Legal Research AI

Lucia v. Prospect Street High Income Portfolio, Inc.

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-09-28
Citations: 36 F.3d 170
Copy Citations
52 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit
                                         

No. 93-2055

                    ROBERT LUCIA, ET AL.,

                   Plaintiffs, Appellants,

                              v.

     PROSPECT STREET HIGH INCOME PORTFOLIO, INC., ET AL.,

                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         

No. 93-2056

                     ERIC MILLER, ET AL.,

                   Plaintiffs, Appellants,

                              v.

          THE NEW AMERICAN HIGH INCOME FUND, ET AL.,

                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         

        APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

     [Hon. A. David Mazzone, U.S. Senior District Judge]
                                                       

                                         

                            Before

                      Cyr, Circuit Judge,
                                        
                Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                             
                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                          

                                         

Eugene A. Spector, with whom Robert  M. Roseman, Mark S.  Goldman,
                                                                 

Robert  G. Eisler, Spector &  Roseman, Nancy Gertner,  Jody L. Newman,
                                                                 
Dwyer, Collora & Gertner, Garwin, Bronzaft, Gerstein &  Fisher, Elwood
                                                                  
S.  Simon & Associates,  Elwood S. Simon,  Wechsler, Skirnick Harwood,
                                                                  
Halebian &  Feffer,  Robert  I. Harwood,  Levin,  Fishbein,  Sedran  &
                                                                  
Berman,  Arnold  Levin,  Esq., Kohn,  Nast  &  Graf,  P.C., Robert  S.
                                                                  
Kitchenoff,  Chertow & Miller,  Marvin Miller, Shapiro  Grace & Haber,
                                                                 
and Edward Haber were on brief for appellants.
            
Thomas  J. Dougherty, with  whom Skadden,  Arps, Slate,  Meagher &
                                                                  
Flom, was on  brief for appellees Messrs.  Omohundro, Frabotta, Carey,

Cote, Meyohas and Platt.
John  D.  Donovan, Jr.,  with  whom  Ivan  B.  Knauer, Timothy  J.
                                                                  
Hinkle, Kurt  S. Kusiak, and Ropes & Gray, were on brief for appellees
                                     
The New High Income  Fund, Inc., Patricia Ostrander, Ellen  Terry, and
Richard E. Floor.
Robert A.  Buhlman, with whom Gerald  F. Rath and  Bingham, Dana &
                                                                  
Gould, were on brief for Prudential Securities Incorporated.
 
Peter M. Saparoff and  Palmer & Dodge were on brief for  appellees
                                     
Ernest  E.  Monrad, Joseph  L. Bower,  Bernard  J. Korman,  and Franco
Modigliani.
Paul C. Madden, Paul D. Shaffner,  David Moffit, and Saul,  Ewing,
                                                                  
Remick  & Saul  were on  brief for  appellees Butcher  Corporation and
          
Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards, Inc.
Harry L. Manion, III, Thomas G.  Guiney, and Cooley, Manion, Moore
                                                                  
&  Jones, P.C. were on brief for appellee Ostrander Capital Management
          
Corp.
Eric  A.  Deutsch, Margaret  A.  Flanagan,  and  Testa, Hurwitz  &
                                                                  
Thibeault were  on brief  for Prospect  Street High  Income Portfolio,
     
Inc. and Prospect Street Investment Management Co., Inc.

                                         

                      September 28, 1994
                                         

          STAHL,  Circuit  Judge.     In  the  late   1980's,
                                

plaintiffs-appellants purchased shares of two  separate "junk

bond"  funds.    After  the value  of  the  purchased  shares

plummeted,  plaintiffs alleged various federal securities law

violations.   In a  series of  related rulings,  the district

court dismissed  some of plaintiffs' allegations  for failure

to  state a claim, and  granted summary judgment  in favor of

defendants  on all remaining claims.   We affirm  in part and

reverse in part.

                              I.
                                

           FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
                                                   

          Prior to this appeal,  the proceedings in these two

cases were not formally consolidated.  As the district  court

noted,  the two cases raise many identical issues.  Thus, our

discussion, unless  we specifically state  otherwise, applies

equally to both cases.

          In 1988,  both New  America High Income  Fund, Inc.

and  Prospect Street  High Income  Portfolio, Inc.  ("the New

America   Fund,"   and   "the  Prospect   Street   Fund,"  or

collectively "the funds") were  first publicly offered on the

New York Stock Exchange.   Each fund's purpose, as  stated in

their  nearly  identical prospectuses,  was  to  invest in  a

diversified portfolio of high yield  fixed-income securities,

commonly known as "junk bonds."   

                             -3-
                              3

          In  April  1989,  well  after  the  initial  public

offerings,  a study  headed by  Professor Paul  Asquith ("the

Asquith study") disclosed that the default rate of junk bonds

was  much higher  than had been  previously believed.1   This

conclusion was reached by  calculating the adverse effects of

"aging" on junk bonds.2  

          Within months of the  study, though not necessarily

as a direct result  of the study, the  market for junk  bonds

began  to collapse.  By November 1989, both funds had reduced

their  dividends,  and  the  share  value of  each  fund  had

declined considerably.

                    

1.  The results of the Asquith  study were first made  public
through various financial and general periodicals in April of
1989.  See, e.g., Kenneth N. Gilpin, Further Rise in Rates is
                                                             
Expected, N.Y. Times, Apr.  10, 1989, at D9; Linda  Sandler &
        
Michael Siconolfi,  Junk Bonds  are Taking Their  Lumps, Wall
                                                       
St.  J., Apr.  14, 1989,  at C1.   The  study itself  was not
published  until September 1989.   See Paul  Asquith, et al.,
                                      
Original Issue High Yield Bonds:  Aging Analyses of Defaults,
                                                             
Exchanges and Calls, 44 J. Fin., No. 4 (September 1989).
                   

2.  The record reveals that, prior to the Asquith study,  the
traditionally  accepted  method  of determining  annual  bond
default  rates was to divide the total number of defaults per
year by the total size of the relevant market sector for that
year.   As  the  affidavit of  Professor Asquith  points out,
however,  this  method  loses   its  accuracy  in  a  rapidly
expanding  market, such as the junk bond market of the 1970's
and  '80's, where  new issues  greatly enlarged  the existing
market.   In  other words,  the traditional  method does  not
reveal whether  a preponderance of older or  newer issues are
defaulting in a given year.
          Breaking   from   the    traditional   method    of
calculation, Asquith's  study  tracked the  default  rate  of
bonds based on their  dates of issuance.  The  study revealed
that  junk bonds become more  likely to default  as they grow
older, hence the term "aging."

                             -4-
                              4

          Plaintiffs,  who consist  of  putative  classes  of

purchasers  of each fund,  commenced parallel actions against

the  two funds.   The  First Amended  Complaints (hereinafter

"the  original complaints") were lengthy, alleging violations

of a  variety of  federal securities laws,  including section

10(b) of the  Securities Exchange  Act of 1934,  15 U.S.C.   

78j(b),  and sections 11 and  12(2) of the  Securities Act of

1933, 15 U.S.C.     77k, 77l(2).3  The  gist of the  original

complaints  was  that  the  funds'  directors,  advisors  and

underwriters ("defendants") knew of, but failed to  disclose,

adverse  information   about  the  junk  bond   market.    In

particular, the complaints alleged that defendants had agreed

to act, and had in  fact acted, as purchasers of  last resort

for undesirable junk bonds; that  they knew of infirmities in

                    

3.  Sections  10(b), 11  and 12(2)  all  prohibit the  use of
materially misleading  information in the sale of securities,
and  the  same conduct  may  be  actionable under  all  three
sections.   See, e.g.,  Herman &  MacLean v.  Huddleston, 459
                                                        
U.S. 375, 382-83 (1983) (stating that the same conduct may be
actionable under  sections 10(b) and 11); Shapiro v. UJB Fin.
                                                             
Corp., 964 F.2d  272, 279, 286-89 (3d  Cir.) (explaining that
     
single  set  of factual  allegations  may  state claim  under
sections 11 and 12(2)), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 365 (1992). 
                                    
     While sections 10(b), 11 and 12(2)  differ significantly
from  one another, see, e.g.,  Herman & MacLean,  459 U.S. at
                                               
382;  Ernst  & Ernst  v.  Hochfelder,  425 U.S.  185,  210-11
                                    
(1976),  the   parties  focus   solely  on   the  materiality
requirement, which is common  to all three sections.   Cf. In
                                                             
re  Donald J. Trump Casino Sec. Litig.,  7 F.3d 357, 368 n.10
                                      
(3d Cir. 1993)  ("Because our analysis here  is predicated on
the materiality requirement, which is common  to [plaintiffs'
section  10(b),  11  and  12(2)  claims],  we  do   not  here
distinguish between [those provisions.]"), cert.  denied, 114
                                                        
S. Ct. 1219 (1994).

                             -5-
                              5

the junk bond market at the time they publicly offered shares

of the  funds and thereafter; and  that misleading statistics

were  used  in the  prospectuses  to  portray the  historical

performance of junk bonds.4

          The  district court  dismissed many  of plaintiffs'

claims  on the pleadings, see  Miller v. New  Am. High Income
                                                             

Fund, 755 F. Supp.  1099 (D. Mass. 1991) ("Miller  I"); Lucia
                                                             

v. Prospect St. High Income Portfolio, Inc., 769 F. Supp. 410
                                           

(D.  Mass. 1991)  ("Lucia I"),  but nonetheless  allowed both
                           

sets of plaintiffs to replead.

          Plaintiffs' Second  Amended Complaints (hereinafter

"the revised complaints") alleged causes of action only under

sections 11 and 12(2).  All section 10(b) claims presented in

the original  complaints were  dropped.  Among  other things,

the  revised  complaints  focused  on a  ten-year  comparison

between junk  bonds  and United  States  Treasury  securities

("Treasury   securities")   that   was   included    in   the

prospectuses.5   Though the ten-year figure  showed that junk

                    

4.  The  original  complaints also  alleged  RICO  claims and
common law fraud claims, which were dismissed by the district
court.  Plaintiffs do not appeal these dismissals. 

5.  The relevant portion of the New America Fund's prospectus
states:

          The   Fund's   portfolio   will   consist
          primarily   of  "high   yield"  corporate
          bonds. . . .

          "High  yield" bonds offer  a higher yield
          to  maturity  than   bonds  with   higher

                             -6-
                              6

                    

          ratings  as  compensation for  holding an
          obligation  of an issuer  perceived to be
          less  credit worthy.   The  DBL composite
          measures  the  performance  of  the  most
          representative bonds in the  "high yield"
          market  and is compiled monthly by Drexel
          Burnham  Lambert  Incorporated.    As  of
          December  31,  1987,  the  DBL  Composite
          offered  a  yield  spread  of  484  basis
          points (i.e., 4.84%;  1% equals 100 basis
          points)  over   the  comparable  Treasury
          security,  7%  U.S.  Treasury  due  1994.
          U.S.  Treasury securities  are considered
          to have minimal risk.  The average spread
          between   the   DBL  Composite   and  the
          comparable  U.S.  Treasury issue  was 358
          basis  points for 1980,  397 basis points
          for 1981, 503 basis  points for 1982, 337
          basis points  for 1983, 311  basis points
          for 1984, 362 basis  points for 1985, 496
          basis  points  for  1986  and  451  basis
          points for 1987.

          For  the years  1977  through  1986,  the
          spread  in  yields  between "high  yield"
          securities   and    representative   U.S.
          Treasury    securities    has    averaged
          approximately 393 basis points.  For this
          period,   the   loss  in   principal  and
          interest  due to defaults on "high yield"
          securities has  averaged approximately 97
          basis points.  Thus,  for the period 1977
          to 1986, the  net average spread  between
          "high      yield"     securities      and
          representative  U.S. Treasury  securities
          (i.e., the average  spread between  "high
          yield"   securities  and   U.S.  Treasury
          securities,  minus  the  average  default
          loss  on "high yield" securities) was 296
          basis  points.   For  1987, the  loss  of
          principal and interest due to defaults is
          estimated to have been 125 basis points.*
          However,   past    performance   is   not
          necessarily    indicative    of    future
          performance. . . .

          The capital  structure  of the  Fund  has
          been  designed to  take advantage  of the

                             -7-
                              7

bonds  had  outperformed  Treasury  securities,  the  revised

complaints  alleged that during  the six years  leading up to

each fund's public offering, Treasury securities had actually

outperformed junk bonds.6   

          Shortly  after the  revised complaints  were filed,

defendants moved  for summary  judgment.  The  district court

began  by ruling as  a matter of  law that the  comparison to

Treasury securities in  the prospectuses was not  misleading.

                    

          historical spread in yields between "high
          yield" securities and representative U.S.
          Treasury  securities,  compared with  the
          average  default  loss  on  "high  yield"
          securities.  

          *  Statistical  data appearing  above are
          based on information  provided by  Drexel
          Burnham Lambert Incorporated.

The Prospect  Street prospectus is  similarly structured  and
worded.  
          We   note  in  passing  that  the  Prospect  Street
prospectus reports significantly different annual spreads for
the  years 1980 through 1987.  Because neither the Miller nor
                                                         
the Lucia plaintiffs have argued,  either below or on appeal,
         
that these inconsistencies are  actionable, we deem the issue
waived.

6.  Both revised complaints at   29 state:

          29.   The [Asquith] Study  also disclosed
          that high  yield  debt had  not  in  fact
          produced  higher   realized  returns  and
          lower standard deviations of returns than
          either investment grade or treasury bonds
          for the period 1982 through 1987 . . . .

The  Asquith  study,  in  turn,  relies  on  statistics  from
Marshall E. Blume  & Donald B.  Keim, Volatility Patterns  of
                                                             
Fixed Income Securities, Rodney L. White Center For Financial
                       
Research,  Wharton School, University  of Pennsylvania (March
1989) ("the Blume and Keim study").

                             -8-
                              8

See In re New Am. High Income Fund Sec. Litig.,  834 F. Supp.
                                              

501,  506-07 (D.  Mass. 1993) ("Miller  II").  It  went on to
                                          

grant summary  judgment in favor  of defendants on  all other

claims.  Id.;  Lucia v. Prospect  St. High Income  Portfolio,
                                                             

Inc., No. 90-10781-MA  (D. Mass. Aug. 26  1993) ("Lucia II").
                                                          

Plaintiffs  appeal   these  various  rulings.     We  address

plaintiffs' claims in the order in which they were decided by

the district court.

                             II.
                                

                          DISCUSSION
                                    

A.  Section 10(b) Claims
                        

          The  district  court dismissed  plaintiffs' section

10(b)  claims at  the  first  of  these cases'  two  pleading

stages.    We  affirm  that  dismissal,  though  on  somewhat

narrower  grounds  than those  relied  upon  by the  district

court.

          1.  Standard of Review
                                

          Rule 12(b)(6)  dismissals are  subject  to de  novo
                                                             

review.  Northeast Doran,  Inc. v. Key Bank of Maine, 15 F.3d
                                                    

1,  2 (1st  Cir.  1994).    While  we  generally  credit  all

allegations  in   the  complaint  and  draw   all  reasonable

inferences favorable to the plaintiff, id., Rule 9(b) imposes
                                          

heightened  pleading requirements  for allegations  of fraud.

"In  all averments  of  fraud or  mistake, the  circumstances

                             -9-
                              9

constituting   fraud   or  mistake   shall  be   stated  with

particularity."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b).    

          As we  have stated in  a recent discussion  of Rule

9(b) in the securities context:

          [G]eneral  averments  of the  defendants'
          knowledge  of  material falsity  will not
          suffice.  Consistent with Fed. R. Civ. P.
          9(b),  the  complaint   must  set   forth
          specific facts that make it reasonable to
          believe  that  defendant[s]  knew that  a
          statement   was   materially   false   or
          misleading.  The  rule requires that  the
          particular times, dates, places  or other
          details   of   the   alleged   fraudulent
          involvement of the actors be alleged.

Serabian v. Amoskeag Bank Shares, Inc., 24 F.3d 357, 361 (1st
                                      

Cir. 1994)  (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

"We have  been especially rigorous in  demanding such factual

support  in  the securities  context."    Romani v.  Shearson
                                                             

Lehman  Hutton, 929 F.2d 875, 878 (1st Cir. 1991).  Moreover,
              

this  heightened pleading  is required  "even when  the fraud

relates  to matters  peculiarly within  the knowledge  of the

opposing party." Id.
                    

          2.  The Original Complaints
                                     

          Plaintiffs'  original  complaints  alleged  various

wrongdoing  by   defendants.    The  common   thread  running

throughout  the  original   complaints,  however,  was   that

defendants knew of  infirmities in the junk  bond market, and

that  they   nonetheless  entered  a  vast   web  of  illicit

agreements with Drexel Burnham  Lambert, and with former junk

                             -10-
                              10

bond dealer Michael Milken, in order  to become purchasers of

last resort for undesirable junk bonds. 

          The  district court  properly concluded  that these

general  allegations in  the original complaints  were wholly

conclusory.   No  factual  basis is  put  forward to  support

plaintiffs'  theory that  defendants  consorted with  Drexel,

that  they dealt with Michael Milken, that they agreed to act

as purchasers of last resort  for undesirable bonds, or  that

they knew  enough to anticipate the impending fall-out of the

junk bond market.   Because all  of plaintiffs' 10(b)  claims

rely  fundamentally  on  such  unsupported  allegations,  the

district court properly dismissed these claims for failure to

meet Rule 9(b).7  Cf.  Romani, 929 F.2d at 878  (finding that
                             

complaint failed to satisfy Rule  9(b) where it contained "no

factual allegations that would support a reasonable inference

that  adverse  circumstances  existed  at  the  time  of  the

offering,  and  were  known  and  deliberately  or recklessly

disregarded by defendants").

B.  Section 11 and 12(2) Claims
                               

                    

7.  Given   adequate   grounds   to  support   dismissal   of
plaintiffs'  section 10(b)  claims, we  expressly  decline to
address  the district court's  "loss causation" analysis, and
its  use of Bastian v.  Petren Resources Corp.,  892 F.2d 680
                                              
(7th Cir.), cert.  denied, 496 U,S. 906 (1990),  in rejecting
                         
these same claims.

                             -11-
                              11

          As noted above, plaintiffs were allowed to replead.

Defendants'  motions for summary  judgment soon followed, and

summary judgment was granted in favor of defendants.

          1.  Standard of Review
                                

          "A district  court's grant  of summary judgment  is

subject  to plenary review."   Calenti v. Boto,  24 F.3d 335,
                                              

338  (1st Cir.  1994).   We  read  the record  indulging  all

inferences  in favor of  the non-moving  party. Id.   Summary
                                                   

judgment is appropriate only "if the  pleadings, depositions,

answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,  together

with  the affidavits, if any,  show that there  is no genuine

issue as  to any material  fact and that the  moving party is

entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."  Fed. R. Civ.  P.

56(c).    In  seeking  to  forestall  the  entry  of  summary

judgment, a  nonmovant may not  rely upon allegations  in its

pleadings.   Rather, the  nonmovant must "set  forth specific

facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial."  Fed.

R. Civ. P. 56(e).

          2.  Parallel Paths Diverge
                                    

          Both   complaints   alleged   that   the   six-year

comparison  favored  Treasury  securities.   And  the  Miller
                                                             

plaintiffs, unlike the Lucia plaintiffs, in their response to
                            

defendants' motion  for  summary judgment,  set  forth  facts

showing that the six-year figure, as well as a shorter three-

year figure, actually favored Treasury securities.  Moreover,

                             -12-
                              12

the district court squarely addressed this argument in ruling

on the Miller  defendants' motion for summary judgment.   See
                                                             

In re New Am. High Income Fund Sec. Litig., 834 F. Supp. 501,
                                          

506-07  (D. Mass.  1993).   Accordingly, we  see no  merit to

defendants' argument that the  Miller plaintiffs waived  this
                                     

issue. 

          The Lucia plaintiffs,  however, failed to  preserve
                   

this  issue.  In  fact, the  Lucia plaintiffs'  opposition to
                                  

defendants' summary judgment motion fails to even mention the

six-year comparison.   Despite the  striking similarities  in

these two cases, the Lucia plaintiffs pursued a significantly
                          

different  tack in  opposing defendants'  motion  for summary

judgment,  and  failed  to  argue that  the  Prospect  Street

prospectus was  misleading due  to its  failure to  include a

shorter-term  comparison  to Treasury  securities.   As noted

above,  a nonmovant faced with  a motion for summary judgment

may not rest on its pleadings.  Moreover, we see no reason in

this case to relax our general rule that "theories not raised

squarely before the district court cannot be surfaced for the

first  time  on  appeal."  McCoy v.  Massachusetts  Inst.  of
                                                             

Technology, 950  F.2d 13, 22  (1st Cir. 1991),  cert. denied,
                                                            

112 S. Ct. 1939  (1992).  Accordingly, our discussion  of the

six-year comparison applies only to the Miller case.
                                              

          3.  Materiality under Sections 11 and 12(2) and the
                                                             
Omission of the Six-Year Comparison
                                   

                             -13-
                              13

          Sections 11 and  12(2) both  prohibit, inter  alia,
                                                            

the  use of  any "untrue  statement of  a material  fact," 15

U.S.C.  77l(2), as  well  the use  of  any information  which

"omits  to state a material  fact necessary in  order to make

the statements, in the light of the circumstances under which

they  are made,  not misleading."   Id.;  see also  15 U.S.C.
                                                  

77k(a).  

          The boundaries  of  materiality in  the  securities

context are clearly enunciated in our case law.

          The mere fact that an investor might find
          information  interesting or  desirable is
          not sufficient to satisfy the materiality
          requirement.     Rather,  information  is
          "material" only if  its disclosure  would
          alter the "total mix" of  facts available
                              
          to  the  investor  and  "if  there  is  a
          substantial likelihood  that a reasonable
                                
          shareholder would  consider it important"
          to the investment decision.

Milton v.  Van Dorn Co.,  961 F.2d 965,  969 (1st Cir.  1992)
                       

(quoting  Basic,  Inc.  v.  Levinson, 485  U.S.  224,  231-32
                                    

(1988)).    It is  equally  well established  that  "[w]hen a

corporation does make  a disclosure--whether it be  voluntary

or  required--there  is  a  duty  to  make  it  complete  and

accurate."  Roeder  v. Alpha  Indus., Inc., 814  F.2d 22,  26
                                          

(1st Cir. 1987).   Moreover, disclosed facts may "not  be `so

incomplete as  to mislead.'"  Backman v. Polaroid  Corp., 910
                                                        

F.2d 10, 16  (1st Cir. 1990) (en banc)  (quoting SEC v. Texas
                                                             

Gulf Sulphur Co.,  401 F.2d  833, 862 (2d  Cir. 1968),  cert.
                                                             

denied, 394 U.S. 976 (1969)).
      

                             -14-
                              14

          In addition, the fact that a statement is literally

accurate does not preclude liability under federal securities

laws.   "Some  statements,  although literally  accurate, can

become, through  their context  and  manner of  presentation,

devices  which  mislead  investors.   For  that  reason,  the

disclosure required by the securities laws is measured not by

literal  truth,  but  by  the  ability  of  the  material  to

accurately  inform rather  than mislead  prospective buyers."

McMahan v. Wherehouse Entertainment,  Inc., 900 F.2d 576, 579
                                          

(2d  Cir. 1990), cert. denied,  501 U.S. 1249  (1991).  Under
                             

the  foregoing standards,  "emphasis  and gloss  can, in  the

right circumstances, create liability."  Isquith v. Middle S.
                                                             

Utils., Inc., 847 F.2d 186, 203 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 488
                                                        

U.S. 926 (1988).

          Finally, we  note that  the question of  whether an

omission or  misleading statement is material  "is normally a

jury  question and  should not  be taken  from it  unless the

court has engaged in meticulous and well articulated analysis

of each item of withheld or misrepresented information."  SEC
                                                             

v. Seabord Corp., 677 F.2d  1301, 1306 (9th Cir. 1982).   See
                                                             

also   Milton,  961   F.2d   at   970  ("`[T]he   [objective]
             

determination [of materiality] requires  delicate assessments

of the inferences a  `reasonable shareholder' would draw from

a given  set of [undisputed]  facts and  the significance  of

those inferences to him  and those assessments are peculiarly

                             -15-
                              15

ones  for the trier of  fact.'") (quoting TSC  Indus. Inc. v.
                                                          

Northway,  Inc., 426 U.S. 438, 450 (1976)); Isquith, 847 F.2d
                                                   

at  208   (stating  that  the  adequacy   of  disclosures  in

securities cases is generally a question for a jury).

          As we have said, plaintiffs argue that the ten-year

comparison between Treasury securities and junk bonds, though

accurate,   was  misleading   because  a   shorter,  six-year

comparison favored  Treasury securities.  We  begin by noting

that the six  years at issue are the six  years leading up to

the  fund's public offering.   Moreover, while any one or two

years might favor Treasury securities without amounting to an

unfavorable  trend,  we  think  that  a  six-year  comparison

favoring Treasury  securities is  substantial enough  to cast

some  doubt  on  the  reliability of  the  reported  ten-year

figure.   In other words,  we cannot say  as a matter  of law

that  the undisclosed information  about the  six-year period

would  not  alter the  total mix  of  facts available  to the

investor.   Rather,  a  jury  could  find  that  there  is  a

substantial  likelihood that  a reasonable  shareholder would

consider the six-year comparison  important to the investment

decision.  See Milton, 961 F.2d at 969.    
                     

          We expressly  decline to  make hard and  fast rules

about the  time length of reported  investment results, i.e.,

we  do not  hold  that ten-year  comparisons  must always  be

accompanied by shorter-term comparisons.  Nor do we hold that

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                              16

a  plaintiff always creates a triable issue of fact by merely

unearthing unfavorable news regarding shorter  time intervals

than those reported.  

          Moreover, the unfavorable  six-year figure in  this

case  does  not  necessarily render  the  ten-year comparison
                            

misleading.   Rather, a  jury, knowing the  individual annual

returns  over the ten-year period at issue (which are not now

ascertainable  on the  record before  us) and  perhaps having

other guideposts for determining the relative  reliability of

shorter- and longer-term bond comparisons, may conclude  that

the ten-year  comparison standing alone is  not misleading at

all.           Because the district  court felt it irrelevant

that  defendants  had  not   reported  the  claimed  six-year

negative trend,  it gave no  attention to whether  the Miller
                                                             

plaintiffs had adequately established a factual base -- viz.,

that  defendants knew,  or reasonably  should have  known, of

that change of circumstances.  While we have some doubt about

the adequacy  of the Miller plaintiffs'  proof of defendants'
                           

knowledge, we  nonetheless recognize  that discovery on  this

issue was limited.   We reverse and remand to  permit further

discovery in this area.   Following such discovery, the court

may then reconsider defendants' motion  for summary judgment,

if defendants choose to renew it.

          Thus, on  the current state  of the  record in  the

Miller case, summary judgment on this issue was improper.  We
      

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                              17

agree with  the district  court that the  ten-year comparison

"paints  a much rosier picture," New America, 834 F. Supp. at
                                            

507, than  the six-year comparison.   Having established this

fact, the district  court erred in  concluding in the  Miller
                                                             

case that the comparison nonetheless  was not misleading as a

matter of law.

          4.  Other Summary Judgment Issues
                                           

          While  fact  issues  remain  with   regard  to  the

Treasury security comparison in the Miller case, the district
                                          

court properly  granted summary judgment on  all other issues

in  both cases.   For  example,  plaintiffs alleged  that (1)

defendants  knew or  should  have known  of  the effect  that

"aging" calculations  have on determining junk  bond returns,

and  (2) defendants should not have used the DBL composite as

an  indicator of past performance of  junk bonds because that

composite failed to account for "forced bond exchanges."8  

          It is  doubtless true, as  plaintiffs allege,  that

several significant studies with regard to "aging" discovered

statistical  infirmities  in   the  traditional  methods   of

calculating junk  bond returns.  However,  these studies were

completed only after the prospectuses were issued.  Moreover,

according to affidavits in the record, the Asquith study  was

                    

8.  Forced  bond exchanges, also  known as  "distressed" bond
exchanges,  occur when a bond issuer,  rather than default on
its existing  obligations, exchanges  them for a  new set  of
obligations.

                             -18-
                              18

the first study  of its  kind to display  the infirmities  of

previous  calculation methods.   Plaintiffs failed  to adduce

any facts  which, contrary to  defendants' affidavits,  would

tend to show that defendants were aware of these infirmities,

or that they could or should  have been aware of the  effects

of  "aging" analysis  at  the time  the funds  were initially

offered  to the public.  Given plaintiffs' failure to raise a

triable issue of fact, we  affirm the district court's  grant

of summary judgment on this issue.

          A   similar   analysis   disposes  of   plaintiffs'

allegation that  the DBL composite, relied  on extensively by

defendants in the prospectuses,  failed to account for forced

bond exchanges.  Defendants  offered affidavits to the effect

that  forced bond exchanges in fact were accounted for in the

DBL composite.  Plaintiffs offer no evidence to the contrary.

Accordingly,  we find no error  in the district court's grant

of summary judgment on this issue.  Because further discovery

will occur in the Miller case, we leave to the district court
                        

the formulation  of the extent of  that discovery, consistent

with the ruling made herein.

          Lastly, defendant Prudential Bache,  an underwriter

of the New America  Fund, argues that claims against  it were

untimely filed.  The district court did not rule  on when the

statute of  limitations in this case began to run, nor can we

make  such   a  determination   on  the  record   before  us.

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                              19

Accordingly, we  leave this important procedural  issue to be

determined in the first instance by the district court.

                             III.
                                 

                          CONCLUSION
                                    

          We  have carefully  considered all  other arguments

and find them to be either  waived or without merit.  For the

foregoing reasons,  the various orders of  the district court

are

          Affirmed in full as  to the Lucia case, and,  as to
                                                             

the  Miller  case, affirmed  in part,  reversed in  part, and
                                                             

remanded   for  further  proceedings   consistent  with  this
                                                             

opinion.
        

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