MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
INTRODUCTION
On March 29, 2013, we issued a Memorandum and Order granting in part and denying in part defendants’ motions to dismiss plaintiffs’
On August 23, 2013, we issued a second Memorandum and Order in response to a series of additional motions addressed to the complaints. In re LIBOR-Based, Fin. Instruments Antitrust Litig.,
Presently before the Court are seven motions. Six of these motions were contemplated by our decision in LIBOR II: (1) exchange-based plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration of our decision denying them leave to add allegations of day-today, trader-based manipulation; (2) exchange-based plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend their complaint to include new, heretofore unpled allegations of trader-based conduct; (3) defendants’ motion for reconsideration of our finding that plaintiffs had pled scienter; (4) defendants’ motion to dismiss exchange-based plaintiffs’ claims based on contracts purchased between May 30, 2008 and April 14, 2009; (5) defendáis’ motion to dismiss OTC plaintiffs’ clájms for unjust enrichment and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; and (6) defendant SG’s motion to dismiss the complaint. The seventh is defendants’ motion to strike the declaration that exchange-based plaintiffs submitted in connection with its motion for reconsideration (the “Kovel Declaration”).
For the reasons stated below, exchange-based plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration is denied, but their motion for leave to amend their complaint to add certain allegations of day-to-day, trader-based manipulation is granted; defendants’ motion for reconsideration of our holding that exchange-based plaintiffs have adequately pled scienter is denied; defendants’ motion to dismiss claims based on contracts purchased between May 30, 2008 and April 14, 2009 is granted; defendants’ motion to dismiss OTC plaintiffs’ claims for unjust enrichment and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing is granted in part and denied in part; defendant SG’s motion to dismiss is granted; and defendants’ motion to strike the Kovel Declaration is granted.
DISCUSSION
I. Legal Standards
A.Motion for Reconsideration
“Reconsideration is appropriate only where a court has overlooked controlling decisions or facts presented in the underlying motion which, had they been considered, might reasonably have altered the result of the initial decision.” In re Fosamax Prods. Liab. Litig.,
B. Motion for Leave to Amend
Under Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, “[t]he court should freely give leave” to a party to amend its complaint “when justice so requires.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a)(2). “Generally, a district court has discretion to deny leave for good reason, including futility, bad faith, undue delay, or undue prejudice to the opposing party.” Holmes v. Grubman,
C. Motion to Dismiss
When deciding a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim pursuant
In the context of claims for commodities manipulation, such as those alleged by the exchange-based plaintiffs, a plaintiff must also meet the heightened pleading requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b). See LIBOR I,
II. Trader-Based Conduct
A. Procedural Background
In LIBOR I, we addressed plaintiffs’ argument that their claims properly related not only to alleged persistent suppression of LIBOR, but also to day-to-day, trader-based manipulation intended to benefit the banks’ respective trading positions in the Eurodollar futures market. Plaintiffs’ assertions were based largely on the Barclays settlements made public on June 27, 2012, which included admissions of efforts to manipulate LIBOR by individual traders. As a result, we granted plaintiffs leave to move to amend their complaint to include allegations of day-to-day manipulation derived from the Barclays settlements. LIBOR I,
Plaintiffs then made two further motions. The first, filed on September 6, 2013, was a motion for reconsideration of “that portion of [LIBOR II] denying Exchange-Based Plaintiffs’ motion to [amend their complaint] to include allegations based on trader-based manipulation during the period January 1, 2005 through the beginning of August 2007.” Pis.’ Notice of Mot. for Reeons. of the Court’s Aug. 23, 2013 Mem. & Order at 1. The second, filed on September 10,' 2013, was a motion for leave to file an amended complaint that would include new allegations of trader-based conduct from pre-August 2007. Pis.’ Sept. 10, 2013 Letter at 3.
It was not until plaintiffs’ reply brief on the reconsideration motion that plaintiffs furnished examples of specific dates when plaintiffs traded in Eurodollar futures and were allegedly harmed by artificial LIBOR fixes. In order to fully explore this issue, we solicited further briefing from both parties, and those sur-replies were filed by October 22, 2013. Then, while these motions were pending, defendant Coópera-tieve Céntrale Raiffeisen-Boerenleenbank B.A. (“Rabobank”) settled with various government regulators — including the U.S. Department of Justice and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission — for conduct relating to LIBOR manipulation. Again, to ensure a full record, we granted plain
To recap, plaintiffs filed in support of their motion for reconsideration a moving brief, a reply, a sur-reply, and a supplemental brief; defendants filed an opposition, a sur-reply, and a supplemental brief of their own. Also fully briefed is plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend their complaint. We address both motions concerning trader-based claims below.
B. Analysis
1. Motion for Reconsideration
In LIBOR II, we denied plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend their complaint to include trader-based claims, finding that the claims asserted at that time “could not withstand a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).” LIBOR II,
First, plaintiffs’ reliance on Panther Partners is misplaced. Panther Partners has been interpreted not “as an intervening change in the controlling law justifying reconsideration of the denial of leave to amend,” but rather as an “affirm[ation] [of] the familiar rule that a district court always has discretion to grant leave to amend.... ” In re CRM Holdings,
Second, plaintiffs’ argument that we failed to consider LIBOR I in reaching our decision in LIBOR II is meritless. Putting aside the absurd notion that this Court failed to consider an opinion that we had written mere months prior, our analysis of plaintiffs’ claims has remained consistent: plaintiffs must plead actual damages to state a claim under the CEA. See 7 U.S.C. § 25(a)(1); LIBOR I,
Third, plaintiffs’ assertion that we overlooked In re Crude Oil Commodity Futures Litigation,
In support of their motion for reconsideration, plaintiffs have relied on obviously flawed arguments, implausibly suggesting that this Court had forgotten its own opinions and that the requirements that we outlined in those opinions were unclear or inconsistent. But before having put pen to
2. Motion for Leave to Amend
Although their motion for reconsideration must fail, plaintiffs have also made a parallel motion for leave to amend their pleadings to include allegations of trader-based conduct. They claim that they are now able, “under the reasoning of [LIBOR II ], [to] identify specific Eurodollar futures trades on days” when plaintiffs can allege actual damages. Exchange-Based Pis.’ Mem. of Law in Supp. of Their Mot. for Recons, of the Court’s Aug. 23, 2013 Mem. & Order (“Pis.’ Trader-Based Mem.”) at 4. While the “standard for granting a motion for reconsideration under Local Civil Rule 6.3 is strict,” Tiffany (NJ) LLC v. Forbse, No. 11 Civ. 4976(NRB),
Given this broad grant of discretion — as well as the fact that the exchange-based plaintiffs have attempted to plead day-today, trader-based manipulation just once before, after the publication of the Bar-clays settlements
First, in light of the content of their most recent submissions, plaintiffs may advance claims against only Barclays and Rabobank. Plaintiffs do not cite a single
Second, plaintiffs must do more than merely allege that they transacted on days when Barclays and/or Rabobank attempted to manipulate LIBOR. Although we have stated as much before, it bears repeating: as private actors, plaintiffs have a distinct and more demanding pleading burden than does the government. See LI-BOR I,
Once we apply the foregoing restrictions to plaintiffs’ proposed amendments, a limited number of examples of day-to-day, trader-based manipulation remain
Direction of Quartile Plaintiff Plaintiff Date Bank Alleged Request Position_Harnted_Position
9/29/05 Barclays_Upward_Upper_Atlantic Trading_Seller
4/7/06 Barclays Downward Lower Atlantic Trading & Buyer _303030 Trading __
6/30/06 Rabobank_Upward_Interquartile Atlantic Trading_. Seller
8/17/06 Rabobank Downward_Lower_Atlantic Trading ■ Buyer
9/1/06 Rabobank Upward Lower Atlantic Trading & Seller _303030 Trading_
10/26/06 Barclays_Downward_Lower_Atlantic Trading_Buyer
11/29/06 Rabobank_Upward_Lower_Atlantic Trading_Seller
12/22/06 Barclays_Downward _Lower_Atlantic Trading_Buyer
2/28/07
7/30/07 Barclays_Upward_Upper_Atlantic Trading_Seller
8/6/07
As circumscribed, the proposed amend-
In reaching this conclusion, the Court has considered and rejected defendants’ opposition arguments. For instance, defendants assert that even if Barclays and Rabobank were able to alter LIBOR on a given date based on their individual submissions, the incremental change as a result of the manipulation would have been too small to actually impact the published rate. See Defs.’ Sur-Reply at 6 & n. 11. It is true that the minimum price increment for Eurodollar futures contracts is one quarter of an interest rate basis point, and none of plaintiffs’ examples suggest that Barclays or Rabobank could have manipulated LIBOR one quarter of an interest rate basis point on their own. See id.; Frederick- Sturm, Eurodollar Futures: The Basics at 2 (Sept.2011), available at http://www.cmegroup.com/trading/interest-rates/files/eurodollar-futures-the-basics. pdf. However, we find it plausible that manipulation of less than the Eurodollar futures contract price increment could have impacted the published LIBOR fix, and thus the contract price itself, because of the use of rounding in calculating the LIBOR fix.
Defendants further argue that none of “the hypothetical minuscule changes to LI-BOR” resulting from trader-based conduct could have possibly impacted plaintiffs’ future behavior in such a way as to have resulted in actual damages. Defs.’ Sur-Reply at 7. However, it would be too de
Although we have permitted plaintiffs to amend their complaint as specified, they still face many hurdles before recovery; chief among them, plaintiffs must demonstrate that they actually sustained damages as a result of defendants’ improper conduct, a burden that “pose[s] a serious challenge.” LIBOR I,
III. Scienter
A. Procedural Background
In LIBOR I, we found that the exchange-based plaintiffs “adequately alleged that defendants manipulated the price of Eurodollar contracts and that this manipulation caused [plaintiffs] actual damages.” LIBOR I,
At that time, we denied defendants’ motion for reconsideration without prejudice because there were issues that had not been adequately briefed. We advised defendants that, if they decided to refile, they should address three questions. First, we asked for more extensive briefing on whether plaintiffs had adequately pled scienter. Id. at 618. At the time, we understood this question to have two sub-parts: (1) whether plaintiffs’ allegation that defendants held positions in the Eurodollar futures market was sufficient to plead scienter, and (2) given the multiple motives that plaintiffs had pled for defendants’ actions in suppressing LIBOR, what burden did plaintiffs bear in pleading that defendants’ actions were actually motivated by a desire to profit in the Eurodollar futures market. Id. at 618 n. 13. Second, assuming that plaintiffs had failed to properly plead scienter, we asked whether plaintiffs’ informational handicaps should have lessened their pleading burden. Id. at 618-19. And third, to the extent that both previous questions were answered in the negative, we sought briefing on whether this analysis should be applicable to all defendants. Id. at 619. Defendants then refiled their motion for reconsideration of the scienter issue on September 20, 2013, and the motion was fully briefed by October 17, 2013.
B. Analysis
In their complaint, the exchange-based plaintiffs make two sets of allegations against defendants: (1) persistent suppression of LIBOR throughout the Class Period and (2) day-to-day, trader-based manipulation. Both sets of claims are brought pursuant to the Commodity Exchange Act (“CEA”), which prohibits any person from “manipulating] or attempting] to manipulate the price of any commodity in interstate commerce.” 7 U.S.C. § 13(a)(2). To state a claim for manipulation under the CEA, a plaintiff
The first issue is whether plaintiffs’ allegations that defendants held positions in the Eurodollar futures market are sufficient to plead scienter under either prong. We find that they are not. “[M]arket power by itself is not enough to establish a CEA violation.” In re Commodity Exch., Inc. Silver Futures & Options Trading Litig.,
Having found it insufficient to. plead merely that defendants held positions in the Eurodollar futures market, we next ask what burden plaintiffs bear in pleading that defendants’ LIBOR submissions were actually motivated by a desire to profit from Eurodollar futures contracts. For their claim to survive, plaintiffs must plead either: (1) that defendants were motivated by their desire to profit in the Eurodollar futures market and had the opportunity to influence the price of contracts, or (2) that defendants consciously or recklessly manipulated the price of Eurodollar futures contracts through their LIBOR submissions.
We first consider whether plaintiffs have sufficiently pled scienter via the motive and opportunity prong. The complexity in applying this theory to the case at bar arises because of plaintiffs’ allegation that all defendants had twd coexisting motives for submitting artificially low LI-BOR figures to the British Bankers’ Association (“BBA”): (1) to protect their reputations and appear financially stable and (2) to profit in the Eurodollar futures market. See Exchange-Based Pis.’ Second Consolidated Am. Compl. (“Exchange-Based SAC”) ¶¶ 73-78. We recognize that plaintiffs are entitled to plead in the alternative or even inconsistently. Fed. R.Civ.P. 8(d)(2)-(3). However, the ability to plead in the alternative does not obviate the need for each of plaintiffs’ motive allegations to be “plausible on its face.”
Put simply, plaintiffs’ dual motive assertions as to all defendants are implausible. Throughout this litigation, the parties have consistently maintained that “defendants were competitors outside the BBA.” LIBOR I,
Given the implausibility of plaintiffs’ motive allegations, we now consider whether plaintiffs have adequately pled scienter through the conscious misbehavior or recklessness prong. “Where motive is not apparent, it is still possible to plead scienter by identifying circumstances indicating conscious behavior by the defendant, though the strength of the circumstantial allegations must be correspondingly greater.” Kalnit v. Eichler,
In LIBOR II, we rejected plaintiffs’ assertion that they had pled scienter through evidence of defendants’ conscious misbehavior or recklessness. See LIBOR II,
First, plaintiffs have more than adequately pled that defendants “consciously misbehaved” by submitting artificial LIBOR quotes to the BBA. See, e.g., Exchange-Based SAC ¶¶ 72-121 (documenting this conduct under the headline “Defendants Misreported LIBOR During The Class Period”). Second, plaintiffs have also pled that the “danger” of submitting artificial LIBOR quotes — the manipulation of the price of Eurodollar futures contracts — was either known to the defendant banks or so obvious that they must have been aware of it. See, e.g., id. ¶ 449 (“Each Defendant well knew, from its financial sophistication and its familiarity with CME Eurodollar futures contracts ... that such contracts traded with reference, and settled to, USD-LIBOR.”). We still find it implausible that all defendants acted with the common motive of profiting off Eurodollar futures contracts, but it is plausible that all defendants, regardless of their positions in the market, manipulated LIBOR for reputational purposes while knowing that such conduct would impact the price of Eurodollar futures. Therefore, we find that plaintiffs have adequately pled scienter based on a conscious misbehavior or recklessness theory.
Defendants argue that knowledge is not enough. See Reply Mem. of Law in Further Supp. of Mot. for Recons, of Mar. 29, 2013 Order on Mot. to Dismiss at 4; Tr. of Oral Arg. 63:12-13 (“[M]ere knowledge of an effect is not enough to satisfy the intent requirement.”). We agree that “only intent, not knowledge, can transform a legitimate transaction into manipulation.” Amaranth I,
In sum, plaintiffs have pled that: (1) defendants knew that they were submitting inaccurate LIBOR quotes, (2) defendants understood the impact on Eurodollar futures contract prices from doing so, and (3) there is no conceivably legitimate purpose for submitting inaccurate LIBOR quotes. Taken together, these three factors demonstrate .defendants’ “conscious misbehavior or recklessness.” As a consequence, plaintiffs have pled scienter as to
IY. Statute of Limitations
The question of whether some of the exchange-based plaintiffs’ CEA claims are barred by the applicable statute of limitations has been an issue since the earliest motions to dismiss, occupying forty pages of our opinion in LIBOR I. To summarize, at the outset, we determined that a “discovery accrual rule” was applicable to claims under the CEA wherein “discovery of the injury, not discovery of the other elements of a claim, is what starts the clock.” Koch v. Christie’s Int’l PLC,
Utilizing that date and the applicable two-year statute of limitations under the CEA, we divided the Class Period into three segments: (1) the start of the Class Period until the date of inquiry notice, i.e. August 2007 to May 29, 2008 (“Period 1”); (2) the day after inquiry notice was triggered until two years and one day before the complaint was filed, i.e. May 30, 2008 to April 14, 2009 (“Period 2”); and (3) two years before the filing of the complaint through the end of the Class Period, i.e. April 15, 2009 to May 2010 (“Period 3”). We found that claims based on contracts entered into during Period 1 were time barred, having not been brought within two years of inquiry notice, whereas claims based on contracts purchased during Period 3 had been brought within two years of inquiry notice and were therefore timely.
In LIBOR II, we observed that defendants in their briefs seemed to argue that we should dismiss “persistent suppression” claims based on contracts entered into at times other than Period 1. LIBOR II,
Apparently not fully appreciating the consequences for their case on the merits, plaintiffs suggest that the articles relied upon by this Court focused only on false LIBOR reports, rather than on manipulated Eurodollar futures contracts prices, and that those articles were therefore insufficient to place plaintiffs on inquiry notice. Pis.’ Period 2 Opp’n at 5 n. 5. However, that the LIBOR fix directly impacts the price of Eurodollar futures contracts is not only a fact, but is also the centerpiece of plaintiffs’ CEA claims. See, e.g., Exchange-Based SAC ¶ 182 (citing evidence that several banks manipulated LIBOR with “the express purpose of manipulating Eurodollar futures”); id. ¶ 271 (“Each Defendant knew that such extensive misreporting [of LIBOR] was manipulating Eurodollar futures contract prices.”). Moreover, plaintiffs’ complaint acknowledges that an ordinary investor would have made a direct connection between LIBOR and the price of k Eurodollar futures contract. See, e.g., id. ¶ 159 (claiming that a change in LIBOR would have communicated information to “the reasonable person of ordinary intelligence who was thinking of investing m Eurodollar futures”). Thus, plaintiffs’ argument that defendants must
In short, “when a court has ruled on an issue, that decision should generally be adhered to by that court in subsequent stages of the same case unless cogent and compelling reasons militate otherwise.” Johnson v. Holder,
We turn now to the motion that is properly before this Court: whether ex- . change-based plaintiffs’ claims arising out of contracts purchased between May 29, 2008 and April 14, 2009 — during Period 2 — are timely. Based on “the totality of the objective evidence,” we find that they are not. Woori Bank v. Merrill Lynch,
When we declined to dismiss Period 2 claims in LIBOR I, we assumed that Period 2 investors had not purchased contracts earlier than Period 2 and therefore “may not have had reason to follow LIBOR-related news.” LIBOR I,
We address first those plaintiffs who purchased Eurodollar futures contracts in Period 2 after also having done so during Period 1. We begin with the proposition that it would be nonsensical to assume that the minds of Period 1 purchasers — who were on inquiry notice — were wiped clean and became blank slates before they transacted against during Period 2. See Shah v. Meeker,
To determine whether plaintiffs’ duty to inquire dissipated during Period 2, we examine (1) the significance of the disclosed problems, (2) how likely it is that those problems are of a recurring nature, and (3) how substantial are the reassurances announced to avoid their recurrence. LC Capital Partners, LP v. Frontier Ins. Grp., Inc.,
_Author_Title
Michael Mackenzie “Libor Remarks Fail to Put Financial Times June 2, 2008 & Gillian Tett_Unease to Rest”_
Gavin Finch & Ben “Libor Overhaul May Fail Bloomberg June 11, 2008 Livesey to Restore Confidence in _Rate”__
Laurence Norman “Changes to Libor Reject- Wall Street Jour- August 6, 2008 ed — U.K. Bankers Group nal Sticks to Definition of Rate _Benchmark” _
Justin T. Wong LIBOR Left in Limbo; A North Carolina February 22, 2009 Call for More Reform Banking Institute
Third, to the extent that there were any reassurances, they were not substantial enough to assuage the concerns of an ordinary investor. In addition to the aforementioned articles, all of which criticized the inaction of the BBA in addressing the potential ongoing manipulation of LIBOR, other articles expressed serious doubts that the calculation of the rate was going to change in a significant way:
Carrick “British Group Largely Wall Street May 31, 2008 Mollenkamp & Maintains Libor Journal Laurence Norman_Procedures”_
Adam Bradbery “Libor Revamp Is Urged Wall Street July. 11,2008 _by Money-Market Group”_Journal_
Laurence Norman “2nd UPDATE: BBA Re- Dow Jones August 5,2008 & Deborah Lynn jects Key Proposals For International Blumberg_Libor Process Change”News
Despite the existence of these articles, plaintiffs argue that inquiry notice dissipated due to “the BBA’s numerous, specific protestations of innocence” and defendants’ “own statements of reassurance.” Pis.’ Period 2 Opp’n at 14-15. This argument is unavailing. The popular press during Period 2 recognized that these reassurances rang hollow in light of the BBA’s continued failure to implement meaningful changes to the management of LIBOR, and there is no reason to believe that a reasonable investor during Period 2 would have given the statements any credence. Plaintiffs’ selective citations to statements by the BBA and defendants do not obscure the fact that, when confronted with the BBA’s inaction, an ordinary investor’s concerns about the accuracy of LI-BOR would not have dissipated, but endured.
Furthermore, plaintiffs’ contention that their situation is “virtually identical” to that of the plaintiffs in In re SCOR Holding (Switzerland) AG Litigation,
Here, there is no such “flood of reports.” To the contrary, the publicly available information during Period 2 reinforced the notion that LIBOR was subject to manipulation. In addition to all the articles previously listed, in June 2008, Dow Jones published an article indicating that 82% of banks, brokers, and traders surveyed by The Financial Markets Association agreed with the view that LIBOR did not reflect actual money market rates.
To the extent that there are named plaintiffs who first transacted during Period 2 — a disputed proposition, see supra— the same analysis would apply. While Period 2 plaintiffs “may not have had reason to follow LIBOR-related news” during Period 1, they nevertheless would have been confronted with information suggesting the probability of LIBOR’s continued artificiality after May 29, 2008. LIBOR I,
At oral argument, plaintiffs proffered three articles in particular that they contend should dissuade us from finding a limitations bar despite the foregoing evidence. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 33:8-10, 34:12-19, 44:12-14. However, all of these articles contain elements that undermine their value to plaintiffs. Two of the articles explicitly acknowledge that they were published at least partially in response to the widespread belief that LIBOR was
In sum, we acknowledged in LI-BOR I, on the basis of the record then before us, that we were not in a position to determine whether the claims of plaintiffs who purchased Eurodollar futures contracts during Period 2 were time barred. In order to decide, we needed three questions answered: (1) when was inquiry notice triggered, (2) whether plaintiffs actually inquired within two years of the date of inquiry notice, and (3) whether the complaint was filed within two years of the date on which a person of ordinary intelligence, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, would have discovered his injury. Id. at 712. Now, the answers to these questions are clear. First, for plaintiffs who initially purchased contracts during Period 1, inquiry notice never dissipated, and their duty to inquire was' therefore triggered on May 29, 2008. For anyone who first transacted during Period 2, the publicly available literature at the time of purchase would have made clear that LI-BOR was, in all probability, still artificial. Thus, inquiry notice was triggered for these purchasers before April 15, 2009, i.e. more than two years before exchange-based plaintiffs filed their complaint. Second, there is no indication that any plaintiff actually inquired within two years of the time when his duty to do so arose. And third, the complaint was filed on April 15, 2011, more than two years after any Period 2 plaintiff would have discovered his injury had he exercised reasonable diligence. Therefore, all CEA claims arising from purchases made by plaintiffs during Period 2 are time barred, and defendants’ motion to dismiss those claims is granted.
V. Contract and Unjust Enrichment Claims
A. Procedural Background
In LIBOR I, we decided that “consider-, ations of judicial economy, convenience, fairness, and comity suggest that we should decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ as-yet-unspecified-state-law claim.” LIBOR I,
We granted plaintiffs leave to amend their pleadings to include both unjust enrichment and contract-based claims under state law, with the understanding that this grant did not preclude defendants from moving to dismiss these claims once asserted. See id. at 631, 635. Plaintiffs amended their complaint accordingly on September 10, 2013, and defendants responded with the instant motion to dismiss the contract and unjust enrichment claims on November 26, 2013.
B. Analysis
OTC plaintiffs’ complaint lists five defendant banks that entered into LIBOR-based contracts with named plaintiffs: UBS, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Citibank, and Credit Suisse. See OTC Pis.’ Second Consolidated Am. Compl. (“OTC SAC”) ¶¶ 378-87. Although only these five banks were counterparties to contracts entered into by named plaintiffs, OTC plaintiffs brought breach of contract and unjust enrichment claims against all defendant banks. See id. ¶¶ 388-98. We find that plaintiffs have sufficiently pled their claims as against those defendant banks with which named plaintiffs directly transacted (“counterparty banks”), but that claims against those banks with which named plaintiffs did not transact (“non-counter-party banks”) must be dismissed. Thus, defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part.
1. Non-Counterparty Banks
Plaintiffs endeavor to state contract and quasi-contract claims against non-counter-party banks (1) by asserting that a transactional relationship between the parties is unnecessary, (2) by relying on conspiracy allegations, and (3) by conflating class standing with Article III standing. None of plaintiffs’ arguments are persuasive. We will address them each in turn.
The fundamental infirmity with plaintiffs’ contract-based and unjust enrichment claims against banks with which they did not transact is that there is an inadequate nexus between named plaintiffs and those non-counterparty banks. We cannot be certain if plaintiffs conceded this point with regard to their contract claims,
A similar analysis applies to plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claims. “The ‘essence’ of [an unjust enrichment] claim ‘is that one party has received money or a benefit at the expense of another.’ ” Kaye v. Grossman,
Here, it makes little sense to conclude that a particular defendant bank somehow improperly obtained profits intended for a certain plaintiff when those two parties never transacted or otherwise maintained a business relationship at all. “Where plaintiff and defendant ‘simply had no dealings with each other,’ their relationship is ‘too attenuated’ ” to support an unjust enrichment claim. LIBOR I,
Plaintiffs’ attempt to plead that all defendant banks were part of a conspiracy to suppress LIBOR does not save their contract and quasi-contract claims against non-counterparty banks.
Moreover, plaintiffs’ conspiracy theory rests on what would appear to be a logical inconsistency. We have consistently maintained, and plaintiffs have not disputed, that defendants competed with one another to secure the contracts with OTC plaintiffs that, when allegedly breached, unjustly enriched the counterparty bank. See LIBOR I,
Having failed to establish that no transactional relationship was necessary or that a conspiracy pleading was sufficient to overcome the lack of such a relationship, plaintiffs’ final attempt to state a claim against non-counterparty banks hinges on their reading of the Second Circuit’s decision in NECA-IBEW Health & Welfare Fund v. Goldman Sachs & Co.,
In NECA-IBEW, members of the plaintiff class purchased mortgage-backed certificates all underwritten by defendant Goldman Sachs & Co. and issued by defendant GS ‘Mortgage Securities Corp. Id. at 149. The certificates were sold in seventeen different offerings, but pursuant to the same shelf registration statement. Id. NECA, the named plaintiff, purchased certificates issued from only two of the offerings, but asserted class claims on behalf of defendants who had purchased certificates from all seventeen offerings on the basis that the offerings were all made pursuant to the common registration statement, which was allegedly false and misleading. Id. The Circuit determined that NECA
Before evaluating the question of “class standing,” however, the NECA-IBEW Court first analyzed whether the named plaintiff had Article III standing and statutory standing to sue defendants “in its own right.” Id. at 158. In applying NECA-IBEW, courts in this district have recognized that the Second Circuit considers the questions of Article III, statutory, and class standing'as distinct. See, e.g., Policemen’s Annuity & Benefit Fund of Chi. v. Bank of Am., NA, No. 12 Civ. 2865(KBF),
“[T]he core component of standing is an essential and unchanging part of the case-or-controversy requirement of Article III.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
As discussed above, named plaintiffs lack standing to sue each of the named
2. Counterparty Banks
Although we have found that plaintiffs’ claims against non-counterparty banks must be dismissed, there still remain breach of contract and unjust enrichment claims against counterparty banks UBS, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Citibank, and Credit Suisse. For the reasons discussed below, we find that plaintiffs have adequately stated these claims, and defendants’ motion to dismiss them is therefore denied.
Turning first to the contract-based claims, the complaint’s allegations against counterparty banks meet the plausibility requirements of the Federal Rules. “Twombly does not impose a probability requirement at the pleading stage. It simply requires factual allegations sufficient to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery is likely to generate evidence of liability.” Keiler v. Harlequin Enters. Ltd.,
Defendants argue that plaintiffs’ allegations are too general because they do not focus on the particular tenors of LIBOR that applied to the parties’ contracts, and that “this Court has previously noted [that] tenors of USD LIBOR are not interchangeable: Conduct alleged with respect to one tenor cannot simply be imputed to the other.” Defs.’ OTC Mem. at 19. However, we drew that conclusion in the context of considering exchange-based plaintiffs’ request to add trader-based claims to their complaint. The proposed allegations concerning trader conduct suggested that manipulation was episodic, varying in direction, and targeted to particular positions in the market. These allegations therefore required specificity with regard to tenor in order to demonstrate injury. By contrast, the breach of contract claims asserted by OTC plaintiffs claim that LIBOR was systematically suppressed across all tenors, and that this suppression led to plaintiffs receiving interest rate payments that were too low. This is a coherent theory, and plaintiffs’ more generalized allegations of persistent LIBOR suppression across tenors is sufficient to meet its pleading burden for breach of contract claims against counter-party banks.
In terms of pleading intent for the contract-based claims, plaintiffs’ allegations against counterparty banks also pass muster. We have previously noted that
Plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claims may also proceed against counter-party defendants. Under New York law, “where the parties have entered into a contract that governs the subject matter” of their dispute, a plaintiff is unable to proceed on an unjust enrichment theory. Pappas v. Tzolis,
However, the law counsels otherwise. “[T]he predicate for dismissing quasi-contract claims is that the contract at issue ‘clearly covers the dispute between the parties.’ ” Union Bank, N.A. v. CBS Corp., No. 08 Civ. 08362(PGG),
“[Ajlthough the swap contracts clearly required defendants to pay plaintiffs the prescribed floating rate of return using the LIBOR reported by the BBA, the contracts did not ‘clearly cover[]’ the subject matter now at issue, namely whether defendants were permitted to manipulate LIBOR itself and thereby depress the amount they were required to pay plaintiffs.”
LIBOR II,
VI. Defendant Société Générale (“SG”)
Beginning in mid-2011, private lawsuits began to be filed in this District and in others across the country relating to the alleged manipulation of LIBOR. One such action was Jeffrey Laydon v. Credit Suisse Group AG, et al., No. 11 Civ. 02824,
On August 12, 2011, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation transferred Laydon to this Court for “coordinated or consolidated pretrial proceedings” with other LIBOR-related actions. Transfer Order, In re Libor-Based Fin. Instruments Antitrust Litig.,
On April 30, 2012, exchange-based plaintiffs filed their First Consolidated Amended Complaint (“FAC”), which superseded the previous complaints of the class members — including the Laydon complaint— and was legally operative. See In re Refrigerant Compressors Antitrust Litig.,
In considering SG’s motion to dismiss, we begin with two key propositions. First, inquiry notice is not a defendant-specific determination. In LIBOR I, we wrote: “The specificity required to trigger inquiry notice is not necessarily specificity with regard to [each] defendant, but rather specificity that notifies a plaintiff that he
Second, there is nothing to suggest that inquiry notice had dissipated for plaintiffs during Period 3. It was not necessary for us to address this issue in either LIBOR I or LIBOR II, as the operative complaint was filed on April 15, 2011, and claims based on transactions during Period 3— between April 15, 2009 and May 2010— clearly fell within the CEA’s two-year statute of limitations. But here, plaintiffs did not move to add SG until May 2013, so the question of when Period 3 plaintiffs were on inquiry notice is relevant.
Given our decision that Period 1 and Period 2 purchasers were on inquiry notice, as well as the fact that plaintiffs have not identified any purchasers who transacted during only Period 3, plaintiffs, have the “burden of demonstrating that their duty to inquire dissipated in order for their claims not to be time barred.” Part IV supra. They have plainly failed to meet this burden. In fact, plaintiffs have not cited a single article or event during Period 3 that would have dissipated their duty to inquire.
Considering that the Class Period ended in May 2010, exchange-based plaintiffs needed to assert CEA claims against SG by May 2012 — within the two-year statute of limitations — to be timely. It is undisputed that they did not do so until May 2013. Consequently, absent some tolling, plaintiffs’ claims against SG would be time barred. Plaintiffs attempt to salvage these claims by maintaining that the statute of limitations should have been tolled pursuant to American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah,
We agree with plaintiffs that American Pipe tolling is applicable to this case. However, only “asserted members of the class who would have been parties had the suit been permitted to continue as a class action” may have their claims tolled. Id.; see also Matana v. Merkin,
American Pipe does not toll plaintiffs’ claims sufficiently to keep them from being time barred. If the toll were to begin on April 27, 2011' — the date when Laydon was filed — it would end on April 30, 2012, the date when exchange-based plaintiffs filed the FAC that did not name SG as a defendant. See In re WorldCom, Inc. Sec. Litig., No. 02 Civ. 8288(DLC),
There are also some exchange-based plaintiffs who transacted after December 31, 2009 — the Class Period runs until May 2010. However, these late purchasers were not part of the Laydon class, and as a result, they are not eligible to receive the benefit of American Pipe tolling. Therefore, the last date for any of these plaintiffs to have asserted CEA claims against any defendant bank, including SG, would have been in May 2012, two years after the end of the Class Period. Since exchange-based plaintiffs did not move for leave to amend their complaint to add SG until May 2013, one year late, claims against SG based on contracts purchased between January 1, 2010 and May 2010 are also time barred.
In sum, whether or not plaintiffs were a party to the Laydon action, all CEA claims asserted against SG are time barred. We therefore grant SG’s motion to dismiss.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, exchange-based plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration of our ruling on trader-based claims is denied, but their motion for leave to amend their complaint is granted; defendants’ motion to dismiss CEA claims on scienter grounds is denied; defendants’ motion to dismiss CEA claims arising out of contracts purchased between May 30, 2008 and April 14, 2009 is granted; defendants’ motion to dismiss OTC plaintiffs’ contract and unjust enrichment claims is granted in part and denied in part; and defendant Société Générale’s motion to dismiss the exchange-based plaintiffs’ complaint is granted.
It has been nearly two years since defendants first moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ consolidated amended complaints. Since then, this Court has issued three major opinions and the parties have submitted hundreds, if not thousands, of pages of briefing materials, all in an attempt to resolve the threshold question of any litigation: what claims, if any, have plaintiffs adequately pled?
This Memorandum and Order resolves docket entry nos. 396, 418, 428, 453, 507, and 516.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Currently, the plaintiffs in this case have been subdivided into four groups: (1) over-the-counter ("OTC”) plaintiffs, (2) exchange-based plaintiffs, (3) bondholder plaintiffs, and (4) Charles Schwab plaintiffs. The motions now pending apply to only the first two groups.
.Additionally, in LIBOR I, we dismissed plaintiffs’ antitrust and RICO claims in full; we dismissed with prejudice the exchange-based plaintiffs’ state-law claim for unjust enrichment; and we declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims.
. In addition, we denied exchange-bas$d plaintiffs' motion for interlocutory appeal, and we denied OTC, bondholder, and exchange-based plaintiffs’ motions to replead antitrust claims that we dismissed in LIBOR I.
. Local Civil Rule 6.3 prohibits the filing of affidavits in support of a motion for reconsid
. The articles that placed plaintiffs on inquiry notice of their injury by May 29, 2008 — as discussed in LIBOR I — suggested that LIBOR was fixed at artificial levels beginning in August 2007, which coincided with the start of the financial crisis. A person of ordinary intelligence reading those articles would therefore not have been on inquiry notice of his injury if he had purchased Eurodollar futures contracts prior to August 2007, as
. More precisely, on September 10, 2013, plaintiffs submitted a letter requesting a pre-motion conference to seek leave to amend their operative complaint. Defendants submitted an opposition letter, and plaintiffs submitted a reply. In a letter to the parties dated October 8, 2013, we proposed that "given the obvious overlap between the plaintiffs’ motion to reargue and the plaintiffs' request for leave to move for leave to amend their complaint,” we would "treat the letters on the leave to amend motion as motion papers.” All parties assented to this approach.
. The posture of this motion stands in sharp contrast to the pleading history of the antitrust claims when we denied plaintiffs leave to amend them. See LIBOR II,
. For example, in their reply brief, plaintiffs cite multiple dates when Barclays allegedly submitted either a suppressed LIBOR figure that was ultimately discarded for being too high or submitted an inflated figure that was later discarded for being too low. Claims based on these dates are futile, as it is mathematically impossible for these submissions to have impacted the LIBOR fix. To illustrate: if a suppressed rate was among the four highest submissions and thus discarded, then that bank’s "true” submission would have been even higher and therefore also discarded. In such a scenario, the manipulation had no impact, as the bank's submission was not factored into the calculation of LIBOR either way. Plaintiffs try to salvage these claims by maintaining that "if the submitters from other banks manipulated LIBOR more aggressively” than Barclays or Rabobank on those dates, then the rate itself would have actually been impacted. Exchange-Based Pis.' Reply Mem. of Law in Further Supp. of Their Motion for Recons, of the Court’s Aug. 23, 2013 Mem. & Order ("Pis.' Trader-Based Reply”) at 2 (emphasis added). But any assertion that other defendants manipulated their submissions
. See Pis.' Trader-Based Reply at 3 — 5; Pis.' Sur-Reply of Oct. 15, 2013 (“Pis.’ Sur-Re-ply”) Ex. C; Pis.’ Rabobank Mem. at 3, 5-7.
. On dates when LIBOR was allegedly manipulated upward, the price of Eurodollar futures contracts would have been suppressed and it would have been disadvantageous to be a seller; by contrast, if LIBOR was suppressed, then contract prices would have increased and a net buyer would be harmed.
. Defendants claim that plaintiffs fail to "allege that this purported request was ever relayed to any submitter.” Defs.’ Sur-Reply Mem. of Law in Further Opp’n to the Exchange-Based Pis.’ Motion for Recons. ("Defs.’ Sur-Reply”) at 6 n. 7. However, the complaint implies that this request to inflate LIBOR was heeded, as the recipient responded to the request by stating that he would relay the messáge "right away.” Exchange-Based Pis.’ Second Consolidated Am. Compl. (“Exchange-Based SAC”) ¶ 243.
.Defendants concede that this date falls within the acceptable time period for plaintiffs’ trader-based claims. See Defs.’ Sur-Re-ply at 6.
. For example, on the first date listed above, September 29, 2005, Barclays submitted a quote of 4.0700, the highest of any panel bank. See Pis.’ Sur-Reply Ex. A. On that same date, according to the Barclays settlement, a trader requested an inflated submission. Exchange-Based SAC ¶ 186. Had Bar-clays instead submitted a rate that was the average of the other fifteen submissions, which we' calculate to have been 4.0540, the published LIBOR would have been lower: 4.0536 as opposed to the actual published rate of 4.0544. See Pis.’ Sur-Reply Ex. A.
. For example, if LIBOR on a given date was 4.0010, when rounded to the nearest one quarter of an interest rate basis point, it would become 4.0000, and the contract price pegged to LIBOR would.be 100 - 4.0000 = 96.0000. If LIBOR was manipulated upward in this example by merely one twentieth of an interest rate basis point (0.0005), then: LI-BOR would be 4.0015; it would round to 4.0025; and the contract price would be 100 — 4.0025 = 95.9975. If a plaintiff was a net seller on that date, the manipulation would have caused a loss, as it would have received a lower price for the contracts it sold.
. We also recognized that, while plaintiffs were required to satisfy the heightened pleading standards of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b), the requirements were somewhat relaxed for their allegations of persistent suppression of LIBOR. See ATSI Commc’ns, Inc.
. The Second Circuit affirmed this decision. In re Commodity Exch., Inc. Silver Futures & Options Trading Litig.,
. This Court has noted that the submission of false LIBOR quotes alleged by plaintiffs, regardless of the motive, is not legitimate activity. See LIBOR I,
. Because we find that plaintiffs have adequately pled scienter, we need not address the question of whether informational handicaps lessen plaintiffs' pleading burden.
. Although inquiry notice was triggered on May 29, 2008, we found that because "a plaintiff cannot discover his injury until he has been injured,” Period 3 plaintiffs "could not have been on ‘ inquiry notice of their claims any earlier than the date on which they purchased their contracts.” Id. at 712. Thus, claims based on contracts purchased on or after April 15, 2009 were not time barred.
.In LIBOR I, we granted plaintiffs leave to add allegations from the Barclays settlement with respect to trader-based claims in the
. Rosa M. Abrantes-Metz et al., LIBOR Manipulation?, Aug. 4, 2008, at 2 (noting that despite their conclusion that "the evidence found is inconsistent with an effective manipulation of [LIBOR],” "some questionable patterns exist with respect to the banks’ daily Libor quotes”); Terry Belton et al., The Outlook for Libor, JPMorgan, May 16, 2008, at 1 (issuing a report for JPMorgan Chase which described LIBOR as a "besieged benchmark” and referencing the widely held belief that LIBOR was "too low relative to actual bank borrowing rates due to systemic bias on the part of contributors" to the LIBOR panel); Jacob Gyntelberg & Philip Wooldridge, Interbank rate fixings during the recent turmoil, BIS Quarterly Review, Mar. 3, 2008, at 59 (acknowledging that there were "questions about the reliability of rate fixings purported to represent conditions” in the interbank markets).
. There are numerous quotes in these articles referencing the inaction of key actors in preventing ongoing LIBOR manipulation, but we believe that the titles of these articles sufficiently convey this point.
. While we recognize that the North Carolina Banking- Institute is not as readily available a news source as is the Financial Times, Bloomberg, or the Wall Street Journal, we cite it here because plaintiffs quote the above-mentioned article from that journal in their complaint. See Exchange-Based SAC ¶¶ 125, 149. In the article, the author asserts that ”[t]he BBA's recent revisions to LIBOR did not fundamentally change its calculation and do not address lingering questions about contributing banks’ incentives to provide false information.” Justin T. Wong, LIBOR Left in Limbo; A Call for More Reform, 13 N.C. Banking Inst. 365, 383 (2009).
. Adam Bradbery, Market Participants Doubt Libor Rates Reflect Market Rates, Dow Jones & Co., June 19, 2008.
. Carrick Mollenkamp, Libor’s Accuracy Becomes Issue Again — Questions on Reliability of Interest Rate Rise Amid Central Banks’ Liquidity Push, Wall St. J., Sept. 24, 2008.
. David Gaffen, Stabilization, Not Normalization, For the Historically High Libor, Wall St. J„ Nov. 18, 2008.
. Our observations in LIBOR I regarding the timing of plaintiffs’ awareness of LIBOR-re-lated news were made in broad strokes given the stage of this'litigation. To be sure, it is quite possible that sophisticated entities considering the purchase of Eurodollar futures contracts worth approximately $1,000,000 each would have conducted research in advance of purchase. As such, a Period 2 purchaser may have been expected to follow LI-BOR trends and news articles during Period 1.
.See, e.g., Alistair Osborne, Former MPC Man Call for Libor to Be Replaced, Telegraph, Sept. 11, 2008 (referencing the fact that suggestions that “some lenders may have understated borrowing costs” first emerged in March 2008); Mollenkamp, Libor’s Accuracy Becomes an Issue Again, supra note 25, (“Earlier this year, Libor appeared to be sending false signals.”).
. Metz et al., LIBOR Manipulation?, supra note 21, at 2 (framing the paper as an extension of the study published in the Wall Street Journal on May 29, 2008, which alleged the "reporting [of] unjustifiably low borrowing costs for the calculation of the daily Libor benchmark”); International Monetary Fund, Global Financial Stability Report, Oct. 2008, at 76-77 (noting that "the integrity of the U.S. dollar LIBOR fixing process has been questioned” and that "[mjarket observers have been expressing concerns that some LIBOR contributors submit rates that are too low”).
. Samuel Cheun & Matt Raskin, Recent Concerns Regarding LIBOR’s Credibility, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, May 20, 2008.
. In their brief, plaintiffs state that while they “agree that under New York law they may only state a claim for breach of contract against the defendants with whom they contracted, they suffered a personal injury to their contracts at the hands of each defendant.” Pis.' Brief in Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss Consolidated Second Am. Compl. ("OTC Pis.' Opp'n”) at 6 (emphasis in original). Plaintiffs then maintain that this common injury provides named plaintiffs with “class standing” to assert contract-based claims against all defendants, not just those with which they transacted. See id. at 7-11. However, this theory relies on a misinterpretation of Second Circuit precedent that is discussed in greater detail infra.
. “To establish.a defendant's liability for unjust enrichment, the plaintiff must [demonstrate] that '(1) defendant was enriched, (2) at plaintiff's expense, and (3) equity and good conscience militate against permitting defendant to retain what plaintiff is seeking to recover.' " Schatzki v. Weiser Capital Mgmt., LLC, No. 10 Civ. 4685,
. Both parties spend significant portions of their briefs debating whether plaintiffs have adequately pled the existence of a conspiracy. See Mem. of Law in Supp. of Defs.' Mot. to Dismiss OTC Pis.' Second Consolidated Am. Compl. (“Defs.’ OTC Mem.”) at 12-15; OTC Pis.’ Opp’n at 12-20. However, because the existence of a conspiracy does not cure the deficiencies in plaintiffs' claims against non-counterparty banks, and because plaintiffs’ claims against counterparty banks do not depend on a finding that there was, in fact, a conspiracy, we do not decide here whether plaintiffs have sufficiently pled a conspiracy
. In a letter to the Court dated April 17, 2014, OTC plaintiffs requested permission to add Yale University as a class representative. Defendants have not identified any prejudice that they would experience based on the addition of Yale to the complaint, and as we established above, the addition of Yale would not be futile, because the university may assert claims against those banks with which it transacted directly. The Court also has no reason to believe that OTC plaintiffs' request "has1 been delayed unduly” or “is sought for dilatory purposes or ... in bad faith.” Lee v. Regal Cruises, Ltd.,
. There is some debate as to whether the relevant date here is May 17, 2013 or May 23, 2013. See Reply Mem. of Law in Further Supp. of Def. Société Générale’s Mot. to Dismiss at 3 & n. 3 (discussing the disagreement between the parties). Because our analysis does not depend on this six-day difference, we decline to resolve this question of fact.
. In their brief, plaintiffs assert that they actually did inquire before filing their complaint, claiming to have been "diligen[t] in investigating claims against [SG].” Mem. of Law in Opp'n to Def. Société Générale’s Mot. to Dismiss at 15. However, these assertions have not been substantiated in any way or even referenced before this brief; as a result, the Court will not give these statements any analytic weight. See Simpson v. Putnam Cnty. Nat’l Bank of Carmel,
