WLF Urges Supreme Court to Reject Expansive Section 11 Liability for Omitting Intra-Quarter Data
“The Ninth Circuit’s flawed reading of Section 11 threatens to chill IPO activity at a critical time for the American economy.”
—Cory L. Andrews, WLF General Counsel & Vice President of Litigation
Click here for WLF’s brief.
(Washington, DC)—Washington Legal Foundation (WLF) today urged the U.S. Supreme Court to grant certiorari and reject an expansive reading of Section 11 of the Securities Act. WLF contends that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit’s reading of the law collapses the duty to disclose into materiality alone, undermining Section 11’s limits on liability for omissions in IPO registration statements. WLF’s brief was prepared with pro bono support from Mark Fleming, Timothy Perla, Peter Spaeth, and Mark Hanin of the firm Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr LLP.
The case arises from Robinhood’s 2021 IPO. Plaintiffs alleged that the registration statement omitted material intra-quarter financial data showing declines in key metrics after a strong first quarter. The district court dismissed the claims, but the Ninth Circuit reversed, holding that material omissions of interim results are actionable even if they do not render prior backward-looking statements misleading.
In its amicus brief, WLF argues that accurate historical financial statements imply nothing about future performance, so new information can never render them misleading under Section 11. The decision below deviates from the SEC’s regulatory framework, increases litigation risks, and exacerbates regulatory burdens that have already driven IPOs to near 30-year lows. WLF urges the Supreme Court to grant certiorari and reverse.