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Omni Bridgeway Posts Record Q3 FY26 Pipeline as A$391 Million in New Commitments Drives 2.5x Returns

By John Freund |

Omni Bridgeway has reported its Q3 FY26 portfolio update, headlined by an exclusive term sheet pipeline of more than A$600 million — roughly twice the firm's average quarterly pipeline — alongside A$391.8 million in new commitments contracted across 27 investments year-to-date. The Sydney-listed funder, which manages A$5.5 billion in assets across ten funds and operates from more than 20 offices in 15 countries, framed the update as a sign of accelerating deployment and capital formation.

According to GlobeNewswire, the firm has recorded 59 full and partial completions year-to-date, generating A$268.4 million in cash investment proceeds at a 2.5x multiple on invested capital and a 108% fair value conversion ratio. Operating expenses of A$51.2 million remain on track to land below the firm's A$80 million FY26 budget, while management fees of A$27 million are tracking toward an upgraded A$35 million full-year target.

On the capital side, Omni Bridgeway said the full and final close of Funds 4/5 Series II remains on track for FY26, and that more than A$150 million in additional sidecar and overflow capital structures are at advanced diligence stages. The combination of an unusually deep pipeline, strong realizations, and disciplined cost performance positions the funder to defend its narrative of platform scale at a moment when listed peers are under pressure on both fundraising and case-realization timelines.

Florida Advocates Press Lawmakers to Revive Third-Party Litigation Funding Bill in Next Special Session

By John Freund |

With Florida's redistricting special session wrapping up and another special session expected, tort-reform and insurance-industry advocates are pressing state lawmakers to use the next window to take up unfinished business on third-party litigation funding. The push centers on legislation that would impose greater transparency obligations on outside funders and that has previously cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee but stalled before reaching the floor.

As reported by Florida's Voice, proponents argue that third-party litigation financing inflates settlement and verdict values, drives up insurance premiums, and operates with too little visibility into who is bankrolling Florida lawsuits. The most recent vehicle, Senate Bill 1396, was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee earlier this year and would require disclosure of funding agreements and limit the influence funders may exert over case strategy.

Florida has been a focal point of the national TPLF debate as states from Georgia to Louisiana have moved ahead with disclosure regimes, registration requirements, and foreign-funder restrictions. Advocates in Tallahassee see the post-redistricting calendar as a narrow but real opportunity to close the gap with neighboring states, while litigation funders and plaintiff-side groups are likely to mobilize against any fast-tracked vehicle that re-emerges in a special session with a compressed schedule.

Jonathan Sablone Launches Sablone Advisory LLC, a Boutique Law and Advisory Firm Focused on Litigation Finance

By John Freund |

Jonathan Sablone, a commercial disputes attorney with three decades of cross-border, financial services, and litigation finance experience, has launched Sablone Advisory LLC — a Boston-based boutique positioned to serve claimants, funders, and insurers across the legal finance ecosystem under the tagline "at the intersection of law and finance™."

According to Sablone Advisory LLC, the new firm offers underwriting, diligence, monitoring, and asset management services to litigation funders and to insurers offering contingent risk products. On the claimant side, Sablone Advisory works with plaintiffs and their counsel to position cases for funding, including packaging case portfolios for cross-collateralized funding and insurance wrappers — services that have become increasingly central as funders and insurers structure deals across multiple matters and risk layers.

"I founded Sablone Advisory to assist clients with the most intractable problems and issues facing the legal finance industry," said Sablone in announcing the launch. "'At the intersection of law and finance' is not just a slogan, but a practical, commercial approach to legal problem-solving that I have practiced for decades."

The launch reflects a continuing trend in the litigation finance industry: senior practitioners with capital-markets and complex-litigation backgrounds spinning out of large institutional platforms to offer specialized, independent advisory and underwriting services. As funders increasingly structure portfolio-level deals, layer ATE and contingent risk insurance into capital stacks, and pursue cross-border recoveries, demand for senior independent diligence and asset management — particularly from professionals fluent in both legal strategy and structured finance — has grown.

For claimants and their counsel, the firm's case-positioning services are likely to resonate in a market where funders are increasingly selective about case quality, structure, and counsel pedigree. For funders and insurers, an independent boutique offering monitoring and asset management — separate from origination — represents the kind of service-provider infrastructure that more mature alternative-asset markets typically develop as they scale.

Inquiries can be directed to Jonathan Sablone at jsablone@sabloneadvisory.com or via www.sabloneadvisory.com.

Colorado HB 1421 Targets PE and Non-Attorney Funding of Law Firms in Bipartisan Push

By John Freund |

Colorado lawmakers have introduced HB 1421, a bill that would sharply restrict the ability of state law firms to enter financial or contractual arrangements with alternative business structures (ABS) and any entity in which non-attorneys hold ownership stakes or exert direction over legal practice. The bill is notable both for the reach of its restrictions and for the unusual coalition behind it.

As reported by The Sum and Substance, the legislation is sponsored by Democratic Rep. Javier Mabrey of Denver and Republican House Minority Leader Jarvis Caldwell of Monument, with active support from the Colorado Chamber of Commerce and the Colorado Trial Lawyers Association — typically opposing forces in business-litigation policy debates. The bill was scheduled for its first hearing before the House Judiciary Committee on April 29.

HB 1421 would prohibit Colorado law firms from entering arrangements with ABS-style structures relating to legal services, practicing in professional companies where non-lawyers own interests or direct lawyer judgment, or compensating any party where compensation depends on a percentage of legal fees or case recoveries. The bill would also empower courts to halt offending arrangements, order fee reimbursement to clients, and disgorge ABS profits derived from prohibited activities. The article specifically references Burford Capital's litigation funding presence in framing the bill's broader policy concern with non-lawyer financial stakes in legal outcomes.

The legislation lands at a moment when private equity ownership of legal services is expanding rapidly in jurisdictions that permit it — Arizona, Utah, and the District of Columbia — and where PE-backed national platforms are increasingly partnering with firms in non-ABS jurisdictions to extend their operating reach. The Colorado bill, if enacted, would cut against that expansion model by restricting how Colorado firms can collaborate with out-of-state, non-attorney-owned platforms.

For the litigation finance community, the bill is a meaningful data point. Although disclosure-based reform has dominated state-level TPLF debate in 2025-26, HB 1421 reflects a parallel and somewhat different policy thrust: not transparency about funding, but structural limits on the ownership and economic relationships that surround legal practice. The convergence of plaintiffs' bar and chamber-of-commerce support behind a single bill is itself rare, and may presage similar coalitions in other non-ABS states facing PE-driven consolidation pressure.

Triple-I Tracks the State-Level Wave of Third-Party Litigation Funding Reform

By John Freund |

A new Triple-I research piece outlines the rapidly expanding state-level reform agenda targeting third-party litigation funding, with disclosure mandates, foreign-funder bans, and registration regimes advancing in legislatures across the country as federal action remains slower-moving.

According to Triple-I's Lewis Nibbelin, Georgia led the most consequential 2025 round of reform with legislation requiring litigation financiers to register with the Department of Banking and Finance and prohibiting funder influence over case outcomes — measures that Triple-I links to subsequent auto insurance rate reductions and dividends to Georgia drivers. Louisiana followed with its widely covered Department of Insurance partnership with the NICB and 4WARN to combat TPLF marketing tactics, alongside legislation requiring attorneys to disclose TPLF contracts within 30 days of retainer or funding execution.

Other states are moving in parallel. Mississippi's new law, effective July 1, mandates disclosure of foreign litigation funding to address concerns about exploitation by non-U.S. entities. Utah passed comparable restrictions in March 2026. Michigan's House committee bill — already covered in LFJ — would ban foreign TPLF entirely while requiring disclosure and registration of all funders. Missouri, Tennessee, and Ohio are advancing similar foreign-funding bans, with the Tennessee and Ohio bills already passing their respective state Houses.

The piece references a joint NICB/4WARN study quantifying the scale of the consumer-facing TPLF market: $380 million in online search advertising between June 2024 and June 2025, and 27.8 million clicks to TPLF websites in June 2025 alone. Triple-I cites broader tort cost figures from the Perryman Group and Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse — including $35.8 billion in direct annual losses and roughly $600 per U.S. household — to frame the policy stakes.

Louisiana Insurance Commissioner Tim Temple, quoted in the piece, framed the partnership as protecting citizens "from opportunists who manipulate the claims process to fuel excessive litigation, which is a primary driver of our high insurance costs." For commercial litigation funders, the rapid proliferation of state-level disclosure and foreign-funder-ban regimes represents a meaningful compliance overlay — particularly for cross-border deals and structured funding vehicles where investor identity, jurisdiction, and reporting timing now vary materially by state.

Diamond Comic Distributors Bankruptcy Court Approves Counsel and JPMorgan Financing to Pursue Litigation Recoveries

By John Freund |

The bankruptcy court overseeing Diamond Comic Distributors has approved trustee Morgan W. Fisher's motion to retain litigation counsel and draw on debtor-in-possession financing from JPMorgan Chase to pursue litigation claims as part of the estate's strategy to generate creditor recoveries — a structure that places the case at the intersection of bankruptcy debt and litigation-driven monetization.

As reported by ICv2, the trustee identified litigation as one of three avenues for revenue generation in an estate that faces approximately $7 million in liabilities and limited operational capacity. The JPMorgan facility is positioned as DIP financing to fund both ongoing operations and the litigation effort, with court approval clearing the way for retained counsel to begin pursuing claims related to the estate.

The motion drew formal objections. The Ad Hoc Committee of Consignors argued the plan lacks a viable execution path, citing the estate's lack of employees, a lapsed insurance policy, and no clear mechanism to distribute the consigned inventory at the heart of the dispute. Alliance Entertainment filed separate objections earlier in the week, with detailed concerns about the structure's economics. The court nonetheless approved the trustee's request to proceed with retained counsel and the financing facility.

For the litigation finance community, the Diamond approval is a useful illustration of how bankruptcy estates increasingly turn to debt-financed litigation strategies to monetize claims that would otherwise sit dormant. While the JPMorgan facility is conventional DIP financing rather than third-party litigation funding in the dedicated TPLF sense, the structural logic — using outside capital to underwrite the cost of pursuing potentially valuable claims, with priority repayment on success — increasingly overlaps with TPLF in bankruptcy contexts.

The case also highlights a recurring tension in trustee-led litigation strategies. Where claim values are highly speculative and creditor classes have divergent interests, court-approved DIP-funded litigation can become a focal point for inter-creditor disputes — particularly when objectors argue, as here, that the estate lacks the operational infrastructure to execute on any litigation upside even if it materializes. As bankruptcy practitioners and TPLF providers continue to develop hybrid structures that combine DIP debt with success-fee or non-recourse capital, cases like Diamond are likely to inform how courts evaluate these arrangements going forward.

Motor Finance Redress is a Clean-Up, a Compromise, and a Promise Not Quite Kept

By Kevin Prior |

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

When the Financial Conduct Authority pushed back its redress consultation deadline to 12 December 2025, its reasoning sounded awfully familiar: the regulator needed more time to ‘get it right’.

What eventually landed in the FCA’s final redress scheme rules in Policy Statement 26/3 on 30 March 2026 was, depending on where you sit, the good, the bad, and the ugly all at once.

  • Good, in that an estimated £7.5 billion will move from lenders to consumers, and the regulator will clean up a historically disorderly market in the process.
  • Bad, in that the final rules are more complicated, conditional, and fairly transparently the product of a protracted negotiation between the FCA and lenders.
  • And ugly, in that the scheme ultimately falls materially short of the full remedy the FCA promised many mis-sold consumers—a point the regulator itself has effectively conceded.

For law firms, claims management companies, and funders, this is a more interesting combination than it may appear at first glance.

The rules introduced:

  • two schemes, not one—albeit there was some logic behind the regulator’s reasoning on this point; 
  • tightened eligibility;
  • a cap on compensation in roughly a third of claims;
  • an APR adjustment that the FCA itself described as a ‘bounded regulatory judgement’; and 
  • rebuttable presumptions on certain agreements.

All of this prompts a question worth asking: what do the FCA’s delays, and the scheme that eventually emerged from them, actually mean for law firms, claims management companies, the funders behind them, and, most importantly, the consumers who are waiting to get their money back?

The drumbeat that never stopped

Between the FCA commencing its investigation into historical car finance mis-selling tied to the use of discretionary commission arrangements on 11 January 2024 and the recent publication of the final rules, motor finance mis-selling has become the biggest consumer finance news in the UK. The Court of Appeal and Supreme Court rulings in the Johnson, Wrench and Hopcraft test cases gave the scandal legal weight. The regulator’s October 2025 proposals provided the redress framework. Every court ruling, extension of the complaint-handling pause, public comments by the FCA, or advice from consumer advocates ensured that motor finance mis-selling was never far from the headlines.

None of this was free publicity for the FCA’s preferred outcome of a tidy, do-it-yourself scheme. In addition to coverage of these events themselves, each development generated further news by prompting additional rounds of lender provisioning and speculation about the industry’s total liabilities.

The FCA estimates that:

  • 79% of motor finance customers know their lenders may owe them compensation;
  • 61% are aware of the redress scheme; and
  • 75% of eligible people will participate in the scheme and receive redress.

The awareness percentages, in particular, still seem lower than you might expect, given the scandal's extensive coverage. But these numbers did not come from nowhere. They came from over two years of accumulated noise.

And behind the noise—the removal of 800 misleading adverts by FCA-regulated claims management firms, the new joint taskforce to deal with law firms and CMCs failing to adhere to good practice, the regulator’s continued insistence that consumers do not need professional representation—sits the reality the regulator will not admit. 

Professional representation remains in demand and for very good reasons. If it did not, the FCA would not be spending considerable resources on campaigns dedicated to dissuading customers from using it.

Complexity favours expertise

The FCA’s scheme does not inspire confidence that the average consumer will be able to work it out on their own.

Policy Statement 26/3 divides affected agreements into two schemes based on whether the loan began before or after 1 April 2014. Within both schemes, eligibility for redress depends on whether there was a DCA, commission above certain thresholds, or an undisclosed contractual tie. Lenders will calculate consumers’ redress using either a hybrid remedy, which is the average of commission paid and an APR-based estimated loss, or full commission repayment for the estimated 90,000 cases closely aligned with Johnson. Compensatory interest, the Bank of England base rate plus one percentage point, with a 3% annual floor, applies. There are certain inclusions, exclusions, and permissible rebuttals. There are even rules for deceased customers.

The bottom line is that a consumer who took out an agreement 10 years ago and receives a redress offer full of legalese and jargon from their lender probably won’t be able to work out what any of it means over breakfast.

Of course, some people will be able to work it out, or at least receive an offer they deem acceptable, take the money, and get on with their lives. These are exactly the people the FCA has in mind, and the regulator itself even admits that the scheme is more about giving as many eligible people as possible something back rather than fully remedying what has happened.

That is an honest admission, and an uncomfortable one. Getting something back is not the same as getting back what you were owed.

It is right that the FCA has made the scheme as accessible as possible. The problem is that the scheme covers 12.1 million agreements, and our data estimates that most mis-sold consumers will have had at least 2 or 3 motor finance agreements during the relevant period. Expecting millions of people to assess whether their lender has correctly assessed their eligibility or calculated their redress offer is not a realistic view of how consumers engage with financial services. It also paints a picture of an out-of-touch regulator—one that has, separately, decided to let lenders assess the scale of their own wrongdoing. And one whose scheme is now itself the subject of a confirmed legal challenge, which is hardly a vote of confidence in the regulator’s promise of an orderly, do-it-yourself route to compensation. Especially as the challenge is that the FCA’s final rules come down too heavily in favour of lenders. The regulator’s response? To call the challenge ‘disappointing,’ focus on the delay it may cause, and call on those bringing it to explain themselves to their clients. Consumer Voice, which is bringing the challenge with Courmacs Legal, says that the scheme need not be delayed at all, as only specific elements are in dispute.

The FCA wants to kill the category, but it will actually weed out the bad actors

The FCA’s joint taskforce with the Solicitors Regulation Authority, the Information Commissioner’s Office and the Advertising Standards Authority is, on the face of it, a warning shot to professional representatives. Exit fees are under scrutiny. Seven law firms have been closed down by the SRA, with some facing multiple ongoing investigations into their practices, and others have agreed to stop signing up new clients until they can demonstrate compliance with FCA rules. 

This, however, is not going to kill the category. Nor will it discourage consumers who have experienced harm. Many are simply not prepared to take lenders’ word that they’re doing right by them this time. Nor do they want to listen to or unquestioningly trust a regulator that allowed this misconduct to happen on its watch in the first place. Instead, it will ensure that what remains is a disciplined, well-run consumer claims market. The firms that can prove to the various regulatory bodies that they are operating fairly and correctly will be left standing and continue to demonstrate and deliver genuine value over and above the outcome of simply waiting for your lender to tell you what they think is a fair redress offer.

For funders, this is a welcome tidying of the sector. The surviving market will be smaller. It will also be more investable.

Where does this all leave law firms and funders?

Delays have given well-run firms time, something they rarely get. Time to refine their onboarding procedures. Time to build a case-vetting methodology worth the name. Time to prepare for a scheme whose final shape only recently became clear. Time to prime their clients for what’s coming. And time to watch the FCA’s own messaging evolve from confident proclamations that consumers do not need representation to an awareness campaign that implicitly concedes that it knows many will seek it anyway.

The scheme that has emerged is more complex and favourable to lenders than the one initially floated. The public awareness that has built up in the meantime has outgrown the neat category of ‘people who will just claim directly’. And the FCA and SRA’s regulatory housekeeping is doing what it should have been doing all along—removing the bad actors responsible for an entire sector being tarred with the same brush, raising the floor for good practice and operational standards, and giving the industry the credibility it needs to grow.

The FCA wanted to take the time to get things right. But it got some things right, some things wrong, and left others visibly short of the mark.

And in delivering its final motor finance redress scheme rules, it has arguably made the case for professional representation more clearly than any law firm could have.

Legalist Closes $415 Million Fund IV, Doubles Firm AUM to $2 Billion

By John Freund |

Legalist has closed a $415 million litigation finance fund — its fourth — bringing the San Francisco-based, tech-driven funder's total assets under management to roughly $2 billion and nearly doubling its capital base over the past year. The new vehicle reinforces Legalist's commitment to small-ticket commercial litigation finance in a market where many large peers continue to pursue ever-bigger cases.

As reported by Bloomberg Law, the new fund will continue Legalist's core strategy of investing $50,000 to $5 million per case across both single-case and portfolio structures, with portfolio investments now representing approximately half of the book — up from a smaller share in the firm's prior $300 million fund. Legalist's prior fund deployed across more than 250 positions, a level of dispersion that few commercial funders match.

The firm has also shifted away from patent infringement litigation toward class action investments, a strategic pivot that places it more squarely in the path of mass tort, consumer, and competition claims that have come to dominate the U.S. funded-litigation pipeline. Legalist's investor base — described as repeat-investing endowments, foundations, hospitals, and universities — appears to have followed the firm specifically rather than treating the allocation as generic litigation finance exposure.

CEO Eva Shang, who co-founded Legalist in 2016 with a $100,000 grant from Peter Thiel's foundation and built the firm around a software-driven origination model, framed the close as a continuation of the firm's founding thesis. "We are very true and consistent to our mission," she told Bloomberg Law, citing a decade-long focus on small commercial litigation finance and a deliberate decision not to pursue alternative business structures or trendier capital formats.

The close lands in a market characterized by both rapid institutionalization and visible stress at peer firms — including a series of high-profile fund closures, restructurings, and intervention proceedings on both sides of the Atlantic. Against that backdrop, Legalist's Fund IV is a notable signal that LP appetite for disciplined, vintage-consistent commercial litigation finance remains intact among institutional investors who treat the asset class as a long-duration allocation rather than a tactical play.

Legal-Bay Flags NY Archdiocese at “Critical Crossroads” Amid Nearly 2,000 Abuse Lawsuits

By John Freund |

Legal-Bay Pre-Settlement Funding has issued a sector update flagging the Archdiocese of New York as approaching a "critical crossroads" in its handling of nearly 2,000 sex abuse lawsuits, with plaintiffs' counsel pursuing settlements estimated to total approximately $2 billion against an institution whose financial position cannot currently meet that demand.

According to Legal-Bay's report via PR Newswire, the Archdiocese — covering Manhattan, the Bronx, and seven Hudson Valley counties — is weighing two paths: a global settlement funded in part by parish-level contributions, or a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing of the kind already pursued by multiple U.S. dioceses confronting similar exposure. CEO Chris Janish, who recently sat for an LFJ Conversation, noted that "a bankruptcy would introduce significant complexity and could further delay compensation for victims."

Legal-Bay points to a series of recent diocese settlements as comparative benchmarks: Albany, NY ($148M pending), Rockville Centre, NY ($323M approved), Rochester, NY ($246M-$256M approved), Syracuse, NY ($176M approved), Buffalo, NY ($150M-$274M proposed), Camden, NJ ($180M pending), and New Orleans, LA ($230M pending). The cumulative outcomes underline both the scale of historic abuse claims now in the U.S. court system and the practical reality that institutional defendants of this size frequently end up resolving claims through structured insolvency proceedings rather than direct settlements.

For the consumer legal funding industry, the matter is operationally significant. Pre-settlement funders active in this space — Legal-Bay among them — provide cash advances to plaintiffs whose cases face the long, uncertain timelines characteristic of institutional abuse litigation. The longer cases run before resolution, the more important non-recourse advances become for plaintiffs facing their own financial pressures during proceedings, particularly when bankruptcy stays freeze recovery activity for extended periods.

The story also crystallizes a recurring theme across institutional abuse litigation: settlements scaled in the hundreds of millions but constrained by the realities of insurance coverage, real estate liquidity, and parish-level fundraising capacity. As the New York matter moves toward resolution, it is likely to influence how other large dioceses navigate the trade-off between bankruptcy protection and direct settlement structures.

ACSO Launches Consumer Legal Association to Champion £5.5 Billion UK Claimant Industry

By John Freund |

ACSO, the UK trade body representing consumer-facing claimant law firms, has launched the Consumer Legal Association (CLA), positioning it as the unified voice of a £5.5 billion-plus personal injury and medical negligence sector that its leadership believes has not been "good enough at representing itself."

As reported by Legal Futures, the CLA is led by Matthew Maxwell Scott, who continues as chief executive of both organizations, with David Whitmore — former Slater & Gordon CEO — chairing the board. Other directors include Shirley Woolham (Minster Law CEO), Peter Haden (Fletchers CEO), and James Maxey (Express Solicitors CEO), with former SRA deputy chief executive Juliet Oliver serving as a non-executive director. The association is targeting around 20 larger claimant firms as core members, with plans to expand into adjacent sectors including medical reporting organizations and legal expenses insurers.

The CLA's stated agenda focuses on research demonstrating consumer benefits, behavioral benchmarks for client onboarding, settlement practices, and legal costs, alongside workforce data — including documenting that the sector's workforce is approximately two-thirds female. The launch reflects a sector under sustained pressure from personal injury reforms, fixed recoverable costs developments, and a narrative environment dominated by tort reform-aligned critics of the claimant economy.

For the litigation finance and ATE community, the CLA's emergence is meaningful. The trade body's planned expansion to include legal expenses insurers indicates an explicit intent to align the claimant law firm sector with its capital and insurance counterparts — a consolidation of voice that could reshape how UK regulators and policymakers engage with the broader funded-claims ecosystem. Litigation funders, ATE underwriters, and disbursement lenders all operate within markets where claimant law firm economics directly determine the viability of their products, and a more coordinated industry voice has obvious implications for how reforms are debated and implemented.

The launch also lands in a UK market increasingly defined by a parallel set of pressures: the FCA car finance redress scheme, intensifying SRA enforcement against problematic claims firms, the Law Commission's review of consumer class actions, and continued PACCAR-related uncertainty around the enforceability of funding agreements. A consolidated trade body that can speak credibly across these intersecting issues is, by design, well-positioned to influence the next phase of UK consumer claims regulation.

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