Exam # ______
/ Securities RegulationFINAL EXAMINATION
Professor Palmiter
University of Michigan Law School
Winter 1998
INSTRUCTIONS
[see updated online instructions]
SHORT ESSAYS
The following questions call for a series of short answers, mostly arising under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "Securities Act"). In your answers, cite to the relevant statutory or regulatory provisions, as well as any significant cases, and briefly explain yourself. The information in each question is cumulative; you should use information in earlier questions to answer later questions. If you need additional facts to answer, state them and explain their relevance.
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Pete and Catherine purchased a timber mill and incorporate it as Twin Peaks Lumber, Inc. (TPL), a Washington State corporation. Catherine manages the firm, which operates in Twin Peaks, Washington. The business thrives, and they want to expand the mill's operations. They need capital.
Question (1) Catherine mails letters to two friends about buying TPL shares. Benjamin, who runs the local hotel, is loaded with cash and savvy; he says he will invest $800,000. Leo, who is a suspiciously well-to-do truck driver and has a cabin in Idaho, is long on brawn but short on investment experience; he says he can invest $400,000. As they are writing their checks, Catherine calls Leeland, her lawyer. She says, “This is a private placement, right?” What should Leeland advise?
Question (2) Headstrong and decisive, Catherine sells only to Benjamin. She then contacts a handful of local banks for them to lend to TPL. She would give the banks an unsecured note with a term of 6 months, renewable for up to 10 additional six-month periods, and returning 5.5 points above prime. The proceeds would help finance TPL's expansion plans. She asserts the instrument should be seen as a "local junk bond." (Generally, "junk bonds" are unsecured, subordinated, long-term, high-interest instruments syndicated nationally and internationally through investment banks to numerous investors. Junk bonds often trade in institutional markets, such as those envisioned by Rule 144A.) Outline an argument that these instruments are not securities.
Question (3) Catherine asks her lawyer Leeland to contact local banks about her “local junk
note” proposal. Leeland is often a closing attorney in commercial lending transactions and knows many local lending officers. He calls twelve and sets up appointments for Catherine, who conducts all negotiations. Behind the scenes, Leeland advises Catherine on what documents to assemble for the banks; he drafts a memorandum for TPL describing the company and the “local junk note” offering; he negotiates an indenture with the banks. The banks lend TPL money. Leeland worries the disclosure Catherine gave the banks was not complete. Assuming the “local junk notes” were securities, is Leeland liable under Rule 10b-5?
Question (4) Catherine's planned expansion works like a charm, and the banks are thrilled. Catherine wants a public stock offering to finance another larger, high-tech mill. Her lawyer Leeland calls some Seattle investment banks about participating in a public offering. For his services, Catherine promises Leeland $150,000 worth of stock to be issued in the offering. Leeland accepts. Does any of this violate the Securities Act?
Question (5) The TPL registration statement becomes effective. The TPL prospectus says "TPL management believes that TPL will experience strong growth in the coming years. The capital expansion funded by this offering will enable TPL to increase its linear foot capacity by at least 250%." Although the new mill increased capacity by 220%, TPL's actual lumber production increased only 90%, as demand for U.S. timber stayed flat. TPL’s stock price falls and investors in the offering consider suing. What impediments are there for investors in the offering who want to sue under § 11 for the false “strong growth” prognostication?
Question (6) Norma, who runs a successful cafe in Twin Peaks, notices a number of international visitors in town. She suspects TPL may be a takeover target and wants to invest her life's savings in TPL stock. But she does not want to buy on the market, where trading is thin. Norma learns that Benjamin, the savvy innkeeper who bought a large block of stock before TPL went public, might sell. In December, 10 months after Benjamin bought his stock, Norma buys from him at the currently prevailing market price. The international visitors happened to be mountain climbing, and Norma wants to rescind her purchase. Advise her.
LONG ESSAY
You represent Silicon Graphics, Inc. (“SGI”) which has been sued for securities fraud in the Northern District of California. See the attached condensed and excerpted complaint, which for present purposes you should treat as complete.
You have been asked to prepare a memo for your client that identifies and discusses the 10b-5 “culpability” defenses that SGI may be able to make in a motion to dismiss the complaint. Remember that a motion to dismiss “tests the legal sufficiency of the complaint.” See North Star Int'l v. Arizona Corp. Comm'n, 720 F.2d 578, 581 (9th Cir.1983). In reviewing a motion to dismiss, the court “must assume all [the plaintiff’s] factual allegations to be true and must construe them in the light most favorable to the [plaintiff].” See North Star, 720 F.2d at 580. Legal conclusions, however, need not be taken as true merely because they are cast in the form of factual allegations. Western Mining Council v. Watt, 643 F.2d 618, 624 (9th Cir.1981).
Make sure you identify particular passages in the complaint (with paragraph number references) that contain pleading or substantive deficiencies with respect to allegations of culpability. Assume that the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 is fully applicable in this case and that there are no issues of retroactive application.
Sec Reg - Final Exam Page XXX
Winter 1998
Exam # ______
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
In re SILICON GRAPHICS, INC. ) Lead Case No. C-96-0393-FMS
SECURITIES LITIGATION ) CLASS ACTION
FIRST AMENDED CONSOLIDATED COMPLAINT
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SUMMARY OF ACTION
1. This is a class action for purchasers of Silicon Graphics, Inc. ("SGI" or the "Company") stock between Sept. 13, 1995 and Dec. 29, 1995 (the "Class Period"), brought by investors who purchased SGI stock during the Class Period. This action alleges that defendants made false and misleading statements about SGI's business [and] its most important new product ...
2. SGI sells desktop graphics workstations. In recent years, its stock traded at a price earnings multiple reserved for premier growth companies with track records of meeting the investment community's expectations for high profit growth. This stock performance enabled SGI's corporate executives to exercise stock options and sell stock at large profits and enabled SGI to grow by using its stock to make acquisitions of other companies. ...
3. After reaching an all-time high of $44-7/8 on Aug. 21, 1995, SGI stock declined sharply as investors became concerned over SGI's ability to maintain its historic 40%+ growth rate due to increased competition. This decline, at a time when the market overall and the stock of SGI's main competitors (Sun Microsystems and Hewlett Packard) was increasing, was viewed with concern by SGI's executives. ...
4. In June 1995, one of SGI's major competitors, Hewlett Packard, introduced a new, powerful 3-D graphics workstation that posed a substantial competitive threat to SGI's existing 3-D graphics workstation. ... In reaction, on July 10, 1995, SGI announced its own line of enhanced 3-D graphics workstations -- known as the Indigo2 Workstation -- via a press event, an analysts' meeting and a one-hour long interview on the Dow Jones Investor Network at 1:00 p.m. by Defendant Edward R. McCracken ("McCracken") CEO and Chairman of the Board of SGI. According to SGI and McCracken, the new Indigo2 Workstation line would generate "more than $1 billion in sales during the current fiscal year ended June 30, 1996" -- a 50% increase over Indigo2's current sales! ... Beginning in Aug. 1995, SGI stock declined due to investors' concerns over SGI's ability to continue to achieve 40%+ growth. This large decline in SGI's stock in just eight weeks, during which the market overall and the stock of similar companies -- especially SGI's competitors, Sun Microsystems and Hewlett Packard -- increased in price, was viewed with concern by SGI's insiders, for the reasons pleaded elsewhere.
5. Then, around September 13, 1995, near the end of SGI's first quarter of FY96, as SGI attempted volume shipments of Indigo2 Workstations, SGI discovered the ASIC chips [supplied by Toshiba] were defective and that it could not assemble anywhere near enough Indigo2 workstations that worked to meet demand. ... On Sept. 13, 1995, after SGI stock had begun to decline sharply from its all-time high and rumors circulated that SGI was encountering problems manufacturing its Indigo2 Workstations, McCracken told a Morgan Stanley analyst, with respect to SGI's new Indigo2 Workstation product line, that "[t]here were no supply constraints."
6. ... SGI knew it would get much less than $1 billion in revenue from its Indigo2 Workstation product line in FY96 and would not be able to achieve 40% growth. ... SGI's executives knew that publicly disclosing that SGI had serious production problems with its most important new product and that shipments of ... the product would be delayed would send SGI stock tumbling even lower and severely hurt sales of Indigo2 Workstations as potential customers would purchase competitive products ..... SGI's executives agreed to pursue a "conspiracy of silence" to conceal these problems from the public and to tell customers that the reason they were not receiving all the Indigo2 Workstations they ordered was due to extraordinary heavy demand that SGI simply could not meet. Thus, when rumors of production problems with the Indigo2 Workstation product line surfaced in mid-Sept. and early Oct. 1995, SGI executives falsely told securities analysts that SGI had successfully introduced the Indigo2 Workstation, that the product was enjoying strong demand and "there were no supply constraints" .... This was not true. In fact there were severe shipping constraints due to the problems SGI was having with the ASIC chips. ...
8. On Oct. 19, 1995, SGI announced its first quarter FY96 results [through Sep. 30, 1995], reporting revenues of $595 million, well below expectations of $650 million, and earnings per share of $.33, at the low end of expectations. [On Nov. 12, 1995, SGI filed its Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended Sept. 30, 1995.] These results -- [which reflected] 33% revenue growth -- were viewed as disappointing by the investment community given SGI's prior representations of 40%-45% growth. SGI publicly said nothing about the problems it was encountering with its Indigo2 Workstations and blamed these disappointing results on reduced productivity of its North American direct sales force due to a recent reorganization of that sales force, ... In a conference call with securities analysts and investors and an interview with Reuters [on that date], McCracken was extraordinarily bullish about SGI's business, indicating that the primary cause of the disappointing first quarter -- the reduced productivity of SGI's direct North American Field Organization -- “was a temporary problem which had been corrected”; ...
9. Thus, while reporting worse than expected first quarter FY96 results, SGI assured analysts and investors that it would get back close to its targeted 40% growth rate in the second quarter of FY96 and would reach or exceed that growth rate for FY96 as a whole. ... As a result of these positive representations ... SGI stock declined by only $2 per share after the announcement of its disappointing first quarter FY96 results.
14. In mid-Dec. 1995, SGI stock fell when rumors circulated that SGI's second quarter FY96 results might be worse than anticipated. However, on Dec. 15, 1995, McCracken communicated with securities analysts to assure them (and through them the securities markets) that SGI had had a good month in November, that the reorganization of its North American direct sales force had been successful and that productivity there was growing, that demand for SGI's Indigo2 Workstation remained strong ... As a result, SGI was supposedly on track to achieve strong second quarter FY96 results. Notwithstanding these reassurances, during the last week of Dec. 1995, SGI stock declined to $26-7/8 per share, as information leaked into the market that weakness in U.S. business ... might prevent SGI from achieving its 40% growth target in its second quarter of FY96.
15. Each of the positive statements about SGI's business during the Class Period was materially false and misleading when issued, and failed to disclose, inter alia, the following adverse information which was then known only to defendants due to their access to internal SGI data:
(a) That SGI was not receiving a sufficient quantity of ASIC chips from Toshiba for use in manufacturing its Indigo2 Workstation to enable it to ship the product in necessary volume to meet demand for those products or achieve its stated revenue growth target, which would adversely impact SGI's revenue and earnings per share at least through the third quarter of FY96; ...
(d) That SGI was suffering severe supply constraints of the critical ASIC chips for its Indigo2 Workstation and because of the defects in and yield problems with these chips SGI had issued a "Stop Ship" report on that product, which had an adverse impact on SGI's revenue because the product could not be shipped in the scheduled volumes; ...