Kraft Heinz
Kraft Heinz
Kraft Heinz
Plaintiff,
CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT
v.
JURY TRIAL DEMANDED
THE KRAFT HEINZ COMPANY,
BERNARDO HEES, PAULO BASILIO,
DAVID H. KNOPF, GEORGE EL-ZOGHBI,
CHRISTOPHER R. SKINGER, VINCE
GARLATI, ALEX BEHRING and 3G
CAPITAL INC.,
Defendants.
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Table of Contents
I. INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................... 1
B. Defendants Mislead The Market About the Results of The Cost Cutting Strategy .......... 12
C. Defendants Mislead Investors About the Value of the Kraft Heinz Brand ...................... 13
D. 3G Capital Reaps Enormous Profits by Selling Shares of Kraft Heinz Stock While in
Possession of Material Nonpublic Information ................................................................ 14
A. Kraft Heinz’s Class Period SEC Filings Were Materially False and Misleading and
Omitted Material Facts in Violation of SEC Disclosure Regulations .............................. 19
B. Additional False and Misleading Statements During the Class Period ............................ 22
COUNT I ................................................................................................................................ 34
COUNT II ............................................................................................................................... 36
Plaintiff Timber Hill LLC (“Plaintiff”), by and through its undersigned counsel, brings this
action on behalf of itself and all other similarly situated investors that purchased Kraft Heinz
Company (“Kraft Heinz” or the “Company”) common stock, purchased call options on Kraft
Heinz common stock, sold put options on Kraft Heinz common stock and/or purchased futures on
Kraft Heinz common stock during the period July 6, 2015 through February 21, 2019, inclusive
(the “Class Period”), pursuant to Sections 10(b), 20(a) and 20A of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (the “Exchange Act”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) 78t(a) and § 78t–1, respectively, and the rules and
regulations promulgated thereunder, including United States Securities and Exchange Commission
(“SEC”) Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5 (collectively, such investors are referred to herein as
the “Class”). This action is brought against Kraft Heinz, certain current and former senior
executives and directors of the Company, as well as Brazilian private equity firm and Kraft Heinz
Except as to allegations specifically pertaining to Plaintiff, all allegations herein are based
on the investigation conducted by and through Plaintiff’s counsel, which included, among other
things, a review of Kraft Heinz’s filings with the SEC, as well as press releases, investor
presentations, earnings calls and analyst and media reports about the Company.
Plaintiff’s Counsel’s investigation into the factual allegations continues, and many of the
relevant facts are known only by Defendants or are exclusively within their custody or control.
Plaintiff believes that substantial additional evidentiary support is likely to exist for the allegations
set forth herein after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery.
I. INTRODUCTION
1. This action arises from Kraft Heinz’s February 21, 2019 announcements that it: (i)
would be taking a $15.4 billion goodwill impairment write-down primarily relating to its Kraft
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and Oscar Mayer brands; (ii) had received an SEC subpoena related to an investigation into the
Company’s accounting and controls; and (iii) was cutting its quarterly dividend from $0.625 cents
per share to $0.40 cents per share. The Company further announced it would be delaying the filing
of its annual report on Form 10-K for fiscal year 2018. Together, these disclosures caused the
price of Kraft Heinz’s common stock to drop significantly – from $48.18 per share on February
21, 2019 to $34.95 per share on February 22, 2019 – erasing more than $16 billion in market
capitalization.
2. Just months prior to the February 21, 2019 disclosures, Kraft Heinz shareholder,
concerning both the write-down and its attendant effect on Kraft Heinz’s business given its
partners’ high-level positions in Kraft Heinz’s management and board of directors – reaped
enormous profits through its sale of 20.6 million shares of Kraft Heinz common stock when it was
trading at approximately $59 per share – a far cry from the post-disclosure price of $34.95 per
share on February 22, 2019. Collectively, 3G Capital received approximately $1.232 billion in
illicit proceeds from its sale of Kraft Heinz common stock, avoiding millions of dollars in losses.
3. The action is brought, in part, pursuant to Section 20A of the Exchange Act on
behalf of investors that purchased Kraft Heinz common stock, purchased call options or futures on
Kraft Heinz’s common stock and/or sold put options on Kraft Heinz common stock
contemporaneously with 3G Capital’s illicit stock sale. The action is also brought pursuant to
Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Exchange Act on behalf of all purchasers of Kraft Heinz common
stock, purchasers of call options or futures on Kraft Heinz common stock and/or sellers of options
on Kraft Heinz common stock from July 6, 2015 through and including February 21, 2018. During
this time, which begins at the closing of the merger (the “Merger”) of Kraft Foods Inc. (“Kraft”)
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and The H.J. Heinz Company (“Heinz”), Defendants made materially false and misleading
statements and omissions of material facts regarding the Company’s value and business prospects.
4. Specifically, since the Merger, the Company has touted that the combination of the
two food giants would result in “an estimated $1.5 billion in annual cost savings from the increased
scale of the new organization, the sharing of best practices and cost reductions by the end of 2017.”
In the years since the closing of the Merger, the Company has also continued to advertise its cost
cutting initiatives while simultaneously indicating that it intends to grow its overall revenue
5. Despite these ongoing representations that Kraft Heinz’s business was improving,
the Company began to reveal deteriorating financial results in 2018. For example, on February 6,
2018, Nielsen released data showing a 4-7% volume decline in Kraft Heinz’s top-3 categories
(cheese, meat and coffee). Additional data showed that sales of one of the Company’s leading
brands, Planters Nuts, fell approximately 15%. As a result of this disclosure, the Company’s
common stock price fell $2.73 per share over the next two days, from a close of $74.31 per share
6. The truth about Kraft’s business and prospects was further revealed on February
16, 2018 when Kraft Heinz announced its 2017 financial results. The Company reported a year-
over-year decline in sales of approximately 1.1%, driven by weak sales of nuts and cold cuts.
Defendant Hees commented on the related earnings call that “there is no question that our financial
results in 2017 did not meet our potential.” On this news, Kraft Heinz’s share price dropped $4.02
per share or approximately 5.5% over the next two trading days, from a close of $72.71 per share
on Thursday, February 15, 2018, to a close of $68.69 per share on Monday, February 20, 2018.
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7. On November 1, 2018 – just three months after Defendant 3G Capital’s sale of over
20 million shares of Kraft Heinz common stock – additional corrective news was disclosed when
the Company released its third quarter financial results, missing consensus estimates for its
earnings per share (“EPS”) by 4% and missing estimates for its earnings before interest, tax,
the news, the price of Kraft Heinz’s common stock fell $5.47 per share, or 9.7%, from a close of
$56.20 per share on November 1, 2018, to a close of $50.73 per share on November 2, 2018.
8. On Kraft Heinz’s third quarter 2018 earnings call, Defendants portrayed the
Company’s disappointing earnings as merely a temporary setback. For example, Defendant Hees
stated that the Company was “confident our Q3 results show that the turnaround of our top line
performance is firmly underway, not just in terms of headline organic growth but also real volume
growth” and that “we are equally confident that profitability will improve going forward, as one-
off negative factors from Q3 fall away. . . that are in the path to sustainable, profitable growth, and
driven by the fact that we are adapting the company with speed.”
9. Despite these reassurances, on February 21, 2019, Kraft Heinz disclosed its non-
cash impairment charge of $15.4 billion related to goodwill and intangible assets relating primarily
to the Kraft and Oscar Mayer trademarks. The Company further disclosed an EPS of $0.84, which
was $0.10 below consensus estimates, and revenues of $50 million, also below consensus
expectations. Kraft Heinz also announced that the Company’s quarterly dividend would be cut
from $0.625 cents per share to $0.40 cents per share. Finally, the Company revealed that in
October 2018, it had received a subpoena from the SEC associated with “an investigation into the
Company’s procurement area” and “account policies, procedures and internal controls.” The
following day, the price of Kraft Heinz common stock fell $13.23 per share, or approximately
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27%, from a close of $48.18 per share on February 21, 2019, to a close of $34.95 per share on
10. On the heels of these disclosures, on April 22, 2019, Kraft Heinz announced the
imminent departure of the Company’s Chief Executive Officer, Defendant Hees, effective June
30, 2019. The Company further disclosed that Miguel Patricio (“Patricio”) – currently the Chief
Marketing Officer at Anheuser-Busch InBev, another 3G Capital Company – will replace Hees as
Chief Executive Officer. Various news reports indicate that Kraft Heinz Chairman and Defendant
3G Capital co-founder Defendant Behring approached Patricio about the Chief Executive Officer
11. Defendants’ misstatements and omissions of material facts caused the price of
Kraft Heinz common stock to be artificially inflated during the Class Period. These misstatements
and omissions also directly impacted the value of the subject options and futures on Kraft Heinz
12. In addition to Kraft Heinz’s common stock, this action is brought on behalf of
purchasers of call options, sellers of put options and purchasers of futures on Kraft Heinz common
stock. Call options, put options and futures are financial derivative instruments whose value is a
function of the price of the underlying security (in this case, Kraft Heinz common stock), and are
subject to price fluctuation corresponding with the increase or decrease in the price of the
underlying security.
13. A call option is a contract between a seller (the option writer) and a purchaser (the
option holder), under which the call option purchaser has the right, but not the obligation, to
exercise the option, and thereby purchase the underlying security at an agreed-upon price (the
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“strike” or “exercise” price) from the seller by a pre-set expiration date. The call option purchaser
(Plaintiff and other members of the proposed Class in this matter) will benefit if the price of the
underlying security appreciates so that the option can be either: (1) resold at a price higher than
the price at purchase; or (2) exercised at a strike price lower than the market price of the underlying
security.
14. A put option is a contract between a seller (the option writer) and a purchaser (the
option holder), under which the put option purchaser has the right, but not the obligation, to
exercise the option, and thereby sell the underlying security at an agreed-upon price. The put
option seller (Plaintiff and other members of the proposed Class in this matter) is obligated to
purchase the underlying security at the agreed-upon price if the option is exercised on or before
the expiration date. Put option sellers generally lose value on their positions when the market price
15. A future is a financial contract that obligates the buyer to purchase an asset (here,
Kraft Heinz common stock), at a predetermined future date and price. While similar to options,
futures are distinguishable because options give the holder the right to buy or sell the underlying
asset at expiration, while the holder of a futures contract is obligated to fulfill the terms of the
contract.
16. As a result of Defendants’ fraudulent conduct, the price of the security underlying
the call options and futures purchased, and put options sold, by Plaintiff and other members of the
proposed Class — Kraft Heinz common stock — was artificially inflated during the Class Period.
Therefore, the prices of Kraft Heinz call options and futures were artificially inflated during the
Class Period, while the prices of Kraft Heinz put options were artificially deflated during the Class
Period. Consequently, Plaintiff and other members of the Class suffered billions of dollars in
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damages by trading in Kraft Heinz common stock and the subject derivatives at prices that did not
reflect their true value. Through this action, Plaintiff asserts claims on behalf of itself and other
similarly situated investors that purchased Kraft Heinz common stock, purchased call options on
Kraft Heinz common stock, sold put options on Kraft Heinz common stock and/or purchased
17. The claims asserted herein arise under Sections 10(b), 20(a) and 20A of the
Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78t(a), and SEC Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, 17
C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 1331 and Section 27 of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa. 13.
18. In connection with the acts alleged in this complaint, Defendants, directly or
indirectly, used the means and instrumentalities of interstate commerce, including, but not limited
to, the mails, interstate telephone communications, and the facilities of the national securities
markets.
19. Venue is proper in this District pursuant to Section 27 of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. § 78aa, and 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b). Defendant Kraft Heinz has one of its two headquarters
in Chicago, Illinois, and many of the wrongful acts alleged herein occurred in this District.
III. PARTIES
20. Plaintiff Timber Hill, LLC (“Timber Hill”) is a Connecticut limited liability
company with its principal place of business at One Pickwick Plaza, Greenwich, Connecticut
06830. As reflected in the certification attached hereto as Exhibit 1, Timber Hill purchased and
sold Kraft Heinz common stock, as well as the subject options and futures on Kraft Heinz common
stock, during the Class Period and suffered damages as a result of the conduct complained of
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herein. Plaintiff Timber Hill also purchased Kraft Heinz common stock and futures on Kraft Heinz
commons tock contemporaneously with Defendant 3G Capital’s insider sales in August 2017.
21. Defendant Kraft Heinz is a Delaware corporation formed in July 2015. Kraft
Heinz’s common stock is traded on the NASDAQ Global Select Market (“NASDAQ”), under the
symbol KHC. Kraft Heinz has headquarters in both Chicago, Illinois and Pittsburg, Pennsylvania.
22. Defendant Bernardo Hees (“Hees”) has served as the Company’s Chief Executive
Officer since its formation in July 2015. Hees is also a partner at Defendant 3G Capital.
23. Defendant David H. Knopf (“Knopf”) has been the Company’s CFO and
Executive Vice President since October 1, 2017. Prior to this position, Knopf joined Kraft Heinz
in July 2015, serving as Vice President of Finance, Head of Global Budget & Business Planning,
24. Defendant Paulo Basilio (“Basilio”) served as the Company’s Chief Financial
Officer and Executive Vice President from June 2015 until October 1, 2017.
25. Defendant George El-Zoghbi (“El-Zoghbi”) served as COO of Kraft Heinz’s U.S.
business until October 1, 2017. El-Zoghbi now serves as a full-time Special Advisor to the
Company.
President Global Controller and Principal Accounting Officer until June 18, 2018.
27. Defendant Vince Garlati (“Garlati”) has served as Kraft Heinz’s Vice President
Global Controller and Principal Accounting Officer since June 18, 2018.
28. Defendant Alex Behring (“Behring”) has served as the Chairman of The Kraft
Heinz Company board of directors since the Merger in July 2015 and previously served as
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Chairman of the Heinz board from June 2013 to July 2015. Behring is the co-founder and
term value and maximizing the potential of brands and businesses. 3G Capital maintains offices
in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil and New York, New York. Three partners of 3G Capital currently serve
on Kraft Heinz’s Board of Directors, including Alex Behring who serves as the board Chairman.
30. Defendants Hees, Basilio, Knopf, El-Zoghbi, Skinger, Garlati and Behring are
senior executives and/or members of the Kraft Heinz Board of Directors (as well as, for some,
being partners of Defendant 3G Capital, one of the Company’s largest shareholder), each of the
31. Prior to the Merger, Kraft was a grocery company based in Chicago, Illinois. The
company was previously named Kraft Foods Inc., but in 2012 was renamed Mondelez
International and a portion of the company was spun off into a separate entity named Kraft Food
Groups, Inc. Following the spin off, Mondelez International focused on producing and distributing
snack foods worldwide, while Kraft focused on American cheese and dairy foods. Kraft produced,
marketed and distributed a variety of valuable brands, including A.1., Capri Sun, Jell-O, Kool Aid,
Kraft Singles, Maxwell House, Oscar Meyer, Philadelphia Cream Cheese, Planters and Velveeta.
32. Heinz was a global food company based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Heinz
manufactured and marketed packaged foods throughout the world, such as its Heinz sauces and
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Ore-Ida potatoes. In February 2013, Heinz announced that it would be purchased by Berkshire
33. Defendant 3G Capital is a Brazilian-American private equity firm known for its
cost cutting strategies, including “zero-based budgeting,” where budgets are created from scratch
each year instead of merely being updated from the previous year’s budget. The firm has
implemented its budgeting and cost cutting strategy at numerous former and current food-related
portfolio companies, including Anheuser-Busch InBev, Burger King and Tim Hortons. As such,
Defendant 3G Capital was intimately aware of the strength, and also the risks, of such a strategy.
After acquiring Heinz in 2013, Defendant 3G Capital started to implement its cost cutting
34. In early 2015, Kraft and Heinz announced they were merging to become the Kraft
Heinz Company. The food giants stated that the Merger would result in “an estimated $1.5 billion
in annual cost savings from the increased scale of the new organization, the sharing of best
practices and cost reductions by the end of 2017.” Enormous synergies were expected from
utilizing Heinz’s global network (prior to the merger, nearly 85% of Heinz’s sales were from
regions other than North America) to expand the reach of Kraft’s primarily domestic brands
(approximately 98% of Kraft’s sales were in North America). While Mondelez had exclusive
rights to sell certain Kraft brands internationally, Kraft had the right to sell some of its brands,
including A.1., Velveeta, Planters, MiO and Lunchables, internationally. The Company
anticipated that expanding such brands outside North America would provide a boost to the new
35. The new combined entity, the Kraft Heinz Company, was controlled by the former
owners of Heinz (i.e. Berkshire Hathaway and Defendant 3G Capital). Indeed, the Kraft Heinz
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Board was composed of six members appointed by the Heinz Board, and only five members
appointed by the Kraft Board. The Heinz Board appointed three partners of Defendant 3G Capital
to the new Kraft Heinz Board. This included appointing 3G Capital cofounder, Alexandre
36. The senior executives leading the Kraft Heinz Company were also primarily
former Heinz executives, including many that were affiliated with Defendant 3G Capital. For
example, Heinz’s former CEO and a partner at 3G Capital, Defendant Hees, became the CEO of
new combined Kraft Heinz Company. The former CFO of Heinz, Defendant Basilio, became
Executive Vice President and CFO of Kraft Heinz. In 2017, Defendant Knopf, another partner at
Defendant 3G Capital, replaced Basilio at Kraft Heinz’s CFO. Further, Pedro Drevon, a former
partner at Defendant 3G Capital, became President of Kraft Heinz’s Latin America Zone.
Hathaway and Defendant 3G Capital, owned approximately 51% of the outstanding shares of Kraft
Heinz common stock, with the former Kraft shareholders owning the remaining 49%.
38. Shortly after the Merger, Defendants implemented Defendant 3G Capital’s cost
reduction strategy and began integrating the operations of Kraft and Heinz. These cost cutting
initiatives, which included reducing marketing expenses, revamping the budgeting process and
eliminating certain employee benefits, were purportedly implemented to lower costs and increase
the Company’s profitability. However, at the time, Defendants knew or should have known that
these cost cutting strategies would impair the value of its brands, as it would prevent the Company
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B. Defendants Mislead The Market About the Results of The Cost Cutting Strategy
39. The Class Period begins on July 6, 2015, when shares of the newly-formed Kraft
Heinz began trading on the NASDAQ. Starting on this date, Defendants misled investors
concerning the business and prospects of Kraft Heinz and the value of its brands. Defendants’
false and misleading statements had the intended effect concealing from investors the true state of
Kraft Heinz’s business operations and financial results, and thus artificially inflated the price of
Kraft Heinz common stock and impacted the value of options and futures on Kraft Heinz common
40. As noted above, leading up to the Merger, Defendants estimated that the Merger
would result in $1.5 billion in annual cost savings by the end of 2017. On November 5, 2015,
Kraft Heinz held an earnings call with analysts and investors to discuss the Company’s first post-
Merger quarterly financial results. During the earnings call, Defendant Hees expressed optimism
that realizing the expected synergies were on track, stating that the Company is “finding significant
opportunities embedded in the $1.5 billion.” During this same earnings call, the Company
presented a slide representing that Kraft Heinz was “[e]ffectively managing pricing and input
41. Defendants continued to mislead investors about the Company’s purported cost
savings during its future earnings calls. For example, on its February 25, 2016 earnings call,
Defendant Basilio announced that the Company had “realized roughly $125 million in savings in
2015.” Similarly, on May 4, 2016, during the Company’s first quarter 2016 earnings call,
Defendant Hees touted that “[r]egarding the integration program, I’m also happy to report that our
savings are coming faster than we were expecting roughly $225 million in Q1.” The Company’s
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accompanying presentation in connection with the same earnings announcement emphasized that
Kraft Heinz was “[o]n pace to fully realize $1.5 billion cost savings in 2017.”
42. In 2017, Defendants further misled investors about its expected cost savings. On
May 3, 2017, Kraft Heinz filed a Form 8-K announcing the Company’s first quarter 2017 financial
results. Within the Form 8-K, Defendant Hees is quoted as stating, “[a]lthough our top line results
in the first quarter reflect a slow start to the year, we remain on track with our key initiatives.”
Hees also stated, “[w]e are delivering product innovations, renovations, and geographic expansion
that positions Kraft Heinz to drive organic sales growth for the balance of 2017 and beyond.”
43. On that same day, Kraft Heinz held a conference call with analysts and investors
to discuss the Company’s financial results. During the conference call, Defendant Hees stated
that, “the result of our 2017 pipeline is on track.” Defendant Hees further added that the Company
“remain[s] on track with our cost savings initiatives.” On an earnings call on November 1, 2017,
Defendant Hees further confirmed with respect to its cost savings that “our plans and our progress
remains on track.”
44. At no point during the Class Period did Defendants disclose that they knew the
expected synergies and other benefits from the Merger would not be realized. However, as would
later be disclosed, Defendants knew that the extreme cost cutting strategies implemented by
Defendant 3G Capital would result in reduced profitability so significant that the value of Kraft
C. Defendants Mislead Investors About the Value of the Kraft Heinz Brand
45. Shortly after the Merger, Kraft Heinz began to suffer an impairment in the value
of certain of its brands as revenues continued to decline in the face of consumer sentiment and the
lack of new product innovation caused by its extreme cost cutting strategy.
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46. Indeed, Defendants, in implicit recognition of the Company’s brand values being
impaired, tried to calm investor concerns by touting purported “new product development
programs.” For example, during the Company’s November 3, 2016 earnings call, Defendant
Basilio stated, “[b]ased on what we’ve already seen in the marketplace, we remain confident in
our ability to drive improvements in our top-line trends in existing markets.” Similarly, on the
November 3, 2017 earnings call, Defendant Hees represented that “we really believe we have a
47. Likewise, during a May 2017 earnings call, Defendant Hees praised the
Company’s “strong pipeline” of new products with “trend-bending ability.” Defendant Hees
further assured investors that the Company’s recent “launches are starting to gain traction in the
48. Defendants continued to mislead investors regarding its brand value in its 2018
SEC filings and public statements. For example, Kraft Heinz filed its second quarter 2018 Form
10-Q, signed by Defendants Knopf and Garlati, with the SEC. Within the second quarter 2018
Form 10-Q, the Company reported that it tests both goodwill and intangible assets for impairment
at least annually in the second quarter or when a triggering event occurs. The second quarter Form
10-Q also disclosed that Kraft Heinz had recorded only a minor “non-cash impairment loss of $101
million due to net sales and margin declines related to the Quero brand in Brazil.”
D. 3G Capital Reaps Enormous Profits by Selling Shares of Kraft Heinz Stock While in
Possession of Material Nonpublic Information
49. Defendants’ misstatements and omissions caused the price of Kraft Heinz common
stock to be artificially inflated throughout the Class Period. This artificial inflation directly
impacted the value of options and futures on Kraft Heinz securities purchased and sold throughout
the Class Period. Consequently, the Class did not have the information required to be disclosed
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under the Exchange Act and, therefore, engaged in transactions in the subject Kraft Heinz
derivatives at unfair prices. Through a series of partial disclosures in 2018 and early 2019, the truth
emerged regarding Kraft Heinz’s business operations, financial condition and prospects. As the
truth was revealed to the market, artificial inflation was removed from the prices of Kraft Heinz
common stock, call options and futures, and artificial deflation was removed from the prices of
Kraft Heinz put options. Consequently, Plaintiff and other investors suffered damages from Class
Period purchases of Kraft Heinz common stock, call options and futures, as well as sales from put
50. On February 6, 2018, Nielsen released data showing a 4-7% volume decline in
Kraft Heinz’s top-3 categories, cheese, meat and coffee. In addition, the data showed that sales of
Kraft’s Planters nuts fell approximately 15%. As a result of the disclosure of Kraft Heinz’s falling
sales on February 6, 2018, the Company common stock price fell $2.73 per share over the next
two days, from a close of $74.31 on February 6, 2018, to a close of $71.58 on February 8, 2018.
51. The next week, on February 16, 2018, Kraft Heinz released its 2017 annual results,
and reported a decline in sales of about 1.1%, driven primarily by weak sales of nuts and cold cuts.
Defendant Hees commented on the related earnings call that “there is no question that our financial
results in 2017 did not meet our potential.” On the poor earnings announcement on February 16,
2018, Kraft Heinz’s share price dropped $4.02 per share or approximately 5.5% over the next two
trading days, from a close of $72.71 per share on Thursday, February 15, 2018 to a close of $68.69
52. While admitting the 2017 results were poor, Defendants attempted to portray the
weak earnings as merely temporary setbacks. For example, Defendant Hees stated on the related
earnings calls that the 2017 financial results “did not reflect our progress or potential.” Defendant
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Hees further stated that apart from several “transitory factors,” “we are seeing ongoing
improvement in consumption trends in most countries and in most of the key categories that we
believe will drive both top and bottom-line growth into the second half of the year.” Similarly, in
the Form 8-K filed announcing the results, Defendant Hees was quoted as stating, “[w]e made
significant improvements in many of our businesses” that “should help further advantage our
53. Defendants further calmed investor concerns on May 2, 2018, citing on an earnings
call that “Oscar Mayer cold cuts” were one of the “tangible drivers of the turnaround in the second
half of 2018.” Defendant Hees highlighted “the Kraft Brand” as “giving us a lot of excite[ment]
behind Kraft’s new offers in cheese and other segments that can be very relevant.” Likewise,
during the next quarter’s earnings call, Defendant Hess stated that “we expect our profitability to
material nonpublic information concerning Kraft’s business prospects, including the need to take
a massive impairment charge, by virtue of its partners and affiliates’ positions as executives and
directors of Kraft Heinz. Indeed, both Defendant Hees, the soon-to-be former CEO of Kraft Heinz,
and Defendant Behring, the Chairman of the Kraft Heinz Board of Directors, were partners at
Defendant 3G Capital.
impairment, Defendant 3G Capital sold 20.6 million shares of Kraft Heinz common stock on
56. Just months later, the truth regarding Kraft Heinz’s diminished value continued to
be revealed. On November 1, 2018, the Company announced that its quarterly results, revealing
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its EPS of $0.78 per share was short of consensus estimates by nearly 4%. The Company also
disclosed that its EBITA missed analysts’ consensus estimates by approximately $100 million, or
7%. In reaction to this disclosure, the price of Kraft Heinz common stock fell $5.47 per share or
9.7% in response to the poor results, from a close of $56.20 per share on November 1, 2018, to
57. Despite the bad news, Defendants attempted to again portray the disappointing
quarter as a “one-off” setback. Indeed, the Form 8-K Kraft Heinz filed on November 1, 2018
stated that “[w]hile a number of one-off factors . . . held back profit in the quarter, we remain
confident that we are well-positioned to deliver sustainable, profitable growth going forward.”
Further, during the earnings call held that day, Defendants Hees assured investors that “we believe
and are confident our Q3 results show that the turnaround of our top line performance is firmly
underway, not just in terms of headline organic growth, but also real volume growth” and that “we
are equally confident that profitability will improve going forward, as one-off negative factors
from Q3 fall away . . . and I believe that are in the path to sustainable, profitable growth, and driven
by the fact that we are adapting the company with speed.” During the same call, Defendant Knopf
responded to analysts concerns over inconsistent results stating, “for 2019, we do expect a much
better balance of top- and bottom line growth going forward [and] [i]n 2018, we’ve had a number
58. The next day, November 2, 2018, Kraft Heinz filed its third quarter Form 10-Q,
signed by Defendants Knopf and Garlati, which stated, “[n]o events occurred during the period
ended September 29, 2018 that indicated it was more likely than not that our goodwill was
impaired.”
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the true extent of Kraft Heinz’s problems was further revealed on February 21, 2019, when the
Company announced it was required to take a $15.4 billion non-cash impairment charge related to
the goodwill and intangible assets driven “primarily [by] the Kraft and Oscar Mayer trademarks”
and due “primarily [to] U.S. Refrigerated and Canada Retail.” In addition to the massive
impairment, the Company also reported that its EPS of $0.84, which was $0.10 below consensus
estimates, as well as revenues $50 million below consensus expectations. In addition, the
Company announced it was lowering its quarterly dividend from $0.625 cents per share to $0.40
60. On the same day, the Company disclosed that in October 2018 it received a
subpoena from the SEC in connection with “an investigation into the Company’s procurement
area, more specifically the Company’s accounting policies, procedures, and internal controls
related to its procurement function, including, but not limited to, agreements, side agreements, and
changes or modifications to its agreements with its vendors.” As a result, the Company stated it
recorded a $25 million increase to costs of goods sold (“COGS”) due to its misstatement of
61. Following the disclosure of the impairment, missed earnings, reduced dividend
and SEC investigation, the price of Kraft Heinz common stock fell $13.23 per share or nearly 28%,
from a close of $48.18 per share on February 21, 2019, to a close of $34.95 per share on February
22, 2019.
62. The disclosures detailed above revealed the truth regarding Defendants’
representations to investors. As the truth was revealed to the market, artificial inflation was
removed from the prices of Kraft Heinz common stock, call options and futures, and artificial
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deflation was removed from the prices of Kraft Heinz put options. Consequently, Plaintiff and
other equity and derivatives investors suffered damages on from Class Period transactions on Kraft
63. Notably, on April 22, 2019, Kraft Heinz announced that Defendant Hees is
stepping down as the Company’s Chief Executive Officer effective June 30, 2019.
A. Kraft Heinz’s Class Period SEC Filings Were Materially False and Misleading and
Omitted Material Facts in Violation of SEC Disclosure Regulations
64. Item 8 of Form 10-K and Item 1 of Form 10-Q, via reference to Regulation S-X ,
17 C.F.R. §210, required Kraft Heinz to file with the SEC financial statements prepared in
conformity with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”) during the Class Period.
Regulation S-X, 17 C.F.R. §210.4-01 (a)(1), states, among other things, that financial statements
filed with the SEC that are not prepared in conformity with GAAP are presumed to be misleading
and inaccurate.
65. During the Class Period, the financial statements Kraft Heinz issued to investors
and filed with the SEC on Forms 10-K and 10-Q improperly accounted for COGS and intangible
asset impairments, including goodwill, were materially misstated, and presented in violation of
GAAP. Indeed, this improper accounting impacted significant portions of each Form 10-K and
Form 10-Q the Company filed during the Class Period, including the Company’s reported net
income and earnings per share figures announced in press releases, Forms 8-K and during earnings
calls.
66. The statements in the Company’s Forms 10-K and 10-Q filed during the Class
Period were false and misleading when made. Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or
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were reckless in not knowing, that Kraft Heinz’s brands were overvalued and as a result the
financial statements included in each of the Company’s quarterly and annual report was false and
misleading. In addition, each of the Company’s Forms 10-K and 10-Q omitted material facts
67. Item 7 of Form 10-K and Item 2 of Form 10-Q required Kraft Heinz to furnish the
information called for under Item 303 of Regulation S-K, 17 C.F.R. §229.303, Management’s
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (“MD&A”) during the
Class Period. The MD&A in the Company’s Forms 10-K and 10-Q were false and misleading
when filed with the SEC. Indeed, the MD&As contained materially false and misleading
disclosures about the Company’s operating performance and failed to disclose material events and
issues associated with Kraft Heinz’s major brands and internal control weaknesses. As alleged
herein, these items were known to management at the time the Forms 10-K and 10-Qs were filed,
and were reasonably likely to have a material effect on the Company’s future operating results.
68. Item 1A of Forms 10-K and 10-Q required Kraft Heinz to furnish the information
called for under Item 503 of Regulation S-K, 17 C.F.R. §229.503, Risk Factors. Item 503 of
Regulation S-K required Kraft Heinz to disclose the most significant matters making an investment
in the Company risky. The Forms 10-K and 10-Q Kraft Heinz filed with the SEC during the Class
Period failed to disclose material risks associated with its major brands and material internal
control weaknesses that made an investment in the Company risky. These Forms 10-K and 10-Q
were false and misleading when made, as Defendants’ knew, or were reckless in not knowing, that
Kraft Heinz’s brands were already overvalued and would soon recognize a significant goodwill
impairment.
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69. Item 9A of Form 10-K and Item 4 of Form 10-Q required the Company to furnish
the information called for under Item 307 of Regulation S-K, 17 C.F.R. §229.307, Disclosure
Controls and Procedures, and Item 308 of Regulation S-K, 17 C.F.R. §229.308, Internal Control
over Financial Reporting, during the Class Period. Similarly, Item 307 of Regulation S-K required
Kraft Heinz’s Forms 10-K and 10-Q during the Class Period to disclose the conclusions of
Defendants Hees, Basilio, and Knopf regarding the effectiveness of Kraft Heinz’s disclosure
controls and procedures, defined by relevant regulation as the controls and procedures designed to
ensure that information required to be disclosed in reports filed with the SEC is appropriately
recorded, processed, summarized, and reported. During the Class Period, Kraft Heinz falsely and
misleadingly represented in its Forms 10-K and 10-Q filed with the SEC that its disclosure controls
were operating effectively when, as the Company has now admitted through is $15 billion write-
down, they were not. During the Class Period, these materially false and misleading
70. Item 308 of Regulation S-K required the Company’s Forms 10-K and 10-Q during
the Class Period to disclose, among other things, the conclusions of Defendants Hees, Basilio,
and/or Knopf regarding the effectiveness of Kraft Heinz’s internal controls over financial
reporting. During the Class Period, Kraft Heinz’s Forms 10-K and 10-Q were false and misleading
when filed, as the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting were operating effectively
when, as the Company has now admitted, it operated with material weaknesses. These materially
false and misleading representations were certified by Defendants Hees, Basilio, and/or Knopf
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71. In addition to the Company’s Forms 10-K and 10-Qs filed during the Class Period,
Defendants made additional false and misleading statements and omissions of material facts in
press releases, Forms 8-K and during Company earnings calls. On November 5, 2015, during an
earnings call with analysts and investors to discuss the Company’s first post-Merger quarterly
financial results, Defendant Hees expressed optimism that realizing the expected synergies were
on track, stating that the Company is “finding significant opportunities embedded in the $1.5
billion.” During this same earnings call, the Company presented a slide representing that Kraft
Heinz was “[e]ffectively managing pricing and input costs” and would “[c]ontinue to deliver
72. The statements Defendants issued on November 5, 2015 were false and misleading
when made. Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing, that
the expected synergies from the Merger would not be realized and the Company’s cost cutting
initiatives were undermining its product innovation, and, as a result, the value of Kraft Heinz’s
73. On Kraft Heinz’s February 25, 2016 earnings call, Defendant Basilio announced
that the Company had “realized roughly $125 million in savings in 2015.”
74. The statements Defendants issued on February 25, 2016 were false and misleading
when made. Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing, that
the expected synergies from the Merger would not be realized and the Company’s cost cutting
initiatives were undermining its product innovation, and, as a result, the value of Kraft Heinz’s
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75. On May 4, 2016, during the Company’s first quarter 2016 earnings call, Defendant
Hees stated that “[r]egarding the integration program, I’m also happy to report that our savings are
coming faster than we were expecting roughly $225 million in Q1.” The Company’s
accompanying presentation in connection with the same earnings announcement emphasized that
Kraft Heinz was “[o]n pace to fully realize $1.5 billion cost savings in 2017.”
76. The statements Defendants issued on May 4, 2016 were false and misleading when
made. Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing, that the
expected synergies from the Merger would not be realized and the Company’s cost cutting
initiatives were undermining its product innovation, and, as a result, the value of Kraft Heinz’s
77. On the Company’s November 3, 2016 earnings call, Defendant Basilio stated,
“[b]ased on what we’ve already seen in the marketplace, we remain confident in our ability to
drive improvements in our top-line trends in existing markets.” On the same call, Defendant Hees
stated that “we really believe we have a solid organic path here to create value.”
78. The statements Defendants issued on November 3, 2016 were false and misleading
when made. Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing, that
the expected synergies from the Merger would not be realized and the Company’s cost cutting
initiatives were undermining its product innovation, and, as a result, the value of Kraft Heinz’s
79. On May 3, 2017, Kraft Heinz filed a Form 8-K announcing the Company’s first
quarter 2017 financial results, stating that, “[a]lthough our top line results in the first quarter reflect
a slow start to the year, we remain on track with our key initiatives.” In the press release,
Defendant Hees stated, “[w]e are delivering product innovations, renovations, and geographic
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expansion that positions Kraft Heinz to drive organic sales growth for the balance of 2017 and
beyond.” Later that same day, Kraft Heinz held a conference call with analysts and investors to
discuss the Company’s financial results, where Defendant Hees stated that, “the result of our 2017
pipeline is on track.” Defendant Hees further added, “we remain on track with our cost savings
initiatives.”
80. The statements Defendants issued on May 3, 2017 were false and misleading when
made. Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing, that the
expected synergies from the Merger would not be realized and the Company’s cost cutting
initiatives were undermining its product innovations, and, as a result, the value of Kraft Heinz’s
81. On February 16, 2018, Kraft Heinz filed a Form 8-K with the SEC, wherein
Defendant Hees stated, “[w]e made significant improvements in many of our businesses” that
“should help further advantage our brands and grow our business in 2018 and beyond.”
82. While the truth was partially revealed on February 16, 2018, the statements
Defendants issued on February 16, 2018 were false and misleading when made because, contrary
to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing that the expected synergies
from the Merger would not be realized and the Company’s cost cutting initiatives were
undermining its product innovations, and, as a result, the value of Kraft Heinz’s brands was
significantly impaired.
83. On May 2, 2018, Kraft Heinz filed a Form 8-K, quoting Defendant Hees stating,
“[t]he initial successes we’re seeing in the marketplace, together with the strong investments we’re
making in marketing, new product innovation, and capability building, give us increased
confidence in delivering the top- and bottom-line growth we expect in 2018.” On the same day,
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during the Company’s earnings call Defendant Hees stated that apart from several “transitory
factors,” “we are seeing ongoing improvement in consumption trends in most countries and in
most of the key categories that we believe will drive both top and bottom-line growth into the
second half of the year.” On the same earnings call, Defendant Knopf listed “Oscar Mayer cold
cuts” as one of the “tangible drivers of the turnaround in the second half of 2018.” Defendant
Hees further highlighted “the Kraft Brand” as “giving us a lot of excite[ment] behind Kraft’s new
84. The statements Defendants issued on May 2, 2018 were false and misleading when
made. Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing, that the
expected synergies from the Merger would not be realized and the Company’s cost cutting
initiatives were undermining its product innovations, and, as a result, the value of Kraft Heinz’s
85. On November 1, 2018, during an earnings call, Defendants Hees stated that “we
believe and are confident our Q3 results show that the turnaround of our top line performance is
firmly underway, not just in terms of headline organic growth, but also real volume growth” and
that “we are equally confident that profitability will improve going forward, as one-off negative
factors from Q3 fall away . . . and I believe that are in the path to sustainable, profitable growth,
and driven by the fact that we are adapting the company with speed.” During the same conference
call, Defendant Knopf responded to analysts concerns over inconsistent results stating, “for 2019,
we do expect a much better balance of top- and bottom line growth going forward [and] [i]n 2018,
86. The statements Defendants issued on November 1, 2018, while partially revealing
the truth about the Company’s deteriorating prospects, were false and misleading when made.
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Contrary to Defendants’ statements, they knew, or were reckless in not knowing that the missed
earnings were not a “one off” setback, and that the value of Kraft Heinz’s brands was significantly
impaired.
87. During the Class Period, as alleged herein, the Individual Defendants acted with
scienter in that the Individual Defendants: (i) knew or were reckless as to whether the public
documents and statements issued or disseminated in the name of the Company during the Class
Period were materially false and misleading; (ii) knew or were reckless as to whether such
statements or documents would be issued or disseminated to the investing public; and (iii)
88. The Individual Defendants permitted Kraft Heinz to release these false and
misleading statements and failed to file the necessary corrective disclosures, which artificially
inflated the value of the Company’s stock and impacted the value of the subject options and futures
89. As set forth herein, the Individual Defendants, by virtue of their receipt of
information reflecting the true facts regarding Kraft Heinz, their control over, receipt, and/or
modification of Kraft Heinz’s allegedly materially misleading statements and omissions, and/or
their positions with the Company that made them privy to confidential information concerning
90. The Individual Defendants Hees, Basilio, and Knopf who, as executive officers of
the Company, knew or recklessly ignored facts related to the core operations of Kraft Heinz, which
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91. Defendant 3G Capital’s insider sales also support scienter. Academic studies
regarding the relationship between insider trading and goodwill impairments are consistent with
the alleged fraudulent intent here and provide evidence, based upon a comparison of firms that
record goodwill impairments and firms that do not take impairment charges, that officers have
private information regarding eventual goodwill impairments and trade on that information prior
to taking a write-down. These statistical studies have found a considerable, abnormal selling of
shares by corporate insiders in the two years preceding the formal announcement
of goodwill impairments, and that insiders generally distance their trades by approximately six
92. According to academic studies, corporate officers and directors face incentives to
behave strategically with respect to their trades. As with the sales by Defendant 3G capital – who
sold shares approximately six months before the February 2019 disclosure of Kraft Heinz’s $15
billion write-down – studies have shown that stock sales by insiders increase three to nine quarters
prior to a break in a string of consecutive quarterly earnings increases. Because SFAS 142 requires
annual impairment testing, insiders may obtain private information about future impairments at
least one year before the actual loss is publicly reported. The results of researchers' tests are
consistent with insiders possessing private information regarding goodwill impairments, and
suggest that even despite high visibility and attendant high litigation risk associated
with goodwill impairments, officers sell their shares strategically in advance of reporting the
impairment. The results of these studies suggest that officers distance their sales from the
93. Consistent with these findings, in August 2018 Defendant 3G Capital sold more
than $1.2 billion of Kraft Heinz common stock at an artificially inflated price. This sale occurred
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approximately six months before Kraft Heinz’s February 21, 2017 concession that the Company
would take a significant goodwill write-down, which is consistent with the insider sales pattern
94. On April 22, 2019, Kraft Heinz announced that Defendant Hees is stepping down
as the Company’s Chief Executive Officer effective June 30, 2019. The departure of senior
95. Finally, scienter is established by the massive size of the goodwill impairment
itself, when just months earlier, the Company had supposedly conducted an impairment analysis
and found only a minimal material impairment of its assets. No reasonable inference can support
any assertion by the Defendants that there was no impairment and then within a matter of months,
much of the value of the entire Kraft Heinz business was deemed to be worthless.
96. The Individual Defendants are liable as participants in a fraudulent scheme and
course of conduct that operated as a fraud or deceit on purchasers by disseminating materially false
and misleading statements and/or concealing material adverse facts. The scheme deceived the
investing public regarding the Company’s financial prospects, and the intrinsic value of Kraft
Heinz common stock, and caused Plaintiff and members of the Class to suffer damages.
97. Plaintiff brings this action pursuant to Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure on behalf individuals or entities who purchased or otherwise acquired Kraft Heinz
common stock, purchased call options on Kraft Heinz common stock, sold put options on Kraft
Heinz common stock and/or purchased futures on Kraft Heinz common stock during the Class
Period, and were damaged thereby. Excluded from the Class are Defendants herein; members of
the immediate families of each of the Defendants; any person, firm, trust, corporation, officer,
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director or other individual or entity in which any of the Defendants has a controlling interest or
which is related to or affiliated with any the Defendants; and the legal representatives, agents,
98. The members of the Class are so numerous that joinder of all members is
impracticable. While the exact number of Class members can only be determined by appropriate
discovery, Plaintiff believes that Class members number at least in the hundreds, if not the
99. There are questions of law and fact that are common to the Class, including:
(c) whether the prices of Kraft Heinz common stock was artificially
inflated during the Class Period;
(e) whether the prices of call options and futures on Kraft Heinz
common stock were artificially inflated, and whether the prices of
put options on Kraft Heinz common stock were artificially deflated
during the Class Period;
(h) whether plaintiff and the other members of the Class were
injured as a result of Defendants’ misconduct.
100. Plaintiff’s claims are typical of the claims of the other members of the Class, and
101. Plaintiff is committed to prosecuting this action and has retained competent
counsel experienced in litigation of this nature. Plaintiff has the same interests as the other
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members of the Class. Accordingly, Plaintiff is adequate representatives of the Class and will
102. A class action is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient
fact, as alleged above, caused Kraft Heinz common stock to trade at artificially inflated prices and
directly impacted the value of options on Kraft Heinz common stock during the Class Period.
104. For example, as alleged above, on February 6, 2018, Nielsen data showed a 4-7%
volume decline in Kraft Heinz’s top-3 categories (cheese, meat and coffee). In addition, data
showed that sales of Kraft’s Planters nuts fell by approximately 15%. As a result of the disclosure,
the Company’s common stock price fell $2.73 per share over the next two days, from a close of
105. Second, on February 16, 2018, Kraft Heinz released its 2017 annual results, and
reported a decline in sales of about 1.1%, driven primarily by weak sales of nuts and cold cuts.
Defendant Hees commented on the related earnings call that “there is no question that our financial
results in 2017 did not meet our potential.” On this announcement, Kraft Heinz’s share price
dropped over the next two trading days $4.02 per share, or approximately 5.5%, from a close of
$72.71 per share on Thursday, February 15, 2018 to a close of $68.69 per share on Monday,
106. Third, on November 1, 2018, Defendants announced that the Company’s EPS of
$0.78 per share fell short of consensus estimates by nearly 4%, while its EBITA missed analysts’
consensus estimates by approximately $100 million, or 7%. In response to this news, Kraft Heinz’s
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stock price declined $5.47 per share, or 9.7%, from a close of $56.20 per share on November 1,
2018, to close at $50.73 per share on November 2, 2018, removing the artificial inflation of Kraft
Heinz common stock, and impacting the value of options on Kraft Heinz common stock.
107. Fourth, on February 21, 2019, Defendants disclosed that the Company recorded
non-cash impairment charges of $15.4 billion related to goodwill and intangible assets driven
primarily by the Kraft and Oscar Mayer trademarks, as well as the U.S. Refrigerated and Canada
Retail. Additionally, the Company disclosed that it received a subpoena from the SEC in October
2018, associated with its investigation into Kraft Heinz’s accounting policies, procedures, and
internal controls over financial reporting and that the Company had been operating material
weaknesses in its system of internal controls over financial reporting. As a result of this news, the
price of Kraft Heinz common stock declined approximately 27.5%, from $48.18 per share on
108. As the truth was revealed to the market, artificial inflation was removed from the
prices of Kraft Heinz common stock, call options and futures, and artificial deflation was removed
from the prices of Kraft Heinz put options. Consequently, Plaintiff and other equity and
derivatives purchasers and sellers suffered damages on from their Class Period transactions.
109. Plaintiff will rely upon the presumption of reliance established by the fraud-on-the
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110. At all relevant times, the market for Kraft Heinz common stock was efficient
because, among other things: (i) as a regulated issuer, Kraft Heinz filed periodic public reports
with the SEC; and (ii) Kraft Heinz regularly communicated with public investors via established
the major news wire services and through other wide-ranging public disclosures, such as
communications with the financial press, securities analysts, and other similar reporting services.
111. At all relevant times, the market for Kraft Heinz common stock and derivatives on
Kraft Heinz common stock was efficient. Indeed, Plaintiff’s demonstration of the market
efficiency of the underlying security – Kraft Heinz common stock – is sufficient to entitle it to rely
on the fraud-on-the market theory for options and futures on Kraft Heinz common stock. The
market for Kraft Heinz common stock was efficient for the following reasons, among others:
(a) Kraft Heinz’s securities met the requirements for listing, and was listed and
actively traded on the NASDAQ, a highly efficient and automated market;
(b) As a regulated issuer, Kraft Heinz filed periodic reports with the SEC;
(c) Kraft Heinz regularly communicated with public investors via established
market communication mechanisms, including through regular disseminations of
press releases on the national circuits of major newswire services and through other
wide-ranging public disclosures, such as communications with the financial press
and other similar reporting services; and
(d) Kraft Heinz was followed by numerous securities analysts employed by major
brokerage firms who wrote reports which were distributed to those brokerage firms’
sales force and certain customers. Each of these reports was publicly available and
entered the public market place.
112. As a result of the foregoing, the market for Kraft Heinz’s securities promptly
reacted to current information regarding Kraft Heinz from all publicly available sources and
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reflected such information in the trading prices of Kraft Heinz common stock. Under these
circumstances, all purchasers of Kraft Heinz common stock, purchasers of call options on Kraft
Heinz common stock, sellers of put options on Kraft Heinz common stock and purchasers of
futures on Kraft Heinz common stock suffered similar injuries through their transactions in these
113. A Class-wide presumption of reliance is also appropriate in this action under the
United States Supreme Court holding in Affiliated Ute Citizens of Utah v. United States, 406 U.S.
128 (1972), because the claims asserted herein against Defendants are predicated upon omissions
114. The statutory safe harbor or bespeaks caution doctrine applicable to forward-
looking statements under certain circumstances does not apply to any of the false and misleading
statements pleaded in this Complaint. None of the statements complained of herein was a forward-
looking statement. Rather, they were historical statements or statements of purportedly current
facts and conditions at the time the statements were made, including statements about Kraft
115. To the extent that any of the false and misleading statements alleged herein can be
language identifying important facts that could cause actual results to differ materially from those
in the statements. As set forth above in detail, then-existing facts contradicted Defendants’
statements regarding Kraft Heinz’s operations, prospects and controls, among others. Given the
then-existing facts contradicting Defendants’ statements, any generalized risk disclosures made by
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Kraft Heinz were not sufficient to insulate Defendants from liability for their materially false and
misleading statements.
116. To the extent that the statutory safe harbor does apply to any forward-looking
statements pleaded herein, Defendants are liable for those false forward-looking statements
because at the time each of those statements was made, the particular speaker knew that the
particular forward-looking statement was false, and the false forward-looking statement was
authorized and approved by an executive officer of Kraft Heinz who knew that the statement was
COUNT I
Violation of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and
Rule 10b-5 against Kraft Heinz and the Individual Defendants
117. Plaintiff repeats, incorporates and realleges each and every allegation contained
118. This claim is brought by Plaintiff against Kraft Heinz and the Individual
Defendants for violations of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-
5 promulgated thereunder.
119. During the Class Period, Defendants disseminated or approved the materially false
and misleading statements specified above, which they knew or recklessly disregarded were
misleading in that they misrepresented or omitted material facts necessary in order to make the
statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.
120. Defendants violated Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 in that
they: (a) employed devices, schemes, and artifices to defraud; (b) made untrue statements of
material facts or omitted to state material facts necessary in order to make the statements made, in
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light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading; or (c) engaged in acts,
practices, and a course of business that operated as a fraud or deceit upon Plaintiff and other Class
members related to the purchase and/or acquisition and sale of Kraft Heinz derivatives.
121. In addition to the duties of full disclosure imposed on the Defendants attendant to
their affirmative false and misleading statements to the public, Defendants had a duty under SEC
Regulations S-X (17 C.F.R. §210.01, et seq.) and S-K (17 C.F.R. §229.10, et seq.) to promptly
disseminate truthful information with respect to Kraft Heinz operations and performance that
would be material to investors in compliance with the integrated disclosure provisions of the SEC,
including with respect to the Company’s revenue and earnings trends, so that the market prices of
the Company’s securities would be based on truthful, complete, and accurate information.
122. As a direct and proximate cause of Defendants’ wrongful conduct, Plaintiff and
other members of the proposed Class suffered damages in connection with their purchases of Kraft
Heinz common stock, purchases of call options on Kraft Heinz common stock, sales of put options
on Kraft Heinz common stock, and purchases of futures on Kraft Heinz common stock during the
Class Period. In reliance on the integrity of the market, Plaintiff traded in the subject securities
and experienced losses when the artificial inflation was removed from the price of Kraft Heinz
common stock as a result of the revelations. Plaintiff would not have purchased or sold the relevant
Kraft Heinz securities at the prices it paid, or at all, if it had been aware of Defendants’ false and
123. By virtue of the conduct alleged herein, Defendants named in this Count have each
violated 10(b) of the Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. § 78j(b)) and SEC Rule 10b-5 (17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-
5), and are liable to Plaintiff and other members of the proposed Class.
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COUNT II
Violation of Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act against
the Individual Defendants and 3G Capital
124. Plaintiff repeats, incorporates and realleges each and every allegation set forth
above (other than disclaimers of fraud claims) as if fully set forth herein.
125. As alleged above, Defendants each violated Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5
126. Defendant 3G Capital and the Individual Defendants acted as controlling persons
of Kraft Heinz within the meaning of Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a). By
virtue of their high-level positions, participation in and/or awareness of the Company’s operations,
direct involvement in the day-to-day operations of the Company, and/or intimate knowledge of the
Company’s actual performance, and their power to control the materially false and misleading
public statements about Kraft Heinz during the Class Period, Defendant 3G Capital and the
Individual Defendants had the power and ability to control the actions of Kraft Heinz and its
employees. By reason of such conduct, Defendant 3G Capital and the Individual Defendants are
COUNT III
For Violations Of Section 20A Of The
Exchange Act Against 3G Capital
127. Plaintiff repeats, incorporates, and realleges each and every allegation set forth
above as if fully set forth herein. As set forth in the paragraphs above, and as further set forth
below, Defendant 3G Capital committed underlying violations of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5
thereunder by selling Kraft Heinz common stock while in possession of material nonpublic
information about, among other things, the Company’s upcoming write-down, and, consequently,
is liable to contemporaneous purchasers of that stock under Section 20A of the Exchange Act. See
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options on Kraft Heinz common stock, sellers of put options on Kraft Heinz common stock and
purchasers of futures on Kraft Heinz common stock, because the market for these instruments is
128. Defendant 3G Capital, through its designees to Kraft Heinz’s senior manager and
Board of Directors, and through direct communications from Kraft Heinz and the Individual
Defendants, possessed material nonpublic information at the time they sold shares over 20.6
129. Material nonpublic information known to 3G Capital at the time of its Kraft Heinz
common stock sales included, among other things, that the Company would soon incur a massive
write-down, leading to missed earnings, a reduced dividend and delayed annual report. Defendant
3G Capital did not contact the SEC on these matters or disclose these material nonpublic facts to
investors. Nor did 3G Capital, as it should have, direct the Company to do so.
130. Simply put, Defendant 3G Capital possessed material nonpublic knowledge about
Kraft Heinz’s operations, accounting and business prospects, and knew or recklessly disregarded
it would cause the Company’s share price to fall when publicly disclosed, and unloaded a
significant portion of its holdings at inflated prices before the nonpublic information was revealed.
In fact, by selling over 20.6 million shares of Kraft Heinz common stock at a price of $59.85 per
share, Defendant 3G Capital received over $1.2 billion in proceeds, avoiding millions of dollars in
losses.
nonpublic information, which is a violation of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, 3G
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Timber Hill purchased shares of Kraft Heinz common stock and futures on Kraft Heinz common
stock. Upon information and belief, thousands of other Class members also purchased Kraft Heinz
common stock or derivatives with markets interconnected to the market for Kraft Heinz common
stock contemporaneously with 3G Capital’s August 7, 2018 sales. As alleged in this Complaint,
at the time of the 3G Capital’s sales and the purchases by Plaintiff Timber Hill and the other Class
members, the price of Kraft Heinz’s common stock was artificially inflated by the Kraft Heinz
133. Section 20A of the Exchange Act provides that “[a]ny person who violates any
provision of this chapter or the rules or regulations thereunder by purchasing or selling a security
while in possession of material nonpublic information shall be liable in an action . . . to any person
who, contemporaneously with the purchase or sale of securities that is the subject of such violation,
has purchased (where such violation is based on a sale of securities) or sold (where such violation
134. As set forth above, Defendant 3G Capital committed underlying violations Section
10(b) and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, by its acts and omissions as alleged in this Complaint.
Specifically, 3G Capital violated Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 thereunder by selling Kraft Heinz
is liable pursuant to Section 20A of the Exchange Act to Plaintiff and any other Class member that
purchased the subject common stock or derivatives contemporaneously with 3G Capital’s sale on
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A. Determining that this action is a proper class action under Rule 23 of the
and the other Class members against all Defendants, jointly and severally, for
C. Awarding Plaintiff and other members of the Class their reasonable costs and
expenses incurred in this action, including counsel fees and expert fees; and
D. Such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper.
-and-
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Michael H. Moirano
MOIRANO GORMAN KENNY, LLC
135 S. LaSalle St., Suite 2200
Chicago, Illinois 60603
Telephone: (312) 614-1260
[email protected]
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