Chatz v. BearingPoint Inc. (In Re Nanovation Technologies, Inc.)

364 B.R. 308, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1862, 2007 WL 1464577
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMay 17, 2007
Docket16-26412
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 364 B.R. 308 (Chatz v. BearingPoint Inc. (In Re Nanovation Technologies, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatz v. BearingPoint Inc. (In Re Nanovation Technologies, Inc.), 364 B.R. 308, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1862, 2007 WL 1464577 (Ill. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

PAMELA S. HOLLIS, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

In the late 1990s, the U.S. economy appeared unstoppable. Unemployment and inflation were low, the growth rate was high, and the Internet revolutionized business. The summer of 2000 was the apogee of the technology boom. The stock market, especially the NASDAQ index, reached astronomical all-time highs in March 2000. The volume of IPOs soared. Companies no longer needed to show 12 quarters of profit before going public— they no longer needed any profits, or even revenues. In the oft-repeated phrase coined by Alan Greenspan, the American economy was in a period of “irrational exuberance.”

During this period, no sector was more exuberant than the telecommunications niche. 1 Presumably, companies that could move escalating Internet traffic fastest could make the most money. One method of moving such information was through fiber-optic cable.

The debtor, Nanovation Technologies, Inc., focused on integrated optical solutions for telecommunications, data communications, networking, access, avionics, and other markets. Nanovation believed it had a better, faster way to move data, and its early investors would get a fantastic return. “The telecommunications business was hot, and optical engineers were the hottest commodities of them all ...” 2

Unfortunately, in the fall of 2000, members of the fiber-optics community began to realize that too much fiber-optic cable was already deployed. Only 10% of the existing cable was currently being used. Moreover, due to continuing improvements in technology, that 10% would soon be able to carry double or even triple the expected traffic. To compound matters, the expected traffic never materialized:

Telecom has turned into one of history’s biggest bubbles because so much money poured into the industry during the stock-market boom, creating some $470 billion in debt and a vast glut of capacity. Once a sleepy industry known for its modest growth, telecom took off like a rocket in the late '90s as companies rushed to lace the world with ultra-fast fiber-optic networks to carry an expected onslaught of Internet traffic. But after a frenzy of spending and hiring, it suddenly became clear in mid-2001 that the Internet wasn’t growing nearly as fast as the 1,000-fold annual increases originally predicted. The huge run-up has now been replaced by a merciless ride down. Rumors of foreclosures and marital problems have replaced word of the latest IPO. Some laid-off telecom workers are even turning up in local homeless shelters.
*310 So much money was spent buying tele-com gear during the frenzy that there is now seven years’ worth of excess inventory, says Lonnie Martin, chief executive of White Rock Networks, a Richardson start-up that is trying to hang on. He values the excess supply at some $160 billion. “That is an awful lot of exuberance to get rid of,” he says. 3

Shortly after the bubble burst, on July 25, 2001, Nanovation voluntarily sought relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Eventually the case converted to Chapter 7 and a trustee was appointed to administer the estate. The trustee brought this adversary proceeding against defendants BearingPoint, Inc., f/k/a KPMG Consulting, Inc., f/k/a KPMG Consulting LLC; BearingPoint LLC, f/k/a KPMG Consulting LLC; KPMG Consulting LLC; and KPMG Consulting, Inc. (collectively, “KPMG”). The trustee alleges that KPMG’s September 30, 2000 valuation of Nanovation stock was improperly inflated to permit insiders to repay loans from the company with company stock that was virtually worthless. The trustee reasons that if the stock had not been grossly overvalued by KPMG, the insiders could not have repaid the notes with the stock and would be liable to the bankruptcy estate in an amount exceeding twenty million dollars.

While not quite “irrational”, the trustee’s exuberant pursuit of KPMG was seriously misguided. Two critical errors haunted the trial of this case. First, to establish damages the trustee had to contradict himself by accepting KPMG’s valuation methodology before September 30, 2000 but rejecting it on September 30 and thereafter.

Nanovation’s loans to its directors and officers never involved the transfer of cash from the company to these insiders. The loans merely enabled them to purchase Nanovation stock. The amount of the loans was based on the value of stock or options given to the directors and officers. If the stock was worthless despite KPMG’s valuation methods on September 30, then the stock was similarly worthless months earlier when KPMG used identical assumptions to value the stock at the time of the insiders’ purchase. Accordingly, the face amount of the notes to purchase the “worthless” stock would be miniscule at best, and not the twenty million dollars or so that the trustee seeks to recover here.

The trustee’s failure to ask his expert Robert Reilly to value Nanovation stock at the time the stock loans were given exposes this incongruity. If Reilly valued the stock at the time of the purchase, his choice of a 5% perpetual growth rate (which he insists is realistic as opposed to KPMG’s 15%) in the discounted cash flow analysis, or his selection of only one pricing fundamental for the market multiple approach, would not have changed from his September 30 valuation. So, Reilly would have to conclude that the stock was also nearly worthless when it was purchased with the loans. As a result, the loans from Nanovation to the insiders would be small or non-existent. In all likelihood, loans would not be necessary to purchase a “penny” stock in contrast to the actual loans given to purchase a $9.00 stock.

The trustee depended on KPMG’s valuation methods at the time the loans were extended but assailed the same valuation approach when the loans were repaid. By accepting KPMG’s valuation of the stock before September 30, but rejecting the same approach taken on September 30 and after, the trustee aims to invent damages. *311 The court is not fooled. If Reilly’s valuation methods were superior as of September 30, then they were superior prior to that time. If KPMG adopted Reilly’s techniques on both occasions, there would be little or no insider loans to collect because large sums of money were not required to buy worthless stock. Instead KPMG used a different approach that was consistent both before and after September 30, which also ended up with no insider loans to collect. The end result is the same, no matter which valuation approach is used, as long as the approach is consistently applied. Damages can only accrue if KPMG’s approach is valid at the time the stock is purchased and suddenly invalid when the notes are repaid.

The second major flaw in the trustee’s case was his expert’s refusal to take into account any real market transactions involving the purchase and sale of Nanovation’s stock. KPMG valued Nanovation’s stock at $9.20 a share on September 30, 2000, while Reilly valued the stock at fifteen cents a share on that same day. When the stock was actually bought and sold by third parties shortly before September 30, its price nearly always

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Bluebook (online)
364 B.R. 308, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1862, 2007 WL 1464577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatz-v-bearingpoint-inc-in-re-nanovation-technologies-inc-ilnb-2007.