Plumbers & Steamfitters Local v. Danske Bank ( 2021 )


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  • 20-3231
    Plumbers & Steamfitters Local v. Danske Bank
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Second Circuit
    AUGUST TERM 2020
    No. 20-3231
    PLUMBER & STEAMFITTERS LOCAL 773 PENSION FUND, BOSTON RETIREMENT SYSTEM,
    TEAMSTERS LOCAL 237 ADDITIONAL SECURITY BENEFIT FUND AND TEAMSTERS
    LOCAL 237 SUPPLEMENTAL FUND FOR HOUSING AUTHORITY EMPLOYEES,
    individually and behalf of all others similarly situated,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    DANSKE BANK A/S, THOMAS F. BORGEN, HENRIK RAMLAU-HANSEN, JACOB AARUP-
    ANDERSEN, ESTATE OF OLE ANDERSEN,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ARGUED: MAY 17, 2021
    DECIDED: AUGUST 25, 2021
    Before:     LIVINGSTON, Chief Judge, JACOBS, and MENASHI, Circuit Judges.
    Three pension funds bring this putative securities class action on behalf of
    themselves and all others who purchased Danske Bank American Depositary
    Receipts (ADRs) between January 9, 2014 and April 29, 2019. The Funds allege
    1
    that Danske Bank and several of its corporate officers made materially
    misleading statements about a money laundering scandal that was perpetrated
    through the Bank’s branch in Estonia. The United States District Court for the
    Southern District of New York (Caproni, J.) dismissed the Funds’ claims
    pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for, inter alia, failure to
    plead actionable misstatements or omissions. We AFFIRM.
    ____________________
    CAROL C. VILLEGAS (Alec T. Coquin, Christine M. Fox,
    on the brief), Labaton Sucharow LLP, New York, NY,
    for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Samuel H. Rudman, David A. Rosenfeld, William
    Geddish, Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP,
    Melville, NY (on the brief), for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    BRIAN T. FRAWLEY (Katherine Bagley, Amanda Shami,
    on the brief), Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, New York, NY,
    for Defendants-Appellees Danske Bank A/S and Jacob
    Aarup-Andersen.
    Bruce E. Yannett, Helen V. Cantwell, Debevoise &
    Plimpton LLP, New York, NY and Jonathan R. Tuttle,
    Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, Washington, DC
    (on the brief), for Defendant-Appellee Ole Andersen.
    2
    Edmund Polubinski III, Patrick W. Blakemore, Davis
    Polk & Wardwell LLP, New York, NY (on the brief), for
    Defendant-Appellee Thomas F. Borgen.
    Daniel J. Kramer, Shane Avidan, Katherine Warren
    Gadsden, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
    LLP, New York, NY (on the brief), for Defendant-
    Appellee Henrik Ramlau-Hansen.
    DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge:
    This securities fraud class action, brought by three pension funds
    (collectively, “the Funds”) against Danske Bank (“Danske” or “the Bank”) and
    four of its former executives, principally alleges that the Bank covered up a
    money-laundering scandal. Between 2007 and 2015, a failure to follow anti-
    money laundering (AML) protocols in the Bank’s Estonian Branch allowed
    suspicious transactions of approximately $230 billion to flow through that
    branch. News of the scandal first broke in 2016 when the Danish Financial
    Supervisory Authority (DFSA) reprimanded and later fined Danske Bank for
    compliance shortcomings. But it became clear over the next two years that the
    amount of money laundered through the Estonian Branch was far greater than
    originally thought. As the scope of the scandal came to light, the price of
    Danske Bank securities declined.
    3
    In 2018—well after news of the Estonian Branch’s AML issues became
    public, but before its full breadth was revealed—the Funds purchased Danske
    Bank American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) and now seek to represent a class of
    ADR investors who purchased between January 9, 2014 and April 29, 2019. The
    Funds claim that the Bank failed to supervise the Estonian Branch, reacted slowly
    once it became aware of the AML issues, and made a series of misstatements and
    omissions along the way. During the relevant time period, Defendant Thomas
    Borgen was Danske’s CEO, Defendants Henrik Ramlau-Hansen and Jacob
    Aarup-Andersen both served as its Chief Financial Officer, and Defendant Ole
    Andersen was the Chairman of its Board of Directors.
    We conclude that none of the misstatements or omissions identified by the
    Funds are actionable. One of the Funds’ misstatement theories improperly
    faults the Bank for its nondisclosure of “uncharged, unadjudicated wrongdoing.”
    See City of Pontiac Policemen’s and Firemen’s Ret. Sys. v. UBS AG, 
    752 F.3d 173
    ,
    184 (2d Cir. 2014). Two more fail in light of the Funds’ reliance on statements
    that were made more than three years before their first purchase of ADRs and
    that—in light of intervening events—cannot reasonably be said to have
    4
    significantly altered the mix of information available to reasonable investors at
    that later date. Another statement, conversely, is not actionable because it was
    made well after the Funds last purchased ADRs. See Denny v. Barber, 
    576 F.2d 465
    , 468–69 (2d Cir. 1978). And the remaining statements are too generic to
    induce reliance.
    All told, the allegations do not move the claims outside the realm of
    corporate mismanagement and into the realm of securities fraud. See Acito v.
    IMCERA Grp., Inc., 
    47 F.3d 47
    , 53 (2d Cir. 1995) (“It is well settled that section
    10(b) was not designed to regulate corporate mismanagement.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)). Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s
    dismissal of this action.
    BACKGROUND
    A.     The Estonian Branch
    Danske Bank, the largest financial institution in Denmark, acquired its
    Estonian Branch by way of a 2006 merger with Sampo Bank. Problems soon
    emerged. In 2009, the Estonian Financial Supervisory Authority (EFSA)
    censured the branch for failing to comply with Know Your Customer (KYC)
    5
    rules, which, inter alia, obligate banks to verify the identity of a customer before
    opening an account. An internal audit conducted in 2012 reported that branch
    personnel sometimes failed to screen incoming payments. That same year, the
    DFSA approached Danske about “serious AML . . . issues in the Estonian
    branch.” App’x at 49. The Funds allege that, despite these cautions, Danske
    failed to strengthen compliance measures at the branch that would have
    impaired profitability.
    Central to the Estonian Branch’s AML issues was its Non-Resident
    Portfolio (“NRP”), which it inherited from Sampo. The NRP was managed by a
    designated group of employees and was composed of 3,000 to 4,000 foreign
    clients at any given time, most of them corporate entities based in Russia, the
    United Kingdom, and the British Virgin Islands, with little apparent reason for
    doing their banking in Estonia. Although just 2–4 percent of the branch’s
    customers were part of the NRP, the portfolio accounted for an average of 56
    percent of the branch’s pre-tax profits between 2011 and 2015.
    The Funds allege that many NRP customers were intermediaries who used
    the branch to launder money. Many of them should have set off alarms. Some
    6
    shared addresses with other NRP customers; others processed transactions
    incommensurate with their purported size. But Estonian Branch employees
    tended not to ask questions about their clients’ financial motives.
    In late 2013, a whistleblower named Howard Wilkinson emailed four of
    his superiors in Copenhagen to report “a near total process failure” at the
    Estonian Branch, accusing branch employees of “knowingly dealing with
    criminals.” App’x at 94–95. Following an investigation, many of Wilkinson’s
    allegations were substantiated by the Bank’s Internal Audit Group, which found
    (inter alia) that branch employees were lax when inquiring into new NRP clients,
    apparently to avoid “caus[ing] problems” for them. App’x at 54. CEO Borgen
    was informed of these findings in early 2014 and recommended “an immediate
    stop of all new business and a controlled winding-down of all existing business”
    within the NRP. App’x at 372.      Around that same time, the EFSA censured the
    branch for its AML shortcomings, and Danske informed the regulator of its plan
    to shut down the NRP completely in the coming months.
    Wilkinson’s allegations prompted changes. Danske ceased opening new
    NRP accounts, terminated all accounts suspected of being operated by an
    7
    intermediary, hired an independent consultant to assess AML policy in Estonia,
    and began considering the outright sale of the branch. One board member
    recommended getting out of Estonia immediately, but Borgen expressed concern
    that a precipitate exit could negatively impact the sales price of the branch.
    In December 2014, Danske reported a goodwill impairment related to its
    operations in Estonia amounting to DKK 2.1 billion (about $326 million)
    alongside substantial impairments in Finland and Northern Ireland. 1      The Bank
    explained that these write-downs were “based on long-term assessments” as
    opposed to “short-term developments at the individual business units.” App’x
    118. Ramlau-Hansen stressed that the write-down “will not affect [the Bank’s]
    ongoing business or the strategy for the involved units.” App’x 58.
    Over the next few months, the NRP was gradually shut down. The
    branch sent termination notices to 2,261 NRP customers in 2015, and anticipated
    that by late that year, 77 percent of NRP accounts would be closed. The NRP was
    1 If a company purchases assets at more than fair market value, it can record the
    difference as goodwill on its balance sheet. But if the value of the assets
    subsequently declines, the company may be required to record a goodwill
    impairment.
    8
    completely dissolved by early 2016.
    B.    The scandal becomes public
    News of the Estonian Branch’s AML violations emerged over the next few
    years. In March 2016, the DFSA publicly reprimanded and fined the Bank for
    failing “to identify material money laundering risks at its branch in Estonia” and
    for not implementing “risk-mitigating measures.” App’x at 68. A year later,
    Berlingske, a Copenhagen newspaper, detailed how $20 billion was laundered out
    of Russia between 2011 and 2014 via several banks, including $1.2 billion
    through Danske. A few months later, Berlingske reported that four UK-based
    shell companies controlled by Azerbaijani elites had used Danske’s Estonian
    Branch to launder $2.9 billion.
    These news stories provoked further scrutiny from Danish and French
    regulators. Danske responded with a September 2017 press release
    acknowledging that significant sums had been laundered through its Estonian
    Branch due to that branch’s “major deficiencies in controls and governance.”
    App’x at 322. Around that same time, the Bank hired Bruun & Hjejle (B&H), a
    Copenhagen law firm, to conduct an independent investigation.
    9
    The bad press continued unabated, however. Bloomberg reported in
    mid-2018 that Danish authorities sought to investigate $8 billion that had
    allegedly been laundered through the Estonian Branch between 2007–2015.
    Two weeks later, Danske voluntarily promised to renounce its profits from all
    illegal transactions from the Estonian Branch. Nevertheless, the Bank assured
    investors in July 2018 that it “does not expect . . . the dialogue with public
    authorities or the inspection of compliance with anti[-]mon[e]y laundering
    legislation to have any material effect on its financial position.” App’x at 83.
    In September 2018, Danske released the B&H Report, which observed that
    the scandal was much larger than initially anticipated and reported for the first
    time that over $200 billion worth of branch transactions were suspect. The B&H
    Report faulted the Bank for its “manifestly insufficient and inadequate” AML
    procedures in Estonia but concluded that “[t]he main responsibility for these
    shortcomings lies with the first line of defence at the Estonian branch.” App’x
    at 397. Borgen resigned as CEO that day, notwithstanding B&H’s finding that
    he had breached no legal obligation. As the bad news accumulated, the price of
    Danske Bank’s securities sank.
    10
    C.     Procedural History
    The Funds, which purchased Danske Bank ADRs amid the AML fallout
    between March and June of 2018, commenced this action in January 2019—
    seeking to represent a class of ADR investors who purchased between January 9,
    2014 and April 29, 2019—and were appointed lead plaintiffs. The operative
    pleading (the Third Amended Complaint) asserts claims under: (1) Section 10 of
    the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5(b); (2) Rule 10b-5(a) and (c); and (3) Section
    20(a) of the Exchange Act.
    After several amended pleadings, the district court granted Defendants’
    motion to dismiss with prejudice, concluding, inter alia, that the Funds failed to
    sufficiently allege any materially misleading statements or omissions. 2 This
    appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    The core claim is brought under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange
    2 The district court also concluded that the operative pleading failed to state a
    claim because it did not sufficiently allege fraud with particularity or scienter.
    Because we agree that the Funds failed to plead actionable misstatements or
    omissions, we do not consider these alternate grounds for dismissal.
    11
    Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and its implementing regulation, Rule 10b-5(b), 
    17 C.F.R. § 240
    .10b–5(b). To state a claim under those provisions, a plaintiff must
    plead six familiar elements: (1) a misstatement or omission of material fact;
    (2) scienter; (3) a connection with the purchase or sale of securities; (4) reliance;
    (5) economic loss; and (6) loss causation. Kleinman v. Elan Corp., plc, 
    706 F.3d 145
    , 152 (2d Cir. 2013).
    This appeal turns on the first element: whether the Funds sufficiently
    alleged that Danske made actionable misstatements or omissions. Though the
    144-page Third Amended Complaint recounts in fulsome detail all that went
    wrong at the Estonian Branch over an eight-year period, the Exchange Act claim
    is premised on five particular categories of alleged misstatements and omissions:
    (1) the Bank’s 2013–2015 financial statements, which allegedly incorporated
    revenue from illegal transactions; (2) statements surrounding the 2014 goodwill
    impairment; (3) a 2015 statement regarding the Bank’s new anonymous
    whistleblower reporting system; (4) corporate governance statements discussing
    the Bank’s compliance with AML; and (5) the Bank’s assertion that it did not
    expect the AML scandal to materially impact its financial position. None of the
    12
    challenged statements are actionable by the Funds. 3
    A. The Financial Statements
    Danske Bank routinely released financial results throughout the class
    period, each time summarizing its year-over-year net profits and revenues. The
    Funds observe that, in all these reports, the allegedly ill-gotten profits from the
    Estonian Branch were baked into the bank-wide numbers. They go on to argue
    that it was misleading for Danske to release those numbers without
    simultaneously disclosing what it knew about possible money laundering at the
    branch. We disagree.
    Generally speaking, “disclosure is not a rite of confession,” so “companies
    do not have a duty to disclose uncharged, unadjudicated wrongdoing.” City of
    Pontiac, 752 F.3d at 184 (internal quotation marks, citations, and alteration
    omitted). As a corollary of that rule, accurately reported financial statements do
    not automatically become misleading by virtue of the company’s nondisclosure
    of suspected misconduct that may have contributed to the financial results. As
    3 The failure to sufficiently plead actionable misstatements or omissions is fatal to
    the Funds’ § 10(b) claim. Because their § 20(a) claim depends on a viable § 10(b)
    claim, the § 20(a) claim fails as well.
    13
    the Sixth Circuit concluded in a related context, “[i]t is clear that a violation of
    federal securities law cannot be premised upon a company’s disclosure of
    accurate historical data.” In re Sofamor Danek Grp., Inc., 
    123 F.3d 394
    , 401 n.3
    (6th Cir. 1997); cf. City of Pontiac, 752 F.3d at 184 (rejecting the contention that
    the defendant bank was required to disclose in offering materials its suspicion
    that some employees were involved in a tax evasion scheme).
    Critically, the Funds do not allege that the financial numbers Danske
    disclosed were manipulated in any way—just that they failed to simultaneously
    disclose the AML issues in Estonia. But because Danske was under no
    obligation to self-report its growing suspicions regarding those issues, its
    “disclosure of accurate historical data,” standing alone, is not actionable. See
    Sofamor, 
    123 F.3d at
    401 n.3; see also Fogel v. Vega, 759 F. App’x 18, 24 (2d Cir.
    2018) (accurate financial statements do not “become actionable simply because
    companies do not simultaneously disclose some wrongdoing that may have
    contributed to the company’s financial performance”). Otherwise, every
    company whose quarterly financial reports include revenue from transactions
    that violated AML regulations could be sued for securities fraud. Such a rule
    14
    would “bring within the sweep of federal securities laws many routine
    representations made by [companies].” ECA & Loc. 134 IBEW Joint Pension Tr.
    of Chi. v. JP Morgan Chase Co., 
    553 F.3d 187
    , 206 (2d Cir. 2009).
    Relatedly, the Funds allege that Danske Bank’s financial reports were
    per se misleading by reason of their alleged noncompliance with standards
    promulgated by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).
    According to the Funds, the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
    permit contract revenue to be reported only if the underlying contract creates
    “enforceable rights and obligations.” App’x at 40 (citing IFRS 15). So, the
    Funds say, Danske violated those standards by including revenue derived from
    unenforceable contracts with NRP clients who were using the branch to launder
    money.
    When a securities fraud claim is premised on the defendant’s predicate
    violations of law or accounting standards, the facts of that underlying violation
    must be pled with particularity. See Gamm v. Sanderson Farms, Inc., 
    944 F.3d 455
    , 464 (2d Cir. 2019); see also City of Sterling Heights Police & Fire Ret. Sys. v.
    Vodafone Grp. Pub. Ltd. Co., 
    655 F. Supp. 2d 262
    , 270 (S.D.N.Y. 2009) (dismissing
    15
    securities fraud claim premised on accounting violations when the plaintiff did
    not “plead with particularity that [the defendant] fraudulently violated
    accounting standards”). In other words, the plaintiff must specify what law or
    standard the defendant violated and how the alleged violation occurred. See
    ECA, 
    553 F.3d at
    199–200 (agreeing that plaintiff sufficiently alleged GAAP
    violation with particularity).
    The operative pleading does not satisfy this heightened pleading
    requirement. The Funds baldly state that the challenged deposit contracts are
    unenforceable because some of the NRP clients were illegally laundering money
    through the Branch. This claim conflates the distinct concepts of illegality and
    unenforceability. As the district court pointed out, whether the deposit
    contracts are actually unenforceable turns on foreign contract law. But the Funds
    identify no law or contractual provision that would render the deposit contracts
    unenforceable. Instead, they posit that “it is reasonable to infer that illicit
    transactions do not give rise to enforceable rights.” Reply Br. at 4–5. But
    under the applicable heightened pleading requirement, the Funds must come
    forth with more than a generality with surface appeal. See 15 U.S.C. § 78u-
    16
    4(b)(1); In re Fannie Mae 2008 Sec. Litig., 
    742 F. Supp. 2d 382
    , 408 (S.D.N.Y. 2010)
    (dismissing claims premised on alleged GAAP violations because the plaintiffs
    failed to plead “facts sufficient to identify any violations of GAAP”).
    B. The Goodwill Impairment
    Danske Bank announced the results of its annual goodwill impairment
    testing in late 2014. The Bank disclosed that it was taking a write-down of
    approximately DKK 9 billion (approximately $1.4 billion) on its assets in Finland,
    Northern Ireland, and Estonia due to “assumptions about weaker long-term
    macroeconomic developments.” App’x at 59. Ramlau-Hansen explained on a
    conference call that “this is primarily a technical accounting exercise,” that “[t]he
    goodwill calculation is not related to expected short-term performance of the
    affected business areas,” and that the write-down “will not affect Danske Bank’s
    ongoing business or the strategy for the involved units.” App’x at 58.
    The Funds allege that it was materially misleading to characterize the
    write-down as “purely technical” and unrelated to short-term strategy because
    the goodwill impairment in Estonia was the direct consequence of the Bank’s
    decision to eliminate the NRP.
    17
    Insofar as Ramlau-Hansen advised that the impairment “will not affect
    Danske Bank’s . . . strategy for the involved units,” App’x at 58, the Funds have
    not alleged that those “factual assertions . . . were false when the statements were
    made.” See In re Time Warner Inc. Sec. Litig., 
    9 F.3d 259
    , 266 (2d Cir. 1993). To
    the contrary, the Funds’ theory (that the strategic winding down of the NRP
    prompted the impairment) depends on the opposite causal relationship: that the
    Bank had already decided to wind down the NRP before announcing the
    goodwill impairment. If that is so, the impairment could not have “affected”
    strategy in Estonia; the strategic change had already been implemented.
    Ramlau-Hansen’s statement that the impairment “is not related to
    expected short-term performance” of the affected areas raises a different issue.
    App’x at 58. The Funds argue that because the decision to wind down the NRP
    prompted the write-down, it was inaccurate and misleading to characterize the
    two events as unrelated. Danske Bank, meanwhile, maintains that that write-
    down had nothing to do with the NRP but was instead caused by
    macroeconomic factors, modest growth projections, low short-term interest rates,
    and deflationary pressures in the Eurozone. The Bank’s annual report, which
    18
    was released less than two months after the goodwill impairment and explained
    that the impairment was the result of “a worsening of the long-term economic
    outlook in Estonia and the planned repositioning of the personal banking
    business in 2015” lends support to the Bank’s contention. App’x at 122–23, 681.
    Nonetheless, this dispute is inconsequential. Even if the Funds could show that
    the planned NRP closure prompted the write-down, that fact would still not be
    material to a reasonable investor who purchased ADRs when the Funds did.
    Whether a misstatement is material “depends on whether there is a
    substantial likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would consider it important
    in deciding how to act.” ECA, 
    553 F.3d at 197
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted). To be material, “a statement must, in the view of a reasonable
    investor, have ‘significantly altered the total mix of information made
    available.’” Singh v. Cigna Corp., 
    918 F.3d 57
    , 63 (2d Cir. 2019) (footnotes and
    internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 
    485 U.S. 224
    ,
    231–32 (1988)). Because materiality involves a “fact-specific inquiry,” Basic, 
    485 U.S. at 240
    , it can be decided on a motion to dismiss only if “reasonable minds
    19
    cannot differ on the question of materiality,” TSC Indus. Inc. v. Northway, Inc.,
    
    426 U.S. 438
    , 450 (1976) (citation omitted).
    “[L]ogic compels the conclusion that time may render statements
    immaterial.” Ross v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., 
    465 F. Supp. 904
    , 908 (S.D.N.Y.
    1979), rev’d on other grounds, 
    607 F.2d 545
     (2d Cir. 1979). Old information
    tends to become less salient to a prospective purchaser as the market is
    influenced by new information that is related or of overriding impact. Cf. In re
    Burlington Coat Factory Sec. Litig., 
    114 F.3d 1410
    , 1432 (3d Cir. 1997)
    (recognizing that there is no duty to update unless a factual representation
    “remain[s] alive in the minds of investors” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    And the further in time a purchase is removed from a misstatement and the more
    that updated related information reaches the market, the less likely it is that—in
    the view of a reasonable investor—the misstatement will alter the total mix of
    relevant information available at the time of the purchase. The misstatement
    will have been superseded or rendered stale by intervening events, not to
    mention memory. In other words, materiality can have a half-life.
    20
    Here, almost 39 months intervened between the 2014 announcement of the
    goodwill impairment and the Funds’ 2018 purchases of Danske ADRs. Over
    that time, the Estonian Branch was the subject of intervening events and
    disclosures. Twenty-seven months after the impairment announcement, in
    March 2017, Danske admitted that AML processes at its Estonian Branch were
    “insufficient to ensure that we could not be used for money laundering.” App’x
    at 68. Six months after that, in September 2017, Danske disclosed the broad
    scope of the problem, admitting in a press release that “several major
    deficiencies” rendered the Bank unable to prevent money laundering “in the
    period from 2007 to 2015.” App’x at 70. Around that same time—but still well
    before the Funds decided to invest—a Danish newspaper reported that Danske
    was enmeshed in a “gigantic money-laundering scandal” involving more than
    DKK 7 billion. App’x at 68–69. Meanwhile, numerous financial regulators
    (Danish, French, Estonian) publicly launched investigations into the Estonian
    Branch; and the DFSA levied a substantial fine. In response, Danske admitted
    that the NRP was principally responsible for its AML shortcomings and
    disclosed that the portfolio had since been terminated.
    21
    In light of these intervening revelations, it is implausible that the fine
    points of a technical accounting exercise conducted back in 2014 “significantly
    altered the total mix of information” available to the Funds in 2018. See TSC
    Indus., 
    426 U.S. at 449
     (internal quotation marks omitted). And for the
    purposes of adjudicating the Bank’s motion to dismiss, it does not matter that the
    Funds seek to represent a class of ADR purchasers dating back to January 2014.
    As the Funds conceded at oral argument, a plaintiff must state a claim in its own
    right to survive a motion to dismiss. See Vanskike v. Peters, 
    974 F.2d 806
    , 813
    (7th Cir. 1992) (“[A] class representative must have a cause of action in his own
    right in order to bring a class action.”); Britt v. McKenney, 
    529 F.2d 44
    , 45 (1st
    Cir. 1976) (“If none of the named plaintiffs may maintain this action on their own
    behalf, they may not seek such relief on behalf of a class.”); In re Initial Pub.
    Offering Sec. Litig., 
    214 F.R.D. 117
    , 122 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) (“If the named plaintiffs
    have no cause of action in their own right, their complaint must be dismissed,
    even though the facts set forth in the complaint may show that others might have
    a valid claim.” (quoting Goldberger v. Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc., 
    2000 WL 1886605
    , at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 28, 2000)).
    22
    Obviously, not all statements become immaterial after a similar or set
    length of time. Whether the influence of a misstatement or omission survives
    will depend on its nature and the intervening load of information on the subject,
    and on other developments affecting the market and the enterprise. In this case,
    the outpouring of information about the Estonian Branch between 2016 and 2018
    compels the conclusion that 2014 statements about the goodwill impairment
    were too remote in time to have “assumed actual significance in the
    deliberations” of a purchaser in 2018. See Folger Adam Co. v. PMI Indus., Inc.,
    
    938 F.2d 1529
    , 1533 (2d Cir. 1991) (internal quotation marks omitted); In re Time
    Warner Inc. Sec. Litig., 
    794 F. Supp. 1252
    , 1260 (S.D.N.Y. 1992), aff’d in part, rev’d
    in part on other grounds, 
    9 F.3d 259
     (2d Cir. 1993) (determining that a statement
    made ten months before the plaintiff’s purchase, “even if utterly false and
    fraudulently made, cannot have formed a basis for plaintiffs’ expectations”
    because “innumerable intervening factors could have changed the company’s
    value” in the interim); Rand v. Cullinet Software, Inc., 
    847 F. Supp. 200
    , 210 (D.
    Mass. 1994) (reasoning that allegedly misleading statements had “lost any
    possible materiality” by the time the plaintiff purchased stock seven months later
    23
    given the “intervening time” and new “information . . . enter[ing] the market”).
    Accordingly, the challenged statements were stale and immaterial to a
    reasonable investor in the Funds’ position by the time they invested in Danske
    Bank in 2018.
    C. The Whistleblower Comment
    The Funds next challenge the following statement from the Bank’s 2015
    Corporate Responsibility Report: “In 2014, three cases were reported in the
    whistleblower system. All the cases were concluded, and the appropriate
    actions were implemented.” App’x at 121. According to the Funds, this
    statement was materially misleading because the B&H Report concluded years
    later that the whistleblower report made by Wilkinson was handled improperly.
    The challenged statement is unfairly abstracted from the Corporate
    Responsibility Report. Read in context, nothing in that statement is false. The
    paragraph in which it appears discusses only the Bank’s new reporting system
    for anonymous whistleblowing. It explains: “[i]n 2013, [Danske] implemented a
    new reporting system that enables employees to report such information online
    anonymously,” and that in 2014, “three cases were reported” through that new
    24
    anonymous system. App’x at 121. The paragraph goes on to say that those
    three cases “were concluded, and the appropriate actions were implemented.”
    App’x at 121.
    It therefore matters that Wilkinson did not report his concerns about the
    Estonian Branch through the new anonymous system discussed in the Corporate
    Responsibility Report. He emailed the executives directly. The finding that
    Wilkinson’s allegations had not been handled appropriately therefore does not
    render the Corporate Responsibility Report—which discussed a distinct subset of
    whistleblower complaints—false when made. See In re Time Warner, 
    9 F.3d at 266
     (agreeing that no affirmative misrepresentation was alleged where the
    factual assertions were not false when made).
    In an attempt to circumvent this defect, the Funds recast this claim as one
    of misstatement by omission. Under that theory, Danske misled investors by
    touting its new anonymous whistleblower system while failing to
    simultaneously discuss the issues raised by Wilkinson’s allegations. Even
    assuming that this statement was misleading by omission, it cannot support the
    25
    Funds’ claims for the same reason as the goodwill impairment. 4 The Bank
    issued this statement in 2015, three years before the Funds purchased any ADRs.
    Whatever impact this statement might have had on an investor at that time,
    intervening events made it such that no “reasonable” investor contemplating
    purchasing Danske ADRs in 2018 “would consider it important in deciding how
    to act.” ECA, 
    553 F.3d at 197
     (internal quotation marks omitted). No
    reasonable investor would discount all of the more recent news about AML
    failures at the Estonian branch on the basis of this years-old boast about three
    whistleblower complaints handled through the Bank’s anonymous reporting
    system.
    D. The Corporate Responsibility Statements
    The Funds allege that certain statements made in Danske’s 2013 and 2014
    Corporate Responsibility Reports were misleading given the state of things then
    4 On its merits, the Funds’ omission-based theory is strained because the
    connection between the topic Danske chose to discuss (a new anonymous
    reporting system) and the allegedly omitted information (Wilkinson’s
    allegations) is fairly attenuated. See In re Morgan Stanley Info. Fund Sec. Litig.,
    
    592 F.3d 347
    , 365–66 (2d Cir. 2010) (making one statement about a topic “did not
    trigger a generalized duty requiring defendants to disclose the entire corpus of
    their knowledge regarding” that topic).
    26
    prevailing in the Estonian Branch.
    First, they allege that Danske misled them by claiming that it “strive[s] to
    conduct our business in accordance with internationally recognised principles in
    the area[] of . . . anti-corruption.” App’x at 113. But “[n]o investor would take
    such statements seriously in assessing a potential investment” because “almost
    every . . . bank makes these statements.” ECA, 
    553 F.3d at 206
    . “General
    declarations about the importance of acting lawfully and with integrity” are
    inactionable puffery, especially when expressed in aspirational terms. See
    Singh, 918 F.3d at 63. Danske’s bromides about being good and upright are
    plainly puffery.
    The Funds next take aim at the Bank’s assertions that it “condemns . . .
    money laundering,” “takes the steps necessary to comply with internationally
    recognised standards, including Know Your Customer procedures,” and has
    procedures for “customer due diligence, reporting, . . . and communications.”
    App’x at 113. These vague statements are similarly unactionable. Assertions
    of satisfactory regulatory compliance can be materially misleading if “the
    descriptions of compliance efforts” are “detailed” and “specific.” Singh, 918
    27
    F.3d at 63. For example, in Meyer v. Jinkosolar Holdings, a company touted its
    environmental compliance efforts in an SEC filing by referencing specific
    pollution-abatement equipment, 24-hour monitoring teams, and the fact that it
    had never been fined for regulatory violations. See 
    761 F.3d 245
    , 247–48 (2d Cir.
    2014). We held that in light of these detailed disclosures, it was misleading for
    the company to omit the existence of “serious ongoing pollution problems” at the
    plant. 
    Id. at 250
    .
    By contrast, in ECA, we held that the defendant’s averment that it had
    “risk management processes [that] are highly disciplined” and “set the standard
    for integrity” were too general to induce reliance. See 
    553 F.3d at
    205–06
    (internal quotation marks omitted). We came to the same conclusion in Singh
    when confronted with a corporation’s statement that it “established policies and
    procedures to comply with applicable requirements” mandated by specific
    federal and state regulations. 918 F.3d at 60, 63. Danske’s statements are of the
    same order. Although Danske averred that it took steps to comply with AML
    protocols and vaguely recited some AML buzzwords, it claimed no particular
    acts of compliance. No reasonable investor—especially one who purchased
    28
    ADRs more than three years after the Reports were published and was well aware
    of a gigantic AML scandal at the Estonian Branch—would weigh these generic
    statements in its investment calculus.
    E. The 2018 Contingencies Footnote
    Finally, the Funds challenge a footnote contained in the Bank’s 2018
    second quarter financial results. The footnote, which was first published on
    July 18, 2018, states: “[Danske Bank] does not expect the outcomes of pending
    lawsuits and disputes, the dialogue with public authorities or the inspection of
    compliance with anti[-]mon[e]y laundering legislation to have any material effect
    on its financial position.” 5 App’x at 83. The Funds contend that this statement
    was misleading because the Bank then knew that the scope of the scandal far
    5 Although the Funds argue in their brief that Borgen made misleading
    statements about Danske’s potential liability during a July 2018 earnings call,
    these statements do not appear in the operative pleading and therefore cannot
    form the basis of an actionable misstatement. See Brass v. Am. Film Techs., Inc.,
    
    987 F.2d 142
    , 150 (2d Cir. 1993). The Funds argue that the conversation was
    incorporated into the pleading by reference but fail to specify which of the
    pleading’s 349 paragraphs accomplished this incorporation.
    29
    exceeded what had been publicly reported and was therefore likely to materially
    undermine its financial position.
    The timing of the Funds’ purchase frustrates this claim as well. The
    Funds last purchased Danske Bank ADRs in late June 2018, about three weeks
    before the challenged statement was made. Plaintiffs alleging that they were
    damaged by purchasing securities at an inflated price cannot maintain a
    securities fraud claim premised exclusively on statements made after the
    plaintiff’s final purchase of securities. See Denny v. Barber, 
    576 F.2d 465
    , 468
    (2d Cir. 1978). The plaintiff in Denny challenged a series of statements, some
    made before his purchase, some after. See 
    id.
     We reasoned that “the
    complaint must be dismissed if it did not adequately allege the issuance of
    fraudulent misleading statements prior to [the plaintiff’s] purchase,” given that
    he “cannot share in any recovery” based solely on statements made after the date
    of purchase. See 
    id.
     at 468–69. We went on to affirm the dismissal of the
    complaint, considering only those statements made prior to purchase. 
    Id.
    The self-evident principle in Denny controls the result here. The Funds
    allege that Danske’s misstatements caused them to pay an inflated price for their
    30
    ADRs. App’x at 159. However, the Funds have failed to make actionable
    claims regarding statements made before their purchase of ADRs. They
    therefore cannot rely on the challenged footnote, which could not have
    influenced the price of a purchase that had already been made. See Gross v.
    Summa Four, Inc., 
    93 F.3d 987
    , 993 (1st Cir. 1996) (“[B]ecause [the defendant]
    issued the letter after [the plaintiff] had purchased his stock, the statements in the
    letter could not possibly have inflated the market price that he paid for those
    shares.”). Accordingly, the Funds cannot premise a Rule 10b-5(b) claim on the
    alleged misstatement in the footnote.
    F.   The Scheme Liability Claim
    The Funds add a claim under subsections (a) and (c) of Rule 10b-5, which
    prohibit (respectively) “employ[ing] any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,”
    and “engag[ing] in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or
    would operate as a fraud or deceit.” 
    17 C.F.R. § 240
    .10b–5. Unlike the better-
    known subsection (b), these subsections do not require the defendant to make a
    misstatement or omission; they require only deceptive conduct. See Lorenzo v.
    31
    SEC, 
    139 S. Ct. 1094
    , 1098, 1102 (2019). 6    To state a scheme liability claim, a
    plaintiff must show: “(1) that the defendant committed a deceptive or
    manipulative act, (2) in furtherance of the alleged scheme to defraud, (3) with
    scienter, and (4) reliance.” In re Mindbody, Inc. Sec. Litig., 
    489 F. Supp. 3d 188
    ,
    216 (S.D.N.Y. 2020) (quoting Menaldi v. Och-Ziff Cap. Mgmt. Grp. LLC, 
    164 F. Supp. 3d 568
    , 577 (S.D.N.Y. 2016)). And, of course, the deceptive or fraudulent
    scheme or activity must have occurred “in connection with the purchase or sale
    of a[] security.” 
    17 C.F.R. § 240
    .10b–5. Because scheme claims sound in fraud,
    they are subject to the heightened pleading requirements of Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 9(b). To maintain a 10b–5(a) or (c) claim, a plaintiff must specify
    “what deceptive or manipulative acts were performed, which defendants
    6 The Funds argue that Lorenzo requires us to reexamine our precedents insofar
    as they require scheme claims to be premised on deceptive acts that are distinct
    from misstatements and omissions that underlie an accompanying Rule 10b-5(b)
    claim. See, e.g., Lentell v. Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., 
    396 F.3d 161
    , 177 (2d Cir.
    2005) (dismissing scheme liability claims “where the sole basis for such claims is
    alleged misrepresentations or omissions”). Several district courts have adopted
    this interpretation of Lorenzo. See Puddu v. 6D Glob. Techs., Inc., 
    2021 WL 1198566
    , at *10–11 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 30, 2021); SEC v. SeeThruEquity, LLC, 
    2019 WL 1998027
    , at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 26, 2019). We need not address that issue here,
    however, because the scheme claim is deficient for a more fundamental reason.
    32
    performed them, when the acts were performed, and the effect the scheme had
    on investors in the securities at issue.” In re Parmalat Sec. Litig., 
    383 F. Supp. 2d 616
    , 622 (S.D.N.Y. 2005).
    The Funds fail to surmount this heightened pleading standard. At no
    point do they articulate with precision the contours of an alleged scheme to
    defraud investors, or which specific acts were conducted in furtherance of it.
    Instead, the claim rests upon the incorporation of the previous 140 pages of the
    pleading paired with the conclusory assertion that “Defendants carried out a
    common plan, scheme, and unlawful course of conduct that was intended to . . .
    deceive the investing public” and “artificially inflate the market price of Danske
    Bank ADRs.” App’x at 160. Money-laundering at a single branch in Estonia
    cannot alone establish that Danske Bank itself carried out a deceptive scheme to
    defraud investors. Absent some sort of enumeration of which specific acts
    constituted an alleged scheme in connection with the purchase or sale of
    securities, the Funds’ claim does not comply with the applicable heightened
    33
    pleading standard and cannot go forward.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, the district court’s dismissal of this action is
    AFFIRMED.
    34