OPINION & ORDER
Plaintiff Landman Partners Inc. (“Plaintiff’) brings this putative securities class action on behalf of all purchasers of common “units” (ie. limited partnership interests) in The Blackstone Group L.P. (“Blackstone” or the “Company”), pursuant or traceable to Blackstone’s June 25, 2007 initial public offering (the “IPO” or the “Offering”). Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint (“CAC”) ¶¶ 2, 20. Plaintiff alleges that in connection with the IPO, Blackstone and certain of its executives (collectively, “Defendants”) caused the Registration Statement and Prospectus issued in connection with the IPO (collectively, the “Offering Documents”) to contain materially false and/or misleading statements in violation of Sections 11 and 12(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 (the “Act"), 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k and 111. Defendants move to dismiss the CAC for failure to state a claim pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). For the reasons that follow, Defendants’ motion is GRANTED.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. Blackstone’s Business
Blackstone is a self-described “leading global alternative asset manager and pro *536 vider of financial advisory services”; at root, the Company’s business is to profitably invest other peoples’ money. CAC ¶ 2. As of May 1, 2007, Blackstone had $88.4 billion “under management” in a variety of hedge funds, corporate private equity funds, funds of hedge funds, mezzanine funds, closed-end mutual funds. 1 CAC ¶ 27; Decl. of Jonathon K. Young-wood, dated December 4, 2008 (“Young-wood Decl.”), Ex. A (“Reg.Stmt.”) at 2. These various funds are generally structured as limited partnerships that are capitalized by limited-partner investors (such as institutional investors and pension funds) and managed by Blackstone, which, through subsidiary holding partnerships, serves as general partner.
Blackstone thus does not own directly either the various portfolio companies in which its corporate private equity funds invest or the real estate assets owned by its real estate funds. 2 Rather, Blackstone derives revenue from two principal sources: (1) it earns a “management fee” equal to 1.5% of the value of the assets under management; and (2) it earns a “performance fee” or “carried interest” equal to of 20% of the profits generated on the capital it invests for limited partners. CAC ¶ 33. Blackstone is subject, however, to having its performance fees “clawed-back.” That is, the Company is obligated to return performance fees to investors if investments perform poorly. CAC ¶ 33. In contrast to those who invest in Blackstone’s various funds, investors in Blaekstone itself acquire a stake in Blackstone’s investment management business, hoping that strong performance by the various investment funds will generate performance fees for the Company.
B. The IPO
On March 22, 2007, Blackstone filed with the SEC a Form S-l Registration Statement (“Registration Statement”) for the IPO, and thereafter filed certain amendments thereto. CAC ¶ 34. On June 21, 2007, the Prospectus became effective and 153 million of Blackstone’s common units were sold to the public at $31 per unit, thereby raising more than $4.5 billion, much of which was used to purchase the ownership interests from Blackstone’s then-existing owners (ie. senior management including the individual named defendants). CAC ¶ 36; Registration Statement at 20-21. As of the date the initial complaint was filed in this action, on April 15, 2008, Blackstone common units traded between $17.00 and $17.50 per unit. Class Action Complaint ¶ 33. By the time the Consolidated Amended Complaint (“CAC”) was filed on October 27, 2008, the units traded for approximately $7.75 per unit. CAC ¶ 8.
C. Alleged Misrepresentations and Omissions
The gravamen of Plaintiffs CAC is that the Registration Statement “misrepresen *537 ted and failed to disclose that certain of the Company’s portfolio companies were not performing well and were of declining value,” such that there was a “real, palpable and almost certain risk that the Company would be subject to a claw-back of performance fees and reduced performance fees.” CAC ¶¶ 7, 40. More specifically, the CAC alleges that had the Registration Statement not been negligently prepared, it would have disclosed adverse facts about the following three Blackstone investments.
1. FGIC
FGIC is in the business of insuring bonds issued by other entities; it is a monoline financial guarantor. CAC ¶ 41. According to the CAC, Blackstone “owns” a 23% equity stake in FGIC. 3 According to the CAC, between 2003 and 2007 FGIC moved away from its traditional and generally more conservative business of insuring municipal bonds towards the much riskier business of insuring collateralized debt obligations (“CDOs”), including CDO’s backed by subprime mortgages and “synthetic” CDOs backed by credit default swaps, a form of insurance policy designed to protect the holder of a CDO against default. CAC ¶¶ 43-55. According to the CAC, as a consequence of its investment in FGIC, Blackstone had substantial exposure to the subprime mortgage market, which, as of the time of the IPO in March 2007, was clearly and demonstrably on the verge of collapse. CACIffl 62-75. Plaintiff alleges that as a major investor in FGIC, Blackstone had a duty to disclose in the Offering Documents such “then-known trends, events, or uncertainties associated with FGIC” because they were “reasonably likely to cause the [sic] Blackstone’s financial information not to be indicative of future operating results.” CAC ¶ 77. The Registration Statement, however, did not mention Blackstone’s investment in FGIC, and in March 2008, Blackstone wrote down that investment by $122 million. CAC ¶ 40.
2. Freescale Semiconductor
The Registration Statement did disclose to prospective purchasers of Blackstone units that one of the Company’s corporate private equity funds had a substantial investment in Freescale, a designer and manufacturer of semiconductors. 4 However, Plaintiff alleges that the Registration Statement failed to mention that “[s]hortly before the IPO, Freescale lost an exclusive agreement to manufacture wireless 3G chipsets for its single largest customer, Motorola” after design defects and quality issues caused delays in the launch of a new cell phone. CAC ¶ 77-80. The CAC alleges that the loss of Freescale’s exclusive arrangement with Motorola was disclosed by, inter alia, Motorola’s CEO who on a March 21, 2007 conference call with securities analysts announced that it was terminating its relationship with Freescale as the exclusive supplier of its 3G chipset. CAC ¶ 83. Plaintiff alleges that the loss of the contract had a “material adverse affect *538 on Freescale’s business and, concomitantly, ... [on the] corporate private equity fund controlled by Blaekstone.” CAC ¶ 85.
3. Real Estate Investments
Finally, the CAC alleges “that at the time of the IPO Blaekstone had significant investments in real estate,” and at that time “the market for real estate ... [was] starting to deteriorate” and “was being adversely affected by a series of negative developments in the credit market.” CAC ¶ 87. Consequently, according to the allegations in the CAC, “by the time of the IPO, it was foreseeable that the Company would have performance fees clawed-back in connection with real estate investments and would not generate additional performance fees on those investments.” CAC ¶ 87. The CAC further alleges that certain statements in the Registration Statement about “high levels of growth” in the real estate industry and “strong investor demand for real estate assets” were materially inaccurate because at the time of the IPO, “the U.S. real estate market had passed its zenith and was in the midst of a prolonged decline.” CAC ¶ 88.
Plaintiff alleges that Blaekstone failed to disclose material information about “currently known trends, events and uncertainties” pertaining to the foregoing three investments, which Plaintiff alleges were “reasonably likely to have material effects” on Blackstone’s performance. CAC ¶ SO-BO (quoting Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, SEC Release No. 6835, May 18, 1989 (the “1989 Interpretative Release”)). Plaintiff also alleges that the financial statements in the Registration Statement were materially inaccurate and violated GAAP, see CAC ¶¶ 94-118, and that the Registration Statement omitted required information about facts and circumstances that made investment in Blaekstone units risky. CAC ¶¶ 119-125.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
The Supreme Court in
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Applicable Law
Plaintiffs’ primary claims arise under Sections 11 and 12(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, which are “ ‘designed to ensure compliance with the disclosure provisions of the Securities Act by imposing a stringent standard of liability on the parties who play a direct role in a registered [securities] offering.’ ”
6
Ladmen Partners v. Globalstar,
07 Civ. 976(LAP),
In this case, Plaintiff proceeds primarily under a theory of omission:
7
Plaintiff alleges that omissions of material fact (1) made affirmative statements in the Registration Statement false or misleading; and (2) violated Item 303 of SEC Regulation S-K (“Item 303”), which requires an issuer such as Blackstone to “[d]escribe any known trends or uncertainties that have or that [it] reasonably expects will have a material favorable or unfavorable impact on new sales or revenues or income from continuing operations.” 17 C.F.R. 229.303(a)(3)(ii). Courts have held that Section 11 imposes liability on a registrant who omits to state fact required to be stated under Item 303.
In re IPO,
“The materiality of a misstatement depends on whether ‘there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would consider it important in deciding how to act.’ ”
ECA, Local 134 IBEW Joint Pension Trust of Chicago v. JP Morgan Chase Co.,
To determine whether an allegedly misleading statement is material, a court must engage “in a fact-specific inquiry” — there is no bright line rule.
JP Morgan Chase,
In
JP Morgan Chase,
the Second Circuit reaffirmed that the inquiry entails both quantitative and qualitative inquiries, although there the Circuit considered the two inquiries
sequentially. JP Morgan Chase,
B. Alleged Omissions Concerning the Portfolio Companies
Applying the foregoing analysis to the alleged misstatements and omissions concerning the portfolio companies FGIC and Freescale, it is apparent that the allegations satisfy neither the quantitative nor qualitative prongs of the test. It is important not to interpret my conclusion here as some sort of approval of the conduct by those responsible for the IPO, nor any indication as to how much, if any, knowledge (as alleged in the CAC) those who drafted the Offering Documents possessed. First, Blackstone’s $331 million investment in FGIC represented a mere 0.4% of the Blackstone’s assets under management at the time of the IPO, on par with the 0.3% of JP Morgan Chase’s assets that the Circuit found “does not even come close” to the 5% threshold that serves as an appropriate “starting place.”
JP Morgan Chase,
Second, the $3.1 billion investment in Freescale represented a 3.6% of the total $88.4 billion the Company had under management at the time of the IPO, which falls below the 5% benchmark that the Second Circuit has stated is a good “starting point” for the quantitative inquiry into ma
*542
teriality.
JP Morgan Chase,
The immateriality of the alleged omissions concerning FGIC and Freescale derives not only from the relative size of Blackstone’s investments in these companies, but also the
structure
of the Blackstone enterprise. The performance of the individual companies only affects Blackstone’s revenues after investment gains or losses are aggregated at the fund level.
See
Reg. Stmt, at 1 (“[W]e receive a preferred allocation of income (a ‘carried interest’) or an incentive fee from an investment fund in the event that specified investment returns are achieved by the funds.”) At the fund level, the poor performance of one investment may be offset by the strong performance of another: the fact that Blackstone’s corporate private equity fund wrote down its investment in FGIC by $122 million but still saw revenues of $821 million proves this point. Purchasers of units in Blackstone at the IPO (the putative class here get the benefit of performance fees or the “carried interest” when an
entire fund
makes a profit and are potentially subject to the adverse consequences of claw-backs if the
entire fund
loses money). In this respect, there is no way to make a principled distinction between the negative information that Plaintiff claims was wrongfully omitted from the Registration Statement and information — whether positive or negative — about every other portfolio company, let alone every investment made by Blackstone’s many subsidiary funds. Including all such information would have obfuscated truly material information in a flood of unnecessary detail, a result that the securities laws forbid.
I. Meyer Pincus & Assocs. v. Oppenheimer & Co.,
This is not to the say that the size or structure of a company immunizes it from liability under the Securities Act. To the contrary, in this Court’s view, preventing such a result is a critical purpose of the qualitative considerations that are “intended to allow for a finding of materiality if the quantitative size of the misstatement is small, but the effect of the misstatement is large.”
JP Morgan Chase,
Second, although the investment Freescale by Blackstone’s corporate private equity group was substantial and the write down of its investment FGIC large as an absolute value, these entities were but two of 43 portfolio companies invested in by one of four business segments. For this reason, and as discussed above, the alleged omissions about FGIC and Freescale did not relate to a “significant aspect of [Blackstone’s] operations” as a whole.
JP Morgan Chase,
Furthermore, the other “considerations that may well render material a qualitatively small misstatement” identified in SAB No. 99 are not implicated here. The CAC does not allege that the misstatements or omissions about the portfolio companies “hide[] a failure to meet analysts’ consensus expectations for the enterprise,” “change[d] a loss into income or vice versa,” or affected Blackstone’s “compliance with loan covenants or other contractual requirements.” SAB No. 99, 64 Fed.Reg. 45150, 45152. Although Black *544 stone executives were some of the chief beneficiaries of the IPO so that alleged omissions in the Offering Documents doubtless had “the effect of increasing management’s compensation,” the alleged omissions pertaining to the portfolio companies are so quantitatively small that this qualitative concern identified in SAB No. 99 is not enough to, alone, make the omissions material. Accordingly, I conclude the alleged misstatements and omissions concerning FGIC and Freescale are immaterial as a matter of law.
C. Alleged Misstatements and Omissions Concerning Real Estate Investments
The core of the Plaintiffs allegations with respect to the real estate investments is the following single paragraph of the CAC:
At the time of the IPO, Blackstone had significant investments in real estate. As noted herein, by the time of the IPO, the market for real estate in several significant markets were [sic] starting to deteriorate. Further, at the time of the time of the IPO the real estate market was being adversely affected by a series of negative developments in the credit markets. Accordingly, by the time of the IPO, it was foreseeable that the Company would have performance fees clawed-back in connection with those real estate investments and would not generate additional performance fees on those investments.
CAC ¶ 87. On the basis of this factual allegation, Plaintiff contends that Blackstone’s failure to specifically address the deteriorating real estate market constituted a material omission. The CAC also alleges that the Registration Statement affirmatively misrepresented that the “[t]he real estate industry is ... experiencing historically high levels of growth and liquidity,” when in fact the “real estate market had passed its zenith and was in the midst of a prolonged decline.” CAC ¶¶ 87-8. Finally, Plaintiff alleges that the Registration Statement’s risk disclosures pertaining to real estate investments were materially inaccurate because the disclosed risks had already materialized. CAC ¶ 125.
These allegations fall short for several reasons. First, the CAC does not identify a single real estate investment or allege a single fact capable of linking the problems in the subprime residential mortgage market in late 2006 and early 2007 and the roughly contemporaneous decline in home prices (which are well-documented by the CAC) to Blackstone’s real estate investments, 85% of which were in commercial and hotel properties. Reg. Stmt, at 50. Plaintiff alleges that Blackstone invested in real estate and the real estate market was starting to deteriorate. CAC ¶ 87. But “without further factual enhancement” as to
how
the troubles in the residential mortgage and housing markets could possibly (let alone plausibly) have a foreseeable material affect on Blackstone’s real estate investments, such allegations “stop[ ] short of the line between possibility and plausibility.”
Twombly,
Second, to the extent that Plaintiff alleges Blackstone should have disclosed the conditions of the market generally, such omissions are not actionable. “Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) do not require the disclosure of publicly available information.”
In re Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. Research Reports Securities Litigation,
Third and finally, Plaintiffs allegations fall short to the extent they allege that Blackstone knew things that others did not and that Item 303’s requirement of disclosure of “known trends” renders the alleged omissions material.
13
The CAC contains no allegations that Blackstone knew that the conditions in the real estate and credit markets were reasonably likely to have a material effect on
its
portfolio of real estate investments.
14
It may well be that as
*546
sophisticated real estate investors Blackstone
should have known
that the problems in the real estate and credit markets were not limited to subprime residential mortgages, but this is not enough.
See e.g. Garber,
D. Alleged Inaccuracies in Financial Statements
Finally, the CAC alleges that the financial statements contained in the Registration Statement overstated the value of Blackstone’s investment in FGIC and in the Company’s various real estate funds. 15 These allegations are essentially derivative of those discussed above and are insufficient to state a claim for largely the same reasons. As discussed above, the alleged omissions about FGIC’s exposure to the subprime mortgage market are immaterial as a matter of law. So too, then, are Plaintiffs allegations that Blackstone overvalued its investment in FGIC at the time of the Registration Statement. Similarly, Plaintiffs allegations that the financial *547 statements overvalued Blackstone’s real estate investments are premised on the conclusory allegation that the real estate market was in the “midst of the freefall” but they lack any factual connection to the real estate investments actually in the Company’s portfolio.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motion to dismiss the CAC for failure to state a claim is GRANTED. Because Plaintiff elected to stand on it pleading rather than to amend it in the face of Defendant’s motion to dismiss as allowed by my Individual Practices, Plaintiffs claims are dismissed with prejudice.
Nwaokocha v. Sadowski
Notes
. Blackstone’s business is organized into four segments: (1) corporate private equity, which focuses on management of the Company's private equity funds; (2) real estate, which is responsible for management of Blackstone's various real estate investment funds; (3) "marketable alternative asset management,” which involves management of Blackstone’s various hedge funds, mezzanine funds, and other "alternative” investment vehicles; and (4) the financial advisory group, which comprises the Company’s advisory services business that provides, for example, merger and acquisition analysis and services to other companies. CAC ¶ 31; Reg. Stmt, at 2.
. Although Blackstone does invest some of its own funds in the various investments that it manages, as of May 1, 2007, such funds represented a mere 6% of the total assets under management. See Registration Statement at 158.
. Blackstone avers that it does not "own” a 23% equity stake in FGIC, but rather that one of its private equity funds invested approximately $332 million to acquire an a 23% stake in the company in a transaction pursuant to which a consortium of investors acquired a collective 88% interest in FGIC from General Electric Capital Corporation. See Young-wood Decl. Ex. C. The PMI Group, Inc. Form 8-K, August 6, 2003.
. The CAC acknowledges that the investment capital used by Blackstone’s private equity funds "includes equity invested by Blackstone's limited partner co-investors,” i.e. other people’s money. CAC ¶ 78 n. 2. The Registration Statement confirms that the combined investment in Freescale was approximately $3.1 billion. Reg. Stmt, at 162.
. Because Plaintiff’s allegations sound in negligence, not fraud, Plaintiff’s complaint is not subject to the more exacting pleading standard of Rule 9(b).
Rombach v. Chang,
. Whereas Section 11 applies to misstatements or omissions in a registration statement filed with the SEC, Section 12(a) applies to persons who sell securities pursuant to a prospectus that contains misstatements or omissions. 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k,
111(a).
However, "claims under Sections 11 and 12 are usually evaluated in tandem because if a plaintiff fails to plead a cognizable Section 11 claim, he or she will be unable to plead one under Section 12(a).”
Lin v. Interactive Brokers Group, Inc.,
. Plaintiff maintains that certain allegations in the CAC concerning the Registration Statement’s discussion of the then-current state of the real estate market constitute affirmative misrepresentations. See CAC ¶ 125; Tr. of Oral Arg. at 27. The CAC's allegations pertaining to the Company's real estate investments are discussed infra.
. Although the Second Circuit has not squarely addressed the issue, in
Oran
v.
Stafford,
the Third Circuit stated that ''[bjecause the materiality standards for Rule 10b-5 and SK-303 differ significantly, the 'demonstration of a violation of the disclosure requirements of Item 303 does not lead inevitably to the conclusion that such disclosure would be required under Rule 10b-5. Such a duty to disclose must be separately shown.’ ”
. Under the facts of
JP Morgan Chase,
where the alleged misstatement concerned 0.3% of JP Morgan Chase's total assets, the Circuit found the misstatement “does not even come close” to the threshold.
JP Morgan Chase,
. Indeed, the CAC does not allege
any
drop in the value of the Blackstone corporate equity fund's investment in Freescale. Allegations of actual loss are not required because the veracity and materiality of the statements at issue here must be judged as of the effective date of the Registration Statement.
See Feiner v. SS & C Techs.,
.
JP Morgan Chase
concerned the defendant bank's ("JPMC”) characterization of certain transactions with Enron. There, the Circuit stated, "[wjhile Plaintiffs allege that Enron is a "key client” of JPMC, it appears clear that JPMC’s transactions were not a significant aspect of JPMC’s operations, considering the fact that JPMC earned less than .1% of its revenues from Enron related transactions each year.”
JP Morgan Chase,
. The Court " 'may take judicial notice of well-publicized stock prices without converting the motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment.’ ”
Miller v. Lazard, Ltd.,
. One of the principal deficiencies with the CAC’s allegations pertaining to Blackstone’s real estate investments is that one is forced to speculate as to what it is that Plaintiff contends should have been disclosed.
. The parties dispute whether Item 303 requires the pleader to allege that the undisclosed trends were in fact known by the registrant. At oral argument, Plaintiff argued that because the trends were "knowable” and Section 11 and 12(a) claims impose a negligence standard of liability, Plaintiff is only required to allege that "the information was knowable or that the defendants were negligent in not knowing it.” Tr. 37-38. As it pertains to the general standard of
liability
under Sections 11 and 12(a), Plaintiff’s argument finds support in the case law. Indeed, as was recently noted by the district court in
Hutchison v. CBRE Realty Finance, Inc.,
if a plaintiff adequately alleges material omissions from a securities offering statement, under Sections 11 and 12(a), "those claims are subject to a strict liability standard and issuers are held liable despite any otherwise available due diligence defense or lack of knowledge.”
Hutchison v. CBRE Realty Finance, Inc.,
. The CAC also alleges a more technical violation of generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP”), "the standard metric by which courts determine whether accounting statements are false or misleading.”
In re Countrywide Financial Corp. Sec. Litig.,
