OPINION
KLEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.
The federal securities laws intersect with the Bankruptcy Code in this appeal arising from a “Ponzi scheme” that collapsed into federal criminal prosecutions and bankruptcy.
The essential question is whether nonpublic transactions in illegally unregistered securities can be the subject of “settlement payments” that are “commonly used in the securities trade” within the meaning of 11
U.S.C. § 741(8). If so, then such payments made to appellee “financial institution” are immunized from trustee avoiding powers by 11 U.S.C. § 546(e).
Before the collapse, appellee, the trustee of a pooled investment fund, sought to withdraw all $29 million of capital contributions it had made to a limited liability company that had funded the Ponzi scheme, the funds having been raised in violation of registration and anti-fraud provisions of the Securities Act of 1933 and Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Although appellee actually withdrew $22 million before the collapse, the LLC’s chapter 7 trustee attacked only the $4 million transfer that was received 89 days before bankruptcy, arguing it was a preference to be retrieved and shared with fellow fraud victims who did not withdraw before the collapse.
The trustee appeals the ruling that the withdrawal of capital was a “settlement payment” that is “commonly used in the securities trade” made to a “financial institution” and, hence, immune from recovery per 11 U.S.C. § 546(e). We hold that nonpublic transactions in illegally unregistered securities are not “commonly used in the securities trade” and REVERSE.
FACTS
PinnFund USA, Inc. (“PinnFund”) engaged in the mortgage banking business, originating, purchasing, and selling so-called non-conforming, or sub-prime, mortgage loans in California.
Funds to make the loans came from investors in two limited partnerships (Allied Capital Partners and Grafton Partners) and Six Sigma, LLC (“Six Sigma”), that were formed for that purpose.
These funding entities were managed by Peregrine Funding, Inc. (“Peregrine”), owned by James L. Hillman and operated by Hillman and Piotr Kodzis, which acted as general partner to the partnerships and as managing member of Six Sigma.
PinnFund agreed, under its Spot Loan Funding Agreement, to pay the funding entities a premium return for the use of their capital: “interest” at 10 percent; plus a share of participation fees on sales of loans. This compensation, according to the Subscription Agreement, was expected to withstand usury attack because “the transactions are more appropriately characterized as either: (i) agreements to advance money in exchange for a share in profits; or (ii) loans in which the amount of the interest payment is contingent upon events within the borrower’s control.”
Although the Spot Loan Funding Agreement required that PinnFund maintain the investors’ funds in a trust account to be used solely to fund loans, about $100 million of the $276 million raised was diverted to pay PinnFund’s operating losses and to finance lavish lifestyles for insiders.
The Ponzi scheme ended in 2001 when the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) took action leading to a receivership and to criminal prosecutions of the principals, who eventually confessed to running PinnFund as a Ponzi scheme.
What made it a Ponzi scheme was that much of the return provided to investors monthly under the guise of “interest” or participation fees actually came from the corpus of invested funds, rather than from profits derived from business activity.
In such a scheme, it was inevitable that Pinn-Fund would run out of funds and plunge PinnFund, Peregrine, and the funding entities into bankruptcy. It was only a question of time.
One of the funding entities, Six Sigma, was a California limited liability company formed in 1999. Its operating agreement made Peregrine (controlled by Hillman) its manager, limited its business to providing funds for PinnFund loans, and precluded LLC members from participating in management.
Membership in Six Sigma was limited to 99 “qualified purchasers,” as defined by the Investment Company Act of 1940. Six Sigma took the position that no registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933 was required. The membership interests could not be transferred without permission of the manager, who could involuntarily redeem an interest in order to permit Six Sigma to continue to qualify as a partnership for purposes of taxation or to comply with securities laws.
Each Six Sigma member had a capital account, consisting of the sum of that member’s capital contributions and pro rata share of profits and losses. The capital account, adjusted monthly, would rise or fall to reflect the fortunes of the business.
The operating agreement provided that a member could withdraw from Six Sigma by withdrawing its entire capital account on 60-day notice (“or any lesser period at the Manager’s sole and absolute discretion”).
Appellee Circle Trust Company (“Circle Trust”), a member of Six Sigma, is a limited purpose trust company chartered by the State of Connecticut to provide fiduciary services only. It may not accept deposits and is not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. It provides investment management, trust, custody, and administrative services.
Circle Trust’s Six Sigma capital contributions totaled $29 million, made as trustee of the Stable Value Plus Fund. Circle Trust represented to Six Sigma that it was
acquiring its interest directly and without a compensated intermediary.
When Circle Trust decided to withdraw from Six Sigma, allegedly after doing “due diligence,”
it gave notice, by letter of September 28, 2000, to James L. Hillman and Peregrine, of its request to withdraw “all of its capital account in Six Sigma, LLC (‘Capital Account’), as of the earliest permitted date.” Three capital account payments ensued, totaling $22 million of the $29 million invested: (1) $10 million wire-transferred November 1, 2000, the 60-day notice requirement having been waived; (2) $8 million by check of December 1, 2000; and (3) $4 million by check dated January 2 and honored January 4, 2001, by the drawee bank.
When Six Sigma filed its chapter 7 case, Circle Trust still had $7 million of capital on the books, on which it received “interest” during 2001: $160,875.09 (January 10); $100,642.82 (February 12); and $98,273.73 (March 12).
The total “interest” that Circle Trust had received monthly from Six Sigma on account of capital contributions was $3,989,041.64. The source of funds to pay such “interest” was, consistent with the fraud’s status as a Ponzi scheme, the capital provided by the LLC and the limited partnerships.
Six Sigma and the limited partnerships filed chapter 7 eases in the Northern District of California on April 2, 2001, twelve days after the SEC sued. They were transferred to the Southern District of California, where they were consolidated under the name “Grafton Partners, LP, and Affiliated Entities,” with Richard Kip-perman as case trustee.
The trustee sued Circle Trust to avoid and recover the $4 million transferred January 4, 2001, as a preference.
Circle Trust moved for summary judgment, arguing that the partial withdrawal was a “settlement payment” as defined by 11 U.S.C. § 741(8) and, thus, was immune from avoidance as a preference. The bankruptcy court agreed. This appeal ensued.
JURISDICTION
The bankruptcy court had core proceeding jurisdiction per 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(F) and 1334(b). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) because the summary judgment order was intended to be the court’s last word on the adversary proceeding.
ISSUE
Whether withdrawal of capital from a limited liability company, in a non-public, non-market transaction involving an illegally unregistered security, constitutes a “settlement payment” that is “commonly used in the securities trade,” as defined by 11 U.S.C. § 741(8), and hence immune from avoidance as a preference in bankruptcy by 11 U.S.C. § 546(e).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review summary judgment de novo.
Paine v. Griffin (In re Paine),
283 B.R. 33, 36 (9th Cir. BAP 2002).
DISCUSSION
The parties agree that a membership interest in an LLC that is required to be the subject of a registration statement filed with the SEC is a “security” under
the Bankruptcy Code. 11 U.S.C. § 101(49)(A) (2000).
Our basic task is to construe the meaning of the definition of “settlement payment,” which was first enacted in 1982. The current version of the definition reads:
(8) “settlement payment” means a preliminary settlement payment, a partial settlement payment, an interim settlement payment, a settlement payment on account, a final settlement payment, or any other similar payment commonly used in the securities trade;
11 U.S.C. § 741(8) (2000).
If the $4 million withdrawal from Six Sigma 89 days before bankruptcy was a “settlement payment,” ‘
then § 546(e) insulates the transfer from avoidance as a preference.
Ascertaining the meaning of “settlement payment” is a “holistic endeavor” that requires us to consider the entire statutory scheme associated with its enactment and to reject plausible readings of isolated terms that are not compatible with the rest of the law.
Koons Buick Pontiac GMC, Inc. v. Nigh,
— U.S.-,- -, 125 S.Ct. 460, 466-467, 160 L.Ed.2d 389 (2004)
(“Koons Buick”); McCarthy v. Bronson,
500 U.S. 136, 139, 111 S.Ct. 1737, 114 L.Ed.2d 194 (1991) (statutory language must be read in proper context and not viewed in isolation);
United Sav. Ass’n of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Assocs.,
484 U.S. 365, 371, 108 S.Ct. 626, 98 L.Ed.2d 740 (1988).
I
The pertinent statutory scheme was created in 1982 by the stockbroker-commodity broker amendments to the Bankruptcy Code. Pub.L. 97-222, 96 Stat. 235 (1982).
A
Public Law 97-222 was a package of amendments designed to protect the carefully-regulated mechanisms for clearing trades in securities and commodities in the public markets from dysfunction that could
result from the automatic stay and from certain trustee avoiding powers.
The protection for the securities industry had several interrelated facets aimed at permitting securities transactions to be liquidated under the eye of the SEC and the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (“SIPC”) without being vulnerable to a bankruptcy attack that could destabilize markets.
The key provision was the creation in 11 U.S.C. § 555 of a power for a stockbroker or securities clearing agency to exercise a contractual right to liquidate a securities contract — including a right set forth in a rule or bylaw of a national securities exchange, national securities association, or securities clearing agency — that could only be limited in a bankruptcy case if authorized under the Securities Investor Protection Act (“SIPA”) or a statute administered by the SEC.
A second facet of the protection was that the Act excepted from the automatic stay any setoff made by a stockbroker or securities clearing agency on account of claims against a debtor for a margin or settlement payment arising out of a securities contract against property held by or due from that stockbroker or securities clearing agency. Pub.L. 97-222, § 3(c).
'
Third, margin and settlement payments made to or by stockbrokers and securities clearing agencies were, with the exception of actually fraudulent transfers, insulated from trustee avoiding actions. Pub.L. 97-222, § 4.
Finally, the terms “margin payment,” “settlement payment,” and “securities contract” were defined for purposes of the other provisions in this scheme in § 741.
B
In 1984, the provisions of Public Law 97-222 were amended by the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984.
The examples named in the § 741(8) definition of “settlement payment” had the phrase “final settlement payment” added.
The § 741(7) definition of “securities contract” was expanded to cover more products in the securities industry: options for the purchase or sale of a certificate of deposit or group or index of securities and options entered into on a national securities exchange relating to foreign currencies.
The newly-defined term “financial institution” was added to § 546(e)’s list of entities insulated from avoiding powers with respect to settlement payments and to the list of entities authorized by § 555 to exercise a contractual right to liquidate a securities contract.
The definition appeared
in new 11 U.S.C. § 101(19),
which later migrated to § 101(22) and was redefined in 2000.
II
Resolving the question whether transactions in illegally unregistered securities can be protected as § 741(8) settlement payments requires, under the Supreme Court’s
Koons Buick
original statutory context precept, that we assess the relationship of Public Law 97-222 to the securities laws and the Bankruptcy Code.
Indeed, in a leading decision regarding Public Law 97-222, the Third Circuit held that it must construe the literal language
of that statute in the context of the precise congressional intent.
Bevill, Bresler & Schulman Asset Mgmt. Corp. v. Spencer Sav. & Loan Ass’n (In re Bevill, Bresler & Schulman Asset Mgmt. Corp.),
878 F.2d 742, 751-53 (3d Cir.1989).
When we do so, it is apparent that Public Law 97-222 was designed to enhance enforcement of the securities laws and rules assuring the integrity of securities markets.
The bill that became Public Law 97-222, H.R. 4935, resulted from House Judiciary
Committee oversight hearings at which there was testimony by, among others, the SEC, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, SIPC, and National Securities Clearing Corporation regarding the need for protection of the organized markets against dysfunction in bankruptcy situations.
The protection of settlement payments on securities trades responded to the concerns of the SEC and entities administering the market sales process that the bankruptcy of one firm in the clearance and settlement chain could produce a ripple effect that threatens other parties in the chain.
The Judiciary Committee’s summary of its bill focuses on market trades that comply with the securities laws:
The commodities and securities markets operate through a complex system of accounts and guarantees. Because of the structure of the clearing systems in these industries and the sometimes volatile nature [of] the markets, certain protections are necessary to prevent the insolvency of one commodity or security firm from spreading to other firms and possibly threatening the collapse of the affected market.
The Bankruptcy Code now expressly provides certain protections to the commodities market to protect against such a “ripple effect.” One of the market protections presently contained in the Bankruptcy Code, for example, prevents a trustee in bankruptcy from avoiding or setting aside, as a preferential transfer, margin payments made to a commodity broker (see 11 U.S.C. Sec. 764(c)).
The thrust of several of the amendments contained in H.R. 4935 is to clarify and, in some instances, broaden the commodities market protections and expressly extend similar protections to the securities market. The amendments will ensure that the avoiding powers of a trustee are not construed to permit margin or settlement payments to be set aside except in cases of fraud and that, except as otherwise provided, the stay provisions of the Code are not construed to prevent brokers from closing out the open accounts of insolvent customers or brokers. The prompt closing out or liquidation of such open accounts freezes the status quo and minimizes the potentially massive losses and chain reactions that could occur if the market were to move sharply in the wrong direction.
The bill provides that, ... [i]n the case of the securities industry, the contractual right of a broker or clearing agency to liquidate a securities contract may not be stayed, avoided, or otherwise limited in any bankruptcy proceeding unless an order affecting such right is authorized under the provisions of [SIPA] or any statute administered by the [SEC].
H.R. Rep. No. 97-420, at 1-2 (1982), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1982, pp. 583-84.
It was, thus, axiomatic to the new § 555 contractual right to liquidate a securities contract that the relevant contractual rights had to be consistent with the securities laws. The main purpose was to protect legitimate securities markets from market fluctuations that, without specific protection from basic bankruptcy rules, created “an inordinate risk that the insolvency of one party could trigger a chain reaction of insolvencies of the others who carry accounts for that party and undermine the integrity of those markets.”
Further, the protection was crafted to assure compliance with securities laws. Thus, § 555 stipulates that the right to liquidate a securities contract does not trump orders affecting trades that are issued under either SIPA or “any statute administered by the” SEC.
The House Report also clarified that the parallel exception to the automatic stay permitting setoff of margin or settlement payments, 11 U.S.C. § 362(b)(6), did “not permit a setoff which would be unlawful under any applicable law or regulation.”
Similarly, the limitation on avoiding powers in what is now § 546(e) does not extend to actually fraudulent transfers that were not received in good faith.
This connotes a statutory scheme designed to protect trades that comply with the securities laws, but not to protect the laundering of actual fraud.
It is in this context that the term “settlement payment” was defined in Public Law 97-222 and should be construed.
The difficulty with the definition of “settlement payment” is that it relies on a conclusory laundry list of securities industry terms of art that contain the words “settlement payment” without articulating the elements of a settlement payment. The definition, however, is rescued from the apparent circularity by the clause “or any other similar payment
commonly used in the securities trade."
11 U.S.C. § 741(8) (emphasis supplied).
Determining common usage in the securities trade requires attention to the operation of trades in the securities industry. Whatever else a settlement payment may be, it is restricted to the securities trade and must be “commonly used.”
This requirement of common usage in the securities trade necessarily excludes non-public trades in illegally unregistered securities. If integrity and compliance with securities laws are to be preserved as the hallmark of the brand name of the United States securities markets, then trades in illegally unregistered securities must flunk the common usage test. An essential purpose of the federal securities laws is to ban trafficking in illegally unregistered securities so as to promote the reputation of American securities markets as safe for investment.
In short, the statutory protection of settlement payments presupposes that securities laws are not being offended. In other words, Public Law 97-222 operated to coordinate and harmonize the securities laws and the Bankruptcy Code.
The next step in the “holistic endeavor” is to consider whether the 1984 amendments that added “financial institutions” to the list of entities protected by Public Law 97-222 changed the statutory context of furthering the securities laws.
The 1984 legislative history is scant. The additions of “financial institution” appeared in Subtitle H (“Miscellaneous Amendments to Title 11”) of the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984 amidst technical corrections that did such things as substitute “stockbroker” for “stock broker” in a definition and substitute “stockbroker” for “stockholder” in the section designating the applicability of the stockbroker liquidation provisions of chapter 7.
The absence of an explanation why a “financial institution” needed to become a protected entity implies that the change was regarded as neither significant, nor controversial.
Had Congress simultaneously meant to create a safe harbor from compliance with the securities laws and abandon common usage in the securities trade as the touchstone for construing protected settlement payments, Congress likely would have
flagged so substantial a departure from the underlying premise of Public Law 97-222 that the securities laws were being harmonized, not preempted.
See Koons Buick,
— U.S. at --, 125 S.Ct. at 468.
It follows that the term “settlement payment” implies trades that comply with the securities laws.
Ill
The judicial decisions construing settlement payments comport with the view that the protection is directed to transactions involving legitimate securities markets.
Although the rhetoric of decisions describes the § 741(8) definition of “settlement payment” as being “broad” or “extremely broad,” reality is different. The decisions that actually have found protected settlement payments to exist have involved publicly traded securities in public markets in which an intermediary played a role.
Wyle v. Howard, Weil, Labouisse, Freidrichs Inc. (In re Hamilton Taft & Co.),
114 F.3d 991, 993 (9th Cir.1997);
Jonas v. Resolution Trust Corp. (In re Comark),
971 F.2d 322, 325-26 (9th Cir.1992);
Jonas v. Farmer Bros. Co. (In re Comark),
145 B.R. 47, 52 (9th Cir. BAP 1992);
accord, Lowenschuss v. Resorts Int’l, Inc. (In re Resorts Int’l, Inc.),
181 F.3d 505, 515-16 (3d Cir.1999);
Kaiser Steel Corp. v. Pearl Brewing Co. (In re Kaiser Steel Corp.),
952 F.2d 1230, 1237-41 (10th Cir.1991);
Kaiser Steel Corp. v. Charles Schwab & Co. (In re Kaiser Steel Corp.),
913 F.2d 846, 848-50 (10th Cir.1990);
Bevill,
878 F.2d at 751-53.
Despite the breadth of the meaning of the term settlement payment, courts recognize that it nevertheless has limits.
KSC Recovery, Inc. v. First Boston Corp. (In re Kaiser Merger Litig.),
168 B.R. 991, 1001 (D.Colo.1994) (while “definition of ‘settlement payment’ is broad, it is not boundless”);
Weinman v. Fid. Capital Appreciation Fund (In re Integra Realty Res., Inc.),
198 B.R. 352, 359-60 (Bankr.D.Colo.1996) (same).
In determining those limits, courts consistently focus on the context of the statute as having been designed to protect public markets.
E.g., Jackson v. Mishkin (In re Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp.),
263 B.R. 406, 478-80 (S.D.N.Y.2001)
(“Adler, Coleman Clearing”); Jewel Recovery, L.P. v. Gordon,
196 B.R. 348, 352-53 (N.D.Tex.1996);
Wieboldt Stores, Inc. v. Schottenstein,
131 B.R. 655, 663-65 (N.D.Ill.1991) (no effect on clearance or settlement process).
The boundary that emerges from such decisions approximates the line between public transactions that involve the clearance and settlement process and non-public transactions that do not involve that process.
Thus, common elements in decisions finding that there is not a protected settlement payment are that the securities involved are not publicly traded and public markets are not utilized. In most of these situations, there is no intermediary.
Zahn v. Yucaipa Capital Fund,
218 B.R. 656, 675-77 (D.R.I.1998);
Jewel Recovery, L.P.,
196 B.R. 348, 351-53 (N.D.Tex.1996);
KSC Recovery, Inc.,
168 B.R. at 1000-01;
Official Comm. v. Asea Brown Boveri, Inc. (In re Grand Eagle Cos.),
288 B.R. 484, 491-95 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio 2003);
Weinman,
198 B.R. at 359-60.
The few decisions that involve outright illegality or transparent manipulation reject § 546(e) protection. In dealing with a preference action based on a Ponzi scheme that had been operated as a sham stock brokerage by an unlicensed ex-felon, the Fifth Circuit did not reach the settlement payment question because the debtor flunked the statutory test of being a “stockbroker” and, thus, could not have
made a transfer protected by § 546(e). 11 U.S.C. § 101(46) (now § 101(53A));
Wider v. Wootton,
907 F.2d 570, 572-73 (5th Cir.1990).
The definition of settlement payment was central to the district court’s appellate decision in
Adler, Coleman Clearing,
which involved “criminal conduct” by a stockbroker in manipulating prices of stocks through phony trades. Hanover, Sterling & Co. (“Hanover”), a stockbroker and market maker, knowing that regulators would shut it down for violating net capital rules, illegally hid its predicament long enough to enable its brokers to execute fake purchases and fake short sales for selected clients. Hanover posted “payments” to the accounts of the favored customers based on the fake trades. The purpose of the phantom transactions was to increase the insured SIPA claims of favored Hanover clients, who were insiders and/or persons who might keep their business with individual Hanover brokers in later employment.
Adler, Coleman Clearing,
263 B.R. at 417-23,
adopting facts from Mishkin v. Ensminger (In re Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp.),
247 B.R. 51, 65-72 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1999). The phony trades generated fatal liability for Adler, Coleman Clearing, which serviced and guaranteed Hanover trades. The Adler, Coleman trustee challenged the phony payments.
The district court, after reviewing the history and context of the statute and surveying the decisional law, focused on the normative aspect of the § 741(8) definition of settlement payment: “commonly used in the securities trade.” This, it reasoned, established a reference point based on “transfers in the ordinary course of business ‘normally regarded [in the securities trade] as part of the settlement process’ for the particular transaction.”
Adler, Coleman Clearing,
263 B.R. at 481 (parenthetical in original),
citing Bevill,
878 F.2d at 752. It concluded that the phantom payments were so steeped in fraud that they “can hardly be deemed so ‘normally regarded.’ ”
Id.
Finally, it noted the irony that Hanover’s fraud was specifically designed to undermine the statutory scheme enacted in Public Law 97-222 to protect the securities industry.
Id.
The essence of the
Adler, Coleman Clearing
analysis is that the disputed payments were not “commonly used in the securities trade” within the meaning of § 741(8), which we find persuasive.
IV
Having assessed the context of the statute and the patterns of judicial interpretations of “settlement payment,” we return to the appeal at hand.
The transaction in question did not occur on a public market and did not involve the process of clearing trades. This places it within the pattern of cases that have concluded that a statutorily-protected “settlement payment” is not present.
Moreover, under the summary judgment rules that require us to construe the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving plaintiff, we are obliged to presume that the payments on Circle Trust’s demands to withdraw capital were made in an effort to prolong a Ponzi scheme that would have collapsed immediately if Six Sigma had paid the full amount of Circle Trust’s demand at the time it was due under the Six Sigma operating agreement, sixty days after Circle Trust’s September 28, 2001, notice.
Thus, the facts correspond with the
Adler, Coleman Clearing
situation that was so steeped in fraud that the particular transactions could not be “normally regarded” as part of the settlement process.
Adler, Coleman Clearing,
263 B.R. at 481,
citing Bevill,
878 F.2d at 752.
If we focus on the plain language of § 741(8), it is apparent that the Six Sigma transfer of $4 million to Circle Trust as a withdrawal of capital was not designated by the participating parties by any term that included the words “settlement payment.” Hence, it was not one of the specific payments catalogued in § 741(8): it was neither a “preliminary settlement payment,” nor a “partial settlement payment,” nor an “interim settlement payment”, nor a “settlement payment on account,” nor a “final settlement payment.” 11 U.S.C. § 741(8).
Since the $4 million transfer was not designated by any term that included the words “settlement payment,” the transfer would constitute a “settlement payment” under the language of § 741(8), only if it qualified as a “similar payment commonly used in the securities trade.”
Id.
The fact that the transfer was a transaction in an illegally unregistered security can hardly be described as a “payment
commonly
used in the securities trade.”
Id.
(emphasis supplied). To the contrary, the viability of the securities markets depends on the ability to enforce provisions outlawing trades in illegally unregistered securities. To construe a transaction in an illegally unregistered security as “commonly” occurring in the securities trade would amount to an absurd contradiction of the securities laws.
As noted, the decisions of the Third Circuit in
Bevill
and the district court in
Adler, Coleman Clearing
confirm that the meaning of “settlement payment” must be construed in light of “transfers which are normally regarded as part of the settlement process.”
Bevill,
878 F.2d at 752;
Adler, Coleman Clearing,
263 B.R. at 481. Since protecting trades in illegally unregistered securities cannot be described as “normally regarded” as entitled to any legitimacy in the securities trade, honoring such a trade would undermine the statutory scheme harmonizing the Bankruptcy Code and the securities laws.
It follows that the withdrawal of capital does not qualify as a “settlement payment” under § 741(8) because a non-public trade in an illegally unregistered security is not “commonly used in the securities trade.” ***** *
The court incorrectly held that the $4 million received by Circle Trust from Six Sigma 89 days before bankruptcy was a settlement payment within the meaning of § 741(8) and hence insulated from recovery by § 546(e).
REVERSED and REMANDED.