Securities & Exchange Commission v. Securities Investor Protection Corp. , 758 F.3d 357 ( 2014 )


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  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued October 16, 2013                  Decided July 18, 2014
    No. 12-5286
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
    APPELLANT
    v.
    SECURITIES INVESTOR PROTECTION CORPORATION,
    APPELLEE
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:11-mc-00678)
    John W. Avery, Deputy Solicitor, Securities and Exchange
    Commission, argued the cause for appellant. With him on the
    briefs were Michael A. Conley, Deputy General Counsel, Jacob
    H. Stillman, Solicitor, Tracey A. Hardin, Assistant General
    Counsel, and Michael L. Post, Senior Litigation Counsel.
    Robertson Park, John Heffner, and Mark J. Andrews were
    on the brief for amici curiae Stanford Victims Coalition, et al.
    in support of petitioner.
    Michael W. McConnell argued the cause for appellee. With
    him on the brief were Eugene F. Assaf, Edwin J. U, John C.
    O'Quinn, Elizabeth M. Locke, and Josephine Wang.
    2
    Thomas J. Moloney, David Y. Livshiz, Darryl G. Stein, and
    Sarah E. Edwards were on the brief for amicus curiae Securities
    Industry and Financial Markets Association in support of
    appellee.
    Steven P. Lehotsky, Joshua S. Press, and Noah Levine were
    on the brief for amici curiae former SEC officials and professors
    of law in support of appellee.
    Steuart Thomsen was on the brief for amicus curiae
    Financial Services Institute, Inc. in support of appellee.
    Before: GARLAND, Chief Judge, SRINIVASAN, Circuit
    Judge, and SENTELLE, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SRINIVASAN.
    SRINIVASAN, Circuit Judge: When a brokerage firm faces
    insolvency, the cash and securities it holds for its customers can
    become ensnared in bankruptcy liquidation proceedings or
    otherwise be put at risk. Congress established the Securities
    Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) to protect investors’
    assets held on deposit by financially distressed brokerage firms.
    SIPC can initiate its own liquidation proceedings with the aim
    of securing the return of customers’ property held by the
    brokerage. SIPC, however, possesses authority to undertake
    those protective measures only with respect to member
    brokerage firms. Its authority does not extend to non-member
    institutions.
    In this case, the Securities and Exchange Commission seeks
    a court order compelling SIPC to liquidate a member broker-
    dealer, Stanford Group Company (SGC). SGC played an
    integral role in a multibillion-dollar financial fraud carried out
    through a web of companies. SGC’s financial advisors
    3
    counseled investors to purchase certificates of deposit from an
    Antiguan bank that was part of the same corporate family. The
    Antiguan bank’s CDs eventually became worthless. The
    massive Stanford fraud spawned a variety of legal actions in a
    number of arenas, the bulk of which are not at issue here. This
    case involves the authority of a specific entity—SIPC—to take
    measures within its own statutorily bounded sphere. As to that
    issue, because the Antiguan bank, unlike SGC, was not a SIPC
    member, SIPC had no ability to initiate measures directly
    against the bank to protect the property of investors who
    purchased the bank’s CDs.
    The question in this case is whether SIPC can instead be
    ordered to proceed against SGC—rather than the Antiguan
    bank—to protect the CD investors’ property. It is common
    ground that SIPC can be compelled to do so only if those
    investors qualify as “customers” of SGC within the meaning of
    the governing statute. SIPC concluded that they do not, and the
    district court agreed. The court reasoned that the investors
    obtained the Antiguan bank’s CDs by depositing funds with the
    bank itself, not with SGC, and they thus cannot be considered
    customers of the latter. We agree that the CD investors do not
    qualify as customers of SGC under the operative statutory
    definition. We therefore affirm the denial of the application to
    order SIPC to liquidate SGC.
    I.
    A.
    In 1970, Congress enacted the Securities Investor
    Protection Act (the Act or SIPA) in response to the “failure or
    instability of a significant number of brokerage firms.” Sec.
    Investor Prot. Corp. v. Barbour, 
    421 U.S. 412
    , 415 (1975).
    Before the Act, customers of a brokerage firm that fell into
    4
    insolvency often “found their cash and securities on deposit
    either dissipated or tied up in lengthy bankruptcy proceedings.”
    
    Id. The Act
    created SIPC, a nonprofit, private membership
    corporation established “for the purpose, inter alia, of providing
    financial relief to the customers of failing broker-dealers with
    whom they had left cash or securities on deposit.” 
    Id. at 413;
    see 15 U.S.C. § 78ccc(a)(1). Congress required most registered
    U.S. broker-dealers to become members of SIPC and to pay
    assessments used to fund SIPC’s investor protection measures.
    See 15 U.S.C. §§ 78ccc(a)(2)(A), 78ddd(c).
    The Act requires the SEC and various industry self-
    regulatory organizations to notify SIPC upon learning that a
    SIPC-member firm “is in or is approaching financial difficulty.”
    15 U.S.C. § 78eee(a)(1). SIPC may file an action for a
    protective decree in federal district court after determining,
    among other things, that the member firm “has failed or is in
    danger of failing to meet its obligations to customers.” 15
    U.S.C. § 78eee(a)(3)(A). If the court grants SIPC’s application,
    the court must appoint a trustee and order the proceedings
    removed to bankruptcy court. 15 U.S.C. § 78eee(b)(3), (4).
    The trustee then oversees the liquidation of the member firm,
    returning any customer cash and securities on deposit with the
    broker. 15 U.S.C. § 78fff. If the insolvent broker’s funds prove
    inadequate to pay all customer claims, SIPC itself must cover
    any shortfalls up to statutory limits. 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-3.
    The Act gives the SEC “plenary authority to supervise . . .
    SIPC” in its implementation of the statute. 
    Barbour, 421 U.S. at 417
    (internal quotation marks omitted). For instance, the
    SEC “may disapprove in whole or in part any bylaw or rule
    adopted by the Board of Directors of . . . SIPC, or require the
    adoption of any rule it deems appropriate.” 
    Id. (citing 15
    U.S.C.
    § 78ccc(e)). The SEC may also “participate in any liquidation
    proceeding initiated by . . . SIPC.” 
    Id. Of particular
    relevance
    5
    here, if SIPC declines to initiate the liquidation of a member
    firm, the SEC can apply to the district court for an order
    requiring SIPC to commence liquidation. See 15 U.S.C.
    § 78ggg(b). This case marks the SEC’s first effort to invoke its
    authority under § 78ggg(b) to compel SIPC to initiate
    liquidation proceedings against a member brokerage.
    For the district court to issue such an order, the SEC must
    show that SIPC has failed to “act for the protection” of the
    member firm’s “customers.” 
    Id. The statutory
    term “customer”
    encompasses persons for whom the member firm holds
    securities or cash on deposit. The Act states that the “term
    ‘customer’ of a debtor means any person . . . who has a claim on
    account of securities received, acquired, or held by the debtor
    in the ordinary course of its business as a broker or dealer from
    or for the securities accounts of such person for safekeeping,
    with a view to sale, to cover consummated sales, pursuant to
    purchases, as collateral, security, or for purposes of effecting
    transfer.” 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(A). The Act further explains
    that the term “customer” includes “any person who has
    deposited cash with the debtor for the purpose of purchasing
    securities.” 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(B)(i). The Act thereby
    includes within the definition of “customer” those persons for
    whom the member firm holds cash or securities on deposit for
    the customer’s use. Significantly, however, the Act specifically
    excludes persons who give cash or securities to the member
    firm for the firm’s use as part of the firm’s capital (e.g., as a
    loan to the member firm): “The term ‘customer’ does not
    include any person, to the extent that . . . such person has a
    claim for cash or securities which . . . is part of the capital of the
    debtor.” 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(C).
    6
    B.
    This case arises out of a massive financial fraud perpetrated
    by Robert Allen Stanford. As described by the SEC, Stanford
    conducted a “Ponzi scheme,” selling certificates of deposit to
    investors but then misappropriating billions of dollars in
    deposited funds to repay earlier investors and finance a lavish
    lifestyle. See generally Chadbourne & Parke LLP v. Troice,
    
    134 S. Ct. 1058
    , 1064-65 (2014).
    Stanford employed a complex web of companies he owned
    or controlled to carry out the fraudulent enterprise. Two entities
    are primarily at issue here: (i) Stanford International Bank, Ltd.
    (SIBL), a bank organized under Antiguan law, and (ii) Stanford
    Group Company (SGC), a Houston-based broker-dealer
    registered with the SEC. SIBL sold certificates of deposit,
    “debt assets that promised a fixed rate of return.” 
    Chadbourne, 134 S. Ct. at 1064
    (internal quotation marks omitted). SGC
    employees actively promoted the SIBL CDs to investors. SGC
    was a member of SIPC, while SIBL was not.
    The parties stipulated to certain facts concerning the sales
    of SIBL CDs. To purchase a CD, “an investor had to open an
    account with SIBL. CD investors wrote checks that were
    deposited into SIBL accounts and/or filled out or authorized
    wire transfer requests asking that money be wired to SIBL for
    the purpose of opening their accounts at SIBL and purchasing
    CDs.” J.A. 952. “Most . . . investors either received the
    physical CD certificates or had them held by an authorized
    designee.” J.A. 953. SGC, for its part, did not itself hold CD
    certificates for investors. “To the extent that some SIBL CD
    investors did not receive the physical certificates, the SEC is not
    relying on that fact to support its claims in this proceeding.” 
    Id. CD investors
    “received periodic statements from SIBL
    reflecting the balances in their SIBL accounts.” 
    Id. 7 Disclosure
    statements for SIBL CDs sold in the United
    States stated that “SIBL’s products are not subject to the
    reporting requirements of any jurisdiction, nor are they covered
    by the investor protection or securities insurance laws of any
    jurisdiction such as the U.S. Securities Investor Protection
    Insurance [sic] Corporation.” 
    Id. A version
    of the CD
    marketing brochure reiterated that the CDs were not covered by
    U.S. investor protection laws, and further stated that there was
    “no guarantee investors will receive interest distributions or the
    return of their principal.” 
    Id. Despite those
    written warnings,
    some investors report being told by SGC representatives that the
    SIBL CDs were covered by U.S. investor protection laws,
    including the Act.
    Stanford’s extensive financial fraud was met with a variety
    of legal responses. In 2009, the SEC filed a civil enforcement
    action in federal district court against Stanford, SGC, SIBL, and
    others. The court appointed a receiver for SGC and other
    entities. The receiver determined that SIBL CDs worth
    approximately $7.2 billion were outstanding worldwide as of
    February 2009. The SEC ultimately prevailed, and the court
    imposed a civil penalty of $6 billion. See Chadbourne, 134 S.
    Ct. at 1064-65. Stanford himself was convicted in 2012 of
    conspiracy, wire fraud, mail fraud, obstruction of justice, and
    money laundering. He was sentenced to 110 years of
    imprisonment and ordered to forfeit approximately $6 billion.
    
    Id. at 1064,
    1070. Antiguan authorities separately initiated
    proceedings to liquidate SIBL and process claims against the
    bank. SIBL CD investors also brought class action lawsuits
    against law firms, investment advisors, and other entities that
    allegedly assisted Stanford in perpetrating the fraud. See
    
    Chadbourne, 134 S. Ct. at 1062
    , 1065 (finding that four such
    class action suits were not barred by federal securities statutes
    and could proceed).
    8
    C.
    This case involves the prospect of a distinct response to the
    Stanford fraud: an action by SIPC to liquidate SGC. In August
    2009, the court-appointed receiver in the SEC’s civil
    enforcement action asked SIPC to determine whether it would
    liquidate SGC in order to protect the assets of investors who had
    purchased SIBL CDs at the suggestion of SGC employees.
    SIPC responded that it found no basis under the Act to initiate
    a liquidation of SGC. In SIPC’s view, the CD investors were
    not SGC “customers” within the meaning of the Act, a
    precondition to liquidation of SGC. SIPC explained that the
    Act “protects the ‘custody’ function that brokerage firms
    perform for customers.” J.A. 158. Here, SIPC concluded, the
    circumstances fell outside the Act’s custody function because
    SGC itself never held investors’ cash or securities in connection
    with their purchase of the CDs. Rather, “cash for the purpose
    of purchasing CDs . . . was sent to SIBL, which is precisely
    what the customer intended.” J.A. 160. As for the “physical
    CDs,” they presumably “were issued to, and delivered to” the
    investors, and SGC did not “maintain[] possession or control of
    the CDs.” J.A. 159-60. In short, “SGC is not, nor should it be,
    holding anything for . . . a customer.” J.A. 160. “The fact that
    the security has gone down in value, even because of a fraud in
    which SGC is complicit,” SIPC added, “does not change that
    result.” J.A. 160. Because the CD investors failed to qualify as
    “customers” of SGC within the meaning of the Act, SIPC
    concluded, the investors were ineligible for liquidation
    protection.
    Two years later, the SEC reached the opposite conclusion.
    In June 2011, the Commission issued a formal analysis stating
    that investors who had purchased SIBL CDs at the urging of
    SGC employees qualified as SGC “customers” under the Act.
    Citing evidence that Stanford had “structured the various
    9
    entities in his financial empire . . . for the principal, if not sole,
    purpose of carrying out a single fraudulent Ponzi scheme,” the
    Commission determined that the “separate existence” of SIBL
    and SGC “should be disregarded.” J.A. 242. The Commission
    also cited evidence that investors might have believed that they
    were depositing cash with SGC when they purchased their SIBL
    CDs, and that some SIBL CD deposits were diverted to pay
    SGC’s expenses. “Based on the totality of the facts and
    circumstances,” the SEC concluded, “investors with brokerage
    accounts at SGC who purchased SIBL CDs through SGC should
    be deemed to have deposited cash with SGC for purposes of
    SIPA coverage.” J.A. 244. SIPC remained unpersuaded by the
    SEC’s analysis, however, and declined to initiate a liquidation
    proceeding.
    The SEC then filed an application with the district court
    under 15 U.S.C. § 78ggg(b), seeking an order compelling SIPC
    to commence liquidation proceedings for SGC. The court
    addressed several preliminary questions in a February 2012
    decision. See SEC v. Sec. Investor Prot. Corp., 
    842 F. Supp. 2d 321
    (D.D.C. 2012). The court held that § 78ggg(b) required the
    court to evaluate de novo whether there were SGC “customers”
    in need of protection, rather than simply accepting the SEC’s
    views without judicial review. 
    Id. at 328-29.
    The court further
    held that § 78ggg(b) mandated a “summary proceeding,” not the
    “full, formal procedures of the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure.” 
    Id. at 327.
    The court ordered supplemental
    briefing on the appropriate “procedures, burdens, and
    discovery” in the circumstances. 
    Id. at 329.
    In a second opinion, the district court denied the SEC’s
    application on the merits. See SEC v. Sec. Investor Prot. Corp.,
    
    872 F. Supp. 2d 1
    (D.D.C. 2012). The court adopted SIPC’s
    view that SIBL CD investors fail to qualify as SGC “customers”
    within the meaning of the statute because CD investors never
    10
    directly deposited funds or securities with SGC itself. 
    Id. at 8.
    The court distinguished cases in which a broker had
    misappropriated funds without completing the promised
    securities purchase. Here, by contrast, the court reasoned, the
    “SIBL CDs were in fact purchased and did in fact exist for the
    SGC clients.” 
    Id. at 11.
    The court also adopted SIPC’s view
    that a preponderance-of-the-evidence standard applies in
    § 78ggg(b) proceedings, 
    id. at 5,
    but it concluded that the
    evidentiary standard ultimately did not matter because the case
    turned on “uncontested facts and an interpretation of law,” 
    id. at 12.
    II.
    The SEC appeals the denial of its application under
    § 78ggg(b) to order SIPC to commence liquidation of SGC.
    That provision comes into play only if SIPC has failed to “act
    for the protection of [SGC] customers.” 15 U.S.C. § 78ggg(b)
    (emphasis added); see also 15 U.S.C. § 78eee(a)(3)(A)
    (authorizing SIPC to file an application to liquidate only if it
    determines that the member broker “has failed or is in danger of
    failing to meet its obligations to customers” (emphasis added)).
    The central issue in this appeal is whether investors who
    purchased SIBL CDs at the suggestion of SGC employees
    qualify as SGC “customers” under the Act.
    Because the district court rested its decision on uncontested
    facts and an interpretation of law, we review that decision de
    novo. See In re New Times Sec. Servs., Inc. (New Times I), 
    371 F.3d 68
    , 75 (2d Cir. 2004); Gordon v. Holder, 
    632 F.3d 722
    ,
    724 (D.C. Cir. 2011). We do not reach the question of the
    appropriate evidentiary burden, as we resolve the case based on
    the stipulated facts. We conclude, in agreement with the district
    court, that SIBL CD investors are not SGC “customers” within
    the meaning of the Act.
    11
    A.
    The “principal purpose of SIPA is to protect investors
    against financial losses arising from the insolvency of their
    brokers.” In re New Times Sec. Servs., Inc. (New Times II), 
    463 F.3d 125
    , 127 (2d Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Before SIPA, when a brokerage firm failed, customer funds and
    securities held on deposit with the brokerage often became
    depleted or enmeshed in bankruptcy proceedings. See 
    Barbour, 421 U.S. at 415
    . The Act addresses that issue by protecting the
    custody function of brokers, i.e., by “protect[ing] customer
    interests in securities and cash left with broker-dealers.” Louis
    Loss & Joel Seligman, Securities Regulation § 8.B.5.A, at 3290
    (3d ed. 2003) (citing legislative history). SIPA thus aims “to
    protect securities investors against losses resulting from the
    failure of an insolvent or otherwise failed broker-dealer to
    properly perform its role as the custodian of customer cash and
    securities.” 1 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 12.01, at 12-4 (16th ed.
    2014).
    The Act generally affords no protection against other types
    of losses, such as those stemming from a decline in investment
    value. That is so even if a broker fraudulently induced the
    losing investment in the first place. Consequently, “if a broker
    used fraudulent means to convince a customer to purchase a
    stock and the customer left that stock with the broker, who
    subsequently became insolvent, SIPC would be required by
    SIPA only to return the stock to the customer.” Sec. Investor
    Prot. Corp. v. Vigman, 
    803 F.2d 1513
    , 1517 n.1 (9th Cir. 1986).
    In that fashion, the statute “‘works to expose the customer to the
    same risks and rewards that would be enjoyed had there been no
    liquidation.’” New Times 
    II, 463 F.3d at 128
    (quoting 6 Collier
    on Bankruptcy ¶ 741.06[6] (15th ed. rev.)). Investors who
    suffer losses in investment value resulting from fraud may have
    claims under other provisions of the securities laws. See
    12
    
    Vigman, 803 F.2d at 1517
    n.1. SIPA, however, is centrally
    addressed to a broker’s custody function.
    SIPA’s definition of “customer” embodies the Act’s focus
    on a broker’s role as custodian of its customers’ property. SIPA
    defines “customer” as
    any person . . . who has a claim on account of
    securities received, acquired, or held by the debtor in
    the ordinary course of its business as a broker or
    dealer from or for the securities accounts of such
    person for safekeeping, with a view to sale, to cover
    consummated sales, pursuant to purchases, as
    collateral, security, or for purposes of effecting
    transfer.
    15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(A). The Act further provides that a
    “customer” includes “any person who has deposited cash with
    the debtor for the purpose of purchasing securities.” 15 U.S.C.
    § 78lll(2)(B)(i). The “‘critical aspect of the “customer”
    definition is the entrustment of cash or securities to the broker-
    dealer for the purposes of trading securities.’” In re Bernard L.
    Madoff Inv. Sec. LLC, 
    654 F.3d 229
    , 236 (2d Cir. 2011)
    (emphasis omitted) (quoting Appleton v. First Nat’l Bank of
    Ohio, 
    62 F.3d 791
    , 801 (6th Cir. 1995)); see In re Brentwood
    Sec., Inc., 
    925 F.2d 325
    , 327 (9th Cir. 1991) (“[The ‘customer’]
    definition embodies a common-sense concept: An investor is
    entitled to compensation from the SIPC only if he has entrusted
    cash or securities to a broker-dealer who becomes insolvent.”).
    To come within the fold of SIPA’s protections, an investor thus
    ordinarily must demonstrate both that the broker “actually . . .
    received, acquired or held the claimant’s property, and that the
    transaction giving rise to the claim . . . contain[ed] the indicia of
    a fiduciary relationship” between the investor and the broker. 1
    Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 12.12[2], at 12-50. An investor’s
    13
    “customer” status is evaluated on an asset-by-asset basis and
    may change over time. See New Times 
    II, 463 F.3d at 130
    .
    Here, insofar as the analysis focuses on the entity that in
    fact held custody over the property of the SIBL CD investors,
    the investors fail to qualify as “customers” of SGC under the
    statutory definition. That is because SGC never “received,
    acquired, or held” the investors’ cash or securities. 15 U.S.C.
    § 78lll(2)(A); see 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(B)(i). With regard to the
    investors’ cash, it is undisputed that investors at no time
    deposited funds with SGC to purchase the SIBL CDs. The
    funds instead went to SIBL. Under the stipulated facts,
    investors either “wrote checks that were deposited into SIBL
    accounts and/or filled out or authorized wire transfer requests
    asking that money be wired to SIBL for the purpose of opening
    their accounts at SIBL and purchasing CDs.” J.A. 952. With
    respect to the investors’ securities, the SEC makes no contention
    that SGC held the CD certificates for investors. Rather, the
    stipulated facts provide that most “investors either received the
    physical CD certificates or had them held by an authorized
    designee.” J.A. 953. And “[t]o the extent that some SIBL CD
    investors did not receive the physical certificates, the SEC is not
    relying on that fact to support its claims in this proceeding.” 
    Id. Because SGC
    had no custody over the investors’ cash or
    securities, the investors do not qualify as SGC “customers”
    under the ordinary operation of the statutory definition.
    B.
    The Commission’s principal response is that we should
    disregard the legal separateness of SGC and SIBL and treat them
    as a combined entity. According to the Commission, the
    companies operated in a highly interconnected fashion in
    furtherance of the fraudulent Ponzi scheme, eschewing corporate
    formalities. As a result, the Commission contends, investors
    14
    who deposited funds with SIBL for the purchase of CDs in
    effect deposited funds with SGC. In the Commission’s view,
    the investors thus qualify as “customers” of a SIPC-member
    firm for purposes of triggering the Act’s protections. We
    conclude, however, that even if SGC and SIBL were treated as
    a combined entity, investors still would not qualify as
    “customers” of a SIPC-member firm.
    The Commission grounds its argument for disregarding the
    corporate separateness of SIBL and SGC in the doctrine of
    “substantive consolidation,” an equitable doctrine typically
    applied in bankruptcy proceedings. “In general, substantive
    consolidation results in the combination of the assets of [two]
    debtors into a single pool from which the claims of creditors of
    both debtors are satisfied ratably.” 2 Collier on Bankruptcy
    ¶ 105.09[3], at 105-110–11; see In re Auto-Train Corp., 
    810 F.2d 270
    , 276 (D.C. Cir. 1987). Courts have employed a
    “variety” of tests when assessing whether to grant substantive
    consolidation. 2 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 105.09[2][a], at 105-
    96; e.g., In re Owens Corning, 
    419 F.3d 195
    , 210-11 (3d Cir.
    2005). With regard to the Stanford companies, the court
    overseeing the receivership in connection with the SEC’s civil
    enforcement action concluded that substantive consolidation was
    warranted.
    The doctrine of substantive consolidation has been applied
    in SIPA liquidations. In New Times I, for instance, the
    bankruptcy court substantively consolidated a SIPC-member
    broker undergoing liquidation with a related, non-broker 
    entity. 371 F.3d at 73
    . The assets of the related entity were brought
    into the SIPC member’s liquidation estate, enlarging the
    available pool for customer recovery. 
    Id. Investors with
    cash
    on deposit with the non-broker entity were treated as
    “customers” in the liquidation, even though the member broker
    itself never held those investors’ funds. 
    Id. Here, the
    SEC
    15
    contends, substantive consolidation of SIBL and SGC would
    similarly mean that investors who deposited funds with a non-
    SIPC member (SIBL) would be treated as “customers” of a
    SIPC member (SGC) for purposes of invoking the Act’s
    protections.
    Even if we were to consolidate, however, SIBL CD
    investors would not be “customers” of a SIPC-member entity
    under the statutory definition. The Act specifically excludes
    from “customer” status “any person, to the extent that . . . such
    person has a claim for cash or securities which by contract,
    agreement, or understanding, or by operation of law, is part of
    the capital of the debtor.” 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(C), (C)(ii)
    (emphasis added). We, like other courts, understand that
    provision to establish that “a claimant cannot qualify for
    customer status under SIPA to the extent that he or she is a
    lender rather than an investor.” 1 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶
    12.12[4][a], at 12-56 (collecting cases). As the Eleventh Circuit
    has explained, “[c]ash that is simply lent to the brokerage cannot
    form the basis of a SIPA customer claim because the statute’s
    definition of ‘customer’ excludes individuals whose claims are
    for ‘cash . . . which . . . is part of the capital of the debtor.’” In
    re Old Naples Sec., Inc., 
    223 F.3d 1296
    , 1304 n.18 (11th Cir.
    2000) (ellipses in original) (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(B)
    (2000), now codified at 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) (2012)). In
    other words, “individuals must have a fiduciary relationship,
    rather than a creditor-debtor arrangement, with their brokerage
    to state a claim under SIPA.” Id.; accord In re Primeline Sec.
    Corp., 
    295 F.3d 1100
    , 1110 (10th Cir. 2002). The upshot is that
    a “person is excluded from eligibility for customer protection to
    the extent that person invests in the SIPA debtor by making a
    loan to the debtor, rather than investing through the SIPA debtor
    in the securities market as part of the debtor’s ordinary course of
    business as a broker-dealer.” 1 Collier on Bankruptcy
    ¶ 12.12[4][a], at 12-56–57 (emphasis added).
    16
    Here, investors who purchased SIBL CDs lent funds to
    SIBL that became part of SIBL’s capital: Those investors gave
    cash to SIBL in exchange for a promise to be repaid with a fixed
    rate of return. See 
    Chadbourne, 134 S. Ct. at 1064
    (SIBL CDs
    “were debt assets that promised a fixed rate of return”) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). The investors invested “in,” not
    “through,” SIBL. 1 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 12.12[4][a], at
    12-56. The basic nature of those investors’ relationship with the
    recipient of their cash would not change if the recipient were
    deemed to be a consolidated entity rather than SIBL alone.
    Under a consolidated view, investors who purchased SIBL CDs
    lent money to the consolidated SIBL/SGC entity, forming a
    “creditor-debtor arrangement.” Old 
    Naples, 223 F.3d at 1304
    n.18. The CD proceeds thus became part of the consolidated
    entity’s “capital,” triggering the statutory exclusion from
    “customer” status for lenders. 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(2)(C)(ii).
    The circumstances are directly analogous to those in New
    Times II. In that case, SIPC had liquidated a member brokerage
    firm, New Times Securities Services, Inc. (New Times), whose
    principal had defrauded investors. See New Times 
    II, 463 F.3d at 126-27
    ; New Times 
    I, 371 F.3d at 71-72
    . A related, non-
    SIPC-member entity, New Age Financial Services, Inc. (New
    Age), was brought into the liquidation through substantive
    consolidation. See New Times 
    I, 371 F.3d at 73
    . The issue in
    New Times II was whether individuals who had been defrauded
    into investing in “promissory notes” issued by New Times and
    New Age could recover as “customers” in the liquidation. See
    New Times 
    II, 463 F.3d at 126-27
    . The Second Circuit held that
    they could not. 
    Id. at 127-30.
    The court explained that the Act’s
    “customer” definition “distinguishes between (i) claimants
    (protected as customers) who are engaged through brokers in
    trading activities in the securities markets and (ii) those
    (unprotected) claimants who are relying on the ability of a
    business enterprise to repay a loan.” 
    Id. at 128
    (citing 15 U.S.C.
    17
    § 78lll(2)(C)(ii)). The New Times and New Age promissory
    notes were “just the type of debt instruments whose possession
    brings claimants within the category of unprotected lenders,”
    even under a consolidated view. 
    Id. at 129.
    Here, the SIBL CDs
    likewise are “just the type of debt instruments whose possession
    brings claimants within the category of unprotected lenders.”
    
    Id. Section 78lll(2)(C)(ii)
    therefore excludes SIBL CD holders
    from “customer” status, even assuming SGC and SIBL should
    be substantively consolidated.
    The SEC does not dispute that funds loaned to an entity
    generally become part of the entity’s “capital” within the
    meaning of § 78lll(2)(C)(ii). The SEC instead contends that the
    § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) exclusion is “inapplicable where, as here, the
    claimants did not intend to loan money to the broker-dealer.”
    Pet’r’s Br. 49-50 n.20. According to the SEC, because investors
    intended to loan money to SIBL—not SGC—the CD proceeds
    could not become part of SGC’s “capital” even if they became
    part of SIBL’s. But if SGC and SIBL are consolidated, investors
    did intend to loan money to the consolidated entity. That
    intention puts this case in alignment with New Times II.
    That intention also sets this case materially apart from the
    decisions on which the SEC relies, Primeline, 
    295 F.3d 1100
    ,
    Old Naples, 
    223 F.3d 1296
    , and In re C.J. Wright & Co. Inc.,
    
    162 B.R. 597
    (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 1993). In each of those cases,
    the investors had no intention to loan their funds to any affiliated
    entity that might be considered consolidated with the SIPC-
    member firm. Instead, the individuals sought to invest cash to
    obtain debt instruments issued by an unrelated third party. See
    
    Primeline, 295 F.3d at 1104
    , 1110; Old 
    Naples, 223 F.3d at 1300-01
    , 1304-05; C.J. 
    Wright, 162 B.R. at 606
    . The investors
    sought to invest “through” the consolidated entity, not “in” the
    consolidated entity. 1 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 12.12[4][a], at
    12-56. The investors’ funds therefore could not be considered
    18
    “part of the capital” of any consolidated entity for purposes of
    § 78lll(2)(C)(ii): The consolidated entity would hold the funds,
    in a strictly custodial capacity, for investment in a security
    issued by a third party. The opposite is true here: The
    consolidated entity—SIBL and SGC—held the funds in a
    non-custodial capacity, i.e., as part of its capital.
    Indeed, the § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) exclusion specifically
    encompasses deposits that become “part of the capital” of a
    SIPC-member firm “by operation of law.” It is undisputed that
    SIBL CD proceeds were “part of the capital” of SIBL. Under the
    SEC’s view, those proceeds effectively also became part of SGC
    under the legal doctrine of substantive consolidation. But if so,
    the “capital” of SIBL would become “part of the capital” of
    SGC “by operation of law,” placing the CD proceeds squarely
    within the ambit of § 78lll(2)(C)(ii). Because we believe the
    SEC’s contrary understanding of the Act’s definition of
    “customer” cannot be squared with the § 78lll(2)(C)(ii)
    exclusion, we need not address whether, as the SEC contends,
    its formal analysis letter should be accorded Chevron deference.
    The SEC makes one additional argument in contending that
    the § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) exclusion should not apply here. The
    agency asserts—for the first time in its reply brief, and with no
    further elaboration—that “funds given to a consolidated entity
    in exchange for SIBL CDs should not become part of that
    entity’s capital because the SIBL CDs were merely participatory
    interests in a Ponzi scheme.” Pet’r’s Reply Br. 16. The SEC
    made no such contention in its formal analysis letter, and we
    therefore need not consider whether the argument would amount
    to a reasonable construction of the statute for Chevron purposes.
    Considering the argument without any overlay of deference, we
    find it unpersuasive. The SEC offers no explanation why
    investment proceeds that would otherwise become part of the
    issuing entity’s “capital” lose that characteristic if the
    19
    investment is induced by fraud as part of a Ponzi scheme. Nor
    are we aware of any legal support for that proposition. To the
    contrary, any such conclusion would be inconsistent with New
    Times II. There, the Second Circuit held that purchasers of
    promissory notes from a consolidated entity were “unprotected
    lenders” to the entity—rather than “customers” of the
    entity—even though the investment was “fraudulently 
    induced.” 463 F.3d at 129
    ; see 
    id. at 126
    (investors were “issued
    fraudulent promissory notes”). There is no reason to reach a
    different conclusion here.
    C.
    The SEC raises a fallback argument in the event we reject
    its effort to treat SGC and SIBL as one consolidated entity.
    According to the SEC, regardless of whether the companies are
    consolidated, investors who gave cash to SIBL for CDs should
    be deemed to have deposited cash with SGC under the approach
    set forth in Old Naples and Primeline. Those decisions,
    however, do not support concluding that the CD investors may
    be considered “customers” of SGC. The decisions instead
    reinforce our conclusion that the capital exclusion in
    § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) precludes finding the Act’s “customer”
    definition satisfied here.
    In Old Naples, the Eleventh Circuit considered another
    financial fraud involving both a SIPC-member broker and a non-
    SIPC-member 
    entity. 223 F.3d at 1299-1300
    . Investors
    received instructions to send money to both entities with the
    understanding that the broker would then purchase bonds in the
    investors’ names. 
    Id. at 1301.
    Instead of buying the bonds, the
    owner of the entities misappropriated investor funds for his
    personal use and for payment of the brokerage firm’s expenses.
    
    Id. at 1300.
    The Eleventh Circuit held that investors who had
    sent money to the non-SIPC-member entity could recover in the
    20
    liquidation as “customers” even though they had never deposited
    funds with the SIPC-member broker itself. 
    Id. at 1302-06.
    The
    court found that customer status “does not . . . depend simply on
    to whom the claimant handed her cash or made her check
    payable.” 
    Id. at 1302.
    Instead, “[i]f an investor intended to have
    the brokerage purchase securities on her behalf and reasonably
    followed the broker’s instructions regarding payment, she can be
    considered a ‘customer’ under SIPA if the brokerage or its
    agents then misappropriate the funds.” 
    Id. at 1303.
    Investors
    who had sent funds to the non-SIPC-member entity qualified as
    “customers” under the Act because they “had no reason to know
    that they were not dealing with” the SIPC-member broker and
    because the broker had “acquired control over all of” the
    deposited funds. 
    Id. at 1303-04
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    The Tenth Circuit’s decision in Primeline is to the same
    effect. There, an employee of a SIPC-member firm operated a
    Ponzi scheme involving the sale to investors of “debentures in
    fictitious 
    corporations.” 295 F.3d at 1104
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted). At the employee’s direction, investors made
    out checks to third-party accounts—not to the brokerage firm
    itself—from which the employee misappropriated investor
    funds. 
    Id. Citing Old
    Naples, the Tenth Circuit reiterated the
    principle that, “[i]f a claimant intended to have the brokerage
    purchase securities on the claimant’s behalf and reasonably
    followed the broker’s instructions regarding payment, the
    claimant is a ‘customer’ under SIPA even if the brokerage or its
    agents misappropriate the funds.” 
    Id. at 1107.
    The court
    affirmed the bankruptcy court’s finding that investors had
    “reasonably thought” that the employee was “acting as an agent
    of [the broker] when he directed them to make out their checks
    to one of his third-party companies.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). As a result, the court held, those investors were
    entitled to recover as “customers” in the liquidation. 
    Id. at 1109.
                                    21
    Here, the SEC points to facts that “could have led SGC
    account holders who purchased SIBL CDs through SGC to
    believe they were depositing cash with SGC for the purpose of
    purchasing the CDs,” J.A. 243—even though, pursuant to the
    stipulated facts, those investors in fact sent their funds directly
    to SIBL. The SEC notes that certain SIBL CD investors “had
    accounts at SGC, dealt solely with SGC representatives, and
    paid for their CDs in accordance with SGC’s instructions.”
    Pet’r’s Br. 52. The SEC highlights investor affidavits reporting
    that SGC employees blurred the lines between SGC and SIBL,
    “frequently refer[ring] simply to ‘Stanford’ without clearly
    distinguishing between” the two entities. J.A. 243. In addition,
    the SEC observes, certain customers “made checks for the
    purchase of the CDs payable to ‘Stanford,’” possibly indicating
    “investor confusion regarding the entity with which they were
    depositing money.” J.A. 244. Those considerations, in the
    SEC’s view, bring this case within the fold of Old Naples and
    Primeline for investors who intended to deposit funds with SGC
    and reasonably believed they were doing so. As in those cases,
    the SEC contends, the fact that the CD investors in fact
    deposited cash with SIBL should not stand in the way of
    deeming them to have deposited cash with SGC for purposes of
    treating them as protected “customers.” SIPC disagrees,
    contending, for example, that investors could not reasonably
    have believed they were depositing funds with SGC in light of
    CD disclosure statements clearly stating that the CDs were
    issued by a non-SIPC member.
    We need not resolve that disagreement. Even if certain
    SIBL CD investors reasonably believed that they had deposited
    cash with SGC, Old Naples and Primeline still would fail to
    support concluding that those investors qualify as “customers”
    under the Act’s definition. The SEC’s argument disregards a
    subsequent inquiry undertaken in both Old Naples and
    Primeline: whether the investors intended to deposit their funds
    22
    as a loan so as to trigger the § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) exclusion for funds
    that become part of the recipient’s “capital.” In Old Naples,
    SIPC argued that the investors failed to qualify as “customers”
    because they intended to give a loan to the recipient rather than
    to deposit cash for investment on their behalf. 
    See 223 F.3d at 1304
    . The court rejected that argument, holding that the
    investors intended the broker to use the funds to invest in bonds
    issued by a third party. 
    Id. at 1304-05.
    In Primeline, similarly,
    SIPC argued that the investors “were lenders rather than
    investors” and thus fell outside the “customer” definition by
    virtue of the § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) 
    exclusion. 295 F.3d at 1110
    . The
    court disagreed, affirming the bankruptcy court’s finding that
    the investors “intended to invest, not loan, the funds each
    entrusted to [the broker].” 
    Id. This case
    stands on a markedly different footing. Here, as
    explained, the investors who purchased SIBL CDs acted as
    lenders. Even assuming those investors reasonably believed
    SIBL and SGC were part of a unified Stanford entity, they
    deposited their cash with that entity as lenders: in exchange for
    a promise of repayment in the form of a CD. Their funds thus
    became part of the Stanford entity’s “capital” for purposes of the
    § 78lll(2)(C)(ii) exclusion. Accordingly, even if we adhere to
    the approach set forth in Old Naples and Primeline—as the SEC
    requests we do—that approach compels concluding that the
    investors in SIBL CDs fail to qualify as “customers” under the
    Act.
    * * * * *
    In declining to grant the SEC’s requested relief, the district
    court expressed that it was “truly sympathetic to the plight of the
    SGC clients who purchased the SIBL CDs and now find
    themselves searching desperately for 
    relief.” 872 F. Supp. 2d at 12
    . We fully agree. But we also agree with the district court’s
    23
    conclusion that SIBL CD investors were not SGC “customers”
    under the Act. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of
    the SEC’s application for an order compelling SIPC to
    commence liquidation of SGC.
    So ordered.