
Every fall since I first started writing this blog, I
have assembled a list of the current hot topics in the world of directors' and
officers' liability. This year's list is set out below. As should be obvious,
there is a lot going on right now in the world of D&O, with further changes
just over the horizon. The year ahead could be very interesting and eventful.
Here is what to watch now in the world of D&O:
1. How Massive Will the Total Cost of
the Subprime and Credit Crisis Litigation Wave Turn Out to Be?:
Even though the subprime and credit crisis-related litigation wave is now well
into its fifth year, only a small number of the cases have settled. But in
recent weeks, a number of cases have settled in quick succession, and these
settlements have been very substantial.
The recent settlements include the largest so far in
subprime and credit crisis-related cases, the $627 million Wachovia bondholders
settlement, about which refer here.
Other settlements include the following: Washington Mutual, $208.5 million
(refer here);
Wells Fargo Mortgage Backed Securities, $125 million (refer here);
National City, $168 Million (refer here);
Colonial Bank, $10.5 million (refer here);
and Lehman Brothers executives, $90 million (refer here).
With these latest settlements (many of which are subject
to court approval), there have now been a total of 29 settlements collectively
representing a total of almost $3.4 billion, for an average settlement of $116
million (although that average is obviously skewed upward by the $627 million
Wachovia bondholders settlement and the $624 million Countrywide shareholders
settlement)
As impressive as these cumulative numbers are, there are
still many more cases pending. Of course, a certain number of the pending cases
will ultimately be dismissed. But many will not, and eventually those remaining
cases will be settled. Although it is impossible to conjecture how large
the total tab for all these cases ultimately will be, the implication
from the cases that have settled is that the total amount will be massive.
The possibilities here may have significant implications
for D&O insurers. Of course, not all of these amounts will be covered by
D&O insurance. But a significant chunk will be. Indeed, a number of the
recent settlements will be funded entirely by D&O insurance, including the
WaMu settlement, the Colonial Bank settlement and the Lehman Brothers
settlement. Interestingly, the Lehman settlement will come close to exhausting
what is left of Lehman's $250 million insurance tower.
In other words, the D&O insurers have had some very
big bills to pay and could have some even bigger bills to pay in the months
ahead. To the extent the ultimate loss amounts are fully reserved, these
funding requirements will not cause a problem. But to the extent the carriers
have not adjusted their loss reserves in anticipation of these losses, the
cumulative impact of the coming settlements could be disruptive.
2. How Extensive Will the FDIC's Failed Bank
Litigation Efforts Become?: Since January 1, 2008, 392 banks have
failed, including 70 so far in 2011 (as of September 2, 2011).
Fortunately, though the closures are continuing to mount, it appears that
the failures finally may be starting to wind down. Since the current wave of
bank closures began, there have been concerns that, just as it did during the
S&L crisis in the late 80s and early 90s, the FDIC will again aggressively
pursue claims against the directors and officers of the failed banks. At least
so far, the FDIC's litigation activity has been relatively modest. However, the
signs are that the FDIC has merely been gearing up, and that substantial
numbers of failed bank lawsuits could be just ahead.
As of September 2, 2011, there have been a total of
eleven FDIC lawsuits against the directors and officers of failed banks. A
number of these were filed in quick succession in August, raising the
possibility that the apparent backlog of FDIC lawsuit filings may finally be
starting to work out. There clearly are more cases to come. The FDIC's website
states that the agency has authorized suits in connection with 30 failed
institutions against 266 individuals for D&O liability with damage claims
of at least $6.8 billion. The eleven cases the FDIC has filed so far
involve only 77 individuals. Even just taking account of the lawsuits that
have already been authorized, there are many more suits to come, and
undoubtedly even more lawsuits will be authorized.
The latest round of failed bank litigation has been very
slow to develop. But at this point it seems likely that for the next several
years there is going to be a very significant amount of FDIC litigation
involving the directors and officers of failed banks. Moreover, the litigation
will not be limited just to cases brought by the FDIC. Many of the failed banks
were publicly trade or otherwise have broad and diverse ownership, and in many
instances the bank failures have been followed by shareholder litigation. These
shareholder suits represent competing claims for the D&O insurance policy
proceeds. The competing claimants will be vying to secure the dwindling limits,
adding a layer of complexity both for the defendants and for the FDIC.
3. Will the Failed Bank Litigation Be
Accompanied by a Wave of Coverage Litigation?: During
the S&L crisis, the FDIC was involved in extensive litigation to try to
establish coverage under D&O insurance policies. Many of the leading cases
on the Insured vs. Insured exclusion arose out of this litigation (about which
refer here),
and the Regulatory Exclusion was also extensively litigated (refer here).
The signs are that there could be extensive coverage
litigation this time around too. Indeed, when the FDIC recently filed a lawsuit
against the former directors and officers of the failed Silverton Bank, it
included the bank's D&O insurers as named defendants. As discussed here,
the FDIC's claims against the D&O insurers in the lawsuit involve the
insurers' attempt to deny coverage for the claim under the Regulatory
Exclusion.
The FDIC may not be the only litigant involved in D&O
insurance coverage litigation. As multiple defendants struggle with the
problems associated with too many claims and too many insured persons, the
various defendants will want to sort out their entitlement to the policy
proceeds. For example, as discussed here,
a subsidiary of the failed IndyMac Bank, which is a defendant in a number of
lawsuits arising out of the bank's failure, recently attempt to obtain a
judicial declaration of coverage in order to sort out who was entitled to what
under the bank's D&O policies. Although the subsidiary's claims were dismissed
for lack of standing, the case does show that a variety of parties may be
interested in using litigation as a way to establish their rights to the
proceeds of D&O insurance.
The coverage litigation will hardly be limited just to
D&O insurance. A recent coverage action in Alabama involved the coverage
disputes involving a failed bank's bond (refer here).
There are also likely to be coverage disputes involving errors and omissions
insurance. And as other outside professionals, such as accountants and lawyers,
get dragged into these cases, there will likely be coverage litigation
involving their professional liability policies.
For those of us who were involved in the failed bank
coverage litigation during the S&L crisis, the return of these types of
coverage cases has a very familiar feeling.
4. Will the Dodd-Frank Whistleblower
Provisions Lead to More Claims? And How Will the D&O Insurers Respond?:
Among the parts of the Dodd-Frank Act that may have a significant impact on
claims is the Act's whistleblower provisions. The whistleblower provisions
include the creation of a new whistleblower
bounty pursuant to which individuals who bring violations of securities and
commodities laws to the attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission or
the Commodities Futures Trading Commission will receive between 10
percent and 30 percent of any recovery in excess of $1 million. The SEC
recently promulgated rules implementing these provisions.
While it is too early to tell what impact the bounty
provisions will ultimately have, most observers expect that the substantial
incentives provided by the whistleblower provisions will lead to an increased
number of whistleblower reports and that these reports will lead to
investigations and enforcement actions. In some instances, the revelations in
the whistleblowers' reports will also lead to follow-on civil litigation, as
aggrieved shareholders or others pursue claims for misrepresentation or
mismanagement. These follow on claims represent one type of potential increase
claims exposure arising from the whistleblower provisions. But the possibility
of increased numbers of investigations and enforcement actions present their
own sets of issues.
One of the perennial issues in D&O coverage
litigation is the question of policy coverage for regulatory investigations.
Individual directors and officers typically covered (depending on policy
wording) for both informal inquiries and requests for information, and civil,
criminal, administrative or regulatory investigations commenced by either the
issuance of a Target Letter or Wells Notice, or after the service of a
subpoena. The company itself rarely has coverage for these types of
investigations, except when it was named with an individual directors and
officer in a "formal" SEC investigation. There typically is no coverage
for the Company for responding to informal inquiries and requests for
information from the SEC.
Many of these issues were discussed in the Second
Circuit's July 1, 2011 opinion in the MBIA case (about which refer here),
which held that, under the specific policy language at issue and under the
circumstances presented, MBIA's D&O insurance policies covered the
investigative and special litigation expense the company incurred during a
regulatory investigation of its accounting practices.
Recently, one D&O insurance carrier introduced a new
insurance product intended to provide entity coverage for these costs of
investigation, as discussed here.
Due to problems of cost, as well as to the high deductibles and
coinsurance that the carrier is requiring, this product is still looking for
widespread acceptance. But the product's introduction shows that the D&O
insurance industry is working to try to find insurance solutions to the growing
need for solutions addressing the regulatory investigation risk. To the extent
the new whistleblower provisions mean increased numbers of investigations,
companies will be increasingly interested in finding insurance products that
address these risks.
5. What Will be the Next "Hot" Litigation
Target?: From time to time, a sector or industry will find itself
as the target of plaintiff securities class action attorneys. Last summer, for
a brief period, the hot sector was the for-profit education section. Since
then, the hot target has been U.S.-listed Chinese companies. This year alone,
there have been 32 cases filed against U.S-listed Chinese companies (through
September 2, 2011).
This surge of litigation involving Chinese companies has
arisen out of accounting scandals, many of which were first revealed by online
analysts,
many of whom have short positions in the companies they are attacking. The
Chinese companies have attempted to deflect the assertions of accounting
improprieties by charging that the online attacks were merely rumors started by
those with a financial incentive to drive down the companies' share price. Fair
or not, the online reports seem to be leading directly to shareholder
litigation, as in many cases the shareholder plaintiffs are simply quoting the
online analysts' reports in their complaints.
For now, the phenomenon shows no sign of letting up, as
the lawsuits involving the U.S.-listed Chinese companies have continued to
accumulate as the year's second half has progressed. Indeed, between July 1,
2011 and September 2, 2011, there were a total of 6 of these Chinese companies
sued in new securities class action lawsuits in the U.S.
The recent litigation outbreak involving the U.S.-listed
Chinese companies is a reminder of circumstance-specific events that can drive
securities class action lawsuit filings. Many things determine filing levels,
many of which cannot be captured or predicted in historical filing data. As a
result, it can be misleading to try to generalize from short term trends about
future filing levels. Simply put, the numbers vary over time, because, for
example, contagion events and industry epidemics happen.
6. Will M&A Litigation Continue to
Surge?: One of the more interesting phenomena in the world of
corporate and securities litigation has been the changing mix of litigation. As
recently as just a few years ago, securities class action lawsuits represented
a significant percentage of all corporate and securities lawsuits. The
insurance information firm Advisen has documented that in more recent years,
class action securities litigation has represented an increasingly smaller
percentage of all corporate and securities lawsuits. One area that has been
growing as a percentage of all corporate and securities litigation has been
M&A related litigation.
According
to Advisen, in 2010, there were 353 lawsuits challenging corporate mergers
filed in state and federal courts, which represents a 58% increase over 2009.
As of August 27, 2011, 352 M&A related lawsuits had already been filed,
putting this year's filings to far exceed last year's.
As discussed in an August 27, 2011 Wall Street Journal
article entitled "Why Merger Lawsuits Don't Pay" (here),
these lawsuits rarely produce substantial damage awards. Often, the most they
succeed in accomplishing is a delay in the merger or slightly improved
disclosures about the deal's terms. The reason these lawsuits continue to be
filed, and indeed continue to be filed in increasing numbers, is that these
cases are good business for the plaintiffs' firms. These firms can collect fees
that range from $400,000 for typical cases to millions of dollars for bigger
cases.
In the past, these types of cases have not represented a
significant claims exposure for D&O insurers. However, now that so many
more of them are being filed, and now that individual merger deals are now
attracting multiple claims, these cases are becoming a much bigger problem for
the D&O insurers, particularly those that are the most active as primary
insurers. A basic assumption of the D&O insurance industry is that D&O
claims represent a low frequency, high severity threat. But these M&A
claims are exactly the opposite - they represent a high frequency, low severity
exposure, for which the D&O insurers likely did not price and almost
certainly cannot underwrite. And even if the typical case settles for relatively
modest amounts, the claims costs including defense fees are now in the
aggregate becoming an issue for the D&O insurers.
In the current competitive marketplace (about which see
more below), the D&O insurers may not be able to do much about this problem,
but this might among the first areas to which D&O insures turn if the
market does start to firm. Among other things, the D&O insurers might
require higher self-insured retentions for these types of claims, on the theory
that they really represent a cost of doing business rather than a true
third-party liability exposure.
7. Will the U.S. Supreme Court Continue Its
Inexplicable Willingness to Take Up Securities Cases?: Years
from now, when the history of the Roberts Court is finally written, perhaps the
historians will be able to explain why during the second half of the first
dozen years of the 21st Century, the Court was so eager to
take up securities cases. The Supreme Court is just coming off a term in which
the Court heard three different securities cases, and it
has already agreed to take up one more case in the term that is about to
begin.
The case that the Court has already agreed to hear next
year is the Credit Suisse Securities case, and it involves statute of
limitations issues arising in connection with Section 16(b) claims for
short-swing profits. This narrow, technical issue is unlikely to have widespread
significance. But what is significant is that yet again this Court has taken up
a securities case. There doesn't seem to be any particular member of the Court
that is driving the Court's interest in securities cases. But for whatever the
reason, the Court's docket increasingly includes these types of cases. Though
there is only one case now on the Court's docket in the upcoming term, the
Court can always choose to hear others - which is something the Court seems
inclined to do.
The current Court does not always rule in the favor of
the defendants. For example, this last term, in the Matrixx Initiatives
case (refer here),
the court rejected the defense argument that plaintiffs must show "statistical
significance" in order to establish materiality in a securities lawsuit. In an
earlier term, in the Merck case, the court rejected the defendants'
statute of limitations arguments (refer here).
But many of the Supreme Court's recent securities law decisions have been
in the defendants' favor, and the Court's rulings in recent terms in such cases
as Janus Capital (refer here),
Morrison (refer here),
and Tellabs (refer here)
represent significant defense victories that have or will have a significant
impact in many cases on the plaintiffs' ability to pursue securities claims.
The overall cumulative impact of the Court's interest in
taking up securities cases has been favorable to companies and unfavorable to
plaintiffs. There is some speculation that the increased difficulty of
successfully maintaining a securities class action lawsuit through the motion
to dismiss may be one reason for the shift in the mix of corporate and
securities litigation away from securities class action lawsuits and toward
other types of litigation (like the M&A litigation, discussed above).
8. Will the Implementation of the U.K Bribery
Act Mean Increased Anti-Bribery Enforcement Activity?: On
July 1, 2011, the U.K Bribery Act became effective, as discussed here.
The Act has a broad reach, regulating prohibited conduct that takes place
within the U.K. or that involves a company or person that carries on business
in the U.K., regardless of where the prohibited activity takes place. The
Bribery Act is broader than the U.S.'s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, reaching
a broader range of prohibited activities and providing for greater possible
liabilities for those at companies involved in these activities, even if not
directly involved in the prohibited conduct.
From the time the Act received Royal Assent, one of its
features that has been the focus of particular concern has been Section 7 of
the Act. Section 7 creates a new offense which can be committed by commercial
organizations that fail to prevent persons associated with them from committing
bribery on their behalf. Commentators have
been concerned that this provision seemingly would subject any firm --even
non-U.K. companies that have operations in the U.K. - to liability under the
Act for violative conduct taking place any where in the world.
Because the Act has only just become effective, it is not
yet known how aggressively it will be implemented or what its overall impact
will be. At a minimum, it seems likely that the Act will lead to an increase in
enforcement activity. It is also possible that as has proved to be the case
with enforcement actions under the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,
follow-on civil litigation will follow in the wake of regulatory enforcement
activity.
As companies confront these developments, among the
issues that are likely to arise are questions concerning coverage for these
proceedings under their D&O insurance policies, as discussed in a
prior guest post on this blog. The Act's fines and penalties are
not likely to be covered under typical policies. Whether investigative costs
and defense fees will be covered will depend on a large variety of
circumstances, including who is the target of the investigation. How serious
these problems will turn out to be will depend a lot on the Act's
implementation, a development that will be worth watching.
9. What Impact Will the Changing Corporate
Governance Requirements Have?: Largely due to the 2010
enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, we have entered a watershed period of
corporate governance reform. Processes now afoot have wrought a transformation
in the relations between corporate boards and corporate shareholders. These
changes have not only created additional burdens on affected companies but they
have also resulted in some cases in a change in the corporate litigation
environment as well.
Among the changes the Dodd-Frank Act implemented is the
requirement for an advisory shareholder vote on executive compensation. As a
result of Section
951 of the Dodd Frank Act and the requirements of SEC rules that went
into effect January 25, 2011, all but the smallest public companies had to put
their executive compensation practices to an advisory shareholder vote this
past proxy season. As it turns out, about 40 companies experienced a negative
shareholder vote. In some cases the negative "say on pay" vote have
been followed by shareholder litigation, by activist investors seeking to
reform executive compensation practices, as discussed here.
The requirement for a shareholder "say on pay" is only
one of many current corporate governance reform under discussion. Other areas
include the question of proxy access - that is, the question whether
shareholders can have their board candidates listed on the annual proxy form.
The D.C. Circuit recently
struck down the SEC's rules requiring proxy access, but the issue is not
likely to go away.
As discussed at length here,
other current corporate governance issues include reforms such as board
declassification and majority voting. Other issues that loom ahead as other
provisions of Dodd-Frank go into effect include requirements that companies
disclose the ratio between total annual compensation of their CEO and the
median annual compensation of their employees (rules implanting these
provisions are required to be adopted before the end of 2011).
Another provision of the Dodd Frank Act requires to SEC
to direct the national exchanges to impose new listing standards directing
public companies to implement compensation clawback provisions. Under Section
954 of the Dodd Frank Act, companies making accounting restatements of prior
financials must recover from any current or former officer all incentive-based
compensation paid during the preceding three-year period above what would have
been paid without the misstated financials. These provisions are to be
implemented by this year-end.
These various provisions will affect different companies
in different ways. But it is clear that these changes are here to stay and that
as a result companies and their management are operating in a challenging
environment. Companies that resist these governance developments may face
heightened levels of scrutiny, both from shareholders and from the media.
Moreover, as corporate governance standards change, boards will be held to
standards of conduct reflecting the changed governance norms and expectations.
And in an era of growing shareholder empowerment, that reality may translate
into increased judicial expectation for boards to address shareholder
initiatives.
Taken together, these changes in the corporate governance
environment mean heightened scrutiny, changing shareholder expectations, and
even an increased litigation risk. How extensive these changes ultimately will
prove to be remains to be seen as the additional provisions of Dodd Frank are put
into effect in the months ahead.
10. What Does All of This Mean for the
D&O Insurance Marketplace?: Given all of these trends
and developments, an outside observer might reasonably expect that the
marketplace for D&O insurance would be becoming more restrictive. And
certainly with respect to certain categories, such as U.S.-listed Chinese
companies and commercial banks, the marketplace for D&O insurance is
challenging. However, outside of those very particularized categories, the
marketplace for D&O insurance remains generally competitive. Most
financially stable companies continue to be able to obtain broad terms and
conditions at relatively attractive prices.
There is nothing specific to suggest that the generally
competitive environment is about to change, at least immediately. But there are
a number of considerations that could lead to change. The first is the
cumulative impact of the year's catastrophic losses. The various natural
disasters this year, from the earthquakes in New Zealand and Japan to Hurricane
(and tropical storm) Irene, have had an impact on the insurance industry's
collective balance sheet. If there were to be another significant event in the
four remaining months of the year, the accumulated losses could be enough to
force a pricing increase or to cause carriers (or at least some of them) to
pull back.
Given the catastrophe events that have already occurred
this year, carriers are likely to be scrutinizing their books. Many of the
developments discussed above will undoubtedly lead the various carriers to take
a close look at their D&O portfolios. The mounting losses from the subprime
meltdown and the credit crisis; the looming impact of the wave of failed banks;
and the difficulties and uncertainties associated with a changing litigation
and legal environment are all likely to raise concerns. These concerns
inevitably lead to questions about pricing adequacy, risk selection, and scope
of coverage.
In light of all of these considerations, it would be very
rational for the D&O insurance marketplace to enter a more restrictive
phase. In some sectors that may already be happening. For example, even
relatively healthy commercial banks are seeing increased pricing and reduced
limits. Several carriers are pulling back in that space.
At the same time, though, the overall marketplace remains
competitive. As long as capacity remains ample and competition active, most
companies outside of the most troubled sectors apparently will continue to
enjoy the benefits of a competitive marketplace for D&O insurance. The
question is how long these conditions will continue. Time will tell of course,
but if the wind blows or the earth shakes again, among the consequences could
be a harder market for insurance generally and for D&O insurance in particular.
Read
other items of interest from the world of directors & officers liability,
with occasional commentary, at the D&O Diary, a blog by Kevin LaCroix.
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