MEMORANDUM OPINION
At issue is Lead Plaintiffs Iowa Public
(1) As against Defendant Ernst & Young, all persons who purchased or otherwise acquired Mills common and preferred stock, during the period from March 28, 2002 through August 10, 2006, and who were damaged thereby;
(2) As against the KanAm Defendants3 , all persons who purchased or otherwise acquired Mills common and preferred stock, during the period from February 27, 2001 through August 10, 2006, and who were damaged thereby.
After the Court issued the class certification order, Defendant Ernst & Young reached settlement with Plaintiffs. Accordingly, this memorandum opinion will address class certification only with respect to the KanAm Defendants — the only remaining defendants in this ease.
I. Background.
This action arises from allegations of accounting fraud by the Mills Corporation and related entities, Mills’ senior officers and directors, the KanAm defendants, and Mills’ outside auditor Ernst & Young. Mills Corporation was a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) that owned and developed “shopper-tainment” centers throughout the United States and Europe. Plaintiffs allege that Mills issued false financial statements for nearly six years. According to the complaint, Mills’ public statements and SEC filings from 2000 to 2006 contained material misrepresentations and omissions. Ultimately, twenty-three consecutive quarters of Mills’ financial statements — from 2000 to 2005 — had to be restated. These misstatements were significant — Mills overstated shareholders’ equity by approximately $350 million, or 35%, and partners’ capital by approximately $430 million, or 40%. Mills’ net income for 2003, 2004, and 2005 was overstated by $210 million, or 158%. In each of these years, Mills met or exceeded analysts’ earnings expectations. Fueled by false fi-nancials, Mills’ stock price rose dramatically. From 2001 to the end of 2004, Mills common stock rose from $26 per share to more than $63 per share. Mills raised more than $1.4 billion in capital from public and private stock offerings between 2001 and 2006, and, through bonuses and sales of shares, Mills’ officers and directors realized more than $90 million.
In late 2005, Mills began a series of public disclosures revealing that its financial statements needed to be restated. According to plaintiffs, the first partial disclosure occurred on November 1, 2005, followed by further partial disclosures on January 9, 2006, Feb
The Second Amended Consolidated Complaint asserts only two claims against the KanAm entities: one for control person liability under Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act, and another for a violation of Section 15 of the Securities Act. The complaint alleges that the KanAm Defendants controlled Mills, that KanAm owned 35% of the company after the IPO, and that KanAm exerted control through Defendants von Boetticher, von Per-fall, and Braithwaite, who represented Ka-nAm on the Mills Board. Plaintiffs further allege that KanAm — as Mills’ primary joint venture partner — participated in the preparation and dissemination of each of the annual statements containing false financials issued by Mills from 2000 to 2004, as well as the registration statements issued from 2000 to 2005.
II. Standard of Review.
The party moving for class certification bears the burden of demonstrating that its proposed class meets the requirements of Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. In re BeaHngPoint, Inc. Sec. Litig.,
District courts must conduct a “rigorous analysis” of the Rule 23 requirements of numerosity, typicality, commonality, and adequacy of representation. General Telephone Co. v. Falcon,
The Court finds these authorities persuasive, and will apply the preponderance standard in this Rule 23 inquiry.
III. Discussion.
A. Plaintiffs Have Met Their Burden as to the Rule 23(a) Factors.
1. Numerosity.
The numerosity requirement is seldom disputed in securities fraud cases given the
2. Commonality and Typicality.
The Rule 23(a) requirements of commonality and typicality tend to merge analytically. In general, commonality requires that there be “questions of law or fact common to the class,” and typicality requires that “the claims or defenses of representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class.” BearingPoint,
As mentioned above, the remaining claims in this action assert control person liability against the KanAm Defendants under Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act and Section 15 of the Securities Act. Section 20(a) and Section 15 are “parallel provisions,” which are “interpreted in the same manner.” In re Global Crossing, Ltd. Sec. Litig.,
In general, “[mjembers of a proposed class in a securities ease are especially likely to share common claims and defenses.” Bear-ingPoint,
Defendants challenge the end date of the class period, arguing that the class period should end on February 24, 2006, because Mills’ disclosures on February 23, 2006, rendered continued reliance on the stock price unreasonable. Plaintiffs, of course, are entitled to the “fraud on the market” presumption of reliance. Under this theory, the court presumes that “an investor who buys or sells stock at the price set by the market does so in reliance on the integrity of the market price.” Gariety,
Here, Plaintiffs have met their burden of showing that Mills stock traded in an efficient market throughout the class period ending on August 10, 2006. On February 23, 2006, Mills disclosed that the financial restatement would involve more accounting issues and have substantially greater impact than previously expected. But this press release was couched in terms of probability, e.g., “additional adjustments may be identified,” which “could be material, either individually or in the aggregate.” Mills informed the market that it was withdrawing its 2005 earnings and FFO guidance and that those numbers would be significantly below market expectations, but did not quantify the expected differences. These disclosures did not correct Mills’ previous announcements that the restatement would only reduce net income from 2000 to by $25 million, nor did Mills provide hard numbers on the size of the restatement.
To be sure, after February 23, 2006, some industry analysts — including ones at Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch, and Key Banc — stopped trying to value Mills. But other analysts, including ones at Stifel Nico-laus, BofA, and Morgan Stanley, continued to value Mills throughout the class period ending August 10, 2006. Contrary to Defendants’ assertion, then, there was no “consensus” among analysts that attempts to value Mills should be abandoned. In fact, several prominent analysts at Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, and Stifel Nicholas continued to recommend a “hold” on the stock. Other analysts even upgraded Mills stock to a “buy” in the months following February 2006.
Moreover, the price movement of Mills stock supports an inference that the market continued to rely on Mills’ financial statements through August 10, 2006. After the February 23, disclosures, Mills common stock fell only $1.48, or 3.66%, from $41.13/ share to $39.65/share, and remained in the $39-$40 range in the weeks following the announcement. By contrast, after the August 10, 2006 disclosures, Mills common stock fell from $21.63 (close of August 10) to $15.91 (close of August 11), a 26.5% drop, and prices of all Mills preferred stock declined between 7.3% and 9.8%. In BearingPoint the market reacted “quite modestly” to the company’s early disclosures of weakness in internal controls and financial restatements, from which the Court inferred that the market “continued to rely” on the erroneous financial statements.
Moreover, at the class certification stage courts generally do not close a class period on the basis of one disclosure when a subsequent disclosure caused a significant drop in stock price. The reason is that such cases present factual issues as to whether early disclosures were fully or partially curative. See In re Scientific-Atlanta,
Defendants also argue that the market for shares of Mills preferred stock was inefficient because these shares traded at a lower volume. The Court must reject this argument. Preferred shares generally trade at lower volumes because the investors tend to buy preferred stock for longer term investment due to the higher dividends. Further, in 2006 the trading volumes for Mills preferred shares increased between 2-3.5%, well above the 1% threshold in Cammer. A finding of market efficiency for the preferred shares is further supported by the considerable price drop in Mills preferred stock on August 11, 2006.
Defendants also argue that preferred shareholders who suffered no actual injury are subject to unique defenses and therefore are unable to represent the class.
The Fourth Circuit has not considered this issue. The Fifth Circuit holds that “loss causation must be established at the class
Other district courts have disagreed because “Moss causation ... is an issue related to the merits rather than to the Rule 23 inquiry into whether common issues will predominate.” In re Micron Technologies Inc. Sec. Litig.,
In this Court’s opinion, the latter cases have the stronger reasoning. Requiring a plaintiff to “prove” loss causation at class certification risks converting class certification into a hearing on the merits. See LDK Solar,
In sum, the Court holds that Plaintiffs have satisfied the commonality and typicality requirements of Rule 23(a).
3. Adequacy.
To certify a class, Rule 23(a) requires a showing that the “representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a). To meet this requirement counsel must possess the qualifications and ability to litigate the case, and be free of interests hostile to those of the class. Lutz,
B. Plaintiffs Have Met Their Burden as to the Rule 23(b)(3) Factors.
As a final step, Rule 23(b)(3) requires a showing that common issues predominate over questions affecting individual members, and that a class action “is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy.” Bearing-Point,
IV. Conclusion.
The Court affirms its certification of a class as against the KanAm Defendants consisting of all persons who purchased or otherwise acquired Mills common and preferred stock during the period from February 27, 2001 through August 10, 2006, and who were damaged thereby. There being no objection raised by the parties, the Certification Order is hereby modified to exclude from the class defendants (and their officers, directors, partners, and agents) and any persons who purchased and sold all of their Mills securities before close of the market on October 31, 2005.
Notes
. IPERS is a pension fund with tens of billions of dollars in assets for the benefit of public employees in Iowa’s schools, state agencies, counties, cities, and other public entities. During the class period, IPERS purchased approximately 172,927 shares of Mills stock.
. MPERS is a government defined-benefit plan for the benefit of public employees in Mississippi. It has tens of billions of dollars in assets, and during the class period purchased approximately 109,506 shares of Mills stock.
. The "KanAm Defendants” refers to the group of nine KanAm corporate entities, which were substituted into the case on February 9, 2009: KanAm International, KanAm Grand Kapitalan-lagegescellschaft MBH, KanAm Services, Inc., KanAm Management, LLC, KanAm LLC, KanAm Providers, Inc., KanAm Realty, Inc., KanAm US, Inc., and KanAm America, Inc. The KanAm defendants filed an answer to the Second Amended Complaint on March 13, 2009, after the Court denied their motion to dismiss on March 3, 2009. They are the only defendants remaining in this case.
. The March 31, 2009 Order also certified the Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System and the Public Employees’ Retirement System of Mississippi as Lead Plaintiffs in this action, appointed Plaintiffs C. Bickley Foster, Frederic Elliott, and Vernon E. Rudolph as representative plaintiffs for the Class, and — pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(g) — appointed Barrack, Rodos & Bacine, and Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP as Class Counsel.
. For example, in In re LDK Solar Sec. Litig., the court declined to close the class period after a disclosure caused the stock price to drop by 24%.
. If true, this would preclude two of the Representative Plaintiffs (Bickley Foster and Fredric Elliott), both of whom allegedly recovered at least their initial purchase price for all their Mills preferred shares. Plaintiffs assert that these class representatives paid an inflated purchase price higher than the closing price on August 11, 2006 (as well as higher than the 90-day average price thereafter). Plaintiffs concede that Rudolph and Foster continued to hold their Series E preferred stock after the last corrective disclosure on August 10, 2006, and therefore under Section 21D(e) of the PSLRA their damages were capped at the difference between their purchase price and the 90-day average price. Under this measure, Rudolph suffered damages of $4.75/ share ($25.80 — $21.05) on his Series E stock and Foster suffered damages of $3.95 ($25.00— $21.05) on his Series E stock.
Mills Series G stock closed at $19.00/share on August 11, 2006, and the 90-day average price thereafter was $ 19.97/share. Under a similar calculation, Elliott and Foster suffered a loss of $5.03/share on their purchases of Series G stock.
. To ultimately recover, a plaintiff must prove a loss and that the alleged misrepresentation was a "substantial cause” of the loss. See Miller v. Asensio & Co., Inc.,
. In LDK Solar, the Northern District of California distinguished Oscar as follows:
The breadth of the Oscar holding is striking. It essentially injects what is fundamentally a merits inquiry into the class certification inquiry through the back door: it requires the plaintiff to prove loss causation in order to avail itself of the benefit of the fraud-on-the-market presumption (without which certification is virtually impossible). This order declines to adopt Oscar’s loss-causation requirement for class-certification. Oscar placed the Fifth Circuit in a minority-indeed, apparently solitary-stance among the circuits; it is in no small amount of tension with the Supreme Court's decision in Basic v. Levinson.
255 F.R.D. at 531-32.
