Schwab YieldPlus Fund
SEC Brings Long Expected Schwab YieldPlus Fund Enforcement Action Against Charles Schwab & Company, Charles Schwab Investment Management, Randall Merk and Kimon Daifotis
Summary Of The Enforcement Action
On January 11, 2011, the Securities & Exchange Commission brought its long expected Schwab YieldPlus Fund (the "Fund") enforcement action against Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. ("Charles Schwab" which was the broker-dealer and distributor of the Fund), Charles Schwab Investment Management, Inc. ("CSIM" which was the investment adviser which managed the Fund's assets), Randall Merk (former President of CSIM) and Kimon Daifotis (former lead portfolio manager of the Fund) in connection with the offer, sale and management of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund. Charles Schwab and CSIM, without admitting or denying the allegations made by the SEC, agreed to settle the Commission's enforcement action by paying almost $119 million in disgorgement and penalties. Randall Merk and Kimon Daifotis have chosen not to settle and are litigating the allegations made against them. The SEC is to be complimented for the comprehensive and thorough nature of its investigation that resulted in the enforcement action discussed herein.
The Rise And Fall Of The Schwab YieldPlus Fund
The Fund was represented to investors as being "an ultra short-term bond fund, designed to offer high current income with minimal changes in share price." See, e.g., Schwab YieldPlus Fund Prospectus dated November 15, 2006 at p. 1. Charles Schwab marketed and recommended the Schwab YieldPlus Fund to its customers as a safe, secure alternative to a money market fund that paid a slightly higher yield than a money market fund.
Kimon Daifotis and his portfolio management team engaged in investment strategies that significantly increased the Fund's overall level of risk by reducing its cash equivalent securities allocation available to satisfy daily shareholder redemptions and simultaneously increasing the Fund's concentration in longer-term, higher yielding, but less liquid securities (asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities). The significant risks associated with these strategies were not disclosed to investors. The strategies boosted the Fund's returns relative to its ultrashort bond fund category peers and resulted in the Fund receiving Morningstar Mutual Fund's highly sought five star ranking for trailing three year returns (i.e., top 10% in the ultrashort bond fund category) as of June 30, 2005.
This impressive performance, combined with Charles Schwab's substantial marketing skill and resources, resulted in a rapid rise in the Fund's total assets under management from 2004 through 2007. The Fund's total assets under management peaked at $13.685 Billion on July 18, 2007. The Fund on that date was far and away the largest fund within the ultrashort bond fund category.
In June and July 2007, heightened levels of turbulence and anxiety arose within the credit markets. Among other things, the failure and forced liquidation of two Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc. hedge funds, which were invested primarily in mortgage-backed securities bonds backed by pools of sub-prime mortgages, focused attention on the liquidity risks associated with these types of securities that had assumed an inappropriately large role in the Schwab YieldPlus Fund. Beginning in late July and August 2007, massive redemptions by Fund shareholders combined with the Fund's strategy of maintaining low cash balances forced the Fund portfolio manger to sell significant portions of the Fund's assets into illiquid markets. These continuing shareholder redemptions eventually required that the portfolio managers dispose of Fund assets at depressed prices which contributed to a decline in the Fund's Net Asset Value price per share during the balance of 2007 and into 2008 and 2009.
Specific SEC Allegations Of Improper Conduct
The SEC in its complaints against Charles Schwab, CSIM, Randall Merk and Kimon Daifotis allege a number of improprieties that have come to light over the past two to three years. These improprieties include allegations that:
- Charles Schwab and CSIM misleadingly marketed the Fund as being only slightly riskier than money market funds, CDs and other cash alternatives and that the Fund's NAV "may fluctuate minimally." The SEC noted that the Fund materially differed from CDs and money market funds in ways which made the Fund significantly riskier than the cash equivalent products to which it compared. The differences included the following:
(1) The securities owned by the Fund were not insured;
(2) The Fund's securities had significantly longer maturities than the securities owned by money market funds;
(3) In mid-2007, only 6% of the Fund's assets ($675 million of $11 billion) were scheduled to mature within the next six months;
(4) The longer maturity of the Fund's securities exposed the Fund to increased liquidity risk (i.e. shareholder redemptions forcing the Fund to sell securities at depressed prices);
(5) The Fund invested in lower credit quality bonds (15 to 25 percent of the Fund's bonds were rated BBB or lower); and
(6) The Fund did not adequately monitor and analyze the Fund's substantial investment in non-agency mortgage-backed securities ("MBS") and lower quality bonds.
- Charles Schwab and CSIM made misleading statements and failed to disclose material facts in its marketing materials and in public filings with the SEC with respect to the true "weighted average maturity" of the Fund.
- The Fund in 2006 deviated from and changed its "concentration policy" that formerly prohibited the Fund from investing more than 25 percent of its assets in non-agency MBS without first obtaining authorization by a vote of the majority of the Fund's shareholders.
- Between at least August 2007 through at least March 2008, Randall Merk and Kimon Daifotis "knowingly or recklessly made a series of materially false and misleading statements and omissions of material fact" about the Fund "in an effort to dissuade YieldPlus investors from redeeming their investments." These false and misleading statements and omissions of material fact included:
(1) false statements in August 2007 about the level of shareholder redemptions;
(2) false statements in August 2007 that the Fund had a "short maturity structure";
(3) false statements in August 2007 about the Fund's performance relative to its peers in the ultrashort bond fund category;
(4) misleading statement in November 2007 that the "The portfolio management team has confidence in the Fund's strategy given our outlook for the fixed income markets.";
(5) misleading statement in November 2007 about the Fund's losses to date were "paper loss[es]" that were "unrealized";
(6) false and misleading statement in November 2007 that the Fund had been maintaining higher than normal cash position to capitalize on investment opportunities and to effectively manage potential redemption requests;
(7) misleading statement in November 2007 that the Fund was "highly diversified";
(8) misleading statement in November 2007 that "[t]he portfolio managers have not been forced into selling securities at distressed prices to meet client redemptions."; and
(9) misleading statements in August 2007 and thereafter regarding the Fund's "minimal" exposure to "subprime" holdings.
- Schwab Target Funds and the Schwab Charitable Fund sold their Schwab YieldPlus Fund holdings in March 2008 after receiving material, nonpublic information about the Fund.
Charles Schwab's Emphasis on "Failure To Mitigate" Equitable Defense in Schwab YieldPlus Fund Arbitration Cases
Charles Schwab in its defense of claims brought by Schwab YieldPlus Fund investors for their losses has devoted a significant amount of its resources on what is called the "failure to mitigate" equitable defense. This equitable defense has been defined by one court as "one [who is] seeking damages as the result of another's act cannot recover those damages he could have avoided by the exercise of reasonable care." Charles Schwab argues that if the Fund was sold to investors as a fund that was a safe alternative to a money market fund and a fund that had a stable price history, the Funds price decline of $.25 per share in August 2007 put shareholders on "notice" that the Fund was not a safe alternative to a money market fund and that the Fund at that point in time did not have a stable price history. Accordingly, Charles Schwab asserts that this "notice" imposed a duty on Fund shareholders to exercise reasonable care and promptly liquidate their shares and limit their losses.
Numerous state courts throughout the country have found that equitable defenses such as the failure to mitigate defense are subject to a fundamental equity jurisprudence doctrine known as "clean hands." For example, the Florida Supreme Court in Peters v. Brown, 55 So.2d 334, 336 (Fla. 1951) advised litigants that:
Equity not only contemplates, it requires fair dealing in all who seek relief at its hands. He that hath committed iniquity shall not have equity, is a well known maxim of equity.
A lower Florida appellate court elaborated further upon the application of the clean hands doctrine as follows:
Equity will stay its hand where a party is guilty of conduct condemned by honest and reasonable men. Unscrupulous practices, overreaching, concealment, trickery or other unconscientious conduct are sufficient to bar relief. 22 Fla.Jur.2d, Equity, § 50.
We believe that SEC's allegations described above that Randall Merk and Kimon Daifotis "knowingly or recklessly made a series of materially false and misleading statements and omissions of material fact" about the Fund "in an effort to dissuade YieldPlus investors from redeeming their investments" greatly assist Fund shareholders in demonstrating that Charles Schwab through Merk and Daifotis were engaging in "[u]nscrupulous practices, overreaching, concealment, trickery or other unconscientious conduct" that would prevent Charles Schwab from utilizing its failure to mitigate equitable defense to prevent Fund shareholders from recovering their losses.
Current Status Of Schwab YieldPlus Fund Shareholders' Claims
Fund shareholders who purchased their shares between May 31, 2006 and March 17, 2008 are participants in the Charles Schwab Corp. class action unless they affirmatively opted out of the class by mailing their opt out notice by January 14, 2011.
It is our opinion that Fund shareholders who purchased their shares prior to May 31, 2006 have valid claims that they can pursue through FINRA arbitration proceedings.
If you have either affirmatively opted out of the class action on a timely basis or you purchased your Fund shares prior to May 31, 2006, we would welcome the opportunity to speak with you about the advisability of pursuing a claim to recover your Schwab YieldPlus Fund losses.
Thomas F. Shine, Esq.
114 Sixth Avenue, Suite 4
Indialantic, FL 32903
Email - tfshine@aol.com
Website - www.thomasfshinelaw.com
(w) (321) 724-4445
Timothy J. Dennin, Esq.
316 Main Street
Northport, NY 11768
Email - secatty@denninlaw.com
Website - www.denninlaw.com
(w) (631) 261-0250
Thomas D. Mauriello, Esq.
209 Avenida Fabricante, Ste. 125
San Clemente, CA 92672
Email - tomm@maurlaw.com
Website - www.maurlaw.com
(w) (949) 542-3555
Christopher T. Vernon
Vernon Healy, Attorneys At Law
3080 Tamiami Trail East
Naples, FL 34112
Email - cvernon@vernonhealy.com
Website - www.vernonhealy.com
(w) (239) 649-5390
