In re NVIDIA Corporation Securities Litigation
Filing
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ORDER by Judge Haywood S. Gilliam, Jr. GRANTING 152 MOTION TO DISMISS AND DENYING 154 MOTION TO STRIKE. (ndrS, COURT STAFF) (Filed on 3/2/2021)
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 1 of 22
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
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IRON WORKERS LOCAL 580 JOINT
FUNDS, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
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v.
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Case No. 18-cv-07669-HSG
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO
DISMISS AND DENYING MOTION TO
STRIKE
Re: Dkt. Nos. 152, 154
NVIDIA CORPORATION, et al.,
United States District Court
Northern District of California
Defendants.
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This is a consolidated securities class action brought by Plaintiffs E. Öhman J:or Fonder
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and Stichting Pensionenonds PGB (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) against Defendant NVIDIA
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Corporation (“NVIDIA” or “the Company”) and Jensen Huang, co-founder and Chief Executive
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Officer, Colette Kress, Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President, and Jeff Fisher,
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Senior Vice President (collectively with NVIDIA, “Defendants”). In their initial complaint,
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Plaintiffs alleged violations of Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
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(the “Exchange Act”) and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder. Dkt. No. 113 (Consolidated Class
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Action Complaint or “CCAC”) ¶¶ 147–48. The Court dismissed the CCAC with leave to amend.
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Iron Workers Local 580 Joint Funds v. NVIDIA Corp., 2020 WL 1244936 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 16,
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2020) (“Order”). Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint that reasserts the same claims. Dkt. No.
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149 (First Amended Complaint or “FAC”).
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Now pending before the Court is Defendants’ motion to dismiss the FAC. Dkt. Nos. 152
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(“Mot.”), 159 (“Opp.”), 163 (“Reply”). Also pending before the Court is Defendants’ motion to
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strike allegations in the FAC. Dkt. Nos. 154, 161, 165. For the following reasons, the Court
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GRANTS Defendants’ motion to dismiss and DENIES Defendants’ motion to strike.
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I.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs bring this securities action individually and “on behalf of all others who
purchased or otherwise acquired common stock of NVIDIA Corporation” between May 10, 2017,
and November 14, 2018, inclusive (the “Class Period”). FAC at 1. The following facts are taken
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from the FAC and judicially noticeable documents.
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A.
Graphic Processing Units
NVIDIA “is a multinational technology company” that produces graphic processing units
(“GPUs”), types of processors that are used in rendering computer graphics. FAC ¶ 1. NVIDIA’s
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GPU business is reported by market platforms, two of which are at issue in this case. Id. ¶ 39.
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The first platform is chips designed for videogames—the Gaming platform—comprised primarily
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of the “GeForce” GPU product line. Id. ¶¶ 39–40. Original Equipment Manufacturer & IP
(“OEM”) is a second platform for chips designed for devices such as tablets and phones. Id. The
gaming platform is NVIDIA’s largest market: “[i]n every quarter of the Class Period, [g]aming
revenues exceeded those of the four other segments combined.” Id. ¶ 40. Generally, NVIDIA
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does not sell GPUs directly to the end users, but rather to device manufacturers, referred to as
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“partners,” that incorporate the GPUs into graphic or video cards. Id. ¶ 42.
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Beginning in 2017, prices in the cryptocurrency market began to climb, creating a demand
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for GPUs processing power. Id. ¶¶ 52, 62. Generally, cryptocurrencies refer to digital tokens
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exchanged peer-to-peer through transactions facilitated by the Internet. Id. ¶¶ 44, 47. These
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transactions are secured by modern cryptology and are reported on a “decentralized, immutable
ledger.” Id. ¶ 45. To maintain the integrity of this ledger, transactions must be verified by
network participants “by first consolidating and encrypting the data of a group of transactions
using a cryptographic technique of ‘hashing’—applying an algorithm to convert a string of text
into an inscrutable, random sequence of numbers and letters.” Id. ¶ 46. Users then compete to
solve a “mathematical puzzle through laborious trial-and-error work performed by their
computers” in order to verify transactions and receive a prize of the network’s token—a process
referred to as “crypto-mining,” or simply “mining.” Id. ¶¶ 46–47. This verification process
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requires significant processing power. Because the mining process has essentially become a
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computational race, miners turned to “GPUs, which could execute the computationally intensive
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work of crypto-mining hundreds of times faster” than CPUs in home computers. Id. ¶ 52. Due to
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the significant hardware costs, as well as electricity costs to run and cool the machines, crypto-
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mining is only profitable when prices for cryptocurrencies are above a certain level. Id. ¶¶ 54–55.
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Thus, “[b]ecause cryptocurrency prices have swung wildly over their short history,” this has also
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led to a relatively volatile demand market for mining hardware, including GPUs. Id. ¶ 55.
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In 2013, Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (“AMD”), NVIDIA’s primary GPU competitor,
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experienced this volatility when prices for Bitcoin, used on the most popular cryptocurrency
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network, skyrocketed. Id. ¶¶ 57–58. AMD’s GPUs were in heavy demand during this time, “with
processors that usually sold for $200-300 per unit selling for $600-800 at the height of the
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bubble.” Id. ¶ 57. However, when prices for Bitcoin later dropped more than 70%, so too did
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demand for AMD GPUs—“a problem compounded by miners dumping their AMD GPUs on the
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secondary market at steep discounts.” Id. ¶ 58. “AMD revenues suffered as its crypto-related
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sales evaporated.” Id.
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In 2016, the price of Bitcoin again rallied, and many new currencies entered the market.
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Although Bitcoin miners moved away from GPUs to application specific integrated circuits
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(“ASICs”), miners for these new currencies still relied on GPUs. Id. ¶¶ 56 n.4, 59. The Ethereum
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network, “[t]he most significant” of the new cryptocurrency networks, also saw its cryptocurrency,
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Ether, rise in price: it “temporarily peaked at over $400 per token in June [2017] . . . [and s]everal
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months later, in January 2018, Ether topped $1,400 per token, an increase of more than 13,000%
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in a single year.” Id. ¶ 60. “During this run up in GPU-mined cryptocurrency prices, miners
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turned to NVIDIA— specifically, its enormously popular line of GeForce Gaming GPUs—and
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began to purchase GeForce GPUs in droves.” Id. ¶ 61. In May 2017, NVIDIA launched a special
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GPU designed specifically for cryptocurrency mining (“Crypto SKU”). Id. ¶ 6. Revenues from
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Crypto SKU sales were reported in NVIDIA’s OEM segment, not the Gaming segment. Id.
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Plaintiffs allege that “[l]aunching the Crypto SKU and reporting its sales in the OEM segment thus
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allowed Defendants to claim that any mining-related revenues were cordoned off in OEM,
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creating the impression that NVIDIA’s crown jewel Gaming business was insulated from crypto3
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related volatility (and the crash in demand that would follow the cryptocurrency markets’
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inevitable bust).” Id.
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B.
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“Throughout the Class Period, NVIDIA reported skyrocketing revenues in its core Gaming
Summary of Alleged False and Misleading Statements
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segment.” Id. ¶ 63. Plaintiffs allege that “investors and analysts alike questioned whether those
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revenues truly derived from GeForce GPU sales to gamers or, rather, were from sales of GeForce
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GPUs to cryptocurrency miners, whose demand was at risk of disappearing if the economics of
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mining turned negative.” Id. ¶ 64. Plaintiffs allege that three general representations in
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Defendants’ responses to these questions were materially false and misleading “and concealed
from investors the enormous risk to NVIDIA’s financial results posed by the Company’s outsized
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exposure to crypto-mining:”
First, Defendants represented to investors that revenues from sales of
its products to cryptocurrency miners were insignificant overall.
Second, Defendants asserted that NVIDIA’s soaring Gaming
revenues indeed resulted from sales “for gaming”—not
cryptocurrency mining. And third, Defendants represented that
NVIDIA’s cryptocurrency-related revenues were contained primarily
in the Company’s OEM reporting segment, when in fact, almost twothirds of such revenue came from GeForce sales recorded in its
Gaming segment.
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Id. ¶ 62 (emphasis omitted). When the purported truth was revealed, NVIDIA’s stock price fell
and the putative class members suffered financial losses. See id. ¶¶ 16–18. For example, on
November 15, 2018, NVIDIA cut its revenue guidance for the fiscal fourth quarter, allegedly
“[a]ttributing the reversal to a ‘sharp falloff in crypto demand’ . . ., and it became fully apparent to
the market that, contrary to Defendants’ earlier representations, NVIDIA’s revenues were unduly
dependent on cryptocurrency mining.” Id. ¶ 18. Following these alleged disclosures, NVIDIA
stock price “plummeted 28.5% over two trading sessions, from a close of $202.39 per share on
November 15, 2018, to close at $144.70 per share on November 19, 2018.” Id. ¶ 171.
i.
Overall revenues from miners were insignificant
On August 12, 2017, VentureBeat published an article that included a transcript of an
interview with Defendant Huang. FAC ¶ 183. The interviewer asked if Defendant Huang “sa[id]
a hallelujah for cryptocurrency?” Id. Huang responded: “No? Cryptocurrency is around. But it
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represented only a couple hundred million dollars, maybe $150 million or so. There’s still crypto
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mining to go . . . [i]t comes and goes. It’ll come again . . . [w]e’re not opposed to it. But our core
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business is elsewhere.” Dkt. 153-5, Ex. D at 3; see also FAC ¶ 183. Defendant Huang responded
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similarly in another VentureBeat article published on November 10, 2017, noting that
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cryptocurrency “is small but not zero. For us it is small because our overall GPU business is so
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large.” Dkt. No. 153-12, Ex. M at 3; see also FAC ¶ 196. Defendant Huang again noted that
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“crypto was a real part of our business this past quarter, even though small, overall,” in an article
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published by Barron’s on February 9, 2018. Dkt. No. 153-19, Ex. T at 1; see also FAC ¶ 207. On
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March 26, 2018, in an article published by TechCrunch, Defendant Huang was reported to have
said that “he still attributes crypto’s demands as a small percentage of NVIDIA’s overall
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business.” Dkt. No. 153-23, Ex. X at 4; see also FAC ¶ 210.
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On March 29, 2018, Defendant Huang appeared on the CNBC show Mad Money. FAC
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¶ 213. When asked about the growth of cryptocurrency risks, Defendant Huang stated that “our
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core growth drivers come from video games. It comes from professional graphics visualization
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. . . [and] from our data center business, which is now a multi-billion dollar business doubling each
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year, as well as in several years our autonomous vehicle business. So, those are our primary
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growth drivers. . . . Cryptocurrency just gave it that extra bit of juice that caused all of our GPUs
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to be in such great demand.” Dkt. No. 153-22, Ex. Y at 3; see also FAC ¶ 213.
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ii.
Soaring gaming revenues resulted from sales “for gaming”
On May 10, 2017, NVIDIA held its 2017 Annual Investor Day in which Defendants
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Huang, Kress, and Fisher participated. FAC ¶ 176. While presenting the “Gaming” portion,
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Defendant Fisher said that “[t]he fundamentals of PC gaming . . . are also strong. What’s driving
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PC gaming, eSports, competitive gaming AAA gaming [and] notebook gaming, all those
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fundamentals remain strong.” Dkt. No. 153-2, Ex. A at 7; see also FAC ¶ 176.
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On August 23, 2017, NVIDIA filed its Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended July 30,
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2017 (“Q2’17 10-Q”) with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), signed by
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Defendants Huang and Kress. FAC ¶ 187. The Management’s Discussion and Analysis of
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Financial Condition and Results of Operations section discussed the GPU business. Specifically,
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the Q2’17 10-Q stated:
GPU business revenue increased by 52% in the first half of fiscal year
2018 compared to the first half of fiscal year 2017. This increase was
due primarily to increased revenue from sales of GeForce GPU
products for gaming, which increased over 30%, reflecting continued
strong demand for our Pascal-based GPU products . . . Revenue from
GeForce GPU products for mainstream PC OEMs increased by over
90% due primarily to strong demand for GPU products targeted for
use in cryptocurrency mining.
Dkt. No. 153-7, Ex. G at 27. NVIDIA’s Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended October 29,
2017 (“Q3’17 10-Q”) similarly stated that “GPU business revenue increased by 31% . . . due
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primarily to increased revenue from sales of GeForce GPU products for gaming, which increased
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over 10%.” Dkt. No. 153-13, Ex. N at 26; see also FAC ¶ 200.
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On November 29, 2017, Defendant Kress represented NVIDIA at the Credit Suisse
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Technology, Media and Telecom Conference. FAC ¶ 203. A Credit Suisse analyst asked: “I think
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[the October quarter] was the first time that you had mentioned cryptocurrency as being partly
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driven by – that’s partly driving the gaming side of the business. If you look at it historically, it’s
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been in the OEM business. I think it was down almost 50% sequentially in the OEM portion, did
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you say that some of that crypto demand was made up for in gaming. Can you quantify that?”
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Dkt. No. 153-14, Ex. O at 13. Defendant Kress responded:
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In Q2 is when we started to create boards specifically for
cryptocurrency that we classify in our OEM business. Now keep in
mind, what that means is these are boards that can be done for
compute, okay, meaning they do not have any graphics capabilities so
they can’t be used for overall gaming. And the reason we did this is
we wanted to make sure that we supplied the overall cards that we
needed to our gamers, because that is our very important strategic
importance that we did. However, in certain times, if there is not the
overall availability and/or if price of Ethereum reaches high levels,
there’s a fairly good return on investment by buying a high-end card.
There could be a good return on investment that says, “I could
actually buy a higher-end game. I can actually do gaming and mining
at the same time if I was doing that.” So you’re correct, there
probably is some residual amount or some small amount in terms of
that, and that’s not something that we can visibly see, we can visibly
count in [indiscernible] there. We do believe the majority does reside
in terms of our overall crypto card, which is the size of about $150
million in Q2 and met our expectations in terms of Q3, that we
thought it would be more residual and most probably closer to
[indiscernible].
Id.; see also FAC ¶¶ 203–04.
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iii.
Cryptocurrency-related revenues were primarily reported in the OEM
segment
On August 10, 2017, NVIDIA held its second-quarter fiscal year 2018 earnings call. FAC
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¶ 179. A Goldman Sachs analyst asked, “So Q2 revenue came in roughly about $250 million
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above your guide. Can you confirm what some of the drivers were to the upside relative to your
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guidance? Was it all cryptocurrency or was it a combination of multiple things?” Dkt. No. 153-4,
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Ex. C at 7. Defendant Huang responded:
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[T]he $250 million, you could see in our – what we categorized under
the OEM SKUs, basically the cryptocurrency SKUs. And that, if you
reverse-engineered it out, I think, is approximately $150 million. And
I – and we serve the vast – I would say, the large majority of the
cryptocurrency demand out of that specialized products. There’re still
small miners that buy GeForces here and there, and that probably also
increased the demand of GeForces.
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Id. Similarly, in Defendant Huang’s statement in the August 12, 2017 interview with
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VentureBeat, he noted that cryptocurrency represented about $150 million in revenues, the same
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amount he referenced as being within the OEM segment during the second-quarter fiscal year
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2018 earnings call. See Dkt. No. 153-5, Ex. D at 3; see also FAC ¶ 183.
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On September 6, 2017, Defendant Kress spoke at the Citi Global Technology Conference.
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FAC ¶ 190. When asked “what steps has NVIDIA taken to avoid cannibalization of core gaming
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market from these cards,” Defendant Kress responded:
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Cryptocurrency has been a very interesting market dynamics over the
last couple of years. I think you’ll remember 2 years ago, when the
Bitcoin mining market came, it was probably one of the shortest-lived
cryptocurrency time periods because that moved to the overall
compute moving to custom ASICs. That wasn’t a market that we
particularly paid any attention to or were even a participant in terms
of that. But the newest cryptocurrency market took quite a leap ahead
in our second quarter that we just finished to where we had planned
cryptocurrency cards that would be available to miners and
exclusively for miners. So what we mean by that is we did not enable
the capabilities for graphics with those cards. You’ll see those cards
in our OEM business not in our overall gaming business, and those
were available throughout most of Q2. But there was very, very
strong demand for mining as the overall price of Ethereum, one of the
most popular cryptocurrencies, was very, very high. And so what you
had seen in some of those shortages is there was a possibility in terms
of some of the gaming cards that they might have bought as well. But
we covered most of cryptocurrency with our cryptocards that we had
developed and that was probably about $150 million in our quarter.
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Dkt. No. 153-8, Ex. H at 9–10.1
On November 9, 2017, Defendants Huang and Kress hosted NVIDIA’s third-quarter fiscal
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year 2018 earnings call. FAC ¶ 193. When asked to “quantify how much crypto was in the
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October quarter,” Defendant Kress responded: “So in our results, in the OEM results, our specific
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crypto [boards] equated to about $70 million of revenue, which is the comparable to the $150
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million that we saw last quarter.” Dkt. No. 153-9, Ex. J at 11; see also FAC ¶ 193.
Outside of the three categories of statements detailed above, Plaintiffs also allege that one
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of Defendant Huang’s answers during the second-quarter fiscal 2019 earnings call on August 16,
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2018, was materially false and misleading. FAC ¶ 216. When asked about the channel inventory,
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Huang responded, “We’re expecting the channel inventory to work itself out. We are the masters
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at managing our channel, and we understand the channel very well . . . we have plenty of
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opportunities as the – as we go back to the back-to-school and the gaming cycle to manage the
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inventory, so we feel pretty good about that.” Dkt. No. 153-26, Ex. AA at 11. Plaintiffs allege
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that these statements were materially false and misleading because “(i) throughout the Class
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Period, the overwhelming majority of NVIDIA’s cryptocurrency-related revenues . . . was made
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through the Gaming segment” and “(ii) the Company had a massive glut of unsold GeForce GPUs
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that NVIDIA had amassed to satisfy the anticipated demand, which no longer existed, from
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crypto- miners.” FAC ¶ 217.
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II.
REQUEST FOR JUDICIAL NOTICE
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A.
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In Khoja v. Orexigen Therapeutics, the Ninth Circuit clarified the judicial notice rule and
Legal Standard
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incorporation by reference doctrine. 899 F.3d 988 (9th Cir. 2018). Under Federal Rule of
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Evidence 201, a court may take judicial notice of a fact “not subject to reasonable dispute because
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it … can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be
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questioned.” Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)(2). Accordingly, a court may take “judicial notice of matters of
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public record,” but “cannot take judicial notice of disputed facts contained in such public records.”
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Defendant Kress provided a similar response on the November 29, 2017 call with Credit Suisse.
See Dkt. No. 153-14, Ex. O at 13; see also FAC ¶ 203.
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Khoja, 899 F.3d at 999 (citation and quotations omitted). The Ninth Circuit has clarified that if a
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court takes judicial notice of a document, it must specify what facts it judicially noticed from the
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document. Id. Separately, the incorporation by reference doctrine is a judicially-created doctrine
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that allows a court to consider certain documents as though they were part of the complaint itself.
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Id. at 1002. This is to prevent plaintiffs from cherry-picking certain portions of documents that
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support their claims, while omitting portions that weaken their claims. Id. However, it is
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improper to consider documents “only to resolve factual disputes against the plaintiff’s well-pled
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allegations in the complaint.” Id. at 1014.
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B.
Analysis
Defendants request that the Court take judicial notice of or consider incorporated by
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reference the following 35 documents: 15 items as to which the Court previously granted judicial
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notice, 13 items as to which the Court previously denied Defendants’ request as moot, and 7 new
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items first alleged in the FAC. Dkt. No. 153 at 1, 15–16; Dkt. No. 153-1 (“Kirby Decl.”), Exs. 2–
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36. Plaintiffs object to Defendants’ request as to at least 14 of the 35 documents. See generally
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Dkt. No. 160.
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Defendants re-attach exhibits as to which the Court previously granted judicial notice:
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Exhibits A, C, D, G, H, J, M, N, O, T, X, Y, AA, BB. Dkt. No. 153 at 2. The Court previously
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granted judicial notice as to these exhibits “for the purpose of determining what was disclosed to
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the market.” Order at *5. Plaintiffs do not object to the Court considering these exhibits for that
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limited purpose. Dkt. No. 160 at 1 n.2. Accordingly, because “the plaintiff refers extensively to
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the document[s] [and] the document[s] form[ ] the basis of the plaintiff’s claim,” the Court
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GRANTS judicial notice of these exhibits for the purpose of determining what was disclosed to
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the market. See Khoja, 899 F.3d at 1002 (quoting United States v. Ritchie, 342 F.3d 903, 907 (9th
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Cir. 2003)). The Court also GRANTS judicial notice on the same basis as to the following
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documents newly referenced in the FAC: Exhibits HH (Jon Peddie Research Report), II (NVIDIA
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Presentation – Citigroup Conference), JJ (NVIDIA Earnings Call –2Q 2016), KK (NVIDIA
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Presentation – Credit Suisse Conference), and LL (NVIDIA Presentation – Morgan Stanley
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Conference).2 The Court will also consider Exhibit MM, the internal company 2017 presentation
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drafted by members of NVIDIA’s China market team. Given that Plaintiffs include images of
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select slides in the FAC and rely on this presentation for various allegations, see FAC ¶¶ 11, 14,
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119–26, 226, the Court finds it incorporated by reference, and GRANTS the request as to Exhibit
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MM on this basis. Defendants also request that the Court deem Exhibit NN, a NVIDIA-produced
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video, incorporated by reference, but it is not clear whether Exhibit NN is the same video
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referenced in the FAC. See Dkt. No. 160 at 3. Given this uncertainty, the Court DENIES the
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request to incorporate by reference Exhibit NN. Additionally, the Court GRANTS Defendants’
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request for judicial notice as to Exhibit FF because “stock price is public information capable of
accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be
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questioned.” See Order at *6. Lastly, Defendants’ Exhibits B, E, K, L, P, Q, R, S, U, V, W, Z,
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and DD are not specifically referenced in the CCAC or relevant to the Court’s analysis.
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Therefore, Defendants’ request as to those exhibits is DENIED AS MOOT.
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III.
MOTION TO STRIKE
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A.
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Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f), a “court may strike from a pleading an
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insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous matter.” Motions to
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strike “should be denied unless the matter has no logical connection to the controversy at
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issue and may prejudice one or more of the parties to the suit.” Hatamian v. Advanced Micro
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Devices, Inc., No. 14-CV-00226-YGR, 2015 WL 511175, at *1 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 6, 2015) (citing
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Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1382 (1990)). “In the
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absence of such prejudice, courts have denied Rule 12(f) motions ‘even though the offending
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matter literally [was] within one or more of the categories set forth in Rule 12(f).’ ” Id. “With a
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motion to strike, just as with a motion to dismiss, the court should view the pleading in the light
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most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Taylor v. Shutterfly, Inc., No. 18-CV-00266-BLF, 2020
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Though Plaintiffs contend that Exhibits II (transcript of presentation at Citigroup 2007
conference) and JJ (transcript of August 2015 earnings call) are not referenced in the FAC, Dkt.
No. 160 at 2, Plaintiffs do cite statements from these exhibits. See FAC ¶¶ 10, 43, 243.
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WL 1307043, at *4 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 19, 2020).
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B.
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In the FAC Plaintiffs attribute several allegations to FE-5, a newly identified confidential
Analysis
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witness. See generally FAC. But Defendants indicate that FE-5 has signed a declaration
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disavowing key statements attributed to him in the FAC. Dkt. 154-2 (“FE-5 Decl.”). In his
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declaration, FE-5 states that “several” of the statements attributed to him are “untrue and
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inaccurate” and that he “certainly did not make them.” FE-5 Decl. ¶ 5. FE-5 details why a few
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key statements are false and states that he would have corrected any inaccuracies if Plaintiffs had
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allowed him to review the statements. Id. at ¶¶ 12–13. FE-5 notes that NVIDIA attorneys assured
him that “even if [he] chose to say nothing further, NVIDIA would respect [his] privacy and not
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retaliate in any way.” Id. at ¶ 14. Defendants argue that these discredited factual allegations are
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“unreliable and immaterial” and should thus be stricken. Dkt. 154 at 3.
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As an initial matter, Plaintiffs contend that the Court cannot consider FE-5’s recanting
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declaration, which Defendants produced prior to the commencement of discovery. Citing Campo
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v. Sears Holdings Corp., 371 F. App’x. 212, 216–17 & n.4 (2d Cir. 2010), Defendants maintain
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that “extrinsic evidence may be considered at this stage for the limited purpose of assessing
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reliability of CW allegations.” Dkt. 165 at 3. In Campo, the Second Circuit found no error in the
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district court’s consideration of deposition testimony at the motion to dismiss stage “for the
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limited purpose of determining whether the confidential witnesses acknowledged the statements
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attributed to them in the complaint.” 371 F. App’x. at 216 n.4. In response, Plaintiffs point to the
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decision of a district court in this circuit stating that “while a district judge is considering a motion
22
to dismiss, there is a strong argument that defendants should never be submitting recanting
23
declarations, and that courts should be striking any such declarations sight unseen.” See Union
24
Asset Mgmt. Holding AG v. Sandisk LLC, 227 F. Supp. 3d 1098, 1101 (N.D. Cal. 2017). The crux
25
of the parties’ disagreement thus revolves around the appropriateness of resolving this issue at the
26
motion to dismiss stage.
27
28
The Court agrees with Plaintiffs that it is improper to resolve factual disputes concerning
FE-5’s account at this stage. The Court finds Hatamian v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 2015
11
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1
WL 511175 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 6, 2015) (“AMD”) persuasive. In AMD, the court considered a
2
motion to strike the accounts of two confidential witnesses in a securities class action complaint.
3
The defendants had filed declarations in which the confidential witnesses recanted or disclaimed
4
certain statements attributed to them. Id. at *1. But because the allegations sought to be stricken
5
“pertain[ed] directly” to the element of scienter, the court determined that those allegations did
6
“not fall within the[] categories for which striking is permissible.” Id. Concerning the defendants’
7
argument that certain allegations were false, the court noted that the declarations did not establish
8
that those allegations were “irrefutably false,” and found that discovery would allow the
9
“opportunity to explore” such questions. Id. at *3.
Here, the allegations sought to be stricken may bear on the litigation because Plaintiffs cite
10
United States District Court
Northern District of California
11
these statements in support of their scienter arguments. Accordingly, the allegations attributed to
12
PE-5 “do not fall within the[] categories for which striking is permissible.” See id. at *1.
13
Defendants maintain that FE-5’s declaration does not raise a factual dispute like the one in AMD,
14
where the defendants asked the court to strike allegations as “false.” Dkt. 165 at 9. Instead,
15
Defendants contend that the truth of FE-5’s allegations is “immaterial to whether” these
16
allegations are “sufficiently reliable.” Id. But, as Plaintiffs note, there plainly are factual disputes
17
concerning whether FE-5 provided some of the information attributed to him and the reasons for
18
FE-5’s disavowals. Dkt. 161 at 13. The Court thus DENIES Defendants’ motion to strike.
19
IV.
20
21
MOTION TO DISMISS
A.
Legal Standard
i.
Rule 12(b)(6) Standard
22
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a) requires that a complaint contain “a short and plain
23
statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2). A
24
defendant may move to dismiss a complaint for failing to state a claim upon which relief can be
25
granted under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). “Dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) is
26
appropriate only where the complaint lacks a cognizable legal theory or sufficient facts to support
27
a cognizable legal theory.” Mendiondo v. Centinela Hosp. Med. Ctr., 521 F.3d 1097, 1104 (9th
28
Cir. 2008). To survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, a plaintiff must plead “enough facts to state a
12
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 13 of 22
1
claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007).
2
A claim is facially plausible when a plaintiff pleads “factual content that allows the court to draw
3
the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
4
556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009).
In reviewing the plausibility of a complaint, courts “accept factual allegations in the
5
6
complaint as true and construe the pleadings in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”
7
Manzarek v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 519 F.3d 1025, 1031 (9th Cir. 2008). Nonetheless,
8
Courts do not “accept as true allegations that are merely conclusory, unwarranted deductions of
9
fact, or unreasonable inferences.” In re Gilead Scis. Secs. Litig., 536 F.3d 1049, 1055 (9th Cir.
10
United States District Court
Northern District of California
11
12
2008).
ii.
Heightened Pleading Standard
Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 provides that it is unlawful “[t]o use
13
or employ, in connection with the purchase or sale of any security registered on a national
14
securities exchange or any security not so registered . . . any manipulative or deceptive device or
15
contrivance . . . . ” 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b). Under this section, the SEC promulgated Rule 10b–5,
16
which makes it unlawful, among other things, “[t]o make any untrue statement of a material fact or
17
to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the
18
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b–5(b). To
19
prevail on a claim for violations of either Section 10(b) or Rule 10b–5, a plaintiff must prove six
20
elements: “(1) a material misrepresentation or omission by the defendant; (2) scienter; (3) a
21
connection between the misrepresentation or omission and the purchase or sale of a security; (4)
22
reliance upon the misrepresentation or omission; (5) economic loss; and (6) loss causation.”
23
Stoneridge Inv. Partners, LLC v. Scientific–Atlanta, Inc., 552 U.S. 148, 157 (2008).
24
At the pleading stage, a complaint alleging claims under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b–5
25
must not only meet the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8, but also satisfy the
26
heightened pleading requirements of both Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) and the Private
27
Securities Litigation Reform Act (“PSLRA”). In re Rigel Pharm., Inc. Sec. Litig., 697 F.3d 869,
28
876 (9th Cir. 2012). Under Rule 9(b), claims alleging fraud are subject to a heightened pleading
13
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 14 of 22
1
requirement, which requires that a party “state with particularity the circumstances constituting
2
fraud or mistake.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). Additionally, all private securities fraud complaints are
3
subject to the “more exacting pleading requirements” of the PSLRA, which require that the
4
complaint plead with particularity both falsity and scienter. Zucco Partners, LLC v. Digimarc
5
Corp., 552 F.3d 981, 990 (9th Cir. 2009).
6
B.
7
Defendants contend that Plaintiffs fail to sufficiently plead falsity, scienter, and control
Analysis
8
person liability. See generally Mot. The Court agrees that Plaintiffs fail to adequately plead
9
scienter. Because the Court finds that Plaintiffs’ Section 10(b) claim fails, it must also dismiss the
10
United States District Court
Northern District of California
11
12
Section 20(a) control person liability claim. See Zucco, 552 F.3d at 990.
i.
Scienter
Under the PSLRA, whenever intent is an element of a claim, the complaint must “state
13
with particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required
14
state of mind.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2). “The PSLRA’s strong inference requirement has teeth,”
15
and “is an exacting pleading obligation.” Nguyen v. Endologix, Inc., 962 F.3d 405, 414 (9th Cir.
16
2020) (internal quotation marks omitted) (citing Zucco, 552 F.3d at 990). “The inference of
17
scienter must be cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference of nonfraudulent
18
intent.” Tellabs, 551 U.S. at 314. The required state of mind is one of at least “deliberate
19
recklessness.” In re Silicon Graphics Inc. Sec. Litig., 183 F.3d 970, 974 (9th Cir. 1999), as
20
amended (Aug. 4, 1999). “[R]ecklessness only satisfies scienter under § 10(b) to the extent that it
21
reflects some degree of intentional or conscious misconduct.” Id. at 977. Additionally, where a
22
complaint relies on statements from confidential witnesses, it must “pass two hurdles to satisfy the
23
PSLRA pleading requirements. First, the confidential witnesses whose statements are introduced
24
to establish scienter must be described with sufficient particularity to establish their reliability and
25
personal knowledge. Second, those statements which are reported by confidential witnesses with
26
sufficient reliability and personal knowledge must themselves be indicative of scienter.” Zucco
27
Partners, 552 F.3d at 995 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
28
The Court previously found that none of the statements by confidential witnesses
14
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 15 of 22
1
adequately supported Plaintiffs’ scienter allegations under the PSLRA. Order at *9–11. The
2
scienter allegations in the FAC are largely based on accounts of the same former employees
3
detailed in the CCAC. The FAC adds statements by FE-1 and FE-2, includes the same allegations
4
regarding FE-3 and FE-4, and provides an additional account of a newly identified former
5
employee, FE-5. Relying on these former employee accounts, Plaintiffs argue that Defendants had
6
“access to copious sales and technical usage data showing the dramatic surge in cryptocurrency-
7
related sales during the Class Period.” FAC ¶ 219. Specifically, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants
8
had access to at least five sources of information concerning GeForce sales to miners:
9
10
United States District Court
Northern District of California
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
(1) Huang’s access to a centralized sales database that expressly
identified sales to miners; (2) regular meetings at which Huang,
Fisher, and other top executives received reports quantifying sales to
miners and discussed ways to capitalize on the cryptocurrency trend;
(3) weekly “Top 5” reports from NVIDIA managers, initiated by and
sent directly to Huang, that consistently discussed bulk GeForce
orders by miners and the explosion of crypto-related demand; (4)
GeForce Experience usage data compiled in monthly reports sent
directly to Huang; and (5) a plethora of reports and sales data from
NVIDIA’s largest market, China, that both provide a “substantial
window” into its global business and confirm that, contrary to their
public prevarications, Defendants were tracking skyrocketing cryptorelated sales all along.
Opp. at 1; see also FAC ¶¶ 78, 87, 94, 99, 109.
The Court finds that Plaintiffs’ allegations again fail to raise a strong inference of scienter,
largely because Plaintiffs do not adequately tie the specific contents of any of these data sources to
particular statements so as to plausibly show that the Defendant who made each specified
statement knowingly or recklessly spoke falsely. Viewed as a whole, the FAC’s factual
allegations do not plausibly suggest that Defendants acted with at least deliberate or conscious
recklessness. While the Court reaches this conclusion after a holistic inquiry, the Court below
discusses inadequacies in particular allegations with respect to each of the Defendants.
a. Defendant Huang
Most of the FE statements concerning access to information focus on Defendant Huang.
The FAC alleges that Defendant Huang was authorized to access a centralized database, which
“expressly identified crypto-miners as purchasers of large blocks of GeForce GPU products.”
FAC ¶¶ 79, 81, 83–84 (citing statements by FE-1, who worked in the “China market”). The
15
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 16 of 22
1
related allegations primarily rely on the accounts of FE-1, a Senior Account Manager for NVIDIA
2
in China, 3 and FE-2, a Senior Products Director who worked in Santa Clara, California until he
3
left NVIDIA in May 2017. While the CCAC did not show that FE-2 ever personally
4
communicated with any Defendant, see Order at *11, the FAC now details that FE-2, “who
5
personally met with Huang on a monthly basis,” alleges that “Huang personally reviewed” the
6
sales data through the database by referencing a video FE-2 saw during a 2017 meeting that
7
showed Defendant Huang looking at the database.4 See FAC ¶ 85. Given that FE-2 left NVIDIA
8
in May 2017, the Court does not consider his allegations sufficiently reliable as to any alleged
9
misstatements beyond that date. And even assuming that Defendant Huang reviewed the
information referenced in FE-1’s allegations about the content of the database concerning China,
11
United States District Court
Northern District of California
10
these allegations do not show that Defendant Huang had some contradictory information when he
12
made any challenged statement concerning global sales.
The same is true for FE-1’s allegation that Defendant Huang attended meetings where
13
14
“sales data detailing GeForce sales to crypto-miners was presented” during the Class Period. Id.
15
¶¶ 87-88. FE-1 details that “business opportunities involving sales to crypto-miners were a topic
16
of conversation at these meetings with Huang” and cites an example of a sales deal with Genesis, a
17
company “well known in the cryptocurrency mining area.” Id. ¶ 88. Putting aside the fact that
18
FE-1 did not attend these meetings, there again is insufficient information pled about these
19
meetings to establish that Defendant Huang actually learned of specific data and then made any
20
statement contradicted by that data.
21
FE-5’s allegations concerning regular meetings or emails are also insufficient. FE-5
22
served as “NVIDIA’s Head of Consumer Marketing for South Asia from April 2014 to June
23
24
25
26
27
28
3
FE-1 reported to a Senior Sales Director in China, who reported to the Senior Director for China
in the United States, who reported to VP for Worldwide GeForce Sales, who reported to
Defendant Fisher, who reported to Defendant Huang. FAC ¶ 33. In light of these levels of
separation, the Court previously found that “Plaintiffs fail[ed] to establish the basis for FE-1’s
reliability and personal knowledge as to statements about NVIDIA’s operations internationally,
given his limited, low-level position in the China market.” Order at *11.
4
Defendants argue that FE-2’s only basis for alleging that Defendant Huang accessed the database
was a “tongue-in-cheek training video made in 2012” that “has nothing to do” with any of the
allegations. Mot. at 20.
16
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 17 of 22
2019.” Id. ¶ 37. FE-5 stated that he attended regional quarterly meetings where managers broke
2
down sales data for regional heads, who would then report that information directly to Defendant
3
Huang. Id. ¶¶ 89–90. But FE-5 does not claim to have direct personal knowledge of what
4
information would have been reported from the regional heads to Defendant Huang following
5
these meetings. Id. FE-5 did report that he personally presented sales data to Defendant Huang at
6
a 2017 meeting in India that “focused on NVIDIA’s sales performance and marketing strategies
7
and the performance of NVIDIA’s channel partners.” Id. ¶ 91. FE-5 noted that Defendant Huang
8
had a great memory and that the first slide included “GeForce sales data,” but crucially includes
9
no further detail about the contents of the slide, such as whether it was even mining-related. Id.
10
Additionally, with respect to the “Top 5 emails” that FE-5 asserts included discussion of mining-
11
United States District Court
Northern District of California
1
related GeForce orders, the Court agrees with Defendants that the FAC does not allege “facts
12
about what any Top 5 email said on any given date, much less facts to show that any Top 5 email
13
was inconsistent with any of the challenged statements.” See Mot. at 15; see also Reply at 3 n.5.
14
The FAC also includes FE-1’s allegations from the CCAC concerning GeForce Experience
15
usage data. Compare CCAC. ¶¶ 102-108 with FAC ¶¶ 99–104. The Court previously found that
16
these allegations “fail[ed] to provide any specific allegations as to the content of [that] data.”
17
Order at *11 n.3. The FAC adds related allegations from FE-5, who details that the usage data
18
compiled in reports by regional managers “showed that over 60% of GeForce GPU sales during
19
the Class Period were to miners.” FAC ¶ 106 (emphasis not included). The Court agrees with
20
Defendants that this allegation lacks particularized facts, such as whether Defendant Huang
21
actually received this data, or whether the particular 60% statistic was presented in a particular
22
report or was an average calculated from reports “during the Class Period.” See Norfolk Cty. Ret.
23
Sys. v. Solazyme, Inc., No. 15-CV-02938-HSG, 2016 WL 7475555, at *3 (N.D. Cal. Dec. 29,
24
2016) (“Generically asserting in an undifferentiated manner that facts occurred ‘during the Class
25
Period’ is insufficient.”).
26
Plaintiffs rely heavily on the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in Nursing Home Pension Fund,
27
Local 144 v. Oracle Corp., 380 F.3d 1226, 1230 (9th Cir. 2004), to support their access-based
28
theory of scienter. The allegedly false statements challenged in Nursing Home were projections
17
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 18 of 22
1
by defendants that Oracle would earn a certain amount per share and have certain revenues in its
2
third quarter. Id. at 1228. Plaintiffs’ theory was that when defendants made these statements, they
3
knew that the company would not meet the forecasts based on internal data, including the fact that
4
a number of large deals already had fallen through. Id. at 1231–32. The plaintiffs alleged that
5
Oracle “maintained an internal database covering global information about sales of Oracle
6
products and services,” and contended that “Oracle must have been aware that it was not going to
7
meet its sales projections earlier in the third quarter and that its statements to the contrary were
8
therefore made with scienter.” Id. at 1231. This was because “all sales information was in this
9
database” and “the top executives admit[ted] to having monitored the database.” Id.
10
The Nursing Home court found the plaintiffs’ scienter allegations sufficient. Id. The
United States District Court
Northern District of California
11
Ninth Circuit noted that the complaint contained “hard numbers and ma[d]e specific allegations
12
regarding large portions of Oracle’s sales data,” and that “specific” employee witness statements
13
from “various regions of the United States . . . testifying to a major slowdown in sales” shed light
14
on Oracle’s overall financial health. Id. The court determined that these statements, combined
15
with other allegations regarding “astronomical” stock sales “highly inconsistent” with the
16
defendant CEO’s trading history, and, “very importantly, . . . improper revenue accounting
17
records,” “create[d] a strong inference of scienter.” Id. at 1231–33. In particular, plaintiffs
18
alleged that “Oracle covered up its losses by creating phony sales invoices and improperly
19
recognizing past customer overpayments as revenue.” Id. at 1228. The Ninth Circuit also found
20
that it could “reasonably infer” that “Oracle had known that it would not make its third quarter
21
sales projections” based in part on admissions by the CEO that he was “heavily involved in an
22
awful lot of th[e] deals that fell through in the third quarter.” Id. at 1232–33 (internal quotation
23
marks omitted).
24
The Court finds Nursing Home distinguishable. The plaintiffs there directly tied the
25
statements at issue—forecasts about Oracle’s third-quarter financial performance—to specific,
26
identifiable underlying information known to the defendants that suggested knowledge that their
27
statements were untrue when made. Nursing Home thus found a strong inference of scienter based
28
on an overall record which included “specific allegations regarding large portions of Oracle’s sales
18
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 19 of 22
data,” suspicious stock sales, improper revenue accounting records, and the fact that the CEO was
2
directly and heavily involved in many of the deals whose disappearance accounted for the eventual
3
third-quarter shortfall. Id. at 1231–33, 1235. In contrast, here Plaintiffs challenge more
4
generalized statements about cryptocurrency issues by the Individual Defendants that by their
5
nature do not inherently suggest any knowing contradiction in the same way that the quarterly
6
performance predictions did in Nursing Home. For example, Plaintiffs challenge Defendant
7
Huang’s statement in a November 10, 2017 VentureBeat article that for NVIDIA, cryptocurrency
8
“is small but not zero. . . . It’s large for somebody else. But it is small for us.” See FAC ¶ 196.
9
Plaintiffs similarly challenge Defendant Huang’s comment in an article published by Barron’s on
10
February 9, 2018 that “crypto was a real part of our business this past quarter, even though small,
11
United States District Court
Northern District of California
1
overall.” Dkt. No. 153-19, Ex. T at 1; see FAC ¶ 207. The Court agrees with Defendants that
12
Plaintiffs’ “impressionistic, high-level view” of both the content and context of Huang’s
13
statements and the reports of the former employees about NVIDIA’s practices for keeping and
14
disseminating data, Reply at 1, does not comport with the “exacting pleading obligation” imposed
15
by the PSLRA. Nguyen, 962 F.3d at 414 (internal quotation marks omitted).5
Viewing the record holistically, the Court thus finds that Plaintiffs again fail to allege
16
17
scienter with the specificity the PSLRA requires as to Defendant Huang.
18
b. Fisher and Kress
The FAC adds very little with respect to Defendants Fisher and Kress. Plaintiffs again rely
19
20
on FE-1 for the proposition that Defendant Fisher was aware that “sales to miners [in China] had
21
caused GeForce sales to almost double in a short period” based on a presentation that FE-1 made
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
5
The Court similarly finds Quality Systems distinguishable based on the nature of the challenged
statements, which concerned the company’s projected growth in revenue and earnings based on
the current and past state of the company’s sales pipeline. In re Quality Sys., Inc. Sec. Litig., 865
F.3d 1130, 1135, 1138 (9th Cir. 2017). The Ninth Circuit found the plaintiffs’ scienter allegations
sufficient where the individual defendants “had access to and used reports documenting in real
time the decline in sales during the Class Period” and “told investors they had real-time access to,
and knowledge of, sales information,” a former employee averred that “sales reports were
‘automatically delivered to the management team,’” and the defendant CEO had made a “massive
and uncharacteristic [stock] sale . . . shortly after boasting to investors that [the company]
anticipated record levels of sales.” Id. at 1145–46. In this case, Plaintiffs neither proffer evidence
of any suspicious stock sale nor tie the challenged statements to comparably specific underlying
information known to the defendants so as to sufficiently suggest a knowing contradiction.
19
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 20 of 22
1
that allegedly “emphasized the explosion of crypto-related sales of GeForce GPUs in China.”
2
FAC ¶ 115. But the Court previously found these allegations insufficient, where “Fisher’s single
3
alleged misrepresentation [about the fundamentals of PC gaming] did not concern China GeForce
4
sales,” and FE-1’s allegations “d[id] not establish that he or she would be knowledgeable about
5
NVIDIA’s fundamentals internationally in several subsections of the Gaming segment.” Order at
6
*10. And the Court also noted that FE-1 shared no link to Kress. Id. No new allegations in the
7
FAC changes the Court’s conclusion that Plaintiffs have failed to allege scienter with respect to
8
these Defendants. For example, FE-1 alleges that Defendants Fisher and Kress had authority to
9
access the centralized database, see FAC ¶ 84, but as noted, FE-1’s link to Fisher remains weak
since Fisher’s statement did not concern China sales and FE-1 is still not alleged to have ever
11
United States District Court
Northern District of California
10
communicated with Kress. Additionally, there is no FE account suggesting that either Defendant
12
actually accessed the database. In sum, whether considered individually or holistically, the FE
13
accounts again do not support a strong inference of scienter as to either of these Defendants.
14
15
c. Core Operations Theory
The Court previously found that Plaintiffs did not meet the “heavy burden” of satisfying
16
the core operations standard. Order at *11. “A plaintiff must produce either specific admissions
17
by one or more corporate executives of detailed involvement in the minutia of a company’s
18
operations, such as data monitoring . . . or witness accounts demonstrating that executives had
19
actual involvement in creating false reports.” Police Ret. Sys. of St. Louis v. Intuitive Surgical,
20
Inc., 759 F.3d 1051, 1062 (9th Cir. 2014) (quoting Reese v. Malone, 747 F.3d 557, 569 (9th Cir.
21
2014), overruled on other grounds by City of Dearborn Heights Act 345 Police & Fire Ret. Sys. v.
22
Align Tech., Inc., 856 F.3d 605 (9th Cir. 2017)). A plaintiff may also meet the standard “[i]n rare
23
circumstances where the nature of the relevant fact is of such prominence that it would be ‘absurd’
24
to suggest that management was without knowledge of the matter.” S. Ferry LP, No. 2 v.
25
Killinger, 542 F.3d 776, 786 (9th Cir. 2008).
26
Defendants argue that the theory remains inapplicable. Mot. at 22. The Court agrees.
27
With respect to the first prong, the Court previously noted that “[w]ithout particularized
28
allegations indicating Individual Defendants’ detailed involvement with this level of secondary
20
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 21 of 22
1
data, as opposed to higher-level information about direct sales by product type, the [Defendants’]
2
statements alone do not meet the standard required to show scienter under the core operations
3
theory.” Order at *11. Plaintiffs argue that Defendant Huang’s statements that “we monitor
4
sellout in the channel literally every day,” “we stay very close to the [cryptocurrency] market,”
5
and “[w]e know its every single move” qualify as “precisely the type” of specific admissions
6
required. Opp. at 16. The first statement is weak because it was made in 2015, years before the
7
Class Period, See FAC ¶ 43; Dkt. No. 153-32, Ex. JJ at 9, and as Defendants note, the statement
8
“referred to monitoring inventory in NVIDIA’s channel (comprised of distributors and resellers),”
9
rather than end-user data. See Reply at 9 (emphasis not included). And the second set of
statements, made during NVIDIA’s August, 10, 2017 earnings call, see FAC ¶ 66; Dkt. No. 153-4,
11
United States District Court
Northern District of California
10
Ex. C at 7, reflects more of a review of the general cryptocurrency market than a “specific
12
admission[] . . . of detailed involvement in the minutia of a company’s operations.” See Order at
13
*11.
14
With respect to the second prong, Plaintiffs largely reiterate their previous arguments. See
15
Order at *12. First, Plaintiffs again argue that “[t]he Gaming segment was NVIDIA’s most
16
important by far, and China was its most important market. . . . It would be absurd to suggest that
17
Defendants were without knowledge of those revenues or that they were without knowledge of
18
their exposure to and dependence on cryptocurrency.” Opp. at 16. The Court’s previous ruling—
19
that it is not sufficient to allege that gaming was Defendants’ core business—stands. See Order at
20
*12. And the Court is not convinced by Plaintiffs’ efforts to use the alleged importance of China’s
21
market to support the core operations inference. Second, Plaintiffs again point to the “persistent
22
analyst questions” relating to Defendants’ exposure to cryptocurrency, but as the Court previously
23
held, to show that “any lack of awareness must have been reckless,” Plaintiffs “must allege facts
24
that reflect ‘some degree of intentional or conscious misconduct.’ ” Order at *12 (citing In re
25
Silicon Graphics Inc. Sec. Litig., 183 F.3d at 977). They do not do so here. Accordingly, the
26
Court finds that Plaintiffs have not shown that the core operations theory applies.
27
28
21
Case 4:18-cv-07669-HSG Document 174 Filed 03/02/21 Page 22 of 22
V.
1
2
3
4
CONCLUSION
The Court finds Plaintiffs have failed to adequately plead scienter.6 And because
“Plaintiff[s] ha[ve] previously been granted leave to amend and ha[ve] subsequently failed to add
the requisite particularity,” the Court finds that leave to amend is unwarranted. See Zucco
Partners, LLC, 552 F.3d at 1007. Accordingly, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ motion to
5
dismiss WITHOUT LEAVE TO AMEND. The clerk is directed to enter judgment in favor of
6
the Defendants and to close the case.
7
8
IT IS SO ORDERED.
9
10
Dated: 3/2/2021
______________________________________
HAYWOOD S. GILLIAM, JR.
United States District Judge
United States District Court
Northern District of California
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
6
Because the Court finds that Plaintiffs failed to adequately plead scienter, it need not consider
Defendants’ arguments regarding falsity.
22
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