Lead plaintiffs-appellants California Public Employees’ Retirement System (“CalPERS”) and Empire Programs, Inc. (“Empire”) (collectively “Lead Plaintiffs”)
BACKGROUND
Because this appeal challenges the grant of a motion to dismiss, we must take the facts alleged in the complaint as true, drawing all reasonable inferences in Lead Plaintiffs’ favor. See Port Washington Teachers Ass’n v. Bd. of Educ. of Port Washington Union Free Sch. Dist.,
The NYSE is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) as a national securities exchange pursuant to section 6 of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78f. As a registered exchange, the NYSE is deemed by the Exchange Act a self-regulatory organization (“SRO”), see 15 U.S.C. § 78e(a)(26), which means that the Exchange “has a duty to promulgate and enforce rules governing the conduct of its members.” Barbara v. N.Y. Stock Exch., Inc.,
The NYSE and the Specialist Firms
According to the complaint, the NYSE was at all times relevant to the action (the “Class Period”) a nonprofit corporation, charged with overseeing the world’s largest stock exchange, which lists over 2,800 publicly traded companies.
Each security listed for trading on the NYSE is assigned to a particular Firm. To execute purchases and sales of a particular security, buyers and sellers must present their bids to buy and offers to sell to the specific Specialist Firm assigned to that security. The primary method of trading-on the Exchange occurs through the NYSE’s Super Designated Order Turnaround System, which transmits orders to buy and sell to the Specialist Firm electronically. The orders appear on a special electronic workstation often referred to as the “display book.” Each Specialist Firm has a computerized “display book” at its trading post that permits the Firm to execute orders for the market.
By acting as either the agent for investors or principal for itself in the sale and purchase of the individual securities to which they are each assigned, the Firms are required to make and display continuous two-sided quotations that accurately reflect prevailing market conditions in order to maintain a liquid and continuous two-sided public auction. When acting as agent, the Specialist Firms match the orders of buyers and sellers, whose bids and offers appear on the display book, and thus ensure the timely execution of trades at the best available price. When acting as principal, the Specialist Firms
[a]re permitted to execute, in certain limited circumstances, trades on a “principal” or “dealer” basis, when required to do so to maintain a fair and orderly market. In such circumstances, such as if there were no matching orders to sell and orders to buy, the specialist was permitted to execute an investor’s order to buy stock by selling the stock from the specialist’s proprietary account, or “inventory” of stock, to the investor. Additionally, the specialist was permitted to execute an investor’s order to sell stock by buying that stock and holding the stock in the investor’s inventory.
In re NYSE Specialists,
The substantial powers of, and the near-total control exercised by, the Specialist Firms over any given stock on the NYSE create an opportunity to manipulate the market for self-gain. The complaint alleges that “[t]he Specialist Firm is constantly in a position to trade for its own proprietary accounts while in possession of material non-public information regarding the supply and demand for a given stock, in part through its knowledge of existing but unexecuted” orders. Consolidated Compl. ¶ 52.
Lead Plaintiffs allege that during the Class Period, the Specialist Firms actively took advantage of their unique position to self-deal and that the NYSE neglected or abandoned its regulatory duties and oversight of the Specialist Firms by permitting and in some cases encouraging blatant self-dealing. Through “wide-ranging manipulative, self-dealing, deceptive and misleading conduct,” the Firms and the Exchange allegedly violated several sections of the Exchange Act, SEC rules, and the NYSE’s own rules and regulations. In the complaint, Lead Plaintiffs alleged five types of misconduct, the first four of which involve the NYSE either turning a blind eye to, or actively encouraging; the Firms’ self-dealing:
• “Interpositioning,” whereby a Specialist Firm prevented the normal agency trade between matching public orders and instead interposed itself between the matching orders in order to generate profits for itself.
• “Trading ahead,” in which a Specialist Firm undertook trades for its own account before undertaking trades for public investors. Because the Specialist Firm knew how the public investors’ orders would impact the stock price, it used this confidential knowledge to its own commercial advantage.
• “Freezing the book,” whereby a Specialist Firm froze its display book for a given stock in order to engage in trades for its own account first before undertaking any orders for public investors.
• Manipulating the “tick,” whereby a Specialist Firm changed the price of the stock to affect principal trades.
The fifth type of misconduct alleged by Lead Plaintiffs involves the effort to conceal evidence of the Specialist Firms’ malfeasance, in which the NYSE actively sought to help the Firms skirt or violate the securities laws by, inter alia, falsifying reports, tipping off Specialist Firms to impending investigations, and covertly encouraging misconduct. This wide-ranging fraudulent scheme allegedly resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in illicit profits for the Firms and the NYSE.
The SEC Report and Enforcement Actions Against the NYSE and Specialist Firms
According to the complaint, the “complete and utter failure of the NYSE to regulate the Specialist Firms’ conduct during the Class Period” is detailed in a November 3, 2003 Wall Street Journal article describing the contents of a confidential SEC report prepared as part of an official SEC investigation of the NYSE and the Firms, begun in early 2003. Consolidated Compl. ¶ 230. The article summarized the report’s conclusions about the Exchange’s regulatory failures, including that the NYSE had failed “to police its elite floor-trading firms” and “ignor[ed] blatant violations” of prohibitions on self-dealing; that the Exchange was “an in-house regulator either ill-equipped or too worried about increasing its workload to care”; and that the NYSE had “no meaningful surveillance, allowing inappropriate behavior to
This newspaper article was followed several months later by announcements on March 30, 2004 and July 26, 2004 from the SEC that it had come to settlement agreements with each of the Specialist Firms, in which the Firms acknowledged that they had failed to maintain a fair and orderly market for their assigned securities as required by law. The Specialist Firms consented to the announced settlement, without admitting or denying the findings, that they had violated the Exchange Act through fraud and manipulation. The Firms further agreed to pay to the SEC settlements totaling nearly 250 million dollars for their transgressions.
On April 12, 2005, the SEC announced the simultaneous filing and settlement of “an enforcement action against the New York Stock Exchange, Inc.,” which indicated that the “NYSE consented, without admitting or denying the findings, to entry of an order imposing a censure and requiring the NYSE to cease and desist from future violations of the federal securities laws.” Press Release, Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Charges the New York Stock Exchange with Failing to Police Specialists (Apr. 12, 2005), available at http://www.sec.gov/ news/press/2005-53.htm. The announcement further noted:
[specifically, the Commission’s Order finds that from 1999 through 2003, various NYSE specialists repeatedly engaged in unlawful proprietary trading, resulting in more than $158 million of customer harm. The improper trading took various forms, including “interposi-tioning” the [F]irms’ dealer accounts between customer orders and “trading ahead” for their dealer accounts in front of executable agency orders on the same side of the market. From 1999 through almost all of 2002, the NYSE failed to adequately monitor and police specialist trading activity, allowing the vast majority of this unlawful conduct to continue. The illegal trading went largely undetected because the NYSE’s regulatory program was deficient in surveilling, investigating and disciplining the specialists’ trading violations.
Id. The Exchange, as a result of this settlement, agreed to implement new oversight methods and to fund their implementation to the sum of $20 million.
The Alleged Misrepresentations
Throughout the Class Period, the NYSE repeatedly made public statements about the operations of its Specialist Firms and its oversight of their daily functions. For instance, in a press release dated January 8, 2001, the Exchange allegedly stated: “Our agency-auction model joins the greatest liquidity and transparency with the most efficient method of price discovery, leading to the lowest execution costs and best prices for customers.” The NYSE ran advertisements featuring Warren Buffet of Berkshire Hathaway, who touted the savings in transaction costs for his company achieved through listing on the Exchange, and who further observed that “[w]e wanted the best market that we could obtain for our shareholders. The NYSE is that market.” Moreover, high-level employees of the Exchange, including its then-Chairman Richard Grasso, issued public statements that assured the public of the NYSE’s integrity and its longstanding commitment to an open and fair market. Lead Plaintiffs claim that these statements deliberately created “the false impression that [the Exchange] was overseeing and operating its auction market in accordance with laws, rules and regulations, and l[ed] investors to believe that the NYSE was an honest and fair market,”
The Instant Suit
On October 17, 2003, a class action suit was filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against the Specialist Firms and the NYSE. Several related class actions were also subsequently filed in the same court. On May 27, 2004, the district court entered an order consolidating the related cases, choosing CalPERS and Empire as Lead Plaintiffs, and appointing lead counsel. Lead Plaintiffs filed an amended consolidated complaint, and the defendants, including NYSE, moved to dismiss under Rules 9(b) and 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. In a published opinion, the district court denied the motions as to the individual defendant Specialist Firms, but granted the NYSE’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion on the basis that as an SRO, it enjoyed absolute immunity on Lead Plaintiffs’ claims that the Exchange had abandoned its regulatory duties and that the Lead Plaintiffs lacked standing under Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, to pursue their misrepresentation claim against the Exchange. In re NYSE Specialists,
DISCUSSION
We review de novo a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6). Nicholas v. Goord,
We first consider whether the NYSE is entitled to absolute immunity from claims stemming from either the Exchange’s active or passive complicity in the Specialist Firms’ misconduct, and then turn to address whether Lead Plaintiffs have standing to bring their Rule 10b-5 claim for the Exchange’s alleged misrepresentations concerning its regulatory activities and the integrity of its market.
I. Absolute Immunity
Absolute immunity affords “complete protection from suit,” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Although the NYSE is not a government entity, we have recognized that in certain circumstances, it is entitled to absolute immunity for actions it takes pursuant to its quasi-governmental role in the regulation of the securities market. See Barbara,
[t]he NYSE, as a[n] SRO, stands in the shoes of the SEC in interpreting the securities laws for its members and in monitoring compliance with those laws ... [i]t follows that the NYSE should be entitled to the same immunity enjoyed by the SEC when it is performing functions delegated to it under the SEC’s broad oversight authority.
Id. at 105. Thus, so long as the “alleged misconduct falls within the scope of the quasi-governmental powers delegated to the NYSE,” absolute immunity attaches. Id. at 106.
Lead Plaintiffs argue that under our precedents, the doctrine of absolute immunity applies solely when SROs act (1) affirmatively and (2) consistently with the powers delegated to NYSE in its quasi-governmental role. Because the allegations demonstrate that the NYSE failed to regulate and at times actually participated in fraud and misconduct, Lead Plaintiffs further contend, the doctrine does not bar their claims. We disagree.
Lead Plaintiffs first argue that our prior decisions in this area have protected
Our understanding of immunity is further buttressed by this Circuit’s prior decisions in other absolute immunity contexts where, for instance, a prosecutor, protected by absolute immunity in the decision to prosecute an individual, was similarly found immune for the decision not to prosecute. Schloss v. Bouse,
In their second argument, Lead Plaintiffs, relying on D’Alessio,
Second and more importantly, the central question our SRO-immunity cases ask is not whether the SRO is acting (or not acting) “consistent with” the laws it is supposed to apply but rather whether the plaintiffs allegations concern the exercise of powers within the bounds of the government functions delegated to it. Under our precedent, the immunity protects the power to regulate, not the mandate to perform regulatory functions in a certain manner. Thus, the immunity depends only on whether specific acts and forbearances were incident to the exercise of regulatory power, and not on the propriety of those actions or inactions. Indeed, if “consistent with” and “capacity” meant that immunity only attaches to those who follow the law, the immunity doctrine would be effectively subverted. After all, individuals characteristically do not bring suit alleging an SRO is obeying its statutory and legal obligations; they bring suit alleging an SRO is violating the law or acting inconsistently with its legal obligations. Lead Plaintiffs here are accordingly asking us to carve out an exception that would all but swallow the doctrine whole, and this we decline to do.
A. Application
Given this understanding of our caselaw, it is clear that the misconduct alleged by Lead Plaintiffs readily falls within the ambit of the quasi-governmental functions the SEC has delegated to the NYSE. Indeed, of the five categories of misconduct that Lead Plaintiffs allege in their complaint (interpositioning, trading ahead, freezing the book, manipulating the tick, and concealing evidence of wrongdoing), the first four involve what Lead Plaintiffs themselves characterize as the failure or abandonment of the Exchange’s regulatory duties. For example, Lead Plaintiffs complain that the NYSE — either with intent, knowledge or reckless disregard — permitted the Specialist Firms (1) to engage in interpositioning in violation of the Exchange’s own regulations and (2) to trade ahead and front-run stocks to their tremendous financial advantage in violation of the securities laws and regulations. Lead Plaintiffs also claim that the NYSE turned a blind eye to the manipulation of the tick price of the stock and that the practice of freezing the book was a point of contention between the SEC and the Exchange in terms of the length of time that a Specialist Firm could engage in such activity. It is clear that these claims all involve the NYSE’s action or inaction with respect to trading on the Exchange, which, is indisputably within the NYSE’s regulatory powers. Moreover, Lead Plaintiffs’ own characterizations of the above claims implicitly concede that the NYSE was acting within the realm of the oversight powers delegated to it by the SEC. See, e.g., Consolidated Compl. ¶ 5 (alleging NYSE’s “deliberate failure to properly oversee, regulate or supervise its securities exchange” and that the “NYSE deliberately failed to halt, expose or discipline the illegal trading practices [of member firms] to the extent necessary to deter, stop or prevent them”). This • is a tacit concession that the NYSE’s decisions to act (or not to act) with respect to the Specialist Firms’ conduct is “consistent with” the powers delegated to it by the SEC.
We confront a somewhat thornier question in evaluating the allegations that the NYSE knowingly permitted, or even actively encouraged, the Specialist Firms to submit doctored or altered regulatory reports to the NYSE and that it alerted - the Specialist Firms to impending internal NYSE investigations so that the Firms could conceal evidence of wrongdoing. Lead Plaintiffs’ allegations here focus on the NYSE’s approach to weekly Form 81 Reports (“Form 81”), which every Specialist Firm was required to submit when it engaged in principal trades. The NYSE floor officials, Lead Plaintiffs claim, permitted their names and badge numbers to be used in preparing false Form 81s, essentially vouching for trades that they knew to be improper or wrong and even when the NYSE discovered a possible falsification, it would send the relevant Form 81 back to the Firm and permit the Form 81 to be resubmitted with the “correct” information. Officials at the Exchange also allegedly “tipped off’ at least one of the Specialist Firms about an imminent investigation before the official announcement, permitting it, now forewarned, to alter its records to conceal its misconduct. At first glance, none of these actions appears to fall within the ambit of the powers delegated to the Exchange. The gravamen of the Lead Plaintiffs’ claims, however, centers on the functions performed by NYSE in its supervisory and regulatory role: announcing investigations, signing off on regulatory reports on the stock exchange floor, and examining the Form 81s for content and legality. While these actions may not appear to form the heart of the regulatory functions delegated to the NYSE as an SRO, they are nonetheless central to effectuating the NYSE’s regulatory decisionmaking. Indeed, in DL Capital Group, this Court noted that without the capacity to perform certain acts related to its core regulatory functions, an SRO “would be stripped of ... critical and necessary part[s] of [its] regulatory powers.”
B. The Fraud Exception
Lead Plaintiffs also argue that the wide-ranging misconduct and fraud allegedly permitted or undertaken here by the NYSE should qualify as an exception to the absolute immunity bar. They cite our decision in DL Capital Group where we stated that
precedent, not to mention common sense, strongly militates against carving out a “fraud” exception to SRO immunity. As to precedent, this Court has already implicitly held that SROs are absolutely immune to suits alleging fraud. In D’Alessio, after all, we upheld the dismissal of all the plaintiffs’ claims even though one of the claims was for “fraudulent deceit and concealment.” ... Not only that, but this Court has, in other contexts, made clear that allegations of bad faith, malice, and even fraud-all of which may be relevant to a qualified immunity analysis-cannot, except in the most unusual of circumstances, overcome absolute immunity.
Lastly, we have cautioned before that courts confronted with claims of absolute immunity should consider “whether there exist alternatives to damage suits against the official as a means of redressing wrongful conduct” if absolute immunity applies. Barrett,
For all of the reasons stated above, we conclude the NYSE is entitled to absolute immunity and affirm the district court’s determination on this issue.
II. Lead Plaintiffs’ Standing to Sue for the NYSE’s Alleged Misrepresentations
The district court concluded that Lead Plaintiffs lacked statutory standing to pursue their misrepresentation claims against the NYSE. However, the district court’s reasons for dismissing the Lead Plaintiffs’ claims were flawed. Citing our opinion in Ontario Public Service Employees Union Pension Trust Fund v. Nortel Networks Corp.,
That is not what Nortel Networks held. In Nortel Networks, the plaintiffs had purchased stock in JDS Uniphase. Plaintiffs claimed that a different company, Nortel Networks, knowingly made falsely optimistic public statements about its own financial prospects. On the basis of a business relationship between JDS Uniphase and Nortel Networks, the plaintiffs claimed that their purchase price for JDS Uniphase stock had been inflated by Nor-tel Networks’ false statements about itself. In the particular circumstances of the case, the connection between Nortel Networks’ false statements about itself and the plaintiffs purchase of JDS Uniphase stock was too remote to sustain an action under Rule 10b-5.
In short, the district court incorrectly read Nortel Networks to mean that an action under Rule 10b-5 for false statements about a security purchased by the plaintiff lies only against the issuer of the security, or that only statements about a security issuer are actionable. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s decision with respect to statutory standing.
We express no opinion on the other grounds for dismissal that the NYSE raised below because we lack proper briefing on those issues. On remand, however, the district court is free to entertain such arguments. Specifically, we point the parties’ and the district court’s attention to
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court in part, vacate the judgment in part and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Exchange is no longer a nonprofit corporation, following a merger which commenced after the filing of this lawsuit. The NYSE now operates under the name NYSE LLC as a for-profit entity. NYSE LLC is registered with the SEC under the Exchange Act as an SRO.
. For instance, taking an example from the complaint for illustrative purposes: If a Specialist Firm knew that for one of the stocks assigned to it, 10,000 shares were bid at $89.06 and 10,000 shares were offered at $89.00, the Firm, following proper regulatory protocols, should allow the trade to go through at $89.03, giving both sides a fair and orderly execution in the public market. According to Lead Plaintiffs' allegations, however, the Specialist Firm would often in such situations act as a principal and buy the 10,-000 shares at $89.01 and then sell them at $89.05. While both the original buyer and seller would receive a $.01 price improvement on their initial trade positions, the Firm, by acting not as agent but as principal, was able to use nonpublic bid and offer information to make a $.04 profit per share for itself in a matter of seconds. Consolidated Compl. ¶¶ 78-79.
. We also observe that Lead Plaintiffs' complaint is rife with language suggesting that absolute immunity is inappropriate where an SRO has either recklessly permitted or knowingly fostered wrongdoing and fraud. See, e.g., Consolidated Compl. ¶¶ 188-91 (noting the Exchange's “proven track record of failing to adequately monitor and maintain surveillance and enforce compliance of its member firms' operations" because "the NYSE as well as its top executives had a direct financial interest in the successful continuation of that scheme”). This would, however, undermine the immunity doctrine we apply today because it threatens to import a "bad faith” or "bad motive” element to absolute immunity, which is incompatible with the doctrine's purpose. Shmueli,
. Moreover, throughout the complaint, Lead Plaintiffs allege that NYSE violated its own internal rules in permitting, for instance, trading ahead, "see Consolidated Compl. ¶ 87 • (noting that NYSE Rules 105 and 476 prohibit this type of conduct), or acting as principal when it was not necessary for the maintenance of a fair and orderly market, id. ¶¶ 71-74. They appear then to admit that the action (or inaction) complained of involves the NYSE’s regulatory powers, and our own review of the NYSE's internal rules leads to the inexorable conclusion that the Exchange’s enforcement (or nonenforcement) of these rules clearly implicates the quasi-governmental functions the SEC has delegated to the NYSE. See, e.g., NYSE Rule 104(a) (prohibiting a
