Jensen v. iShares Trust

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 2020
DocketA153511
StatusPublished

This text of Jensen v. iShares Trust (Jensen v. iShares Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. iShares Trust, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 1/23/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

GARTH JENSEN et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A153511 v. iSHARES TRUST et al., (San Francisco County Super. Ct. No. CGC 16-552567) Defendants and Respondents.

Investors who purchased shares of exchange-traded funds sued the issuers of the fund and associated entities for violations of disclosure requirements under the federal Securities Act of 1933. The trial court entered judgment for respondents after finding appellants lacked standing to pursue their claims. Appellants’ challenge to this ruling is based on a provision of the Investment Company Act of 1940 they view as conferring standing and various differences between exchange-traded funds and traditional investment vehicles. We affirm. BACKGROUND Appellants are individual investors who purchased one or more shares of BlackRock iShares Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) and thereafter suffered financial losses when their shares were sold pursuant to “market orders” or “stop-loss orders” during a “flash crash” on August 24, 2015, when ETF trading prices fell dramatically. Appellants maintain that BlackRock’s registration statements, prospectuses and amendments thereto (collectively, “offering documents”) issued or filed between 2012 and 2015, were false or misleading in that they failed to sufficiently disclose the risks associated with flash crashes. Appellants purchased their ETF shares after these allegedly defective offering documents were issued or filed.

1 Respondent iShares Trust (iShares) is registered with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as an open-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (ICA) (15 U.S.C. § 80a et seq.), and encompasses numerous separate ETFs. BlackRock Fund Advisors (BFA) is the investment advisor for the Blackrock iShares Funds at issue in this case. BFA is a subsidiary of BlackRock, Inc. (BlackRock), which controls iShares, BFA and BlackRock Investments, LLC, the distributor for iShares. The remaining respondents on this appeal are four of the 11 individual defendants named in the complaint. According to the allegations of the complaint and evidence before the trial court, ETFs, which first came to market in the 1990s, are investment companies that are registered under the ICA as open-end funds or unit investment trusts. (SEC Concept Release: Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Funds, 17 C.F.R. Part 270 [Release No. IC-25258].) Instead of transacting in individual shares, however, ETFs sell and redeem shares, at net asset value (NAV),1 only in large aggregations or blocks called “Creation Units.” (SEC Concept Release: Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Funds, 17 C.F.R. Part 270 [Release No. IC-25258].) Creation units are sold to “authorized participants,” such as broker-dealers or large institutional investors, which may then sell some or all of the shares to investors in the secondary market; creation units are not sold directly to retail investors.2 (Ibid.) ETFs are listed for trading on national securities exchanges, allowing investors to purchase and sell ETF shares at market prices, not necessarily at NAV. ETFs have some characteristics of traditional open-end funds, which issue redeemable shares, and some characteristics of closed-end funds, which generally issue shares that trade on exchanges at negotiated prices and are not redeemable. (SEC

Net asset value, or NAV, is the ETF’s assets minus liabilities divided by the 1

number of outstanding shares. 2 “Secondary market” refers to transactions between investors, such as through public exchanges, as distinguished from “primary market” transactions in which investors purchase directly from the issuer of the securities.

2 Concept Release: Actively Managed Exchange-Traded Funds, 17 C.F.R. Part 270 [Release No. IC-25258].) Early ETFs passively track the performance of specific United States equity indices; newer ones often are actively managed and seek to track indices of fixed-income instruments and foreign securities.3 Appellants alleged that BlackRock portrayed ETFs as safe investments, designed to reduce and protect investors from market volatility, despite being aware of particular risks that it failed to disclose to investors. At issue in the present case is the use of stop- loss orders with ETFs. A stop-loss order requires that an investor’s security be bought or sold when the stock value hits a certain price; when the stock price drops to the preset price, the order is automatically converted to a market order and the security trade is automatically executed at market price. Stop-loss orders are generally used to limit risk, but in times of high volatility can have the opposite effect. Appellants alleged that the use of stop-loss and market orders to hedge ETF risk “amplifies the disengagement of ETF values from their NAV” due to “lack of liquidity in the ETF market”: “When ETF markets are highly illiquid, market sell orders sweep through available purchase orders, allowing ETF prices to plummet and reflect a sales price completely unrelated to an ETF’s underlying value.” On May 6, 2010, equity markets in the United States experienced a “flash crash” in which equities and ETFs holding equities declined “precipitously” for approximately a half hour during afternoon trading. Many ETFs traded 60 percent lower than the value of

3 The role of the authorized participants is illustrated in the following description: “The most distinctive feature of the ETF is its arbitrage mechanism. The purpose of this mechanism is to help bring together the price at which an ETF’s shares trade on a stock exchange and the pro rata value of the fund’s underlying assets, which is known as its net asset value . . . . This parity between trading price and NAV is essential to an ETF’s unique role as a nearly frictionless, nearly universal, financial portal. The arbitrage mechanism poses risks, because it relies entirely on market incentives to lead certain ‘authorized participants’ (‘APs’) to enter into just the right transactions at just the right times with an ETF and traders in the secondary market so that the trading price of a share will be close to the share’s NAV.” (Hu, H. and Morley, J, A Regulatory Framework for Exchange-Traded Funds 91 So.Cal. L.Rev. 839, 845 (2018).)

3 their underlying assets. BlackRock later observed that this was similar to a 2008 crash, when ETFs traded 5-8 percent lower than the underlying value of their assets. BlackRock reported to regulators that in the 2008 and 2010 crashes, stop-loss orders increased the volume of sell orders for ETFs, resulting in decreased liquidity and exacerbation of disproportionate declines in ETF prices as compared to the ETF’s underlying assets. In 2011, BlackRock wrote to the SEC that it expected “mini-flash” crashes to recur and ETF investors needed education on the use of market and stop-loss orders. In 2013, BlackRock acknowledged that the 2010 flash crash disproportionately affected “US ETFs holding US equities.” Appellants alleged that the offering documents pursuant to which they purchased respondents’ ETFs disclosed that ETFs are subject to volatility but did not disclose “the known inherent risk” of using stop-loss orders with ETFs, despite respondents’ admitted knowledge of the likelihood of disproportionate harm and belief that more flash crashes were inevitable.

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Jensen v. iShares Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-ishares-trust-calctapp-2020.