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- Texas v. BlackRock, Inc.
About this case
Documents
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
08/01/2025
Decision
Motions to dismiss granted in part and denied in part.
The federal district court for the Eastern District of Texas denied three large institutional investors’ motion to dismiss 13 states’ federal antitrust claims alleging that the investors collectively used their shareholdings in coal producers to reduce coal output. Regarding the claim under Section 7 of the Clayton Act, which concerned the defendants’ use and acquisition of stock, the court found that the states sufficiently alleged that the defendants “acquired significant amounts of stock in coal companies and then used their market power to pressure the companies to decrease coal production.” The court cited “dozens of specific examples” of conduct supporting this theory, including the defendants’ joining of “climate initiatives” such as the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative and Climate Action 100+ that involved public commitments to using stock to take action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and address climate change; the affirmation of these commitments through public statements; and actions such as votes against directors at coal companies for failing to have adequate climate risk disclosures. The court further found at this state of the litigation that the defendants did not qualify for the Clayton Act’s safe harbor for passive investors. Under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, which concerned the defendants’ alleged agreement to work together, the court found that the states’ allegations included sufficient circumstantial evidence to suggest the investors’ “agreed to collectively pressure coal companies to reduce the output of coal in the relevant markets and disclose future output information.” The court cited alleged “parallel conduct” such as the joining of a climate initiative within the same time period and “plus factors suggestive of an agreement” such as the investors’ “shared moral imperative to combat climate change.” The court also found that the states sufficiently alleged anticompetitive harm with allegations that the investors’ actions decreased coal output and increased prices in certain markets between 2019 and 2022. The court also allowed consumer protection claims to proceed against one of the investors—BlackRock, Inc.—under the laws of Texas, Montana, Iowa, and Nebraska. The court dismissed claims under Louisiana’s consumer protection law and one of Nebraska’s statutes because they did not apply to marketing and sale of securities but found that claims under the other state laws were not barred on this basis. The court further found that the states plausibly alleged that BlackRock made deceptive and material statements that misrepresented certain “non-ESG funds.” Because the states plausibly alleged federal antitrust claims, the court dismissed parallel state antitrust claims.
06/02/2025
Reply
Reply filed by defendant The Vanguard Group in support of defendants' joint motion to dismiss.
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05/22/2025
Statement
Statement of interest filed by Federal Trade Commission and United States of America.
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05/08/2025
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Power the Future as amicus curiae in support of plaintiffs.
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03/24/2025
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amicus curiae Investment Company Institute in support of defendants' motion to dismiss.
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03/24/2025
Amicus Motion/Brief
Unopposed motion filed by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association for leave to file brief as amicus curiae in support of defendants' joint motion to dismiss.
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03/17/2025
Motion To Dismiss
Motion to dismiss the consumer protection counts (XV-XXI) filed by BlackRock, Inc.
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03/17/2025
Motion To Dismiss
Joint motion filed to dismiss Counts I-XIV and XVIII of the amended complaint.
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11/27/2024
Complaint
Complaint filed.
Eleven states, led by Texas, filed a lawsuit in the federal district court for the Eastern District of Texas asserting that three institutional investors had violated antitrust laws by collectively using their shareholdings in domestic coal producers to reduce coal output. The complaint alleged that the investment managers used their collective power, including through proxy voting, to pressure the coal producers. The complaint also cited the defendants’ participation in initiatives such as the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative and Climate Action 100+ as “substantial evidence of a horizontal agreement” to use common ownership to set and enforce output restrictions. The states contended that the defendants’ concerns regarding climate change did not allow them “to turn a blind eye to an illegal deal.” The complaint further alleged that one of the defendants, Blackrock, Inc., had actively deceived shareholders by representing that its non-ESG funds “would be dedicated solely to enhancing shareholder value” while in fact using all of its holdings to advance its climate goals. The complaint asserted that the defendants violated Section 7 of the Clayton Act and Section 1 of the Sherman Act. The complaint also asserted violations of state antitrust laws in Texas, Montana, and West Virginia. Texas asserted a deceptive trade practice claim against defendant BlackRock, Inc. Relief sought included declaratory relief, damages, injunctive relief (including divestiture to restrain the defendants from using their stock to restrain output and limit competition), and civil fines or penalties.
Summary
Eleven states' lawsuit alleging that three institutional investors violated antitrust laws by collectively using their shareholdings in domestic coal producers to reduce coal output.