让数十亿美元从你的指间溜走:金融机构未能参与证券集体诉讼和解的经验证据和法律含义

IF 4.9 1区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences Stanford Law Review Pub Date : 2004-12-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.655181
James D. Cox, Randall S. Thomas
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引用次数: 29

摘要

本文提出了金融机构在解决证券集体诉讼中提交索赔的频率的实证调查结果。我们将对大量和解的实证研究与对机构投资者的索赔申请实践的调查结果结合起来。我们分析的第一部分样本包含118个定居点,这些定居点没有包括在我们早期的研究中。我们发现,只有不到30%的可证明损失的机构投资者在这些和解中完善了他们的索赔。然后,我们探讨了这种普遍失败的可能解释。我们提出了各种各样的潜在问题,从通知和记录保存过程中的机械故障,到更微妙的问题,如投资组合经理认为只有投资活动才能为客户带来可观的回报。为了确定哪些问题是主要的罪魁祸首,我们调查了机构投资者的索赔申请实践,询问他们谁负责这项任务,他们是如何执行的,如果有的话,他们做了什么绩效监控。我们了解到,大多数机构依靠其托管银行在证券欺诈集体诉讼和解中为它们提出索赔,其中许多机构几乎没有监督托管银行是否实际提供了这些服务,而且托管银行在代表客户提出索赔方面存在经济上的障碍。我们认为,任何此类失败都应被评估为潜在的违反注意义务的行为,这与特拉华州Caremark判决中所包含的监督义务相一致。将这一标准应用于我们的问题,我们认为机构投资者的受托人必须真诚地确保他们的基金有一个适当的系统来识别和处理基金的索赔。此外,他们应该建立一个监督机制,以确保这个系统是足够的,如果他们发现它是不够的,他们应该采取措施来解决问题。代表其机构客户提出索赔的托管人也应该以应有的谨慎来完成这项工作的各个方面,否则将面临潜在的疏忽责任。然后,我们确定了索赔归档系统中可以解决的几个离散问题,以帮助纠正当前的情况。最后,我们对我们的结果对证券欺诈诉讼目标的影响进行了两个观察。我们的调查结果显示,和解的受益人与那些因证券违规而受到损害的人之间存在严重的不匹配。简单地说,许多被骗的受益人没有得到赔偿,而其他人则不公正地发财。鉴于机构投资者在市场上的巨大重要性,这种不匹配引发了人们对证券欺诈集体诉讼作为补偿机制是否合理的严重质疑。此外,机构投资者糟糕的索赔备案记录加剧了这种不匹配,因为许多投资者被系统性地剥夺了从这些和解中获得的任何利益。这使人们对证券诈骗案的赔偿功能产生了更多的质疑。相反,我们认为这些案例更有说服力的理由是对欺诈的威慑。但是,为了实现这一目的,我们认为目前的进程需要进行一些改变。因此,我们建议将证券欺诈诉讼的目标锁定在个人违法者身上,只有当公司从欺诈中获益时才援引替代责任。
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Letting Billions Slip Through Your Fingers: Empirical Evidence and Legal Implications of the Failure of Financial Institutions to Participate in Securities Class Action Settlements
This article presents the results of an empirical investigation of the frequency with which financial institutions submit claims in settled securities class actions. We combine an empirical study of a large set of settlements with the results of a survey of institutional investors about their claims filing practices. Our sample for the first part of the analysis contains 118 settlements that were not included in our earlier study. We find that less than 30% of institutional investors with provable losses perfect their claims in these settlements. We then explore the possible explanations for this widespread failure. We suggest a wide range of potential problems from mechanical failures in the notification and recordkeeping processes to more subtle issues such as portfolio managers' beliefs that only investment activities produce significant returns for their clients. In order to determine which of these problems were the main culprits, we surveyed institutional investors about their claims filing practices, asking them who was responsible for this task, how they performed it, and what, if any, performance monitoring was done. We learned that most institutions relied on their custodian banks to file claims for them in securities fraud class action settlements, that many of these institutions did little monitoring of whether the custodian actually performed these services, and that custodians had financial disincentives to file claims on behalf of their clients. We argue that any such failures should be evaluated as potential breaches of the duty of care consistent with the monitoring obligations embraced in Delaware's Caremark decision. Applying this standard to our problem, we believe that the trustees of institutional investors must, in good faith, insure that their fund has an adequate system in place to identify and process the fund's claims. Furthermore, they should create a monitoring mechanism to insure that this system is adequate, and if they learn it is inadequate they should take measures to fix the problem. Custodians that file claims on behalf of their institutional clients should perform the various aspects of this job with due care, too, or face potential liability for negligence. We then identify several discrete problems with the claims filing system that can be addressed to help remedy the current situation. We conclude our article with two observations about the implications of our results for the goals of securities fraud litigation. Our survey results show a serious mismatch between the beneficiaries of the settlement and those that have been harmed by the securities violation that gave rise to the settlement. Simply stated, many defrauded beneficiaries are not compensated for their losses, while others are unjustly enriched. Given the enormous importance of institutional investors in the market, this mismatch raises serious doubts about whether securities fraud class actions can be justified as compensatory mechanisms. Moreover, the poor claims filing records of institutional investors exacerbates this mismatch, as many investors are systematically deprived of any benefits from these settlements. This raises more doubts about the compensatory function of securities fraud cases. Rather we believe the more persuasive rational for these cases is the deterrence of fraud. But in order to accomplish that purpose, we think that the current process needs to undergo some changes. We therefore suggest targeting securities fraud litigation at the individual wrongdoers, and invoking vicarious liability only when the company benefits from the fraud.
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