In Re ProShares Trust Sec. Litig.

728 F.3d 96, 2013 WL 3779364, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 14764
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 2013
DocketDocket 12-3981
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 728 F.3d 96 (In Re ProShares Trust Sec. Litig.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re ProShares Trust Sec. Litig., 728 F.3d 96, 2013 WL 3779364, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 14764 (2d Cir. 2013).

Opinion

*99 WESLEY, Circuit Judge:

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 *100 decrease by 2%.” TAC ¶ 94. Each one of the ETFs in this case is leveraged.

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, *101 and that] even a small movement in market prices could cause large losses” because an ETF investment was “speculative” and involved a high degree of risk. See id., App’x x B, Item 6.

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.

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728 F.3d 96, 2013 WL 3779364, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 14764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proshares-trust-sec-litig-ca2-2013.