Trending Now

Legal Funding Journal is dedicated to informing and engaging the global legal funding community through daily news, insight, analysis and original content.

Latest News

View All

State Legislatures Tighten the Screws on Third-Party Litigation Funding

By John Freund |

State legislatures continued their march toward tighter regulation of third-party litigation funding this week, with separate bills advancing in Michigan and Colorado that take very different routes to constrain outside capital in litigation.

In Michigan, the state House on May 12 passed House Bill 5281, the Third-Party Litigation Funding Transparency Act, sponsored by Rep. Mike Harris. The bill requires registration and disclosure by funders, prohibits funder control over case decisions, bars foreign adversaries from financing Michigan lawsuits, and caps funder returns from any award. The measure is backed by the Michigan Alliance for Legal Reform, a coalition of consumer advocates, small-business groups, and chamber-aligned organizations. It now moves to the Michigan Senate.

In Colorado, the legislature sent House Bill 1421 to Governor Jared Polis, who has until June 12, 2026 to sign or veto. The bill prohibits Colorado law firms from entering financial arrangements with non-attorney-owned alternative business structures, including arrangements in which out-of-state entities cover marketing or operational costs in exchange for a percentage of settlements. It cleared the Colorado House 53–11 and the Senate 33–2, supported by a coalition that included the Colorado Chamber of Commerce, the Colorado Trial Lawyers Association, and the American Property Casualty Insurance Association.

Together, the two bills illustrate the dual fronts on which the U.S. litigation finance industry is now defending itself: disclosure and conduct rules in Michigan, and outright structural prohibitions on outside capital flowing to law firms in Colorado. Both reflect a coordinated state-level push by chamber and insurance trade groups, at times aligned with elements of the plaintiffs' bar, to redraw the boundaries of permissible third-party funding in U.S. civil litigation.

Burford Repositions Around Broader Portfolio After $2.4 Billion YPF Write-Down

By John Freund |

Burford Capital is shifting its public narrative from a single landmark case toward the breadth of its underlying portfolio after absorbing a $2.4 billion non-cash write-down tied to the YPF reversal. The firm posted a $1.6 billion first-quarter loss and saw nearly half of its market valuation wiped out in the immediate aftermath, but management has used recent disclosures to reframe the setback against the rest of the book.

As reported by Non-Billable, Burford continues to pursue legal avenues on YPF, though chief executive Chris Bogart has acknowledged that U.S. courts "rarely grant such requests," with international arbitration emerging as the more probable next step. The firm has also pointed to roughly $100 million of profit already realized from YPF through the sale of minority stakes to third-party investors.

Beyond YPF, Burford is leaning on the size and composition of its broader portfolio: more than 230 active assets that the company has previously identified as capable of generating in excess of $5 billion in future returns. Management is framing the residual book as concentrated in large-scale commercial claims handled by major law firms and specialist disputes practices, distinct from the public profile of the YPF dispute.

Burford has also signaled operational continuity, with Travis Lenkner advancing from chief development officer to chief operating officer. Taken together, the moves suggest a strategy of accepting the YPF setback as a discrete event while attempting to reanchor investor focus on the firm's underlying claim portfolio rather than headline-case asymmetry.

Op-Ed: Nuclear Verdicts and Litigation Funding Driving Consumer Price Pressure

By John Freund |

A new op-ed by Ike Brannon of the Jack Kemp Foundation argues that the rapid rise of "nuclear" verdicts, fueled in part by third-party litigation funding, is now translating directly into higher prices for U.S. consumers. The piece adds to the chorus of tort-reform commentary linking the growth of outside capital in litigation to broader inflationary pressures.

As reported by RealClearMarkets, Brannon points to 49 "thermonuclear" judgments exceeding $100 million in 2024, nearly double the prior year, with overall tort litigation payments topping half a trillion dollars and projected to reach $800 billion annually by 2030. The op-ed cites antitrust allegations against fire truck manufacturers Oshkosh Corp., REV Group, and Rosenbauer America, and notes that "dozens of local and state governments are suing energy companies" over fossil fuel production.

On funding specifically, Brannon highlights data showing 42 funders held $16.1 billion in U.S. commercial litigation assets under management in 2024, up from $9.5 billion in 2019, an increase of nearly 70%. He argues that the growth "creates incentives" for expansive litigation strategies aimed at maximizing settlement leverage rather than clarifying the merits of underlying claims.

The piece urges Congress to advance the Litigation Funding Transparency Act, which would require disclosure of outside funding in federal class actions and multidistrict litigation, alongside broader tort reforms aimed at speculative class actions. The argument lands at a moment of intensifying state and federal scrutiny of litigation funding economics and disclosure obligations.

Kairos Digital Loan Notes Bring UK Litigation Finance to Tokenized Capital Markets

By John Freund |

UK litigation finance has taken a step into tokenized capital markets with the launch of the Kairos Digital Loan Notes High-Yield Programme — the first publicly rated senior secured digital bond backed by UK litigation finance receivables. The structure opens with an initial $50 million tranche and is designed to scale to $500 million.

According to a press release distributed via Plentisoft, the programme is structured by Canadian fintech T-RIZE Group with issuance through UK-based Kairos Litigation Limited and programme management by Horizon Group. The notes carry a B+ pre-issuance rating from Particula and are distributed by regulated broker-dealers Texture Capital and Black Manta Capital Partners to eligible institutional and qualified investors.

The underlying assets consist of short-duration financing to UK law firms advancing consumer claims within established regulatory frameworks. The portfolio benefits from claim-level diversification, insurance overlays, and A-rated reinsurance, with the structure incorporating ring-fenced assets, security trustee oversight, and bankruptcy-remote protections. Lifecycle administration runs on the Canton Network's governed digital infrastructure.

T-RIZE chief executive Madani Boukalba described the programme as evidence that "private credit can operate within a digitally native framework" without lowering institutional standards. The launch coincides with a broader shift among litigation funders to access institutional credit markets directly and with rising investor appetite for non-correlated alternative credit exposures — a category in which litigation finance has long sought broader acceptance.

Roundup Class Counsel Seek $675 Million Fee Award in $7.25 Billion Monsanto Settlement

By John Freund |

Class counsel in the $7.25 billion Roundup nationwide class settlement have asked a Missouri judge to approve $675 million in legal fees — about 9.3% of the settlement fund, which counsel describe as "quite modest" relative to comparable mass-tort outcomes. The request crystallizes the economics behind one of the largest product-liability settlements of the decade.

As reported by Law.com, the settlement covers individuals across the United States who were exposed to Monsanto's Roundup herbicides and diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, along with future diagnosed claimants. Monsanto, owned by Bayer, will fund the agreement over 17 to 21 years. Lead counsel for future claimants Eric D. Holland of Holland Law Firm framed the structure as designed to serve long-tail medical-monitoring needs of a chronic-exposure population.

The settlement received preliminary approval from the 22nd Judicial Circuit Court for the City of St. Louis, with a fairness hearing scheduled for July 9, 2026 to determine whether the structure is fair, reasonable, and adequate. The court has authorized a national notice program to alert eligible class members.

The fee request lands amid broader scrutiny of how legal fees and funder economics scale in mass-tort matters. While the Roundup class settlement does not publicly identify third-party litigation funding involvement, its sheer size and the duration of payouts highlight the long-horizon capital that has become increasingly central to mass-tort litigation strategy in U.S. courts.

APCIA Pins Cost-of-Living Pressures on “Legal System Abuse” and Litigation Funding

By John Freund |

The American Property Casualty Insurance Association is pressing its tort-reform message, arguing in a new release that "legal system abuse" — including third-party litigation funding — is a major and underappreciated driver of higher prices, fewer choices, and reduced economic output. The framing aligns with a coordinated industry push to reshape public discussion of civil-justice costs.

According to a press release distributed via PR Newswire, APCIA claims the U.S. tort system costs households nearly $6,000 per year in higher prices and reduced choice, alongside "hundreds of billions of dollars in lost economic output" and millions of jobs. The release argues outside capital, including TPLF, "could add to pressure on the legal system and costs for consumers," noting projections that the litigation funding market will more than double in size over the next decade.

The featured commentary comes from Dr. Robert P. Hartwig, clinical associate professor at the University of South Carolina, who frames "legal system abuse" as a key but underreported driver of cost-of-living pressures. APCIA calls for "commonsense reforms" that it says would lower household costs and improve insurance affordability while preserving access to the civil justice system.

The release does not cite peer-reviewed studies or specific state-level data for its figures. It arrives amid intensifying state and federal scrutiny of litigation funding disclosure, taxation, and foreign ownership — battles in which the property-casualty industry has emerged as the most consistent voice for tighter regulation.

Litigation Funding Emerges as an Asset Class in India

By John Freund |

Litigation funding is taking root in India as domestic and global investors begin financing commercial disputes in exchange for a share of awards or settlements. The shift positions India as one of the more closely watched emerging markets for third-party legal funding, even as deal data remains sparse and confidentiality the norm.

As reported by Mint, three firms — Mumbai-based alternative investment fund Five Rivers, LegalPay, and ELF Partners — are leading the early build-out. Five Rivers is in discussions to close its inaugural fund at $25 million to $50 million, targeting individual deployments of $1 million to $12 million. Cases are screened on legal merit, viable quantum, and asset rating, with litigation costs typically covered upfront in return for a share of recoveries.

Return profiles are striking by the standards of mainstream private credit. ELF Partners chief executive Pranav Mago has said investor payouts can run as high as 200% to 300% over four to five years, while Five Rivers expects successful cases to deliver 50% to 70% IRRs, with a portfolio target above 30%.

The legal foundation for third-party funding in India was clarified in 2018, when the Supreme Court in Bar Council of India v. A.K. Balaji validated such arrangements provided they are not "extortionate, unconscionable or against public policy." Industry participants argue that third-party funding broadens access to courts for commercial claimants facing better-resourced opponents and could anchor India's role in the next leg of global litigation finance growth.

Burford Capital Reports Q1 2026 Results, Citing Over $700M Liquidity Despite YPF Charge

By John Freund |

Burford Capital reported first-quarter 2026 results highlighting more than $700 million of liquidity and a 25% increase in new commitments, even as the YPF reversal drove a large non-cash charge to quarterly earnings. The figures frame Burford's capital base as intact despite the most significant single setback in its history.

According to the company's Q1 2026 earnings release, Burford ended the quarter with $740 million in cash and marketable securities, supported by the $500 million it raised in January. The firm reported $133 million in new definitive commitments — 25% above its Q1 average for 2024 and 2025 — and has visibility on roughly $280 million of cash from the portfolio so far this year.

Chief executive Christopher Bogart emphasized that the YPF loss, although headline-grabbing, has not produced a cash hit. To date, Burford has realized $236 million in cash proceeds and more than $100 million in profit from the YPF case. Bogart said the case was large in potential outcome but not especially costly to pursue, and that Burford remains open to similar asymmetric matters.

Looking ahead, Burford has 36 trials and merits hearings scheduled across its portfolios in 2026, compared with 23 at the same point last year, and identifies 23 assets with the potential to generate double-digit-million-dollar realizations during the year. The disclosures reinforce the company's view that the YPF reversal is recoverable within the broader portfolio.

Burford CEO Bogart Argues for Outside Capital in Law Firm Ownership

By John Freund |

Burford Capital chief executive Christopher Bogart is making the case for opening law firm equity to outside capital, framing the legal profession's current partnership structure as the last major holdout of professional services to resist public-market ownership. The vision extends Burford's existing strategy of treating legal claims as financial assets into the firms themselves.

As reported by Semafor, Bogart outlined two pathways for the model on the network's Compound Interest program. The first involves management services organizations, or MSOs, that separate back-office functions into standalone entities — a structure already gaining adoption across the U.S. legal market. The second is direct non-lawyer ownership, which would require either a bold first-mover firm in a permissive jurisdiction or coordinated reform of state ownership rules.

Bogart drew the parallel to investment banks in the 1980s, which moved from private partnerships to public companies after similar regulatory resistance collapsed. He observed that managing partners are "waiting for somebody else to take the next step," and reflected that many senior lawyers eventually look back on the value they created and wonder whether they would have been better off building equity in another industry.

The interview lands as Burford continues to absorb the impact of its March YPF litigation reversal and as broader U.S. litigation finance has drawn capital into law firm ownership through MSO structures. Bogart also pushed back on the idea that AI will dismantle the billable hour model anytime soon.

Hedge Funds Move on Distressed Litigation Finance Assets as Sector Slumps

By John Freund |

A protracted downturn in litigation finance is drawing hedge funds and special situations investors to acquire legal-claim portfolios at deeply discounted valuations, in some cases as low as 10 cents on the dollar. The roughly $20 billion industry has been battered by tougher regulation, prolonged court timelines, and investor withdrawals, leaving traditional funders short of capital and creating an opening for opportunistic buyers.

As reported by Bloomberg, firms including Davidson Kempner Capital Management, Attestor, Fortress Investment Group, and Bench Walk Advisors are among those exploring purchases of distressed portfolios. In some transactions, buyers are reportedly assuming claims at no upfront cost, paying sellers only a contingent share if cases ultimately succeed.

The shift follows several high-profile setbacks for the industry. In March, a U.S. appeals court overturned a $16.1 billion judgment in favor of YPF SA investors against Argentina — a case backed by Burford Capital. Burford's share price dropped 47% on the news and is down roughly 42% year-to-date.

Zachary Krug of NorthWall Capital observed that lengthy court cases have become a structural problem and that traditional funders are "running out of cash," generating supply for distressed buyers. Adding to the pressure, the UK justice ministry has signaled intentions to introduce "proportionate regulation" of litigation funding agreements, reinforcing the case for consolidation as long-duration capital meets short-duration liquidity needs.

Fundraising

View All

Case Developments

View All

Legal Innovation

View All

People Moves

View All

Regulatory

View All

Consumer

View All

Thought Leadership

View All