Plаintiffs Gerald R. Roth and Logan M. Ammon appeal from the district court’s order granting summary judgment to defendants Charles J. Sawyer and Clifford E. Sawyer (the trustees). The plaintiffs claim that the district court erred by finding that the trustees satisfied their fiduciary duties under ERISA 1 by securing deferred payments of the plaintiffs’ retirement benefits under an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) with the stock of the Sawyer-Cleator Lumber Company (the Company). We reverse and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
The Company conducted a retail and wholesale lumber business in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area for many years. In 1975, the Company established its ESOP to provide retirement benefits to its employees. Under the ESOP, each participant had an account consisting of Company stock and one consisting of other investments. The ESOP provided several methods of distributing accumulated benefits to retiring participants. One method was the “put option,” under which a participant could require the Company to purchase his stock. The Internal Revenue Code gives participants in ESOPs the right to demand that the employer purchase the stock where no public market exists for it. See 26 U.S.C. § 409(h)(1)(B). The regulations, in turn, allow the ESOP itself to assume the employer’s rights and obligations under the put option. See 29 C.F.R. § 2550.-408b-3(j) (1993).
Roth and Ammon are former employees of the Company who retired in 1988 and 1989, respectively. . When the plaintiffs retired, Charles Sawyer and Clifford Sawyer were the ESOP’s trustees. On retirement, both Roth and Ammon chose to exercise their put options. Each plaintiff sold his Company stock back to the ESOP, see id., and in return received a promissory note providing for periodic payments from the ESOP over a ten-year period. 2 Federal law allows participants to defer payments from the sale of such stock when “adequate security and a reasonable interest rate are provided for any *917 credit extended.” Id. § 2550.408b-8(i )(4); see also 26 U.S.C. § 409(h)(5)(B) (providing that there must be “adequate security” for deferred payments on put options). To secure the payments, the ESOP granted Roth and Ammon security interests in the stock each had sold to it.
After Roth and Ammon retired, the Company experienced financial difficulties. It ceased operations in December 1990 and discontinued its contributions to the ESOP. Without further contributions from the Company, the ESOP had insuffiсient assets to pay the promissory notes and its other obligations in full. As a result, the trustees decided to cease further payments to Roth and Ammon until they could determine how to allocate the E SOP’s remaining assets. Thus, the ESOP defaulted on the payment that was due to Roth and Ammon on January 1, 1991. In February 1991, creditors forced the Company to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Bankruрtcy rendered the Company’s stock, and thus plaintiffs’ security interests, worthless.
Plaintiffs brought suit in June 1991, asserting both state and federal claims against the trustees and the ESOP. The defendant trustees answered and sought a declaratory judgment regarding their obligations to plan participants. Both parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court dismissed the state law claims and grantеd summary judgment to the trustees on the plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claim. The court found that the trustees fulfilled their fiduciary duties because the Company stock that secured the plaintiffs’ promissory notes constituted “adequate security” under federal law. The plaintiffs’ only claim on appeal is that the district court erred by granting summary judgment to the trustees on the breach оf fiduciary duty claim.
II. DISCUSSION
Congress enacted ERISA in 1974 to provide retirement security to employees by regulating the structure and operation of retirement plans. As we explained in
Martin v. Feilen,
A. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
In
Martin,
Courts have developed standards for analyzing whether a fiduciary has satisfied ERISA’s standard of care. Section 404’s prudent persоn standard is an objective standard,
see Katsaros v. Cody,
Besides the general statutory duty of § 404, federal regulations specifically prоvide that plan trustees must ensure that “[t]he provisions for payment under a put option [are] reasonable. The deferral of payment is reasonable if adequate security and a reasonable rate of interest are provided for any credit extended_” 29 C.F.R. § 2550.-408b-3(l)(4). We believe that this regulation should be interpreted in conjunction with an ERISA trustee’s fiduciary duties under § 404. Thаt is, whether a trustee is liable for breach of duty here does not depend on whether the security he provided ultimately proved to be inadequate. So holding would improperly focus the breach of duty inquiry on results and ignore the process by which a trustee made his decision.
Nor do we believe, as the trustees suggest here, that providing security that is equal in value to the retiree’s loan to the plan at the time of the transaction in itself satisfies a fiduciary’s duty. Adopting this standard would also ignore the trustee’s conduct by relieving him of any duty to evaluate whether the security would retain its value over the term of the loan. Rather, we conclude that the regulation and § 404 can be harmonized by focusing the inquiry on the trustee’s conduct under § 404’s standards. Thus, we agree with the plaintiffs that the issue is whether the trustees’ conduct before making the decision to secure the plaintiffs’ notes with Company stock was objectively reasonable under the circumstances. 3
We find that the trustees have failed to show that there are no genuine issues of material fact regarding the reasonableness of their conduct. The undisputed facts in the record do not support summary judgment for the trustees. The parties agree that the trustees hired an independent appraiser to value the stock for purposes of determining the amount of benefits to which each plaintiff was entitled and an attorney to draft the agreements relating to the put option transactions. That they hired an aрpraiser might satisfy the prudence standard, but there is insufficient evidence in the present record to determine whether the appraisal adequately informed the decision to secure the notes. We do not know what the appraiser based his calculations on or what the results of his analysis even mean.
Cf. Donovan v. Cunningham,
There also is evidence in the record tending to show that the trustees’ conduct was deficient. The plaintiffs cite deposition testimony, for instance, suggesting that the trustees did very little to evaluate the propriety of securing the notes with Company stock. Mоreover, there is evidence that, around the time that both plaintiffs retired, the trustees should have known that the Company was losing business and had poor prospects for the future. This evidence could support a judgment at trial for the plaintiffs on the issue of breach of fiduciary duty. Thus, we believe that what the trustees did and whether what they did was reasonable are factual questions that preclude granting them summary judgment on this basis.
B. Causal Connection Between Breach and Loss
The district court may have granted summary judgment on the ground that there was no causal connection between the trustees’ alleged breach of duty and a loss to the ESOP. The court devoted much discussion to the Company stock itself, independent of the steps that the trustees took in making the decision to secure the notes. For instance, the court reasoned that the stock constituted adequate security because it was the only collateral that the ESOP could offer the plaintiffs, it was “something in addition to and supporting the promissory note[s],” and because “it is common commercial practice for a lender to take a security interest in the object purchased with the borrowed money.”
Roth v. Sawyer-Cleator Lumber Co. Employee Stock Ownership Plan,
Under the prudent person standard, the relevance that the facts relating to the stock hold is that they tend to show that the trustees’ decision was objectively reasonable regardless of the process by which they reached it and thus that there was no causal connection between their allegedly deficient conduct and a loss to the ESOP. Even if a trustee failed to conduct an investigation before making a decision, he is insulated from liability if a hypothetical prudent fiduciary would have made the same decision anyway.
Cf. Fink v. National Sav. & Trust Co.,
C. Loss to the ESOP
The trustees may also escape personal liability even if they breached their duties and a hypothetical prudent fiduciary would not have made the same decision that they did if the trustees can show that there was no loss to the ESOP. The plaintiffs are suing under ERISA § 502(a)(2).
See
29 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(2) (codifying ERISA § 502(a)(2)). Under § 502(a)(2), plan participants may sue trustees to enforce ERISA § 409.
See id.; id.
§ 1109 (codifying ERISA § 409). Section 409 provides that trustees may be personally liable, but only for losses
“to the plan,” id.
§ 1109(a) (emphasis added); if individual plan participants suffer losses, but the plan does not, the trustee is not
*920
personally liable for damages under § 409.
4
As noted above, once the plaintiff shows a breach of duty and a prima facie case of loss to the plan, the trustee then has the burden of persuasion to show that the loss was not caused by the breach.
Martin,
The trustees here argue that the ESOP did not suffer a loss as a result of their decision to secure the plaintiffs’ nоtes with Company stock. We decline to review this argument, however, because the trustees did not raise the loss issue in their memorandum supporting their summary judgment motion; they raised it only in their reply to the plaintiffs’ cross-motion for summary judgment.
See
II Joint App. at 535. Thus, the trustees, as the moving party, did not satisfy their burden under
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
D. Trustees are not Guarantors
Finally, we reject the trustees’ policy argument that a finding of liability here would render them virtual guarantors of the plaintiffs’ retirement benefits. It is true that, as we noted in
Martin,
On remand, the district court should apply
Martin’s,
three-step test to the plaintiffs’ claim. In determining whether the trustees acted reasonably, the court should consider, among other factors, if they investigated the future prospects of the Company and the propriety of securing the plaintiffs’ notes
*921
with the stock and evaluated possible alternative methods of securing the notes. There is no formula, however, for determining whether an ERISA fiduciary’s conduct was reasonable, so the court should take into account all relevant circumstances. Morеover, in its order granting summary judgment to the trustees, the district court assumed for purposes of its analysis that the ESOP sustained losses because the plaintiffs’ security interests lost their value. Under
Martin,
the plaintiffs must establish a prima facie case of loss to the plan to prevail.
See
III. CONCLUSION
We reverse the judgment of the district court granting summary judgment to the trustees and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461.
. Roth and Ammon also received payments directly from the ESOP which partially satisfied the ESOP's obligations to them.
. We note that the district court improperly applied a subjectivе test to the trustees' conduct: "The plaintiffs have put forward no evidence and the court has no reason to believe that the
trustees believed
the security would be inadequate to cover a default by the [ESOP] on the
promissory
notes.”
Roth v. Sawyer-Cleator Lumber Co. Employee Stock Ownership Plan,
. Under § 409, "a fiduciary who breaches his fiduciary duty is liable to the plan — not the beneficiaries individually.”
Walter v. International Ass’n of Machinists Pension Fund,
Moreover, in their mоtion for summary judgment, the plaintiffs argued that ERISA § 502(a)(3)(B) supported their claim.
See
I Joint App. at 20; 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)(B) (codifying ERISA § 502(a)(3)(B)). Some circuits have held that § 502(a)(3)(B) gives plan participants a direct action against fiduciaries to recover damages that they personally suffered as a result of a breach of duty.
See, e.g., Bixler v. Central Pa. Teamsters Health & Welfare Fund,
