Category Archives: Settlement

Settlement Roundup (i2 And Raytheon)

The Citigroup settlement may have gotten all of the headlines, but last week was bookended by two other significant settlements.

i2 Technologies, Inc. (OTC: ITWO), a Dallas-based provider of closed-loop supply chain management solutions, announced on Monday the preliminary settlement of the securities class actions (and related derivative lawsuits) pending against the company in the N.D. of Tex. The original suit, first filed in March 2001, alleges that the company made false and misleading statements concerning the characteristics and implementation of certain software products. A second set of class actions were filed starting in April 2003 relating to the company’s 2003 financial restatement.

The settlement is for $84.85 million ($43 million from the company’s insurance carriers and $41.85 million from the company). Interestingly, i2 also announced that to help fund its portion of the settlement, “the company has entered into definitive agreements providing for the issuance and sale by i2 of $22 million of common stock to certain individual defendants in the lawsuits.”

Raytheon Company (NYSE: RTN), a Massachusetts-based leading defense contractor, announced on Thursday the preliminary settlement of the securities class action pending against the company in the D. of Mass. The suit, originally filed in 1999 and about to go to trial, alleges that Raytheon made false and misleading statements concerning its financial performance.

The settlement is valued at $410 million (a cash payment of $210 million and warrants for Raytheon stock with a stipulated value of $200 million). Although Raytheon apparently has yet to reach an agreement with its insurance carriers, the company stated that it “expects to receive insurance proceeds of $75 million in connection with the settlement.”

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Cornerstone Releases Report On Settlements

Cornerstone Research has released an updated report on post-Reform Act settlements of securities class actions through 2003. The findings include:

(1) Of the 96 settlements in 2003, almost 85% were for less than $20 million. Five cases settled for more than $100 million.

(2) 20% of post-Reform Act settlements have involved Section 11 or 12(a)(2) claims and median settlements as a percentage of “estimated damages” are significantly higher for these cases.

(3) Approximately 30% of post-Reform Act settlements have involved institutions serving as lead plaintiffs (as compared to approximately 15% before the Reform Act). After controlling for various factors, the report finds that settlement amounts are higher in these cases.

(4) Less than 15% of post-Reform Act cases have been accompanied by the filing of a derivative action.

Cornerstone’ also announced that its report on securities class action filings for 2003 (done jointly with Stanford Law School’s Securities Class Action Clearinghouse) will be released shortly.

Addition: The New York Law Journal (via law.com – regist. req’d) has an article on the report.

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More On The Citigroup Settlement

There is extensive press coverage today of Citigroup’s $2.65 billion settlement in the WorldCom case. Some highlights:

Additional Settlements – The Wall Street Journal (subscrip. req’d) reports that the lead plaintiff has given the other defendant banks in the WorldCom litigation 45 days to settle under the same formula used by Citigroup. If the banks agree, they would pay about $2.8 billion to bond investors.

Allocation – The Associated Press reports that, according to the lead plaintiff in the case, Citibank’s payment will be allocated with $1.45 billion to bondholders and $1.2 billion to shareholders.

Attorneys’ Fees – The Wall Street Journal (subscrip. req’d) and the London Evening Standard report that the complex attorneys’ fees arrangement in the case may result in fees of around $140 million for the plaintiffs’ firms handling the litigation.

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“We Want To Put The Entire Era Behind Us”

Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) has announced a settlement of the claims against the company in the WorldCom litigation. Citigroup will make a payment of $2.65 billion, or $1.64 billion after tax, to be allocated between class period purchasers of WorldCom stock and WorldCom bonds. According to the press release, the path to settlement became easier last Thursday when New York State Comptroller Alan Hevesi, who oversees the lead plaintiff in the case, agreed to face-to-face discussions. Citigroup also announced that after settling the WorldCom claims it will have a “litigation reserve” of $6.7 billion on a pre-tax basis to address other legal matters, including the Enron securities class action.

News coverage can be found in Bloomberg, Reuters, and the New York Times.

Quote of note (Bloomberg): “Chief Executive Officer Charles Prince said Citigroup faced claims seeking $54 billion in the WorldCom lawsuit. ‘We made a $1.64 billion insurance policy to avoid a roll of the dice in front of a jury,’ Prince said on a conference call with investors. ‘We want to put the entire era behind us.'”

Quote of note II (Bloomberg): “Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, Citigroup’s largest individual shareholder, said Prince and Citigroup Chairman Sanford Weill called him this morning and he told them ‘I’m backing them all the way. If this was to go to court it would be so big, God help us,’ Alwaleed said. ‘The trend in the U.S. and New York is against corrupt practices. Look at Martha Stewart.'”

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TALX Settles

TALX, Corp. (Nasdaq: TALX), a St. Louis-based business process outsourcer of payroll data-centric services, has announced the preliminary settlement of the securities class action pending against the company in the E.D. of Mo. The case, originally filed in December 2001, alleges that TALX made misleading statements that did not properly account for certain software and inventory, did not reflect certain write-offs, and did not accurately disclose certain business prospects. The settlement is for $5.75 million and will be paid by TALX’s insurance carriers.

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The Top 50

ISS’s Securities Class Action Services (“SCAS”) has issued a list of the top 50 plaintiffs’ law firms ranked by the total dollar amount of final securities class action settlements occurring in 2003 in which the law firms served as lead or co-lead counsel.

Securities Litigation Watch, the blog authored by Bruce Carton of SCAS, also has a post summarizing the results.

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ESI Settles

Electro Scientific Industries, Inc. (Nasdaq: ESIO), a Portland-based manufacturing equipment supplier, has announced the settlement of the securities class action (and a related derivative suit) pending against the company in the D. of Oregon. The suit, originally filed in March 2003, is based on misrepresentations related to the company’s restatment of its financials for the 2002 fiscal year and two subsequent quarters. The settlement is for $9.25 million, of which approximately $3.8 million will be paid by ESI and approximately $5.45 million will be paid by its insurance carrier.

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The Goldilocks Problem

How can a court determine what amount of attorneys’ fees is “just right”? DPL, Inc. and their former accountants, PricewaterhouseCooopers, settled the securities class action against them in the S.D. of Ohio (as well as related state court derivative actions) for $145.5 million. The class action portion of the settlement was $110 million and plaintiffs’ counsel requested that the court award them 35%, or $38.5 million, in attorney’s fees and costs.

In a decision issued last month (but only recently appearing online), the court rejected this fees request after members of the class objected. See In re DPL, Inc. Sec. Litig., 2004 WL 473472 (S.D. Ohio March 8, 2004). The court found that plaintiffs’ counsel had achieved an “outstanding” result in the case. According to an affidavit of an economist submitted by plaintiffs’ counsel, $110 million represented “between about 62% and 145% of the losses suffered by the members of the class.” The court also noted that “a review of the Defendants’ motions seeking dismissal of the litigation, motions which were not ruled upon due to the settlement, reveals that it is by no means certain that the claims of the Plaintiffs and the class they represent would have survived rulings on such.” Under these circumstances, the court found that the percentage of fund method for calculating the attorneys’ fees, with its emphasis on rewarding good results, was more appropriate than the lodestar method (which is based on the number of hours reasonably expended, at a reasonable hourly rate, adjusted by a multiplier).

When it came to the actual percentage to award, however, the court balked at 35%. The court determined that plaintiffs’ counsel had done relatively little work to obtain the settlement (primarily briefing the motion to dismiss) and that “an attorney compensated at the hourly rate of $350, an overly generous rate for this part of the world, would have to work 110,000 hours to generate such a fee.” The court then concluded that a reasonable award was 20% of the common fund, or $22 million. Notably, the court offered no rationale for selecting 20% as the right amount, as compared to 19%, 21%, or any other percentage below what was requested.

Holding: Sustaining in part and overruling in part the application for attorneys’ fees.

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Service Corp. Int’l Settles

Service Corp. Int’l (NYSE: SRV), a Houston-based funeral and cemetary company, has announced the preliminary settlement of the securities class action pending against the company in the S.D. of Tex. The suit, originally filed in January 1999, alleges that the company made misrepresentations concerning its prearranged funeral business and other financial matters. The settlement is for $65 million, with $30 million of the payment being provided by the company’s insurance carriers.

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Infonet Settles

Infonet Services Corp. (NYSE: IN), a California-based provider of managed network communications services, has announced the preliminary settlement of the securities class action pending against the company in the C.D. of Cal. The case, originally filed in December 2001, alleges that the company made misrepresentations as part of an initial public offering of Class B common stock. The settlement is for $18 million ($13 million from insurance coverage and $5 million from the company).

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