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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Zaki & Ors v Credit Suisse (UK) Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 583 (03 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/583.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 583 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
(MR JUSTICE TEARE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
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SOHEIR AHMED ZAKI SHAHIRA MAGDY ZEID BAHIRA MAGDY ZEID (suing on their own behalf and on behalf of MOHAMED MAGDY ZEID as his successors in title) |
Applicants/ Claimants |
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- and - |
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CREDIT SUISSE (UK) LIMITED |
Respondent/ Defendent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Adrian Beltrami QC & Mr William Edwards (instructed by Messrs Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson:
"3. Considerable forensic effort was expended by the Claimants in showing that certain aspects of CSUK's record keeping and the manner in which CSUK had classified Mr. Zeid and the Claimants pursuant to COB 4 and COBS 3 were unsatisfactory. Aspects of CSUK's record keeping and classification of the Claimants did not inspire confidence that CSUK gave proper attention to its statutory duties but they are not in truth the foundation of the claim. The foundation of the claim lay in CSUK's duty under COB 5 and COBS 9 to ensure, where it makes a personal recommendation concerning an investment, that its advice is suitable for the client. Reliance was also placed on a duty of CSUK under COB 7.9 not to arrange for the loan of money in connection with a proposed investment unless certain conditions were satisfied, in particular that the arrangements for the loan and the amount concerned were suitable for the type of investment proposed. There is no such duty under COBS but instead there is guidance (not a rule) that when considering the suitability of an investment which is linked to a loan the suitability of the overall transaction should be taken into account.
4. There was a factual dispute between the parties as to whether CSUK made a personal recommendation to Mr. Zeid to buy the structured products in question. If CSUK made such a recommendation then CSUK had a duty to ensure that its advice was suitable for Mr. Zeid pursuant to COB 5 and COBS 9. If no such recommendation had been made then no such duty arose. There was also a factual dispute as to whether CSUK (as opposed to another Credit Suisse entity) arranged for a loan. If it did, then it had a duty only to do so under COB 7.9 in certain circumstances. If it did not, then no such duty arose."
"133. ... In May/June 2008, at a time of great market volatility, Mr. Zeid made very large investments, involving substantial leveraging. He did so, notwithstanding that in January-April 2008 there had almost been a margin call and that he had promised to provide additional collateral. To invest in products linked to equity markets in May/June 2008 one had to have had a serious appetite for investing and to be bullish, brave and confident. Mr. Zeid was, it seems to me, all of those and was determined to get an enhanced return on his money. Mr. Zaki described Mr. Zeid as having an 'appetite for continuing to purchase…….He was a pro, he was bullish about the market and he wanted to take advantage.' In deciding to purchase notes 8-10 it is more likely than not that Mr. Zeid relied on his own judgment and not on advice from Mr. Zaki. If Mr. Zeid had not received advice on the merits from Mr. Zaki he would still have bought the notes and suffered loss when they were liquidated. Put another way, if Mr. Zaki had advised that notes 8-10 were unsuitable, it is more probable than not that Mr. Zeid would still have purchased them and suffered loss when they were liquidated.
"121. ... Pursuant to COB 7.9 a firm which lends money or arranges for another person to do so must not do so unless, inter alia, it has made and recorded an assessment of the customer's financial standing and has taken reasonable steps to ensure that the arrangements for the loan and the amount concerned are suitable for the type of investment which the customer is likely to enter into. Under COBS 9.3.4 guidance was given that, when considering the suitability of a recommendation, which is linked to a loan, the firm should take into account the overall suitability of the overall transaction."
The judge dismissed that part of the claim for reasons which he set out at paragraph 123:
"123. In circumstances where an existing credit facility is drawn down I do not consider that COB 7.9 imposes an additional duty to consider the suitability of drawing down the loan. COB 7.9 appears to me to be dealing with the suitability of a loan or credit facility at an earlier stage, namely, when it is granted, not when it is drawn down. Thus the customer is required to give his 'prior written consent to both the maximum amount of the loan or credit and the amount or basis of any interest or fees.' The customer will surely do that when the loan or facility is granted, not when it is drawn down. Before granting the facility the firm must have taken reasonable steps to ensure that the arrangement for the loan or credit and the amount concerned are suitable 'for the type of investment agreed proposed or which the private customer is likely to enter into.' There was no suggestion in the present case that when the credit facility of US$100m. was arranged by CSFB in January 2005 or when CSUK arranged the Framework Credit Limit in September 2006 that such credit was unsuitable for Mr. Zeid. What was suggested was that when that credit was drawn down to purchase structured credit products, and in particular, the 10 which form the subject matter of this claim, those purchases, taking into account the substantial leverage, were unsuitable for him. In my judgment leverage was a relevant matter to take into account when assessing suitability, but that duty arose pursuant to COB 5.2.5 and COBS 9.2.1."
"2.3 ...
(1) failed to have in place adequate systems and controls in respect of the determination of Customers' attitudes to risk. ...
(2) failed to take reasonable care to adequately evidence that the SCARPs it recommended to its Customers were suitable, given the assets and investments held by those customers at the time. ...
(3) failed to have in place adequate systems and controls surrounding the recommendation of leverage to Customers. ...
(4) failed to have in place adequate systems and controls surrounding levels of issuer and investment concentration within Customers' portfolios. ...
(5) did not effectively monitor its staff to ensure that they took reasonable care to ensure the suitability of their advice. ..."
The FSA concluded at paragraph 2.4 that as a result of those failings Credit Suisse's customers were exposed to an unacceptable risk of being sold a SCARP which was unsuitable for them. The notice also stated:
"2.4 ... The FSA has not proceeded to examine whether any individual advised sales were in fact unsuitable."
"99. CSUK's approach to obtaining and recording information about Mr. Zeid therefore appears to have lacked the rigour and care which COB and COBS required. But, although detailed submissions were made about that approach and, in particular, as to the manner in which CSUK and its predecessor had classified Mr. Zeid, those submissions did not, in my judgment, ultimately assist the Claimants' case on suitability. It was accepted by CSUK that Mr. Zeid and his family had to be regarded as private clients. Mr. Zaki regarded Mr. Zeid as an "expert" private client but I am not persuaded that he was wrong to do so. Mr. Zeid plainly had a high level of interest in the market, formed views about the market and had confidence in his own views. Mr. Zaki could and should have made more enquiries as to Mr. Zeid's net worth but no evidence was adduced to suggest that Mr. Zeid could not bear the financial risks to which he was exposed by trading in CDIs. The important point, it seems to me, is whether the recommendations made by Mr. Zaki were suitable for Mr. Zeid. If they were not suitable then it adds nothing to enquire whether Mr. Zaki's approach to obtaining and recording information and classifying the Claimants lacked the required rigour and care. If they were suitable, then again it cannot matter whether his approach to obtaining and recording information and classification was adequate or not. Of course, if the recommendations were not suitable for Mr. Zeid the extent to which Mr. Zaki failed to exercise the required degree of rigour and care in obtaining information about Mr. Zeid may, depending upon the reasons why the recommendations were unsuitable, be relevant when assessing whether Mr. Zaki, and hence CSUK, took reasonable steps to ensure that the recommendations were suitable. In that sense regulatory failures in the information gathering exercise may evidence a breach of the duty to take reasonable steps to ensure that the recommendations were suitable but they do not, it seems to me, assist in showing that the recommendations were not suitable."
This is an important passage. What is also an important fact is that the claimants have not sought to suggest that the judge erred in principle in adopting that approach. There is no ground of appeal asserting that this was a misdirection by the judge. In those circumstances it is perhaps unnecessary to add (but I nevertheless do add) that the judge's approach was logically entirely correct.
"12. Mr. Zaki gave evidence over three days. He left Credit Suisse at the end of 2008 and so did not appear to have a direct interest in the result of this litigation. At first he was keen to know where the questions were going and therefore appeared to be guarded in his answers. Some of his answers were also long and at times difficult to follow. From time to time he disagreed with what had been said in the contemporaneous documents. However, as time went on he engaged with the cross-examiner in a manner which appeared to be that of an honest witness, keen to give his evidence of what actually happened between himself and Mr. Zeid. Obviously, where the events in question took place between 2003 and 2008, his evidence must be tested against the contemporaneous (or almost contemporaneous) documents which are likely to be a better guide to what happened than his recollection in 2011. But where there are no documents to test his recollection I considered that his evidence, where it was clear, was worthy of belief unless there were some particular reason for regarding it as improbable. His assistant Rabih Khodari, who also gave evidence, appeared to me to be a witness who was seeking to tell the truth. He also had the merit of speaking with great clarity."
"(3) Credit Suisse failed to have in place adequate systems and controls surrounding the recommendation of leverage to Customers. Where leverage was used to fund transactions there was often no documentation available to evidence the rationale for recommending leverage, the appropriateness and the amount of the leverage in the context of the Customer's overall wealth, or whether the risks associated with the use of leverage had been considered by the relevant Relationship Managers. In addition, there was no formal mechanism to monitor the amount of leverage within the Customers' portfolios;"
"4.22 ... If a customer uses leverage to make an investment and the investment rises in value, then the customer's gains are increased reflecting the amount of leverage used. Conversely, if the investment falls in value, the customer's losses are much greater than they would have been if the investment had not been leveraged. Consequently, leverage magnifies both the customer's gains and losses."
The judge found that in the instant case the degree of leverage was very high, and acknowledged by Mr Zaki to be so. The judge said at paragraph 124:
"124. ... Mr. Zaki accepted that it was 'excessive'. Its particular relevance lay in the fact that it increased the quantum of any loss of capital and that it would lead to a demand for additional collateral when the loan to value ratio fell below the ratio regarded by CSUK as acceptable, usually 70%. It seems clear that the amount of leverage extended to Mr. Zeid was usually the maximum or nearly the maximum available to him at any particular time."
The judge then had to consider the significance of this in relation to Mr Zeid. At paragraph 125 he found as follows:
"125 ... But whether or not the leveraging made available to Mr. Zeid, which was undoubtedly on a grand scale, was unsuitable for Mr. Zeid depends on his understanding of the risks involved and his ability to bear the consequences of those risks if they materialise. There can be no doubt, having regard in particular to the experience of June 2006 and the market and financial information provided to him by and discussed with Mr. Zaki, that Mr. Zeid understood the risks associated with leverage. No evidence was led which suggested that Mr. Zeid was unable to bear the risks involved. These matters, coupled with the fact that Mr. Zeid had accepted substantial leveraging since 2003, suggest that notes 1-7, notwithstanding the leveraging levels, were suitable for Mr. Zeid and I so find."
Lord Justice Davis:
Lady Justice Arden:
Order: Application refused