This case began as a benchmark-fixing case. Until 2013, the price of silver bullion was set in part through a daily private auction among a small group of silver dealers ("the Silver Fixing"). Based on a sophisticated econometric analysis of thousands of price quotes from the silver markets, Plaintiffs alleged that this daily private auction was a cover for a conspiracy among the participating banks, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, and Bank of Nova Scotia (together, the "Fixing Banks"), to suppress the price for physical silver and silver-denominated financial products.
In September 2016, the Court held that Plaintiffs had stated claims against HSBC and Bank of Nova Scotia. Plaintiffs settled with Deutsche Bank for $38 million dollars and what Plaintiffs hoped would be a treasure trove of preserved electronic chat messages among precious metals traders employed by Deutsche Bank and traders at Bank of America, Barclays, Standard Chartered, BNP Paribas, and UBS (the "Non-Fixing Banks"). The chat messages, many of which are quoted in the Third Amended Complaint (the "TAC") (Dkt. 258), appear to document sharing of proprietary information and episodic attempts to coordinate trading, apparently in the hopes of profiting from resulting movement in the prices of silver and silver-denominated financial instruments. After acquiring these chat messages, Plaintiffs amended their complaint to allege that the Non-Fixing Banks conspired with the Fixing Banks and among themselves to manipulate the Silver Fixing and the silver markets more generally.
But what Plaintiffs represented to be a mother lode of evidence of a vast conspiracy turns out to be less than overwhelming. The Non-Fixing Banks have moved to dismiss on the grounds that the chat messages do not connect them to a conspiracy with the Fixing Banks and do not document any actionable manipulation of the silver markets (among other things). For the reasons that follow, the Court agrees in part. Plaintiffs' allegations of an overarching conspiracy involving the Fixing Banks and Non-Fixing Banks are implausible. The chat messages provide a basis to infer the existence of a more limited conspiracy to episodically manipulate the silver markets, but Plaintiffs lack antitrust standing to bring a claim based on that theory. Plaintiffs also fail to allege market manipulation by any of the Non-Fixing Banks. Thus, the Non-Fixing Banks' motion to dismiss is GRANTED.
BACKGROUND
From 1897 to 2014, the price of silver bullion was set through the Silver Fixing. See
The Second Amended Class Action Complaint (the "SAC") (Dkt. 63) alleged that the Silver Fixing was a cover for a long-running conspiracy to suppress artificially the price of physical silver and silver-denominated financial instruments.
Plaintiffs tied the Fixing Banks to this anomalous behavior by analyzing publicly-available trading data. According to Plaintiffs, on approximately 1900 days the Fixing Banks and defendant UBS quoted below-market prices for silver-denominated assets in the minutes leading up to and during the Silver Fixing.
In Silver I, the Court denied the Fixing Banks' motion to dismiss and granted UBS's motion to dismiss. The Court concluded that the trading patterns identified by the Plaintiffs were evidence of parallel conduct consistent with a conspiracy.
The Court also concluded that Plaintiffs had adequately alleged that they had "antitrust
On June 8, 2017, the Court granted leave to amend and file the Third Amended Complaint. See Dkt. 253 ("Silver II "). The TAC alleges a much broader conspiracy to manipulate the markets for physical silver and silver-denominated assets. According to Plaintiffs, Defendants' "comprehensive strategy" has three elements.
One of the means allegedly used by the Non-Fixing Banks to profit from their manipulation of the silver markets was manipulation of bid-ask spreads in the market for physical silver. Plaintiffs allege occasions on which traders at Deutsche Bank and UBS discussed how "wide" they would quote prices for 500,000 ounces of silver, settling on a spread of 10 cents. TAC ¶ 230; see also TAC ¶¶ 231 (comparing spreads for different quantities of silver), 240 ("if they call me in 1 lac [100,000 ounces of silver] I will quote 7-8 cents"). Traders at Barclays, BNP Paribas, HSBC, and BAML are alleged to have engaged in similar discussions with traders at Deutsche Bank. See TAC ¶¶ 232-43. For example, on July 4, 2008, in a conversation with a trader at Barclays, a London-based Deutsche Bank trader said, "just be wide." TAC ¶ 239; see also TAC ¶ 240 (UBS trader told trader at Deutsche Bank "just quote wider"). Many of the chats involve a single trader at Deutsche Bank, who communicated with individual traders at each
The TAC also alleges collusion in the silver markets by traders at each of the Non-Fixing Banks. Numerous chats between a trader at UBS and a trader at Deutsche Bank describe efforts to coordinate positions, TAC ¶¶ 253, 279; to time coordinated trades for maximum market impact, TAC ¶ 252 ("if we are correct and do it together, we screw other people harder"); and to employ manipulative techniques artificially to push the price of silver-denominated assets up or down, TAC ¶¶ 256-57, 259 (the "blade" and the "muscle"), 264 ("sniping"). Several of the chats between traders at UBS and Deutsche Bank refer to collusion with traders at other banks. For example, on March 31, 2011, a UBS trader shared a stop-loss position with Deutsche Bank and said "in one hour im gonna call reinforcement," i.e., another trader to help move the market price and trigger the stop-loss order. TAC ¶ 251. On June 8, 2011, the same UBS trader told the same Deutsche Bank trader that "we need to grow our mafia a lil get a third position involved," to which the Deutsche Bank trader responded, "ok calling barx." TAC ¶ 250. On another occasion, the same Deutsche Bank trader added the UBS trader to a chat with traders at HSBC and Barclays, to which the UBS trader responded, "wow this is going to be the mother of all chats." TAC ¶ 274; see also TAC ¶ 280 (describing information possibly learned from discussions with Bank of Nova Scotia).
Traders at Barclays also shared information with Deutsche Bank. In addition to sharing information regarding bid-ask spreads, see TAC ¶ 233, a Barclays trader discussed another bank's attempt to "spoof" the silver markets on July 4, 2008. TAC ¶ 263; see also TAC ¶ 264 (Deutsche Bank and Barclays discussed "sniping"). On other occasions, traders at Barclays and Deutsche Bank compared positions and coordinated purchases. TAC ¶¶ 291-96. In one chat, a Barclays trader, referring to himself and a trader at Deutsche Bank, said "we are one team one dream." TAC ¶ 295. Chats between Deutsche Bank and UBS also reference collusion with traders at Barclays. See TAC ¶¶ 250, 274.
The Deutsche Bank Cooperation Materials also include messages between a trader at Deutsche Bank and traders at BNP Paribas. Several chats describe real-time sharing of market positions and conditions including bid-ask spreads quoted by BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank's position heading into the Silver Fixing. TAC ¶¶ 236, 298-99, 306-07. Two of the chats between Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas reference collusive trading techniques. See TAC ¶¶ 300 (BNP Paribas trader described taking the "bulldozer" out on a prior occasion-potentially a reference to triggering stop-loss orders), 310 (BNP Paribas trader suggested to Deutsche Bank trader that they go "smash" the Silver Fixing).
A trader at Standard Chartered (and formerly of HSBC) also shared proprietary information with a trader at Deutsche Bank. The TAC includes only three chat messages involving Standard Chartered, but those chats include sharing of current
Finally, the TAC alleges six conversations between Deutsche Bank and BAML. One of the chats includes an exchange of information regarding bid-ask spreads. TAC ¶ 301. Deutsche Bank and BAML also shared information about the price level of stop-loss orders in the market, TAC ¶¶ 301-02, and their current positions in silver-denominated derivatives, TAC ¶ 303.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC") and Department of Justice have recently undertaken enforcement actions directly relevant to Plaintiffs' claims against the Non-Fixing Banks. On January 29, 2018, the CFTC announced a settlement with UBS to resolve allegations that UBS traders "spoofed" the markets for precious metals and collaborated with traders at another financial institution to trigger stop-loss orders. See Dkt. 344 Ex. 1 ("UBS CFTC Order"). The CFTC consent order references specific instances of manipulation in the silver markets, including the COMEX futures market. See UBS CFTC Order at 3-5. UBS agreed to pay a $15 million monetary penalty to the CFTC. UBS CFTC Order at 11. Deutsche Bank settled similar claims with the CFTC on the same day for $30 million. See Dkt. 344 Ex.2 at 3-7, 13. The CFTC has also initiated civil proceedings against three individual traders at Deutsche Bank and UBS for alleged spoofing in the COMEX futures markets between 2008 and 2013.
Plaintiffs are individuals and entities that transacted in physical silver and silver-denominated financial instruments during the class period. There are many silver-based derivatives, but Plaintiffs allege they traded in physical silver or silver bullion; Chicago Board of Trade ("CBOT") silver futures; COMEX silver futures; COMEX "miNY" silver futures; New York Stock Exchange LIFFE mini silver futures; and CBOT "mini" silver futures. Appendix D to the TAC includes a list of days on which the price of silver was allegedly affected by Defendants' manipulative conduct on which Plaintiffs traded. The list in Appendix D does not specify whether Plaintiffs' alleged injury was the result of manipulation of the Silver Fixing, manipulation of bid-ask spreads for physical silver, or manipulative trading. The TAC also does not identify the counterparties to Plaintiffs' transactions. It is unclear whether any of the Plaintiffs dealt directly with any of the Defendants-much less dealt with a Defendant in an allegedly manipulated transaction or in the immediate wake of a manipulated transaction.
The Non-Fixing Banks have moved to dismiss the TAC. They argue that the TAC's allegations of a "comprehensive" conspiracy among the Fixing Banks and
The Non-Fixing Banks also argue that Plaintiffs lack antitrust standing as to the Non-Fixing Banks. Because the Non-Fixing Banks' involvement in the conspiracy differs in important respects from the Fixing Banks, the Non-Fixing Banks contend that they are differently situated. They argue that because no Plaintiff alleges that he traded with the Non-Fixing Banks, there is only an indirect connection between Plaintiffs' trades and the market manipulation identified in the Deutsche Bank Cooperation Materials. Joint Mem. at 25. For the same reason, they assert that Plaintiffs' injuries are attenuated from the alleged collusion and are highly speculative. Joint Mem. at 26-27.
With respect to Plaintiffs' claims pursuant to the CEA, the Non-Fixing Banks argue that Plaintiffs' claims are untimely because Plaintiffs were on notice of possible manipulation of the silver markets more than two years before they sought leave to amend in November 2017. Assuming Plaintiffs' claims are not time-barred, the Non-Fixing Banks contend in the alternative that Plaintiffs' allegations are insufficient because they do not adequately allege that the Non-Fixing Banks intended to manipulate the silver futures markets or that they were successful in doing so. The Non-Fixing Banks also contend that Plaintiffs' CEA claims are impermissibly extraterritorial because there is no alleged impact on a domestic market from the Non-Fixing Banks' manipulation.
Failing these defenses, certain of the Non-Fixing Banks contend the Court lacks personal jurisdiction over them. UBS, Standard Chartered, BNP Paribas, and Barclays argue that Plaintiffs do not allege their involvement in any in-forum, suit-related misconduct.
DISCUSSION
In evaluating a motion to dismiss, the Court must " 'accept all factual allegations in the complaint as true and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.' " Meyer v. JinkoSolar Holdings Co. ,
I. Sherman Act Claims
Plaintiffs bring claims for price fixing, bid rigging, and conspiracy to restrain trade under Section 1 of the Sherman Act. Horizontal price fixing is, of course, per se illegal. United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. ,
A. Allegations of an Overarching Agreement Involving the Silver Fixing
To allege an unlawful agreement, Plaintiffs must plead either direct evidence (such as a recorded phone call or email in which competitors agreed to fix prices) or "circumstantial facts supporting the inference that a conspiracy existed." Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Citigroup, Inc. ,
For the reasons discussed more fully below, the Court does not find Plaintiffs' allegations of a "comprehensive" conspiracy to be plausible. What Plaintiffs present as components of a single agreement appear to be unrelated, internally inconsistent efforts to manipulate the silver markets episodically. See Sonterra Capital Master Fund Ltd. v. Credit Suisse Grp. AG ,
The TAC does not include any direct evidence of an agreement between the Non-Fixing Banks and the Fixing Banks involving the Silver Fix. The chat messages that reference the Silver Fixing do not reference or suggest an overarching scheme to depress the Silver Fix and many are inconsistent with Plaintiffs' theory that the Non-Fixing Banks had foreknowledge of the Fix Price. For example, chats between Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas appear to involve sharing by Deutsche Bank of its anticipated position heading into the Silver Fixing. TAC ¶¶ 297-98, 310. The information in these messages could have been used by BNP Paribas to predict the direction of the Silver Fixing, but the messages do not suggest that BNP Paribas was part of an agreement to manipulate the Fix Price, and the fact that this information was worth sharing suggests that the result of the Silver Fixing was otherwise uncertain to BNP Paribas. Other chats reference apparently unilateral or bilateral attempts to manipulate the Silver Fixing. See TAC ¶¶ 307 ( [Deutsche Bank]: "HE SPOOFED IT TO BUY IT AND I THINK HE JUST SOLD IT TO BUY IT ... JUST LIKE THEM TO BID IT UP BEFORE THE FIX THEN GO IN AS A SELLER...."), 308 ( [UBS]: "oh ok did I tell u I saw a
It is also hard to understand why the Fixing Banks, major market-makers with their own trading operations and collective control over the Silver Fixing, would involve numerous other market makers in their scheme. In re Zinc Antitrust Litig. ,
The manipulative techniques described in the Deutsche Bank Cooperation Materials also lack a connection to Plaintiffs' theory that the Fixing Banks conspired to depress the Fix Price. Coordinated trading could further the Fixing Banks' alleged conspiracy by masking otherwise suspicious changes in the price of silver-denominated assets. But the chats are not direct or circumstantial evidence of this theory. Because Plaintiffs did not include the time of the messages on which the TAC relies, it is impossible to tell from the TAC whether the manipulative trades being discussed were timed to conceal a reversion in the Fix Price.
Where direct evidence is lacking, an antitrust conspiracy may be plausibly alleged through circumstantial evidence. Circumstantial evidence includes parallel behavior and so-called "plus factors." See Mayor & City Council of Balt. ,
Plaintiffs do not present an econometric analysis of quotes from the New Defendants to tie them to the alleged conspiracy to suppress the Fix Price. Plaintiffs identified approximately 850 days on which they allege there was manipulation of the spot price of silver around the time of the Silver Fixing. See TAC App'x D. Reversions in the price of silver shortly before and during the Silver Fixing are circumstantial evidence of a conspiracy to depress the Fix Price because they indicate either foreknowledge of the direction of the Fix Price or an attempt to conceal the effect of manipulation of the Fix Price. See Silver I ,
Plaintiffs' allegations of unilateral and bilateral manipulative trading are evidence of collusion in the silver markets but are of limited value in suggesting a conspiracy to manipulate the Silver Fixing. Arguing to the contrary, Plaintiffs rely on In re High-Tech Employee Antitrust Litigation ,
Because manipulative trading could cause an increase in price-as Plaintiffs acknowledge-it is also possible that the manipulative trading alleged in the TAC would work at cross-purposes with a conspiracy to suppress the Fix Price. Cf. CHF LIBOR ,
Plaintiffs also rely heavily on In re Foreign Exchange Benchmark Rates Antitrust Litigation ,
B. Allegations of an Agreement among the Non-Fixing Banks
While the TAC does not allege an "overarching" conspiracy among the Fixing Banks and Non-Fixing Banks, the Court finds that the chat messages contained in the TAC plausibly allege a conspiracy among the Non-Fixing Banks (and Deutsche Bank) to manipulate the markets for silver and silver-denominated financial assets opportunistically and to fix bid-ask spreads in the market for physical silver. Cf. In re Zinc Antitrust Litig.,
The chat messages included in the TAC are direct evidence of an anticompetitive agreement to manipulate the silver markets.
Several of the chat messages refer to other Defendants, suggesting that market-manipulation was not limited to sporadic bilateral agreements. For example, a UBS trader told a Deutsche Bank trader that they needed to "grow our mafia a lil" by getting a "third position involved." TAC ¶ 250. The Deutsche Bank trader responded by saying "ok calling barx [Barclays]" and reported that the Barclays trader had agreed to participate in the manipulation. TAC ¶ 250. The same traders participated in what one characterized as "the mother of all chats" involving traders at HSBC and Barclays. TAC ¶ 274. Other chats plausibly support an inference of a multilateral conspiracy. See TAC ¶ 251 (UBS trader told Deutsche Bank trader that "in one hour im gonna call reinforcement"). A single London-based Deutsche Bank trader appears to have played a clearinghouse role in the alleged conspiracy. This particular trader shared proprietary information, discussed manipulative trading, and agreed to fix prices with traders at each of the Non-Fixing Banks. See TAC ¶¶ 235-36, 238-39, 263, 288, 290, 297-306, 310. At this stage, Plaintiffs "need not show that 'the defendant knew the identities of all the other conspirators,' " In re Interest Rate Swaps Antitrust Litig. ,
The CFTC's settlements with UBS and Deutsche Bank, and the Department of Justice's prosecution of traders at Deutsche Bank and BAML are also evidence of a conspiracy. See FrontPoint Asian Event Driven Fund, L.P. v. Citibank, N.A. , No. 16-CV-5263 (AKH),
The chat messages are especially strong direct evidence of an anticompetitive agreement to quote artificially wide bid-ask spreads in the market for physical silver.
Defendants' remaining arguments urge the Court to pick-and-choose between plausible inferences. Relying on the dearth of multi-bank chat messages in the TAC, Defendants argue that the Court should presume that any market-manipulation was bilateral and that there was no overarching agreement. Joint Reply Mem. at 4-5. The cases cited by Defendants for this point are summary judgment cases. See Dahl v. Bain Capital Partners, LLC ,
In sum, the Court does not find Plaintiffs' allegations of a single conspiracy among the Fixing Banks and Non-Fixing Banks to manipulate the Silver Fixing to be plausible. That said, the TAC plausibly alleges two conspiracies: Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged a conspiracy involving the Fixing Banks to suppress the Fix Price through the daily fixing call. Plaintiffs have also plausibly alleged a conspiracy among the Non-Fixing banks to collude in the silver markets through market manipulation and information-sharing. Whether Plaintiffs would be able to prove that the market manipulation alleged in the TAC was anything other than episodic and bilateral collusion among traders is unknown, but they have plausibly alleged the existence of a conspiracy.
Because Plaintiffs' Sherman Act claim against the Non-Fixing Banks is plausible, the Court must consider whether Plaintiffs have "antitrust standing" to assert such a claim.
C. Antitrust Standing
Section 4 of the Clayton Act establishes a private right of action to enforce Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
Efficient Enforcers
The Second Circuit has identified four factors to consider when determining whether a particular plaintiff has standing as an "efficient enforcer" to seek damages under the antitrust laws:
(1) whether the violation was a direct or remote cause of the injury; (2) whether there is an identifiable class of other persons whose self-interest would normally lead them to sue for the violation; (3) whether the injury was speculative; and (4) whether there is a risk that other plaintiffs would be entitled to recover duplicative damages or that damages would be difficult to apportion among possible victims of the antitrust injury.... Built into the analysis is an assessment of the "chain of causation" between the violation and the injury.
Gelboim ,
Since the Second Circuit's decision in Gelboim , a critical mass of judges within this district have concluded that plaintiffs who are not direct purchasers are not efficient enforcers in a benchmark manipulation case.
These concerns are particularly acute in this case. Plaintiffs' claims against the Non-Fixing Banks do not depend on benchmark manipulation; rather, they allege a comprehensive scheme of market manipulation, involving rigged bid-ask spreads and coordinated trading in unspecified silver markets. See TAC ¶ 401 ("Defendants also caused artificial prices by injecting artificial supply and demand fundamentals into the market through their illegitimate coordinated trading activity including (a) maintain an artificial bid-ask spread; (b) quoting systematically lower silver prices in advance of the Silver Fix; and (c) coordinating trading activity, e.g., to intentionally trigger client stop-loss orders."). Plaintiffs' proposed class includes "[a]ll persons or entities that transacted in U.S.-Related Transactions in or on any over-the-counter ("OTC") market or exchange in physical silver or in a derivative instrument in which silver is the underlying reference asset ..., at any time from January 1, 2007 through December 31, 2013," TAC ¶ 364, regardless of whether they traded a silver-denominated instrument that was manipulated by the Non-Fixing Banks and regardless of whether they ever dealt with a Non-Fixing Bank (or a Fixing Bank, for that matter). Although there is often a statistically significant, or formula-based, connection between a financial benchmark and related derivatives, the impact of episodic coordinated trading in the silver markets is unclear. The TAC does not identify which markets were manipulated-physical silver, COMEX futures, CBOT futures, or some other silver-denominated financial instrument-or identify specific manipulative transactions, even as examples. The TAC also does not include any econometric analysis of the impact of the Non-Fixing Banks' alleged coordinated trading on the markets for physical silver or silver-denominated assets. Plaintiffs' class definition presents an obvious risk of disproportionate damages, even relative to benchmark-fixing cases-which themselves often entail potential damages in the hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars.
For these reasons, discussed more fully below, the Court finds that Plaintiffs are not efficient enforcers.
(a) Directness of Injury
Evaluating the directness of an injury is essentially a proximate cause analysis that hinges on "whether the harm alleged has a sufficiently close connection to the conduct the statute prohibits."
The relationship between Plaintiffs' injuries and the Non-Fixing Banks' conduct is attenuated and inadequately alleged in the TAC. In a benchmark-fixing case the impact of the manipulated benchmark on the financial instruments traded by the plaintiff is relatively clear. For example, and as relevant here, the Fix Price is the price for physical silver, and the price of physical silver has a 99.85% correlation to the price of silver futures traded on COMEX. See TAC ¶ 137; Silver I ,
The fact that Plaintiffs are umbrella purchasers makes the causal connection between their injury and Defendants' manipulation even less clear. In Gelboim , the Second Circuit understood there to be little difference, if any, between plaintiffs
It is also likely that there are numerous intervening causative factors between Plaintiffs' trades and Defendants manipulative trading. The likelihood of intervening causative factors is greater in this case than in other similar cases. See, e.g., In re Platinum & Palladium Antitrust Litig. ,
The breadth of Plaintiffs' proposed class definition also raises serious concerns of ruinous, potentially-disproportionate liability. "[T]o hold defendants trebly responsible for 'transactions, over which defendants had no control, in which defendants had no input, and from which defendants did not profit' would result in 'damages disproportionate to wrongdoing.' " CHF LIBOR ,
The TAC does not allege market control by the Non-Fixing Defendants. According to the TAC, "UBS was the third most active market maker in the silver spot market" during the class period. TAC ¶ 76. "Barclays was the eleventh most active U.S. market maker in the silver spot market." TAC ¶ 89. "Standard Chartered was the eighth most active U.S. market maker in the silver spot market." TAC ¶ 98. The TAC does not include similar allegations about the role of BNP Paribas or BAML in the physical silver markets. In all events, this information does not shed much light on the Non-Fixing Banks' role in the exchange-traded silver futures markets. At the risk of stating the obvious, the Non-Fixing Banks' role/influence on the spot market for physical silver has no necessary relationship to their role in the futures markets. Even as to physical silver, the TAC gives no indication of any of the Non-Fixing Banks' influence relative to other participants in the market. The physical silver market may be roughly equally divided among a dozen market makers or there may be a few giants and a much larger number of bit players; the TAC leaves the Court guessing. Any inference of market control is further undermined by the fact that nothing in the chat messages indicates which futures and options markets were being manipulated. See e.g. , TAC ¶¶ 301 (discussion of wide "vols" between BAML and Deutsche Bank traders without any indication of which silver-denominated instrument they were discussing), 303 ("Somejackass [sic], ... sold me 1mm ozs of 1 week 35 silver call at 29 vol yesterday" but no indication on which futures or options market the complained-of trade occurred.).
In sum, the TAC provides no support for Plaintiffs' argument that they have suffered a direct injury from the Non-Fixing Banks' manipulation of the silver markets. Although this is an independently adequate basis to find that Plaintiffs are not efficient enforcers, the other efficient enforcer factors also weigh against Plaintiffs' claims.
(b) Existence of More Direct Victims
Class-members who traded directly with the Non-Fixing Banks were more directly injured than Plaintiffs. As discussed above, in a benchmark-fixing case, there is little difference between direct and umbrella purchasers because benchmark-manipulation affects all market participants equally. See In re Platinum & Palladium Antitrust Litig. ,
(c) Speculative Damages
This case would present difficult damages issues against the Non-Fixing Banks.
Given that the Complaint offers only a handful of specific instances of manipulation and alleges that the manipulation was varied and episodic, even determining the days on which manipulation occurred at all may prove quite difficult. Moreover, any damages would need to be netted out as to each plaintiff to offset any benefit from the defendants' manipulation in other transactions.
CHF LIBOR ,
The Court finds that it would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to isolate the impact of coordinated trading and episodic manipulation on an umbrella plaintiff's trades. See LIBOR VI ,
(d) Duplicative Recovery and Apportionment of Damages
This factor also weighs against Plaintiffs' claims against the Non-Fixing Banks. Plaintiffs seek to recover on behalf of a market-wide class from five defendants who represent an unknown percentage of the market.
II. Commodities Exchange Act Claims
Plaintiffs bring claims for violations of the CEA based on the same bad acts that underlie their Sherman Act claims. As relevant to this case, Section 9 of the CEA prohibits manipulation in the markets for commodities and commodities-based derivatives, see
A. Timeliness
CEA claims must be brought "not later than two years after the date the cause of action arises."
The Non-Fixing Banks contend that a collection of news articles and press releases cited in the TAC show that Plaintiffs were on notice that they may have been injured by manipulative trading in the silver markets as early as 2008 and, at the latest, by January 2014 (approximately two years and ten months before Plaintiffs sought leave to file the TAC). "[P]ress coverage, prior lawsuits, or regulatory filings" may put plaintiffs on inquiry notice of their injury. See Staehr ,
The articles and press releases cited in the TAC do not contain information that is as specific as the information contained in the articles in LIBOR I , and they do not describe alleged misconduct with a similarly-direct connection to the injury alleged by Plaintiffs. The Non-Fixing Banks rely on three statements by the CFTC in September 2008, February 2013, and September 2013, which, they contend, put Plaintiffs on inquiry notice of manipulation in the silver markets. The 2008 press release reads, in its entirety: "In September 2008 the CFTC confirmed that its Division of Enforcement has been investigating complaints of misconduct in the silver market." See TAC ¶ 345 & n.190. The press release includes no information about the financial products involved, the time period of the alleged misconduct, or the markets in which the misconduct allegedly occurred. In February 2013, CFTC commissioner Bart Chilton stated publicly that there was reason to believe that
The other articles cited by the Non-Fixing Banks also relate to manipulation of the Silver Fixing or are too general to put Plaintiffs on inquiry notice. Deutsche Bank resigned its seat on the Silver Fixing in January 2014 in response to scrutiny from the German securities regulator BaFin.
The Non-Fixing Banks also point to UBS's November 2014 settlement with FINMA of allegations of market manipulation by foreign exchange and precious metals traders. TAC ¶¶ 339-40. But the relevant discussion in the FINMA report either references manipulation of the Silver Fixing or is too generic to have put Plaintiffs on notice (at least at this stage). See Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA), Foreign Exchange Trading at UBS AG: Investigation Conducted by FINMA , at 12 (November 12, 2014), https://www.finma.ch/en/news/2014/11/mm-ubs-devisenhandel-20141112/. FINMA Report at 12 (describing "repeated front running (especially in the back book) of silver fix orders of one client."). The FINMA report also alludes to manipulation in the precious metals spot markets more generally, but it does not provide key details such as the commodities or financial products involved, the markets in which they were traded, or the frequency or approximate dates of the manipulation. At this stage in the proceedings and without additional information, the Court cannot conclude that in 2014 a reasonable investor would have been aware of the probability that they had traded in the silver markets at artificial prices.
B. Extraterritoriality
The private right of action under the CEA does not apply to extraterritorial transactions. See Loginovskaya v. Batratchenko ,
Whether a transaction is a "domestic transaction" within the meaning of Ficeto is not, however, necessarily the end of the inquiry. In Parkcentral Global Hub Ltd. v. Porsche Automobile Holdings SE ,
The parties dispute the framework for the Court's analysis and, unsurprisingly, the result at each step. The Non-Fixing Banks contend that both the plaintiffs' and defendants' transactions must be "domestic" under Loginovskaya . See Joint Supp. Mem. (Dkt. 352) at 2. Because Plaintiffs do not allege that they were counterparties to the Non-Fixing Banks' alleged manipulative trades, the Non-Fixing Banks' position is that the transactions at issue are "domestic" only if both the manipulative trading activity (e.g., spoofing) and the transaction in which the Plaintiff was injured are domestic. Even assuming Plaintiffs' claims involve a "domestic" transaction, the Non-Fixing Banks contend that the underlying conduct is so predominantly foreign that, under Parkcentral , the CEA does not apply. Joint Mem. at 46. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, take the position that the extraterritoriality analysis begins and ends with whether their transactions are "domestic." The parties agree that Plaintiffs transacted on COMEX and so, according to Plaintiffs, that is the end of the analysis. Opp'n at 39-40. Plaintiffs contend Parkcentral does not apply to the CEA because Plaintiffs transacted on a "domestic exchange," rather than through domestic, over-the-counter transactions. Opp'n at 39-40.
Although the issue is a close one, the Court finds that the relevant transaction for purposes of Section 22 is the transaction in which the plaintiff is injured-in this case Plaintiffs' trades of COMEX and CBOT futures and options. So far as the Court is aware, this issue has been squarely presented only once before, in In re North Sea Brent Crude Oil Futures Litigation . See
Having determined that the relevant transaction is the plaintiff's, there is no dispute that these Plaintiffs' claims involve "domestic transactions," and the Court proceeds to step two of the analysis. Plaintiffs contend that Parkcentral is inapplicable to their claims because they traded on a "domestic exchange." See Opp'n at 40. Plaintiffs' reference to a "domestic exchange" derives from Morrison , which interpreted the Exchange Act to be focused on "transactions in securities listed on domestic exchanges, and domestic transactions in other securities, to which § 10(b) applies." Morrison ,
Plaintiffs' argument is unconvincing, and likely foreclosed by the Second Circuit's recent decision in Tower Research Capital . As Tower Research Capital explained, the Supreme Court's reference to transactions on a "domestic exchange" is rooted in the language of the Exchange Act, which applies to deceptive conduct "in connection with the purchase or sale of any security registered on a national securities exchange...." 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) ; Tower Research Capital ,
But, in any event, nothing in Parkcentral limits the Court's holding to "domestic transactions," as Plaintiffs insist.
Taking a step back, adopting Plaintiff's understanding of Morrison would raise exactly the same concern that animated the Circuit's decision in Parkcentral . Under Plaintiffs' reading, a course of conduct that is entirely foreign-undertaken by foreign actors, executed in foreign transactions, and intended to have an impact primarily on foreign interests-could be deemed domestic, and subject to U.S. law, simply because it had an effect on a U.S.-based transaction. See Parkcentral ,
Applying Parkcentral , the Court concludes that Plaintiffs' CEA claims against Barclays, Standard Chartered, and BNP Paribas are impermissibly extraterritorial. The TAC's factual allegations against these three defendants have only an attenuated connection to Plaintiffs' domestic transactions. The factual allegations against Barclays relate to thirteen chat conversations in which Barclays traders shared confidential information or coordinated trading strategies with traders at Deutsche Bank. See Declaration of Michael S. Feldberg ("Feldberg Declr.") (Dkt. 313) Ex. C. The chat messages involve traders in London and Singapore. It is entirely speculative whether the silver products discussed in the chat messages include COMEX or CBOT futures or options; Plaintiffs have made no factual allegations from which the Court could infer that these traders manipulated COMEX- or CBOT-traded products directly. Plaintiffs
What has been said about Barclays is true for Standard Chartered and BNP Paribas as well: there are only eight chat messages involving BNP Paribas traders, see BNP Paribas Supp. Mem. (Dkt. 306) at 1, and no indication that any of the misconduct discussed in the chats involved COMEX- or CBOT-traded products, see Declaration of Joshua A. Goldberg ("Goldberg Declr.") (Dkt. 314) Ex. A. For example, the most egregious message involving BNP Paribas states: "CANT WAIT FOR ANOTHER DAY WHEN WE GET THE BULLDOZER OUT THE GARAGE ON GOLD OR SIL, THEY ARE MY FIRST PORT OF CALL HAHAHAHAHAH LET ME KNOW WHEN THEY START QUOPTING [sic] 10K'S THO." TAC ¶ 300. But Plaintiffs do not allege that the trader ever, in fact, took his "bulldozer" out of the garage relative to silver, and if he did, in which silver market, or when the alleged manipulation occurred. See TAC ¶¶ 286-90; see also Declaration of Hannah Chouikhi ("Chouikhi Declr.") (Dkt. 317) Ex. A. The chats describe sharing information, see TAC ¶¶ 286-90, but do not describe any particular manipulative trading tactics or reference particular silver products (much less domestic silver products). The only inference that can be gleaned from the messages is that BNP Paribas and Standard Chartered traders, like Barclays traders, engaged in what appears to be wrongful conduct abroad. How or whether that conduct affected any domestic transactions, let alone Plaintiffs' specifically, is entirely speculative.
Plaintiffs do not respond directly to these arguments. Instead, they cite to three categories of evidence that are either inapposite under Parkcentral or too general to be persuasive. See Opp'n at 40. Although Plaintiffs claim the "defendants" (which defendant is not specified) traded COMEX futures during the class period, they provide no factual allegations to substantiate this claim or to link Defendants' COMEX trades to the manipulation at issue in their CEA claims. Plaintiffs contend the "defendants" "conspired to illegitimately increase profits on their silver trading positions," but the paragraphs of the TAC cited for support concern the Silver Fixing. See Opp'n at 40 (citing TAC ¶¶ 14, 164-67, and 172-75). For the reasons given above (at length), Plaintiffs' allegations regarding the Non-Fixing Banks' involvement in a conspiracy to manipulate the Silver Fixing are implausible.
By contrast, there are sufficient facts alleged (although barely) for the Court to find that Plaintiffs' CEA claims against UBS and BAML are plausibly domestic. Although the chats involving UBS and BAML do not specifically reference manipulation of COMEX or CBOT-futures (or any domestic market for that matter), recent enforcement actions by the CFTC and Department of Justice indicate that UBS and BAML traders manipulated the domestic markets in which Plaintiffs traded. These allegations are sufficient-at this stage-to allege that Plaintiffs claims are not "so predominantly foreign as to be impermissibly extraterritorial." Parkcentral ,
C. Failure to State a Claim
Regardless of whether any of Plaintiffs' CEA claims pass muster under Parkcentral , however, they fail because Plaintiffs do not plausibly allege the elements
The TAC asserts two theories of market manipulation. The more prominent theory is that the Non-Fixing Banks conspired with the Fixing Banks to suppress the Silver Fixing. See TAC ¶¶ 398, 401-02. The TAC also alleges that the Non-Fixing Banks manipulated the silver markets through a campaign of episodic market manipulation. See TAC ¶¶ 399-402. For the reasons the Court has already discussed, the alleged connection between the Non-Fixing Banks and a conspiracy to suppress the Silver Fixing is implausible. See supra at 896-901. To summarize briefly: the chat messages referencing the Silver Fixing describe bilateral and unilateral attempts to manipulate the Silver Fixing and are inconsistent with a broader conspiracy to suppress the Fix Price; Plaintiffs' econometric analysis does not tie the Non-Fixing Banks to a conspiracy to suppress the Fix Price;
Plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged that they suffered actual damages from episodic manipulation of the silver markets. Plaintiffs' allegations of the impact of Defendants' manipulation on prices in the COMEX futures market (or CBOT futures market) depend almost entirely on an econometric analysis of the impact of the Silver Fixing on the price of COMEX futures. See Opp'n at 36 (citing econometric analysis of the impact of the Silver Fixing on other markets contained in TAC ¶¶ 143-98). Stripped of this analysis-which
In order to plead "actual damages" under Section 22, Plaintiffs must make "a showing of actual injury caused by the violation." CHF LIBOR ,
Alleging actual damages in an "episodic manipulation" case is more difficult. As the name suggests, episodic manipulation does not warp market forces continuously throughout the class period or in a predictable manner. See In re LIBOR-Based Fin. Instruments Antitrust Litig. ,
As in LIBOR III , Plaintiffs have alleged a "conceivable" theory of actual damages, but have not alleged a theory that is "plausible" and survives a motion to dismiss. See id. There are no facts alleged in the TAC that connect Barclays's, Standard Chartered's or BNP Paribas's episodic manipulation to prices of COMEX futures at all, let alone to Plaintiffs' alleged trades. It is a closer case as to UBS and BAML because, buttressed by the CFTC settlements, Plaintiffs are at least able to connect UBS and BAML to manipulation of the COMEX futures market generally. Nonetheless, the Court finds the numerous inferences required to connect UBS's and BAML's manipulative conduct to Plaintiffs' alleged injury (if they suffered any injury at all) to be too attenuated and speculative to survive a motion to dismiss.
The chat messages involving BNP Paribas and Standard Chartered also do not support an inference that their misconduct caused Plaintiffs actual damage. Plaintiffs do not allege plausibly that BNP Paribas or Standard Chartered caused artificiality in the COMEX silver markets, much less explain how that artificiality affected trades by the Plaintiffs. The chat messages involving BNP Paribas and Standard Chartered describe various types of misconduct. See TAC ¶¶ 236, 297-99, 300, 306-07, 310. But none of the chat messages appears to reference silver futures or describes a transaction from which the Court could infer any effect at all on the price of COMEX silver futures. Assuming that Plaintiffs had adequately alleged artificiality, it would still require additional logical leaps to connect that artificiality to a negative impact on specific trades by the Plaintiffs. Tellingly, to support their allegations of a connection between manipulative conduct by BNP Paribas and their injury, Plaintiffs cite only the econometric analysis
Plaintiffs' claims against BAML (and UBS, as discussed below) present a closer case because the DOJ Complaint and CFTC orders make it plausible that BAML and UBS manipulated the COMEX futures markets. The chats contained in the TAC itself are of limited evidentiary value. Only six chat messages involve BAML traders and most do not reference silver futures. It is speculative to infer that the traders were discussing manipulation of COMEX products. Nonetheless, the Department of Justice's complaint charges BAML traders with spoofing of COMEX silver futures between 2010 and 2014, and the Department's Complaint is supported by a detailed analysis of spoofed orders placed by the traders on specific days during the class period. BAML Complaint ¶ 18-19. Accepting that those allegations are sufficient for the Court to conclude that Plaintiffs have alleged the existence of artificial prices in the COMEX silver futures markets caused by BAML, the series of inferences required to connect that artificiality to actual damage suffered by Plaintiffs is collectively implausible. First, the Court would be required to assume that spoofing-or other manipulative conduct that is entirely unalleged-occurred on more occasions than are alleged in the Department of Justice complaint. Next, the Court would be required to infer that the artificiality caused by these spoofs altered market prices for an unspecified period of time. The Court would then need to infer a connection between the artificiality-of-unknown-duration and a specific trade by Plaintiffs. And finally, the Court would need to infer that this artificiality moved the market against Plaintiffs' position. In isolation the Court might draw any of these four inferences in Plaintiffs' favor, but collectively they amount to rank speculation.
Plaintiffs' allegations against UBS require the Court to draw a similar series of collectively implausible inferences. To begin with, Plaintiffs' theory requires the Court to infer that the manipulation described in the chat messages occurred in the COMEX silver futures markets, despite the fact that the chat messages do not indicate what financial instruments (or markets) were the subject of manipulation. See TAC ¶¶ 252 (coordinating trading to maximize market impact), 256-64 (describing manipulative tactics with colorful names). The CFTC proceedings against UBS and the Department of Justice's criminal complaint against a UBS trader who was acquitted make it plausible that at least some of the conduct referenced in the chat messages occurred in the COMEX futures market or that UBS traders engaged in similar behavior affecting the COMEX futures market. See TAC ¶¶ 342-44; UBS CFTC Order at 2-3. But, again, a plausible allegation that UBS manipulated the COMEX silver futures market is insufficient to allege plausibly that UBS caused Plaintiffs to suffer actual damages. Despite the fact that the chat messages are time-stamped and that the CFTC UBS Order and the criminal complaint identify specific dates and times on which alleged manipulation occurred, Plaintiffs have made no attempt to connect those identified instances of manipulation to artificial prices at the time of any of their trades.
In sum, the TAC fails to allege that episodic manipulation by the Non-Fixing Banks caused Plaintiffs any actual damages. Because Plaintiffs' vicarious liability, aiding-and-abetting, and Rule 180.1 claims rise and fall with Plaintiffs' primary liability theory, those claims fail as well. Plaintiffs' CEA claims against the Non-Fixing Banks are DISMISSED.
III. Unjust Enrichment
For the reasons stated in Silver I , Plaintiffs' unjust enrichment claim is DISMISSED.
IV. 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). "Leave may be denied 'for good reason, including futility, bad faith, undue delay, or undue prejudice to the opposing party.' " TechnoMarine SA v. Giftports, Inc. ,
Plaintiffs have not requested leave to amend, and they have not attached a proposed, fourth amended complaint for the Court's review. Given that Plaintiffs have already amended three times, including based on discovery from Deutsche Bank, and that Plaintiffs have not requested leave to amend, the Court denies leave to amend. Plaintiffs are represented by competent, experienced counsel. If they had the facts necessary to plug the holes that exist in the TAC, the Court is confident those facts would have been included in the pleadings filed to date.
The Non-Fixing Banks' motion to dismiss is GRANTED. Plaintiffs' claims against the Non-Fixing Banks are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. The Clerk of the Court is directed to close the open motion at docket entry 302 and terminate defendants Barclays, Standard Chartered, BNP Paribas, BAML, and UBS from the case.
The remaining parties are directed to appear for a status conference with the Court at 11:00 a.m. on August 24, 2018 . By August 17, 2018 , the parties must submit a joint letter of not more than 5 pages setting forth a proposed schedule for discovery in this action.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
Plaintiffs describe the "comprehensive strategy" in five parts. See Opp'n (Dkt. 336 at 4-11). The difference between three elements and five parts is not substantive.
The SAC also alleged improper trading and manipulation of bid-ask spreads. But the SAC alleged that the Fixing Banks and UBS used manipulative trading tactics to profit from their foreknowledge of the Silver Fixing and as means to conceal their manipulation of the Fix Price. The TAC alleges manipulative trading in the silver markets more generally.
The chat messages do not make clear which silver-denominated financial instruments were the subject of the Non-Fixing Banks' manipulation. Some of the messages clearly discuss physical silver. Others likely refer to silver-denominated derivatives, but it is not obvious which derivatives or on what market they were traded.
The United States Department of Justice initiated criminal proceedings against the same traders in the District of Connecticut and the Northern District of Illinois. The trader charged in Connecticut has since been acquitted. See United States v. Andre Flotron , No. 17-Cr-220 (JAM) (D. Conn.).
Under the circumstances, the Court exercises its discretion to address the Non-Fixing Banks' motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim before addressing personal jurisdiction. See Sullivan v. Barclays PLC , No. 13-CV-2811 (PKC),
Exhibits to the Defendants' motions include time stamps for the chats included in the TAC and the locations of the traders involved. The time stamps reveal that many of the chat messages occurred when the London markets were closed, which suggests that they were not a part of an effort to manipulate the Silver Fixing. Notwithstanding Plaintiffs' obvious and annoying attempt to hide the ball by omitting this information, the Court may consider the time stamps (and the locations of the traders involved in the chats) because the chat messages are incorporated into the TAC.
By cross-referencing this information to Appendix D to the TAC it is possible to determine that the Plaintiffs traded on certain of the days on which the chat messages were sent. But this information is of limited value because Plaintiffs do not connect the chat messages to specific incidents of market manipulation in the silver markets (much less to the markets on which Plaintiffs traded), and they do not explain how that hypothetical market manipulation would have had an impact on Plaintiffs' trades.
To the extent Plaintiffs intend to argue that they have plausibly alleged parallel conduct and plus factors as to UBS, the Court disagrees. The Court granted UBS's motion to dismiss the SAC because Plaintiffs did not allege that UBS had any role in the Silver Fixing. See Silver I ,
The chat messages, as reproduced in the TAC, do not specify which silver-denominated instruments were to be manipulated. Many of the chats use terminology that is specific to the physical silver markets. See, e.g. , TAC ¶¶ 7, 230-233. Others appear to reference silver futures but do not specify whether they involve COMEX silver futures, CBOT silver futures, or NYSE silver futures. Nonetheless, it is plausible that the manipulation involved the silver futures markets in which Plaintiffs traded: the CFTC's settlements with Deutsche Bank and UBS describe manipulation of COMEX futures, see Dkt 344 Ex. 1 at 3, Ex. 2 at 3; the CFTC's complaints against individual traders at Deutsche Bank and UBS also refer to manipulation of COMEX futures contracts, Dkt. 344 Exs. 4, 5; and the Department of Justice's complaint against two traders at BAML also describes manipulation of COMEX futures. See Dkt. 344 Ex. 6.
A comparison to the chat messages in CHF LIBOR is helpful. In that case, Plaintiffs' complaint relied primarily on chat messages included in government reports. There were "multiple[,] specific" messages involving one defendant, Royal Bank of Scotland ("RBS"), and an unidentified other bank, but only one chat involving the other defendants.
Plaintiffs have adduced no evidence of a conspiracy to fix bid-ask spreads in any other silver-related market. To the extent they claim bid-ask spread manipulation in the markets for silver-denominated derivatives, their claims are based purely on speculation, see CHF LIBOR ,
It is possible, even likely, that some of the Defendants may have been on the other side of the market manipulation discussed in the TAC. An agreement among two of the Defendants to "push" silver prices higher could injure other Defendants betting that silver prices would fall. If true, the fact that some of the allegedly anticompetitive conduct injured other Defendants may be a basis to argue that there was no overarching conspiracy. See CHF LIBOR ,
Section 4 of the Clayton Act provides:
[A]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue ... in any district court of the United States in the district in which the defendant resides or is found or has an agent, without respect to the amount in controversy, and shall recover threefold the damages by him sustained, and the cost of suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee.
FOREX III is an exception to this rule, but Judge Schofield's reasoning is consistent with the analysis applied by the other judges in this district. As discussed further below, the umbrella purchasers in FOREX III alleged a direct relationship between the price of the derivatives they purchased and the manipulated benchmark and that the defendants controlled over 90% of the relevant market. On those facts, Judge Schofield concluded that the umbrella plaintiffs suffered a direct injury for which damages could be proven and that the risk of disproportionate liability was limited. FOREX III ,
A similarly close causal connection would exist for any class member who placed a stop-loss order that was triggered by Defendants' manipulative tactics. No Plaintiff alleges, however, that he placed stop-loss orders, much less that those orders were triggered by Defendants' manipulative trading.
Likewise, the TAC includes no facts that even remotely suggest that Defendants' episodic, artificially-wide bid-ask spreads led to wider spreads in the market generally.
That is not to suggest that the damages issues associated with Plaintiffs' claims against the Fixing Banks will be child's play.
Take for example a hypothetical plaintiff whose stop-loss order was allegedly triggered by manipulative "pushing." If prices were moving downward already, it is possible, and maybe even likely, that the stop-loss order would have been triggered regardless. Whether such a plaintiff was injured may depend on whether there is any injury from triggering the stop-loss order prematurely, by hours or even minutes. Even that assumes the "pushing" was effective, which depends on market-liquidity and the size of the manipulative position. The Court would also be required to address this hypothetical plaintiff's counter-party-also a putative class member-who may have profited from purchasing at a reduced market price.
Including the Fixing Banks in the analysis does not significantly change the result. The Fixing Banks are not alleged to have controlled the markets for physical silver and silver-denominated assets. According to the TAC, Bank of Nova Scotia was the most active market maker in the physical silver market during the class period. TAC ¶ 74. Deutsche Bank was the fifteenth most active market maker in the physical silver market during the class period. TAC ¶ 43. HSBC was the sixth most active market maker. TAC ¶ 59. Because the TAC does not explain the distribution of the physical silver market, it is unclear whether these shares represent a large portion of the market, even aggregated with the Non-Fixing Banks. Moreover, Plaintiffs do not include any allegations with respect to control of the markets for silver-denominated assets such as futures and options.
The existence of parallel investigations is not necessarily relevant to whether plaintiffs' claims raise a risk of duplicative recovery. See LIBOR VI ,
Having determined that Plaintiffs are not efficient enforcers, the Court need not address whether they have suffered an antitrust injury. Nonetheless, as the Court discusses in more detail below with respect to CEA standing, the Second Circuit's recent decision in Harry v. Total Gas & Power North America suggests that Plaintiffs have not suffered an antitrust injury.
Judge Buchwald explained the inquiry in LIBOR I as asking whether the plaintiffs would be on notice of their injury, as opposed to the elements of their claim. See LIBOR I ,
The contemporaneous press accounts cited in the TAC are similar. They focus on potential manipulation of the Gold and Silver Fixings, not episodic manipulation in the silver-denominated derivatives markets. See TAC ¶ 337 & nn.185-86.
Defendants appear to appreciate this distinction-at least when it is in their interest. In pointing to silver-related lawsuits filed against JP Morgan in 2010 and 2011, Defendants distinguish the Court's previous discussion of these lawsuits in Silver I as evaluating them relative to Plaintiffs' Silver Fixing claims. That distinction is a meaningful one, but it cuts both ways.
In 2010 and 2011, several of the Plaintiffs sued JP Morgan Chase and HSBC, alleging that they conspired to suppress the price of silver and silver-denominated instruments traded on COMEX between 2008 and 2010 through an outsized net-short position. Joint Mem. at 30 & n.18; see In re Commodity Exch., Inc. Silver Futures & Options Trading Litig. , No. 11-MD-2213 (RPP), Dkt. 85 (Consolidated Class Action Complaint) ¶¶ 3-7, 68-69. Those claims were precipitated by a CFTC investigation of manipulation of the silver markets by JP Morgan Chase. See
Because Plaintiffs were not on inquiry notice, the Court need not address whether the statute of limitations was tolled pursuant to the fraudulent concealment doctrine or whether Plaintiffs' claims against UBS relate-back under Rule 15.
The locus of irrevocable liability is not disputed in this case. The parties agree that Plaintiffs incurred irrevocable liability in the United States.
The bracketed language is cross-referenced from subsection (a)(1)(B) of Section 22. The Court assumes for purposes of analysis that the statute permits a plaintiff to sue if he has been injured by defendant's manipulation, even if the plaintiff and defendant are not counterparties. See In re Amaranth Nat. Gas Commodities Litig. ,
Where a plaintiff alleges he traded on a domestic exchange, this distinction is unlikely to be of practical significance. A transaction on a "domestic exchange" is almost certain to be a "domestic transaction" within the meaning of Absolute Activist Value Master Fund Ltd. v. Ficeto ,
Plaintiffs do not contend that Parkcentral is distinguishable because it analyzed the Exchange Act and not the CEA. As discussed below, the same concerns apply whether the statute at issue is the Exchange Act or CEA, and there is nothing in the CEA that indicates Congress intended to include within its reach a broader class of predominantly foreign transactions than are covered under the Exchange Act.
The Fixing Banks did not argue that Plaintiffs' Silver Fixing-related claims were impermissibly extraterritorial. Because the Silver Fix has a direct and persistent correlation to the price of domestic silver futures, see TAC ¶ 137, and Plaintiffs contend that the Fixing Banks profited from their manipulation of the Silver Fixing by trading in the silver futures markets (among other markets), Plaintiffs' claims against the Fixing Banks involve bad acts with a significantly closer connection to domestic transactions.
The CFTC also brought a civil action against Stamford, Connecticut-based UBS trader, Andre Flotron. The CFTC's complaint alleges that Flotron manipulated the COMEX silver futures market on an "ongoing basis" between 2008 and 2013. Dkt. 344 Ex. 4. Although the CFTC's allegations are just that, the fact remains that they are supported by factual allegations that describe manipulation of domestic transactions by UBS traders, at times in the United States.
The Court need not determine whether Plaintiffs' claims sound in fraud because Plaintiffs' allegations fail under either Rule 8 or Rule 9(b).
The TAC includes a few charts that show a few parallel quotes on a few days by BNP Paribas and UBS. TAC ¶¶ 181-83. While the parallel quotes could be evidence of collusion, it is also possible that they are just the result of random chance.
That is not to say that Plaintiffs must necessarily allege "the specific transactions on which they were injured." See FOREX III ,
The shortcomings in the TAC also go to the second and third elements of a CEA manipulation claim: whether artificial prices existed and whether they were caused by the defendants. As the Court has previously noted, the elements of a CEA claim are closely related. See Silver I ,
For this reason the Court rejects Plaintiffs' contention that the adequacy of the TAC's allegations of actual damages was raised improperly by notice of supplemental authority. See Dkt. 356 at 1 n.1. Although it is true that the Non-Fixing Banks (inexplicably) did not argue in their opening brief that Plaintiffs had failed to allege actual damages, they raised the closely related issues of whether Plaintiffs had suffered an injury in fact under Article III and whether Plaintiffs alleged the elements of a claim for CEA manipulation. See Total Gas & Power N. Am., Inc. ,
As noted supra note 6, it is possible to cross-reference the chat messages to the list of days in Appendix D on which Plaintiffs allege they traded. A few of the chat messages occurred on the same day as trades by Plaintiffs. But the TAC does not connect the chat messages to any specific manipulative trades or to the same markets in which Plaintiffs traded, and the TAC does not explain whether the impact of market manipulation would have been persistent such that it could have had an impact on market participants other than the counterparties to the manipulated transactions. The fact that Plaintiffs may have traded in the same 24 hour period as traders at the Non-Fixing Banks discussed manipulation of the silver markets is simply too thin a basis for the Court to infer that it is plausible that the traders' employers caused the Plaintiffs actual damages.
The parties are encouraged to coordinate discovery with the parallel gold fixing case pending before the Court.
