reports (filed on SEC Form 10-K) from fiscal year 2010 through fiscal year 2015.27 FXCM‘s 2014 annual proxy revealed that Niv, Sakhai, Ahdout, Yusupov, and Grossman held “over 27.7% of the Company‘s voting power through their stock
B. Factual Overview
1. FXCM‘s Business Model
FXCM, which was founded in 1999 and went public in 2010, “provides online foreign exchange . . . trading services to nearly 200,000 customers globally.”31 FXCM‘s business is divided into two primary components: “retail trading, in which its customers are individual investors trading on their own personal accounts, and institutional trading, where the Company offers foreign exchange trading services to banks, hedge funds and other institutional customers.”32 FXCM obtains most of its profits from its retail segment, “with 76.6% of its 2014 trading revenues derived from retail and 23.4% from institutional customers.”33 Indeed, FXCM is the largest FX broker for retail customers in the United States.34 Despite FXCM‘s prominence
FXCM‘s trading platform employs what it describes as an “agency model” to carry out trades.36 FXCM provided the following description of its agency model in its 2013 Form 10-K:
Our agency model is fundamental to our core business philosophy because we believe that it aligns our interests with those of our customers and reduces our risks. In the agency model, when our customer executes a trade on the best price quotation offered by our FX market makers, we act as a credit intermediary, or riskless principal, simultaneously entering into offsetting trades with both the customer and the FX market maker. We earn trading fees and commissions by adding a markup to the price provided by the FX market makers.37
FXCM allows its customers to trade currency pairs, purchasing one currency at the same time as they sell another.38 According to the Complaint, FXCM maintained a “policy of extending massive amounts of leverage to its customers,”39 “with leverage of as much as 50:1 extended to U.S. customers and 200:1 for overseas customers.”40 FXCM‘s leverage policy stemmed from the nature of FX markets, in which “daily
FXCM maintains several policies designed to reduce its customers’ risk of incurring trading losses. It touts its “margin-watcher feature,” which purports to “automatically close[] out open positions if a customer‘s account is at risk of going into a negative balance as a result of a trading position losing value and reaching the minimum margin threshold.”43 The Complaint notes that “market conditions” may prevent FXCM from closing out a customer‘s account before she is at risk of suffering losses greater than her margin.44 When that happens, “FXCM‘s stated policy [as set out in the Company‘s Form 10-Ks] is ‘generally not to pursue claims for negative equity against our customers.‘”45 In other words, where FXCM is unable to close out a customer account before its losses exceed the amount the customer invested, FXCM, and not the customer, takes the loss.
FXCM‘s policy regarding customer losses is embodied in its Client Agreement, which customers must sign before they open an account.46 The Client Agreement provides, among other things, that “[if] the Client incurs a negative balance through trading activity, the Client should inform FXCM‘s trade audit team.
The Complaint points to a bevy of FXCM materials designed to draw attention to the Company‘s policy regarding customer losses. In December 2014, FXCM‘s U.S. website stated that while “account equity” may “become[] negative,” “FXCM will not hold traders responsible for deficit balances in this scenario.”49 And from March 2011 to March 2015, FXCM‘s U.S. website answered in the negative the following questions: “Is there a debit balance risk? Can I lose more money than I deposit?”50 The site elaborated that FXCM “guarantee[s] you can never pay a debit balance. One of the greatest concerns traders have about leverage is that a sizable loss could result in owing money to their broker. At FXCM, your maximum risk of loss is limited by the amount in your account.”51 A July 6, 2010 FXCM Australia press release noted that “[u]nlike margin trading with other providers, FXCM
FXCM also used social media to promote its policy regarding customer losses. For example, on June 30, 2011, FXCM UK‘s Twitter page stated that “FXCM traders have peace of mind knowing that they are not responsible for account deficit balances as a result of trading.”53 And a now-removed YouTube video posted on FXCM‘s YouTube channel touted that “customers would ‘NEVER OWE A DEFICIT AS A RESULT OF TRADING.‘”54
2. CTFC Regulations and FXCM
The CFTC regulates FXCM.55 The Complaint alleges in conclusory fashion that “[s]ince at least 1981, the CFTC has prohibited companies like FXCM from offering guarantees or limiting customer losses.”56 The Plaintiff, however, does not quote the language of this prohibition.57 Instead, he points to Regulation 5.16, which the CFTC adopted in September 2010, as part of the Dodd-Frank reforms.58 Under Regulation 5.16,
a) No retail foreign exchange dealer, futures commission merchant or introducing broker may in any way represent that it will, with respect to any retail foreign exchange transaction in any account carried by a
retail foreign exchange dealer or futures commission merchant for or on behalf of any person:
(1) Guarantee such person against loss;
(2) Limit the loss of such person; or
(3) Not call for or attempt to collect security deposits, margin, or other deposits as established for retail forex customers.59
According to the CFTC, the purpose of adopting Regulation 5.16 was threefold. First, Regulation 5.16 provides protection for FX companies in the event of extreme volatility in the currency market.60 Second, Regulation 5.16 helps ensure that FX companies remain financially viable, because a firm that agrees to eat its customers’ losses is at risk of undercapitalization, which may ultimately necessitate bankruptcy.61 Third, the CFTC was concerned that policies guaranteeing or limiting customer losses had often gone hand in hand with illegal conduct on the part of FX companies.62
FXCM‘s business model—“highly leveraged forex trading” combined with a policy that customers, typically, would not bear losses beyond what they deposited into their account—allegedly led to significant increases in the Company‘s retail trading volume.63 To support this assertion, the Plaintiff points out that “retail customer trading volume for December 2014 ‘was 61% higher thаn December
The Complaint alleges that the Defendants “could not help but know about FXCM‘s violations of Regulation 5.16 due to its scope and pervasiveness at the Company.”66 Specifically, the Complaint asserts that because “Regulation 5.16 was part of a significant overhaul of the CFTC‘s regulations in connection with the highly publicized Dodd-Frank Act in 2010, the Company‘s Board knew or should have known that the Company‘s zero debit policy was a violation of Regulation 5.16.”67 The Complaint also alleges that the Defendants were aware of FXCM‘s purported violations of Regulation 5.16 because of the Company‘s “extensive marketing materials and its client agreements offering guarantees to customers.”68 Finally, the Complaint attempts to establish the Defendants’ knowledge of impropriety by pointing to FXCM‘s SEC filings, which refer to Regulation 5.16.69 For instance, FXCM‘s Form 10-Ks for 2010 to 2014 noted that one of the risks
On August 18, 2016, the CFTC brought a complaint against FXCM, alleging that it had “improperly guarantee[d] its customers against loss, limit[ed] the loss of customers, or not call[ed] for or attempt[ed] to collect security deposits, margin, or other deposits of customers.”71 “The CFTC . . . [sought] damages in the billions of dollars as a result of FXCM‘s violations of Regulation 5.16.”72 In February 2017, FXCM entered into a consent order with the CFTC in which it agreed to pay a $650,000 fine for, among other things, violations of Regulation 5.16 resulting from its no-debit policy.73 FXCM did not admit or deny the consent order‘s allegations or conclusions,74 and the order provides scant factual detail regarding the Company‘s implementation of the no-debit policy. It states that “FXCM represented to customers that it would limit customer losses . . . . by advertising that if the customer incurred a negative balance through trading activity FXCM would credit the customer account with the amount of the negative balance.”75 The consent order
3. The “Flash Crash”
From September 2011 to January 15, 2015, the Swiss National Bank (“SNB“) maintained a policy of pegging the Swiss franc to the euro.77 During this time, the SNB worked to prevent the Swiss franc from “appreciat[ing] beyond the level of 1.2 euros per franc.”78 The SNB adopted this policy “during the Eurozone debt crisis . . . , when, in response to a weakening euro and fears of the euro‘s ongoing viability as a common currency, an influx of money flowed into Switzerland, creating upward pressure on the Swiss franc.”79 The introduction of this currency peg caused what the Complaint describes as “the largest price swing of any ‘G-10’ currency in recent memory (other than when the peg was removed on January 15, 2015), with the Swiss franc falling 8.8% against the euro on the day of the announcement.”80 Nevertheless, as a result of the SNB‘s efforts, the EUR/CHF currency pair remained stable for several years, and FX traders took “large positions in the pair.”81 FXCM, for its part, promoted trading in the EUR/CHF pair through a Company-owned website and
In response to concerns that the European Central Bank was about to “creat[e] downward pressure on the euro” via “pumping in money through bond purchases,” the SNB “announced on January 15, 2015 that it would allow its currency to float freely against the euro.”86 The announcement led to extreme volatility in the EUR/CHF currency pair, with the Swiss franc appreciating rapidly.87 The franc rose “more than 41% against the euro, eventually settling at an 18% rise over the course of the day.”88 As a result of this volatility, FX markets were drained of liquidity, effectively preventing FXCM from executing stop orders or margin calls until approximately forty-five minutes after the announcement.89 But “[b]y that time, customers on the wrong side of the EUR/CHF pair [that is, long on EUR, short on
The Flash Crash proved catastrophic for FXCM. On the evening of January 15, FXCM put out a press release announcing that FXCM‘s customers had suffered large losses, leading to “negative equity balances owed to FXCM of approximately $225 million,” a figure later revised upward to $276 million.92 FXCM also stated that these negative balances potentially put it “in breach of certain regulatory capital requirements.”93 FXCM was hampered in its ability to collect on these accounts because of its policy regarding customer losses, which put “the Company . . . on the hook for these losses.”94 The Complaint describes in great detail the FXCM Board‘s response to these events, to which I now turn.
4. The Board‘s Response to the Flash Crash
The FXCM board first met to address the Flash Crash at 3:00 pm on January 15, 2015.95 Niv gave background on the events of the day, and noted that FXCM customers had suffered $200 million in losses that the Company may not be able to
The FXCM board met again on the evening of January 15.101 Niv gave an update on the situation, describing UBS‘s ongoing efforts to obtain financing for the Company.102 Niv mentioned that Jeffries Group LLC, “an investment banking subsidiary of the holding company Leucadia,” was in FXCM‘s offices and was considering providing financing to the Company.103 At this meeting, Niv stated that a suspension of trading “would not necessarily put the Company out of business but
The next morning, at 8:30 am, the Board convened for a third time.107 Niv informed the Board that “regulators from the CFTC and the [National Futures Association] were in the Company‘s offices and had threatened to shut down the Company‘s operations if FXCM did not immediately receive sufficient capital to stay in regulatory compliance.”108 Robert Lande, FXCM‘s CFO, mentioned that the Company was working on a deal with Leucadia in which “Leucadia would extend a two year secured loan of up to $300 million . . . to FXCM, with an interest rate of 10%, increasing 1% per quarter.”109 At this time, FXCM had contacted several other parties, but nоne “were willing to execute a transaction within the time frame
The Board met yet again at 11:15 am, and the directors learned that the regulators would force the Company into liquidation if it did not obtain enough capital to bring it into regulatory compliance by noon.112 Niv then told the Board that the loan offered by Leucadia was FXCM‘s only option if it was to continue to operate.113 The Complaint alleges that while UBS had been unable to secure equity financing from other parties with whom it or the Company had negotiated, “UBS and the Company failed to propose a loan from these parties similar to the Leucadia Loan, but with better terms for the Company.”114
At this meeting, Niv also set out the terms of the proposed Leucadia deal.115 In exchange for loaning FXCM $300 million, Leucadia would receive interest at the rate of 10% per annum, increasing by 1.5% every quarter.116 The loan was set to mature in two years, and after repayment, “net proceeds of asset sales, as well as certain other distributions from the operating subsidiaries, would be split, with the
The final board meeting in the immediate aftermath of the Flash Crash took place approximately four hours later.126 At 3:05 pm, right before the Board was set to approve the Leucadia loan, CFTC regulators entered the room and announced that “if the Board did not approve the transaction at that very moment, they would shut down the Company‘s operations immediately and force FXCM into liquidation.”127 The Board (again with the exception of the abstaining Brown) then approved the transaction.128 Despite the compressed timeframe within which the Board was forced to act, the Plaintiff faults the Board for failing to form “a special committee of independent directors to cleanse the process of conflicts of interest.”129 As an example of such a conflict of interest, the Plaintiff points out that five out of eleven
5. The Aftermath
On January 19, 2015, FXCM issued a press release announcing the Leucadia loan.131 It described the terms of the loan, which included, as noted above, an initial interest rate of 10% per annum that would increase by 1.5% each quarter the loan remained outstanding until the cap of 20.5% was reached, and an agreement that FXCM would pay Leucadia a share of the proceeds resulting from certain transactions, including a sale of assets, dividends or distributions, and the sale of the Company.132 Under this value-sharing agreement, once the Leucadia loan and associated fees were paid off, Leucadia would be entitled to 50% of the next $350 million of sale proceeds, dividends, or distributions, 90% of the “[n]ext amount equal to 2 times the balance outstanding on the term loan and fees as of April 16, 2015, such amount not to be less than $500 million or more than $680 million,” and 60% of “[a]ll aggregate amounts thereafter.”133 The loan also contained several restrictive covenants limiting FXCM‘s ability to enter mergers and other significant
According to the Complaint, market reaction to the Leucadia deal was negative. The Plaintiff points out that on January 15, 2015, FXCM stock closed at $12.63, and when trading in the stock began again on January 20, FXCM stock opened at $1.58 and closed at $1.60.136 The Complaint also quotes financial analysts who expressed the view that the Leucadia loan had significantly reduced the value of FXCM stock.137 As a result of FXCM‘s inability to pay down the Leucadia loan with revenue from its businesses, the Company has had to sell several of its subsidiaries.138 Another consequence of the Flash Crash was that FXCM “increased margin requirements for global clients who trade currencies.”139 FXCM also stopped allowing customers to trade fourteen currency pairs that it deemed too risky.140
FXCM implemented several other changes in the wake of the Flash Crash and the Leucadia loan. On January 30, 2015, “the Board announced that it had adopted a Stockholder Rights Plan [“Rights Plan“] . . . , declaring a dividend distribution of
In March 2015, FXCM announced that Niv, Sakhai, Adhout, and Yusupov had entered into new severance agreements with the Company.146 If these executives were fired, they “would be entitled to[, among other things,] (1) two times their annual base salary on the termination date, [and] (2) their annual target bonus (which
On March 10, 2016, FXCM announced that it had entered a memorandum of understanding (“MOU“) with Leucadia to amend the Leucadia loan.158 The Plaintiff emphasizes that in exchange for giving FXCM an additional year to pay off the loan, “Leucadia will acquire 49.9% common membership interest in the newly named FXCM Group.”159 The MOU also modified the value-sharing schedule discussed above; now, FXCM management is “guaranteed between 10% and 14% of the post-
C. This Litigation
The Plaintiff filed his initial complaint on December 15, 2015, and filed an amended complaint on March 4, 2016. After the Plaintiff filed another amended complaint on May 31, 2016, the Defendants moved to dismiss, whereupon the Plaintiff filed the Complaint currently before the Court. The Complaint asserts six counts against the Defendants. Count I alleges that the Defendants breached their fiduciary duties of loyalty and care by allowing the Company to violate
The Defendants moved to dismiss the Complaint on October 17, 2016, and on December 1, 2016, the Plaintiff moved to strike various materials relied on in the Defendants’ motion papers. I heard oral argument on these motions on February 1, 2017. On February 13, 2017, the Plaintiff moved to file a supplement to his Complaint based on a recent CFTC Order (“February CFTC Order“) that, among other things, fined FXCM for failing to disclose that it retained a financial interest
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Motion to Dismiss
The Defendants have moved to dismiss the Plaintiff‘s Complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1 for failure to make a demand.172 The demand requirement is an extension of the bedrock principle that “directors, rather than shareholders, manage the business and affairs of the corporation.”173 Directors’ control over a corporation embraces the disposition of its assets, including its choses in action. Thus, under Rule 23.1, a derivative plaintiff must “allege with particularity the efforts, if any, made by the plaintiff to obtain the action the plaintiff desires from the directors or comparable authority and the reasons for the plaintiff‘s failure to obtain
This Court analyzes demand futility under the test set out in Rales v. Blasband.177 Rales requires a derivative plaintiff to allege particularized facts raising a reasonable doubt that, if a demand had been made, “the board of directors could have properly exercised its independent and disinterested business judgment in responding to [it].”178 Aronson v. Lewis addresses the subset of cases in which the plaintiff is challenging an action taken by the current board.179 To establish demand futility under Aronson, the plaintiff must allege particularized facts creating a reasonable doubt that “the directors are disinterested and independent” or the “challenged transaction was otherwise the product of a valid exercise of business
1. The Leucadia Loan and the MOU
Because the Plaintiff first challenged the Board‘s decision to approve the Leucadia loan in his original complaint, I must consider whether demand would have been futile with respect to the Board as it was constituted when the initial complaint was filed—that is, when it was composed of the same directors who approved the Leucadia loan.184 At that time, eleven directors sat on FXCM‘s Board: Niv, Ahdout, Grossman, Sakhai, Yusupov, Brown, Davis, Fish, Gruen, LeGoff, and Silverman.185 Of those eleven, Niv, Ahdout, Grossman, Sakhai and Yusupov were corporate officers as well as directors.186 The Defendants do not argue that these Company
Thаt is because, when presented with the proposed Leucadia loan, one of the outside directors, Brown, expressed to the Board his intention, or wish, to become involved in the transaction from the lender‘s side.189 The Complaint is silent as to whether he ultimately was a part of the Leucadia loan. Decisively here, however, in apparent recognition that he was conflicted, he abstained from the vote.190 This left,
Because demand is excused, I must consider the alternative ground for the Defendants’ Motion, dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6). Under that rule, a motion to dismiss must be denied unless, accepting as true the well-pled192 facts and the reasonable inferences therefrom, it nonetheless is not reasonably conceivable that the Plaintiff can prevail.193 The Defendants argue that the Board was faced with the Leucadia loan decision when the only alternative was corporate ruin; they describe
The Plaintiff also alleges that a breach of duty inheres in Board approval of the MOU to modify the Leucadia loan. The Complaint is silent as to whether Brown voted for or abstained from the vote to approve the MOU. In light of my decision on the Leucadia loan, I find it prudent to deny the Motion to Dismiss with respect to the MOU pending discovery as well.
2. The Rights Plan
The Plaintiff also attacks the Board‘s decision to approve (and later amend) the Rights Plan in the aftermath of the Flash Crash. As with the Leucadia loan, the Plaintiff first challenged the adoption of the Rights Plan in his initial complaint, at which time the Board consisted of Niv, Ahdout, Grossman, Sakhai, Yusupov, Brown, Davis, Fish, Gruen, LeGoff, and Silverman. Again, of those individuals, Brown, Davis, Fish, Gruen, LeGoff, and Silverman were outside directors who constituted a majority of the Board. The Plaintiff argues that demand is excused as
To excuse demand as to a stockholder rights plan under the first Aronson prong, a plaintiff “must plead particularized facts demonstrating that the directors had either a financial interest or an entrenchment motive in [adopting] the Rights Plan.”195 But “a conclusory allegation of entrenchment . . . will not suffice to excuse demand.”196 And if the allegedly entrenching transaction “could, at least as easily, serve a valid corporate purpose as an improper purpose, such as entrenchment,” then demand will not be excused.197 Moreover, “a board need not be faced with a specific threat before adopting a rights plan.”198
Here, the FXCM Board adopted the Rights Plan in the aftermath of the Flash Crash, when FXCM stock had declined by 87%. The Rights Plan initially had what the Complaint describes as an “atypically low” 10% ownership trigger,199 which was later reduced to 4.9%. The Plaintiff attempts to demonstrate an entrenchment motive with respect to the Rights Plan by alleging that “the Board adopted the Rights Plan simply to maintain their stronghold over the Company and keep the Company‘s shareholders at bay.”200 The result of the Rights Plan, according to the Plaintiff, is
For starters, the Plaintiff fails to allege any particularized facts suggesting that the Board was motivated to entrench itself in adopting and later amending the Rights Plan. It is not enough to offer, as the Plaintiff does here, the conclusory allegation that “[i]n reality, the Rights Plan was designed to further entrench FXCM’s Board and management in office by blocking any takeover efforts from third parties.”203 That is because, as noted above, “a conclusory allegation of entrenchment . . . will not suffice to excuse demand.”204 And while FXCM was not faced with a takeover threat from any particular party, that alone is not enough to successfully allege an entrenchment motive.205 Given the precipitous decline in FXCM’s share price in the wake of the Flash Crash—which could conceivably subject the Company to takeover
3. The Amended Severance Agreements and the Bonus Plans
The Plaintiff also argues that the Board breached its fiduciary duties by approving the amended severance agreements and the bonus plans. The decision to approve the bonus plans took place after the Plaintiff filed his initial complaint, by
The Plaintiff argues that demand is excused as to these transactions because the outside directors who approved them were dominated and controlled by the insider defendants, who stood to benefit financially from the transactions. The executives who received the amended severancе packages “would[, upon termination,] be entitled to (1) two times their annual base salary on the termination date, [and] (2) their annual target bonus (which is 200% of the executive’s annual base salary).”210 These executives received a base salary of $800,000. Niv, Sakhai, Ahdout, and Yusupov also became subject to new incentive-based bonus plans, as a
“Independence means that a director’s decision is based on the corporate merits of the subject before the board rather than extraneous considerations or influences.”211 A plaintiff may establish a director’s lack of independence by alleging facts creating “a reasonable doubt that a director is so beholden to an interested director that his or her discretion would be sterilized.”212 To raise doubts about a director’s independence, a plaintiff “must allege particularized facts manifesting ‘a direction of corporate conduct in such a way as to comport with the wishes or interests of the corporation (or persons) doing the controlling.’”213 “Allegations as to one’s position as a director and the receipt of director’s fees, without more, however, are not enough for purposes of pleading demand futility.”214
Moreover, “conclusory allegations of domination and control are insufficient to excuse pre-suit demand.”215 And “[s]tock ownership alone, even a majority interest, is insufficient proof of ‘domination or control’ over a board of directors.”216 Instead, the plaintiff must allege “particularized facts showing that an individual person or entity interested in the transaction controlled the board’s vote on the transaction.”217
The Plaintiff has failed to allege facts supporting a reasonable inference that the insider defendants controlled and dominated the outside directors with respect to the challenged transactions. The Plaintiff alleges that “[t]he combination of their high-level executive and director positions, their influence over the Company’s Board and their aggregate stock holdings, qualifies the FXCM Insider Defendants as controlling shareholders.”218 But the conclusion that the insider defendants were controllers is unsupported by any specific factual allegations detailing the manner in which these defendants supposedly exerted control over the outside directors. True,
The Plaintiff attempts to show demand futility under Aronson’s second prong by alleging that the amended severance agreements and the bonus plans constituted waste. To successfully plead waste, a plaintiff “must allege particularized facts that lead to a reasonable inference that the director defendants authorized ‘an exchange that is so one sided that no business person of ordinary, sound judgment could
The Plaintiff’s waste claim premised on the insider defendants’ compensation fails because the Complaint discloses a rational business purpose for the Board’s decisions in this area: retaining top FXCM executives at a time when the Company
4. The Alleged Violations of Regulation 5.16
I turn now to the Plaintiff’s claim that the Defendants breached their fiduciary duties by allowing or causing FXCM to follow a business model allegedly premised on violations of Regulation 5.16. The Plaintiff alleges both that the Defendants adopted a business plan premised on violations of Regulation 5.16 and that they chose to ignore various red flags related to these purported violations. According to the Plaintiff, I must evaluate demand futility as to the first theory of liability under
The Plaintiff’s allegations about FXCM’s supposed violations of Regulation 5.16 were principally treated in briefing as a Caremark claim. Typically, Caremark claims involve “a breach of the duty of loyalty arising from a director’s bad-faith
Similarly, knowing failure to prevent such a violation implies bad faith. “Where directors fail to act in the face of a known duty to act, thereby demonstrating a conscious disregard for their responsibilities, they breach their duty of loyalty by failing to discharge that fiduciary obligation in good faith.”238
Here,
represent[ing] that it will, with respect to any retail foreign exchange transaction in any account carried by a retail foreign exchange dealer or futures commission merchant for or on behalf of any person:
- Guarantee such person against loss;
- Limit the loss of such person; or
- Not call for or attempt to collect security deposits, margin, or other deposits as established for retail forex customers.239
The Defendants do not meaningfully contend that I may infer from the facts in the Complaint that the directors were unaware of this legal prohibition against limitation of customer loss, given the disclosures in the Company’s Form 10-Ks. Nor do they so argue that the directors were unaware that, with respect to its core business, retail FX trading, the Company openly and publicly touted that it would
With regard to a more complеx and nuanced law that did not threaten a key source of FXCM’s profits, or a more ambiguous Company policy, the Defendants would undoubtedly be right that something more would need to be pled to invoke scienter; for example, some indication making it inescapable to the Board that it must act to prevent implementation of corporate policy, absent which positive law would be violated. It would be a perverse incentive indeed were directors held liable because a regulator adopted a legal interpretation at odds with a rationally compliant, if ultimately unavailing, position adopted by the corporation.241 It would be equally
Here, I find the situation different from that described above. The primary pursuit of the Company was retail FX trading.242 The Company pursued clients explicitly on the ground that FXCM would hold them harmless for loss beyond investment, in contradistinction to competing FX brokers.243 I infer, and the Defendants do not seriously contend otherwise, that the directors understood that FXCM was engaged in this policy. I also infer, based on the facts alleged and the Form 10-Ks, that the directors were aware of
The Defendants may well be proved correct that, on a developed record, the Plaintiff cannot demonstrate that the directors willfully acted, or refrained from a known duty to act, causing the Company to violate the law. I find, however, that the Regulation itself, on my reading, clearly prohibits touting loss limitations to clients, and I find that the Company did precisely that. That reading is based on the plain language of the Regulation; it is, I believe, bolstered by the purposes given by the CFTC for the adoption of
I note that the Defendants also sought dismissal of this Count on laches grounds. If, under the facts and law I have found applicable here, the Defendants wish me to consider laches, they should so notify me. Alternatively, they may renotice the issue on a developed record. I make no determination on laches here.
B. The Motion to Supplement
Finally, I consider the Plaintiff’s Motion to Supplement the Third Amended Complaint under Court of Chancery Rule 15(d). The Motion to Supplement was made after briefing was complete and after oral argument on the Motion to Dismiss. I then held a separate oral argument on the Motion to Supplement.248 It became
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. Consideration of the laches defense is deferred. The parties should submit an appropriate form of order.
