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Inside India’s Insolvency Regime

By John Freund |

A new joint study by the Insolvency Law Academy and Burford Capital sheds light on how legal finance is gaining traction as a strategic tool in the India's insolvency processes. By enabling distressed entities and professionals to monetize contingent assets without exhausting limited estate resources, legal finance has the power to enhance liquidity and improve recovery outcomes for creditors.

An article by Burford Capital unveils how legal finance-backed structures can convert contingent claims into tangible value, supporting corporate continuity and delivering stronger creditor returns. The study highlights India’s unique factors: abundant untapped recoveries from avoidance claims and disputed receivables, widespread capital shortages faced by insolvency professionals, and the need for prompt liquidity solutions. It also references real-world case studies showcasing how legal finance facilitated strategic wins for firms like Hindustan Construction Company and Patel Engineering.

On the regulatory front, judicial rulings—such as in Tomorrow Sales v. SBS Holdings (2023)—have explicitly recognized the legitimacy of legal finance in India’s litigation ecosystem. Meanwhile, updates to the IBC now permit the assignment of “not readily reali[z]able assets” during liquidation, laying groundwork for integrating legal finance into the insolvency framework. Nonetheless, the regulatory landscape—including aspects of FEMA compliance and fund repatriation—remains cautiously permissive.

Emerging operational structures include direct estate financing, SPV‑based claim ring‑fencing, and creditor assignments for immediate value. The report urges a “light‑touch” regulatory approach, alongside the development of codes of conduct and educational efforts to arm insolvency professionals and creditors with the know‑how to deploy legal finance effectively.

Looking ahead, as India’s insolvency infrastructure matures, legal finance is poised to play a central role—unlocking value in distressed assets, bridging funding gaps, and aligning with global best practices.

Burford’s Law-Firm Investment Plan Draws Fire

By John Freund |

Burford Capital’s new push to take minority stakes in U.S. law firms is already meeting resistance from tort-reform advocates and insurer-aligned groups, who argue the structure could blur loyalties inside the attorney-client relationship. The plan, described by Burford’s chief development officer Travis Lenkner as “strategic minority investments” to help firms scale, would rely on managed service organizations (MSOs) that house back-office assets while leaving legal work to a lawyer-owned entity. Supporters cast it as a lawyer-friendly alternative to private equity; skeptics see a back-door end-run around state bars’ bans on non-lawyer ownership.

An article in Insurance Journal reports that critics, including the Florida Justice Reform Institute’s William Large, warn MSO-style deals could tilt decision-making toward investors focused on “big verdicts,” threatening firm independence and client interests. Only Arizona permits direct non-lawyer ownership today, and while Utah and Washington, D.C., have loosened rules at the margins, most states still enforce bright-line prohibitions.

The debate has sharpened as disclosure and licensing regimes proliferate: at least 16 states now require some level of third-party funding transparency. The Insurance Journal piece also notes a recent Texas Bar ethics opinion that green-lights MSOs for law-firm services under narrow conditions, though it doesn’t answer the broader question of outside investors’ influence. For its part, Burford says it understands the ethical guardrails and intends to be a passive investor focused on firm growth and operational support.

For the legal finance industry, the MSO path signals a pivotal test. If bars and courts accept these structures, capital could flow directly into firm operations—potentially accelerating portfolio origination, technology spend, and fee-earner leverage. If regulators balk, expect renewed calls for explicit rulemaking on ownership, disclosure, and control—alongside creative alternatives (credit facilities, revenue shares, and hybrid portfolios) to replicate MSO-like benefits without the governance controversy.

BHP Presses Gramercy–Pogust on Control of £36bn Claim

By John Freund |

A high-stakes governance fight is spilling into the UK’s largest group action. BHP has demanded clarity over hedge fund Gramercy Funds Management’s role at Pogust Goodhead, the claimant firm fronting a £36 billion suit tied to Brazil’s 2015 Mariana dam disaster. The miner’s counsel at Slaughter and May points to recent leadership turmoil at the firm and questions whether a non-lawyer financier can exert de facto control over litigation strategy—an issue that cuts to the heart of legal ethics and England & Wales’ restrictions on who can direct claims.

Financial Times reports that Gramercy, which finances Pogust, has just extended $65 million more to the firm after the removal of CEO-cofounder Tom Goodhead. BHP wants answers on independence and management oversight as the case nears a pivotal High Court ruling. For its part, Pogust says it remains independent and committed to its clients, while Gramercy rejects any suggestion it owns or manages the firm. The backdrop is familiar to funders: courts’ increasing scrutiny of who calls the shots when capital underwrites complex, bet-the-company litigation. Prior settlement overtures from BHP and Vale—reported at $1.4 billion—were rebuffed as insufficient relative to the claim’s scale and alleged harm.

Beyond this case, the episode underscores a larger question: how far can financing arrangements go before they collide with the long-standing principle that lawyers—and only lawyers—control litigation? The answer matters well beyond Mariana. If courts or legislators tighten the definition of control, expect deal terms, governance covenants, and disclosure norms in UK funding to evolve quickly. For cross-border mass-harm claims, the line between support and steer is narrowing—and being tested in real time.

ALF-Member Backs Amazon UK Pricing Class Action

By John Freund |

A new opt-out competition claim aims squarely at Amazon, alleging price-parity tactics inflated costs for more than 45 million UK consumers. The Association of Consumer Support Organisations has filed for certification in the Competition Appeal Tribunal, instructing Stephenson Harwood with counsel from Monckton Chambers. The claim asserts Amazon’s marketplace policies restricted third-party sellers from offering better prices elsewhere—costs that, ACSO says, consumers ultimately bore.

The Global Legal Post notes a third-party litigation funder—confirmed as a member of the Association of Litigation Funders—is bankrolling the action, with identity to be revealed at certification. That disclosure posture aligns with the CAT’s funder-transparency expectations post-PACCAR while preserving competitive sensitivity during the early phase. On the defense side, Amazon labeled the case “without merit,” and emphasized consumer benefits and seller support on its platform. For claimant-side practitioners, the case illustrates how funders continue to underwrite large opt-out competition claims notwithstanding shifting case law on damages-based LFAs; structures are adjusting, not retreating.

If certified, the case will test funder appetite for big-ticket consumer competition matters amid the UK government’s newly announced review of the collective actions regime. It could also influence how funders structure returns (percentage vs. multiple, hybrids) to thread the needle between tribunal oversight and commercial viability. Watch for whether the CAT’s scrutiny of fees and “just and reasonable” outcomes further standardizes funding terms across UK opt-out claims.

Funding of collective actions under the spotlight

By Tom Webster |

The following was contributed by Tom Webster, Chief Commercial Officer for Sentry Funding.

The UK government is seeking views on the operation of litigation funding in the collective actions sphere, as part of its wider review of the opt-out collective actions regime in competition law.

An open call for evidence by the Department for Business & Trade (DBT) earlier this month featured a number of questions relating to litigation funding. These included whether the approach to funders’ share of settlement sums or damages is fair and proportionate; how the secondary market in litigation funding has developed and whether this has affected transparency and client confidentiality; whether funding provision for the full potential cost of claims is considered enough at the outset; and how conflict between litigation funders and class representatives should be approached.

As well as funding issues within the regime, the review will also look at scope and certification of cases; alternative dispute resolution, settlement and damages; and distribution of funds.

The DBT said it was time to review the operation and impact of the opt-out collective actions regime in competition law, as it is now ten years since its introduction through the Consumer Rights Act 2015. 

It said: ‘This government is focused on economic growth, and a regime that is proportionate and focused on returns to consumers where they are due is good for growth and investment.

‘However, we are aware of the potential burden on business that increased exposure to litigation can present. Finding the right balance between achieving redress for consumers and limiting the burden on business is essential to ensure that businesses can operate with certainty, whilst providing a clear, cost-effective, route for consumers.’

Providing background to its review, the DBT noted that when it was introduced in 2015, the regime was intended to make it easier for consumers, including businesses, to seek redress where they have suffered loss due to breach of competition law. It said that since then, the regime has developed and expanded significantly: ‘tens of billions’ of pounds in damages have been claimed, and ‘hundreds of millions’ of pounds spent on legal fees. The DBT said this was far higher than anticipated in the original impact assessment, which estimated the total cost to business to be just £30.8 million per annum.

The DBT also noted that the type of case being brought before the CAT has also developed in ‘unexpected’ ways. When the regime was introduced, it was expected that most cases would be follow-on claims, brought after the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) or European Commission have already investigated anti-competitive behaviour and made an adverse finding. However, approximately 90% of the current caseload is now made up of standalone cases, the DBT said.

The government also pointed out that only one case (Justin Le Patourel v BT Group Plc [2024] CAT 76) has reached judgment in the CAT, with other certified cases generally concluding in settlement outside of court. This means that there has been limited precedent set on key issues such as damages and distribution, it asserted.

Proponents of the collective actions regime have pointed out that it is still relatively new, and has been subject to much challenge by defendants. But while it will inevitably take time to bed in, they argue that the regime is already effective in improving corporate behaviour and levelling the playing field for consumers.

The government said its review will also take into account existing work relevant to the regime, such as the Civil Justice Council (CJC)’s recent report on litigation funding.  

Its call for evidence will close on 14 October. 

Car Finance Mis-Selling: What the UK Supreme Court Verdict Really Means

By Kevin Prior |

The following article was contributed by Kevin Prior, Chief Commercial Officer of Seven Stars Legal Funding.

On Friday 1st August 2025, the Supreme Court delivered its ruling on car finance commission complaints. While banks avoided the massive £44 billion liability some predicted, one customer called Johnson won his case - and that victory has opened the door for thousands of similar claims totalling somewhere between £9bn and £18bn – still a huge market.

The Bottom Line: Johnson proved his finance deal was "unfair" because:

  • The dealer received a massive undisclosed commission (55% of all the interest he paid)
  • He was misled about getting independent advice when the dealer was actually tied to one lender
  • Important information was hidden in small print

What This Means

The Supreme Court has given us a clear roadmap. Claims will succeed where customers can show:

  • Excessive hidden commissions (Johnson's was 55% of his interest payments)
  • Poor disclosure - burying commission details in terms & conditions isn't enough
  • Misleading sales practices - claiming to offer "best deals" while being tied to one lender
  • Pre-2021 agreements often have the strongest cases

Why This Is Good News

  • No government bailout risk - the ruling removes fears of political intervention to protect banks
  • Clear success criteria - we now know exactly what makes a winning case
  • Settlement pressure - lenders know more claims are coming and want to avoid court
  • Immediate opportunity - claims can start now without waiting for regulators

Our Position

Our cautious approach to date has been vindicated. While others rushed in with untested legal theories, we waited for clarity. Now we have it.

The car finance opportunity is very much alive - it just requires smarter case selection. We're actively evaluating opportunities and expect to be funding cases that meet the Johnson criteria in the coming weeks.

The FCA will announce their compensation scheme plans in October, but the legal pathway is already clear. Well-selected cases with Johnson-style facts have strong prospects of success.

GLS Capital Deal Voided by Judge Over ‘Abuse of Discretion’

By John Freund |

A Texas bankruptcy judge has voided a $2.3 million litigation funding agreement between GLS Capital and a Chapter 11 liquidation trust, in a decision that may reverberate across the bankruptcy and legal funding sectors.

An article in Bloomberg Law reports that Chief Bankruptcy Judge Stacey G. Jernigan ruled the funding deal—entered into by trustee David Gonzales—was an "abuse of discretion," finding it failed to benefit creditors and lacked proper court oversight. The deal gave GLS the right to nearly $7 million in repayment (a 3x return), plus 12% of any proceeds beyond that, and included a $75,000 broker fee. Judge Jernigan noted that the financing appeared structured in a way that made it difficult for creditors to receive any meaningful recovery, commenting that “it’s hard to see how the juice will ever be worth the squeeze.”

The judge was particularly troubled by the trustee’s failure to seek prior court approval and disclose the agreement, which she found to be a serious breach of duty. As a result, she not only voided the agreement but also removed Gonzales from his trustee position. GLS Capital and the trustee have both signaled plans to appeal.

Ken Epstein, a litigation finance broker and former investment manager at Omni Bridgeway, suggested this ruling is more of an outlier than a trendsetter. While he acknowledged that courts may struggle with understanding litigation finance, he emphasized that most funders approach these agreements with appropriate safeguards.

Burford is Exploring Minority Stakes in U.S. Law Firms

By John Freund |

Burford Capital—a leading litigation funder with a market cap around $3 billion—is currently in talks with several U.S. law firms to acquire minority stakes. The firm sees opportunity amid shifting ownership regulations in the legal market.

An article in Pymnts notes that because most U.S. states prohibit non-lawyers from owning law firms due to ethical rules, Burford is proposing a structure known as a Managed Service Organization (MSO). Under this model, a law firm splits into two entities: one lawyer-owned entity handles legal work, while the MSO—potentially investor-owned—manages back-office services. This structure allows capital injection without breaching ownership restrictions.

Burford co‑founder Jonathan Molot declined to name the firms in talks and revealed no specific investment commitments yet—expectations depend on opportunities.

This move isn't framed as a private equity takeover. Instead, Burford presents itself as a "lawyer's orientation and mentality," intending to offer capital, governance, and strategic guidance—such as investing in AI and operational infrastructure—via board participation.

Just How Big is Commercial Litigation Funding?

One of LFJ's most popular posts is this 2020 piece from Ed Truant, Founder of Slingshot Capital, on the sizing of the commercial litigation funding industry. William Weisman from Parabellum Capital has just published an updated version for 2025.

Writing in NatLaw Review, Weisman notes that the commercial litigation funding industry is often misrepresented as a burgeoning asset class—typically pegged at a headline figure of $16 billion. But that AUM total is misleading. According to Westfleet Advisors, which publishes the most comprehensive annual analysis, the true picture is far smaller. In 2024, U.S. commercial litigation funders had $16.1 billion in assets under management—yet actual new annual commitments totaled only $2.3 billion, down roughly 16% from 2023 and 20% from 2022.

What's more, in terms of AUM, mainstream asset classes dwarf litigation funding. Public equities command about $60 trillion, commercial real estate about $27 trillion, and private credit around $1.6 trillion. In contrast, commercial litigation funding sits at just $16 billion—making it more than 100× smaller than private credit, 200× smaller than private equity, and 1,500× smaller than commercial real estate.

While undeniably valuable for small to mid-sized businesses pursuing meritorious claims they couldn’t otherwise afford, the industry’s overall reach is extremely limited. It raises important questions about the appropriateness of broad regulation targeting an industry that remains a rounding error in global finance.

This analysis highlights a central tension: while litigation funding plays a critical role in access to justice, its modest scale suggests policymakers should avoid heavy-handed regulation. Instead, targeted, tailored rules—focused on transparency and case-level risks—may be more appropriate and proportionate for such a specialized and niche market.

Manolete Welcomes New Era Under Mena Halton

By John Freund |

Steven Cooklin, founder and CEO of Manolete Partners, has stepped down after a remarkable 40‑year tenure in the litigation funding sector, marking the end of a defining leadership era for the firm. In his 16 years guiding Manolete, Cooklin steered the company through its foundation in 2009, its 2018 IPO, and multiple waves of market turbulence, not least the Covid‑related slump in insolvency proceedings that severely impacted litigation funding operations.

The Global Legal Post reports that Cooklin’s departure aligns with Manolete’s renewed financial vigor, with the company having refinanced its debt with HSBC, delivered record revenue of £30.5 million for the year ended 31 March, and invested in 282 new UK insolvency cases. A landmark moment was the firm’s first cartel claim settlement in the Trucks Cartel litigation, netting £3.2 million.

Stepping into Cooklin’s role is long‑time managing director Mena Halton, who joined Manolete in 2014 and has been at the forefront of its legal strategy. With roots at Dentons and Rothman Pantall, Halton is celebrated for her expertise in contentious insolvency matters.

Manolete’s strategic repositioning comes at a pivotal time—Halton takes over a firm that has restored momentum and financial stability. Her leadership credentials suggest a seamless transition and promising path forward.

Cooklin reportedly remains a major shareholder and will be available to advise the board.

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