Dumontet v. UBS Financial Services, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 29, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-10361
StatusUnknown

This text of Dumontet v. UBS Financial Services, Inc. (Dumontet v. UBS Financial Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dumontet v. UBS Financial Services, Inc., (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

USDC SDNY DOCUMENT UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DO IRONIC SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK x DATE FILED: 3/29/2024 CHRISTIAN DUMONTET,, individually and on : behalf of all those similarly situated, : Plaintiff, : 1:21-cv-10361-GHW -against- : MEMORANDUM OPINION & : ORDER UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC; : MATTHEW S. BUCHSBAUM; SCOTT M. : ROSENBERG; GERARD COSTELLO; and : SONIA M. ATTKISS, : Defendants. :

GREGORY H. WOODS, United States District Judge: Plaintiff is a client of UBS Financial Services, Inc. (“UBS”) who agreed to participate in a new, innovative investment strategy called the Yield Enhancement Strategy (“YES”) program with UBS and its YES team. Plaintiff now brings a putative class action against UBS and its YES team to recover the fees assessed on his and others’ YES accounts, based on Defendants’ alleged failure to disclose an arbitration proceeding between the YES team and their former employer. Because Plaintiffs putative class action asserts state law claims based on alleged fraudulent conduct in connection with Plaintiffs acquisition of covered securities, this action is a federal securities fraud case in disguise, and Plaintiffs action is precluded by the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act (“SLUSA”). Accordingly, Defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint is GRANTED in full.

I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Allegations’ Plaintiff Christian Dumontet is a client of Defendant UBS. Dkt. No. 47 §[ 1 (the “Amended Complaint” or “AC”). In November of 2015, UBS hired a team from Credit Suisse (which included Matthew S. Buchsbaum, Scott M. Rosenberg, Gerard Costello, and Sonia M. Attkiss—together, the “Individual Defendants”). Id. Jj 20, 22. With the new team, UBS initiated a YES program—similar to one the Individual Defendants had managed at Credit Suisse—as part of an effort to shift from focusing on investment banking to wealth management, providing brokerage and financial advisory services to individual chents. Id {fj 5, 22; see also id. □□□ 17-18 (description of Individual Defendants). The YES program “is an actively managed investment strategy that seeks to generate income through the strategic sale and purchase of S&P 500 Index options.”* Dkt. No. 45-6° at ECF p. 2 (the “ADV Amendment”); see AC Jf 7, 39 (quoting the ADV Amendment). Specifically, a YES account is used to engage in high frequency trading of short-term S&P 500 index options to generate an additional source of income for the portfolios of UBS clients. ADV Amendment at 1— 2. UBS warns in its disclosures to clients participating in the YES program that this strategy carries significant risk: This Strategy is aggressive and carries a high degree of risk. You should not authorize the use of sophisticated option strategies unless you are prepared to sustain large losses. You should not enter into option transactions unless you are prepared

! Unless otherwise noted, the following facts are drawn from the Amended Complaint, Dkt. No 47, and the documents incorporated by reference in the Amended Complaint, and they are accepted as true for the purposes of evaluating Defendants’ motions to dismiss. See, e.g, Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc., 282 F.3d 147, 152 (2d Cir. 2002). However, “[t]he tenet that a court must accept as true all of the allegations contained in a complaint is inapplicable to legal conclusions.” Asheroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009). “In ruling upon a Rule 12(b)(1) motion alleging lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the Court must accept as true all well-pleaded assertions of fact in the complaint and resolve doubts and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff. This factual presumption, however, does not attach to jurisdictional allegations.” Arbitron, Inc. v. 3 Cities, Inc., 438 F. Supp. 2d 216, 217 (S.D.N-Y. 2006). 2 An option is a financial derivative product that gives the purchaser the right to buy or sell an underlying product— here, the S&P 500 index—at (or sometimes up to) a certain time in the future. The S&P 500 index is a weighted index of the stock prices of 500 publicly traded companies in the United States. 3 While the Amended Complaint cites to this docket item, the same document is also available at Dkt. No. 52-3 and, in redacted form, Dkt. No. 60-3.

to lose the principal invested as well as the total amount of premiums paid or received. ADV Amendment at 2; see also AC § 38 (alleging the ADV Amendment was provided to each UBS client who chose to open a YES account). The YES program requires participating clients to “designate a portion of their existing UBS investment portfolio as collateral for a margin account called the Mandate that could be used for the YES program.” AC 6; see also ADV Amendment at 3. The portion of the investment portfolio designated as collateral for a YES account, or the “Mandate,” is then “used to meet the margin requirements of the option positions held in the YES account.”” ADV Amendment at 3. While UBS typically charges its clients a fee based on the value of a client’s investment portfolio, UBS’s YES program charges a “flat fee” based on the size of the Mandate for the YES account. Id. Jj 5—7, 19; ADV Amendment at 3. UBS and the Individual Defendants recruited existing UBS clients, including Plaintiff, to enroll in the YES program. AC §] 8. Plaintiff opened his YES account on or about August 24, 2017. Dkt. No. 45-5* at ECF p. 5 (the “Options Agreement”). At opening, Plaintiff designated $3.5 million (out of $19 million available in the account designated as his collateral account) as the Mandate for his YES account. ADV Amendment at 1. At some point after opening his YES account, Plaintiff paid the fees charged on his YES account, which was calculated as a percentage of his Mandate. AC ¥ 16. Meanwhile, on March 1, 2017, the Individual Defendants commenced a confidential FINRA arbitration proceeding against Credit Suisse for the recovery of alleged unvested contingent deferred awards from their time at Credit Suisse, alleging claims of breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, conversion, unpaid wages, and unjust

4 While the Amended Complaint cites to this docket item, see AC J 39, the same document is also available at Dkt. No. 52-15 and, in redacted form, at Dkt. No. 60-15.

enrichment. Id §] 23. On June 21, 2017, Credit Suisse filed counterclaims in the arbitration proceeding, alleging in part that the Individual Defendants, in Plaintiffs words, had appropriated “substantial amounts of valuable confidential information relating to Credit Suisse’s business and chents,” including the YES program and certain client account information, for use at UBS. Id □□ 24. By the time Plaintiff opened his YES account, Defendants had not disclosed to him or other prospective YES program clients the existence of the FINRA arbitration proceeding and its allegations, including the Individual Defendants’ allegations of “constructive discharge” from Credit Suisse and Credit Suisse’s allegations of the misappropriation of confidential information from Credit Suisse. Id. | 26. Plaintiff represents that Defendants were under a “continuing affirmative obligation” to disclose these facts to Plaintiff and other YES clients and that Defendants failed to do so up until the filing of this action. Id; see also id. 25-40. Plaintiff also alleges that Defendants’ omissions were “material to Plaintiffs . .. decision to choose a YES account, entrust [his] assets to the [Individual Defendants], and pledge a Mandate upon which [he] would pay a flat fee,” and that Defendants’ purported “failure to comply with their affirmative fiduciary obligations relating to disclosure of material facts .. . caused Plaintiff...

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Dumontet v. UBS Financial Services, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dumontet-v-ubs-financial-services-inc-nysd-2024.