Why? You're not white? You sound like a pathetic and ignorant redneck, the way that you can't take your losses and just fuck off. LOL
Class action lawsuit against TD Ameritrade over -ve oil prices DISMISSED!! https://www.reuters.com/article/sec...wsuit-over-negative-oil-futures-idUSL1N2IY3F4 Exactly as I predicted. LOL The funny thing is the reason though: The reason is the guy didn't even make the trades?? What does that mean? The guy didn't even attempt to trade and just accused TD of not having the platform ready and decided to sue??!! Did this vulture lawyer vet his/her clients before taking on their cases? LOL Oh gawd...
Some quotes from the judge... The problem for Lindstrom is that he fails to identify any duty that TDAFF owed to Lindstrom to inform him of market trends. Futures trading is risky, and TDAFF made Lindstrom aware of that before he could even sign up for an account. Moreover, contemporaneous newspaper articles referenced in TDAFF's Motion make clear that the possibility the oil prices could fall into the negatives was widely reported in the media. Lindstrom has cited no authority to suggest that an investment platform has an affirmative duty to make its users aware of publicly available information that may negatively affect their investments. Indeed, TDAFF has no fiduciary obligations to Lindstrom. The Futures Client Agreement, however, "authorizes [TDAFF], without prior notice and in its sole discretion, to liquidate any assets held by TD Ameritrade Clearing, Inc. in a Securities Account to eliminate [any] margin deficiency or insecurity." (Dkt. 17 at p. 37.) That is precisely what happened here; Lindstrom's account became under-margined as the futures prices continued to drop, so TDAFF exercised its discretion to liquidate. Lindstrom fails to identify any principle that would support imposing liability on TDAFF for exercising its right to liquidate securities held in under-margined accounts. Lindstrom has failed to state any of the elements of a securities fraud claim under 7 U.S.C § 9 and 17 C.F.R. § 180.1(a)(3). A good read...But close the door with no distractions.
EXACTLY what I wrote in my 2nd and 3rd post in this thread. LOL I think the judge just copied and pasted my comments here into his/her ruling. Oh well, too bad for Lindstrom that he really had to spend all the lawyer fee and hear it from the judge.
OMG The judge basically was screaming on top of his/her lungs "You don't have a case!!!" throughout his/her entire ruling except this one best "legally actionable claim" against TD for the omission on TD's part of not having the platform ready to be able to take negative prices but on this one "legally actionable claim" where the plaintiff had the best chance of winning, the plaintiff didn't attempt to trade *facepalm* so the judge was like "you didn't even trade how do you know TD's system couldn't handle the negative prices?". LOL Gawd. Poor Lindstrom. I blame the vulture lawyer. She should've known that her client had no case right from the beginning as discount brokers owing no fiduciary duties to inform clients of anything except executing trades and having the discretion to liquidate without clients' consent are standard with any discount brokers. Majority of ET'ers here all know these. And yet she still took their money and advised her clients to reject arbitrage in which TD did try to make her client whole and go for litigation in court so she can take even more money. I hope in her other case against TD, her client at least made the attempt to trade with negative prices, otherwise it's another quick dismissal. The judge could really just copy this ruling and paste it onto the other case after changing the name. And for a 3rd case that this lawyer has against AMP, another broker, the contracts were cash-settlement types so there was no trading needed with negative prices. LOL So that's gonna be another even quicker dismissal. These traders should turn around and launch a class action to sue the lawyer for negligence and failure in duty of care for her incompetence assuming she wasn't trying to defraud them. LOL
A good read. Actually, the judge isn't clear about what would have been the decision if Lindstrom had actually tried to liquidate his position through the software and couldn't: "The third alleged omission is TDAFF's failure to enable protocols on its platform that would permit investors to place negatively-priced trades. This is Lindstrom's best allegation of a legally actionable omission, considering that TDAFF was aware that prices were likely to go negative and allegedly took no action to prepare its systems for that eventuality. The complication here is that there is no allegation that Lindstrom ever tried to place a trade while the prices were in the negatives, so he lacks standing to pursue a claim based on this omission. See Spokeo v. Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1548 (2016) (explaining that plaintiffs lack standing unless they allege a concrete and particularized injury). Lindstrom cannot plausibly claim that he was injured unless he actually tried to use the system that TDAFF failed to prepare."