OPINION
We must decide whether a material misrepresentation in a prospectus caused actionable loss to shareholders when the price of the company’s stock did not decline in the weeks immediately following disclosure of the correct information.
I
A
Section 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 imposes civil liability on “any person who ... offers or sells a security ... by the use of any means or instruments ... in interstate commerce ... by means of a prospectus or oral communication, which includes an untrue statement of a material fact or omits to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements ... not misleading.” 15 U.S.C. §
771(a)(2).
Accordingly, “to prevail under Section 12(a)(2), a plaintiff must demonstrate (1) an offer or sale of a security, (2) by the use of a means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, (3) by means of a prospectus or oral communication, (4) that includes an untrue statement of material fact or omits to state a material fact that is necessary to make the statements not misleading” by “any person.”
Miller v. Thane Int’l, Inc.,
B
With the relevant statutory framework in mind, we turn now to the facts of this case. In November 2001, defendant Thane International, Inc. (“Thane”), a company that markets consumer products through homeshopping channels, infomercials, and other similar means, and Reliant Interactive Media Corp. (“Reliant”) agreed to merge. The merger agreement provided for Reliant shareholders to receive shares of Thane for their shares of Reliant. The “imputed merger price” — the value of Reliant stock each Reliant shareholder exchanged for each Thane share — was approximately $7.00. Significantly, the prospectus Thane filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) stated that Thane stock, which had not been publicly traded previously, was “approved for quotation and trading on the NASDAQ National Market upon completion of the merger, subject to Thane’s compliance with the minimum bid price requirements of $5.00 per share.” Nevertheless, after the merger was consummated on May 24, 2002, Thane shares commenced trading not on the NASDAQ National Market System (“NMS”), but on the NASDAQ Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board (“OTCBB”).
In the nineteen days (twelve trading days) between May 24 and June 11, 2002, Thane’s shares traded between $8.50 and $7.00, above the merger price that Reliant shareholders had paid. On June 24, 2002, however, the stock closed at $6.00. The next day Thane reported disappointing earnings for the fiscal year, and the stock closed at $5.25. It soon thereafter dropped below $5.00, never to rise again above that minimum price for listing on the NMS.
On August 14, 2002, Thane announced further disappointing quarterly earnings, partly caused by a slump in the industry. It also reported that it had originally delayed listing on the NMS in order to time it with a secondary public offering, but that recent business developments had put listing on the NMS on hold. Thane shares tumbled to $1.95 by August 16, 2002. In February 2004, Thane bought out existing shareholders at a price of $0.35 per share.
C
In September 2002, a class of individual Reliant investors who acquired shares of Thane in the merger (“investors”) filed suit against Thane and four of its executives (collectively, “Thane”) in federal district court, alleging violation of section 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77Z(a)(2), and control person liability under section 15 of the Securities Act of 1933, id. § 77o, and seeking rescission of the merger, recovery of damages, and fees. Specifically, the investors alleged that Thane’s pre-merger prospectus contained materially misleading representations because it implied that Thane shares would list on the NMS.
After certifying the investors’ class and conducting a three-day bench trial, the district court held that Thane did not violate section 12(a)(2).
Miller v. Thane Int’l, Inc.,
In a prior appeal, we reversed, ruling that the district court clearly erred.
Miller,
On remand, the district court granted Thane’s Motion for Judgment on Loss Causation. The district court observed that there could be no loss as long as Thane’s stock price remained at or above the price of $7.00 that the investors had paid for the stock in the merger and that, consequently, there could be no loss causation if the stock price did not drop below $7.00 after reacting to the nonlisting on the NMS. The stock remained at or above that price for nineteen days. Accordingly, the district court focused on whether the stock price “impounded,” ie., absorbed, 1 the nonlisting on NMS in this nineteen-day period. It held that Thane had carried its burden to show that the stock did so. The investor class timely appealed.
II
In this second appeal, the investors advance two arguments that the district court erred as a matter of law in finding an absence of loss causation.
A
The investors first argue that the district court’s award of judgment to Thane on loss causation is foreclosed by Miller I. In their view, our holding in the investors’ favor on materiality forecloses an award of judgment to Thane on loss causation.
But loss causation and materiality are different concepts in the statutory scheme. Indeed, the statute provides a loss causation defense even when there are materially misleading representations. 15 U.S.C. § 77Z(b). If a ruling on materiality foreclosed an affirmative defense of loss causation, that affirmative defense would be, as Thane correctly recognizes, “a nullity.”
Moreover, the materiality inquiry concerns whether a “reasonable investor”
would
consider a particular misstatement important.
Miller I,
In re Gilead Sciences Securities Litigation,
The investors contend that, even if materiality and loss causation are different concepts, the district court’s decision repeats verbatim the same reasoning we rejected when we ruled on materiality. But we did not reject the district court’s reasoning that Thane stock prices were reliable even though the market was inefficient, which is what we now review. Rather, we rejected the district court’s reasoning that historical stock prices are relevant to the reasonable investor test, which focuses on hypothetical, not actual, investors. We did not comment on the reliability of Thane’s stock prices, other than to state what is undisputed, namely, that the stock traded in an inefficient market. Miller I, 519 F.3dat 888.
B
The investors next challenge the district court’s reliance on Thane’s stock prices. They argue that such reliance was inappropriate in the absence of market efficiency as defined in
Cammer v. Bloom,
Cammer
outlined a test for market efficiency in the context of a section 10(b) securities fraud class action. To prevail under section 10(b), a plaintiff must show he justifiably relied on the alleged misrepresentation.
Binder v. Gillespie,
We hold that it may. The absence of
Cammer
efficiency does not mean that prices are unreliable.
Cammer
efficiency, by definition, exists when the release of financial information results in an “immediate response” by the market.
Cammer,
Indeed, the
Cammer
test is not appropriate for assessing loss causation. That test was developed in support of a judicial presumption allowing plaintiffs to avoid a significant obstacle in certifying a class in securities fraud litigation. Due process concerns require that class certification meet rigorous standards in securities cases.
See Unger v. Amedisys Inc.,
No court has applied
Cammer
to loss causation, nor even to any area other than class certification, as the investors admit. Quite the contrary, the Second Circuit abstained from a
Cammer
— like inquiry in
Akerman v. Oryx Communications, Inc.,
We are persuaded by Akerman and follow it. Accordingly, we decline to extend Cammer to loss causation. In so doing, we reject a per se rule that it is inappropriate to rely on stock prices in an inefficient market to determine loss causation.
Ill
The investors also contend that the district court improperly found that Thane’s stock price impounded the failure to list on
A
The investors argue that our standard of review of the district court’s finding should be de novo. We disagree.
The loss causation inquiry is not a question of law reviewed de novo because it involves “the application of a legal standard to a particular set of facts.”
TSC Indus.,
B
Turning to the merits, the question is whether the district court clearly erred in holding that Thane established the absence of loss causation. Because the stock price movements are undisputed, we focus on whether the district court clearly erred in finding that the Thane stock price could impound the fact of listing on the OTCBB instead of the NMS in the nineteen-day period before the price dropped below the merger price the investors paid for the stock.
The record contains substantial evidence supporting the district court’s finding. Thane’s expert stated that Thane’s stock price could and did impound information about Thane during this nineteen-day period, including the listing on the OTCBB, which was disseminated on Internet bulletin board postings even though no analysts covered Thane. The district court found this expert credible, and we are extremely deferential to credibility determinations.
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City,
In any event, even the investors’ expert admitted that Thane’s stock price could absorb information. We recognized as much in
Miller I
when we said that Thane’s stock price slump in August “was compounded by the company’s failure to find and market the ‘hit’ product it had
The investors argue that this August 2002 earnings report disclosed additional information about the misleading representation and management’s integrity, namely that management “intentionally” did not list on the NMS. Although the investors do not spell out their position, they appear to argue that focusing on the changes in price in the first nineteen days is inappropriate because some of the truth regarding the misleading representation was not publicly available until the August 2002 earnings report.
The August 2002 earnings report, however, reiterated information that was obvious immediately after the merger, namely, that Thane was not going to be listed on the NMS because of market conditions. Even the investors’ expert testified that the market was aware of Thane’s nonlisting at the outset of the merger, long before the August 2002 earnings report, and it was obvious that Thane could not list on the NMS in August because its stock price was below the $5 minimum. Moreover, the August 2002 earnings report is not, as investors argue, a “mea culpa” that undermined management’s integrity for the first time. That integrity was undermined, if at all, by the failure to list on the NMS. The earnings report did not provide evidence that such failure, involving a decision not to list even though Thane’s stock was approved to do so, was any more “intentional” than it had been in the days immediately subsequent to the merger.
It is true that listing on the NMS is superior to listing on the OTCBB, at least according to our decision in
Miller I,
In light of the evidence of impoundment before the district court and despite the investors’ detailed arguments regarding other evidence, we do not have “a definite and firm conviction that a mistake [was] committed” when the district court found that Thane’s stock price impounded information about the nonlisting on the NMS before it fell below the merger price that investors paid for it.
Exxon Co.,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The word “impound” is used in securities law as a synonym for "absorb.”
E.g., In re Time Warner Inc. Sec. Litig.,
. Justifiable reliance is not an element of the cause of action at issue here. 15 U.S.C. § 772(a)(2).
