New Mexico State Investment Council v. Bank of America Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedJune 5, 2023
Docket1:21-cv-00606
StatusUnknown

This text of New Mexico State Investment Council v. Bank of America Corporation (New Mexico State Investment Council v. Bank of America Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Mexico State Investment Council v. Bank of America Corporation, (D.N.M. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO IN RE CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS AUCTIONS LITIGATION Civ. No. 21-0606 KG/DLM MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER “Credit default swap (CDS) auction” is Wall Street-speak for, essentially, settling-up an insurance payout when corporate or municipal bond issuers default on those bonds or declare bankruptcy. The Plaintiffs', which the Court collectively refers to as “Plaintiffs,” are quasi-state funds that manage state and state-employee asset funds and retirement accounts. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants impermissibly colluded and conspired to manipulate—or “fix” or “rig”’—-CDS auctions in an anticompetitive manner, and that this conduct constitutes: 1) a conspiracy to restrain trade in violation of the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act, 2) violations of the Commodity Exchange Act, and 3) unjust enrichment by civil conspiracy in violation of New Mexico law. See generally (Doc. 151). Defendants now move to dismiss the Amended Complaint for four reasons: 1) the applicable statutes of limitation bar all claims; 2) the Court lacks personal jurisdiction over some Defendants; 3) Plaintiffs lack antitrust standing to assert umbrella claims; and 4) the Amended Complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. (Doc. 157). For the reasons explained herein, the Court grants in part and denies in part the Motion to Dismiss.

' This case presents a putative class action. Plaintiffs have not moved for class certification at this time, so the Court will address only the named Plaintiffs.

L Background Plaintiffs and Defendants participate in the CDS and CDS auction market. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants have been “rigging” CDS auctions and have “worked together to manipulate this market for their own financial benefit” and to the detriment of Plaintiffs. Jd. at § 1. More specifically, Plaintiffs allege Defendants have “rigged the CDS auction process when so-called ‘credit events’ occur.” Id. at 3. A. The Players Plaintiffs are the New Mexico State Investment Council (SIC), an institutional investment firm that manages New Mexico’s permanent endowment and investments from twenty-three (23) state agencies, (Doc. 1) at § 38; the Public Employees Retirement Association of New Mexico (PERA), a cost-sharing, multiple employer, defined benefit pension fund that manages the retirement system for New Mexico state, county, and municipal employees, id. at ] 43; and the New Mexico Educational Retirement Board (ERB), a pension trust fund that manages the retirement system for employees of New Mexico school districts and other state educational institutions, id. at J 48. The Defendants come in ten (10) tranches, which the Court collectively refers to as “Defendants”: 1) Bank of America/Merrill Lynch (BoA), including: Bank of America, N.A., and BofA Securities, Inc.; 2) Barclays, including Barclays Bank plc and Barclays Capital Inc.; 3) BNP Paribas, including BNP Paribas S.A. and BNP Paribas Securities Corp.; 4) Citi, including Citibank N.A., Citigroup Global Markets, Inc., and Citigroup Global Markets Limited; 5) Credit Suisse, including Credit Suisse AG, Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, Credit Suisse Capital LLC, and Credit Suisse International; 6) Deutsche Bank, including Deutsche Bank AG and

? All facts in this section come from Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint, (Doc. 1), and are accepted as true for purposes of resolving the Motion to Dismiss.

Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.; 7) Goldman Sachs, including Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC and Goldman Sachs International; 8) IPMorgan, including J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. and J.P. Morgan Securities LLC; 9) Morgan Stanley, including Morgan Stanley & Co., LLC, Morgan Stanley & Co. International, and Morgan Stanley Capital Services, LLC; and 10) RBS, including NatWest Markets plc and NatWest Markets Securities, Inc. Jd. at J] 53-94. Defendants are “market makers” or “dealers” of CDS. Jd. at 3. Three non-parties play relevant and substantial roles in this story: 1) the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA); 2) Creditex Group Inc. (CGI, and with its subsidiaries, “Creditex”); and 3) IHS Markit, Ltd. (Markit). Jd. at 98-110. ISDA “isa financial trade association formed in 1985 purporting to represent the interests of derivatives market participants.” /d. at 98. Defendants are members of ISDA and their employees/representatives sit on the ISDA board of directors. Id. at § 99. Creditex “is an interdealer broker in the credit derivatives market.” Jd. at ] 102. An “interdealer broker” is “an intermediary broker that facilitates trades between Defendants.” Jd. at 106; see also id. at § 142 (“[a]n interdealer broker facilitates trades between dealers”). Defendants “backed Creditex as a ‘strategic investment” and helped it “get off the ground.” Jd. at | 103. This backing, referred to as a “dealer consortium” or “club” transaction, involved “various members of the club — Defendants — collectively choos[ing] to support (and not support) companies that form critical market infrastructure in the financial markets, like trading platforms, clearinghouses, trade processing businesses, and brokerages.” /d. Defendants “use these investments to shape a financial market so that it favors Defendants’ collective, incumbent

> The designations as “market maker” or “dealer” does not mean that Defendants exclusively buy or sell CDS protection. This designation has more to with Defendants’ position in the market than the individual positions each Defendant takes with respect to any given reference entity.

interests in that market, such as by preventing the development of a market in a certain way, or by ensuring that any technological innovation in a specific market is controlled by Defendants.” Id. at { 104. Investment in these businesses “often involve some form of equity in the company, in exchange for the promise of control,” such as seats on the board of directors and seats on the “most important committees that make development decisions about how the business will operate and evolve.” /d. Defendants use these board of directors and committee meetings as “a form for the Defendants’ representatives to meet and share their views about overall market structure and how they think it should develop to protect their collective interests.” Jd. Defendants’ controlling involvement in Creditex means that Creditex cannot “take business positions contrary to the interests of Defendants.” Jd. at J 106. Markit was originally incorporated as Markit Ltd. in January 2014 and held an initial public offering (IPO) in June 2014. Jd. at § 107. Markit Ltd. later merged with IHS, Inc. and became the current iteration of IHS Markit, Ltd, which includes Markit Group Holdings Limited and Markit Group Limited. /d. Prior to its IPO, Markit was another strategic investment of Defendants and was owned by sixteen (16) shareholder banks. /d. at § 108. “Each dealer was entitled to (and occupied) a seat on Markit’s board of directors.” Jd. “As with Creditex, Defendants’ control of Markit was rooted in Markit’s dependence on the Defendants for the continuation and success of Markit’s business, in Defendants’ ownership of Markit, and in Defendants’ role as Markit’s directors.” Jd. at § 109. Markit’s operations concern “CDS auctions, CDS pricing/valuation, CDS training, CDS processing, and/or CDS indices.” Jd. at § 107. “Markit is a leading provider of CDS pricing and valuation services (it currently prices approximately 3,800 CDS entities and all major CDS indices) and also provides CDS trade

processing services. Markit also owns, manages, and administers the leading CDS indices, including the CDX and iTraxx indices[.]” Jd. at § 110. Defendants, along with ISDA, Creditex, and Markit, “developed the CDS auction protocol, and the related Determinations Committee.” /d. at § 98; see also id. at §§ 141-43.

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New Mexico State Investment Council v. Bank of America Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-mexico-state-investment-council-v-bank-of-america-corporation-nmd-2023.