This аppeal is from a summary judgment granted by the district court dismissing consolidated suits
1
filed by various
I. Facts 4
Since at least 1976, Grace has sponsored the Plan, a defined contribution 401 (k) plan which offers participants an opportunity to invest wages in anticipation of retirement benefits. The Plan was administered by the Investments and Benefits Committee (“IBC”) composed of Grace officers. The IBC was responsible for selecting and changing investment options offered under the Plan. Each Plan member, however, had the power to determine in which fund to invest at any given time. The Plan offered participants twenty eight different options, including the Grace Stock Fund, which invested in Grace stock. The Grace Stock Fund owned approximately 12% of Grace’s outstanding shares.
Commencing in the 1970s, Grace, which was a global manufacturer and supplier of catalysts and silica products, became a defendant in industry-wide asbestos-related personal injury suits. Because of potential massive liability, on April 2, 2001, Grace filed voluntary petitions for reorganization
In the meantime, frоm September 1999 until the bankruptcy proceedings were initiated in April 2001, the market price of Grace stock fell from approximately $19 per share to $1.50 per share. During this period, Grace continued to maintain the Grace Stock Fund and to offer Grace stock as an investment option in the Plan. 6 Thereafter, while the bankruptcy proceedings continued their course, and during the certified class period, the stock price more or less stabilized at between $2.00 to $5.00 per share.
On March 17, 2003, Brian McGowen, a member of the IBC, wrotе the Plan’s participants informing them that the Grace fiduciaries were “seriously eonsider[ing]” naming an independent fiduciary to operate the Grace Stock Fund in order to avoid any potential conflict of interest arising out of the reorganization plan in Grace’s bankruptcy. 'Thereafter, Grace proceeded to amend the Plan to allow the IBC to appoint an independent investment manager for the Grace Fund. The amendment provided that:
[T]he Independent Investment Manager shall have the following authority and duties:
(i) the continuous authority and duty to determine the extent that the continued retention of shares of Grace Stock within the Grace Stock Fund is not inconsistent with the applicable provisions of [ERISA], and to take actions in this regard that it deems appropriate; including the authority to dispose of Grace Stock held within the Grace Stock Fund and to close the Grace Stock Fund to participant trading.
Pursuant to this provision, in December 2003, after due deliberation, the IBC decided to resolve the potential conflict of interest conundrum by appointing State Street as an independent investment manager, granting it the powers and discretion authorized by the amended Plan. In this respect the independent investment manager was charged with determining the risks inherent in continued ownership of the Grace stock, including the extent of the contingent asbestos litigation liability, an analysis that was itself partially dependent on assessing the likelihood of enactment by Congress of the Fairness in Asbestos Injury Resolution Act of 2003. S. 1125, 108th Cong. (2003) (designed to provide economic relief to the litigation-ridden asbestos industry).
Upon its аppointment, State Street itself proceeded to seek expert advice by retaining Duff and Phelps LLC (“D
&
P”) for the purpose of obtaining an opinion regarding Grace’s financial prospects, and the firm of Goodwin Procter LLP to provide appropriate legal counsel. After due consideration, D & P prepared a report that concluded that the value of Grace stock was between $0.73 and $3.02 per share, with a midpoint value of $1.88 per share. Considering that the approximate market price of Gracе stock was $3.51 per share at that time, the State Street Fiduciary Committee (“Fiduciary Committee”), charged with exercising the discretion assigned to State Street by Grace, entertained D & P’s findings and recommendations that the Grace stock be sold at its January 2004 meeting. The Fiduciary
Upon reconvening in February, the Fiduciary Committee concluded that the Grace stock was an inappropriate investment because of the risks inherent to the price of the stock by reason of the potential liability extant in the continuing asbestos litigation. Concomitantly, it also found that “the market price of W.R. Grace stock [was] not a good indication of its long term value.” Thus, it decided that the best course to follow was to sell the Grace holdings on the open market.
Before doing so, however, State Street gave advance notice to Grace of its decision to begin selling the Plan’s Grace stock. It then notified the Plan’s participants of its decision, but advised them that, notwithstanding this decision, it would “continue to monitor the situation” and might decide to end the sales effort if the circumstances rеquired it. The Grace fiduciaries did not question State Street about why it decided to sell the Plan’s Grace stock, in part because Robert Tarola (“Tarola”) considered such inquiry “off limits” in view of the conflict of interest potential that led to delegation of the independent power to act to State Street.
Relying in part on D & P’s valuation of the stock, State Street proceeded to sell 13% of its Grace stock holdings at between $2.86 and $3.09 per share.
Approximately a month or two later, an independent third party investor, D.E. Shaw & Co.(“Shaw”), sought to buy the Plаn’s remaining Grace stock. Shaw offered to buy this block at $3.50 per share, although the stock was then selling at $2.96 per share. State Street informed Grace of the offer and asked Tarola if there was anything that State Street should know about Grace before making a decision on this offer. Tarola responded that everything that State Street should know about Grace was available in the public domain.
On April 12, 2004, State Street sold substantially all of the Plan’s holdings in Grace stock to Shaw at $3.50 per share, and notified the Plan participants of its action. The balance of the Grace stock was passed to Shaw one week later, on April 17, 2004.
II. Discussion
Although packaged in a more legalistic wrapping, the essence of appellants’ allegations of fiduciary misconduct by Grace can be reduced to faulting Grace for its failure or refusal to insert itself into State Street’s decision-making process. This may be an accurate statement of Grace’s actions, or rather inactions; however, under the circumstances of this case, this did not constitute a breach of Grace or State Street’s fiduciary duties to appellants under ERISA.
A. The Decision of the District Court
Before the district court, appellants argued that because Grace’s stock traded in an efficient market,
7
absent evidence of eminent collapse of the stock price, State Street ought to have relied more heavily on market prediction of the stock’s value, and “Grace’s solid potential in the future,” before deciding to sell the Grace stock portfolio.
Bunch,
The district court agreed that “the market was the best indicator of the stock’s
present
value.”
Id.
(emphasis in original). Nevertheless, it rejected appellants’ notion that the efficient market was the standard by which the court should measure State Street’s actions. The court concluded that the applicable standard was ERISA’s prudent person standard. It ruled that ERISA did not require that a fiduciary maximize the value of investments, as Appellants seemed to imply by their arguments. Rather, what ERISA calls for from a fiduciary is that it use the “care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with like aims.” 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(B). As the district court aptly stated, “in common parlance, [what] ERISA fiduciaries owe participants [are] duties of prudence and loyalty,”
Bunch,
[W]e examine the totality of the circumstances, including, but not limited to: the plan structure and aims, the disclosures made to participants regarding the general and specific risks associated with investment in company stock, and the nature and extent of challеnges facing the company that would have an effect on stock price and viability.
Thus, the district court concluded, the relevant inquiry was not whether the market price was the best predictor of share value, as claimed by appellants, but whether State Street took into account all relevant information in carrying out its fiduciary duties under ERISA.
Bunch,
Although appellants exert strenuous efforts to have us conclude otherwise, we can find little to disagree with in the decision of the district court. We are nevertheless duty bound to consider appellants’ contentions before us.
B. The Case on Appeal
On appeal appellants present us with two general complaints regarding the decision of the district court: first, they allege “misapplication” of the law concerning the presumption that the retention of company stock in a retirement plan is consistent with ERISA, and second, they claim error in the district court’s “mistaken” equation of State Street’s process for deciding to sell the Grace stock, which the court said “took into consideration the totality of circumstances surrounding [said] stock,” with a substantively sound and reasoned analysis of all relevant circumstances. Id. We shall discuss these contentions in inverse order of presentation because resolution of the second claimed error easily disposes of the first alleged fault.
Oonsidering the- thorough investigative and decisional process that preceded the divestment of the Grace stock by the fiduciaries in this case, it is difficult, indeed impossible, given the standard of review which we are bound tо follow, to legally challenge their actions in this appeal. Notwithstanding the re-framing of the issues before us, as stated above, it is clear from a reading of appellants’ briefs that they continue to base their contentions of breach of fiduciary duty by State Street on the mistaken application of the efficient market theory to the facts of this case, a contention that was rejected by the district court. Specifically, this contention is the erroneously framed argument that State Street breached its duty by not giving sufficient weight to the market price in determining the value of the Grace stock.
Reiterating what was decided by the district court, this position is plainly wrong. As cogently stated by that court, the efficient market is not the standard by which State Street’s actions are to be judged. Rather, under ERISA, a fiduciary is required to act with “ ‘the care, skill, prudence and diligence ... that a prudent man acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use.’ ”
Beddall v. State St. Bank & Trust Co.,
Under the circumstances of this case, the actions of both Grace and State Street, with relation to the divestment of the Grace stock held by the Plan, unquestionably meet the prudent man standard embodied in ERISA.
First of all, upon concluding that the decisions required of Grace management in connection with the reorganization proceedings augured a potential conflict of interest with Grace’s fiduciary duties, Grace took the eminently correct decision of insulating itself from that possibility. It amended the Plan, after duly notifying the participants of its intended action and notifying them of the reasons for its action. It then delegated the relevant decisional power to an independent third party, State Street, to render its expert, unbiased assessment of the Grace stock, and to execute its autonomous determination based on its conclusion regarding whether the Fund’s retention or sale of Grace stock was appropriate. See 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1) (requiring a fiduciary to act “solely in the interest оf the participants and beneficiaries”). State Street itself sought further assessment from two nonpartisan professional entities, D & P and Goodwin Procter LLP, whose expertise in their respective fields of knowledge is not questioned by appellants.
State Street, as well as these two firms, in addition to closely monitoring the price fluctuations of the Grace stock on the market, compiled and studied Grace’s financial. performance and outlook, in particular analyzing how developments in the Grace bankruptcy and the process of reorganization could impact the value of Grace’s common stock. Of prime importance was whether Grace’s contingent asbestos liabilities in the bankruptcy could approach or exceed the value of equity in the company, thus diluting or altogether wiping out the value of the Grace stock in the Plan’s portfolio. Among the factors considered by the State Street team at the various meetings and conferences regarding the asbestos contingent liability were: (1) the asbestos-related bodily injury claims being filed and pending against Grace; (2) the outcome of class action litigation pending against Grace regarding a product called Zonolite attic insulation material; (3) the availability of insurance coverage to pay asbestos claims; and (4) the probability of passage of legislation pending in Congress, the Fairness in Asbestos Injury Resolution Act of 2003, which, if enacted, could reduce or cap Grace’s liability for asbestos bodily injury claims.
Thereafter, based on its investigations and analysis of the facts that it found, D & P prepared and рresented to State Street a detailed 88-page financial and valuation analysis of Grace, which included a determination of what it considered “a reasonable pricing range for the [Grace] stock given the factors we believe should impact the value to equity investors.” Based on these factors, the recommendation was made to State Street to commence selling the Grace stock holdings. Nevertheless, the Fiduciary Committee requested further analysis from its advisors, which led to additional meetings and a further formal presentation, attended by representatives of both D & P and Goodwin Procter LLP. At this presentation, a summary was made of the due diligence and analysis to date, which included the following summary of its recommendation:
Unresolved asbestos litigation and potential asbestos legislation will affect the determination of whether Grace stock remains a prudent investment. The uncertainty and consequence of unfavorable events occurring as a result of litigation probabilities or of legislation notbeing enacted timely or at all, has resulted in the IFG 8 recommendation that the Committee override Plan documentation and begin to reduce the holdings of Grace stock.
The recommendation to commence a selling program is based upon the IFG’s determination that the continued holding by the Trust of all of its shares of Grace stock would be imprudent and therefore inconsistent with the requirements of Section 101(a)(1)(B) of ERISA. Such determination reflects the input of [¶] & P] and Goodwin [Procter LLP] and has been made after careful consideration of all of the facts and circumstances determined to be relevant by IFG.
(emphasis added).
Thereafter, the Fiduciary Committee met again and unanimously approved this recommendation, establishing as a minimum sales price the midpoint valuation range found by D & P of $1.88 per share. The divestment decision was communicated to the Plan’s participants, who were also informed that the situation would continue to be monitored in case a change in strategy became necessary by reason of changed circumstances.
Between February 25 and April 6, 2004, State Street sold approximately 900,000 shares of Grace stock in the open market transactions at then-prevailing New York Stoсk Exchange trading prices, ranging from $2.86 to $8.00 per share. During this period, State Street continued to monitor the Grace stock and received regular updates from D & P regarding its equity valuation conclusion for Grace.
On April 2, 2004, Shaw, an independent investor, made State Street an unsolicited offer to purchase the remaining 6.2 million shares of Grace stock still in the Plan’s portfolio. The offer was for the entire lot at $3.50 per share, which was 8% higher than the closing price of $3.24 per share on April 1, and almost twice the mid-point equity valuation of $1.36 per share assessed by D & P as of March 31, 2004. In the meantime, developments in the proposed legislative settlements required further investigation by D & P and additional meetings with State Street, but ultimately it was concluded that there was no further need for D & P to re-evaluate the equity valuation for Grace. This hiatus led to Shaw lowering its offer to $3.25 per share, after which Goodwin Procter LLP advised the Fiduciary Committee on recent events regarding Grace’s exposure to asbestos liabilities. The Fiduciary Committee reaffirmed the basis for its conclusion that Grace stock was an inappropriate investment for the Plan because of the factors already considered, including the bankruptcy status of the company, the uncertainty that equity holders would receive value for the stock, and the outstanding asbestos litigation. The fundamentals regarding the Grace stock remaining unaltered from when the question was previously considered, the Fiduciary Committee voted unanimously to sell the remaining shares to Shaw provided that the original offer price of $3.50 was reinstated and that the sale did not burden the Plan with any commission expenses. The sale to Shaw was effectuated in two transactions, on April 12 and 19, 2004, at $3.50 per share, approximately 18% higher than the market closing price on those dates.
There can be little doubt on this record that the state of Grace’s corporate health was thoroughly studied by experts who debated and considered
ad nauseam
the
Appellants seek to induce us to reject State Street’s actions by having us apply a presumption of prudence which is afforded fiduciaries when they decide to retain an employer’s stock in falling markets, first articulated in
Kuper v. Iovenko,
III. Conclusion
The decision of the district court is affirmed.
Costs are imposed on appellants.
Notes
. Certified as a class by the district court, comprising "all W.R. Grace Stock Plan participants and entities who owned shares of W.R. Grace's publicly traded common stock through the Grace Stock Plan at any time from April 14, 2003, through April 30, 2004.” The class is represented in this case by Lawrence Bunch, Jerry L. Howard, Sr., David Mueller, and Keri Evans, hereinafter referred to collectively as "appellants”.
. In addition to Grace and State Street, individually named defendants included the W.R. Grace Investment and Benefits Committee, Robert M. Tarola, Fred E. Festa, John F. Akers, Ronald C. Cambre, Marye Anne Fox, Officer John J. Murphy, Paul J. Norris, Thomas A. Vanderslice, H. Furlong Baldwin, Brenda Gottlieb, W. Brian McGowan, Michel Pier-grossi, Unknown Defendants 1-100, Martin Hunter, Ren Lapadario, Davis Nakashige, Elyse Napoli, Eileen Walsh, Fidelity Management Trust Company, State Street Global Ad-visors, Investments and Benefits Committee, and Administrative Committee. When appropriate they shall be included in the collective term "appellees”.
. The parties stipulated to all the relevant facts, and thus the district court decided the matter as a case stated.
Bunch,
. Evans v. Akers, No. 04-11380 (D. Mass, filed June 17, 2004) and Bunch v. W.R. Grace & Co., No. 05-11602 (D. Mass, filed Aug. 2, 2005), consolidated into No. 04-11380 on May 18, 2006. The procedural history prior to consolidation is long and complicated, and mostly irrelevant to the merits of this appeal. Except where necessary, it will be by-passed for present purposes. See Bunch v. W.R.
. See In re W.R. Grace, No. 01-01139 (Bankr.D. Del. filed April 2, 2001).
. As so happens, the
failure
to divest under those circumstances was itself the subject of a case before this court.
See Evans v. Akers,
. The efficient market theory hypothesizes that the best indicator of a stock’s potential, as well as its risks and liabilities, is the price at which it is traded in the open market.
See In re Xcelera.com Sec. Litig.,
. "IFG” refers to State Street’s Independent Fiduciary Group, itself composed of investment professionals experienced in managing company stock funds for ERISA-covered pension plans.
. A fiduciary charged with making investment decisions on behalf of an ERISA plan is required (1) to “employt ] the appropriate methods to investigate the merits of the investment and to structure the investment;” (2) to “act[] in a like capacity [of others] familiar with such matters;” and (3) to conduct an “independent investigation of the merits of a particular investment”, id. (quotation marks omitted).
