Omnicare, Inc. v. Laborers Dist. Council Constr. Indus. Pension Fund

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The Securities Act of 1933 requires that a company issuing securities file a registration statement containing specified information, 15 U.S.C. 77aa. The statement may include other representations of fact or opinion. A purchaser of securities may sue an issuer if it either “contain[s] an untrue statement of a material fact” or “omit[s] to state a material fact . . . necessary to make the statements therein not misleading.” The buyer need not prove intent to deceive. Omnicare filed a registration statement for a public offering of common stock. In addition to required disclosures, the statement expressed the company’s opinion that it was in compliance with federal and state laws. After the government sued Omnicare for receiving kickbacks from pharmaceutical manufacturers, purchasers of Omnicare Funds sued, claiming that the legal-compliance statements constituted “untrue statement[s] of . . . material fact” and that Omnicare “omitted to state [material] facts necessary” to make those statements not misleading. The district court dismissed. The Sixth Circuit reversed, holding that subjective disbelief was not required. The Supreme Court vacated. A statement of opinion is not an “untrue statement of . . . fact” simply because that opinion ultimately proves incorrect. Opinions qualify as untrue statements of fact if the opinion was not sincerely held or if they contain embedded statements of untrue facts. Under section 11’s omissions clause, whether a statement is “misleading” is an objective inquiry based on a reasonable investor’s perspective. A reasonable investor may understand an opinion to convey facts about the speaker’s basis for holding that view; if the real facts are otherwise, but not provided, the opinion will mislead by omission. An opinion, however, is not misleading simply because the issuer knows, but fails to disclose, some fact cutting the other way. Section 11 creates liability only for the omission of material facts that cannot be squared with a fair reading of the registration as a whole. The case was remanded for determination of whether the complaint adequately alleged that Omnicare omitted some fact that would have been material to a reasonable investor. View "Omnicare, Inc. v. Laborers Dist. Council Constr. Indus. Pension Fund" on Justia Law