New Orleans Employees' Retirement System v. Omnicom Group, Inc.

     08-0612-cv
     In re: Omnicom Group, Inc. Securities Litigation

1                           UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

2                               FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

3                                 August Term, 2008

4    (Argued:    May 5, 2009                            Decided:   March 9, 2010)

5                               Docket No. 08-0612-cv

6    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 7   IN RE: OMNICOM GROUP, INC. SECURITIES LITIGATION
 8
 9   NEW ORLEANS EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM,
10
11               Plaintiff-Appellant,
12
13   PHILIP SZANTO, DR. JOSEPH S. FISHER, M.D. PROFIT SHARING PLAN, on
14   behalf of itself and all others similarly situated, DIANEE GLYNN,
15   on behalf of herself and all others similarly situated, RICHARD
16   LEHAN, PETER “PETER KIM”, EDWARD KAIMINSKI, SUSAN BLACK, MATT
17   BRODY, AMY HOFFMAN, ROBERT E. GARREN, and ALAN MIRKEN,
18
19               Consolidated-Plaintiffs,
20
21                     v.
22
23   OMNICOM GROUP, INC., JOHN WREN and RANDALL J. WEISENBURGER, BRUCE
24   CRAWFORD and PHILIP J. ANGELASTRO,
25
26               Consolidated-Defendants-Appellees.
27
28   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
29
30   B e f o r e:      FEINBERG, WINTER, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges.
31
32         Appeal from an order of the United States District Court for

33   the Southern District of New York (William H. Pauley III, Judge)

34   granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment.             The district

35   court held that defendants were entitled to summary judgment on

36   plaintiffs’ claims under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange

37   Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 because plaintiffs failed to show loss


                                             1
1    causation.   We affirm.

 2                                   JOHN P. COFFEY, Bernstein Litowitz
 3                                   Berger & Grossmann LLP, New York,
 4                                   New York, for Plaintiff-Appellant
 5                                   and the Certified Class.
 6
 7                                   PETER A. WALD (Jeff G. Hammel,
 8                                   Latham & Watkins LLP, New York, New
 9                                   York; Janey Mallow Link, Latham &
10                                   Watkins LLP, Chicago, Illinois, of
11                                   counsel; Abid R. Qureshi, Latham &
12                                   Watkins LLP, Washington, D.C., of
13                                   counsel, on the brief) Latham &
14                                   Watkins LLP, New York, New York,
15                                   for Defendants-Appellees.
16
17
18   WINTER, Circuit Judge:
19
20        The New Orleans Employees’ Retirement System, the lead

21   plaintiff in this class action, appeals from Judge Pauley’s grant

22   of summary judgment dismissing its complaint alleging securities

23   fraud in violation of Section 10(b), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), against

24   Omnicom Group, Inc. and its managers.     The district court held

25   that appellant proffered no evidence sufficient to support a

26   finding of loss causation.

27        For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
28                                BACKGROUND

29        Given the procedural posture of this matter, an appeal from

30   a grant of summary judgment dismissing a complaint, “we construe

31   the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff,

32   drawing all reasonable inferences and resolving all ambiguities

33   in [its] favor.”   Colavito v. N.Y. Organ Donor Network, Inc., 438

34   F.3d 214, 217 (2d Cir. 2006).

35   a) The Seneca Transaction


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1         Omnicom is a large global marketing and advertising holding

2    company.   Around 1996, Omnicom began using its subsidiary,

3    Communicade, to invest in internet marketing and advertising

4    companies.   The value of the internet companies began to decline

5    in 2000.   Omnicom determined that these losses were not “other-

6    than-temporary impairment[s],” and thus non-reportable, a

7    position that was reviewed without exception by Arthur Andersen.

8         During the first quarter of 2001, Omnicom entered into a

9    transaction with Pegasus Partners II, L.P., a Delaware private

10   equity firm, that created a new company, Seneca, owned by both

11   Omnicom and Pegasus.   In a press release, Omnicom and Pegasus

12   stated that the objective of the Seneca transaction was to

13   “maximize consolidation and other strategic opportunities among

14   companies in the currently depressed e-services consulting and

15   professional services marketplace.”   The Seneca transaction

16   involved Omnicom’s transfer to Seneca of $47.5 million in cash

17   and its Communicade subsidiary, whose sole assets were the

18   internet companies, and Pegasus’s promise to transfer a total of
19   $25 million in cash, $12.5 million up front and $12.5 million

20   when Seneca requested it.   Omnicom received $325 million in

21   Seneca’s non-voting preferred stock, while Pegasus received all

22   of Seneca’s common stock.   Omnicom reported that it would incur

23   no gain or loss from this transaction because it was exchanging

24   the internet companies, purported to be worth $277.5 million, and

25   $47.5 million in cash for preferred stock of equivalent value.

26        Appellant alleges that the accounting for the Seneca

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1    transaction was fraudulent, a claim we assume to be true, albeit

2    one that is disputed.   While Omnicom’s auditors, it is claimed,

3    viewed Pegasus’s willingness to invest $25 million in Seneca as

4    support for Omnicom’s valuation of the internet companies at

5    $277.5 million, there is evidence that, despite the

6    representations that Pegasus would immediately transfer $12.5

7    million to Seneca, it instead transferred only $100 to Seneca,

8    while transferring the $12.5 million to a Pegasus holding

9    company.   Appellant argues that this fact, which was not
10   disclosed to the market in any of the news articles that

11   appellant relies on, raises doubts about Omnicom’s valuation of

12   the assets transferred to Seneca.

13        Appellant also claims that Omnicom misrepresented the value

14   of its Seneca stock to its auditors at the end of 2001.     To

15   conceal the decline in the value of Seneca’s assets, Omnicom is

16   said to have arranged for Seneca, rather than Omnicom, to buy a

17   technology license from Live Technology Holdings, Inc., one of

18   Seneca’s investee companies.    Seneca would then sell the license

19   to Omnicom for $75 million.    The $75 million would nearly offset

20   Seneca’s yearly losses.

21   b) Publicly Available Information About the Seneca Transaction

22        Several news articles at or near the time reported the

23   Seneca transaction and suggested that it was an attempt to move

24   the internet companies, whose value was deteriorating, off




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1    Omnicom’s books.1     Indeed, observers expressed these views well

2    into 2002.2    However, Omnicom’s stock never experienced any

3    statistically significant drop in value at or near the time of

4    these news reports.

5          On June 5, 2002, Omnicom filed a Form 8-K disclosing that

6    Robert Callander, an outside director and Chair of Omnicom’s

7    Audit Committee, had resigned from its board of directors on May

8    22, 2002.     Although the Form 8-K did not disclose the reason for

9    Callander’s resignation, appellant argues that it was because of

10   Callander’s concern over the accounting of the Seneca

11   transaction.     Appellant relies on Callander’s request for a

12   review of the Seneca transaction by a separate accounting firm,

13   his handwritten notes on a copy of Omnicom’s 2001 Form 10-K, his

14   request for Seneca’s financial statements, questions he asked

           1
            On May 7, 2001, Advertising Age published an article stating that the
     Seneca transaction “was seen by some as a way for Omnicom to get struggling
     stocks off of its books.” Debra Aho Williamson, The Fairy Tale Ends;
     Interactive 100 Stumbles After Dot-Com Business Blows Away, Advertising Age,
     May 7, 2001, at S1. InternetNews.com featured an article about the Seneca
     transaction on June 26, 2001, in which it stated that “[t]he merger comes out
     of a complicated effort by ad agency group Omnicom to lessen its losses in the
     interactive sector, by sharing its stakes in Agency.com and other I-shops with
     a private equity firm, Pegasus Partners.” Christopher Saunders, Seneca to
     Absorb Agency.com, InternetNews.com, June 26, 2001. Later, on September 17,
     2001, an article in Fortune stated that “[Omnicom’s CEO John] Wren is just
     cleaning up the mess from his last big foray into untapped market terrain: the
     Internet,” and that “Wren is now getting all the Net assets off Omnicom’s
     books by shoveling them into a private holding company called Seneca.”
     Patricia Sellers, Rocking Through the Ad Recession: Omnicom Is Defying the
     Madison Avenue Slump Thanks to Its CEO’s Aggressive, Contrarian Strategy,
     Fortune, Sept. 17, 2001, at 145.


           2
             In May 2002, New Media Agencies reported that if Omnicom hadn’t entered
     into the Seneca transaction, it “might have faced the prospect of having to
     accept sizeable write-offs in the value of its [internet] investments and, in
     the case of Agency.com, it would have had to deduct its share of the
     increasing losses from the profit that Omnicom would hope to report for 2001.”
     How Omnicom Detached its Internet Ventures But Still Kept its Options Open,
     New Media Agencies Financial Intelligence, May 2002, at 2-1.


                                             5
1    during audit committee meetings, and his request for advice

2    regarding his responsibilities from a Columbia Business School

3    professor.   Appellant also relies on the fact that Callander

4    resigned the same day that the board rejected his suggestion that

5    the audit committee review Omnicom’s proposal to reacquire two of

6    the internet companies recently transferred to Seneca.

7         On June 6, 2002, Omnicom’s stock price declined as rumors

8    circulated that The Wall Street Journal would be publishing a

9    negative article about accounting issues at Omnicom.    That same
10   day, Salomon Smith Barney issued a report noting “an article

11   circulated on Briefing.com which speculated that The Wall Street

12   Journal was set to break a potentially negative story about

13   accounting issues at Omnicom.”   Joint App. at 1566.   However, the

14   report also expressed the belief that Callander resigned because

15   his “relationship with other board members had become

16   increasingly strained and counter-productive,” noting that “[h]ad

17   Mr. Callander complained about or disagreed with something in

18   particular, Omnicom would have had to disclose it.”     Id.   The

19   next day, June 7, 2002, UBS Warburg published a report stating

20   that “[w]e believe that [Callander’s] resignation has more to do

21   with ‘fit’ than actual auditing improprieties, but note that the

22   director who headed the audit committee has given fuel to

23   concerns with auditing irregularity.”   Id. at 1570.

24        On June 10, 2002, The Wall Street Journal published a short

25   article in which it stated that Callander “quit the board after

26   expressing concerns about the creation of an entity that houses

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1    Omnicom’s Internet assets,” and, in particular, his

2    “unhapp[iness] with Omnicom management’s limited disclosure to

3    the audit committee about the entity that holds many of Omnicom’s

4    former Internet assets.”   Vanessa O’Connell & Jesse Eisinger,

5    Leading the News: Omnicom Director Quits Due to Entity Concerns,

6    Wall St. J., June 10, 2002, at B4.       The article further suggested

7    that Callander left due to “some broader corporate governance

8    concerns,” but quoted Omnicom’s Chairman as reassuring investors

9    that “‘there is no issue’ with Seneca.”       Id.
10         Late on June 11, 2002, the Financial Times published an

11   article describing Omnicom’s investors’ “post-Enron concerns

12   about disclosure.”   Richard Tomkins & Christopher Grimes, Omnicom

13   Shares Wobble Amid Disclosure Fears, Fin. Times, June 11, 2002.

14   It acknowledged that “there is no suggestion of impropriety,

15   still less any breaking of the rules,” but noted that,

16   nonetheless, industry executives and analysts were still

17   concerned with Omnicom’s methods of calculating organic growth.

18   Id.   The article also stated that investors were concerned with
19   the Seneca transaction, which the article stated had been

20   described as “a clever ploy” and “very skillful financial

21   engineering,” but the article stated that “there is no suggestion

22   of impropriety or rule-breaking.”       Id.

23         On June 12, 2002, The Wall Street Journal published the

24   rumored article on Omnicom that discussed Callander’s resignation

25   and the Seneca transaction.   Vanessa O’Connell & Jesse Eisinger,

26   Unadvertised Deals: At an Ad Giant, Nimble Financing Fuels Rapid


                                         7
1    Growth -- But Omnicom’s Web Stakes Spark Board Controversy; A

2    Question of Disclosure -- The Impact of Acquisitions, Wall St.

3    J., June 12, 2002, at A1.    The article stated that Callander had

4    “resigned amid questions about how the company handled a series

5    of soured Internet investments,” that “[h]e questioned whether

6    something wasn’t being disclosed to the board about the initial

7    off-loading of the problematic investments and the proposal to

8    buy two Internet firms,” that “he had voiced doubts about

9    Seneca’s purpose for months,” and that he had concerns that
10   management “had engaged in transactions without running it

11   through the board.”   Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).     In

12   further discussing the Seneca transaction, the article stated

13   that it “allowed the company to avoid the possibility of writing

14   down the value of its investments in some of the online firms.”

15   Id.   It quoted Omnicom’s CEO as saying that “Seneca was smart

16   because instead of just walking away from these [Internet

17   investments] and taking a write-off, we said we believe that

18   Pegasus, through Seneca, could restructure the assets and make
19   them valuable again.”    Id. (internal quotation marks omitted)

20   (alteration in original).

21         The article also quoted Omnicom’s general counsel, who

22   stated that he had told Callander that the board had not approved

23   Seneca.   Id.   This information was mistaken because “the still-

24   unnamed venture wasn’t called Seneca then, so the word hadn’t

25   shown up in automated searches of board minutes,” even though the

26   transaction had been approved.    Id. (internal quotation marks


                                        8
1    omitted).   Furthermore, the June 12 article referred to

2    statements by two accounting professors, one who thought that

3    Seneca “raises a red flag,” and one who said, “[y]ou really have

4    to wonder where this fair value is coming from in this

5    environment, in this area.”      Id. (internal quotation marks

6    omitted).

7         The June 12 article also raised questions about Omnicom’s

8    general accounting practices.      For example, the article stated

9    that “[i]n the wake of the collapse of Enron Corp., investors are

10   demanding clearer and simpler financial statements from big

11   companies, putting particular pressure on serial acquirers with

12   tangled webs of deals.”    Id.    It noted that Omnicom “uses a more

13   aggressive means than its competitors to calculate the critical

14   statistic of how much of its growth it generates from existing

15   operations.”   Id.   The article also claimed that “[t]he clash

16   over Seneca [between Callander and management] signals new

17   concern about the financial side of the Omnicom juggernaut.”      Id.

18   In addition, it suggested that Omnicom may have a cash flow
19   problem because “if cash spent on acquisitions is subtracted, the

20   company has a negative cash flow,” further noting that “Omnicom

21   has sharply increased its borrowing lately.”      Id.   Finally, the

22   June 12 article discussed Omnicom’s use of earn-out payments in

23   its deal structures, stating that “[w]ith such a high volume of

24   acquisitions, Omnicom’s obligations to make future earn-out

25   payments amount to a substantial potential liability . . . .


                                          9
1    [that Omnicom does not] carry . . . on its balance sheet.”       Id.

2           Later that day, Omnicom held a telephone conference to

3    reassure investors.     During the conference, Omnicom’s CEO stated

4    that there was no dissent among the board members, but

5    acknowledged that “Mr. Callander’s reasons [for resigning from

6    the board] were presented accurately as in ‘The Journal’ this

7    morning.”

8           A number of articles and analyst reports also responded to

9    the June 12 article, some of which suggested that the article
10   raised questions about Omnicom’s accounting practices.     For

11   example, a Reuters article that day stated that Omnicom “was

12   forced to play defense on Wednesday amid questions about its

13   accounting,” and suggested that Omnicom’s management’s

14   credibility was harmed by the June 12 article.     Adam Pasick,

15   UPDATE 1-Omnicom Defends Accounting as Stock Plunges, Reuters,

16   June 12, 2002.     Nonetheless, the article also noted that “Omnicom

17   said Callander’s resignation was the result of a

18   misunderstanding: that he was told, erroneously, that the board
19   had not approved the creation of Seneca when it [sic] fact it

20   had.”    Id.   A New York Times article on June 13 also suggested

21   that Omnicom “scrambled yesterday to repair damage caused by a

22   newspaper article critical of its accounting practices.” Stuart

23   Elliott, Omnicom Shares Tumble 20%, N.Y. Times, June 13, 2002, at

24   C11.    Similarly, an analyst report from Lehman Brothers on June

25   13, 2002, stated that “[i]nvestors’ concerns focus on whether or


                                         10
1    not the assets should have been written down either at the time

2    of the transaction or at the end of last year,” yet it noted that

3    “yesterday’s Wall Street Journal article did not bring up any

4    substantial ‘new’ issues.”   On June 21, 2002, a Campaign article

5    stated that “[t]he questions now being asked are about whether

6    the [Seneca] deal was entirely at arm’s length, whether it was

7    adequately disclosed and whether there might still be some

8    lingering potential liabilities that might come back to haunt

9    Omnicom in the future.”   Bob Willott, Omnicom Could Stand Test of
10   WSJ Allegations, Campaign, June 21, 2002.

11        However, some analyst reports and news articles also

12   indicated that the June 12 article did not raise any new factual

13   issues and suggested that the market’s negative reaction was due

14   to the article’s negative tone and innuendo in the post-Enron

15   market.   See, e.g., Merrill Lynch, FlashNote, Omnicom Group Inc.:

16   Good News: No New News in WSJ Article, June 12, 2002; Richard

17   Morgan, Hatchet Job, TheDeal.com, June 14, 2002; Bear Stearns,

18   Omnicom Group (OMC-62.30) - Buy: Follow Up On WSJ Article, June
19   13, 2002; SalomonSmithBarney, Omnicom Group Inc. (OMC): Comments

20   on Management Meeting, June 13, 2002; SalomonSmithBarney, Omnicom

21   Group Inc. (OMC): Comments on WSJ Article, June 12, 2002; Richard

22   Tomkins, Omnicom Slides on S&P’s Move to Cut Outlook, Fin. Times,

23   June 13, 2002; UBS Warburg, Global Equity Research: Omnicom Group

24   (OMC), June 13, 2002.

25        In the two days following the June 12 article, Omnicom’s


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1    stock dropped over twenty-five percent relative to trading prices

2    and activity in the market and the industry.    However, after

3    Omnicom announced that its new auditor, KPMG, reviewed the

4    accounting for the Seneca transaction and had not recommended any

5    changes, Omnicom’s stock increased substantially relative to the

6    industry and the market.

7    c) The Present Action

8         On June 13, 2002, as Omnicom’s closing price fell, appellant

9    and other plaintiffs filed this action.   On May 19, 2003,

10   appellant filed an amended complaint, which appellees moved to

11   dismiss.   The district court granted appellees’ motion in part,

12   dismissing claims involving Omnicom’s organic growth calculations

13   and its earn-out and put-out liabilities, but denied the motion

14   with regard to the Seneca transaction.

15        The complaint made three allegations of fraud concerning the

16   Seneca transaction.   First, it alleged that Omnicom should have

17   written down the value of the internet companies before engaging

18   in the Seneca transaction.   Second, it alleged that the
19   accounting of the Seneca transaction was fraudulent because

20   Omnicom failed to appropriately value the internet companies.

21   Third, it alleged that Omnicom should have accounted for Seneca’s

22   losses after the Seneca transaction occurred because Omnicom

23   controlled Seneca.    Each allegation, therefore, focused on the

24   loss in value of the internet companies and the failure to

25   reflect that loss on Omnicom’s books.


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1           The class action complaint invoked the rebutable presumption

2    of shareholder reliance established in Basic, Inc. v. Levinson,

3    485 U.S. 224, 241-42 (1988).    It alleged that Omnicom was an

4    actively traded company and that the market for its shares

5    promptly reflected public information about the company.

6           In July 2005, appellant moved to certify a class “consisting

7    of all persons and entities who purchased or otherwise acquired

8    the securities of Omnicom from February 20, 2001 through June 11,

9    2002 and who were damaged thereby.”     Appellant’s Br. at 24.   The
10   district court certified the class on April 30, 2007.

11          After extensive discovery and in response to appellees’

12   motion for summary judgment, appellant proffered, inter alia, a

13   report of its expert witness, Dr. Scott D. Hakala.    Dr. Hakala

14   prepared an event study analysis and was prepared to testify that

15   “the investing public’s initial reactions to the partially

16   corrective disclosures in June 2002 were tied to the news of

17   Omnicom’s inappropriate accounting for investments in Internet-

18   related entities and not to other news during that time period.”
19   Joint App. at 1221.    He claimed that “[i]nvestors legitimately

20   feared that Omnicom’s transfers of its Internet investments

21   created the potential for losses and hidden liabilities and/or

22   had allowed Omnicom to hide losses in the past.”     Joint App. at

23   803.    Dr. Hakala also stated that:

24               [T]he declines from June 5 to June 13, 2002,
25               would not have occurred on those dates had
26               Defendants not previously engaged in the
27               fraudulent scheme alleged by Plaintiffs. The

                                        13
1              information revealed in that time period
2              constituted a partial revelation of
3              information about this scheme.
4
5    Id. at 793-94 (internal citation omitted).

6         On January 29, 2008, the district court granted appellees’

7    motion for summary judgment.     See In re Omnicom Group, Inc. Sec.

8    Litig., 541 F. Supp. 2d 546 (S.D.N.Y. 2008).    The district court,

9    in a thorough and well-reasoned opinion, held that appellant had

10   failed to proffer sufficient evidence that the fraud alleged --

11   the Seneca transaction -- caused the drop in stock price that
12   damaged the class.   We agree.

13                               DISCUSSION

14   a) Standard of Review

15        “We review the grant of summary judgment de novo.”    Lawrence

16   v. Cohn, 325 F.3d 141, 147 (2d Cir. 2003).    Summary judgment is

17   only appropriate if the record shows “that there is no genuine

18   issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to

19   judgment as a matter of law.”    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); see also

20   Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-24 (1986).    An issue
21   of fact is genuine “if the evidence is such that a reasonable

22   jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”    Anderson

23   v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986).    In looking at

24   the record, we “constru[e] the evidence in the light most

25   favorable to the nonmoving party and draw[] all inferences and

26   resolv[e] all ambiguities in favor of the nonmoving party.”    Doro

27   v. Sheet Metal Workers’ Int’l Ass’n, 498 F.3d 152, 155 (2d Cir.


                                         14
1    2007).   Nonetheless, summary judgment is appropriate where a

2    defendant:

 3              has moved for summary judgment on the ground
 4              that undisputed facts reveal that the
 5              plaintiff cannot establish an essential
 6              element of the claim, on which element the
 7              plaintiff has the burden of proof, and the
 8              plaintiff has failed to come forth with
 9              evidence sufficient to permit a reasonable
10              juror to return a verdict in his or her favor
11              on that element . . . .
12
13   Burke v. Jacoby, 981 F.2d 1372, 1379 (2d Cir. 1992); see also

14   Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248-49.

15   b) The Section 10(b) Claims

16        To sustain a claim under Section 10(b), appellant must show

17   (i) a material misrepresentation or omission; (ii) scienter;

18   (iii) “a connection with the purchase or sale of a security[;]”

19   (iv) reliance by the plaintiff(s); (v) economic loss; and (vi)

20   loss causation.   Dura Pharms., Inc. v. Broudo, 544 U.S. 336, 341-

21   42 (2005).   The district court granted summary judgment on the

22   ground that appellant failed to proffer sufficient evidence to

23   show loss causation.

24        Use of the term “loss causation” is occasionally confusing

25   because it is often used to refer to three overlapping but

26   somewhat different concepts.    It may be used to refer to whether

27   the particular plaintiff or plaintiff class relied upon -- or is

28   refutably presumed to have relied upon -- the misrepresentation.

29   ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd., 493 F.3d 87, 107 (2d


                                        15
1    Cir. 2007).       Generally, however, courts use the term “transaction

2    causation” to refer to this element.            See, e.g., Dura Pharms.,

3    544 U.S. at 341-42; Emergent Capital Inv. Mgmt., LLC v. Stonepath

4    Group, Inc., 343 F.3d 189, 197 (2d Cir. 2003) (“Like reliance,

5    transaction causation refers to the causal link between the

6    defendant’s misconduct and the plaintiff’s decision to buy or

7    sell securities.”).

8          “Loss causation” may also refer to the requirement that the

9    wrong for which the action was brought is a but-for cause or
10   cause-in-fact of the losses suffered, also a requirement for an

11   actionable Section 10(b) claim.           Dura Pharms., 544 U.S. at 342;

12   see also 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(4) (“In any private action arising

13   under this chapter, the plaintiff shall have the burden of

14   proving that the act or omission of the defendant alleged to

15   violate this chapter caused the loss for which the plaintiff

16   seeks to recover damages.”).           In short, plaintiffs must show “a

17   sufficient connection between [the fraudulent conduct] and the

18   losses suffered . . . .”           Lattanzio v. Deloitte & Touche LLP, 476

19   F.3d 147, 157 (2d Cir. 2007).3          This requirement exists because


           3
               Appellant argues that:

                    It is not Lead Plaintiff’s burden, on this motion, to
                    show that the entire relative price drop in June 2002
                    was due to the fraud. Rather, summary judgment may be
                    granted only if Defendants can prove as a matter of
                    undisputed fact that none of the price drop could have
                    resulted from the fraud.

     Appellant’s Br. at 42 (emphasis omitted). In doing so, it misstates the
     parties’ burdens on summary judgment. Although “a party seeking summary
     judgment always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district
     court of the basis for its motion, and identifying [the evidence] which it

                                               16
1    private securities fraud actions are “available, not to provide

2    investors with broad insurance against market losses, but to

3    protect them against those economic losses that

4    misrepresentations actually cause.”         Dura Pharms., 544 U.S. at

5    345.

6           A third concept sometimes referred to as “loss causation”

7    relates to the question whether events that are a cause-in-fact

8    of investor losses fall within the class of events from which

9    Section 10(b) was intended to protect the particular plaintiffs
10   and which the securities laws were intended to prevent.            This

11   issue, one of proximate cause, was the subject of extended (to

12   say the least) discussion in three opinions in AUSA Life Ins. Co.

13   v. Ernst & Young, 206 F.3d 202 (2d Cir. 2000).          Subsequently, we

14   adopted the “zone of risk” test outlined in the dissenting

15   opinion in AUSA.     See Lentell v. Merrill Lynch & Co., 396 F.3d

16   161, 172-75 (citing AUSA, 206 F.3d at 235, 238 (Winter, J.,

17   dissenting)).

18          To one degree or another, all three of these overlapping but

19   somewhat differing issues are involved in the present matter.

20          With regard to reliance, appellant’s complaint invokes the

21   presumption of reliance based on the fraud-on-the-market theory



     believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact,” this
     does not relieve appellant of its burden of making “a showing sufficient to
     establish the existence of an element essential to [appellant’s] case, and on
     which [appellant] will bear the burden of proof at trial.” Celotex, 477 U.S.
     at 322. As a result, summary judgment is appropriate if appellant cannot show
     that at least some of the price drop was due to the fraud.

                                            17
1    adopted in Basic.    485 U.S. at 241-42 (reliance of investors on

2    misrepresentations is presumed where market for securities is

3    open and developed).    The complaint alleges active trading by

4    Omnicom in a “highly efficient and automated market,” Omnicom’s

5    provision of information to the public through SEC filings and

6    other means of disclosure, and scrutiny of available information

7    by professional analysts who themselves communicate with the

8    public.    Joint App. at 152.   It further alleges that “[a]s a

9    result . . . the market for Omnicom’s securities promptly
10   digested current information regarding Omnicom from all publicly

11   available sources and reflected such information in Omnicom’s

12   stock price.”    Id. at 153.

13        Having sought to establish investor reliance by the fraud-

14   on-the-market theory, appellant faces a difficult task.     The

15   fraud alleged -- the Seneca transaction and failure to write down

16   the value of the internet companies -- was the subject of

17   continuing media reports beginning in May 2001.     See supra notes

18   1 & 2.    The stock price decline, which is the basis for the

19   damages claim, occurred in June 2002.     In short, appellant must

20   concede that the numerous public reports on the Seneca

21   transaction were “promptly digested” by the market and “reflected

22   . . . in Omnicom’s stock price” in 2001 while seeking to recover

23   for a stock price decline a year later in 2002.

24        Appellant seeks to do so through two means:     first, by

25   claiming the existence of cause-in-fact on the ground that the

                                         18
1    market reacted negatively to a corrective disclosure of the

2    fraud, Lentell, 396 F.3d at 175; and, second, by arguing the

3    existence of proximate cause on the ground that negative investor

4    inferences drawn from Callander’s resignation and from the news

5    stories in June 2002 caused the loss and were a foreseeable

6    materialization of the risk concealed by the fraudulent

7    statement.   ATSI, 493 F.3d at 107 (2d Cir. 2007) (citing Lentell,

8    396 F.3d at 173).    Establishing either theory as applicable would

9    suffice to show loss causation.

10        1) Corrective Disclosure

11        A fraud regarding a company’s financial condition in May

12   2001, if concealed, may cause investors’ losses in June 2002 when

13   disclosure of the fraud is made and the available public

14   information regarding the company’s financial condition is

15   corrected.   See Lentell, 396 F.3d at 175 n.4 (acknowledging that

16   loss causation can be established by a “corrective disclosure to

17   the market” that “reveal[s] . . . the falsity of prior

18   recommendations”).   Appellant argues that information disclosed

19   to the market in June 2002, particularly by the June 12 article,

20   constituted a partial corrective disclosure of the fraud and that

21   the disclosure caused the market to respond negatively.

22        To reiterate, the June 12 article reported that Callander, a

23   director and Chair of Omnicom’s Audit Committee, had resigned

24   amid questions he had raised for months regarding the purpose of

25   the Seneca transaction.   Callander was also reported to have

                                        19
1    questioned whether the board had received full information about

2    the initial Seneca transaction and about the new proposal to buy

3    back two of the internet companies.     The article also noted

4    concerns, including those of accounting professors, about

5    Omnicom’s aggressive accounting strategy and about Omnicom’s cash

6    flow and increased borrowing.    In opposing the motion for summary

7    judgment, appellant offered the expert testimony of Dr. Hakala

8    regarding causation issues.

9         However, none of these matters even purported to reveal some
10   then-undisclosed fact with regard to the specific

11   misrepresentations alleged in the complaint concerning the Seneca

12   transaction.   See In re Flag Telecom Holdings, Ltd. Sec. Litig.,

13   574 F.3d 29, 40-41 (2d Cir. 2009) (holding that plaintiffs’

14   evidence of news events and the expert’s event study did not

15   provide sufficient evidence of causation).     The use of the Seneca

16   transaction as an accounting method to remove losses from

17   Omnicom’s books was known to the market a year before Callander’s

18   resignation.   See supra notes 1 & 2.    There was no ambiguity in

19   that regard in these articles.

20        All that the June 12 article stated was that Callander’s

21   resignation was due to general concerns over an aggressive

22   accounting strategy, including perhaps Omnicom’s year-old failure

23   to write-down the value of the internet companies, and other

24   matters concerning governance, in particular management’s keeping

25   the board informed.   At best, from appellant’s viewpoint, it has

                                        20
1    shown that the market may have reacted as it did because of

2    concerns that Callander’s resignation and the negative tone of

3    the June 12 article implied accounting or other problems in

4    addition to the known Seneca transaction.

5          Appellant also relies on comments in the June 12 article by

6    the two accounting professors to support a nexus between the

7    fraud alleged and the June 2002 decline in share price.              They

8    argue that “a reasonable jury could conclude that the professor

9    found Omnicom’s accounting suspicious in light of Callander’s
10   resignation and Omnicom’s decision to unwind Seneca, which were

11   newly disclosed facts.”       Appellant’s Br. at 55.       However, the

12   conclusory suspicions of the accounting professors and the

13   unwinding of the Seneca transaction added nothing to the public’s

14   knowledge that the Seneca transaction was designed to remove

15   losses from Omnicom’s books.4

16         What appellant has shown is a negative characterization of

17   already-public information.        See Teacher’s Ret. Sys. of La. v.

18   Hunter, 477 F.3d 162, 187-88 (4th Cir. 2007) (negative

19   characterization of previously known information cannot

20   constitute a corrective disclosure); In re Merck & Co. Sec.

21   Litig., 432 F.3d 261, 269-70 (3d Cir. 2005) (same).             A negative



           4
             Appellant also relies on the fact that Omnicom’s stock price recovered
     after Omnicom announced that KPMG had reviewed its accounting of the Seneca
     transaction and did not recommend any changes. Appellant’s Br. at 52-53.
     However, KPMG’s conclusion that there was no fraud in the Seneca transaction
     hardly supports a finding that fraud in the Seneca transaction caused a loss.



                                             21
1    journalistic characterization of previously disclosed facts does

2    not constitute a corrective disclosure of anything but the

3    journalists’ opinions.   After all, no hard fact in the June 12

4    article suggested that the avoidance of the write-down was

5    improper.

6         Dr. Hakala’s study does not alter our conclusion.    It is

7    true that “[w]here, as here, there are conflicting expert reports

8    presented, courts are wary of granting summary judgment.”    Harris

9    v. Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co., 310 F.3d 73, 79 (2d Cir.
10   2002) (internal quotation marks omitted).   However, summary

11   judgment is not per se precluded because there are conflicting

12   experts.    See Raskin v. Wyatt Co., 125 F.3d 55, 65 (2d Cir. 1997)

13   (“As we read the opinion, [the district court] concluded that the

14   [expert’s] report was probative of no material fact, from which

15   we deduce that it was, in [the district court’s] view, irrelevant

16   and inadmissible.   We therefore can review this ruling as

17   evidentiary in character . . . .”) (citations omitted).    Although

18   the reports must be construed in the non-moving party’s favor,

19   “if the admissible evidence is insufficient to permit a rational

20   juror to find in favor of the plaintiff, the court remains free

21   to direct a verdict or grant summary judgment for defendant.”

22   Amorgianos v. Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp., 303 F.3d 256, 267 (2d

23   Cir. 2002); see also Raskin, 125 F.3d at 66 (“[A]n expert’s

24   report is not a talisman against summary judgment.”).

25        Summary judgment is appropriate here because Dr. Hakala’s

                                        22
1    testimony does not suffice to draw the requisite causal

2    connection between the information in the June 12 article and the

3    fraud alleged in the complaint.        His event study merely “links

4    the decline in the value of [the company’s] stock to various

5    events.”    Flag Telecom, 574 F.3d at 41.

6          If Dr. Hakala is opining that Omnicom’s stock dropped

7    because investors first became aware in June 2002 of the fraud

8    alleged in the complaint, that opinion is, as a matter of law,

9    unsustainable on this record.        It runs squarely into the
10   undisputed fact that the internet company losses and the failure

11   to write them down was known in May 2001 and into appellant’s

12   allegation that the market for Omnicom’s securities at all times

13   promptly digested and reflected in its share price all public

14   information.5    If he is opining that Omnicom’s stock dropped

15   because the fraud in May 2001 caused the negative press of June

16   2002 attending Callander’s resignation, then his testimony is

17   irrelevant because these events were not proximately caused by

18   the fraud alleged, for reasons discussed immediately below.              The


           5
            Appellant is mistaken to compare this to our cases in Suez Equity
     Investors, L.P. v. Toronto-Dominion Bank, 250 F.3d 87 (2d Cir. 2001), Rothman
     v. Gregor, 220 F.3d 81 (2d Cir. 2000), and Mfrs. Hanover Trust v. Drysdale
     Sec. Corp., 801 F.2d 13 (2d Cir. 1986). Those cases are factually
     distinguishable because in each case the plaintiffs demonstrated a specific
     causal connection between the loss and the alleged fraud. See Suez Equity,
     250 F.3d at 96-97 (facts omitted from executive’s background report would have
     indicated executive’s inability to run company and forecast company’s eventual
     liquidity problems); Rothman, 220 F.3d at 87, 89, 95 (company’s misleading
     accounting of royalty expenses caused later losses when market became aware
     that a massive write-down was imminent); Mfrs. Hanover, 801 F.2d at 16-17, 19,
     21-22 (defendant accounting firm’s misrepresentations as to company’s solvency
     induced plaintiff to do business with the company which ultimately led to the
     plaintiff’s loss).



                                            23
1    remainder of his report establishes only that, as previously

2    noted, the June 12 article raised questions about potential

3    accounting concerns, including the Seneca transaction.

4         Because appellant failed to demonstrate any new information

5    in the June 12 article regarding Omnicom’s alleged fraud,

6    appellant has failed to show a price decline due to a corrective

7    disclosure.

8         2) The Materialization of the Risk Theory

9         Appellant argues that, even if no new financial facts were

10   revealed in June 2002, Callander’s resignation and the ensuing

11   negative media attention were foreseeable risks of the fraudulent

12   Seneca transaction and caused the temporary share price decline

13   in June 2002.   The losses suffered by the class are, the argument

14   goes, due to the materialization of that risk.

15        As noted, plaintiffs can prove loss causation by showing

16   “that the loss was foreseeable and caused by the materialization

17   of the risk concealed by the fraudulent statement.”   ATSI, 493

18   F.3d at 107.    A misrepresentation is “the ‘proximate cause’ of an

19   investment loss if the risk that caused the loss was within the

20   zone of risk concealed by the misrepresentations . . . .”

21   Lentell, 396 F.3d at 173.   Because Omnicom’s internet company

22   losses were publicly known, the matter concealed must be the

23   invalidity of Omnicom’s accounting for those losses in the Seneca

24   transaction.



                                        24
1         The zone of risk is determined by the purposes of the

2    securities laws, i.e., “to make sure that buyers of securities

3    get what they think they are getting.”   Chem. Bank v. Arthur

4    Andersen & Co., 726 F.2d 930, 943 (2d Cir. 1984).   In this

5    context, therefore, recovery is limited to only the foreseeable

6    losses “for which the intent of the laws is served by recovery.”

7    AUSA, 206 F.3d at 234 (Winter, J., dissenting).

8         Fraud may lead to a director’s resignation -- to escape

9    personal liability, if for no other reason, see, e.g., 15 U.S.C.
10   § 77k(b)(1) (providing exemption from civil liability for

11   director who resigns before effective date of fraudulent

12   registration statement) -- and to negative stories by the media.

13   In such circumstances, it is generally the facts underlying the

14   fraud and resignation that causes a compensable investor’s loss.

15   In the present case, as noted, the facts were known a year before

16   the resignation, and the resignation did not add to the public

17   knowledge any new material fact about the Seneca transaction.

18   The essence of the claim is that Callander’s resignation

19   concerned the Seneca transaction and that the resultant negative

20   publicity suggesting possible accounting malfeasance may lead to

21   recovery for a temporary drop in share price.

22        To be sure, the record shows that Callander was concerned

23   over general accounting practices and governance problems.    In

24   that regard, he was concerned about the Seneca transaction, but

25   he had also been mistakenly informed that the Board had never

                                      25
1    approved it.    On the present record, appellant has at best shown

2    that Callander’s resignation and resulting negative press stirred

3    investors’ concerns that other unknown problems were lurking in

4    Omnicom’s past.    Indeed, there is no allegation that investors

5    were ever told that improper accounting had in fact occurred with

6    regard to the Seneca transaction, either in the June 2002 stories

7    or later.

8         The generalized investor reaction of concern causing a

9    temporary share price decline in June 2002, is far too tenuously
10   connected -- indeed, by a metaphoric thread -- to the Seneca

11   transaction to support liability.    The securities laws require

12   disclosure that is adequate to allow investors to make judgments

13   about a company’s intrinsic value.       Firms are not required by the

14   securities laws to speculate about distant, ambiguous, and

15   perhaps idiosyncratic reactions by the press or even by

16   directors.     To hold otherwise would expose companies and their

17   shareholders to potentially expansive liabilities for events

18   later alleged to be frauds, the facts of which were known to the

19   investing public at the time but did not affect share price, and

20   thus did no damage at that time to investors.      A rule of

21   liability leading to such losses would undermine the very

22   investor confidence that the securities laws were intended to

23   support.

24                                 CONCLUSION

25        Appellant has failed to raise a material issue of fact that

                                         26
1   would support a finding of loss causation, and, as a result, the

2   district court properly granted defendants’ summary judgment

3   motion.6   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.

4

5

6

7

8




          6
           Plaintiffs also rely on Section 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of
    1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78t. However, in order to establish control person
    liability, appellant must first establish a primary violation. See ATSI, 493
    F.3d at 108. Because appellant fails to establish a primary violation, the
    district court properly granted defendants’ summary judgment motion on the
    Section 20(a) claims.

                                           27