Full opinion text
KAPLAN, District Judge. Parmalat Finanziaria, S.p.A. and Parma-lat S.p.A. and its affiliates (collectively, “Parmalat”) collapsed upon the discovery of a massive fraud that reportedly involved the understatement of Parmalat’s debt by nearly $10 billion and the overstatement of its net assets by $16.4 billion. Plaintiffs, purchasers of Parmalat securities between January 5, 1999 and December 18, 2003 (the “Class Period”), seek damages against Parmalat’s accountants, banks and others, most of whom now move to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rules 12(b), 9(b) and 8(a) and (e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“PSLRA”). This opinion addresses the motions to dismiss of some of the accountants and addresses the question whether the complaint states a claim against the multinational accounting firms with which Parmalat’s Italian auditors were connected. I. Background, Plaintiffs purportedly represent a class of individuals who purchased ordinary Par-malat shares and bonds during the Class Period. They sue Deloitte Touch Tohmat-su, Deloitte & Touche LLP, Deloitte & Touche USA LLP, and James Copeland (collectively, the “Deloitte defendants”), and Grant Thornton International, Grant Thornton LLP and Grant Thornton S.p.A. (collectively, the “Grant Thornton defendants”), among others, under Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”) and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The complaint alleges the following facts, which the Court accepts as true for the purposes of this motion. In the early 1990s, Parmalat, an Italian dairy conglomerate known for its long shelf-life milk, pursued an aggressive growth strategy financed largely by debt. Its expansion into South America, however, turned out to be ill-advised, and it began to lose hundreds of millions of dollars a year from its operations there. To cover these losses, service its massive debt, and hide the personal diversion of funds by Parmalat chief executive officer Calisto Tanzi and his family, the company needed constant infusions of cash. But cash could be obtained only so long as Parmalat appeared to be a sound investment. To this end, insiders at Parmalat and Grant Thornton S.p.A. (“GT-Italy”) concocted a scheme involving misleading transactions and off-shore entities that created the appearance of financial health. One such transaction, for example, involved a fictitious sale of 300,000 tons of powdered milk to Cuba for $620 million. Loans obtained on the basis of this transaction were used to service debt and obtain more loans. In short, Parmalat and its confederates were operating something akin to a Ponzi scheme. Italian law obliged Parmalat to switch auditors in 1999. Concerned that new auditors would discover and disclose the fraud, Parmalat and GT-Italy moved the allegedly fictitious financing transactions to Bonlat, a new company incorporated in the Caribbean, that would continue to be audited by Grant Thornton. Parmalat then hired Deloitte & Touche, S.p.A. (“De-loitte Italy”) as its auditor. Deloitte offices in a dozen countries audited Parmalat and its subsidiaries and affiliates as part of this worldwide engagement. Despite the company’s fear that new auditors would not continue to perpetuate the fraud, De-loitte discovered or recklessly ignored the fraud, yet certified the company’s financial statements as substantially accurate. By late 2003, the scheme became unsustainable, and Parmalat had a liquidity crisis. The collapse was rapid. In early December, Parmalat could not pay certain maturing bonds. By December 11, the company’s stock had lost half its value. Trading was suspended for days by Italian regulators. Parmalat’s bonds rapidly lost value as well. On December 19, the company announced that a Bank of America account allegedly held by Bonlat that supposedly contained $4.9 billion did not exist. Parmalat filed for bankruptcy in Italy on December 24, and it was declared insolvent three days later. Italian authorities thereafter indicted a number of Parmalat executives and insiders as well as the company’s auditor, Deloitte Italy, and individual partners of GT-Italy. Authorities also arrested many individuals connected with the fraud and seized their assets. II. Pleading Standards In deciding a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court accepts as true the well-pleaded allegations in the complaint and draws all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs’ favor. Dismissal is inappropriate “unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.” Although such motions are addressed to the pleading, a district court may consider also the full text of documents partially quoted or incorporated in the complaint where the documents are “integral” to it and relied upon by plaintiffs. Accordingly, the exhibits submitted in connection with defendants’ moving papers are taken into account. A. Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 Exchange Act Rule 10b-5 makes it unlawful: “(a) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud, “(b) To make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, or “(c) To engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person, in connection with the purchase or sale of any security.” To state a claim under Rule 10b — 5(b), “a plaintiff must plead that the defendant, in connection with the purchase or sale of securities, made a materially false statement or omitted a material fact, with scienter, and that the plaintiffs reliance on the defendant’s action caused injury to the plaintiff.” Plaintiffs asserting a claim under Rule 10b-5(a) or (c) — that is, on the basis of manipulative or deceptive conduct — must allege that the defendant committed a manipulative or deceptive act with scienter in addition to the other elements of the claim. Scienter is an “intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud.” B. Rule 9(b) and the PSLRA As this is a securities fraud case, those aspects of the complaint that allege fraud must satisfy the heightened pleading requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) and the PSLRA. To the extent that a claim is based on alleged misrepresentations, a plaintiff must: “(1) specify the statements that the plaintiff contends were fraudulent, (2) identify the speaker, (3) state where and when the statements were made, (4) explain why the statements were fraudulent.” Scienter must be alleged “either (a) by alleging facts that defendants had both motive and opportunity to commit fraud, or (b) by alleging facts that constitute strong circumstantial evidence of conscious misbehavior or recklessness.” In addition, if an allegation is based on information and belief, “the complaint shall state with particularity all facts on which that belief is formed.” Although the PSLRA’s heightened pleading standard in respect of misrepresentations arguably does not apply when plaintiffs allege a violation by virtue of a deceptive or manipulative device, the complaint nonetheless must comply with Rule 9(b)’s requirement of particularity in respect of the conduct alleged and the basis for the requisite allegation of scien-ter. Finally, “[w]here multiple defendants are asked to respond to allegations of fraud, the complaint should inform each defendant of the nature of his [or her] alleged participation in the fraud.” It is not necessary, however, that plaintiffs connect a particular insider or affiliate to an allegedly deceptive corporate statement. In other contexts, in contrast, a complaint will fail where plaintiffs lump separate defendants together in vague and collective fraud allegations. C. Rule 8 Not all the allegations of the complaint are averments of fraud. These allegations are governed by Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a), which requires only a short and plain statement of the claim. Even under the liberal notice pleading standard of Rule 8, however, conclusory assertions are inadequate. III. Claims under Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5: Misrepresentations & Scienter A. Overview Defendants Grant Thornton International (“GTI”), Grant Thornton LLP (“GT-USA”), Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (“DTT”), and Deloitte & Touche LLP and Deloitte & Touche USA LLP (collectively “Deloitte USA”) principally argue that they did not audit Parmalat and were not involved in any of the alleged fraud committed by Parmalat’s auditors, Deloitte Italy and GT-Italy. They assert further that they each are factually and legally separate from their Italian affiliates and therefore cannot be liable for the affiliates’ alleged fraud. Their only link to the fraud, they contend, is that they have names similar to the alleged culprits and operated within the same auditing networks. Plaintiffs respond that the links between these defendants and their Italian affiliates are far stronger that defendants admit. They argue that international accounting enterprises such as Deloitte and Grant Thornton operate as unified firms and that their alleged separateness is a fiction. Specifically, plaintiffs assert that Deloitte Italy and the other member firms conducting the Parmalat audit did so as the agents or otherwise under the control of Deloitte USA and DTT. They assert further that GT-Italy was controlled by and an agent of GTI and GT-USA. In turn, they contend that GTI was controlled by GT-USA. As these arguments turn in substantial part on the characterization of the structure of defendants’ organizations, it is useful to start with an overview of those structures. 1. Deloitte Defendant DTT, a Swiss verein headquartered in New York, is a professional services organization of member firms, sometimes referred to in promotional materials as “offices.” These member firms, such as defendants Deloitte Italy and Deloitte USA, generally are organized as limited liability entities under the laws of their respective jurisdictions. Accounting and auditing standards and regulation of the accounting profession often are country specific. In addition to complying with any locally applicable rules, however, Deloitte firms follow general professional standards and auditing procedures promulgated by DTT. Member firms regularly cross check each other’s work to ensure quality, and they cooperate and join together in submitting bids for audit services. Partners and associates of member firms participate in global practice groups and attend DTT meetings. Although various disclaimers on DTT’s website indicate the legal separateness of DTT and its members, the firms market themselves under the name Deloitte, and DTT reports revenue for the firms on a combined basis. According to plaintiffs, DTT advertises itself as a global network the member firms of which provide worldwide service in auditing and other professional services. Member firms use the Deloitte name and logos in bidding for and delivering contracted for services. 2. Grant Thornton The Grant Thornton defendants have a similar structure, with GTI serving as an umbrella organization for Grant Thornton member firms around the world. GTI is an Illinois corporation with its headquarters in London. Its member firms use the Grant Thornton name and market themselves as a global accounting organization. Like DTT, GTI reports revenue from member firms on a combined basis. Of those member firms, GT-USA is the largest, accounting for approximately one quarter of the fees generated by the global organization. GTI creates auditing policies and procedures that must be followed by the member firms and reviews each member firm every three years to ensure compliance. With this outline of Grant Thornton and Deloitte’s organizational structure in mind, the Court now turns to the arguments regarding vicarious liability. B. Group Pleading Defendants seize first on the fact that the complaint uses the terms “Deloitte” and “Grant Thornton” to refer collectively to the various entities within each organization, thus failing to make clear which alleged actions are attributed to which entities. They contend that most, if not all, of the alleged misrepresentations at issue were made by the Italian firms, Deloitte Italy and GT-Italy, and that the use of the Deloitte and Grant Thornton labels does not give the other defendant Grant Thornton and Deloitte entities adequate notice of the statements that are attributed to them. As a general matter, defendants’ point is well taken, and plaintiffs’ use of the firm names is ill-advised. Nevertheless, it is clear from the complaint that plaintiffs attribute the alleged misrepresentations and omissions to the Italian entities and that they sue the other Deloitte and Grant Thornton entities entirely, or, at least, primarily on vicarious liability theories. In these circumstances, the concerns of Rule 9(b) and the PSLRA are not implicated. The vicarious liability theories will stand or fall on their own merits. C. Accountants’ Vicarious Liability 1. Background Plaintiffs contend that GTI, GT-USA, DTT, Deloitte USA and James Copeland (“Copeland”) are liable for the fraudulent acts of their respective Italian affiliates. They argue that Deloitte and its affiliates and Grant Thornton and its affiliates each operated as one firm, viz., that the affiliates acted as the agents or alter egos of GTI and DTT. The Deloitte and Grant Thornton mov-ants resist the notion that they may be sued for the alleged fraud by their Italian member firms. They argue that the fact that affiliated accounting firms share a common name such as Deloitte or Grant Thornton and practice under the same global accounting standards does not make them a single firm, liable for the acts of their separately organized members. The “ ‘limited liability corporation is the greatest single discovery of modern times,’ ” they contend, and they assert that a finding that a global accounting organization is one firm would imperil the capital markets and undermine professional audit standards throughout the world. The significance of the corporate form to the development of capital markets and economic progress in general cannot be denied. Nevertheless, the limited liability entity is not an unmitigated blessing. The limitation of liability that encourages capital formation in some circumstances may eliminate disincentives to fraudulent behavior. Independent auditors serve a crucial role in the functioning of world capital markets because they are reputational intermediaries. In certifying a company’s financial statements, their reputations for independence and probity signal the accuracy of the information disclosed by the company, the managers of which typically are unknown to most of the investing public. This is especially true of defendants and other global accounting firms. Certification by an entity named Deloitte & Touche, Grant Thornton, or one of the small handful of other major firms is incalculably more valuable than that of a less known firm because the auditor “is in ef-feet pledging a reputational capital that it has built up over many years of performing similar services for numerous clients.” In the case of these defendants and their confreres, the relevant reputa-tional capital is that associated with the worldwide organizations, at least to a predominant extent. In consequence, allowing those organizations to avoid liability for the misdeeds and omissions of their constituent parts arguably could diminish the organizations’ incentives to police their constituent entities, with adverse consequence for participants in capital markets. But it is neither appropriate nor necessary to attempt at this early stage to resolve the question whether such considerations warrant disregard of the formal organizational structures of these firms. For the present, it is sufficient to consider whether plaintiffs have stated a claim against these defendants for the acts of the Italian affiliates based on the conventional theories that these firms had agency or alter ego relationships with them and/or each other. 2. Legal Standards a. Agency An. agency relationship exists under New York law when there is agreement between the principal and the agent that the agent will act for the principal and the principal retains a degree of control over the agent. The element of control often is deemed the essential characteristic of the principal-agent relationship. “To bind a principal, ‘an agent must have authority, whether apparent, actual or implied.’ ” Actual authority arises from a principal’s direct manifestations to the agent. It “ ‘may be express or implied, but in either case it exists only where the agent may reasonably infer from the words or conduct of the principal that the principal has consented to the agent’s performance of a particular act.’ ” Deloitte USA contends that plaintiffs’ allegation of agency is intertwined with their fraud claims and that the heightened pleading requirements of Rule 9(b) therefore ápply. They cite Kolbeck v. LIT America, Inc., in which Chief Judge Mu-kasey held that plaintiffs were obliged to plead with particularity the existence of an implied agency relationship when the false appearance of an agency relationship was part of the alleged fraud. As he explained, “plaintiffs’ claim that the agency itself was a fraud, and that defendants created the appearance of an agency relationship to facilitate [defendant’s] perpetration of commodities fraud” was among the circumstances constituting the fraud. Plaintiffs’ claim here differs. First, they do not allege an apparent agency relationship. Second, they do not allege that the agency relationship was part of the fraud in the sense that they claim injury because they were led to bélieve that the Italian affiliates were movants’ agents when in fact they were not. Rather, they assert that there was an actual agency relationship between Deloitte Italy and DTT and GT-Italy and GTI and that DTT and GTI therefore are- vicariously ■ liable for the torts of their agents. This allegation is not so closely intertwined with the claim of securities fraud that it is a circumstance of the fraud itself. Accordingly, agency need not be pled with particularity in this case. The agency allegations are governed by Rule 8. b. Alter Ego Relationship A firm may be liable for the acts of a wrongdoer if the wrongdoer is the other’s alter ego. That is,, New York will disregard the corporate form “when the corporation has been so dominated by an individual or another corporation ..., and its separate identity so disregarded, that it primarily transacted the dominator’s business rather than its own” and this domination was used “to commit a fraud or other wrong that causes the plaintiffs loss.” Whether a wrongdoer is a defendant’s alter ego is a fact specific matter that turns on such factors as the failure to adhere to corporate formalities, undercapi-talization, intermingling of funds, overlap in ownership, staff and directorship, common use of office space, the degree of discretion shown by the wrongdoer, “whether the dealings between the entities are at arms length,” and “whether the corporations are treated as independent profit centers.” The proper pleading standard for a claim of alter ego liability has been a “knotty question” in this district. Nevertheless, plaintiffs here allege that defendants used their domination of their affiliates to commit securities fraud. The fraud allegations therefore are governed by Rule 9(b) and the PSLRA. The domination and control elements of the claim, however, need comply only with Rule 8. D. Deloitte Defendants 1. Factual Allegations Plaintiffs allege that Deloitte Italy audited Parmalat as the agent of DTT and did so pursuant to its authority and control. In addition to. those facts set forth already, they contend that the Deloitte organization has centralized leadership headed by a global chief executive officer and a global board of directors. According to the complaint, there is significant overlap between the leadership of Deloitte USA and DTT. Copeland was the chief executive officer and/or managing partner of DTT and Deloitte USA from 1999 to 2003, and the chief financial officer of the U.S. firm has served also as the chief financial officer of DTT for the last ten years. Plaintiffs contend that Deloitte offices throughout the world audited Parmalat as agents of DTT and that, although Deloitte & Touche S.p.A. signed audit reports for Parmalat, both the Deloitte & Touche and DTT logos appeared on the reports without the abbreviation “S.p.A.” in close proximity. They argue also that the alleged agency relationship is evidenced by DTT’s conduct in respect of the Brazilian member firm. In 2001, Wanderley Olivetti, an auditor in Deloitte’s Brazilian firm, told Adolfo Mamoli, a partner from Deloitte & Touche, S.p.A. in charge of the Parmalat audit, that he had concerns about the transfer of inter-company debt to Parmalat’s Brazilian affiliate, Parmalat ParticipagSes, and in consequence would not be able to issue a clean audit opinion for the company. According to plaintiffs, Parmalat Participa-gSes was a consolidated subsidiary, and any qualification of the audit opinion of its financial statements would have impacted that of Parmalat as well. Olivetti subsequently expressed additional concerns about the lack of documentation for various transactions. On April 5, 2002, Mamoli sent a note to Copeland in New York about the disagreements among the Italian and Brazilian auditors, explaining: “In connection with this multimillion-dollar worldwide engagement of which I am the Lead Client Service Partner a major issue has now emerged relating to Brazilian operations where a major contrast exists between our Firm and Local and Corporate management of Parmalat relating to certain statutory financial statements disclosure requirements on a matter of inter-company transaction and certain other minor matters. “I prefer not to bother you with the details on the subject; however, since the risk exists that for this problem Parmalat Headquarters could dismiss Deloitte & Touche as worldwide auditors, I would strongly appreciate your input or the input of somebody delegated by you to arbitrate the matter.” There is no indication whether Copeland personally became involved. The situation was resolved by May, however, when Olivetti agreed not to issue a qualified opinion and to add only an emphasis note, which plaintiffs contend “would not require an auditor’s exception or qualification and no mention of these issues appeared in [Par-malat’s] consolidated financial statements.” Olivetti again raised concerns in 2003 about Parmalat’s transfer of intercompany debt to Parmalat ParticipagSes, allegedly through the use of fraudulent accounting entries. When Olivetti threatened to withhold certification of Parmalat Partici-pagSes financial statements, “the global Deloitte organization, headed in the United States by Jim Copeland, ‘removed’ Olivetti from any further role in auditing Parma-lat’s Brazilian operations.” Dr. Stefania Chiaruttini, the Italian expert appointed to investigate the fraud, uncovered other instances in which De-loitte auditors in South America raised questions with respect to Parmalat’s financial statements. When these auditors brought these issues to the attention of more senior personnel, top executives, including Copeland and other Deloitte officers in the United States, “confronted the auditors who had detected the fraud and told them to keep quiet.” 2. Plaintiffs Have Alleged Adequately That Deloitte Italy was the Agent of DTT DTT asserts that plaintiffs’ conclusory assertions of agency are not sufficient and that they have not alleged any specific facts that show that DTT authorized any member firms to act for it in auditing Parmalat. It argues that the press releases and promotion materials quoted by plaintiffs indicate that audit services were provided by Deloitte member firms and not DTT. These purported disclaimers are not dis-positive of the question of whether an agency relationship existed. First, the statement that audit services were provided by Deloitte member firms does not bear on whether the firms did so as agents of DTT. More basically, plaintiffs’ allegations about how DTT operated with respect to Deloitte Italy and its member firm in Brazil are at odds with the purported disclaimer. At most, then, the disclaimers cited by DTT raise an issue of fact with respect to whether the member firms delivered the auditing services at issue as the agents of DTT. DTT next asserts that at least ten other courts have declined to find “one firm” or agency liability on the basis of promotional materials of similar global accounting firms and the fact that the firms may have collaborated on some aspects of the audits there at issue. It argues that plaintiffs’ allegations here are equally insufficient to state a claim on the basis of an agency relationship. DTT’s argument does not go very far where, as here, plaintiffs have made specific allegations from which an agency relationship could be inferred. They have alleged that Mamoli sought direction and help from DTT, from which it could be inferred that DTT was in ultimate control of the audit. Plaintiffs have alleged further that DTT took actions in directing— or directing the removal of — auditors on the Parmalat audit. Whether this was simple collaboration or an agency relationship, the Court cannot say at this point. But the Court assuredly cannot now say that no trier of fact reasonably could infer that Deloitte Italy or other member firms auditing Parmalat were agents of DTT. DTT nevertheless contends that allowing the case to proceed against it on anything less than a “full showing” of agency would imperil the corporate form, citing the Second Circuit’s decision in Merrill Lynch Investment Managers (‘MLIM”) v. Optibase, Ltd. It then argues that plaintiffs have failed to make such a full showing here. MLIM does not address the requirements of pleading an agency relationship. MLIM there moved for an order staying Optibase from proceeding with arbitration against it on the grounds that it was not a signatory to the arbitration agreement. Optibase responded that arbitration could be compelled because there was an agency relationship between MLIM and the signatory, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith. The district court granted MLIM’s motion after an evidentiary hearing at which it considered several affidavits, declarations and a preliminary stipulation of facts about the relationship between MLIM and the signatory. The Second Circuit upheld this conclusion on appeal, finding that Optibase had “failed to adduce facts that would support” the finding of an agency relationship. In doing so, it rejected Opti-base’s reliance on a Third Circuit case involving the same parties that purported to apply “agency logic” to hold that arbitration could be compelled. MLIM is inapposite. To be sure, plaintiffs must prove agency to hold DTT liable for the acts of Deloitte Italy and the other member firms that conducted the Parma-lat audit. But the issue here is not whether plaintiffs have proved the existence of an agency relationship, merely whether they should have the chance to do so. In any case, MLIM did not involve anything comparable to the allegations relating to DTT’s actions with respect to the problems created by Deloitte’s Brazilian affiliate. The Court has considered DTT’s remaining arguments and finds them without merit. Plaintiffs have adequately pleaded an agency relationship and therefore the Court declines to consider their alternative claim that DTT may be liable as the alter ego of its member firms. 3. Deloitte USA a. Plaintiffs Have Not Alleged Sufficiently an Alter Ego Relationship Plaintiffs seek to hold Deloitte USA liable on the theory that (1) Deloitte Italy violated the securities laws as the agent of DTT, and (2) DTT is the alter ego of Deloitte USA. As discussed, plaintiffs adequately have pleaded the first part of that theory. In respect of the second step, their contention appears to rest on the group’s marketing materials and the fact that Deloitte USA’s top executives serve also as the top executives of DTT. Plaintiffs contend that these facts are sufficient to overcome a motion to dismiss, relying on Franklin High Income Trust v. APP Global Ltd. The Appellate Division there affirmed the denial of Arthur Andersen LLP’s motion to dismiss, explaining that dismissal was not appropriate “merely because the accounting defendants dispute plaintiffs’ allegations respecting the assertedly close and controlling relationship between them and the Arthur Andersen entity that was purportedly immediately responsible for the complained-of audits and financial statements.” Their reliance on Franklin High Income Trust is misplaced. Plaintiffs there did not base their claim on vicarious liability, but asserted that Arthur Andersen, LLP, Arthur Andersen Singapore and Andersen Worldwide SC had audited APP Global Ltd. and therefore were liable for certifying the company’s allegedly fraudulent financial statements from 1997 to 2000. By contrast, plaintiffs here do not assert that Deloitte USA signed the audit reports or made the misrepresentations and omissions at issue. Here, defendants’ marketing materials indicate a close relationship among the parties and the existence of overlapping executives cuts in favor of a finding of domination. However, the complaint does not indicate that there was an intermingling of funds or a failure to adhere to corporate formalities. Indeed, the marketing materials state that each firm is separately incorporated. Without pleading any facts that would tend to show that Deloitte USA used the close relationship to dominate DTT, an alter ego relationship cannot be inferred from the close relationship and overlap in executives. Significantly, plaintiffs must do more than allege that Deloitte USA had the opportunity to dominate DTT. They must allege that it in fact dominated DTT and used it in a relevant manner. To hold otherwise would create an alter ego relationship between almost every parent and subsidiary. b. Liability on the Basis of Deloitte USA’s Actions Although plaintiffs have failed to allege that Deloitte USA is liable vicariously for the alleged misdeeds of Deloitte Italy, they contend that its own actions violated Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act. Plaintiffs assert that Deloitte USA was involved in the fraud by providing audit services to Parmalat USA Corp. as well as non-audit services such as “ ‘comfort letters’ in connection with certain Parmalat U.S. acquisitions.’ ” Specifically, they contend that Mike Power, an auditor in Deloitte USA’s New Jersey office, raised concerns with the Italian auditors about Parmalat’s overvaluation of goodwill in connection with its fiscal year 2002 financial statements. An auditor at Deloitte Italy passed these concerns along to audit partner Adolfo Mamoli, as well as to Par-malat director and chief accounting officer Luciano Del Soldato. Neither Deloitte USA nor Deloitte Italy followed up, however, and plaintiffs charge that they would have discovered that the “recorded value of goodwill [was] not supported by any corroboration” had they done so. Exchange Act Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 do not encompass claims of aiding and abetting. They prohibit only “the making of a material misstatement (or omission) or the commission of a manipulative act.” The Second Circuit has opted for a bright line approach to determining primary liability, concluding that “Allegations of ‘assisting,’ ‘participating in,’ ‘complicity in’ and similar synonyms ... all fall within the prohibitive bar of Central Bank.” Plaintiffs have not alleged here that Deloitte USA itself made any misrepresentations in respect of Parmalat’s overvaluation of its goodwill. Moreover, even assuming arguendo that the overvaluation of goodwill could be considered a deceptive or manipulative act, plaintiffs do not contend that Deloitte USA created, contrived or even participated in this alleged scheme to overvalue Parmalat’s goodwill. Indeed, the complaint asserts that an auditor from Deloitte USA complained about it. Plaintiffs therefore have failed to state a claim against Deloitte USA as a primary violator of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act. 4. James Copeland a. Alter Ego and Agency Plaintiffs allege that Copeland was the chief executive officer of both DTT and Deloitte USA during the Class Period and that he or someone else at DTT may have taken action against a troublesome Brazilian auditor. However, they do not aver facts suggesting that Copeland dominated either company or misused the corporate form and that failure is fatal. Thus, plaintiffs’ claim that Copeland was an alter ego of DTT lacks any factual or legal basis. Plaintiffs claim also that Copeland had an agency relationship with the Italian auditors. The theory is that (1) he was a partner of Deloitte USA, (2) Deloitte USA is the alter ego of DTT, and (3) the Italian auditors were agents of DTT. But this theory suffers from a number of infirmities, not the least of which is that plaintiffs have failed to allege that Deloitte USA is the alter ego of DTT. b. Individual Liability Plaintiffs next claim that Copeland is liable under Section 10(b) and subsections (a) and (c) of Rule 10b-5 on the basis of his alleged actions to ensure that Deloitte auditors issued clean audit opinions for Par-malat and its subsidiaries. They contend that Copeland and the Deloitte defendants knew about Parmalat’s fraudulent scheme and certified its financial statements notwithstanding the serious concerns they should have had about doing so. In particular, Copeland, or other DTT executives working under him, are alleged to have silenced auditors who raised concerns about Parmalat’s financial statements. Plaintiffs contend that these allegations go beyond mere participation to actual perpetration of the fraud. They argue that their allegations are similar to those in In re Global Crossing Securities Litigation, in which the court held that plaintiffs stated a claim under Rule 10b-5(a) and (c) against auditor Arthur Andersen, in part because certain auditors’ “concerns had been ‘quash[ed].’ ” At least for present purposes, Global Crossing does not help the plaintiffs. The court there found that the fact that auditors’ concerns had been quashed was significant for purposes of establishing scien- ter. But even assuming that this would be sufficient to allege scienter on the part of Copeland, the first issue is whether they have alleged that he was a primary violator. This is where the complaint and that in Global Crossing part company. In Global Crossing, plaintiffs claimed that Andersen had, inter alia, “masterminded the misleading accounting for IRUs [indefeasible right of use] and the subsequent sham swap transactions used to circumvent GAAP and inflate the Companies’ revenues, that it actively participated in structuring each swap, that it was intimately involved in all of [Global Crossing]’s and [Asia Global Crossingj’s accounting functions, and that it directly participated in the creation of the misleading ‘pro forma’ numbers that concealed these practices from investors.” The court concluded that given “Andersen’s allegedly central role in these schemes, as their chief architect and executor,” there could be “no doubt as to its potential liability as a primary violator under section 10(b).” Here, plaintiffs have not alleged that Copeland was the mastermind or architect of any fraud, but only that he assisted by encouraging others not to disclose the alleged fraud. Indeed, they contend that Parmalat and its Grant Thornton auditors created and managed most of the alleged schemes to create false revenue, which Deloitte Italy then concealed. Plaintiffs’ allegations therefore do not state a claim for primary liability under Section 10(b) against Copeland. E. Grant Thornton Defendants 1. Factual Allegations Plaintiffs contend that GT-Italy was controlled by GTI and GT-USA and that it was their agent, acting on their authority and for their benefit. In turn, they assert that GTI was controlled by GT-USA. In addition to those facts already set forth, plaintiffs contend that two incidents show that the Grant Thornton member firms operated as agents and/or alter egos of GTI in their work for Parmalat. First, they allege that Grant Thornton member firms cooperated in setting up Camfield Pte. Ltd. (“Camfield”), a Singapore-based holding company that was used in the fictitious sale of powdered milk to Cuba. Camfield operated out of the offices of Foo Kan Tan Grant Thornton, the Singapore member firm of GTI, and an employee of an affiliate of Foo Kan Tan Grant Thornton served as Camfield’s company secretary. Second, they point to GTI’s actions in disciplining GT-Italy and some of its individual partners for their alleged participation in the Parmalat fraud. On December 31, 2003, GTI announced that Lorenzo Penca and Maurizio Bianchi, partners of GT-Italy “have both been suspended with immediate effect from all responsibilities for an indefinite period” after their arrest by Italian authorities in relation to the Parmalat scandal. It stated further that it was “continuing, with the involvement of legal counsel, its investigation into the Par-malat matter and its review of Grant Thornton S.p.A.” Subsequently, on January 8, 2004, GTI announced that it had expelled Grant Thornton, S.p.A. from the organization. It explained that “Grant Thornton S.p.A. can no longer operate as part of the international network” and that “[n]o further work will be performed by independent Grant Thornton International member firms on behalf of Grant Thornton S.p.A.” 2. GTI a. Plaintiffs Have Alleged Adequately that GT-Italy was an Agent of GTI GTI contends that plaintiffs have not alleged any facts that could serve as the basis of an agency relationship. It points to many of the same cases cited by DTT, relying specifically upon two cases from this district, Nuevo Mundo Holdings v. Pricewaterhouse Coopers LLP, and In re WorldCom, Inc. Securities Litigation to argue that allegations that promotional materials referred to the firm as global and that the firms used a common name are not sufficient to justify a finding of agency. In WorldCom, the court dismissed plaintiffs’ securities claim against Andersen Worldwide SC (“AWSC”), the umbrella organization for the former Arthur Andersen firms, finding the allegation that it was an “ ‘umbrella organization for its member firms worldwide’ ” insufficient to plead agency. Similarly, in Nuevo Mundo Holdings, the court held that statements by an agent proclaiming the existence of an agency relationship, coupled with allegations that “there is overall training and supervision of all affiliates and peer review meetings held to assure compliance with the accepted professional standards and ethical requirements of what each affiliate is doing,” were insufficient to allege an agency relationship between Arthur Andersen LLP and the Peruvian member firm of AWSC, and Pricewaterhouse Coopers, LLP and the Peruvian member firm of Pricewaterhouse Coopers International Ltd. Plaintiffs’ allegations differ from those in WorldCom and Nuevo Mundo Holdings. The complaint here not only quotes GTI’s press releases, but contends that GTI exercised control over GT-Italy in a manner typical of a principal-agent relationship. It alleges further that GTI investigated and disciplined the Italian member firm and ultimately expelled it from the group. GTI’s ability to discipline individual partners of GT-Italy suggests that it had the power to direct the policies and practices of that firm — a defining characteristic of agency. GTI responds that even if plaintiffs’ allegations are not conclusory, they are undermined by the fact that its website and the January 8, 2004 press release stated that each member firm “is a separate independent national firm,” that no firm is “responsible for the services or activities of any other,” and that GTI does not deliver services in its own name. It cites In re Lernout & Hauspie Securities Litigation, in which the court observed that the web page that plaintiffs relied upon to argue that KPMG International should be liable vicariously for the acts of KPMG UK, belied their claim, as it indicated the legal separateness of each firm. In consequence, it declined to find that plaintiffs’ sole allegation that “KPMG Int’l markets itself and all of its member firms as a single entity” sufficient to state a claim against it. GTI’s reliance on the Lemout & Haus-pie decision is misplaced, as the complaint here differs. First, plaintiffs do not claim that the agency relationship was based on apparent authority, viz., that GTI’s advertisements are the basis for vicarious liability because of the appearance to a third party. Consequently, the fact that its press release stated that each firm is a separate legal entity does not necessarily undermine plaintiffs’ claim that an actual agency relationship existed. Second, the plaintiffs in Lemout & Hauspie relied only on allegations that defendants marketed themselves as a unified firm. Not so the complaint here, which alleges specific instances in which GTI acted in a manner consistent with an agency relationship. As noted in the Court’s discussion of DTT’s argument in this respect, the arguable inconsistency between GTI’s alleged actions and its public statements is sufficient to overcome a motion to dismiss. Plaintiffs sufficiently have alleged an agency relationship between GTI and GT-Italy. The Court consequently does not consider plaintiffs’ alternative theories of vicarious and individual liability. 3. GT-USA a. Agency and Alter Ego Plaintiffs next claim that GTI was the alter ego of GT-USA and/or that GTI acted as its agent. They base these claims on their allegations that GT-USA is the largest of the Grant Thornton member firms, earned twenty-five percent of the global organization’s revenue, and had access to the books and papers of other Grant Thornton firms. In other words, plaintiffs assert that GT-USA was the proverbial thousand pound gorilla, able to use its size to get what it wanted. Assuming that GT-USA was large enough to have practical control over GTI — and the complaint does not indicate the relative size of GT-USA — standing alone, such an allegation is not sufficient to establish an alter ego relationship for the reasons discussed in respect of plaintiffs’ claim of an alter ego relationship between DTT and Deloitte USA. Nor are there allegations from which an agency relationship could be inferred. Plaintiffs therefore have failed to state a claim against GT-USA on the basis that GTI was its agent or alter ego. F. Conclusion To sum up, plaintiffs’ allegations with respect to GT-USA, Deloitte USA and Copeland are insufficient to state a claim against them on the theory that Deloitte Italy and GT-Italy were their agents or alter egos. As plaintiffs do not allege that these defendants committed any deceptive acts or made any material misrepresentations or omissions, primary liability cannot attach under Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. On the other hand, plaintiffs have alleged sufficiently that an agency relationship existed between GTI and GT-Italy and DTT and its member firms that conducted the Parmalat audit. As principals, they would be responsible for the actions of their agents and the knowledge and, consequently scienter, of their agents is imputed to them. Plaintiffs therefore have alleged that GTI and DTT made materially false statements or omitted a material fact in connection with the purchase and sale of securities with scienter. Having pled the first three elements of a claim under 10(b) — that defendants made material misrepresentations or omissions with scienter in connection with the purchase or sale of securities — the next issue is whether plaintiffs adequately allege causation. IV. Claims under Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5: Causation To plead causation sufficiently under Section 10(b) “a plaintiff must allege both transaction causation, i.e. that but for the fraudulent statement or omission, the plaintiff would not have entered into the transaction; and loss causation, i.e., that the subject of the fraudulent statement or omission was the cause of the actual loss suffered.” DTT and GTI contend that the complaint is deficient in pleading both forms of causation. A. Transaction Causation “[Transaction causation refers to the causal link between the defendant’s misconduct and the plaintiffs decision to buy or sell securities. It is established simply by showing that, but for the claimed misrepresentations or omissions, the plaintiff would not have entered into the detrimental securities transaction.” Here, plaintiffs contend that defendants’ fraud artificially inflated the price of Par-malat securities and that they would not have bought Parmalat stock or bonds had they known of its true financial condition. While, they do not claim to have relied on particular misstatements or omissions, they argue that the complaint adequately alleges transaction causation for two reasons. They are correct. First, reliance for purposes of transaction causation may be presumed where, as here, defendants are alleged to have made material omissions. Insofar as the complaint turns on alleged omissions, this principle alone suffices to plead transaction causation. Second, the fraud-on-the-market doctrine provides a rebuttable presumption that plaintiffs relied on defendants’ misrepresentation or omissions pursuant to the theory that a company’s securities prices in an open and efficient market are determined by all available information. Consequently, “[misleading statements ... defraud purchasers of stock even if the purchasers do not directly rely on the misstatements.” Although generally discussed in terms of misrepresentations, the reasoning applies equally to instances of alleged market manipulation or other schemes to defraud. To obtain the benefit of this presumption, plaintiffs first must allege that the relevant market was open and developed or, in other words, efficient. An open market is “one in which anyone, or at least a large number of persons, can buy or sell.” A developed market is “one which has a relatively high level or activity and frequency, and for which trading information (e.g. price and volume) is widely available.” Whether a market is open and developed often is a question of fact. Plaintiffs allege that there was an efficient worldwide market for Parmalat securities. They claim that Parmalat securities traded actively on several markets, including the Luxembourg, Milan and Uruguayan stock exchanges. Parmalat common stock was traded in the over-the-counter market in the United States, but plaintiffs do not indicate the volume of such trades. There was also an active market in American Depository Receipts, each of which represented a proportional interest in twenty shares of Parmalat common stock. Parmalat made regular reports to the Italian securities regulators, information about the company was available widely, and securities analysts followed and reported on Parmalat. Defendants respond that the allegations “cover many different types of securities, including new issues ..., issues denominated in numerous currencies ..., and private placements” and that the fraud-on-the-market theory therefore is inapplicable. Although plaintiffs have pleaded that some of the misrepresentations occurred in connection with private placements, that does not undermine their claims against GTI, DTT and their Italian affiliates based on publicly traded securities. These defendants are alleged to have made misstatements in annual and semiannual audit reports. In this context, the reliance presumed by the doctrine of the fraud-on-the-market is especially appropriate, as it is difficult to imagine that the markets would not have moved on the basis of reports by Parmalat’s independent auditors. Moreover, defendants do not explain why the fact that securities were denominated in several currencies would undermine plaintiffs’ reliance on the fraud-on-the-market theory. Plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts to invoke the presumption of reliance at this stage with respect of these defendants. They therefore have pleaded transaction causation sufficiently. Whether they later will succeed in proving the applicability of the fraud-on-the-market theory must abide that event. B. Loss Causation Loss causation is the requirement that a plaintiff allege that the “defendant’s misrepresentation ' (or other fraudulent conduct) proximately caused the plaintiffs economic loss.” “To plead loss causation, the complaint must allege facts that support an inference that [the defendant’s] misstatements and omissions concealed the circumstances that bear upon the loss suffered such that plaintiffs would have been spared all or an ascertainable portion of that loss absent the fraud.” In short, “the damages suffered by plaintiff must be a foreseeable consequence of any misrepresentation or material omission.” DTT and GTI assert the plaintiffs have failed to plead loss causation because they do not allege that any misrepresentation by them was the proximate cause of the decline in value of the price of Parmalat securities or that a corrective disclosure about their prior misrepresentations caused the company’s collapse. They contend that their role in the alleged fraud came to light only after the price of Par-malat stock plummeted and, in consequence, that plaintiffs have not pleaded loss causation. An allegation that a corrective disclosure caused the plaintiffs loss may be sufficient to satisfy the loss causation requirement. It is not, however, necessary. In Suez Equity Investors, L.P. v. Toronto-Dominion Bank, the Second Circuit held that an allegation that the defendant’s misrepresentation concealed the subject that caused the loss was sufficient because the loss was foreseeable. Plaintiffs there alleged that the defendants’ misrepresentations about the past business problems of Mallick, the company’s principal, led them to regard Mallick as capable of managing the complex debt loads of the venture. They alleged further that Mallick ultimately was unable to do so and that the venture consequently suffered a liquidity crisis which left its stock worthless. The Second Circuit held that this was a sufficient allegation of loss causation because it was foreseeable that “Mallick’s concealed lack of skill would cause the company’s eventual liquidity problems.” This reasoning was reaffirmed and expanded upon in Lentell v. Merrill Lynch & Co. The court there concluded that plaintiffs had failed to plead loss causation because they did “not allege that the subject of those false recommendations (that investors should buy or accumulate 24/7 Media and Interliant stock), or any corrective disclosure regarding the falsity of those recommendations, is the cause of the decline in stock value that plaintiffs claim as their loss.” The use of the word “or” indicates that a corrective disclosure is not necessary where, as here, plaintiffs allege that the subject of the misrepresentations and omissions caused their loss. The complaint here avers that defendants, through their agents, Deloitte Italy and GT-Italy, misrepresented that the financial statements of Parmalat and its subsidiaries were accurate and complete when, in fact, they significantly understated the company’s debt and overstated its revenue and net assets. Plaintiffs cite a number of particular misrepresentations, but one will suffice to illustrate that their allegations of loss causation are adequate. On April 11, 2002, Deloitte Italy issued two audit reports, both signed by Adolfo Mamoli, on Parmalat’s financial statements. The reports certified that the financial statements fairly presented the financial position of Parmalat and the Par-malat group as of December 31, 2001. Plaintiffs contend that these statements in fact overstated its consolidated shareholder equity by more than 8 billion and overstated a consolidated of EBITDA of approximately 948 million by at least 538 million. Among the risks concealed by these reports was that Parmalat had massive undisclosed debt and was unable to service it. Defendants reasonably could have foreseen that Parmalat’s inability to service its debt would lead to a financial collapse. The concealed risk materialized when Par-malat suffered a liquidity crisis on December 8, 2003 and was unable to pay bonds as they came due. Italian regulators suspended trading in Parmalat securities in Italy. The next day, Parmalat announced that it would have to delay repayment on maturing bonds. The prices of Parmalat stock dropped sharply on the Luxembourg exchange. When trading in Parmalat stock resumed in Italy on December 11, 2003, Parmalat shares lost almost one-half of them value. The value of its bonds dropped rapidly and Standard & Poor’s dropped its rating to double C, at the low end of investment grade. That the true extent the fraud was not revealed to the public until February — after Parmalat shares were worthless and after the close of the Class Period — is immaterial where, as here, the risk allegedly concealed by defendants materialized during that time and arguably caused the decline in shareholder and bondholder value. V. Section 20(a): Control Person Liability Plaintiffs claim that Copeland, DTT, De-loitte & Touche LLP, GTI, and GT-USA are liable as controlling persons under Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act, which provides that “Every person who, directly or indirectly, controls any person liable under any provision of this chapter ... shall also be liable jointly and severally with and to the same extent as such controlled person to any person whom such controlled person is liable, unless the controlling person acted in good faith and did not directly or indirectly induce the act or acts constituting the violation or cause of action.” The elements of a claim under Section 20(a) include both a primary violation and control over the primary violator. Defendants contend that plaintiffs must allege also culpable participation by the control person. A. Pleading Culpable Participation Is Not Required The Second Circuit has not addressed the question whether a plaintiff must allege culpable participation in order to state a legally sufficient claim under Section 20(a). As this Court recently noted, whether culpable participation must be pleaded as well as proven “is an interesting question on which courts, both within and outside this circuit are deeply divided.” This question is one of statutory interpretation. The starting point therefore must be the plain language of the text. In this case, the statutory language is clear upon its face. An individual who controls another is hable for the primary violation of the controlled person unless the controlling person acted in good faith and did not induce the cause of action. The interpretation most consistent with the text is that the defendant bears the burden of establishing good faith and lack of inducement, not that the plaintiff must allege the opposite in its pleadings. It accords also with the purpose of Section 20(a) which, as the Second Circuit observed, was enacted “to expand, rather than restrict, the scope of liability.” Nor are the Second Circuit cases inconsistent with the conclusion that plaintiff is not required to allege culpable participation. In one line of cases, beginning with Marbury Management, Inc. v. Kohn, the Court laid out the burden shifting aspect of Section 20(a) when it held that once plaintiff had established control, the burden of proving good faith shifted to the defendant. While Lanza v. Drexel & Co., SEC v. First Jersey Securities, Inc. and their progeny are relied upon by those district courts in this Circuit that have required the pleading of culpable participation, these cases are consistent with the burden shifting element of Marbury Management. In Lanza, the Second Circuit stated that “[t]he intent of Congress in adding [Section 20(a) ] ... was obviously to impose liability only on those directors ... who are in some meaningful sense culpable participants in the fraud perpetrated by controlling persons.” This statement has no bearing on the question of pleading culpable participation. It merely reiterates that an individual must culpably have participated in the fraud in order ultimately to be held liable, a requirement that would be satisfied by the failure of a control person to establish the statutory good faith defense. In First Jersey, the Second Circuit went a step further and said that culpable participation is an element in proving a prima facie case of control person liability, which of course seems to support defendants’ argument. Having given with one hand, however, the First Jersey panel took away with the other. It then restated the burden shifting approach of Marbury Management, explaining “[o]nce the plaintiff makes out a prima facie case of § 20(a) liability, the burden shifts to the defendant to show that he acted in good faith, and that he did not ... induce the act or acts constituting the violation.” As another court has stated in reference to this passage, the Second Circuit there “essentially rendered the culpable participation requirement meaningless.” Another way to put the same point would be to say that the broad language to the effect that culpable participation is an element of a Section 20(a) plaintiffs prima facie case was a loosely stated dictum. Since First Jersey, the Second Circuit has addressed Section 20(a) liability, albeit briefly, in four cases. At no point has the Second Circuit applied First Jersey to conclude that culpable participation must be pleaded to state a legally sufficient Section 20(a) claim. Nor has it overruled Marbury Management. Suez Equity Investors is the only decision that substantively addressed the pleading requirements, and it supports the view that alleging culpable participation is not required. The Second Circuit there held that plaintiffs had alleged control person liability adequately without any discussion of culpable participation. In sum, if the Second Circuit had held that a Section 20(a) claim is insufficient absent an allegation of culpable participation, this Court of course would follow it. But it has not. With the plain language of the statute unambiguous, this Court holds that plaintiffs state a legally sufficient claim under this statute if they plead (1) a primary violation by a controlled person and (2) control of the primary violator by the defendant. B. Control Defendants do not dispute that plaintiffs have alleged primary violations by GT-Italy and Deloitte Italy. They contend, however, that plaintiffs do not sufficiently allege control. “Control over a primary violator may be established by showing that the defendant possessed ‘the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of a person, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract, or otherwise.’ ” The remaining question therefore is whether the facts alleged by plaintiffs would permit a conclusion of control by this standard. 1. GTI, DTT, & James Copeland As noted, plaintiffs have pleaded adequately that DTT and GTI were principals that controlled their respective agents, Deloitte Italy and GT-Italy. They therefore state a sufficient control person claim in respect of those two defendants. Although a defendant ultimately may not be held liable as both a primary violator and a contro