OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal from orders of dismissal under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) involves multiple putative class actions alleging massive conspiracies throughout the insurance industry. Plaintiffs are purchasers of commercial and employee benefit insurance, and defendants are insurers and insurance brokers that deal in those lines of insurance. According to plaintiffs, defendants entered into unlawful, deceptive schemes to allocate purchasers among particular groups of defendant insurers. The complaints assert that conspiring brokers funneled unwitting clients to their co-conspirator insurers, which were insulated from competition; in return, the insurers awarded the brokers contingent commission payments — concealed from the insurance purchasers and surreptitiously priced into insurance premiums — based on the volume of premium dollars steered their way. As a result of this scheme, plaintiffs allege they paid inflated prices for their insurance coverage and were generally denied the benefits of a competitive market. The question on appeal is whether plaintiffs have adequately pled either a per se violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act (plaintiffs have foresworn a full-scale rule-of-reason analysis) or a violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. Concluding they had not, the District Court dismissed the complaints. We will affirm in large part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I. Procedural History and Plaintiffs’ Allegations
This litigation followed on the heels of a public investigation and enforcement ac
*309
tion. In October 2004, the New York State Attorney General filed a civil complaint in state court against insurance broker Marsh & McLennan (“Marsh”), alleging “that Marsh had solicited rigged bids for insurance contracts, and had received improper contingent commission payments in exchange for steering its clients to a select group of insurers.”
In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
Nos. 04-5184, 05-1079,
The private actions were transferred by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation to the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey for consolidated pretrial proceedings.
In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
The plaintiffs in the Commercial Case are a proposed class of businesses, individuals, and public entities who, between August 26, 1994 and September 1, 2005, engaged the services of the Broker Defendants to obtain advice with respect to the procurement or renewal of commercial property and casualty insurance and entered into or renewed an insurance policy with the Insurer Defendants. The plaintiffs in the Employee Benefits Case are both employers who utilized the services of the Broker Defendants to obtain group insurance coverage from the Insurer Defendants for their employees as part of their employee benefits plans and employees who obtained insurance from the Insurer Defendants through the employers’ benefits plans.
In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
In accordance with the District Court’s restructuring, plaintiffs filed a separate consolidated amended complaint in each of the Commercial and Employee Benefits cases. Each complaint alleged violations of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and the RICO Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), (d), as well as violations of various state-law antitrust statutes and common-law duties. Shortly thereafter, defendants moved to dismiss the Sherman Act and RICO claims in both cases under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). 2
*310
On October 3, 2006, the District Court granted the motions and dismissed the claims without prejudice.
Ins. Brokerage,
In granting leave to amend, the District Court instructed plaintiffs to file in each case a supplemental statement of particularity for their federal antitrust claims and an amended RICO case statement for their RICO claims. Plaintiffs did so, and defendants again moved to dismiss. On April 5, 2007, the District Court again granted the motions, but it once again allowed plaintiffs an opportunity to amend their pleadings.
In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
*311 Plaintiffs’ pleadings are of a substantial volume. The complaint in each case is more than 200 pages (including attached exhibits), and to this total must be added the pages in the Revised Particularized Statements and Amended RICO Case Statements. Significantly, the District Court allowed discovery to proceed while the motions to dismiss were pending. Plaintiffs’ amended pleadings were thus able to draw on documents produced and depositions taken pursuant to these discovery orders, as well as material unearthed in the course of the public investigations.
As reflected by the length of this opinion- — -and of the caption — this is extraordinarily complex litigation involving a large swath of the insurance provider and brokerage industries, elaborate allegations of misconduct, and challenging legal issues. The District Court skillfully managed the consolidated proceedings. We take particular note of the court’s thorough treatment of defendants’ motions to dismiss, which comprised five separate opinions examining three successive rounds of pleadings. The court’s patient and meticulous analysis has greatly aided our review.
A. Antitrust Claims
1. Broker-Centered Conspiracies
In each complaint, plaintiffs allege the existence of a number of broker-centered antitrust conspiracies. As the name suggests, at the center of each alleged conspiracy was a defendant broker, who colluded with its defendant insurer-partners to steer its clients, purchasers of insurance, to particular insurers in exchange for the payment of contingent commissions. In the Commercial Case, plaintiffs allege six such conspiracies, centered on defendant brokers Marsh, 4 Aon Corporation, Wells Fargo & Company, HRH, Willis Group, and Gallagher, respectively. In the Employee Benefits Case, plaintiffs allege five broker-centered conspiracies, led respectively by Marsh, 5 Aon, Universal Life Resources, Gallagher, and Willis Group. 6
*312 According to the complaints, the broker-centered conspiracies proceeded in two stages. First, “[b]eginning in the mid-to-late 1990s, each of the Broker Defendants,” in “a dramatic change” from prior practice, “began to form so-called ‘strategic partnerships’ with certain insurance companies, to which it would then allocate the bulk of its business.” Comm. SAC ¶ 83. The broker and each of its co-conspiring insurers agreed, “and each of the conspiring insurers horizontally agreed,” that the broker “would ‘consolidate’ its business by directing the bulk of its premium volume to its ‘strategic partner’ co-conspirators, thereby eliminating hundreds of other insurers from competing equally with the conspiring insurers for the majority” of the broker’s business. Id. ¶ 158. In the second stage, the insurer-members of each conspiracy each agreed with the broker, “and agreed horizontally among themselves, to reduce or eliminate competition for that secured business among the conspiring [‘strategic partner’] insurers.” Id. 7
As alleged by plaintiffs, a major focus of the second stage of the conspiracies was protecting the incumbent business of each insurer. To maximize insurers’ retention of existing customers, the conspiracies allegedly employed a variety of “incumbent protection devices.” Specifically, plaintiffs aver that brokers facilitated the non-competitive allocation of customers to insurers by giving insurers “last looks” and “first looks” on bids. 8 The complaints also assert that each insurer in each broker-centered conspiracy knew the identity of the broker’s other “strategic partners.” The brokers also revealed to each insurer detailed information about the arrangements between the broker and its other insurer-partners, including information about the size of the contingent commissions those partners were paying to the broker, and even the amount of premium volume steered by the broker to the other insurers. These facts, plaintiffs contend, evince the existence of an agreement between the insurers and the broker — and among the insurers themselves — to reap inflated profits by stifling competitive bidding and protecting incumbent business, in violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act.
These incumbent protection devices, plaintiffs claim, were common to all of the broker-centered conspiracies. In the Commercial Case only, plaintiffs also allege that insurers in the Marsh-centered conspiracy acceded to broker requests to provide “false” bids that were intentionally higher than the bids of the insurer to which the broker wished to award the business. For example, the complaint relates a statement by a former employee of a defendant insurer that his employer had agreed to “provide!] losing quotes” to its broker-partner in exchange for, among other things, the broker’s “getting ‘quotes from other [insurance] carriers that would support the [employer, at least when it was the incumbent carrier] as being the best price.’ ” Id. ¶ 109. The employee of another insurer allegedly stated that “she provided protective quotes when the broking plan called for it ‘[t]o show, to pretend to show competition where there is none.’ ” *313 Id. ¶ 119. This employee was allegedly told by the broker that the insurer “should provide protective quotes so that [it] would not face competition on its own renewals.” Id. This bid-rigging behavior facilitated the customer allocation scheme by deceiving insurance customers into believing they were receiving the best possible price in a competitive market. According to plaintiffs, insurers were willing to assist co-conspiring insurers in this way because they expected to be the beneficiary of such bid rigging where their own incumbent business was concerned.
2. Global Conspiracy
In addition to the broker-centered conspiracies, each complaint alleges a “global conspiracy” among all of the defendants: “[W]hile engaging in their separate ‘hub and spoke’ schemes [i.e., the broker-centered conspiracies] to create supra-competitive premiums and contingent commissions, each of the Broker ‘hubs’ simultaneously agreed horizontally not to compete with each other by disclosing any competing broker’s contingent commission arrangements, or the consequent premium price impact of those arrangements, in an effort to win those brokers’ customers’ business.” Id. ¶ 354. Although each broker, plaintiffs claim, knew that the other brokers were using contingent commission arrangements to obtain outsized profits, each “also knew that exposing another broker’s contingent commission arrangements to the other broker’s customers would lead to retaliation, thereby threatening the first broker’s own contingent commission scheme and supra-competitive profits.” Id. ¶ 355. “Therefore,” plaintiffs allege, the brokers “agreed horizontally” to maintain a mutually beneficial silence. Id. ¶ 362. Plaintiffs further allege that the defendant insurers were “complicit[ ]” in this horizontal agreement among the brokers, id. ¶ 353, and that they also agreed “horizontally with each other[ ] not to disclose the Broker-Centered Conspiracies and resulting supra-competitive premiums to the brokers’ customers,” id. ¶ 359.
As evidence of this asserted “global” agreement in the Commercial Case, plaintiffs point to allegations that each broker-centered conspiracy operated in a similar way and that the brokers incorporated similar standardized confidentiality provisions into their respective contingent commission agreements with insurers, which prohibited disclosing the terms of the contingent commission agreements to insurance customers. Furthermore, plaintiffs allege that the brokers’ membership in the Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers (CIAB), a trade association, “afforded them many opportunities to exchange information and allowed Defendants to adopt collective policies towards nondisclosure of rival brokers’ contingent commissions.” Id. ¶ 364.
Plaintiffs in the Employee Benefits Case also rely on these types of allegations to support their claim of a global conspiracy. They find additional support, however, in the similar way in which insurers, at the alleged behest of the brokers, accounted for the expense of contingent commissions on Schedule A of Form 5500, a document that must, under ERISA, be filed with the Internal Revenue Service and the Department of Labor. According to plaintiffs, instead of reporting the commissions as “a variable, case-specific cost,” insurers treated them “improperly as a non-reportable fixed cost (overhead).” EB SAC ¶ 305. This reporting technique allegedly yielded two advantages to defendants. First, they “were enabled to evade their disclosure requirements under ERISA and mislead their clients.” Id. Second, by classifying contin *314 gent commissions as a fixed cost spread across all lines of an insurer’s business, “the Insurer Defendants artificially raised the price of all lines of insurance, rather than substantially raising the cost of insurance” obtained through the co-conspiring brokers, which would have rendered that insurance blatantly uncompetitive with insurance obtained through other, non-conspiring brokers. Id. ¶ 306. Not only, plaintiffs allege, did defendants adopt a similar approach to accounting for the contingent commission agreements, but employees of the defendants also sometimes exchanged information about how they completed Form 5500. Plaintiffs claim these allegations support an inference of an agreement not to disclose contingent commissions properly in order to conceal the existence of defendants’ anti-competitive practices.
B. RICO Claims
Plaintiffs contend that defendants’ alleged customer allocation schemes also violated the RICO statute. In the Commercial Case, plaintiffs assert the existence of six RICO enterprises, which correspond to the six broker-centered conspiracies identified in the antitrust claims. “Alternatively, Plaintiffs allege that CIAB is a legal entity which constitutes a RICO enterprise .... ” Comm. SAC ¶ 512. According to the complaint, the defendants utilized these enterprises to engage in a pattern of racketeering activity consisting of numerous acts of mail and wire fraud that served to conceal and misrepresent defendants’ customer allocation schemes.
The Employee Benefit complaint alleges similar predicate acts of racketeering and adds allegations that defendants misrepresented information reported on Form 5500 and otherwise violated ERISA through their use of contingent commissions. Here, plaintiffs allege the existence of five RICO enterprises congruent with the five alleged broker-centered antitrust conspiracies.
II. Discussion
We exercise plenary review of the District Court’s orders granting defendants’ motions to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
See Gelman v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
A. Antitrust Claims
1. Plausibility Under Twombly
a. Legal Standards
Section 1 of the Sherman Act provides: “Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is declared to be illegal.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. As we have explained, this
*315
statutory language imposes two essential requirements on an antitrust plaintiff.
9
“First, the plaintiff must show that the defendant was a party to a ‘contract, combination ... or conspiracy.’ ”
Toledo Mack Sales & Serv., Inc. v. Mack Trucks, Inc.,
In addition to demonstrating the existence of a “conspiracy,” or agreement, “the plaintiff must show that the conspiracy to which the defendant was a party imposed an unreasonable restraint on trade.”
11
Mack Trucks,
Judicial experience has shown that some classes of restraints have redeeming competitive benefits so rarely that their condemnation does not require application of the full-fledged rule of reason. Paradigmatic examples are “horizontal agreements among competitors to fix prices or to divide markets.”
Leegin,
are ordinarily condemned as a matter of law under an “illegal per se ” approach because the probability that these practices are anticompetitive is so high; a per se rule is applied when “the practice facially appears to be one that would always or almost always tend to restrict competition and decrease output.” In such circumstances a restraint is presumed unreasonable without inquiry into the particular market context in which it is found.
NCAA,
While pleading exclusively per se violations can lighten a plaintiffs litigation burdens, it is not a riskless strategy. If the court determines that the restraint at issue is sufficiently different from the per se archetypes to require application of the rule of reason, the plaintiffs claims will be dismissed.
E.g., AT & T Corp. v. JMC Telecom, LLC,
Some restraints of trade are “highly suspicious” yet “sufficiently idiosyncratic that judicial experience with them is limited.” 11 Hovenkamp,
supra,
¶ 1911a. Per se condemnation is inappropriate, but at the same time, the “inherently suspect” nature of the restraint obviates the sort of “elaborate industry analysis” required by the traditional rule-of-reason standard.
Gordon,
Here, plaintiffs abjure “a full-scale rule of reason analysis.” They claim instead that defendants’ behavior was per se unlawful, or that, at the very least, it is susceptible to condemnation under a “quick look” analysis. Plaintiffs do not dispute that in order to succeed under either of these approaches, they need to show the existence of a horizontal agreement, that is, an agreement between “competitors at the same market level.”
In re Pharmacy Benefit Managers Antitrust Litig.,
Plaintiffs’ obligation to show the existence of a horizontal agreement is not only an ultimate burden of proof but also bears on their pleadings. “[A] plaintiffs obligation to provide the ‘grounds’ of his ‘entitle[ment] to relief requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do.”
Twombly,
*320
As we have recognized, this plausibility-standard is an interpretation of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8.
Phillips,
The
Twombly
plaintiffs had alleged that defendant telephone companies had “entered into a contract, combination or conspiracy to prevent competitive entry in their respective local telephone and/or high speed internet service markets and ha[d] agreed not to compete with one another and otherwise allocated customers and markets to one another.”
Twombly,
*321
In conducting this inquiry, the Court looked to well-settled jurisprudence establishing what is necessary to satisfy the conspiracy requirement of a § 1 claim at various post-pleading stages of litigation.
Id.
at 554,
Some courts have denominated these facts, the presence of which may indicate the existence of an actionable agreement, as “plus factors.”
Flat Glass,
One important question raised by
Twombly
is what is the relationship between this summary judgment (and directed judgment) jurisprudence governing the kind of evidentiary facts necessary to support a finding of conspiracy, on the one hand, and the “antecedent” issue,
Twombly,
A corollary of this proposition is that plaintiffs relying on parallel conduct must allege facts that, if true, would establish at least one “plus factor,” since plus factors are, by definition, facts that “tend[ ]• to ensure that courts punish concerted action' — -an actual agreement — instead of the unilateral, independent conduct of competitors.”
Flat Glass,
It bears noting that, consistent with summary judgment analysis, plus factors need be pled only when a plaintiffs claims of conspiracy rest on parallel conduct. Allegations of direct evidence of an agreement, if sufficiently detailed, are independently adequate.
See Twombly,
Because
Twombly
dismissed the antitrust claim before it, the Court did not provide specific examples of allegations that would satisfy its plausibility standard. Nonetheless, the Court did point in general terms to “parallel behavior that would probably not result from chance, coincidence, independent responses to common stimuli, or mere interdependence unaided by an advance understanding among the parties.”
The
Twombly
plaintiffs proffered two basic theories of anticompetitive collusion. First, they charged that the defendant regional telephone companies (ILECs) conspired to “inhibit the growth of upstart” competitors (CLECs).
At the outset of its analysis, the Court remarked that the complaint’s sufficiency would “tum[ ] on the suggestions raised by [defendants’ alleged] conduct when viewed in light of common economic experience.”
Id.
at 565,
In sum, Twombly makes clear that a claim of conspiracy predicated on parallel conduct should be dismissed if “common economic experience,” or the facts alleged in the complaint itself, show that independent self-interest is an “obvious alternative explanation” for defendants’ common behavior. For our present purposes, we find this guidance sufficient.
b. Assessing the Sufficiency of Plaintiffs’ Pleadings
As the Supreme Court has instructed, we begin by identifying the complaints’ bare assertions that the insurers or brokers entered into horizontal agreements.
See, e.g.,
Comm. SAC ¶ 158 (“[T]he Insurers members of the ... Broker-Centered Conspiracy all agreed with [the Broker], and agreed horizontally among themselves, to reduce or eliminate competition for [the Broker’s] secured business among the conspiring insurers.”);
id.
¶ 354 (“[T]he Broker ‘hubs’ simultaneously agreed horizontally not to compete with each other....”). Because these conclusory averments do not “show[ ]” but merely “assert[ ]” plaintiffs’ entitlement to relief,
Twombly,
*327 i. The Broker-Centered Conspiracies
(a) Conspiracies Not Involving Bid Rigging
As the District Court recognized, plaintiffs’ “broker-centered conspiracies” are alleged as hub-and-spoke conspiracies, with the broker as the hub and its insurer-partners as the spokes. This type of conspiracy has “a long history in antitrust jurisprudence.”
Dentsply Int’l,
Plaintiffs’ allegations in support of horizontal conspiracy in the broker-centered schemes fall into two different categories. First, plaintiffs assert that the very nature of the contingent commission agreements between the broker and each of its insurer-partners implies an agreement among the brokers. Second, plaintiffs rely on specific details about the operation of the customer steering schemes, particularly the “devices” used to ensure that a particular piece of business was placed with the designated insurer. With the exception of the bid rigging alleged in the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy, we agree with the District Court that plaintiffs’ allegations do not give rise to a plausible inference of horizontal Conspiracy-
Contrary to plaintiffs’ arguments, one cannot plausibly infer a horizontal agreement among a broker’s insurer-partners from the mere fact that each insurer entered into a similar contingent commission agreement with the broker. As the District Court concluded, the first stage of the alleged broker-centered conspiracies — the consolidation of the groups of insurers to which each broker referred business— evinces nothing more than a series of vertical relationships between the broker and each of its “strategic partners.”
According to the complaints, the defendant brokers decided to consolidate the pool of insurers to which they referred business in order to improve efficiency and extract higher commissions from each of their insurer-partners. As defendants point out, “[o]nce a broker decided to organize its business in this fashion, each insurer had sound, independent business reasons to pay contingent commissions to become and remain a ‘preferred insurer.’ Paying such commissions helped the insurer to compete for and retain a larger share of its partners’ business than if it had no such vertical relationships.” Defendants’ EB Br. 38. In short, the obvious explanation for each insurer’s decision to enter into a contingent commission *328 agreement with a broker that was consolidating its pool of insurers was that each insurer independently calculated that it would be more profitable to be within the pool than without. The complaints themselves reinforce this conclusion with their portrait of a concentrated brokerage market, in which a handful of brokers controlled the majority of client business, and an unconcentrated, more competitive market of insurers vying for premium dollars. Comm. SAC ¶¶ 70-76; EB SAC ¶¶ 67-73. According to plaintiffs’ own account, “[t]he Insurer Defendants are thus largely dependent on the Broker Defendants to assure access to business and protect their market share.” EB SAC ¶ 73; accord Comm. SAC ¶ 76; see also id. ¶ 73 (“The close bond between broker and client gives brokers tremendous influence, and often decisive control, over the placement of their clients’ insurance business.”). Given this economic landscape, each insurer had an obvious incentive to enter into the “strategic partnerships” offered by the defendant brokers, irrespective of the actions of its competitors.
Refusing to concede this point, plaintiffs argue that the parallel decisions of insurers to join the broker-centered conspiracies plausibly imply a horizontal agreement among the insurers because “an insurer would not pay enormous contingent commissions in order to access premium volume if its major rivals were getting the same access for free.” Plaintiffs’ EB Reply Br. 8 (emphasis omitted). This contention is implausible. Although each insurer would be motivated to achieve the best deal possible with the broker — and would doubtless like to obtain terms as least as favorable as those negotiated by other insurers — the determinative consideration would be whether the insurer is better off paying contingent commissions for privileged access to the broker’s clients than it would be saving those payments and foregoing the broker’s assistance in winning and retaining business. Especially in light of the market dynamics alleged by plaintiffs, the obvious explanation for the decision of the defendant insurers to enter into contingent commissions agreements with the consolidating brokers is that each insurer found that the benefits justified the costs. In fact, the complaints relate incidents in which insurers who were reluctant to conform to the contingent commission demands of a broker nonetheless did so when faced with the prospect of losing their privileged access to the broker’s book of business. See, e.g., Comm. SAC ¶¶ 135-140; EB SAC ¶¶ 163-168; id. ¶¶ 214-226. These anecdotes only strengthen the obvious conclusion that no horizontal agreement was necessary to induce the insurers to become “strategic partners.”
Moreover, plaintiffs’ argument proves too much. If the parallel decisions by several insurers to pay contingent commissions imply a horizontal agreement, then it is difficult to see why parallel decisions to pay standard commissions (that is, a fixed percentage of each policyholder’s premium payment) would not also imply an agreement. For that matter, plaintiffs’ logic would divine a horizontal agreement from virtually any parallel expenditures for marketing services, on the mistaken ground that a firm would not pay for advertising, for example, in the absence of an agreement with its competitors to enter into similar contracts with the advertising company.
Cf. Twombly,
Plaintiffs seek to bolster the inference of horizontal agreement with allegations of information-sharing among the members of each putative broker-centered conspiracy. Plaintiffs assert numerous instances, for example, in which a broker communicated the details of its contingent commission agreement with one insurer-partner to other insurer-partners, in violation of confidentiality provisions forbidding such disclosures. In plaintiffs’ view, these alleged disclosures helped defendants to police the broker-centered conspiracies by assuring each conspiring insurer that none of the other insurer-partners was “cheating” by taking more than the allegedly agreed-upon share of premium volume.
But there is a significant obstacle to plaintiffs’ attempts to infer a horizontal agreement from this sharing of information. The complaints allege only that the brokers made the disclosures; there are no allegations that any insurer ever horizontally disclosed to its competitors the details of its vertical agreement with a broker. Furthermore, there are obvious reasons for each broker to share this information with its insurer-partners, reasons that have nothing to do with preexisting agreements of any kind. The details of commission agreements with other insurers, for example, could be a powerful tool for a broker attempting to negotiate a more favorable agreement with a particular insurer-partner. Either match the “market” price for my premium volume, a broker might threaten, or I will transfer your share of my business to other, higher-commission-paying insurer-partners. This tactic would seem to be an effective way for brokers to exploit the leverage that, according to the complaints, they enjoyed over the insurers. And in fact, the complaints show that brokers used the information in precisely this way. See, e.g., EB SAC ¶ 126 (recounting an incident in which a broker “reveals [to a particular insurer] that the bonus compensation arrangement it was seeking from [that particular insurer] had been agreed to by the other conspiring Insurers, and that [the particular insurer] should offer terms like those put forth by another Insurers [sic]”). Just as a manufacturer’s practice of in *330 forming each of its distributors of the identities of its other distributors — as well as the prices they paid and the volume of product they received — would not plausibly imply a horizontal agreement among the distributors, the disclosure of information alleged here fails to plausibly suggest a conspiracy among the insurers. It is true that if a horizontal conspiracy of the sort asserted by plaintiffs existed, the exchange of information alleged could conceivably serve the “policing” function plaintiffs describe. But it does not follow that this disclosure of information plausibly implies such a conspiracy; it is at least equally consistent with unconcerted action. 27
The manufacturer analogy highlights a basic fallacy that undergirds much of plaintiffs’ argumentative strategy. Plaintiffs repeatedly insist that
when [an] insurer knows that it is buying competitive protections for its incumbent business and it knows that other insurers are not getting a real opportunity on its incumbent business, and it knows that there are other partners of the broker who have the same competitive protections bought with the same contingent commissions, it is a fair inference ... that this describes ... a horizontal conspiracy.
Tr. of Oral Arg. 15-16. “Competitive protections” sound vaguely sinister, but what insurers were allegedly buying was a portion of the client business controlled by the broker. Whatever portion of that business one insurer buys is, of course, a portion unavailable to other insurers. Each contract between an insurer and the broker is, in this sense, a restraint of trade, but only in the way that every contract is a restraint of trade.
See Bd. of Trade v. United States,
Plaintiffs maintain that this conclusion is at odds with the holdings in two hub-and-spoke-conspiracy cases,
Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. United States,
We do not dispute this principle, but it does not relieve plaintiffs of the obligation to “allege facts plausibly suggesting ‘a unity of purpose or a common design and understanding, or a meeting of minds in an unlawful arrangement.’ ”
Dentsply Int’l,
As noted, however, in the circumstances alleged here, the rationality of each insurer’s decision to enter into a “strategic partnership” with the broker does not presuppose concerted action. The advantages of the partnership to the insurers flowed from the broker’s control of its clients’ business, not the market power of the insurers. If anything, an insurer here would prefer that fewer of its competitors participate in the scheme, as it would then enjoy that much more of the broker’s steered business. See, e.g., Comm. SAC ¶ 242 (noting that one of broker HRH’s insurer-partners preferred that HRH have only three other partners, whereas HRH wanted four). The opportunity to become a broker’s “strategic partner” was an opportunity for the insurer to increase output, not reduce it.
Toys “R” Us
is likewise distinguishable. There, Toys “R” Us, a toy retailer, invited manufacturers to stop selling toys to wholesale toy clubs, which competed with Toys “R” Us. The manufacturers did so. The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit affirmed the FTC’s finding of § 1 conspiracy among the manufacturers. The court acknowledged that the “agreements between [Toys “R” Us] and the various manufacturers were, of course, vertical agreements,”
Here, the parallel vertical agreements are of a different sort. Interstate and Toys “R” Us solicited exclusive-dealing agreements from movie distributors and toy manufacturers, respectively, in an attempt to exploit the latters’ collective market power. Plaintiffs here do not allege that the insurers possessed market power (as noted, plaintiffs instead emphasize the brokers’ market power, see Comm. SAC ¶ 76; EB SAC ¶ 73), nor that each broker wanted its insurer-partners to deal exclusively with it (the complaints show that some insurers had contingent commission agreements with multiple brokers 2 9 ). Instead, plaintiffs allege that brokers demanded contingent commissions in exchange for given amounts of broker-controlled business. And the complaints show that each insurer had an incentive to pay these commissions based solely on the brokers’ ability to guarantee *333 delivery of premium volume. Each insurer’s share of the market thus depended on its ability to gain the broker’s favor, not on the choices of its competitors.
Plaintiffs’ attempt to compare their allegations with the facts of
Interstate Circuit
and
Toys “R” Us
is thus misguided. If anything, the fundamentally different factual contexts in those cases reinforce our view that the alleged information-sharing by the brokers here does not plausibly support a claim of horizontal conspiracy.
30
We believe the alleged contingent commission agreements between brokers and insurers — which form the backbone of plaintiffs’ alleged “broker-centered conspiracies” — find a more apt analogue in the facts of
NYNEX Corp. v. Discon, Inc., 525
U.S. 128,
Here, too, the “strategic partnerships” alleged by plaintiffs imply only a vertical restraint. Furthermore, the complaints show that the injury to purchasers of insurance “naturally flowed” primarily from the nature of the broker-client relationship and the ability it afforded brokers to deceive clients about the quality and competitive status of the bids received from insurers. Contingent commission agreements were the means by which the brokers converted this power into profit, ultimately at their clients’ expense; contingent commissions were the “rebate” insurers paid to brokers. But none of the allegations examined to this point give reason to believe that the broker-centered schemes were underwritten by horizontal agreements among the insurer-partners. Purchasers may have some cause of action against the defendants for their alleged deception and unfair trade practices, see id. (listing possible legal remedies), but plaintiffs’ allegations of parallel eontingent-eommissionsfor-guaranteed-premium-volume agreements between each broker and its insurer-partners do not adequately plead a per se violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act. 31
The gravamen of plaintiffs’ allegations lies in what the District Court described as the second stage of the asserted schemes: the operation of the “incumbent protection rackets” within each broker-centered conspiracy. Even if the parallel decisions to become strategic partners of the broker do not in themselves bespeak a horizontal agreement, plaintiffs contend their allegations about the “devices” used to conduct the customer-steering schemes suffice to meet the Twombly threshold.
According to the complaints, several of the devices that allegedly facilitated the schemes are common to all of the broker-centered conspiracies. For instance, plaintiffs allege that brokers often afforded insurer-partners “first looks” and “last looks” in bidding on policies. Once again, *335 however, the practices identified by plaintiffs are strictly vertical in nature. On the complaint’s own account, first and last looks were techniques utilized by brokers to ensure that a given client’s policy was placed (or remained) with a designated insurer-partner. See, e.g., Comm. SAC ¶ 88 (“Broker Defendants shielded their insurer partners from normal competition by agreeing not to bid renewals competitively, or by limiting the circumstances under which renewals could be marketed. Broker Defendants also routinely promised to provide competitive advantages to Insurer partners, by disclosing other carriers’ bids, providing first or last looks, and other methods.”). The complaints describe “[t]he close bond between broker and client,” which “gives brokers tremendous influence, and often decisive control, over the placement of their clients’ insurance business. Given the high degree of financial investment and trust placed in their broker, clients will rarely if ever seek quotes from insurers other than those recommended by the broker.” Id. ¶ 73. In other words, the complaints themselves provide obvious reasons to conclude that the brokers were able to steer clients to preferred insurers without the need for any agreement among the insurers. Whatever the vices of these steering techniques, they do not give rise to a plausible inference of horizontal conspiracy.
Also insufficient are two allegations of certain “bid manipulation” within the broker-centered conspiracies in the Employee Benefits Case. In the first example, the complaint asserts only that a broker unilaterally refused to submit an insurer’s bid to the client. In the second, a broker successfully persuaded one of its insurer-partners not to withdraw a bid the insurer had come to view as unacceptably low. If the insurer had withdrawn the bid, another, non-partner insurer would have become a “finalist,” an outcome the broker wished to avoid. To allay the insurer-partner’s concerns, the broker assured it that it would not end up winning the contract because another insurer had submitted an even lower bid. Shortly afterward, the broker placed a large account with the insurer-partner. Neither example provides a plausible basis for inferring anything more than vertical agreements between brokers and individual insurers.
In the Employee Benefits Case, plaintiffs allege that defendant insurers used similar strategies to evade their obligation to report contingent commission payments on Form 5500. But the asserted fact that the insurers intended to violate their reporting obligations, and that they all adopted the same deceptive reporting model, does not plausibly suggest a horizontal agreement. If anything, the allegations suggest that each insurer would be independently motivated to evade the requirement, and that each had access to the same effective model of how to accomplish this deception.
Cf. In re Elevator Antitrust Litig.,
In sum, the allegations discussed thus far do not provide “plausible grounds to infer” a horizontal agreement.
Id.
at 556,
(b) Bid-Rigging Allegations
There is, however, one notable ex: ception to this conclusion. In the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy, plaintiffs provide detailed allegations of bid rigging by the insurer-partners.
32
According to these allegations, insurers furnished purposefully uncompetitive sham bids on policies in order to facilitate the steering of business to other insurer-partners, on the understanding that the other insurers would later reciprocate. Bid rigging — or more specifically, as alleged in this case, bid rotation
33
— is quintessential^ collusive behavior subject to per se condemnation under § 1 of the Sherman Act.
See United States v. All Star Indus.,
The District Court did not find the bid-rigging allegations sufficient to imply any sort of horizontal agreement among Marsh’s insurer-partners, even one to rig bids. The court appears to have believed that because Marsh, the broker, was the one who directed the insurers to provide sham bids, the bid rigging was not indicative of an agreement among insurers but simply reflected the desire by individual insurers to propitiate Marsh in order to ensure that Marsh would continue to steer premium volume their way.
See
We agree that plaintiffs’ allegations portray a conspiracy masterminded and directed by defendant broker Marsh, but this fact does not make implausible the inference of a horizontal agreement among the insurers. If the defendant insurers supplying sham bids were truly indifferent as to whether Marsh’s other insurer-partners would ever reciprocate, then the bid rigging might not plausibly imply a horizontal agreement. 36 On a motion to dismiss, however, we must assume the truth of the complaint’s statement of facts, and the complaint here sets forth a plausible basis for inferring that each bid-rigging defendant’s decision not to compete was conditioned on an expectation of reciprocity from its competitors — and not based purely on independent motivation or broker Marsh’s behavior, as the District Court concluded. See Comm. SAC ¶ 109 (quoting statement by a former employee of a defendant insurer to the effect that the Insurer had agreed to “provide[ ] losing quotes” to its broker-partner in exchange for, among other things, the broker’s “getting ‘quotes from other [insurance] carriers that would support the [Insurer, at least when it was the incumbent carrier] as being the best price’ ”).
The fact that Marsh, an entity vertically oriented to the insurers, appears to be a
sine qua non
of the alleged horizontal agreement is not necessarily an obstacle to plaintiffs’ claim. As one of our sister courts of appeals has written, “defendants cannot escape the per se rule [for certain horizontal restraints of trade] simply because their conspiracy depended upon the participation of a ‘middle-man’, even if that middleman conceptualized the conspiracy, orchestrated it ... and collected most of the booty.”
All Star,
The conspiracy alleged in All Star has some striking similarities with the broker-centered conspiracy alleged here. In All Star, a criminal prosecution for antitrust conspiracy in the specialty pipe industry, the government’s theory was that defendant Texas Pipe Bending Company (TPB), *338 which performed fabrication jobs on a cost-plus basis, coordinated a bid-rigging scheme among defendant pipe distributors. The distributor(s) designated to win a particular bid would be protected by higher bids submitted by the other bidders, and the winning distributors rebated some portion of their sales revenue — which was significantly inflated over the price that would have prevailed in competitive bidding' — -to TPB. Id. at 467-68. In both All Star and (as alleged) this case, competitors agreed to submit intentionally uncompetitive bids in order to dictate the firm to which a particular contract would be awarded, as well as (by implication if not design) the price of that contract. This conduct plausibly implies a horizontal conspiracy, and the fact that here it was the broker, Marsh, that allegedly designated the winner and solicited the sham bids does not alter that conclusion. Marsh may have been an essential conduit and coordinator, but the insurers’ agreement to provide protective bids to one another was also instrumental to the operation of the asserted broker-centered conspiracy. Even if the broker could have allocated customers on its own, without enlisting the assistance of other insurer-partners, the alleged willingness of those partners not only to refrain from competing with one another, but also actively to assist in the deceptive steering practices, plausibly suggests that customer allocation could be the result not only of vertical collusion, but also of a horizontal agreement among the insurers. 37 The anticompetitive danger inherent in insurers’ alleged concerted efforts to rotate bids is not necessarily mitigated by the fact that the broker managed the details of each bid, nor by the likelihood that the horizontal collusion would not have occurred without the broker’s involvement.
On appeal, defendants do not dispute that the bid-rigging allegations plausibly imply a horizontal agreement among the insurers. For several reasons, however, they contend this agreement is insufficient to support plaintiffs’ antitrust claims. Defendants do not deny that plaintiffs have set forth particularized allegations of unlawful bid rigging, but they contend that plaintiffs have no standing to challenge this activity because plaintiffs do not assert that the bids were rigged on any of the policies they purchased. Plaintiffs, in turn, insist that this argument misses the point, since their claim is not that defendants engaged in an actionable bid-rigging conspiracy; as noted, the alleged horizontal agreement on which they base their § 1 claim is not an agreement to rig bids. Instead, they complain of a “broader scheme” of “incumbent protection,” and the incidents of bid rigging are alleged as evidence of this “broader scheme.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 70. 38
*339 To evaluate the merit of this argument — that is, to determine whether the bid-rigging allegations satisfy Twombly’s pleading standard — it is necessary to identify the scope of this “broader scheme” with precision. This imperative derives from the requisite elements of a claim under § 1 of the Sherman Act. As noted, since plaintiffs have elected to forego a rule-of-reason analysis, they must adequately plead (1) a horizontal agreement among insurers (2) to engage in an unreasonable restraint of trade. 39 Plaintiffs might be able to allege some sort of horizontal agreement among defendants, the object of which would nonetheless not amount to an unreasonable restraint of trade. Alternatively, they might be able to allege that defendants engaged in activity unreasonably restraining trade, but nonetheless fail to plead that this conduct was the product of an agreement. In both cases, plaintiffs would have failed to plead a § 1 claim. Accordingly, we must define the object of the horizontal agreement alleged in the complaint. See generally 6 Areeda & Hovenkamp, supra, ¶ 1409, at 54 (noting the importance of “ask[ing] precisely (1) who was in agreement with whom, and (2) about what?”).
Having reviewed the complaint, we believe it asserts two different conceptions of this horizontal agreement. According to the broader of the two conceptions, Marsh’s insurer-partners agreed that Marsh would deliver to each insurer an amount of premium volume necessary to trigger the payment of a contingent commission under the vertical agreement between Marsh and that insurer.
See
Comm. SAC ¶ 130 (“[Premium] volume threshold commitments reflected a tacit agreement among the conspiring parties that Marsh was guaranteeing the delivery of a specified minimum amount of premium volume.”). Reading the complaint in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, we find such a horizontal agreement implausible. Given the context presented by plaintiffs, it is not plausible that the insurers agreed among themselves that a third party, the broker, would guarantee delivery of differing amounts of premium volume to each of them. Perhaps such a claim would be coherent if the insurers had power to extract such guarantees from the broker, but the complaint demonstrates in abundant detail that it was Marsh who held the reins. Plaintiffs note that the contingent commission thresholds were established in vertical agreements between the broker and each insurer, and they recount stories of insurers who balked at Marsh’s demands and refused to continue to pay contingent commissions, only to relent and agree to resume payments after Marsh steered a significant volume of business away from them. At the same time, however, plaintiffs incongruously assert that the contingent commission thresholds in Marsh’s contracts with each of its insurer-partners were somehow the product of an agreement among
all
of the insurers.
*340
This attempt to bootstrap vertical contracts into horizontal conspiracy is at odds with both “common economic experience,”
Twombly,
The complaint also posits a narrower agreement among Marsh’s insurer-partners, namely, an agreement not to compete for other partners’ incumbent business. See, e.g., Comm. SAC ¶ 89 (“[T]he Broker Defendants orchestrated a horizontal agreement among rival Insurers not to compete for each others’ [sic] customers.”). Unlike the previous alleged agreement, this one is not necessarily incompatible with the complaint’s account of a market in which Marsh pulled most of the strings and called most of the shots. The complaint alleges that Marsh prepared broking plans “when an account was up for renewal. The broking plans assigned the business to a specific insurer at a target price and outlined the coverage.... If the incumbent Insurer hit the ‘target’, it would get the business....” Id. ¶ 117. An agreement by the insurers not to compete with the incumbent designated by Marsh would obviously facilitate Marsh’s placement goals. That the bid-rigging allegations refer not to closed, bilateral agreements in which insurers X and Y each help the other win a specific account, but rather to open-ended agreements in which insurer X provides “protection” of Y’s “renewal” or “incumbent” account in exchange for an assurance of similar assistance from some other insurer (not necessarily Y) plausibly supports the inference that the bid rigging was in service of a broader agreement not to compete for one another’s incumbent business. As we have seen, plaintiffs allege that the customer allocation schemes employed other mechanisms that do not appear to have entailed a horizontal agreement among the insurers, but this does not alter the fact that the bid-rigging allegations plausibly imply a “broader” horizontal non-competition agreement designed to aid the posited (broader still) customer allocation scheme instigated by Marsh.
Nonetheless, one might reasonably ask (especially in light of the allegations involving the other broker-centered schemes) whether the insurers had an opportunity to compete in the first place^ — ■ that is, an opportunity other than that afforded by Marsh’s solicitations of sham bids. An agreement not to compete necessarily presupposes the existence of an opportunity to compete, and if the only opportunities for insurers to compete were Marsh’s requests for rigged bids, 40 then the alleged bid rigging could not imply a “broader” horizontal agreement not to compete for incumbent business. And in fact, certain allegations in the complaint might be read to suggest that the solicitation of rigged bids provided the only opportunity for insurers to compete, that Marsh would either steer clients to the target insurers on its own, or, in the rare cases when clients required it to show them bids from multiple insurers, 41 would *341 solicit sham bids from other insurer-partners. See, e.g., id. ¶ 109 (“Marsh would protect the incumbent of an excess casualty risk by not sending submissions on that risk out to competition, or by getting quotes from other carriers that would support the incumbent as being the best price.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
In reviewing a motion to dismiss, however, we “construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.”
Phillips,
Defendants argue that plaintiffs have alleged only “isolated episodes” of bid rigging. Defendants’ Comm. Br. 43. To the extent defendants object that the allegations of bid rigging within the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy cannot support claims of horizontal agreements within other alleged broker-centered conspiracies, their point is well-taken. But insofar as defendants contend that the bid-rigging allegations do not adequately support the more general allegation of an agreement among the defendant insurers to allocate customers in the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy, we reject their argument for the reasons given. At this stage of the litigation, Rule 8(a)(2) requires plaintiffs to plead only “enough fact to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of illegal agreement,”
Twombly,
*342
Defendants attempt to resist this conclusion with a number of different arguments, but after due consideration we find none have merit. According to defendants, the scheme alleged by plaintiffs is incoherent. To illustrate its implausibility, defendants contrast it with the conspiracy at issue in
Petruzzi’s IGA Supermarkets, Inc. v. Darling-Delaware Co.,
Defendants contend that at least two salient features distinguish the Petruzzi’s conspiracy from the one alleged here. First, in Petruzzi’s the method for allocating business was transparently obvious. Each conspirator could easily ascertain which member of the scheme was entitled to a given account — namely, the incumbent holder of the account. Here, defendants argue, there is no way for an insurer to know with which conspirator a given policy should be placed. Plaintiffs propose that the allocation was structured not by particular policies but by premium volume, but defendants insist that such a basis of allocation would be unworkable in light of the various contingent commission incentives detailed in the complaint. In addition to contingent commission payments triggered by a threshold volume of incumbent business retained, the contractual agreements between the brokers and insurers also provided for commission payments based on the overall volume of premium steered to an insurer, growth in volume over a particular benchmark (such as the previous year’s level), and the quality of the premium volume (i.e., premiums for policies requiring relatively small indemnification payments for covered losses). Defendants contend that these multifarious incentives would often conflict with the alleged scheme’s posited goal of incumbent protection. For example, a broker’s placement of a given policy with incumbent insurer X might bring the broker that much closer to the negotiated contingent commission threshold for premium volume renewed with that broker. But placement of that same policy with another insurer might trigger a contingent commission payment for overall premium volume or volume growth — and that commission payment might be larger than the one negotiated with the incumbent. “It defies credulity,” defendants insist, “to assert, as Plaintiffs do, that ... insurers agreed to join conspiracies in which they agreed to allow brokers to unilaterally decide who got what business based on what was most profitable for the brokers.” Defendants’ Comm. Br. 51.
Second, defendants contend that while the scheme in Petruzzi’s included an obvious mechanism for the conspirators to discipline deviant members, the conspiracy alleged here is “hardly a scheme of market allocation that the insurers could enforce.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 43. According to defendants, since virtually all of the power to steer insurance purchasers belonged to the brokers, who operated under the competing incentives created by the variegated contingent commission agreements, there could be no feasible mechanism to enforce a customer allocation scheme.
We agree with defendants that the scheme alleged by plaintiffs appears a good deal more complex than the one in Petruzzi’s. And as noted, we agree that based on the facts alleged, it is implausible to claim that the defendant insurers came to an agreement together and instigated an arrangement whereby each would receive whatever volume of premium happened to be prescribed by each’s contingent commission agreement with Marsh. But as also noted, a narrower horizontal agreement not to compete for one another’s incumbent business does not appear incompatible with the larger picture painted by the complaint, in which Marsh was the dominant force.
The complaint also provides a coherent mechanism for disciplining recalcitrant insurers. Consistent with the complaint’s general narrative of broker power, it was Marsh that did the enforcing. In a vivid *344 illustration of this enforcement potential, the complaint recounts the following alleged statement from a high-ranking Marsh executive:
[I]f an alternative [i.e., a non-incumbent insurer from which Marsh has solicited a sham bid] quotes below [the incumbent insurer’s target bid] then they have made a conscious decision to quote below [the incumbent insurer] and pull [the incumbent] down. If that happens, then ... we will put this guy in open competition on every acct. and CRUCIFY him. Further, we must make sure [the] incumbent [or another insurer] keep[s] this [account] and NOT give it to the alternative and reward them.
Comm. SAC ¶ 118 (emphasis omitted). According to the complaint, insurers who breached the non-competition agreement would not only find themselves deprived of the conspiracy’s protection, but their renewal business would be specifically targeted for transfer.
Although we acknowledge that the hub- and-spoke conspiracy alleged by plaintiffs has a more prominent vertical dimension than most, if not all, other examples found in the case law — owing to the relative power of broker Marsh and the relative dependence of its insurer-partners' — we believe the complaint contains enough well-pled factual matter to suggest a plausible horizontal agreement among the insurers not to compete for renewal business. On the complaint’s own account, the conspiracy was instigated, coordinated, and policed by Marsh, but this does not belie the alleged horizontal agreement. On the contrary, Marsh’s influence could create a powerful incentive for exactly such an agreement: join and enjoy renewals at inflated premium rates and without threat of competition, or remain outside the “strategic partnership” and be denied access to Marsh’s large and loyal clientele. To be sure, the complaint suggests that Marsh could be a tough master, threatening at times to transfer business to another insurer in order to coerce a more lucrative contingent commission agreement. And in some cases, as defendants suggest, Marsh may even have steered renewal business away from an incumbent insurer-partner in order to realize a more profitable commission offered by another partner. 45 If so, however, this would show only that Marsh, and not the insurers, had the negotiating power to set the terms of participation in the scheme. It does not make implausible the inference, created by the bid-rigging allegations, that insurer-partners agreed not to compete for one another’s renewal business. As we have noted, plaintiffs’ allegations paint a conspiracy in which the hub, Marsh, held an unusual amount of power and may even have been able economically to “coerce” the insurers into the non-competition agreement. Defendants *345 have failed, however, to show why this feature would preclude per se condemnation of the horizontal agreement. See 6 Areeda & Hovenkamp, supra, ¶ 1408c (“[Sjoeiety prefers that coerced parties seek the protection of public authorities rather than help create a cartel.”).
Defendants next argue that “even if there were agreements that could have existed among the insurers,” the vertical element of the hub-and-spoke conspiracy would defeat plaintiffs’ claim. Tr. of Oral Arg. 43. In defendants’ view, “horizontal restraints that are ancillary to vertical arrangements, in other words horizontal agreements that exist to facilitate the vertical ones, are judged under the rule of reason which the plaintiffs have disclaimed.”
Id.
(citing
United States v. Addyston Pipe & Steel Co.,
Defendants’ contention draws on a fundamental principle of antitrust law but misapplies it here. It is well settled that “ancillary” restraints of trade are less suspicious than “naked” ones, and that to qualify for per se condemnation, a restraint must be of the naked horizontal type.
Polk Bros., Inc. v. Forest City Enters., Inc.,
As this example indicates, “[determining ancillarity requires [courts] to consider
first,
whether any aspect of the defendants’ association contains a significant promise of integration or cooperation yielding an increase in output.
Second,
some determination must be made whether the challenged agreement is an essential part of this arrangement, whether it is important but perhaps not essential, or whether it is completely unnecessary.” 11 Hovenkamp,
supra,
¶ 1908b, at 253 (footnote omitted);
see MLB Props., Inc. v. Salvino, Inc.,
Defendants are unable to identify among plaintiffs’ allegations any procompetitive venture to which the insurers’ alleged horizontal agreement not to compete for incumbent business could reasonably be deemed integral. Defendants stress that vertical “preferred provider” agreements, used here by the brokers to consolidate the insurers with which they did business, have consistently been found by courts to have competitive benefits. But defendants cannot explain why a non-competition agreement among those providers is an essential or reasonably necessary component of those agreements; the benefits of preferred provider agreements do not depend on such a horizontal restraint of trade, as other provider agreements well illustrate. 46
Defendants also contend that the insurers competed with one another to win a favored position with Marsh. See supra note 45 (discussing Marsh’s classification of its insurer-partners into hierarchical tiers). Without doubt, according to the complaint’s allegations, Marsh’s ability to guarantee competition-free access to business — in part by enforcing a non-competition agreement among its insurer-partners — motivated the insurers to pay Marsh larger commissions in order to receive a larger slice of the competition-free premium pie. We fail to see, however, how this kind of rivalry among the insurers would increase output in the market for insurance. 47
*347
Furthermore, defendants’ argument proves too much. If all “horizontal agreements that exist to facilitate ... vertical ones,” Tr. of Oral Arg. 43, must be tested by the rule of reason, then per se condemnation of hub-and-spoke conspiracies would appear to be impossible. In all hub- and-spoke conspiracies, the horizontal agreement among the spokes supports the agreements between, the hub and each spoke, and vice versa.
See, e.g., Interstate Circuit v. United States,
Although we have found that the bid-rigging allegations suffice to plead a § 1 claim for purposes of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)(2), defendants insist that plaintiffs must surmount not only this general requirement, but also the heightened pleading standard set forth in Rule 9(b). That Rule provides that “[i]n alleging fraud or mistake, a party must state with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). 48 Defendants contend the antitrust claims here “sound in fraud” and argue that the complaints fail to satisfy Rule 9(b)’s particularity requirement. Defendants’ Comm. Br. 31. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, maintain Rule 9(b) is inapplicable to the alleged antitrust conspiracies.
In
Lum v. Bank of America,
we stated that Rule 9(b) requires fraud to be “pled with particularity in
all
claims based on fraud.”
ii. The Global Conspiracy
Overlaying the broker-centered conspiracies, plaintiffs aver, was a “global conspiracy.” In this alleged scheme, the defendant brokers, “with the complicity of the Defendant Insurers,” EB SAC ¶ 301, agreed “to conceal from the general public and other brokers [i.e., non-conspiring brokers]” the existence of the broker-centered conspiracies and the details of the contingent commission agreements. Id. ¶ 314. Plaintiffs contend that this “agreement not to disclose the Contingent Commission agreements and resulting profits was a naked horizontal restraint of informational output that directly affected the price of insurance.” Id. ¶ 303.
The District Court concluded that the complaints’ factual allegations fail to plausibly imply horizontal non-disclosure agreements among the defendant brokers or the defendant insurers.
Plaintiffs contend that “[i]n a truly competitive environment, brokers could utilize information about another broker’s charging of supra-competitive premiums through inclusion of Contingent Commissions ... to compete for that broker’s
*349
business. An economically rational broker would maximize its opportunity to increase market share by telling its rival’s customers they are paying too much for their insurance.” EB SAC ¶ 315. But this argument fails, much like the
Twombly
plaintiffs’ contention that the defendant ILECs’ reluctance to challenge one another’s regional monopolies bespoke agreement.
See Twombly,
Nor do plaintiffs’ other proffered “plus factors” plausibly imply a horizontal agreement among the brokers. The Commercial complaint alleges that the defendant brokers “issued substantially similar purported ‘disclosure’ statements modeled after the CIAB’s position statement” advising brokers on how to respond to questions regarding contingent commissions. Comm. SAC ¶ 452. According to plaintiffs, these statements misleadingly disguised the existence and effect of the contingent commission agreements. But neither defendants’ membership in the CIAB, nor their common adoption of the trade group’s suggestions, plausibly suggest conspiracy.
Cf. Twombly,
Even if we read the complaint to assert that the defendant brokers collaborated in crafting these allegedly misleading disclosures (insofar as these defendants allegedly “control the affairs of ... CIAB,” Comm. SAC ¶ 515, which produced the “position statement” allegedly incorporated into defendants’ disclosures to clients), this still would be insufficient to show a horizontal agreement not to disclose one another’s contingent commissions. If proven, this allegation would plausibly show that defendants agreed to work together to determine the best way of disguising activity in which each engaged. But this allegation would not plausibly imply that the decision to disguise that aetivi
*350
ty (namely, the alleged use of contingent commissions as part of a scheme to steer customers to particular insurers) was itself the product of an agreement — not, at least, in the face of the complaint’s many allegations showing that each defendant had ample independent motive to conceal its own contingent commission arrangements. A contrary holding would be tantamount to finding that any collaborate effort to refine a “pernicious industry practice,”
In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
In the Employee Benefits Case, plaintiffs allege that “Defendants executed substantially similar disclosure policies regarding contingent compensation matters, including failing to disclose contingent compensation information to ERISA plan administrators on Form 5500s, as required by governmental regulations.” EB SAC ¶ 324. Plaintiffs also allege instances in which defendants exchanged information about how they accounted for, and reported, this compensation. These allegations, like the other allegations of shared information and similar disclosure practices, are insufficient. They imply only that each defendant had a similar motive to obfuscate the structure of the brokers’ compensation, and that they sought the most effective means to achieve this obfuscation.
54
They do not provide a “reason to infer that the [defendants] had agreed among themselves to do what was only natural anyway.”
Twombly,
Finally, plaintiffs point to the similar nature of each broker-centered conspiracy, as well as the allegedly similar confiden
*351
tiality agreements the brokers inserted into the vertical contracts with each of their partner insurers. But these allegations of parallel conduct do not qualify under
Twombly
as a basis for a plausible inference of horizontal agreement among the brokers or insurers. Having reviewed the entirety of the Global Conspiracy pleadings, we concur with the District Court’s conclusion: “While Plaintiffs present facts to support the possibility of inadequate disclosures by the brokers to the insureds, the Complaints are bereft of allegations to demonstrate that this was more than brokers adopting sub-par disclosure methods to protect their own, lucrative agreements.”
2. The McCarran-Ferguson Act
Defendants argue that whether or not plaintiffs have adequately pled the elements of their Sherman Act claims under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the conduct alleged in the complaints is exempt from federal antitrust regulation under the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1011-1015. Section 2(b) of the McCarran-Ferguson Act provides:
No Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate, impair, or supersede any law enacted by any State for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance, or which imposes a fee or tax upon such business, unless such Act specifically relates to the business of insurance: Provided, That ... the Sherman Act ... shall be applicable to the business of insurance to the extent that such business is not regulated by State law.
15 U.S.C. § 1012(b). Section 3(b) of the Act provides that “[n]othing contained in this chapter shall render the said Sherman Act inapplicable to any agreement to boycott, coerce, or intimidate, or act of boycott, coercion, or intimidation.” 15 U.S.C. § 1013(b).
The second, proviso clause of Section 2(b) — which is the clause relevant to this appeal — “provides a statutory antitrust exemption for activities that (1) constitute the ‘business of insurance,’ (2) are regulated pursuant to state law, and (3) do not constitute acts of ‘boycott, coercion or intimidation.’ ”
Ticor Title Ins. Co. v. FTC,
The Supreme Court observed in
Royal Drug
that “the [Act] does not define the ‘business of insurance.’ ”
In Royal Drug itself, the plaintiffs, independent pharmacies, challenged agreements between Blue Shield, a health insurer, and three “participating pharmacies.” Under the agreements, Blue Shield’s policyholders could purchase prescription drugs from the participating pharmacies at a price of $2 per prescription, and Blue Cross would reimburse the pharmacy for the cost of acquiring the drug prescribed. By contrast, policyholders who selected a non-participating pharmacy were required to pay the full retail price charged by the pharmacy and could then seek reimbursement from Blue Shield for 75% of the difference between that price and $2. The independent pharmacies asserted these agreements violated § 1 of the Sherman Act, while Blue Shield contended it was exempt from the antitrust laws under the McCarran-Ferguson Act.
The Court held that the agreements did not constitute the “business of insurance.” “The fallacy of the [defendants’] position,” the Court explained, “is that they confuse the obligations of Blue Shield under its insurance policies, which insure against the risk that policyholders will be unable to pay for prescription drugs during the period of coverage, and the agreements between Blue Shield and the participating pharmacies, which serve only to minimize the costs Blue Shield incurs in fulfilling its underwriting obligations.... The Pharmacy Agreements ... do not involve any underwriting or spreading of risk, but are merely arrangements for the purchase of goods and services by Blue Shield.”
Id.
at 213-14,
Looking back on its decision in
Royal Drug,
the Court later distilled three criteria for determining whether particular conduct constitutes the “business of insurance”:
“first,
whether the practice has the effect of transferring or spreading a policyholder’s risk;
second,
whether the practice is an integral part of the policy relationship between the insurer and the insured; and
third,
whether the practice is limited to entities within the insurance industry.”
Union Labor Life Ins. Co. v. Pireno,
In
Pireno,
the challenged conduct was a health insurer’s use of a professional association’s peer review committee to examine chiropractors’ statements and charges and render an opinion on the necessity of treatments and the reasonableness of charges paid for them. The Court held that the use of the association did not implicate the transfer of risk because “[p]eer review takes place only after the risk has been transferred by means of the policy, and then it functions only to determine ... whether the insured’s loss falls within the policy limits,” that is, whether the insured’s loss is, under the terms of the policy, among the risks that has been transferred to the insurer.
Id.
at 130,
The Supreme Court’s analysis in
Royal Drug
and
Pireno
was informed by an extensive inquiry into the Act’s legislative history. “The law was enacted in 1945 in response to [the Supreme Court’s] decision in
United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters Assn.,
As the Court has explained, the primary purpose of the McCarran-Ferguson Act was “to preserve state regulation of the activities of insurance companies, as it existed before the
South-Eastern Underwriters
case.”
Id.
at 218 n. 18,
The Court also found that the legislative history sheds some light on the scope of that exemption- — that is, on which particular activities within the insurance industry Congress intended to exempt. This history, the Court concluded, “strongly suggest[s] that Congress understood the business of insurance to be the underwriting and spreading of risk.”
Id.
at 221,
This bill would permit- — -and I think it is fair to say that it is intended to permit— rating bureaus, because in the last session we passed a bill for the District of Columbia allowing rating. What we saw as wrong was the fixing of rates without statutory authority in the States; but we believe that State rights should permit a State to say that it believes in a rating bureau. I think the insurance companies have convinced many members of the legislature that we cannot have open competition in fixing rates on insurance. If we do, we shall have chaos. There will be failures, and failures always follow losses.
Id.
at 223,
On the basis of this history, one might narrowly construe the “business of insurance” to encompass only public ratemaking efforts, not purely private collaboration unauthorized or unsupervised by state agencies. Dicta in
Royal Drug
suggest otherwise, however. The Court observed that the Act’s legislative history does not indicate exactly “which of the various practices alleged in the
Southr-Eastem Underwriters
indictment Congress intended to be covered by the phrase ‘business of insurance’ ”; nonetheless, it noted that the indictment had charged “that the defendants had fixed their ... premium rates,” and it concluded that the legislative history
did
make clear “that the fixing of rates is the ‘business of insurance.’ ”
Id.
at 224 n. 32,
Relying in part on this reasoning, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has explicitly rejected the claim that private agreements among insurance companies to fix rates do not fall within the “business of insurance.”
In re Workers’ Comp. Ins. Antitrust Litig.,
Our Court has also had occasion to interpret the scope of the “business of insurance.” In
Owens v. Aetna Life & Casualty Co.,
decided after
Royal Drug
but before
Pireno,
we held that alleged cooperation between two insurers “in the decision to file in New Jersey only a single mass market rating-schedule, and perhaps a very high individual policy rate ... would fall within even the narrowest reading” of the “business of insurance” for purposes of the Act’s antitrust exemption.
it is clear that at least the following activities are the business of insurance, either because they pertain to risk-spreading or to the contract between the insurer and the insured:
1. preparing and filing a rating-schedule, either on behalf of an individual company or jointly through a rating bureau;
2. deciding upon rating classification differences between individual policies and group marketing plans, either individually or jointly through a rating bureau;
3. authorizing agents to solicit individual or group policies;
4. accepting or rejecting coverages tendered by brokers.
Id. at 225-26 (footnote omitted).
The dissenting opinion in
Owens
did not dispute the majority’s conclusions about the scope of the “business of insurance.” Instead, it argued that the majority had mischaracterized the alleged activity before it. The dissent believed the proper
*356
McCarran-Ferguson Act question concerned not ratemaking, as the majority had concluded, but rather “whether a conspiracy by insurance companies to divide markets can be construed as a matter of law to constitute ‘the business of insurance’ within the meaning of the McCarran-Ferguson Act.”
Id.
at 236-37 (Sloviter, J., dissenting). In the dissent’s view, the Act “was enacted to protect the arrangements necessary to preserve the writing of insurance within and under regulation of the respective states.... [T]he scope of the statute can be no broader than protection of insurance company activities that can rationally be claimed to need anticompetitive regulation.”
Id.
at 242 (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, the dissent believed it was “unlikely that Congress thought it was protecting agreements whereby an insurance company would completely withdraw from writing one type of insurance within the state.”
Id.
Nonetheless, the dissent was “reluctant to suggest that no agreement between insurance companies which may result in withdrawal from a market can ever be the business of insurance, because we do not know enough of the economic and business stuff out of which these arrangements emerge to be certain.”
Id.
at 244 (internal quotation marks omitted). What could be said for certain, the dissent concluded, was that the District Court had erred in finding “that the alleged division of markets constitutes ‘the business of insurance’ as a matter of law.”
Id.
at 245;
see also Maryland v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield Ass’n.,
With this precedent in mind, we turn to the case before us. As the disagreement between the majority and dissent in
Owens
illustrates, the precise characterization of the defendants’ conduct can be dispositive. Here, having dismissed several antitrust claims for failure to satisfy
Twombly’s
pleading standard, we are left with plaintiffs’ allegations that Marsh’s insurer-partners agreed with one another not to compete for incumbent business. Applying the
Pireno
criteria to this alleged conduct, we agree with defendants (as did the District Court) that the third criterion is met because the parties to this alleged agreement are all entities within the insurance industry.
See Pireno,
On the basis of the complaint before us, however, we cannot conclude that the alleged agreement “has the effect of transferring or spreading a policyholder’s risk.”
Id.
(describing the first criterion). Given the Supreme Court’s declaration that “underwriting or spreading of risk [is] an indispensable characteristic of insurance,”
Royal Drug,
*357
Our conclusion as to the first criterion rests on the fact that plaintiffs do not allege that defendants’ agreement involved who could receive insurance coverage, or the type of coverage they could obtain.
Cf., e.g., In re Ins. Antitrust Litig.,
Royal Drug’s
examination of the purpose of the McCarran-Ferguson Act bolsters this conclusion. As the Supreme Court explained, in carving out only the “business of insurance” from federal antitrust regulation — and not the “business of insurance companies” — Congress had in mind “[t]he relationship between insurer and insured, the type of policy which could be issued, its reliability, interpretation, and enforcement,” as well as “other activities of insurance companies [that] relate so closely to their status as reliable insurers that they too must be placed in the same class.”
Royal Drug,
at 215-16,
Here, not only is defendants’ alleged agreement not to compete for incumbent business different than the cooperative ratemaking efforts described in Royal Drug, but it also appears to have been unrelated to reliability; it does not involve any restriction on the type of coverage offered or the risk profile of insurable entities. Royal Drug emphasized that Congress understood the “business of insurance” as bound up with actuarial considerations intrinsic to the underwriting process, but the collusion alleged by the complaint is not addressed to these considerations. Defendants’ alleged agreement was designed to ensure only that, once an *358 insurer had won a client’s business — by-providing the client with an acceptable coverage package at an acceptable premium— another insurer would not attempt to poach that business by offering a more attractive price when it came up for renewal.
Nor does this alleged conduct fall into any of the categories of the “business of insurance” we set forth in
Owens,
each of which also implicated reliability issues.
See Owens,
Defendants dispute this analysis. Noting that plaintiffs’ theory of injury rests on a claim that insurance customers paid higher prices for insurance as a result of the alleged agreement, defendants argue that the allegations go directly to the heart of the insurance contract. In defendants’ view, to deny that the alleged agreement among the insurers implicates the transfer of risk is to artificially segregate the element of premium price from the element of risk spreading; since premiums are the price paid for transferring risk, conspiracies that have the direct effect (if not necessarily the explicit purpose) of driving up premium prices necessarily affect risk spreading.
We do not deny that premiums are an integral part of the transfer of risk. But as the District Court accurately observed,
Royal Drug
stands for the proposition that “more than a mere impact on the price of premiums must be demonstrated” in order “[t]o establish that a particular practice has a substantial connection to the spreading and the underwriting of risk.”
Defendants do not dispute that
Royal Drug
held that the fact that challenged behavior has an impact on premiums is not enough to make it the “business of insurance” for purposes of the McCarran-Ferguson Act’s antitrust exemption. Defendants point out, however, that while the agreement found not to be the “business of insurance” in
Royal Drug
was between insurers and third-party benefit providers, here it is between only insurers and directly involves the formation of the insurance contract between insurer and insured (and not merely, as in
Royal Drug,
the specific manner in which the insurer would perform obligations assumed under a preexisting contract). In
Sabo v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
we stated that “whatever the precise contours of the insurance business phrase may be, there is nothing more basically ‘insurance’ than the sale of an insurance contract.”
Defendants overlook, however, an important distinction between
Sabo
and this case. Because
Sabo
involved a RICO rather than an antitrust claim, it was governed by the first clause of § 2(b) of the McCarran-Ferguson Act. That clause provides that “[n]o Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate, impair, or supersede any law enacted by any State for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance ... unless such Act specifically relates to the business of insurance.” 15 U.S.C. § 1012(b). This “first clause ... impostes] what is, in effect, a dear-statement rule, a rule that state laws enacted ‘for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance’ do not yield to conflicting federal statutes unless a federal statute specifically requires otherwise.”
U.S. Dep’t of Treasury v. Fabe,
In fact, a close reading of the Supreme Court’s cases may counsel against indiscriminately classifying all conduct involving the “sale of an insurance contract” as the “business of insurance” for purposes of the Act’s antitrust exemption.
Sabo
relied heavily on
SEC v. National Securities, Inc.,
in particular its statement that “[t]he selling and advertising of policies” falls “within the scope of the [Act’s preemption of federal law].”
Furthermore, even if
Sabo’s
holding were directly applicable to this case, plaintiffs’ allegations here are distinguishable. Whereas the
Sabo
plaintiff challenged a scheme by which defendants allegedly churned insurance policies — that is, bought and sold them with excessive frequency— plaintiffs here complain that defendants agreed
not
to sell them insurance.
Cf. Owens,
In sum, although the scope of the agreement alleged by plaintiffs has been refined since the District Court first passed on the issue of the McCarran-Ferguson Act, we agree with the court’s conclusion that defendants’ alleged conduct does not constitute the “business of insurance” for purposes of the Act’s antitrust exemption. Accordingly, the Act does not provide a basis for dismissing plaintiffs’ Sherman Act claims.
3. Antitrust Conclusion
Because the McCarran-Ferguson Act does not bar plaintiffs’ claims (at least, not at this stage of the litigation), our earlier
Twombly
analysis is dispositive. Given the long path our discussion has taken, a brief synopsis of that analysis is in order. The Supreme Court has made clear that courts confronted with a motion to dismiss must assess whether the complaint contains “enough factual matter (taken as true) to suggest that an agreement was made.”
Twombly,
In the context of claims brought under § 1 of the Sherman Act, plausibility is evaluated with reference to well-settled antitrust jurisprudence that “limits the range of permissible inferences from ambiguous evidence.”
Matsushita,
Here, the bid-rigging allegations supply the requisite “further circumstance.” Because they plausibly suggest an unlawful horizontal conspiracy not to compete for incumbent business, plaintiffs have adequately met Rule 8(a)(2)’s requirement for setting forth a § 1 claim against those defendants in the asserted Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy who are alleged to have participated in bid rigging. This agreement to divide the market, if proven, would be a naked restraint of trade subject to per se condemnation.
See Leegin,
With respect to the remaining antitrust claims, however, plaintiffs have failed to plead facts plausibly supporting their allegations of horizontal conspiracies to unreasonably restrain trade, notwithstanding their conclusory assertions of agreement. Given plaintiffs’ exclusive reliance on a per se or quick look analysis, the absence of a horizontal agreement is fatal to their § 1 claims. 60 Accordingly, these antitrust claims must be dismissed, as the District Court concluded.
B. RICO Claims
Plaintiffs also claim that defendants’ alleged conduct violated the Racketeer Influenced and Correct Organizations (RICO) Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), (d). Section 1962(c) makes it unlawful “for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity.” Section 1962(d) makes it unlawful “for any person to conspire to violate” § 1962(c).
To plead a RICO claim under § 1962(c), “the plaintiff must allege (1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.”
Lum v. Bank of Am.,
According to the RICO statute, a “pattern of racketeering activity” requires at least two acts of racketeering activity within a ten-year period. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(5). “These predicate acts of racketeering may include,
inter alia,
federal mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341 or federal wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1343.”
Lum,
In their motion to dismiss the RICO claims, defendants argued that plaintiffs had failed adequately to plead the enterprise and conduct elements of their § 1962(c) claims, and that they had failed adequately to plead predicate acts of racketeering. The District Court granted the motion, finding that plaintiffs had insufficiently pled both the enterprise and conduct elements of the § 1962(c) claims based on the alleged broker-centered enterprises, and had insufficiently pled that defendants conducted CIAB “through a pattern of racketeering activity.” Having determined that plaintiffs had failed to allege adequately that any defendant had violated § 1962(c), the court also dismissed the claims of conspiracy under § 1962(d).
1. Legal Standards
a. Section 1962(c)
i. The Enterprise Element
The RICO statute “describes two categories of associations that come within the purview of the ‘enterprise’ definition. The first encompasses organizations such as corporations and partnerships, and other ‘legal entities.’ The second covers ‘any union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity.’ ”
United States v. Turkette,
The statutory language does not, however, specify the essential features of an association-in-fact enterprise. The Supreme Court attempted to explicate this concept in
Turkette,
where it reviewed a First Circuit decision limiting the definition of “enterprise” to legitimate organizations. The Supreme Court reversed, stating that “[t]here is no restriction upon the associations embraced by [§ 1961(4)’s] definition [of enterprise]: an enterprise includes any union or group of individuals associated in fact. On its face, the definition appears to include both legitimate and illegitimate enterprises within its scope.... ”
Turkette,
The First Circuit had expressed concern that including criminal organizations within the definition of “enterprise” would ef
*365
fectively collapse the distinction between the “enterprise” and “pattern of racketeering” elements of a § 1962(c) violation.
Id.
at 582,
The enterprise is an entity, for present purposes a group of persons associated together for a common purpose of engaging in a course of conduct. The pattern of racketeering activity is, on the other hand, a series of criminal acts as defined by the statute. The former is proved by evidence of an ongoing organization, formal or informal, and by evidence that the various associates function as a continuing unit. The latter is proved by evidence of the requisite number of acts of racketeering committed by the participants in the enterprise. While the proof used to establish these separate elements may in particular cases coalesce, proof of one does not necessarily establish the other. The “enterprise” is not the “pattern of racketeering activity”; it is an entity separate and apart from the pattern of activity in which it engages.
Id. (internal citation omitted).
Interpreting this language from
Turkette,
we identified three elements essential to an association-in-fact enterprise.
United States v. Riccobene,
it is not necessary to show that the enterprise has some function wholly unrelated to the racketeering activity, but rather that it has an existence beyond that which is necessary merely to commit each of the acts charged as predicate racketeering offenses. The function of overseeing and coordinating the commission of several different predicate offenses and other activities on an on-going basis is adequate to satisfy the separate existence requirement.
Id. at 223-24.
In evaluating the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ pleadings here, the District Court understandably relied heavily on
Riccobene. See
Informed by these background principles, the Court expounded the necessary elements of an association-in-fact enterprise. Such an enterprise must have a structure. Specifically, it “must have at least three structural features: a purpose, relationships among those associated with the enterprise, and longevity sufficient to permit these associates to pursue the enterprise’s purpose.” Id. at 2244. 63 But the Court saw “no basis in the language of RICO” for requiring a particular type of organizational structure. Id. at 2245. An association-in-fact enterprise, it explained,
need not have a hierarchical structure or a “chain of command”; decisions may be made on an ad hoc basis and by any number of methods — by majority vote, consensus, a show of strength, etc. Members of the group need not have fixed roles; different members may perform different roles at different times. The group need not have a name, regular meetings, dues, established rules and regulations, disciplinary procedures, or induction or initiation ceremonies. While the group must function as a continuing unit and remain in existence long enough to pursue a course of conduct, nothing in RICO exempts an enterprise whose associates engage in spurts of activity punctuated by periods of quiescence. Nor is the statute limited to groups whose crimes are sophisticated, diverse, complex, or unique; for example, a group that does nothing but en *367 gage in extortion through old-fashioned, unsophisticated, and brutal means may fall squarely within the statute’s reach.
Id. at 2245-46; see also id. at 2243 & n. 3 (rejecting, as “extratextual,” the dissent’s argument “that the definition of a RICO enterprise is limited to ‘business-like entities’ ” (citing id. at 2247-50 (Stevens, J., dissenting))). Boyle makes clear, in other words, that although the structure requirement demands that “the parts” of the association in fact must be “arranged or put together to form a whole,” the statute does not prescribe any particular arrangement, as long as it is “sufficient to permit [the enterprise’s] associates to pursue the enterprise’s purpose.” Id. at 2244 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Boyle
also clarified the relationship between the “enterprise” and “pattern of racketeering activity” elements of a § 1962(c) claim. The petitioner in
Boyle
had objected to the trial judge’s jury instructions, which had stated that “the existence of an association-in-fact [enterprise] is sometimes more readily proven by what it does, rather than by abstract analysis of its structure.”
Id.
at 2247. In the petitioner’s view, the judge should have specified that, to qualify as a RICO enterprise, the association’s structure must go “beyond that inherent in the pattern of racketeering activity.”
Id.
at 2244. The Supreme Court found the petitioner’s proffered language unnecessary. If the language “is interpreted to mean that the existence of an enterprise is a separate element that must be proved,” the Court explained, “it is of course correct.... [T]he existence of an enterprise is an element distinct from the pattern of racketeering activity and ‘proof of one does not necessarily establish the other.’ ”
Id.
at 2245 (quoting
Turkette,
Not only was it unnecessary to require proof of a structure “beyond that inherent in the pattern of racketeering activity,” but the phrase was also potentially misleading. For “if the phrase is used to mean that the existence of an enterprise may never be inferred from the evidence showing that persons associated with the enterprise engaged in a pattern of
*368
racketeering activity, it is incorrect.”
Id.
at 2245. As the Court had observed in
Turkette,
“the evidence used to prove the pattern of racketeering activity and the evidence establishing an enterprise ‘may in particular cases coalesce.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Turkette,
In short,
Boyle
holds that the RICO statute defines an “enterprise” broadly, such that the “enterprise” element of a § 1962(c) claim can be satisfied by showing a “structure,” that is, a common “purpose, relationships among those associated with the enterprise, and longevity sufficient to permit these associates to pursue the enterprise’s purpose.”
Id.
at 2244;
see id.
at 2245 (“[A]n association-in-fact enterprise is simply a continuing unity that functions with a common purpose.”). “[A]fter
Boyle,
an association-in-fact enterprise need have no formal hierarchy or means for decision-making, and no purpose or economic significance beyond or independent of the group’s pattern of racketeering activity.”
United States v. Hutchinson,
Neither
Turkette
nor
Boyle
(nor
Riccobene,
for that matter) specifically addressed requirements for pleading civil
*369
RICO claims.
65
Plaintiffs contend these cases speak only to which “attributes of an enterprise must ultimately be proven”; they do not define what must be plead in the complaint. Plaintiffs’ EB Br. 70.
66
Citing our opinion in
Seville Industrial Machinery Corp. v. Southmost Machinery Corp.,
Plaintiffs, however, misconceive the pleading standard. To begin with,
Seville
was decided before the Supreme Court held in
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly
that Federal Rule of Procedure 8 requires plaintiffs to plead “enough factual matter” to state “a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”
When the asserted enterprise, however, is not itself a legal entity, but rather an association of legal entities, simply identifying the allegedly associated components does not serve to put defendants on notice of the RICO claim alleged against them— just as merely listing the names of alleged conspirators would not give defendants adequate notice of an alleged conspiracy. For that reason, even before
Twombly,
some courts required plaintiffs to provide more detail in pleading the existence of an association-in-fact enterprise.
See, e.g., Richmond v. Nationwide Cassel L.P.,
In any case, it is clear after
Tioombly
that a RICO claim must plead facts plausibly implying the existence of an enterprise
*370
with the structural attributes identified in
Boyle:
a shared “purpose, relationships among those associated with the enterprise, and longevity sufficient to permit these associates to pursue the enterprise’s purpose.”
Boyle,
In Twombly, this concern focused on the agreement element of § 1 of the Sherman Act. Because § 1 allows plaintiffs to bring suit against conspiracies, it has the potential to impose liability on a large number of defendants. To prevail, however, a § 1 plaintiff must show not simply that the defendants all engaged in similar wrongdoing, but that they agreed to undertake concerted action in restraint of trade.
The enterprise element of RICO claims is a close analogue of § l’s agreement element. Unless a plaintiff is required at the pleading stage to suggest plausibly the existence of an enterprise structure — unless a plaintiff must “allege something more than the fact that individuals were all engaged in the same type of illicit conduct during the same time period,”
Elsevier,
ii. The “Conduct” Element
Mere association with an enterprise does not violate § 1962(c). To be liable under this provision, a defendant must “conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enter
*371
prise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). The Supreme Court has held that the “conduct or participate” element requires a defendant to “have some part in directing those affairs.”
Reves v. Ernst & Young,
iii. The Requisite Nexus
Simply pleading that a defendant “participated in the operation or management” of an enterprise, however, is not enough to make out a violation of § 1962(c). The defendant must have done so “through a pattern of racketeering activity.” In other words, there must be not only a “nexus between the [defendant] and the conduct [of] the affairs of an enterprise,”
Univ. of Md.,
The Second Circuit has repudiated this standard, however, finding it inconsistent with the definition of “conduct” subsequently set forth by the Supreme Court in
Reves. United States v. Wong,
We agree with the Second Circuit that the
Provenzano/Scotto
standard is no longer good law.
68
Given
Reves,
the inquiry must be whether the defendant participated in the “operation or management” of an enterprise’s affairs, and if so, whether he did so “through a pattern of racketeering activity.” As the plain language of the statute indicates, the nexus element requires a plaintiff to show that the defendant participated in the conduct of the enterprise’s affairs (per Reves) through— that is, “by means of, by consequence of, by reason of, by the agency of, or by the instrumentality of,”
United States v. Brandao,
b. Section 1962(d)
Under § 1962(d), it is unlawful to conspire to violate any of the substantive provisions of RICO. 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d);
see
18 U.S.C. § 1962(a)-(c) (substantive provisions).
70
In certain circumstances, a defendant may be held liable under § 1962(d) even where its own actions would not amount to a substantive RICO violation.
Salinas v. United States,
2. Application to This Case
a. Section 1962(c) Claims
i. The Broker-Centered Enterprises
Plaintiffs contend they have pled facts plausibly suggesting that each defendant
*374
broker and its insurer-partners composed an association-in-fact enterprise. The District Court disagreed. Central to its conclusion was its finding that although plaintiffs had adequately alleged bilateral agreements (regarding the steering of business and the payment of contingent commissions) between each broker and its insurer-partners, plaintiffs had failed to plead facts plausibly suggesting collaboration among the insurers. The asserted hub-and-spoke structures therefore lacked a “unifying ‘rim.’ ”
With respect to all but the Marsh-centered enterprise alleged in the Commercial complaint, we agree with the District Court that plaintiffs’ allegations of broker-centered enterprises are fatally defective. In our analysis of the antitrust claims, we determined that, with the exception of the alleged Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy, the facts alleged in the complaints do not plausibly imply a horizontal agreement among the insurer-partners. In seeking to establish a “rim” enclosing the insurer-partners in the alleged RICO enterprises, plaintiffs rely on the same factual allegations we found deficient in the antitrust context: that each insurer entered into a similar contingent-commission agreement in order to become a “strategic partner”; that each insurer knew the identity of the broker’s other insurer-partners and the details of their contingent-commission agreements; that each insurer entered into an agreement with the broker not to disclose the details of its contingent-commission agreements; that the brokers utilized certain devices, such as affording “first” and “last looks,” to steer business to the designated insurer; and that, in the Employee Benefits Case, insurers adopted similar reporting strategies with regard to Form 5500. As noted, these allegations do not plausibly imply concerted action — as opposed to merely parallel conduct — by the insurers, and therefore cannot provide a “rim” enclosing the “spokes” of these alleged “hub-and-spoke” enterprises.
Even under the relatively undemanding standard of
Boyle,
these allegations do not adequately plead an association-in-fact enterprise. They fail the basic requirement that the components function as a unit, that they be “put together to form a whole.”
Boyle,
As the District Court acknowledged, although the complaints do not adequately plead these asserted broker-centered enterprises, it is possible that plaintiffs’ factual allegations would provide a plausible basis for the assertion of a number of bilateral enterprises, each encompassing a broker and one of its insurer-partners, or even the assertion that individual brokers or insurers each constituted an enterprise. But the District Court determined that “Plaintiffs’ three previous rounds of pleadings unambiguously indicate that Plaintiffs have no interest in asserting” such smaller-scale enterprises.
As with the antitrust claims, we reach a different conclusion with respect to the claims alleging bid rigging — the bid-rigging allegations in the Commercial complaint suffice to plead a “Marsh-centered enterprise.”
74
As
Boyle
clarified, a RICO “enterprise” must have a structure, but it need not have any particular structural features beyond “a purpose, relationships among those associated with the enterprise, and longevity sufficient to permit these associates to pursue the enterprise’s purpose.”
Boyle,
In at least one sense, plaintiffs’ allegations regarding the “Marsh-centered enterprise” exceed
Boyle’s
requirements.
Boyle
explicitly disavowed the need for any particular organizational structure.
Boyle,
The District Court, proceeding without the benefit of
Boyle,
found that the bid-rigging allegations were not sufficient to plead a Marsh-centered enterprise. The court believed that the defendant insurers’ participation in each bid-rigging transaction was “ad hoc.”
See
The District Court also appeared to believe that the bid-rigging allegations did not adequately plead interrelationships among the insurers, as opposed to simply bilateral relationships between Marsh and each insurer. As the District Court read the complaint, “an Insurer-Defendant ‘X’ cared little which other Insurer-Defendant would be ‘accommodated’ by its ‘B’ quotes and whether these ‘B’ quotes would actually be used at all by the requesting Broker-Defendant; the sole point of ‘X’s’ interest was to ensure that ‘X’ would be rewarded” by the Broker, in some form, in exchange for its willingness to generate sham bids.
The District Court believed plaintiffs had also failed to plead the “conduct” element of their claims regarding the Marsh-centered enterprise, that is, failed to plead that defendants “conducted], or participate[d], directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). To some extent, the District Court’s conclusion appears to derive from its determination regarding the “enterprise” element of these claims.
78
At least one of its findings, however, appears particular to the “conduct” element. In an implicit reference to the Supreme Court’s
Reves
decision, the District Court stated that it was “not convinced” that “Defendants operated” the alleged Marsh-centered enterprise’s affairs “rather than Defendants’ own affairs.”
Here, however, the defendants are alleged to be members of the enterprise. It will often be the case that the interests of the enterprise are congruent with those of its members; such congruence presumably provides the incentive for members to participate in the enterprise. We think, therefore, that “if defendants band together to commit [violations] they cannot accomplish alone ... then they cumulatively are conducting the association-in-fact
enterprise’s
affairs, and not [simply] their
own
affairs.” Joseph,
supra,
at 332;
see Brandao,
Moreover, we believe that, based on the complaint’s allegations, plaintiffs have adequately pled that defendants engaged in activities constituting participation in the conduct of the enterprise. The allegations that defendant broker Marsh directed the placement of insurance contracts and solicited rigged bids from insurers plausibly imply that Marsh “participated in the operation or management of the enterprise itself.”
Reves,
In summary, we find that plaintiffs have adequately pled both the “enterprise” and “conduct” elements of the § 1962(c) claims based on the alleged Marsh-centered commercial enterprise. Accordingly, we will vacate the District Court’s judgments insofar as they dismissed those claims, and we will remand to allow the District Court an opportunity to evaluate the remaining elements of those claims. 80
ii. The CIAB Enterprise
In the Commercial Case, plaintiffs also bring § 1962(c) claims naming the Council of Insurance Agents and Brokers (CIAB), a trade organization, as a RICO enterprise. According to the complaint, the CIAB “represents the largest, most profitable of all commercial insurance agencies and brokerage firms. The Council’s primary audience is CEOs and their management teams. The Council partners with its members and provides not only vital intelligence on current market conditions and trends, but also solutions to the next challenge before the need arises.” Comm. SAC ¶ 513 (internal quotation marks omitted). Plaintiffs aver that defendant insurers’ and brokers’ association with the CIAB violated the RICO statute insofar as defendants “used vital intelligence gained through communications and meetings facilitated by CIAB and otherwise, including information about decreased profits and demand to devise [their customer allocation] scheme[s] ... to replace competition. The [defendants] operating through the CIAB Enterprise reached consensus on how they would change the market and regarding non-disclosure” of the details of their allegedly unlawful contingent-commissions-for-guaranteed-premium-volume schemes. Id. ¶ 523.
The District Court acknowledged the complaint had adequately pled that the CIAB, a legal entity, was an enterprise, but it concluded the complaint failed to allege adequately that defendants had participated in the conduct of the CIAB “through” the acts of fraud pled as the requisite pattern of racketeering activity.
81
In the District Court’s view, the complaint’s allegations “merely indicate that CIAB provided an internal and external communication tool for the members of the insurance industry. No
fact
stated in Plaintiffs’ submissions indicates that Defendants’ alleged predicate acts of mail and wire fraud (aimed at Defendants’ clients) were related in any way to the activities of CIAB, or that Defendants committed the
*380
alleged predicate offenses through the means of CIAB, or that CIAB was somehow indispensable to Defendants in their alleged goal to commit the underlying predicate offenses.”
As the District Court observed, plaintiffs’ nexus theory appears to rest primarily on the alleged fact that the CIAB provided an “opportunity” or “forum” for defendants to discuss and advance their schemes.
82
We agree with the District Court that the allegation that defendants took advantage of an opportunity to meet provided by a legitimate enterprise in the normal course of its business does not mean — or plausibly imply — that defendants were participating in the conduct of the enterprise. By extension, the allegation that defendants utilized such an opportunity to plot or discuss or otherwise facilitate a pattern of racketeering activity does not, without more, plausibly imply that defendants conducted the enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity. If it did, any coffee house or hotel with conference facilities could, as the District Court rightly recognized, be made into a RICO enterprise merely by dint of the fact that racketeers used the facility as a meeting place. In our view, such an expansive interpretation of § 1962(c) liability would not comport with the text or purpose of the RICO statute, nor with the cases interpreting it. As we have observed in interpreting the Supreme Court’s decision in
Reves,
“[s]imply because one provides goods or services that ultimately benefit the enterprise does not mean that one becomes liable under RICO as a result.”
Univ. of Md.,
In an apparent attempt to supply this “something more,” plaintiffs allege that “[t]he purpose of the CIAB Enterprise is to further the interests of larger brokers generally and to further the Defendants’ scheme specifically.” Comm. SAC ¶ 524. But to claim that the purpose of the CIAB was to further the defendants’ scheme is simply to assert what must be shown through well-pled factual allegations.
See Twombly,
Our analysis thus confirms the District Court’s conclusion that the allegations it recited were inadequate to plead the nexus element of plaintiffs’ CIAB-based RICO claims. We believe, however, that the complaint might reasonably be construed as asserting additional facts that present a closer question. Specifically, the complaint appears to allege that defendant brokers did not merely make use of the CIAB as a forum, but actually utilized its institutional machinery to formulate strategy and issue public statements in aid of their fraudulent acts. The complaint avers that the defendant brokers effectively operated and controlled the CIAB; the brokers sat on its Board of Directors. CIAB allegedly formulated a “position statement that was intended to stave off any meaningful regulatory disclosure requirements and reassure insurance purchasers that their brokers were acting in their best interests.” Comm. SAC ¶ 445. “The CIAB position statement was made available for review and editing by its members before being finally approved by CIAB’s Executive Committee, which included executives from Marsh, Aon, and HRH.... Further, one or more representatives of all of the Broker Defendants, or their predecessors, were on CIAB’s Board of Directors at the time the CIAB position statement was issued.” Id. ¶ 446. The Brokers then allegedly incorporated language from this position statement into their allegedly fraudulent disclosures. See id. ¶ 458 (“The [Broker] disclosures were modeled after the CIAB position statement in order to create the impression of transparency, by stating that the brokers ‘may’ have contingent commission agreements that might result in some additional revenue, while failing to disclose any information regarding the strategic partnerships that the Broker Defendants had entered into with the Insurer Defendants or the significance of these partnerships and the contingent payments arrangements [for] the insurance placement process and the premiums charged.”)
Assuming the truth of these allegations, one might arguably make a plausible inference'that defendant brokers participated
*382
in the conduct of the CIAB enterprise, and furthermore, that one way they operated the enterprise was to have it craft the allegedly misleading disclosure statements incorporated by defendants into their allegedly fraudulent communications with clients (and perhaps others).
83
This inference, however, would raise additional questions that would have to be resolved before we could conclude that plaintiffs have adequately pled their CIAB-based RICO claims. First, under § 1962(c), which is the only substantive RICO provision invoked by plaintiffs, the defendants must be distinct from the enterprise they conduct.
See Gasoline Sales, Inc. v. Aero Oil Co.,
Second, there is a question about whether plaintiffs have adequately pled that defendant brokers’ allegedly misleading disclosure statements constitute a “pattern of racketeering activity.” In other words, even assuming plaintiffs have adequately alleged a connection between defendants’ conduct of the CIAB and the statements alleged to be fraudulent, it remains to be determined whether the fraudulent nature of these statements has itself been adequately alleged.
Cf. Am. Dental Ass’n v. Cigna Corp.,
In light of these significant questions, as well as our discussion of the nexus standard, see supra Section II.B.l.a.iii., we will vacate the dismissal of the CIAB-based claims. None of these questions was squarely addressed by the parties on appeal, and we believe the District Court is best positioned to decide them in the first instance. On remand, the District Court may proceed in any way consistent with our opinion. 86
b. Section 1962(d) Claims
The District Court dismissed the § 1962(d) RICO conspiracy claims on the ground that plaintiffs had failed to plead any viable § 1962(c) claims. Because we will vacate the dismissal of the § 1962(c) claims relating to the alleged Marsh-centered commercial enterprise and the CIAB enterprise, we will also vacate the § 1962(d) claims based on those two enterprises. We will affirm the District Court’s dismissal of the remaining § 1962(d) claims because with respect to these claims, plaintiffs have failed to allege adequately “an endeavor which, if completed, would satisfy all of the elements of a substantive [RICO] offense.”
Salinas,
C. State-Law Claims
A district court “may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction” over state-law claims if it “has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.” 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3). Having dismissed all federal-law claims, the District Court here exercised this statutory grant of discretion and dismissed plaintiffs’ state-law claims. Because we will vacate in part the judgment dismissing the federal claims, we will also vacate the dismissal of the state-law claims.
See Shaev v. Saper,
III. Conclusion
For the forgoing reasons, we will vacate the dismissal of the Sherman Act claims with respect to defendants alleged to have engaged in bid rigging in the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy; the dismissal of the RICO claims based on the alleged Marsh-centered commercial enterprise, with respect to those same defendants; the dismissal of the RICO claims based on the alleged CIAB enterprise, with respect to the defendant brokers; and the dismissal of the state-law claims. We will affirm the District Court’s judgment in all other respects and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
. See supra note 6.
Notes
. This statement paraphrases the description of the proposed plaintiff classes given by the District Court.
See In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
. In the Employee Benefits Case only, plaintiffs also brought claims under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2), alleging defendants had breached fiduciary duties im *310 posed by die statute. These claims are not before us. See infra note 3.
. The District Court exercised jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1367. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The Sherman Act and RICO claims were the only federal causes of action asserted in the Commercial complaint. Having dismissed both claims in its August 31 and September 28 opinions, the District Court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims and dismissed the Commercial complaint in its entirety.
Although plaintiffs originally appealed the District Court's summary judgment order regarding the ERISA claims, they expressly waived that issue in their opening brief. Plaintiffs’ Employee Benefits (EB) Br. 10.
.While this appeal was pending, the District Court approved a settlement agreement between the plaintiffs and the Marsh Defendants. (In the Commercial Case, the Marsh Defendants comprise Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.; Marsh Inc.; Marsh USA, Inc.; Marsh USA Inc. (Connecticut); and Seabury & Smith, Inc. In the Employee Benefits Case, the Marsh Defendants comprise Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.; Marsh Inc.; Marsh USA, Inc.; Marsh USA Inc. (Connecticut); Mercer, Inc.; Mercer Human Resource Consulting LLC; Mercer Human Resource Consulting of Texas, Inc.; and Sea-bury & Smith, Inc.)
See In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
No. 04-5184,
. See supra note 4.
. The defendant-broker names given here encompass related and/or subsidiary companies, as detailed in Comm. SAC ¶¶ 24-36 and EB SAC ¶¶ 34-45. The names of the defendant insurers allegedly conspiring with each broker can also be found in the complaints; in the interest of brevity, we will not reproduce them here. See Comm. SAC ¶¶ 95, 157, 201, 236, 262, 326; EB SAC ¶¶ 106, 139, 175, 239, 271. The number of insurers in each alleged broker-centered conspiracy ranges from three to thirteen. (These numbers refer to parent entities and do not include the subsidiary/related companies also named as defendants. See Comm. SAC ¶¶ 37-63 (listing subsidiary/related insurers in the Commercial Case); EB SAC ¶¶ 46-57 (listing subsidiary/related insurers in the Employee Benefits Case).)
. The quoted language is drawn from the description of the Aon-centered conspiracy in the Commercial complaint but is generally applicable to all of the alleged broker-centered conspiracies. See Comm. SAC ¶¶ 66-67; EB SAC ¶¶ 76-77.
. Plaintiffs do not specifically define these terms, but from context we infer that a “last look” affords a bidder the ability to make the final bid with knowledge of all previous bids, and a “first look” allows a bidder the opportunity to bid without competition (for example, guaranteeing a sale to the bidder if it can match a certain price).
. In addition to the following two requirements, the plaintiffs in any antitrust case “must prove antitrust injury, which is to say (1) injury of the type the antitrust laws were intended to prevent and (2) that flows from that which makes defendants’ acts unlawful.’’
A.D. Bedell Wholesale Co. v. Philip Morris Inc.,
. "Congress used th[e] distinction between concerted and independent action to deter anticompetitive conduct and compensate its victims, without chilling vigorous competition through ordinary business operations.... [UJnlike independent action, '[c]oncerted activity inherently is fraught with anticompetitive risk’ insofar as it 'deprives the marketplace of independent centers of decisionmaking that competition assumes and demands.’ ’’
Am. Needle, Inc. v. NFL,
- U.S. -,
. “The question whether an arrangement is a contract, combination, or conspiracy is different from and antecedent to the question whether it unreasonably restrains trade.”
Am. Needle,
. In the event a genuinely disputed issue of fact exists regarding the reasonableness of the restraint, the determination is for the jury.
See Arizona v. Maricopa County Med. Soc’y,
. When evaluating tying arrangements, in which a firm "sell[s] one good (the tying product) on the condition that the buyer also purchase another, separate good (the tied product),”
Town Sound & Custom Tops, Inc. v. Chrysler Motors Corp.,
. As the above discussion ought to make clear, the respective analyses conducted under the rule of reason, per se, and quick look standards are not categorically different. In every case, "the essential inquiry" is "whether or not the challenged restraint enhances competition.”
Cal. Dental,
. In
Leegin,
the Supreme Court overruled its earlier holding that vertical price-fixing agreements were subject to per se condemnation.
. Although plaintiffs' First Amended Complaints (FAC) expressly pled a rule-of-reason claim in the alternative,
see, e.g.,
Comm. FAC ¶ 530; EB FAC ¶ 454, their Second Amended Complaints omit any reference to the rule of reason, and their moving papers and appellate arguments make clear they are alleging exclusively per se violations. In their initial motions to dismiss, defendants contended that the First Amended Complaints had not adequately defined a market or pled anti-competitive effects and had thus failed to state a claim under the rule of reason. In response, plaintiffs did not assert that they had, in fact, met these requirements; they argued only that "where plaintiffs allege
per se
claims,” these requirements do not apply. Plaintiffs' Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendants Motions to Dismiss 43 n. 26, filed in the District Court as No. 04-5184, Dkt. Entry # 344. In a subsequent submission, plaintiffs explicitly stated that the allegations in their complaints were "subject to
per se
antitrust analysis, not evaluation under the rule of reason.” Plaintiffs' Reply Brief in Support of Motion for Class Certification 1, filed in the District Court as No. 04-5184, Dkt. Entry # 506. Plaintiffs have never disputed the District Court's determination that "[bjecause Plaintiffs have alleged the Section 1 claim as a
per se
violation, even at the pleading stage Plaintiffs must set forth sufficient facts evidencing a horizontal conspiracy involving market or customer allocation in order for their claim to survive a motion to dismiss.”
.
Twombly
affirms that Rule 8(a)(2) requires a statement of facts "suggestive enough" (when assumed to be true) "to render [the plaintiff's claim to relief] plausible,” that is, "enough fact to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of illegal” conduct.
Twombly, 550
U.S. at 556,
. As the Supreme Court has noted, "[c]on-text matters in notice pleading,”
Phillips,
. In a highly concentrated market, “any single firm's price and output decisions will have a noticeable impact on the market and on its rivals,” such that when any firm in that market "is deciding on a course of action, any rational decision must take into account the anticipated reaction of the other firms.”
Flat Glass,
. In fact, "in actual practice, most courts rely on the
absence
of motivation or offense to self-interest to preclude a conspiracy inference” from ambiguous evidence or mere parallelism. 6 Areeda & Hovenkamp,
supra,
¶ 1434c2;
see, e.g., Matsushita,
. Although
Twombly’s
articulation of the pleading standard for § 1 cases draws from summary judgment jurisprudence, the standards applicable to Rule 12(b)(6) and Rule 56 motions remain distinct. In expounding this distinction, some judges and commentators have opined that “[e]ven in those contexts in which an allegation of [conspiracy based on] parallel conduct will not suffice to take an antitrust plaintiff's case to the jury, it will sometimes suffice to overcome a motion to dismiss and permit some discovery, perhaps leaving the issue for later resolution on a motion for summary judgment.”
Starr v. Sony BMG Music Entm’t,
.
Twombly
did not explicitly use the term "plus factor” in formulating its pleading standard. But the Court did note that the lower-court decision under review had held that “plus factors are not
required
to be pleaded to permit an antitrust claim based on parallel conduct to survive dismissal.”
Twombly,
. Courts devised the requirement of "plus factors” in the context of offers of proof of an agreement that rest on parallel conduct, i.e., circumstantial evidence. On appeals from summary judgment, we have stated that direct evidence of a conspiracy, such as a document or conversation explicitly manifesting the existence of the agreement in question— "evidence that is explicit and requires no inferences to establish the proposition or conclusion being asserted,”
Baby Food,
Twombly
noted that no such direct allegations appeared in the complaint before it.
See
. Sometimes, of course, discovery will uncover both direct and circumstantial evidence of agreement. We do not imply that a plaintiff must commit to a single method of proof at the pleading stage, but merely that a plaintiff must put forth
some
statement of facts suggestive of unlawful conspiracy. "[0]nce a claim has been stated adequately, it may be supported by showing any set of [evidentiary] facts consistent with the allegations in the complaint.”
Twombly,
.
Twombly
thus abrogates our earlier holdings that § 1 plaintiffs can survive a motion to dismiss without alleging facts supporting a plausible inference of conspiracy.
See, e.g., Bogosian,
. Plaintiffs distinguish contingent commissions from advertising costs on two grounds, neither of which is relevant. First, plaintiffs stress that unlike advertising, which is pro-competitive, the customer allocation schemes allegedly linked to the contingent commission payments were antagonistic to competition. This response, however, misunderstands the thrust of the advertising analogy. Even assuming defendants’ practices unreasonably restrained trade, plaintiffs' § 1 claims must also plausibly suggest that these practices were the product of an agreement among the insurers. The advertising analogy illustrates plaintiffs' failure to satisfy this element of their pleading burden; parallel conduct, such as the payment of contingent commissions, does not plausibly imply the existence of an agreement when each defendant had a strong, independent motive to engage in that conduct.
Second, plaintiffs allege that contingent commission agreements were not customary before the brokers' decisions in the 1990's to consolidate their pool of insurers, and that the insurers received no additional benefits in exchange for these payments. Even if that is true, however — and the complaints’ assertions of increasing premium revenue by defendant insurers during the proposed class period suggest otherwise — the point is that, once the brokers had undertaken that consolidation, insurers had much to lose if they did not become a "strategic partner,” which provided each of them with an independent business reason to pay brokers contingent commissions.
. Plaintiffs contend that "[i]t strains credulity to insist that an insurer, which repeatedly and systematically receives confidential information about a rival’s contingent commission arrangements and premium volume, would not expect and understand that its rivals were being provided with the same information about its business.” Plaintiff's EB Reply Br. 13. But the allegation that insurers knew that the brokers would disclose the details of their vertical agreements to other insurer-partners does not imply that insurers intended that the information be so disclosed, let alone that they had entered into a horizontal agreement with other insurers. Plaintiffs’ reliance on
United States v. Container Corp. of America,
. See infra note 31 and accompanying text. We discuss below plaintiffs’ argument that the specific means allegedly used to steer clients, e.g., first looks, last looks, and the solicitation of intentionally uncompetitive bids, imply a horizontal agreement among the insurers.
. Plaintiffs place special emphasis on the alleged information-sharing in the HRH- and Wells Fargo/Acordia-centered commercial conspiracies, but these allegations do not overcome the basic deficiency we have just described. Plaintiffs allege that HRH allocated its book of business among three insurers and assert that "[t]he number of [insurers] to which HRH allocated its business was discussed among and agreed to by the three chosen insurers.” Comm. SAC ¶ 242. When we search for additional information about this putative agreement, we find mostly allegations common to the other broker-centered conspiracies, namely that each insurer-partner knew the identities of the others and the details of their similar contingent commission agreements with the broker. Plaintiffs’ pleadings suggest that one insurer wanted HRH to have one fewer insurer-partner than HRH originally had in mind. See Comm. RPS ¶281 ("During its negotiations with HRH, [the insurer] was aware of the existence of other proposed carrier partners and expressed concern that HRH was considering consolidating its business with four Insurers rather than only three, which [the insurer] preferred.”). But this vertical effort to persuade HRH (with apparent success) to exclude the participation of a competitor hardly implies horizontal conspiracy among the insurers. (It also stands in stark contrast to the hub-and-spoke conspiracies found in Interstate Circuit and Toys “R" Us, in which each firm's motivation to enter into the vertical agreement was contingent on all of its competitors’ doing the same.) To the contrary, the obvious alternative explanation for the insurer’s behavior is a desire to maximize its piece of HRH's guaranteed-premium-volume pie.
Similarly, the allegations in the Well Fargo/Acordia conspiracy indicate only that the insurer-partners knew one another’s identities, and knew that each was benefitting in similar ways from the broker’s ability to steer business. They do not imply that any insurer-partner’s agreement with Wells Fargo/Acordia was dependent on the conduct of its competitors.
. Hovenkamp's discussion of NYNEX is also relevant to this case:
[T]he allegations in [NYNEX] contained an element of fraud, but many thousands of contracts have exchanged exclusivity for kickbacks or some deception on consumers or third parties. An agreement giving a waste removal or towing company an exclusive right to the buyer’s business in exchange for a secret rebate or kickback does not injure competition simply because of the fraud. Such a holding would cross the line from antitrust to consumer protection. And while protecting consumers from such schemes is certainly a worthy goal of legal policy generally, it is not an antitrust goal. Hovenkamp, supra, ¶ 1902d, at 223. Here, too, the basic scheme alleged by plaintiffs is one in which defendant brokers exchanged exclusivity (premium volume) for kickbacks (contingent commissions). To be sure, here the brokers dealt "exclusively” with multiple parties — the exclusive dealing involved individual insurance policies (most notably those already placed with a particular insurer and up for possible renewal), rather than a broker's entire roster of clients — but this difference does not materially alter the basic exclusivity-for-kickbacks model. It merely presents multiple, parallel instantiations of that model.
. Apart from the multiple, detailed incidents of bid rigging in the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy, plaintiffs appear to allege one incident of bid rigging in each of the Willis-centered and Gallagher-centered commercial conspiracies. Comm. SAC ¶¶ 275, 336. In their briefs and at oral argument, however, plaintiffs's bid-rigging discussion appears to be limited to Marsh and its insurer-partners. See, e.g., Tr. of Oral Arg. 12 (affirming that "[t]he specific instances of bid rigging ... occurred with respect to the Marsh broker centered conspiracies [sic]").
.
See United States v. Heffeman,
.As one treatise explains:
A strong inference of coordinated behavior arises when a participant actively seeks to lose a bid. Deliberate sacrifice of a contract implies an unusual confidence that the winning party will return the favor. Moreover, spurious bidding indicates an awareness of wrongdoing coupled with a desire to hide it by simulating normal bidding. A spurious bid is almost always anticompetitive ....
6 Areeda & Hovenkamp, supra, ¶ 1420b, at 140.
. We note that, under
Twombly,
the test is not whether plaintiffs’ allegations
necessarily
amount to an unlawful horizontal agreement, but rather whether they plausibly imply — that is, "raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of” — such an agreement.
. This aspect of the District Court’s reasoning as to why the bid rigging does not imply a horizontal agreement is more fully developed in its evaluation of the RICO claims.
See
. As noted, it may be more precise to say that allegations of brokers' unilateral acts of fraud against their clients, while undeniably asserting a form of consumer injury, do not plead an injury to competition, which is adequately alleged in the Marsh-centered scheme only by virtue of the well-pled horizontal agreement among the insurer-spokes. See supra note 31 and accompanying text.
. At oral argument, counsel for plaintiffs explained: ''[T]he defendants take a lot of time talking about how we can’t win in a big [sic] rigging scheme because we didn't allege a bid rigging scheme. And that's right. We have [instead] alleged an agreement among these participants in the Marsh broker-centered conspiracies ... to protect each other's incumbent business.” Tr. of Oral. Arg. 72; see also Letter from Plaintiffs to the District Court, No. 04-5184, Dkt. Entry #669, at 2 (''[P]laintiffs do not allege that defendants are liable under the antitrust laws because they engaged in 'bid-rigging.' Instead, the theory of the Complaint is that defendants are liable under the antitrust laws because they participated in a conspiracy to allocate customers, using, on some occasions, bid-rigging, last *339 looks and other manipulative devices as overt acts to achieve the conspiracies’ end.”).
. Furthermore, because of the way plaintiffs have pled their claim, plaintiffs must plead a type of horizontal restraint that can be deemed unreasonable without evaluation of market power.
See Leegin,
. The complaint shows how in providing these intentionally non-competitive bids, the insurers necessarily passed up the opportunity to compete. According to the complaint, one insurer who was dissatisfied by Marsh’s protection of its own incumbent business contemplated supplying competitive bids in response to Marsh’s request for non-competitive offers. "If we can not get proper protection," the insurer stated, "we will go hard after [another insurer’s incumbent business] that we feel [Marsh is] protecting. We will no longer provide [Marsh] with protective quotes for [that insurer] but will put out quotes that [Marsh] will be forced to release....” Comm. SAC ¶ 107.
. See Comm. SAC ¶ 73 ("Given the high degree of financial investment and trust placed in their broker, clients will rarely if ever seek *341 quotes from insurers other than those recommended by the broker.”).
.As the Supreme Court reiterated in
Iqbal,
the
Twombly
standard does not impose a "probability requirement.”
Iqbal,
. As the Supreme Court explained:
In applying the[ ] general standards [of Rule 8(a)(2) ] to a § 1 claim, we hold that stating such a claim requires a complaint with enough factual matter (taken as true) to suggest that an agreement was made. Asking for plausible grounds to infer an agreement does not impose a probability requirement at the pleading stage; it simply calls for enough fact to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of illegal agreement.
Twombly,
. The number of defendants alleged to have engaged in bid rigging appears to be slightly smaller than the number of defendants al *342 leged to be participants in the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy. Compare Comm. SAC ¶ 95 (naming "AIG, ACE, CNA, Chubb, Crum & Forster, Hartford, Liberty Mutual, Travelers, Zurich, Fireman's Fund, Munich, XL and Axis” as defendant insurers in the Marsh broker-centered conspiracy), with Plaintiffs’ Comm. Br. 78 n. 17 (claiming that the defendant insurers that engaged in bid rigging are "AIG, ACE, Axis, Chubb, XL, Munich/AmRe, Liberty Mutual, St. Paul Travelers, Fireman's Fund, and Zurich”), and Comm. RPS ¶¶ 27-56 (detailing bid-rigging allegations).
Our disposition must also take account of the fact that although the complaint’s narrative of wrongdoing speaks primarily (if not exclusively) in terms of parent entities or corporate groups, subsidiary corporate entities are also named as individual defendants.
See
Comm. SAC ¶¶ 37-63 (stating that the use of the parent or group entity name is meant to incorporate the subsidiaries by reference). Defendants contend that the bid-rigging allegations are limited to a single line of commercial insurance, namely excess casualty. Plaintiffs appear to concede this point.
See
Plaintiffs' Comm. Reply Br. 11 (referring to the “Marsh Excess Casualty conspiracy”). As noted, without the bid-rigging allegations, plaintiffs have not stated "enough factual matter ... to suggest that an agreement was made” among the insurers.
Twombly,
Plaintiffs argue that subsidiary companies "act[] at the common direction of the parent[],” Plaintiffs’ Comm. Reply Br. 12, and that “in reality a parent and a wholly owned subsidiary always have a unity of purpose or a common design,” Plaintiffs' EB Reply Br. 35 (quoting
Copperweld,
. We find the complaint somewhat ambiguous on this question. Plaintiffs allege that under the customer allocation scheme, "each conspiring insurer would be permitted to keep its own incumbent business.” Comm. SAC ¶ 96. But as defendants point out, the alleged contingent commission agreements tied commissions to factors other than incumbent business, which might motivate Marsh to transfer business away from incumbents. Plaintiffs contend that Marsh only used new business and business transferred from non-partner insurers to satisfy these thresholds. More problematic for plaintiffs’ claim of guaranteed incumbent protection may be the complaint’s statement that Marsh "grouped its preferred insurers into three tiers, classified as A, B, and C tiers, based on how much they were paying in contingent commissions. Tiers A and B were the more preferred markets to which the bulk of premium was allocated.” Comm. SAC ¶ 101. It is unclear from the complaint's brief description whether incumbent business from lower-tier insurers would sometimes be transferred to higher-tier insurers or whether the "premium” mentioned came only from new or non-insurer-partner-held accounts.
.
See, e.g., Stop & Shop Supermarket Co. v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of R.I.,
. The facts in the seminal case of
Addyston Pipe
offer a useful comparison. There, a cartel of pipe manufacturers rigged bids for pipes sold principally to municipalities. The winning bidder would pay a "bonus” to the other bidders. First, the amount of the winning bid was determined, and then the bidders conducted a
competitive
bid among themselves to determine who was willing to pay the largest bonus to the others. The winner of that competition obtained the right to submit the winning bid in the rigged auction. The structure of the scheme meant that the most efficient or lowest-cost manufacturer — and thus the one able to pay the largest bonus to the others — would generally win the rigged bid, just as in a competitive market. But the conspiracy ensured that the price of the winning bid was supracompetitive and output-reducing.
Addyston Pipe,
*347 Toys "R” Us provides another illustration. Suppose the toy manufacturers in that case competed with one another over the amount of product Toys “R” Us would buy from each. This competition for Toys "R” Us’s business would not alter the basic fact that the horizontal agreement to sell exclusively to Toys "R” Us reduced output.
. The Rule nonetheless allows "[m]alice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of a person’s mind [to] be alleged generally.” Id.
. See Plaintiffs' Comm. Br. 14 n. 3; Defendants' Comm. Br. 31.
.In its initial October 3, 2006 opinion, the District Court found that plaintiffs' First Amended Complaint did "not specifically identify the entities which allegedly conspired with each Broker Defendant” in the alleged broker-centered conspiracies.
. The District Court's Rule 9(b) analysis should be directed to the specific antitrust conspiracy we have found adequately pled for purposes of Rule 8(a)(2) — namely, a horizontal agreement among certain of Marsh's insurer-partners not to compete for incumbent business.
. The Employee Benefits complaint “alleges that the brokers knew, through industry studies and other means, that disclosure of [the contingent commission] arrangements would cause a decrease in commission income (which was almost exclusively profit to the brokers) of between 5% to 25%.“ Plaintiffs’ EB Br. 20. But this fact does nothing to strengthen the inference that the brokers' similar silence on contingent commissions was the product of an agreement. The “obvious alternative explanation” remains: each broker decided, perhaps on the basis of the same industry studies, that disclosure was not in its best interest, just as each ILEC in Twombly decided that competition with the other regional monopolies would not benefit its bottom line.
. Plaintiffs describe the alleged “Global Conspiracy” as “the Broker Defendants’ agreement not to disclose or advertise truthful pricing information and to limit consumer information about price.” Comm. SAC ¶ 358. This language, however, elides the significant difference between this case and those in which defendants are alleged to have agreed to refrain from disclosing information about their
own
practices.
Cf. Cal. Dental Ass'n v. FTC,
. Plaintiffs do not contend that the exchange of information about reporting techniques was itself unlawful, but argue only that this communication evinces a horizontal agreement to report the brokers' compensation improperly on Form 5500. Notably, some of the particular exchanges detailed by plaintiffs actually appear to undermine the inference of an agreement not to disclose. See, e.g., EB RPS ¶ 63 (noting an e-mail from one insurer to another expressing “surprise[]” that the addressee had not been reporting its commission payments "given our conversation on this topic earlier this year”).
. "The views of the NAIC are particularly significant, because the Act ultimately passed was based in large part on the NAIC['s proposed] bill.” Id.
. Furthermore, as commentators have observed, a construction of the "business of insurance” that limited the concept to state-authorized collaboration would arguably "be so narrow as not to go beyond the state action antitrust exemption” set forth in
Parker v. Brown,
.
Cf. Arroyo-Melecio v. Puerto Rican Am. Ins. Co.,
The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit decided that the challenged conduct constituted the "business of insurance” under the second clause of section 2(b) of the McCarranFerguson Act. The court determined that “[hjorizontal agreements among insurers to fix the price and to issue policies only through the residual market are within the business of insurance.” Id. at 67. Unlike defendants’ alleged agreement here, the insurers’ conduct in Arroyo-Melecio was rate fixing in the classic sense: because of the public scheme of compulsory insurance, it had the effect of ensuring that no one could purchase insurance except at the price prescribed by the public entity. The compulsory insurance scheme and public entity in Arroyo-Melecio also brought that case much closer to the McCarran-Ferguson Act’s concern to exempt public ratemaking from federal antitrust regulation.
.
Cf. Blue Cross,
. Even if we concluded that a per se rule were inappropriate and instead applied a quick look analysis (as plaintiffs urge in the alternative), we would still condemn the alleged restraint. As noted, defendants have not put forward a plausible justification for a naked horizontal agreement not to compete for renewal customers.
. As noted, see supra Section II.A.l.a., plaintiffs who seek to condemn a vertical agreement must proceed under the traditional rule of reason, which requires plaintiffs to demonstrate anticompetitive effects in the relevant market.
. Section 1954 provides:
Whoever being—
(1) an administrator, officer, trustee, custodian, counsel, agent, or employee of any employee welfare benefit plan or employee pension benefit plan; or
(2) an officer, counsel, agent, or employee of an employer or an employer any of whose employees are covered by such plan; or
(3) an officer, counsel, agent, or employee of an employee organization any of whose members are covered by such plan; or
(4) a person who, or an officer, counsel, agent, or employee of an organization which, provides benefit plan services to such plan
receives or agrees to receive or solicits any fee, kickback, commission, gift, loan, money, or thing of value because of or with intent to be influenced with respect to, any of the actions, decisions, or other duties relating to any question or matter concerning such plan or any person who directly or indirectly gives or offers, or promises to give or offer, any fee, kickback, commission, gift, loan, money, or thing of value prohibited by this section, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both: Provided, That this section shall not prohibit the payment to or acceptance by any person of bona fide salary, compensation, or other payments made for goods or facilities actually furnished or for services actually performed in the regular course of his duties as such person, administrator, officer, trustee, custodian, counsel, agent, or employee of such plan, employer, employee organization, or *364 organization providing benefit plan services to such plan.
. The Court noted that § 1961(4), which lists entities "include[d]” in the term "enterprise,” "does not purport to set out an exhaustive definition of the term,” and that, "[a]ccordingly, this provision does not foreclose the possibility that the term might include, in addition to the specifically enumerated entities, others that fall within the ordinary meaning of the term 'enterprise.' ”
Boyle,
.
Boyle
thus sees what we described in
Riccobene
as the second element, i.e., continuity, as an inherent component of the structure requirement.
See Boyle,
. Writing in dissent, Justice Stevens agreed with the majority that “[t]here may be cases in which a jury can infer [the existence of an enterprise] from the evidence used to establish the pattern of racketeering activity.”
Id.
at 2249 (Stevens, J., dissenting). But he believed that should "be true only when the pattern of activity is so complex that it could not be performed in the absence of structures or processes for planning or concealing the illegal conduct beyond those inherent in performing the predicate acts.”
Id.
By that standard, Justice Stevens found the jury instructions approved by the majority to be “plainly deficient.”
Id.
at 2251. In allowing the jury to " 'find an enterprise where an association of individuals, without structural hierarchy, forms solely for the purpose of carrying out a pattern of racketeering acts,' ” the instructions failed, he argued, to “require the Government to prove that the alleged enterprise had an existence apart from the pattern of predicate acts.”
Id.; see also id.
at 2250 ("By permitting the Government to prove [the 'enterprise’ and 'pattern of racketeering activity’] elements with the same evidence, the [majority] renders the enterprise requirement essentially meaningless in association-in-fact cases.”). By contrast, the majority held that an association-in-fact enterprise need not
do
anything other than engage in the pattern of racketeering activity, so long as it has the requisite structural features (common purpose, interrelationships among its associates, and longevity).
Cf. Odom v. Microsoft Corp.,
. Turkette evaluated a challenge to the validity of a criminal indictment; Boyle reviewed jury instructions in a criminal case; and Riccobene evaluated a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a criminal RICO conviction.
. Boyle was decided after the parties filed their briefs in this appeal. Although plaintiffs’ argument distinguishing burdens of proof from pleading burdens thus does not explicitly refer to Boyle, its logic would seem to call for interpreting that decision, like Turkette and Riccobene, as addressed only to burdens of proof.
Plaintiffs also argue, in the alternative, that their allegations adequately plead the enterprise features set forth in the Turkette/Boyle line of cases. See infra.
. We do not imply that Twombly's pleading standard is applicable only to “big” cases, but we note that the "practical” reasons for this standard,
see Twombly,
. We recited the
Provenzano
standard post
Reves
in
United States v. Irizarry,
. Although we adopt Brandao’s definition of the statutory term "through,” we believe the decision inverts the relationship specified by § 1962(c).
Brandao
states that "[a] sufficient nexus ... exists ... if the defendant was able to commit the predicate acts by means of, by consequence of, by reason of, by the agency of, or by the instrumentality of [i.e., 'through'] his association with the enterprise.”
. Here, § 1962(c) is the only substantive provision invoked by plaintiffs’ complaints.
. In Salinas, the Supreme Court explained § 1962(d)’s relationship to general conspiracy doctrine:
The relevant statutory phrase in § 1962(d) is "to conspire.” We presume Congress intended to use the term in its conventional sense, and certain well-established principles follow.... When Congress passed RICO in 1970, the American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code permitted a person to be convicted of conspiracy so long as he "agrees with such other person or persons that they or one or more of them will engage in conduct that constitutes such crime.” As the drafters emphasized, "so long as the purpose of the agreement is to facilitate commission of a crime, the actor *373 need not agree 'to commit' the crime.” ... A conspirator must intend to further an endeavor which, if completed, would satisfy all of the elements of a substantive criminal offense, but it suffices that he adopt the goal of furthering or facilitating the criminal endeavor .... It is elementary that a conspiracy may exist and be punished whether or not the substantive crime ensues, for the conspiracy is a distinct evil, dangerous to the public, and so punishable in itself.
.
Salinas
appears to hold that a violation of § 1962(d) does not require a consummated violation of a substantive RICO provision; it is sufficient that the conspiracy have as its object acts which, if completed, would constitute a substantive violation. Whether a plaintiff who had not been injured by a substantive violation would have standing to bring a civil action for violation of § 1962(d), however, is a different question.
See
18 U.S.C. § 1964(c) (creating a civil cause of action for "[a]ny person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962” and providing for triple damages);
Beck v. Prupis,
. We do not address the other grounds relied on by the District Court to support its conclusion that these "broker-centered enterprises” were inadequately pled.
. Plaintiffs also allege a "Marsh-centered enterprise” in the Employee Benefits complaint, but they do not allege that the associates of this "enterprise” engaged in bid rigging. For the reasons given above, we agree with the District Court that plaintiffs have not adequately pled the existence of such an enterprise.
. Defendants do not dispute that the complaint sufficiently alleges the requisite relationships between each insurer and Marsh.
. The number of defendants alleged to have engaged in bid rigging appears to be slightly smaller than the number of defendants alleged to be associates of the Marsh-centered enterprise. See supra note 44. Compare Comm. SAC ¶ 502 (naming alleged members of an association-in-fact Marsh-centered commercial enterprise), with Plaintiffs' Comm. Br. 78 n. 17 (claiming that the defendant insurers that engaged in bid rigging are "AIG, ACE, Axis, Chubb, XL, Munich/AmRe, Liberty Mutual, St. Paul Travelers, Fireman’s Fund and Zurich”), and Comm. RPS ¶¶ 27-56 (detailing bid-rigging allegations). While, as noted, plaintiffs have declined to plead alternative enterprises consisting of only individual defendants or bilateral relationships, they urge us to permit them "to proceed with their RICO claims as to Marsh and the insurers explicitly alleged to have been involved in bid-rigging.” Plaintiffs' Comm. Br. 78 n. 17. Such a "downscaled” Marsh-centered enterprise has been adequately pled.
It may also be worth reiterating that membership in an enterprise is not the touchstone of § 1962(c) liability. Rather, it is the operation of that enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering that constitutes a violation. Accordingly, although the Commercial complaint here appears to allege that each defendant was a member of the enterprise it "conducted,” as a general matter defendants who are outside an enterprise may in certain circumstances be held liable under § 1962(c), as the Supreme Court has acknowledged.
See Reves,
. The District Court suggested that defendant insurers may have sometimes refused Marsh's request for a false bid. But even if there were occasional refusals, we do not believe they would prove fatal to plaintiffs' enterprise allegations.
Cf. Boyle,
. The overlap between the District Court’s analyses of these two elements is understandable. A defendant cannot participate in conducting the affairs of a non-existent enterprise.
. Whether plaintiffs have adequately alleged that defendants participated in the conduct of the Marsh-centered enterprise’s affairs “though a pattern of racketeering activity” is, of course, another matter. This question necessarily turns in part on whether plaintiffs have sufficiently pled a “pattern of racketeering activity.” See infra note 80.
. In their motion to dismiss, defendants also contended that plaintiffs had failed to plead adequately a pattern of predicate offenses. In a footnote, the District Court suggested this challenge might have merit but did not conclusively adjudicate it, instead granting the motion on the ground that "Plaintiffs’ pleading of the 'enterprise’ and 'conduct’ elements warrant dismissal without granting Plaintiffs leave to amend.”
.Plaintiffs conclusorily allege that "Defendants have conducted or participated in the conduct of the affairs of the CIAB Enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity,” Comm. SAC ¶ 527, but as
Twombly
observed, "a plaintiff’s obligation to provide the grounds of his entitlement to relief requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do,”
Twombly,
. See, e.g., Comm. SAC ¶513 (“CIAB provides Defendants with numerous opportunities to communicate, meet, use vital intelligence on market conditions that is shared with its partner members, and reach agreement on how they will address challenges in the marketplace ____"); id. ¶ 518 ("CIAB provides the Broker Defendants a forum to discuss and reach agreement with each other and with the Insurer Defendants regarding, among other things, compensation arrangements and other aspects of their relationships, what each wants and needs from the relationship, the market and market conditions, consolidation and disclosure.”); id. V519 ("CIAB hosts 'Executive Forums' ... [which] allow members the opportunity to ‘discuss common problems and solutions.' ”); id. ¶521 ("CIAB has also provided Defendants the opportunity to discuss and reach agreement on joint action in response to the regulatory investigations and regarding disclosure issues.”); id. ¶ 522 ("CIAB provides Defendants with numerous opportunities to communicate, meet, use vital intelligence on market conditions that is shared with its partner members, and reach agreement on how they will address challenges in the marketplace. ...”).
. This possible inference pertains only to the defendant brokers. The complaint does not contain well-pled factual allegations plausibly implicating the defendant insurers in the creation of the disclosure statements.
. As noted, the requisite nexus element would not be satisfied by the mere allegation that the defendants’ alleged racketeering activity benefitted from goods or services provided by the CIAB.
. See supra note 80 and accompanying text.
. The court may choose in its discretion, for instance, to address the adequacy of plaintiffs' fraud allegations before returning to the question of the nexus between that alleged fraud and defendants' alleged conduct of the CIAB.
