Appellate Court Rules in Favor of Plaintiff

A U.S. appeals court found that fiduciaries of the bankrupt Rock Island Corporation can be liable for allowing retirement plan participants to select company stock as an investment if it is imprudent for them to do so.

In Peabody v. Davis, et.al., the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Andrew Davis and Robyn Kole, trustees of Rock Island Corporation’s (RIC) retirement plan, made no effort to show that the plan complied with ERISA 404(c). The court had to decide if carrying out the rollover of Jonathan F. Peabody’s external IRA assets into the plan and subsequently allowing Peabody to remain 98% invested in RIC stock during the company’s decline was consistent with the trustees’ fiduciary duties.  

The appellate court agreed with a district court that a prudent investor would not have remained so heavily invested in RIC’s stock as the company’s profit margins had declined by 70%-80% over a five-year period. The court said “no one was better positioned to know of RIC’s prospects and the future of its stock value than Davis and Kole, who cofounded the company and set the share value.”

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The court noted that the defendants did not justify their failure to divest from RIC stock. “These facts are consistent with circumstances under which sister courts would find it imprudent to continue an investment in company stock,” the court opinion said. 

When Peabody rolled over his IRA assets into the plan in 1999, the stock was priced at $2,000 per share. When Peabody’s employment with RIC ended in January 2004, the company gave him several choices for receiving his plan benefits: he could redeem his 835 RIC shares immediately for $215 per share, redeem them in 2005 for $300 per share or redeem them in 2007 for $400 per share. Not satisfied with any of these options, Peabody entered into a loan agreement with RIC in 2004, which agreed to purchase all of his RIC stock for $350 per share in one year. However, when the time came for payment on the loan, RIC informed Peabody that it would be unable to pay.   

In 2005, RIC went out of business.  

The district court ruled that Davis had breached his fiduciary duty by offering only a loan in payment for the RIC stock and further, that this exchange constituted a “prohibited transaction” under ERISA 406(a)(1)(B).  

The 7th Circuit’s opinion is here.

Barclays Introduces Commodities ETNs

The new commodities are part of the iPath Exchange Traded Notes (ETNs) series, linked to Barclays Capital Pure Beta Indices.

The iPath Pure Beta Commodity ETNs were created to give investors access to commodities while seeking to minimize the effects of distortions in the commodity markets, according to Barclays.   

The iPath Pure Beta Commodity ETNs and their exchange tickers are:  

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1.  

   

   

iPath® Pure Beta S&P GSCI®-Weighted ETN (SBV)  

 
   

2.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Broad Commodity ETN (BCM)  

 
   

3.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Crude Oil ETN (OLEM)  

 
   

4.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Agriculture ETN (DIRT)  

 
   

5.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Grains ETN (WEET)  

 
   

6.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Copper ETN (CUPM)  

 
   

7.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Nickel ETN (NINI)  

 
   

8.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Livestock ETN (LSTK)  

 
   

9.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Energy ETN (ONG)  

 
   

10.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Industrial Metals ETN (HEVY)  

 
   

11.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Sugar ETN (SGAR)  

 
   

12.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Softs ETN (GRWN)  

 
   

13.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Precious Metals ETN (BLNG)  

 
   

14.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Lead ETN (LEDD)  

 
   

15.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Cotton ETN (CTNN)  

 
   

16.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Coffee ETN (CAFE)  

 
   

17.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Cocoa ETN (CHOC)  

 
   

18.  

  

iPath® Pure Beta Aluminum ETN (FOIL)  

 

The iPath Seasonal Natural Gas ETN began trading on the NYSE Arca as well.

Barclays Capital Pure Beta Indices were designed to provide a more representative measure of commodity market returns, the company reported. Unlike many commodity indices, which roll their exposure to the corresponding futures contract on a monthly basis in accordance with a pre-determined roll schedule, the Indices may roll into one of a number of futures contracts with varying expiration dates. Each Pure Beta index was constructed around the concept of providing the best proxy for the average price return of the front-year futures contracts for each commodity in the index while avoiding parts of the futures curve that are subject to persistent market distortions.   

Prospectuses can be found on EDGAR, the SEC Web site at http://www.sec.gov, as well as on the product Web site at http://www.iPathETN.com.

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