Paskowitz v. Prospect Capital Management L.P. et al
Filing
20
OPINION & ORDER re: 10 MOTION to Dismiss . filed by Prospect Administration LLC, Prospect Capital Management L.P. Defendants move to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. (As further set forth in this Order.) Defendants' motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim (Dkt. No. 10) is granted. The request for oral argument (Dkt. No. 12) is denied. (Signed by Judge Louis L. Stanton on 1/24/2017) (cf)
IJ ORIGINAL
USDC SDNY
DOCUMENT
ELECTRONICALLY FILED
DOC#:
--------~--~~DATE FILED: 1/'l-y/,2 .
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
SUSAN PASKOWITZ,
Plaintiff,
- against -
16 Civ. 2990 (LLS)
PROSPECT CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.,
and PROSPECT ADMINISTRATION LLC,
OPINION & ORDER
Defendants.
Plaintiff Susan Paskowitz seeks pursuant to Section 36(b)
of the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("ICA"), 15 U.S.C. § 80a35(b), to recover what she claims are excessive fees paid by
Prospect Capital Corporation ("Prospect") to defendants Prospect
Capital Management L.P.
("PA")
("PCM") and Prospect Administration LLC
for investment advisory and administrative services.
Defendants move to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a
claim upon which relief can be granted.
For the reasons that follow, defendants' motion is granted.
BACKGROUND 1
Prospect, a Maryland corporation, is a registered
investment company that trades on the NASDAQ stock market and
operates as a business development company ("BDC") under Section
54 of the ICA, see 15 U.S.C.
§
80a-53. Compl.
(Dkt. No. 1)
~~
14, 27. Prospect has a board of directors, but has no employees.
For purposes of this motion, the complaint's allegations are accepted as
true.
1
-1-
Id.
~
4. Instead, Prospect contracts with PCM to provide it with
investment advisory services, and with PA to provide it with
administrative services and facilities.
Id.
~
14.
Plaintiff is and has been a shareholder of Prospect since
October 2013, and brings this action on Prospect's behalf and
for its benefit. Id.
~~
13-14.
PCM is a registered investment adviser. Id.
~
15. PCM
created Prospect, and Prospect is PCM's only client. Id.
~
16.
Under its agreement with Prospect, PCM (1) manages the
investment and reinvestment of Prospect's assets in accordance
with Prospect's investment objective, policies, and
restrictions, and implements its investment decisions for
Prospect;
(2) arranges for Prospect's debt financing; and (3)
maintains books and records concerning transactions in
Prospect's portfolio, and periodically reports to Prospect's
board of directors. Id.
~
56.
In exchange for the services it provides to Prospect, each
year PCM receives a base management fee equal to 2.00% of
Prospect's gross assets, paid quarterly. Id.
~
63. Additionally,
PCM is paid an incentive fee 2 which is calculated as follows: for
The incentive fee is actually composed of two fees, namely an income fee and
a capital gains fee. Compl. ~ 62. "PCM has not collected any actual capital
gains fees in recent years, and, accordingly, Plaintiff is not claiming any
damages to date relating to the Capital Gains Fee provision." Id. ~ 68. As
used here, the term "incentive fee" refers only to the income fee portion.
2
-2-
quarters in which Prospect's net investment income 3 amounts to
2.1875%
(i.e., 8.75% annually) or less of its net assets, PCM is
paid 20.00% of the net investment income that exceeds 1.75% of
net assets; for quarters in which Prospect's net investment
income exceeds 2.1875%
(i.e., 8.75% annually) of its net assets,
PCM is paid 20.00% on all of Prospect's net investment income.
Id. ~ 65. During the fiscal year that ended on June 30, 2015,
Prospect paid PCM a total of $225,277,000. Id. ~ 78, Table 1.
During the first two quarters of the fiscal year ending on June
30, 2016 it paid PCM a total of $112,796,000, which is roughly
in line with what PCM earned the prior year. Id. ~ 79, Table 2.
Unlike PCM which provides investment advisory services, PA
provides Prospect with administrative services, personnel, and
facilities. Id. ~ 71. PA is an LLC whose sole member is PCM, and
its only client is Prospect. Id. ~ 19. PA provides Prospect with
office space and equipment, maintains Prospect's books and
records, fulfils Prospect's reporting obligations to its
shareholders and regulatory agencies, interacts with Prospect's
third-party service providers (e.g., brokers, accountants,
attorneys, banks, insurers, etc.), and provides Prospect with
managerial assistance. Id. ~~ 72-73. P~ospect reimburses PA for
the costs and expenses it incurs in providing these services.
Net investment income here is total investment income minus operating
expenses, calculated before deducting PCM's incentive fee. See id. ~ 64, n.5.
3
-3-
Id.
~~
75-76. During the fiscal year that ended on June 30, 2015,
Prospect reimbursed PA $21,906,000. Id.
~
78, Table 1. During
the first two quarters of the fiscal year ending on June 30,
2016 it reimbursed PA $6,178,000, which is a substantial decline
from what PA was reimbursed the prior year. Id.
~
79, Table 2.
Section 36(b} of the ICA imposes upon the investment
adviser of a registered investment company "a fiduciary duty
with respect to the receipt of compensation for services, or of
payments of a material nature, paid by such registered
investment company .
. to such investment adviser or any
affiliated person of such investment adviser." 15 U.S.C.
§
80a-
35(b}. It also authorizes a shareholder of a registered
investment company to bring an action "on behalf of such
company, against such investment adviser, or any affiliated
person of such investment adviser .
for breach of fiduciary
duty in respect of such compensation or payments paid by such
registered investment company or by the security holders thereof
to such investment adviser or person." Id. The statute limits
recovery to damages incurred up to one year before the action
was instituted. Id.
§
80a-35 (b) (3}.
Plaintiff alleges that defendants breached their fiduciary
duty by charging excessive fees, and seeks to recover damages
that resulted from the breach on behalf of Prospect shareholders.
DISCUSSION
-4-
"To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain
sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to
relief that is plausible on its face. A claim has facial
plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that
allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the
defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged. This
plausibility standard asks for more than a sheer possibility
that a defendant has acted unlawfully." Wilson v. Merrill Lynch
& Co.,
671 F.3d 120, 128
(2d Cir. 2011)
(citation and alteration
omitted). While "all factual allegations in the complaint are
accepted as true and all inferences are drawn in the plaintiff's
favor," Littlejohn v. City of New York, 795 F.3d 297, 306 (2d
Cir. 2015), "bald assertions and conclusions of law will not
suffice," Amron v. Morgan Stanley Inv. Advisors,
338, 344
Inc.,
464 F.3d
(2d Cir. 2006). Adjourned
The complaint is predicated on the claim that the fees paid
to defendants substantially exceed the average fee rate paid by
comparable BDCs to their investment advisers and administrators
for comparable services. Compl.
<.II
131. However, "to face
liability under§ 36(b), an investment adviser must charge a fee
that is so disproportionately large that it bears no reasonable
relationship to the services rendered and could not have been
the product of arm's length bargaining." Jones v. Harris Assocs.
L.P., 559 U.S. 335, 346, 130 S. Ct. 1418, 1426 (2010). "[T]he
-5-
test is essentially whether the fee schedule represents a charge
within the range of what would have been negotiated at arm'slength in the light of all of the surrounding circumstances."
R.W. Grand Lodge of F. & A.M. of Pa. v. Salomon Bros. All Cap
Value Fund, 425 F. App' x 25, 30 (2d Cir. 2011)
(summary order),
quoting Gartenberg v. Merrill Lynch Asset Mgmt.,
694 F.2d 923,
928 (2d Cir. 1982). "[T)he Supreme Court's approach does not
allow a court to assess the fairness or reasonableness of
advisers' fees; the goal is to identify the outer bounds of
arm's length bargaining and not engage in rate regulation."
Jones v. Harris Assocs. L.P.
(Jones II), 611 F. App'x 359, 360
(7th Cir. 2015). As stated in the Supreme Court's unanimous
opinion, Jones, 559 U.S. at 352-53, 130 S. Ct. at 1430:
Congress rejected a "reasonableness" requirement that was
criticized
as
charging
the
courts
with
rate-setting
responsibilities. See Daily Income Fund[ v. Fox, 464 U.S. 523),
at 538-540[,
104 S. Ct. 831
(1984)). Congress'
approach
recognizes that courts are not well suited to make such precise
calculations. Cf. General Motors Corp. v. Tracy, 519 U. S. 278,
308[, 117 S. Ct. 811] (1997) ("[T)he Court is institutionally
unsuited to gather the facts upon which economic predictions can
be made, and professionally untrained to make them") [citing
cases). Gartenberg's "so disproportionately large" standard, 694
F.2d, at 928, reflects this congressional choice to "rely largely
upon [independent director) 'watchdogs' to protect shareholders
interests." Burks[ v. Lasker, 441 U.S. 471], at 485[, 99 S. Ct.
1831 (1979)].
As Justice Thomas, concurring, stated, id. at 354-55, 130
S. Ct. at 1431:
most courts
. have followed an approach (principally in
deciding which cases may proceed past summary judgment) that
defers to the informed conclusions of disinterested boards and
-6-
holds plaintiffs to their heavy burden of proof in the manner
the Act, and now the Court's opinion, requires.
* * * *
. Whatever else might be said about today's decision, it
does not countenance the free-ranging judicial "fairness" review
of fees that Gartenberg could be read to authorize, see 694
F.2d, at 929-930, and that virtually all courts deciding§ 36(b)
cases since Gartenberg (including the Court of Appeals in this
case) have wisely eschewed in the post-Gartenberg precedents we
approve.
"[T]he Act does not require courts to engage in a precise
calculation of fees representative of arm's-length bargaining,"
id. at 352, 130 S. Ct. at 1430, and it "does not necessarily
ensure fee parity between mutual funds and institutional
clients," id. at 350, 130 S. Ct. at 1429. Plaintiff's burden is
"to show that the fee is outside the range that arm's-length
bargaining would produce." Id. at 347, 130 S. Ct. at 1427.
Using this test, plaintiff has failed to plead facts
creating a plausible inference that defendants are liable. The
complaint conclusorily alleges that
As set forth in Sections VI-VIII [of the complaint], Defendants
breached their fiduciary duties in violation of ICA Section 36 (b)
by extracting investment advisory and other fees from Prospect
so disproportionately large that they bear no reasonable
relationship to the value of the services provided by Defendants,
and could not have been the product of arm's-length bargaining
(hereinafter, "excessive" fees)
Compl.
~
7. But a careful review of the allegations made in
Sections VI-VIII of the complaint reveals that from the facts
pleaded one cannot plausibly infer that defendants' fees do not
bear a reasonable relationship to the services rendered, or fall
outside the range that arm's-length bargaining could produce.
-7-
The allegations address six factors that under Gartenberg,
courts are to consider in deciding Section 36(b) claims. These
are: "(1) the nature and quality of services provided to fund
shareholders;
manager;
( 3)
(2)
the profitability of the fund to the adviser-
fall-out benefits;
( 4) economies of scale;
( 5)
comparative fee structures; and (6) the independence and
conscientiousness of the trustees." Amron, 464 F.3d at 344.4
Upon consideration of these factors,
the complaint fails to
state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
1....:_ Comparative Fee Structures
The complaint first addresses comparative fee structures.
The complaint purports to show that $102.6 million of the fees
paid to defendants for fiscal year 2015 are excessive and "At a
minimum
at least $54.4 million of the fees Prospect paid
to Defendants are excessive." Compl.
CJ[
7. It does so by
comparing the fee rate paid to defendants with the average fee
rate paid by other BDCs included in the Wells Fargo Business
Development Company Index ("BDC Index")
5
(of which Prospect is
4 "At the pleading stage a court need not consider whether all six factors are
met, but rather only determine whether the facts as alleged would meet the
basic standard as articulated in Gartenberg." Chill v. Calamos Advisors LLC,
175 F. Supp. 3d 126, 131 (S.D.N.Y. 2016).
"The BDC Index is a rules-based, capitalization-weighted, float-adjusted
index that (1) includes all BDCs listed on the New York Stock Exchange and
NASDAQ that satisfy certain market capitalization and public float
requirements, and (2) assigns weights to individual BDC Index constituents
according to market capitalization and float. The BDC Index currently
5
includes 44 publicly-traded BDC.s," Compl. 'Jl 90.
-8-
one) going back to 2013.
and looks at:
(1)
It divides those BDCs into two groups
fees paid by internally-managed BDCs6 to their
advisers-employees, and (2)
fees paid by other externally~~
managed BDCs to their investment advisers. Id.
115-35.
In 2015 Prospect paid an effective fee rate of 6.68% of net
assets to defendants.
Id.
~
129, Table 7. The effective fee rate
paid by seven of the nine 7 internally-managed BDCs included in
the BDC Index ranged from 1.58% of net assets to 7.36% of net
assets, and averaged 3.90% of net assets. Id.
~
116, Table 5. 8
The effective fee rate paid by thirty-four of the thirty five9
externally-managed BDCs included in the BDC Index (of which
6
In contrast to Prospect which contracts with separate entities to obtain
investment advisory and administrative services. See id. ~ 94.
7
Excluded from the complaint's analysis are Harris & Harris Group, which paid
an effective fee rate of 8.24% of net assets in 2015, because it "seeks to
generate long-term capital appreciation by making venture capital equity
investments" unlike "almost all other BDCs, which primarily seek to generate
current income and thus primarily make debt investments," and Newtek Business
Services, which paid an effective fee rate of 12.64% of net assets in 2015,
"because it appears to be an outlier." Id. '][ 116, Table 5.
8
The following is reproduced from '][ 116, Table 5 of the complaint:
Effective Overall Fee Rates for Internally Managed BDCs
Company
Effective Fee Rate
Capital Southwest Corp.
1. 58%
2.37%
Main Street Capital
Medallion Financial Corp.
2.63%
4.44%
American Capital Strategies
KCAP Financial
4.45%
Triangle Capital
4.51%
Hercules Technology Growth Capital
7.36%
Harris & Harris Group
8.24%
12.64%
Newtek Business Services
9 Excluded from the complaint's analysis is MVC Capital because plaintiff
could not be determine its effective fee rate. Id. ~ 129, Table 7.
-9-
Prospect is one)
ranged from 1.77% of net assets to 7.23% of net
assets, and averaged 5.21% of net assets. Id.
~
129, Table 7. 1 0
According to the complaint, internally-managed BDCs obtain
10
The following is reproduced from ~ 129, Table 7 of the complaint:
Effective Fee Rates of Externally-Managed BDCs
Company
Effective Fee Rate
(Total Fees as % Net Assets)
Pennant Park Floating Rate Capital
1.77%
American Capital Senior Floating Rate
2.69%
Solar Senior Capital
2.83%
Fifth Street Senior Floating Rate
3.48%
OHA Investment Corp.
3.61%
Alcentra Capital Corp.
3.70%
Golub Capital BDC
3. 72%
Solar Capital
3. 87%
Goldman Sachs BDC
4.09%
CM Finance
4. 72%
Gladstone Capital Corp.
4.76%
TriplePoint Venture Growth BDC Corp.
4.88%
Gladstone Investment Corp.
4.93%
Ares Capital Corp.
5.22%
New Mountain Finance Corp.
5.22%
Garrison Capital
5.37%
TPG Specialty Lending
5.48%
TCP Capital Corp.
5.55%
Horizon Technology Finance Corp.
5.68%
WhiteHorse Finance
5.75%
Monroe Capital Corp.
5.90%
Capitala Finance
6.19%
Stell us Capital Investment Corp.
6.19%
TICC Capital
6.21%
Fidus Investment Corp.
6.30%
FS Investment Corp.
6.37%
6.44%
Fifth Street Finance
THL Credit
6.54%
Blackrock Kelso Capital Corp.
6.63%
OFS Capital
6.63%
Prospect Capital Corp.
6.68%
Apollo Investment Corp.
6.85%
Pennant Park Investment Corp.
6.97%
7.23%
Medley Capital Corp.
can't determine
MVC Capital
-10-
investment advisory and administrative services at cost, because
these services are provided by company employees. Id. ~ 260. The
average cost of internal investment advisory and administrative
services in 2015 was thus 3.90% of net assets, and the highest
was 7.36%.
Externally-managed BDCs hire third party investment
advisers who, in addition to recouping the cost of providing the
services, must mark up the price of their services in order to
make a profit. Id. ~ 263. The average rate of 5.21% of net
assets paid by externally managed BDCs is 1.31% greater than the
3.90% average paid by internally managed BDCs; the highest rate
paid was 7.23%.
Thus, as to both groups Prospect's rate was above the
average but less than the top rate paid.
The complaint makes similar allegations for 2013 and 2014
to show that 2015 was no outlier. Id. ~~ 116-17, 129-34.
Fees charged for investment advice and fees charged for
administrative services must be examined separately and "not
aggregated and then considered as a whole," as this complaint
does. See Levy v. All. Capital Mgmt. L.P., 189 F.3d 461, No. 989528, 1999 WL 642920, at *2
(2d Cir. Aug. 20, 1999)
(unpublished
opinion), citing Meyer v. Oppenheimer Mgmt. Corp., 895 F.2d 861,
866 (2d Cir. 1990)
("If the fee for each service viewed
separately is not excessive in relation to the service rendered,
-11-
then the sum of the two is also permissible.").
Moreover, charging a fee that is above the industry average
does not violate Section 36(b). The complaint shows that PCM's
stated and effective base and incentive fee rates are within the
range of those paid by comparable funds. See Compl. ~~ 137, 164.
Furthermore, Prospect's effective fee rate lies within the range
of fee rates paid by internally-managed BDCs (which the
complaint alleges are free from the "disabling lack of true
arm's-length negotiations in contracting for investment advisory
and administrative services,") which place it within, and not
outside of, "the outer bounds of arm's length bargaining." See
Jones II, 611 F. App'x at 360. 11
The fee rate paid by Prospect is above average, but is not
"so disproportionately large that it bears no reasonable
relationship to the services rendered and could not have been
the product of arm's length bargaining." Jones, 559 U.S. at 346,
130 S. Ct. at 1426.
Plaintiff relies on Chill v. Calamos Advisors LLC, 175 F.
Supp. 3d 126 (S.D.N.Y. 2016) where the court found that "the
Complaint's allegations describing comparative fee structures
provide ample basis for the Court to find it plausible that the
Advisory Fees are excessive." Id. at 139. But Chill relied
u See Jones, 559 U.S. at 347, 130 S. Ct. at 1427 (noting with approval that
"Garte~ uses the range of fees that might result from arm's-length
bargaining as the benchmark for reviewing challenged fees").
-12-
mostly on the complaint's comparison between the higher fees
charged by the defendants to their captive funds and the lower
fees they charged to institutional funds.
Id. at 133-37. Only
after establishing that the complaint thus stated a plausible
claim did the court remark that the complaint's comparison of
the fee rate paid by the plaintiffs' fund and the fee rates paid
by other funds that the defendants were not advising, "make
Plaintiffs'
§
36(b) claim moderately more plausible." Id. at 138.
Plaintiff argues that under defendants' theory, only the
highest paid investment adviser can be found liable under
Section 36(b). Opp.
(Dkt. No. 17) at 14. That misunderstands the
point, which is that as long as defendants' fees do not exceed
that which could result from arm's-length bargaining in the real
market, they are not disproportionally large, even if above the
average. As noted at pp. 5-7 above, it is not for the court in a
Section 36(b) suit to determine a reasonable rate; such rate
setting is left to market negotiations and boards of directors.
Since the fees as a whole are not shown to be so
disproportionately large, or outside the range of what arm'slength bargaining could produce, it is of no avail to argue that
particular elements in the calculation should be reduced (e.g.,
the inclusion of cash and cash equivalents in gross assets in
calculating PCM's base management fee, Compl.
assets were overvalued, id.
~
~~
146-47, that
381, that PCM's investment
-13-
advisory agreement lacked a "Lookback/Cap mechanism,"l2 id. !!
188-90, and that the parties included "payment-in-kind income"l3
in net investment income for purposes of calculating PCM's
incentive fee,
id. !! 191-96).
2. Nature and Quality of Services
Plaintiff's allegations concerning this factor address only
PCM's portfolio selection services, alleging them to be the
primary services that PCM provides to Prospect. See id. !
291.
The complaint claims that PCM's portfolio selection services
were poor because Prospect underperformed three benchmarks
against which it measures its performance (the S&P 500 Index,
the S&P 500 Financials Sector Index, and a customized BDC Peer
Group Index) over one, three, five, and ten year periods. Id. !!
293-95, Table 15. It does not allege, however, that Prospect
performed substantially worse than any specific comparable
funds.
In any index, some funds over-perform the index at times
while others underperform.
Moreover, the complaint makes no specific allegation of bad
investment decisions by PCM, or poor performance of the other
12 Lookback/Cap mechanisms essentially link an adviser's incentive fee to
various measures of shareholder performance and returns, and function to
limit payment of incentive fees based on shareholder performance and returns.
They are used by a number of BDCs in various ways. Compl. ~~ 174-80.
1 3 In debt investments, "payment-in-kind income" is where interest on debt is
paid in the form of more debt. In such a scenario, a BDC will accrue non-cash
income "that, while recognizable as income, was not actually paid to it in
cash." Id. ! 191.
-14-
services PCM provides Prospect. Nor does the complaint make any
allegation about the quality of services provided by PA.
"Underperformance is not a Gartenberg factor, though, and
courts have been 'wary about attaching too much significance to
a fund's financial performance.'" Redus-Tarchis v. N.Y. Life
Inv. Mgmt. LLC, 14 Civ. 7991 (WHW), 2015 WL 6525894, at *7
(D.N.J. Oct. 28, 2015)
(citation omitted).
[A]s the Second Circuit noted in Amron,
"allegations of
underperformance alone are insufficient" to satisfy this factor.
Amron,
464 F.3d at 344. Plaintiffs'
complaint offers no
allegations about the actual services provided by the funds.
Instead, Plaintiffs rest their complaint only on post hoc
performance, an approach that was rejected in Amron. In re
Salomon Smith Barney Mutual Fund Fees Litig., 528 F. Supp. 2d
332, 338 (S.D.N.Y. 2007) (stating that Amron requires more than
mere performance analysis). Accordingly, Plaintiffs' allegations
fail to satisfy the first Gartenberg factor.
Hoffman v. UBS-AG, 591 F. Supp. 2d 522, 539 (S.D.N.Y. 2008).
~Profitability
The complaint alleges that because PCM and PA are privately
held companies and do not disclose their financial statements,
the profitability of Prospect to defendants is within their
peculiar knowledge. Compl.
~
256. However, it goes on to surmise
that "Defendants' profit is substantially higher than the norm,
and thus excessive." Id.
~
257. The complaint suggests the
profit margin was 41.5% based on an unsupported speculation that
defendants' costs in providing their services to Prospect in
2015 were equal to the average fee rate paid by internally-
managed BDCs to their advisory and administrative employees. Id.
-15-
~~
260-61. No allegation is made about defendants' actual costs.
As to PA, the complaint alleges that it was reimbursed for
expenses actually incurred, not that it marked up the cost of
its services. That would produce no profit, let alone an
exorbitant one.
4. Fall-Out Benefits
Fall-out benefits are "those collateral benefits that
accrue to the adviser because of its relationship with the
mutual fund." Jones, 559 U.S. at 344, 130 S. Ct. at 1426, n.5.
"The essence of fall-out benefits in the context of a § 36(b)
claim is that, as a fiduciary, an investment adviser should
share with the Fund revenue generated through ventures only made
possible by the fiduciary relationship by reducing fees." Chill,
175 F. Supp. 3d at 144.
The complaint alleges that in providing Prospect with
administrative services, PA uses PCM personnel and office space,
and that therefore, the cost to PA for providing administrative
services "is, in reality, iQ, as the services provided are
actually provided by PCM personnel." Compl. ~ 281 (emphasis in
complaint).
The complaint argues that Prospect's reimbursement to PA
constitutes substantial fall-out benefits to PCM because under
PCM's advisory agreement with Prospect, it is not entitled to
reimbursement for overhead expenses, but through its subsidiary
-16-
PA, PCM collects payment from Prospect for rent, salaries, and
other overhead expenses. Id.
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