In this putative class action, Plaintiffs collectively purchased shares in forty-four leveraged ProShares exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”) during the August 6, 2006 through June 23, 2009 class period. Third Amended Complaint (“TAC”) ¶¶ 1-2. They seek to hold Defendants-Appellees ProShares Trust and ProShares Trust II (collectively, “ProShares”) liable for material omissions and misrepresentations in the prospectuses for those ETFs pursuant to sections 11 and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933 (“'33 Act”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k & 77o. 1
A. Exchange-Traded Funds
In a series of press releases, ProShares indicated that their ETFs were for “investors interested in pursuing more sophisticated” trading strategies. See TAC ¶¶ 104-08 (internal quotation marks omitted). With ProShares ETFs, investors could hedge and manage risk without having “ ‘to go through the process of setting up margin accounts or covering margin calls — they [could] simply trade ProS-hares.’ ” TAC ¶ 104 (quoting June 21, 2006 Press Release). “ ‘And unlike a margin account,[an investor] can’t lose more than [ she] invest[s].’ ” TAC ¶ 106 (quoting Feb. 1, 2007 Press Release). This is because ETFs operate like indexed mutual funds but trade like stocks. TAC ¶ 82.
“ETFs frequently track an index, a sector of stocks, or a commodity or currency.” TAC ¶ 81. They are considered to be “indexed mutual funds that trade like stocks,” TAC ¶ 82, but they differ from mutual funds because they are generally sold to institutional investors in large blocks of shares, called Creation Units. These investors generally purchase Creation Units in exchange for “baskets” of securities that mirror the securities in the ETF portfolio. Investors who purchase Creation Units often split up the Units into individual shares and sell them on a secondary market to retail investors who otherwise might not be able to access ETFs because of the cost of Creation Units. These retail investors are then able to sell shares of ETFs on the secondary market, but they generally cannot redeem shares with the ETFs because the ETFs often redeem shares only when they are packaged in Creation Units. TAC ¶ 82.
ProShares offered three types of ETFs: (1) an Inverse ETF, (2) an Ultra Long ETF, and (3) an Ultra Short ETF. TAC ¶ 93(a)-(c). An Inverse ETF aimed to “replicate the inverse movement of the specified index over one day.” TAC ¶ 93(a). An Ultra Long ETF tried to “double the performance of the underlying index or benchmark on a daily basis.” TAC ¶ 93(b). And an Ultra Short ETF was designed to “double the inverse of the performance of the underlying index or benchmark on a daily basis.” TAC ¶ 93(c). Accordingly, if the “specific index, benchmark, sector or commodity on which an ETF [was] based[ ] increased] by
1%
on a given day, then [the Inverse ETF] would decrease by 1%; the [Ultra Long ETF] would increase by 2%; and [the Ultra-Short ETF] would
B. Registration Statements
ProShares I filed its registration statement on SEC Form N-1A. TAC ¶ 89. ProShares II filed its registration statement on Forms S-l and S-3. TAC ¶ 91. The registration statements consisted of, inter alia, a prospectus and a statement of additional information (“SAI”). Though ProShares I and ProShares II provided investors with several different offering documents relevant to this appeal, ProS-hares’ key disclosures relating to the ETFs at issue here were materially consistent across all of the documents.
All relevant ProShares registration statements disclosed that the ETFs pursued daily investment objectives and daily investment results. See Skinner Deck, App’x A, Item 1; App’x B, Item 1. ProS-hares I’s offering documents make Clear that these daily objectives were bets that it could return a stated multiple of an ETF’s underlying index each day by investing in different components of the underlying index through various financial instruments. For example, “principal investment strategies include[d investing in equity securities and/or financial instruments (including derivatives) that ProShare Advisors believe[d], in combination, [wjould have similar daily price return characteristics” of a stated multiple of the ETF’s underlying index. June 19, 2006 ProShares I Reg. Stmt, at 7.
To achieve the predicted, daily investment results, ProShare Advisors or a Sponsor would determine the type, quantity, and mix of investment positions that an ETF should hold. In addition, ProShares reserved the right to substitute a different index or security for an ETF’s underlying index and disclosed that it might overweight or under-weight certain components contained in the underlying index. See,.e.g., id. at 59-60; see also, e.g., Nov. 17, 2008 ProShares II Reg. Stmt, at 33-34. Furthermore, the ETFs never took a defensive position and would remain “fully invested at all times in securities and/or financial instruments that provide exposure to its [underlying [ijndex without regard to market conditions, trends, or direction.” ■ June 19, 2006 ProShares I Reg. Stmt, at' 60; see also Nov. 17, 2008 ProShares II Reg. Stmt, at 33. The ETFs’ views were expressly myopic: long-term objectives were blurred because they were focused only on meeting a benchmark tied to an underlying index one day at a time with a portfolio of different securities.
Moreover, ProShares warned that its decision to invest in a particular stock or financial instrument was not based on the “investment merit of a particular security, instrument, or company” and that it did not use “conventional stock research or analysis, or forecast stock movement or trends” in managing the assets of the funds. June 19, 2006 ProShares I Reg. Stmt, at 60;
see also
Nov. 17, 2008 ProS-hares II Reg. Stmt, at 34. Instead, ProS-hares ETFs pursued daily results through aggressive investment techniques. For ProShares I, each registration statement warned that the ETFs used financial instruments and “investment techniques ... that may be considered aggressive, including the use of futures contracts, options on futures contracts, securities and indices, forward contracts, swap agreements, and similar instruments.”
See
Skinner Deck, App’x A, Item 6. ProShares I also disclosed that use of these techniques and financial instruments exposed the ETFs to “potentially dramatic” losses.
Id.
Similarly, each relevant ProShares II prospectus warned that the aggressive financial instruments had “volatile [trading prices,
ProShares also warned that ETFs could not pursue their stated objectives for beyond-a-day periods because mathematical compounding and leveraging prevented the ETFs from reaching those -results. See id., App’x A, Item 2; App’x B, Item 2. In that regard, ProShares disclosed that “[o]ver time, the cumulative percentage increase or decrease in the net asset value of the [ETFs] may diverge significantly from the cumulative percentage increase or decrease in the multiple of the return of the Underlying Index” due to a compounding effect of daily gains and losses. 2 For ProShares II, the warning was even more direct: “[u]sing leverage ... should be considered, speculative and could result in the total loss of an investor’s investment.” See id., App’ x B, Item 6. In its brief, ProShares provided a hypothetical illustration of two investors who invested in an Ultra Long ETF at separate times to illustrate the effect an index’s volatility would have on those investments’ returns. We have provided that example in Appendix A.
C. Alleged Omissions and Misstatements
Plaintiffs principally complain that ProS-hares failed to disclose the magnitude and probability of loss for beyond-a-day investments in ProShares ETFs despite investors’ correct predictions regarding the overall movement of the indices underlying the ETFs. Furthermore, Plaintiffs allege that the registration statements contained various “contra-indicators” of successful long-term investments which the above omissions made materially- misleading. The district court rejected these arguments and dismissed the complaint with prejudice pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
In re ProShares Trust Sec. Litig.,
DISCUSSION
The standard of review is neither contested nor determinative. 3
A. Alleged Omissions
Liability attaches to a security’s issuer, its underwriter, and certain .other statutorily enumerated parties pursuant to section 11 of the '33 Act if “any part” of the operative registration statements “omitted to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading.” 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a);
see also In re Morgan Stanley Info. Fund Sec: Litig.,
In judging whether an alleged omission was material in light of the information already disclosed to investors, we consider whether there is “ ‘a
.substantial
likelihood that the disclosure of the [omitted material] would have been viewed by the
reasonable
investor as having
significantly
altered the total mix of information [already] made available.’”
DeMaria v. Andersen,
Here, the district court concisely summarized Plaintiffs’ allegations: the “thrust of the [P]laintiffs’ [s]ection 11 claim is that the registration statements omitted the risk'that the ETFs, when held for a period of greater than one day, could lose substantial value in a relatively brief period of time, particularly in periods of high volatility.” Id. at 654. The district court dismissed that claim in equally concise language: “the disclosures in the registration statements accurately conveyed the specific risk that the [P]laintiffs assert materialized: when investors held the ETFs for periods longer than one day the funds’ performance widely diverged from the performance of the underlying indices sometimes resulting in losses despite the overall direction of the underlying indices.” Id. at 656. We agree that the relevant prospectuses adequately warned, the reasonable investor of the allegedly omitted risks.
1. The Magnitude of Beyond-A-Day Losses
Plaintiffs • allege, that the registration statements omitted the risk that correctly predicting the long-term movement in an ETF’s underlying index could result in a substantial loss in their investment over that same period of time. Plaintiffs acknowledge that the prospectuses warned that the value of long-term ETF investments “may diverge significantly” from that ETF’s underlying index. Pis. Br. at 42. The complaint even recognizes that
“In evaluating a prospectus, we read it as a whole.”
DeMaria,
Here, the district court concluded that it was “not possible to read the registration statements ... without understanding that the ETFs were particularly risky and speculative and were intended to meet their stated goal only over the course of a single day.”
ProShares,
We are unpersuaded by this argument, and Plaintiffs’ efforts to find a meaningful distinction between “diverge significantly” and “actual loss” strains the plain meaning of the former phrase. Because one might expect the long-term value of an ETF to correlate with the Ibng-term value of its underlying index, ProShares warned that the actual results might diverge significantly from that prediction. “Significant” means large or important; in the context of the offering documents, “divergence” means the opposite from one’s expectation. ProShares’ “significant divergence” disclosures, fairly read, put investors on notice that an ETF’s value might move in a direction quite different from and even contrary to what an investor might otherwise expect.
Plaintiffs use a linguistic preference to read out of the prospectuses a scenario which the ProShares disclosures clearly contemplate. Time and again, we have said that “disclosure is not a rite of confession or exercise in common law pleading.”
Morgan Stanley,
Perhaps more importantly, the “diverge significantly”-disclosure takes on additional meaning within the context of the prospectus as a whole. The earliest relevant prospectuses make absolutely clear that the ETFs operated pursuant to daily investment objectives, that they utilized lever
Accordingly, we conclude that it is implausible that substituting “actual loss” for “diverge significantly” is a change substantially likely to be viewed by a reasonable investor as having significantly altered the import of the total mix of information ProShares made available.
See Basic,
2. The Probability of Long-Term Loss
Plaintiffs also complain that ProS-hares omitted that certain market circumstances would “necessarily [cause] quick and potentially large losses” despite an investor’s correct prediction of the overall, beyond-a-day direction of an ETF’s underlying index. Pis. Br. at 1 (emphasis added); see also id. at 24-25; TAC ¶¶ 12-26. The complaint further asserts that ProS-hares possessed an “undisclosed mathematical formula” which “very accurately predicted and described the relationship between the movements in each type of ETF’s price and the movements in the index underlying the ETF in any market scenario.” See TAC ¶ 13. Based on this formula, Plaintiffs allege that ProShares knew and omitted that certain market conditions could materialize that would put
investors “who held ProShares products for extended periods of more than a day” in “a ‘must lose’ position.” TAC ¶ 15. These market conditions existed, Plaintiffs maintain, when “the volatility (ie., the day-today changes in prices) of the underlying index significantly exceeded its performance over time.” TAC ¶ 16.
The district court concluded that the existence of the undisclosed mathematical formula was implausible on its face.
ProS-hares,
Here, Plaintiffs continue to pursue the argument and allege that ProShares “knew and could simulate from their mathematical formula exactly what was going to happen to investors for each market scenario, including the continuation of the actual, existing current daily volatility circumstances.” Pis. Br. at 11 (emphasis in original) (complaint citations omitted). According to Plaintiffs, ProShares knew “to the day when, if current actual volatility circumstances continued, their ETFs would become dysfunctional and an investor necessarily would lose from a correct judgment about the market.” Pis. Br. at 24-25 (complaint citations omitted).
We remain unpersuaded. Assuming,
arguendo,
that ProShares possessed an undisclosed mathematical formula that accurately predicted potential market conditions and the effect market volatility would have on ETF shares, Plaintiffs’ argument amounts to nothing more than an allegation that ProShares failed to disclose that the more an ETF’s underlying index changed value day-to-day for a particular investor, the more likely it became that
In tandem with this argument, Plaintiffs assert that ProShares failed to disclose the risks of “excess daily index volatility” which its mathematical formula predicted and that eventually materialized. 4 ProS-hares, however, consistently disclosed the effect market volatility had on ETFs. The first relevant ProShares I prospectus warned, under Principal Risk Considerations, that the “equity markets are volatile, and the value of securities, futures, options, contracts and other instruments correlated with the equity markets may fluctuate dramatically from day-to-day.” June 19, 2006 ProShares I Prospectus at 8, 64. “This volatility may cause the value of an investment in a[n ETF] to decrease.” Id. at 65. ProShares also warned that the net asset value of an ETF and its market price would be made more volatile than its underlying index on account of leveraged investment techniques that magnify exposure to the underlying index. Finally, ProShares highlighted and bullet-pointed the risk: “Volatility Risk — [Leveraged ETFs] seek to achieve a multiple of an index and therefore will experience greater volatility than the index underlying its benchmark and consequently ha[ve] the potential for greater losses.” Id. at 9. In addition, the earliest ProShares II prospectus warned that pricé “volatility, which is exacerbated by the use of leverage, may possibly cause the total loss of an investor’s investment.” Nov. 17, 2008 ProS-hares II Reg. Stmt, at 4.
While “it is not sufficient that overtones might have been picked up by the sensitive antennae of investment analysts,”
Gerstle v. Gamble-Skogmo, Inc.,
B. Misleading Statements
“Our conclusion that the ['33 Act] did not directly require defendants to disclose the allegedly omitted information does not mark the end of our inquiry.”
Morgan Stanley,
Plaintiffs complain that ProShares prospectuses included “numerous” misleading statements about the positive results of 1, 3, 5, and 10. year investments in ProShares
1. 1, 3, 5, and 10 Year Cost Projections
Plaintiffs contend that ProShares provided tables which illustrated the hypothetical costs of investing in ProShares I ETFs for 1, 3, 5, and 10 year periods, which misleadingly implied that ProShares ETFs were suitable 1, 3, 5, and 10 year investments.
See
TAC ¶ 102(a). The district court dismissed the argument for two reasoná. First, it reasoned that the “various projections ... fall far short of undercutting the emphasis on the daily nature of the ETFs.”
ProShares,
The contested tables -are presented as an example of the costs of investing in ProShares I ETFs assuming a $10,000 investment for time periods spanning 1, 3, 5, and 10 years — assuming a 5% return each year. Form N-1A requires those assumptions. This makes sense because the example is intended to help investors compare the cost of investing in ProShares with the cost of investing in other funds. It would be difficult to cross-compare the costs of investing in different funds were prospectuses to use different time periods, different assumptions about annual returns, and different assumptions about the amount invested. The ProShares I prospectuses also tie cautionary language to the tables, which Form N-1A does not expressly require: the table was for “illustration purposes only” and was, not “meant to suggest actual or expected fees and expenses or returns, all of which may vary.” See, e.g., Sept. 28, 2007 Reg. Stmt, at 20.
We conclude that the cost tables, placed in context, would not lead a reasonable investor into thinking that ProShares I ETFs were safe 1, 3, 5, and 10 year investments. ■ We also agree with the district court that the tables do not undercut the disclosures regarding the ETFs’ daily objectives with all the attendant warnings already described in this opinion. Accordingly, we are unpersuaded by Plaintiffs’ attempt to isolate and construe a single element of ProShares I’s prospectuses.
See DeMaria,
Beginning with the September 28, 2007 ProShares I prospectus, Plaintiffs assert that ProShares I included correlation-risk disclosures which included line-graph examples that misled them into thinking that an ETF’s divergence from its underlying index would be somewhere in the ballpark of 0.6%-2.2%. TAC ¶¶ 29-43, 102, 203-220.
The correlation-risk disclosure expressly warns that there is no guarantee that an ETF will achieve a high degree of correlation with its benchmark and lists factors that prevent perfect correlation. For Plaintiffs’ leveraged funds “there [was] a special form of correlation risk[:] for periods greater than one day, the use of leverage tends to cause the performance of an [ETF] to be either greater than or less than the index performance.” See Sept. 28, 2007 ProShares I Reg. Stmt, at 8.
To “illustrate” how leveraging increases correlation risk, the prospectus included three line graphs that “simulated [a] hypothetical one year performance of an index compared with the performance of a fund that perfectly achieved its investment objective of twice (200%) the daily index return.” Id. “Each of the graphs [assumed] a volatility rate of 15%, which [was] an approximate average of the five-year historical volatility rate” of certain indices. Id. But, “[o]ther indexes to which the [ETFs] are benchmarked ha[d] different historical volatility rates; certain of the [ETFs] historical volatility rates [were] substantially in excess of 15%.” Id.
The line graphs show that where a leveraged ETF meets its daily objectives each day, with the above assumptions, its value could diverge from the index’s performance by 2.2% in a flat market, 0.7% in an upward-trending market, and 0.6% in a downward-trending market. After the presentation of the graphs, the prospectus referred potential investors to the SAI “for a further discussion of how both index volatility and index performance can impact” ETF performance. The SAI includes a “wedge graph” that represents the effect market volatility would have on a leveraged ETFs’ annual correlation with index volatility, ranging from 0%-40% at 5% intervals. The wedge graphs clearly demonstrate that at high levels of volatility an ETF’s value could move in the opposite direction from its underlying benchmark. We have included an example wedge graph in Appendix B.
Plaintiffs complain that the line graphs misled them into believing that annual ETF returns ran the risk of only a slight disconnection (.6% — 2.2%) from an index’s performance. We have already concluded that the ProShares prospectuses, absent the wedge" graphs, clearly described the daily mvéstment objectives, the nature of ETFs, and, in plain English, warned that leveraging, volatility, and compounding could cause an ETF’s performance to significantly diverge from its underlying index. We have also already concluded that the relevant prospectuses disclosed that aggressive investment techniques exposed the ETFs to dramatic losses and an imperfect correlation with its index.
The addition of the line graphs does not alter those conclusions, and we agree with the district court that this one-year representation does not undercut the representations throughout the rest of the prospectuses. This is especially true because the disclosure introducing the line graphs clearly explained that the line graphs assumed 15% volatility and that many of the ETF indices have historically experienced volatility substantially in excess of 15%. It
3. SAIs and Wedge Graphs
Plaintiffs argue that the district court impermissibly relied upon the wedge graphs to dilute their cost-table and line-graphs arguments and to bolster ProS-hares’ disclosures.
See
Pis. Br. at 46-47. That argument is misplaced, however, because the district court concluded, as we do here, that it was “not possible to read the registration statements — even those issued before the wedge graphs were added in September 2007 — without understanding that the ETFs were particularly risky and speculative and were intended to meet their stated goal only over the course of a single day.”
ProShares,
Plaintiffs also contend that the wedge graphs constitute a unique principal-risk disclosure that ProShares impermissibly buried in the SAL Plaintiffs’ argument, however, merely repackages what they argued earlier: ProShares failed to disclose the effect of excess daily volatility in the principal-risk portion of the prospectuses. Because we concluded that ProShares’ volatility disclosures and prospectuses sufficiently warned of the effects excess market volatility would have on an ETF, spelling out the details of those disclosures in the SAI does not violate the securities laws. As we have recognized: “to avoid prospectus disclosures that are too long and complex, Form [N-1A] calls for a streamlined, simplified prospectus” and an SAI which “offer[s] issuers the opportunity to provide more detailed discussions of matters required to be in the prospectus.”
Morgan Stanley,
Finally, Plaintiffs allege that the wedge graphs themselves were materially misleading for not contemplating the effects of volatility above 40% and the effect volatility would have on short-term investments.
7
But, as the district court concluded, no reasonable investor could read the prospectuses without understanding beyond-a-day risk exposure or that risks increased as volatility increased above 40%. In fact, the complaint itself acknowledges that ProShares could not meet its objectives beyond a day, TAC ¶ 100, and all of the ProShares prospectuses made clear that leveraging, compounding, volatility, and aggressive investment techniques sub
C. Corrective Disclosures
Plaintiffs allege that ProShares made new disclosures beginning on the last day of the class period, thereby tacitly conceding that the class-period disclosures failed to reveal critical facts. These new disclosures include, inter alia, (1) acknowledging that volatility could cause an ETF to “move in [the] opposite direction as the index,” TAC ¶ 181 (quoting July 31, 2009 Am. No. 16 of Reg. Stmt, at 410); (2) stating that an “investor’s views.on the future direction and volatility of the markets can be useful tools for investors,” TAC ¶ 185-186 (quoting July 31, 2009 Amendment No. 16 of Reg. Stmt, at 410); and (3) advising that investors should be willing to “monitor and/or periodically re-balance their portfolios,” id.
We have previously noted that where the “quality of [a] disclosure could have been improved!,] the advisability of revision does not render what was done deceptive or misleading.”
Greenapple,
D. Section 15
Plaintiffs also brought claims under section 15 of the '33 Act against the individual defendants. “To establish [section] 15 liability, a plaintiff must [first] show a ‘primary violation’ of [section] 11.... ”
Hutchison v. Deutsche Bank Secs. Inc.,
CONCLUSION
The order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (John G. Koeltl, Judge.), entered on September 12, 2012, dismissing Plaintiffs-Appellants’ third amended complaint, with prejudice, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), is hereby AFFIRMED.
APPENDIX A
Hypothetical ETF Investments Seeking to Double the Daily Return of its Underlying Index
Notes
. Defendant-Appellee ProShares Trust ("ProShares I”) registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC”) as an open-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940. TAC ¶ 62(a). Defendant-Appellee ProShares Trust II ("ProShares II,” collectively with ProShares I “ProShares”) registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission as a commodity pool. TAC ¶ 62(b). ProShares I offered thirty-eight of the ETFs underlying this action; ProShares II offered six. TAC ¶ 62(a), (b). Plaintiffs have not identified any meaningful distinction between ProShares I’s and ProShares II’s securities or registration statements such that one of the fund defendants would be subject to liability while the other would not.
. Beginning with its September 2007 registration statement, this information was moved to the SAL
. “We review
de novo
the dismissal of a complaint under [Federal] Rule [of Civil Procedure] 12(b)(6), accepting all factual allegations as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.”
Litwin v. Blackstone Grp., L.P.,
. Plaintiffs make a distinction between "inherent facts” and "materialization facts.” For example, Plaintiffs argue that ETFs were subject to an inherent risk of excess market volatility which ProShares omitted and that once the markets became excessively volatile those inherent risks became materialized risks. For the purpose of our analysis, this distinction is without a difference.
. The district court also commented that the tables did not create liability because, the "plaintiffs point[ed] to no case that holds that information that the SEC requires must be specifically identified, qualified, or tempered.”
ProShares,
. ProShares asserts that the law of this Circuit permits reliance on information contained in the SAI in evaluating section 11 claims.
See
ProShares' Br. at 53 (citing
Hunt v. Alliance N. Am. Gov't Income Trust, Inc.,
. We note a bit of an internal inconsistency in Plaintiffs’ theories of liability: Plaintiffs argue that the district court impermissibly relied upon the wedge graphs ''buried” in the SAI in analyzing the complaint while simultaneously maintaining that this same buried information misled them about ETF risks. Plaintiffs’ complaint actually presents the point heading “Additional Misleading Statements in the SAI.” TAC ¶¶ 44-47. It’s curious that Plaintiffs could not find this information to get a more in-depth understanding of the funds but have no trouble using that same information to shoulder ProShares with liability.
. Plaintiffs argue that
In re Direxion Shares ETF Trust
counsels against reliance on the "daily objective” disclosures.
