22-2039-cv
In re: Mexican Government Bonds Antitrust Litigation
United States Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit
August Term 2023
Argued: October 27, 2023
Decided: February 9, 2024
No. 22-2039
OKLAHOMA FIREFIGHTERS PENSION & RETIREMENT
SYSTEM, ELECTRICAL WORKERS PENSION FUND LO-
CAL 103, I.B.E.W., GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES RETIRE-
MENT SYSTEM OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS, MANHATTAN
AND BRONX SURFACE TRANSIT OPERATING AUTHORITY
PENSION PLAN, METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION AU-
THORITY DEFINED BENEFIT PENSION PLAN MASTER
TRUST, BOSTON RETIREMENT SYSTEM, UNITED FOOD
AND COMMERCIAL WORKERS UNION AND PARTICIPAT-
ING FOOD INDUSTRY EMPLOYERS TRI-STATE PENSION
FUND, SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA TRANSPORTA-
TION AUTHORITY, on behalf of themselves and all oth-
ers similarly situated,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BANCO SANTANDER (MÉXICO) S.A. INSTITUCIÓN DE
BANCA MÚLTIPLE, GRUPO FINANCIERO SANTANDER
MÉXICO, BBVA BANCOMER S.A., INSTITUCIÓN DE
BANCA MÚLTIPLE, GRUPO FINANCIERO BBVA BAN-
COMER, HSBC MÉXICO, S.A., INSTITUCIÓN DE BANCA
MÚLTIPLE, GRUPO FINANCIERO HSBC, BANCO
NACIONAL DE MÉXICO, S.A., INSTITUCIÓN DE BANCA
MÚLTIPLE, GRUPO FINANCIERO BANAMEX, BANK OF
AMERICA MÉXICO, S.A., INSTITUCIÓN DE BANCA MÚLTI-
PLE, GRUPO FINANCIERO BANK OF AMERICA, DEUTSCHE
BANK MÉXICO, S.A. INSTITUCIÓN DE BANCA MÚLTIPLE,
Defendants-Appellees. *
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of New York
Before: LYNCH and PARK, Circuit Judges, and SUBRAMANIAN,
District Judge. **
Plaintiffs in this putative class action are U.S. investors who
bought Mexican government bonds. Defendants are the Mexican
branches of several multinational banks, who sold bonds to Plain-
tiffs through non-party broker-dealers. Plaintiffs allege that De-
fendants fixed the bonds’ prices, and they bring claims against De-
fendants under the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 3, and for com-
mon-law unjust enrichment. Defendants moved to dismiss for lack
of personal jurisdiction, and the District Court (Oetken, J.)
granted Defendants’ motion. Relying on Charles Schwab Corp. v.
Bank of America Corp., 883 F.3d 68 (2d Cir. 2018), the court con-
cluded that it lacked jurisdiction because the alleged wrongdoing
underlying Plaintiffs’ claims—fixing the prices of the bonds—hap-
pened solely in Mexico. We vacate and remand because (1) Defend-
ants had minimum contacts with New York based on solicitations
and sales from the forum by their agents, the broker-dealers, and
(2) Plaintiffs’ claims arise from or are related to those contacts un-
der Schwab. The District Court’s order is VACATED and the
case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
* The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to update the caption.
** Judge Arun Subramanian, of the United States District Court for the South-
ern District of New York, sitting by designation.
2
MARGARET C. MACLEAN, Lowey Dannenberg, P.C.,
White Plains, NY (Vincent Briganti, Lowey Dannen-
berg, P.C., White Plains, NY, on the brief), for Plain-
tiffs-Appellants.
BORIS BERSHTEYN, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom LLP, New York, NY (Susan Saltzstein, Kamali
P. Willett, Kartik Naram, Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom LLP, New York, NY; Adam S. Hakki,
Shearman & Sterling LLP, New York, NY; Alan
Schoenfeld, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
LLP, New York, NY; Paul S. Mishkin, Caroline Stern,
Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP, New York, NY; Lev L.
Dassin, Roger A. Cooper, Samuel Levander, Cleary
Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP, New York, NY; John
Terzaken, Karen M. Porter, Simpson Thacher & Bart-
lett LLP, Washington, DC, on the brief), for Defend-
ants-Appellees.
SUBRAMANIAN, District Judge:
This case involves the alleged price-fixing of Mexican government
bonds. Plaintiffs are investors who bought these bonds in the United
States, allegedly at inflated prices. Defendants are Mexican banks that
deal in the market for the bonds. Defendants did not sell bonds to Plain-
tiffs directly. Instead, sales were negotiated and carried out through bro-
ker-dealers located in New York, each of which was affiliated with a De-
fendant. The brokers are not parties to this case and are not alleged to
have been involved in the price-fixing. The complaint says that they
were just Defendants’ “clearinghouses.”
The question in this appeal is whether there is personal jurisdiction
over Defendants. Plaintiffs say yes because Defendants exploited the
New York market by directing the brokers’ actions in the forum. Defend-
ants say no, arguing that the brokers’ conduct should not be attributed
to them. And even if it is, Defendants say that isn’t enough. They argue
3
that the jurisdictional inquiry focuses on the wrongdoing underlying a
plaintiff’s claims, and the wrongdoing here—the alleged price-fixing—
all happened in Mexico. For this argument, Defendants rely on this
Court’s decision in Charles Schwab Corp. v. Bank of America Corp., 883
F.3d 68 (2d Cir. 2018). The District Court agreed with Defendants’ read-
ing of Schwab and dismissed this case. In re Mexican Gov’t Bonds Anti-
trust Litig., No. 18-CV-2830 (JPO), 2020 WL 7046837, at *5 (S.D.N.Y.
Nov. 30, 2020).
Because the complaint plausibly alleges that Defendants actively
sold billions of dollars’ worth of price-fixed bonds through their agents
in New York, we hold that personal jurisdiction was properly alleged.
The judgment of the District Court dismissing the complaint on per-
sonal-jurisdiction grounds is VACATED and the case REMANDED for
further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual allegations
The following facts are taken from the operative complaint (the Sec-
ond Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint) except where
noted. We take these allegations as true at the motion-to-dismiss stage. 1
Plaintiffs are institutional investors and filed this case on behalf of a
putative class of purchasers who, between 2006 and 2017, transacted in
Mexican government bonds. Defendants are the Mexico-based subsidi-
aries of several multinational banks. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants
violated the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 3, and were unjustly enriched
by selling them price-fixed Mexican government bonds.
To understand the alleged conspiracy, start with the bonds’ lifecycle.
As their name suggests, the Mexican government bonds were issued by
the Mexican government. The bonds were initially sold by the Mexican
central bank, “Banxico,” at auctions. Not everyone could participate in
1 We are concerned here only with whether Plaintiffs’ allegations suffice to
survive a motion to dismiss. “Eventually personal jurisdiction must be estab-
lished by a preponderance of the evidence, either at an evidentiary hearing or
at trial.” A.I. Trade Fin., Inc. v. Petra Bank, 989 F.2d 76, 79 (2d Cir. 1993).
4
these auctions. Instead, Banxico had to approve bidders. Defendants
were approved as bidders and were part of Banxico’s “Market Maker
Program.” The members of that program were tasked with buying large
chunks of bonds (collectively, they had to bid for 100% of the bonds is-
sued), with the understanding that they would resell them for a profit.
After Defendants purchased the bonds at auction, they traded them
in the over-the-counter market. To facilitate market liquidity, each De-
fendant agreed to quote customers both a “bid” price and an “ask” price,
with a promise to buy bonds at the bid price and to sell bonds at the ask
price. Defendants profited on the difference—the “bid-ask spread.” (In
this opinion, we focus on Defendants’ sales of bonds. But Defendants
also bought bonds on the open market, including from Plaintiffs.)
If a U.S. investor wanted to buy a Mexican government bond from a
Defendant, it would first contact that Defendant’s affiliated New York
broker-dealer. Then, the broker-dealer’s sales team would contact the
Defendant’s Mexico-based traders. The traders would quote a price for
the bond, and if the investor agreed to that price, the transaction would
be executed through the broker-dealer.
The brokers were middlemen. Once a trade was agreed to, the broker
would contact its affiliated Defendant so that the bonds could be deliv-
ered to the investor. These trades were executed through “back-to-back”
transactions: In a sale, the bonds would move from the Defendant to the
broker and then to the investor. The cash paid for the bond would go to
the broker and then immediately be forwarded to the Defendant. 2 So
the broker was technically the investor’s counterparty, but the com-
plaint characterizes the brokers as mere “clearinghouse[s].” App’x 326,
Second Am. Compl. (“SAC”) ¶ 81. For example, the brokers never inde-
pendently priced or marketed the bonds. Nor did they hold any inven-
tory. The electronic transfers were also “immediate,” id. at 336, SAC
2 There are a few variations on this pattern. Santander Mexico arranged sales
through a New York broker-dealer but exchanged bonds and cash with inves-
tors through a foreign affiliate, Santander Investment Bolsa, Sociedad de
Valores. BBVA-Bancomer and Citibanamex transacted through New York bro-
ker-dealers just like the other Defendants, but in some instances they also ex-
changed bonds and cash directly with U.S. investors.
5
¶ 119, so the brokers never risked being stuck holding the bag. Perhaps
most tellingly, with one exception, the brokers didn’t make money on the
trades. Only one U.S. broker charged a fee to its affiliated Defendant, 3
and only the Defendants’ trading desks recorded profits and losses from
the trades.
Plaintiffs say that Defendants conspired to fix prices at multiple
points. They allege that Defendants shared pricing information and sub-
mitted fixed bids during the Banxico auctions. Plaintiffs also say that
Defendants sold the bonds they purchased at auction to investors at ar-
tificially high prices. Finally, the complaint alleges that Defendants
agreed to fix their bid-ask spreads—the prices quoted to customers—
artificially wide. In a competitive market, Defendants would compete by
narrowing their bid-ask spreads. They could attract customers by buy-
ing bonds at higher prices (raising their bid price) and selling bonds at
lower prices (lowering their ask price). But they stood to gain by agree-
ing not to do that: Defendants’ “business model in the [Mexican govern-
ment bond] market [was] based on buying low and selling high, as many
times as possible.” Id. at 435, SAC ¶ 456. Wider bid-ask spreads “al-
low[ed] the Defendants to earn greater profits from each transaction be-
cause they equate[d] to a higher sale[s] price to the customer (i.e. a
higher ‘ask’ price).” Id. The complaint relies on chatroom discussions
among traders, economic data, and other information to support the al-
legation that Defendants “agreed to fix the prices that they quoted” to
customers. Id. at 418, SAC ¶ 413.
II. Procedural history
Plaintiffs’ prior complaint asserted claims against not only the Mex-
ico-based Defendants in this appeal, but also dozens of Defendants’ af-
filiates, including the New York brokers. The District Court dismissed
the complaint for improper group pleading, noting that the complaint
treated the defendants as a collective bloc without any defendant-
3 That one broker, BBVA Securities Inc., wrote in its year-end statement of
Financial Condition for 2017 that it “acts as agent on behalf of . . . [Defendant
BBVA-]Bancomer in fixed income securities transactions.” Id. at 328, SAC ¶ 87
n.11.
6
specific allegations. In re Mexican Gov’t Bonds Antitrust Litig., 412
F. Supp. 3d 380, 388–89 (S.D.N.Y. 2019). Plaintiffs then amended their
complaint, dropping all claims against Defendants’ affiliates (includ-
ing the brokers) while adding specific allegations of wrongdoing by
Defendants.
Defendants once again moved to dismiss, and the District Court
granted the motion for lack of personal jurisdiction. In re Mexican Gov’t
Bonds Antitrust Litig., 2020 WL 7046837, at *5. It concluded that this
Court’s decision in Schwab, which is discussed below, was “dispositive”
as to “the conditions under which foreign banks may be haled into court
in the United States to answer for alleged anticompetitive conduct
abroad.” Id. at *3. The District Court understood the “upshot of Schwab”
to be that “purposeful availment in antitrust cases generally requires
in-forum contacts that bear a causal relationship to defendants’ wrong-
doing, not merely to plaintiff’s harm.” Id. So even if Defendants had es-
tablished in-forum contacts by marketing and selling bonds through af-
filiated broker-dealers, “a conspiracy does not ‘arise from’ an ex post at-
tempt to profit from the conspiracy.” Id. In the District Court’s view, the
claims arose from Defendants’ price-fixing, which “occurred in Mexico
alone.” Id.
The court also rejected Plaintiffs’ arguments for jurisdiction under
two specific theories: the “effects” test and conspiracy jurisdiction. Id. at
*4–5. And in a follow-up opinion, the court said that the Supreme
Court’s intervening decision in Ford Motor Co. v. Montana Eighth Judi-
cial District Court, 592 U.S. ----, 141 S. Ct. 1017 (2021), did not dislodge
Schwab as the controlling precedent in this case. In re Mexican Gov’t
Bonds Antitrust Litig., No. 18-CV-2830 (JPO), 2022 WL 950955, at *3
(S.D.N.Y. Mar. 30, 2022). Because the complaint properly alleges juris-
diction under Schwab, we do not address whether there is also jurisdic-
tion under these other theories or based on Ford. 4
4 Plaintiffs argue that Ford abrogated Schwab by creating a more lenient
standard for personal jurisdiction than the one that Schwab applied. Because
we find that jurisdiction is proper under Schwab, we need not decide whether
Ford abrogated Schwab by broadening the relevant standard.
7
LEGAL STANDARDS
We review a dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction de novo. Daou
v. BLC Bank, S.A.L., 42 F.4th 120, 128 (2d Cir. 2022). “To defeat a mo-
tion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, a plaintiff ‘must make a
prima facie showing that jurisdiction exists. Such a showing entails
making legally sufficient allegations of jurisdiction, including an aver-
ment of facts that, if credited[,] would suffice to establish jurisdiction
over the defendant.’” Schwab, 883 F.3d at 81–82 (alteration in original)
(quoting Penguin Grp. (USA) Inc. v. Am. Buddha, 609 F.3d 30, 34–35
(2d Cir. 2010)). On a motion to dismiss, we “construe the pleadings and
affidavits in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, resolving all doubts in
their favor.” Chloe v. Queen Bee of Beverly Hills, LLC, 616 F.3d 158, 163
(2d Cir. 2010) (quoting Porina v. Marward Shipping Co., 521 F.3d 122,
126 (2d Cir. 2008)).
DISCUSSION
Personal jurisdiction can be general or specific. Here, Plaintiffs claim
only specific jurisdiction. Typically, specific-jurisdiction analysis pro-
ceeds in two steps. First, the court applies the forum’s long-arm statute.
Chloe, 616 F.3d at 163. Second, if the long-arm statute permits the ex-
ercise of jurisdiction, the court determines whether that exercise would
comport with the Due Process Clause. Id. at 164. Step two has two
parts of its own: minimum contacts and reasonableness. Id. This ap-
peal involves only whether Defendants had minimum contacts with the
forum. 5
5 The parties dispute whether the relevant forum is the United States or New
York. They point to one of our recent decisions that says this Court has yet to
decide that question. Gucci Am., Inc. v. Weixing Li, 768 F.3d 122, 142 n.21 (2d
Cir. 2014). But there are several other cases that suggest otherwise. U.S. Ti-
tan, Inc. v. Guangzhou Zhen Hua Shipping Co., 241 F.3d 135, 152 n.12 (2d Cir.
2001) (“In determining whether personal jurisdiction exists over a foreign de-
fendant who . . . has been served under a federal service of process provision,
a court should consider the defendant’s contacts throughout the United States
and not just those contacts with the forum.” (internal quotation marks and
citations omitted)); Chew v. Dietrich, 143 F.3d 24, 30 (2d Cir. 1998); Texas
Trading & Milling Corp. v. Fed. Republic of Nigeria, 647 F.2d 300, 314 (2d Cir.
8
“The contacts needed . . . often go by the name ‘purposeful avail-
ment.’” Ford, 141 S. Ct. at 1024 (quoting Burger King Corp. v. Rudze-
wicz, 471 U.S. 462, 475 (1985)). In other words, to have minimum con-
tacts with the forum, the “defendant . . . must take ‘some act by which
[it] purposefully avails itself of the privilege of conducting activities
within the forum State.’” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Hanson v.
Denckla, 357 U.S. 235, 253 (1958)). The contacts “must show that the
defendant deliberately ‘reached out beyond’ its home—by, for example,
‘exploi[ting] a market’ in the forum State.” Id. at 1025 (alteration in orig-
inal) (quoting Walden v. Fiore, 571 U.S. 277, 285 (2014)). And the “plain-
tiff’s claims . . . ‘must arise out of or relate to the defendant’s contacts’
with the forum.” Id. (quoting Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Ct.,
582 U.S. 255, 262 (2017)).
I. Defendants had sufficient contacts with the forum
According to Defendants, they solicited and executed the transac-
tions through brokers. They argue that this layer of separation insulates
them. But the complaint plausibly alleges that the brokers were mere
pass-throughs. And for personal jurisdiction, we look through form to
substance.
“It is well established that a defendant can ‘purposefully avail itself
of a forum by directing its agents or distributors to take action there.’”
Schwab, 883 F.3d at 84 (quoting Daimler AG v. Bauman, 571 U.S. 117,
135 n.13 (2014)). And we have indicated that a defendant avails itself of
New York’s forum if the defendant’s “alleged agent acted in New York
for the benefit of, with the knowledge and consent of, and under some
control by, the nonresident principal.” Id. at 85 (quoting Grove Press,
Inc. v. Angleton, 649 F.2d 121, 122 (2d Cir. 1981)). So it is “plausible that
an agency relationship between a parent corporation and a subsidiary
that sells securities on the parent’s behalf could establish personal ju-
risdiction over the parent in a state in which the parent ‘indirectly’ sells
1981), overruled on other grounds by Frontera Res. Azerbaijan Corp. v. State
Oil Co. of Azerbaijan Republic, 582 F.3d 393 (2d Cir. 2009); Mariash v. Morrill,
496 F.2d 1138, 1143 (2d Cir. 1974). In any event, Defendants’ alleged contacts
with New York are enough at this stage, so we do not reach this question.
9
the securities.” Id. at 85–86. But a defendant can also avail itself of a
forum through something less than “a formal agency relationship.”
Chloe, 616 F.3d at 168; see also Daimler, 571 U.S. at 135 (“Agencies . . .
come in many sizes and shapes . . . .”).
Schwab is instructive. That case involved LIBOR manipulation. LI-
BOR was an interest-rate average calculated by collecting information
from the London branches of several multinational banks. Schwab, 883
F.3d at 78. Those branches allegedly conspired to manipulate the rate
by reporting false information. Id. Some of the conspirators—the “direct
seller[s]”—sold LIBOR-based financial instruments directly to the
Schwab plaintiffs in the forum state. See id. at 78–79, 82–84.
But there were also “indirect sellers.” Schwab, 883 F.3d at 79, 84.
“[T]hese indirect seller Defendants sold debt instruments to [the plain-
tiffs] in [the forum] through non-party broker-dealer subsidiaries or af-
filiates.” Id. Although these defendants “may well have purposefully
availed themselves of [the forum] ‘by directing their agents’ to transact
with [the plaintiffs] there,” the Schwab plaintiffs’ “sparse” allegations
fell short. Id. at 86 (alterations omitted) (quoting Daimler, 571 U.S. at
135 n.13). The complaint there merely asserted in conclusory fashion
that the defendants controlled and benefited from the brokers’ activities,
but it “shed[] no light on the relationship between Defendants and those
broker-dealers.” Id.
Here, that relationship is alleged. The complaint alleges that each
Defendant maintained a New York sales staff “assigned to serve custom-
ers in the United States,” App’x 325, SAC ¶ 76, 6 and that the Mexico-
based “traders were in constant communication with their respective
salesforce in the United States,” id., SAC ¶ 79. Moreover, Defendants
actively used the broker-dealer affiliates as mere pass-throughs to exe-
cute transactions on Defendants’ behalf for free, with all profits and
6 See also id. at 334, SAC ¶ 110 (Santander Mexico); id. at 339, SAC ¶ 131
(BBVA-Bancomer); id. at 346, SAC ¶ 156 (Citibanamex); id. at 352, SAC ¶ 176
(Deutsche Bank Mexico); id. at 357, SAC ¶ 197 (HSBC Mexico); id. at 363, SAC
¶ 216 (Bank of America Mexico).
10
losses from the brokers’ transactions recorded not on the brokers’ ac-
counts, but on Defendants’ accounts. 7
The complaint also details Defendants’ knowledge, control, and ben-
efit. On knowledge and control, the complaint alleges that Defendants
were directly involved in every trade. The brokers “did not actually em-
ploy any individuals who were responsible for marketing, trading, or
pricing” bonds. Id. at 326, SAC ¶ 81. Instead, Defendants’ own trading
desks “suppl[ied] trade ideas to the bank’s salesforce to attract custom-
ers” and then priced every trade furnished and executed by their New
York brokers. Id. at 322, SAC ¶ 67; see also id. at 325, SAC ¶ 77 (“For
example, when a customer located in the United States contacts a New
York salesperson about purchasing [bonds], the salesperson would route
the customer request to a Defendant’s [bond] trading desk.”). The com-
plaint alleges that this was true for each Defendant. 8 And once the New
York brokers executed a deal, each Defendant arranged for the bonds to
be sent from its own inventory. 9 In essence, Defendants merely “use[d]
the[] broker-dealer affiliates as a clearinghouse in cross-border transac-
tions.” Id. at 326, SAC ¶ 81.
As for who benefited, the complaint alleges that it was Defendants
on every trade. For each transaction, “the resulting gain or loss from the
transaction [was] recorded in the profit and loss records of the Defend-
ant’s [Mexican] trading desk.” Id. at 328, SAC ¶ 86. In fact, with one
exception, Defendants were the only ones to benefit. Because the brokers
did “not have an active role in arranging, pricing, or sourcing [the]
7 As noted above, supra at n.1, Plaintiffs’ allegations about the nature of De-
fendants’ relationship with the identified sales forces and broker-dealers will
have to be proven.
8 Id. at 335, SAC ¶ 113 (Santander Mexico); id. at 341, SAC ¶ 137 (BBVA-
Bancomer); id. at 348, SAC ¶ 159 (Citibanamex); id. at 353, SAC ¶ 179
(Deutsche Bank Mexico); id. at 359, SAC ¶ 201 (HSBC Mexico); id. at 364, SAC
¶ 219 (Bank of America Mexico).
9 Id. at 336, SAC ¶¶ 116–17 (Santander Mexico); id. at 342, SAC ¶¶ 141–42
(BBVA-Bancomer); id. at 348, SAC ¶¶ 162–63 (Citibanamex); id. at 354, SAC
¶¶ 182–83 (Deutsche Bank Mexico); id. at 360, SAC ¶¶ 204–05 (HSBC Mex-
ico); id. at 365, SAC ¶¶ 222–23 (Bank of America Mexico).
11
transactions and serve[d] purely an accounting function, they d[id] not
collect a fee or markup for routing [bonds] to and from customers.” Id.,
SAC ¶ 87. And the one exception, BBVA-Bancomer’s broker, expressly
stated in a financial disclosure that it acted as the bank’s “agent.” Id.,
SAC ¶ 87 n.11. These allegations support Plaintiffs’ conclusion that the
brokers “serve[d] in a passive role as an internal clearinghouse.” Id. at
322, SAC ¶ 66. So the brokers do not shield Defendants from the exercise
of jurisdiction.
Once the brokers are established as Defendants’ agents for jurisdic-
tional purposes, the agents’ contacts can be “imputed” to Defendants.
Schwab, 883 F.3d at 86. Perhaps unsurprisingly, using a New York
agent as the sales hub for billions of dollars’ worth of bonds subjects the
principal to specific jurisdiction for claims arising from or related to that
conduct. See Katz Commc’ns, Inc. v. Evening News Ass’n, 705 F.2d 20,
24–25 (2d Cir. 1983) (personal jurisdiction was proper when “the [New
York] office was made virtually a division of the defendant’s business”
and the defendant’s “representatives were in New York planning and
executing the tactics and strategy for getting advertising contracts not
merely in New York but throughout the nation”); PDK Labs, Inc. v.
Friedlander, 103 F.3d 1105, 1111 (2d Cir. 1997) (“[The defendant] does
not claim that the letters and phone calls [his agent] made from New
York constitute random or unintentional actions. [The defendant] has
purposefully availed himself of the New York forum by using [his agent]
in New York . . . to advance his interest in his unique ‘product’ through
soliciting funds and negotiating royalty agreements.”); see also Asahi
Metal Indus. Co. v. Superior Ct., 480 U.S. 102, 112 (1987) (plurality opin-
ion) (“Additional conduct of the defendant may indicate an intent or pur-
pose to serve the market in the forum State, for example, . . . advertising
in the forum State, establishing channels for providing regular advice to
customers in the forum State, or marketing the product through a
12
distributor who has agreed to serve as the sales agent in the forum
State.”). 10
This is not to say that an affiliate’s in-forum marketing, sales, and
distribution can always be pinned to an out-of-state defendant. As
Schwab envisioned, the defendant’s knowledge of, control over, and ben-
efit from the agent’s conduct are the key considerations. This case, how-
ever, does not involve any difficult line-drawing questions. The com-
plaint alleges that Defendants were in charge of every step of every deal,
thousands of times over during the alleged class period.
II. The claims arise from or are related to Defendants’
contacts with the forum
Defendants say that even if the brokers’ contacts are attributed to
them, Plaintiffs’ claims don’t “arise from” or “relate to” those contacts
under Schwab. As explained, the plaintiffs in Schwab alleged that the
defendants conspired to manipulate LIBOR. Some of their claims were
related to certain defendants’ sales to plaintiffs of financial products tied
to LIBOR. Schwab, 883 F.3d at 83. Other claims, however, were based
not on the sales of financial products but solely on the defendants’ alleg-
edly false LIBOR submissions in London. Id. That is, the plaintiffs sued
members of the conspiracy who had not sold them any LIBOR-based fi-
nancial products. Id. at 86–87.
Schwab held that there was jurisdiction for the first set of claims,
those related to the defendants’ sales to the plaintiffs. Id. at 82–83.
These claims included “fraud relating to omissions by Defendants in the
course of selling floating-rate instruments, interference with prospective
economic advantage, breach of the implied covenant, and unjust enrich-
ment.” Id. at 83. As to these claims, the Court emphasized that “[a]llega-
tions of billions of dollars in transactions in [the forum] easily make out
10 This analysis and these precedents apply equally to Santander. Although it
used a foreign affiliate for its back-to-back transactions, that routing decision
is insignificant. Santander’s Mexican trading desk cooperated with its New
York affiliate to promote the bonds, quote prices, and arrange trades. That
conduct is at the heart of the allegedly price-fixed sales.
13
a prima facie showing of personal jurisdiction for claims relating to those
transactions.” Id. at 82.
However, the Court observed that in-forum sales “do not alone create
personal jurisdiction for claims premised solely on Defendants’ false LI-
BOR submissions in London.” Id. at 83 (emphasis added). The Court
identified one such claim: that “Defendants committed fraud through
their daily LIBOR submissions to the [British Bankers’ Association] in
London.” Id. This claim did not arise from the defendants’ in-forum sales
to the plaintiffs. Indeed, the plaintiffs asserted this fraud claim “against
all Defendants, including those that did not sell any products to [the
plaintiffs].” Id.
Defendants read this part of Schwab broadly. They say it requires
that the “wrongdoing” underlying a claim take place in the forum, even
for claims involving sales by the defendant to the plaintiff. And because
the price-fixing alleged here all occurred in Mexico, Defendants say ju-
risdiction in New York is improper. But Schwab expressly rejected that
argument. The district court in Schwab had concluded, mirroring De-
fendants’ argument here, that “plaintiffs could establish personal juris-
diction only where a plaintiff established a prima facie case that ‘defend-
ants’ LIBOR manipulation took place in the relevant forum.’” Schwab,
883 F.3d at 89–90 (quoting In re LIBOR-Based Fin. Instruments Anti-
trust Litig., No. 11 MDL 2262 NRB, 2015 WL 6243526, at *32 (S.D.N.Y.
Oct. 20, 2015)). Schwab described that reasoning as “erroneous.” Id. at
90. It held instead that there was jurisdiction over claims connected to
the defendants’ “sales and solicitation” in the forum. Id. Only the free-
floating fraud claim failed.
In context, that distinction makes sense. The conspiracy alleged in
Schwab was to manipulate LIBOR. But LIBOR itself was not bought
and sold. Rather, the rate was incorporated into financial instruments
that were then sold to the Schwab plaintiffs by some (but not all) of the
alleged conspirators. The LIBOR conspiracy’s object affected in-forum
transactions indirectly, so Schwab paid special attention to the legal
theories linking the manipulation and sales. Personal jurisdiction ex-
isted for claims based on in-forum sales of manipulated instruments but
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did not exist for the one claim based solely on the allegedly fraudulent
out-of-forum LIBOR submissions.
Here, the complaint alleges that Defendants rigged the product, then
arranged to sell it through their agents in New York. Plaintiffs say that
the prices of the bonds were fixed and that those price-fixed bonds were
sold to them by the price-fixers’ agents. Rather than being incorporated
by reference, the wrongdoing here is baked into the product itself. So
there is little need to police the line between the alleged wrongdoing and
sales. As a result, the solicitations and sales here fit Schwab’s category
of “transactions [that] easily make out a prima facie showing of personal
jurisdiction.” Id. at 82.
Indeed, the facts here present an even stronger case for jurisdiction
than those in Schwab. While the contacts in Schwab were sales into the
forum, Defendants here, through their brokers, arranged sales of bonds
from the forum. “In determining whether personal jurisdiction is pre-
sent, a court must consider . . . ‘the interests of the forum State and of
the plaintiff in proceeding with the cause in the plaintiff’s forum of
choice.’” Bristol-Myers, 582 U.S. at 263 (quoting Kulko v. Superior Ct.,
436 U.S. 84, 92 (1978)). “But the ‘primary concern’ is ‘the burden on the
defendant.’” Id. (quoting World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 444
U.S. 286, 292 (1980)).
The plaintiffs in Schwab wanted to sue in their home forum. In some
sense, the defendants were burdened by that choice. But the forum
state’s interest in protecting its consumers was strong, and the pur-
ported burden was less compelling because the defendants had chosen
to transact with a party there. Here, by contrast, Plaintiffs want to sue
Defendants where Defendants have allegedly elected to conduct their
U.S. sales operations. New York has a strong interest in regulating busi-
nesses in the state, of course, and Defendants chose to take advantage
of New York’s market and laws. So they can’t complain.
In the end, Defendants’ theory that jurisdiction can exist only where
the price-fixing occurred makes little sense. Suppose that Defendants
opened a sales office in New York, staffed by their own employees, and
then sold the bonds out of that office to U.S. investors at prices fixed in
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Mexico. It could hardly be argued that Defendants’ New York contacts
would be insufficiently related to the price-fixing to confer jurisdiction
in New York. Since the acts of the brokers here may be attributed to
Defendants, the divided nature of the sales cannot change that result.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the judgment of the District Court is VACATED
and the case REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
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