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  • Loopa Finance Backs Nearly 300 Chilean Families in $18 Million Villa Panamericana Construction Defects Suit

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Eric is CEO, North America at Moneypenny.

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WHY LITIGATION FUNDERS WIN OR LOSE OPPORTUNITIES BEFORE CASE REVIEW BEGINS

By Eric Schurke |

The following piece was contributed by Eric Schurke, CEO, North America at Moneypenny.

In litigation finance, firms often believe they win or lose opportunities based on the quality of their analysis, the strength of their capital position, or the sophistication of their investment strategy.  But, in reality, that decision is often made much earlier.

It happens during the very first interaction; the first inquiry, the first call, the first exchange of information between a claimant, law firm, or referrer and the funding team. Long before a case is reviewed in detail or due diligence begins, impressions are already forming around responsiveness, professionalism, clarity and trust.

And yet, across much of the industry, first contact is still treated primarily as an administrative process rather than a strategic one.

First contact shapes confidence

Litigation finance is fundamentally relationship driven. While analytics, modelling and case assessment are all critical, trust remains central to every funding decision and every long-term partnership.

Over the years, I’ve seen that first contact is rarely neutral. A prompt, thoughtful response signals professionalism, organization, and confidence, while slow follow-up or fragmented communication can quietly introduce doubt even when the underlying opportunity is strong.

Potential claimants and law firms may not always articulate those impressions directly, but they absolutely act on them.

At Moneypenny, we often see this when new legal and professional services clients come to us after experiencing missed calls, delayed responses, or inconsistent handling of inbound inquiries that have already cost them opportunities. In many cases, the issue is not capability. The organization may be highly experienced and commercially strong, but the experience at first contact simply failed to reflect that at the moment it mattered most.

That is why first contact should not be viewed as operational admin alone. It is the beginning of the relationship, and increasingly, a competitive differentiator.

The hidden cost of inconsistent intake

One of the biggest operational challenges within litigation finance is inconsistency in how inbound opportunities are handled.

Inquiries arrive through multiple channels; law firm referrals, direct claimant inquiries, email introductions, website forms, conferences, and professional networks. Information is often captured differently depending on who receives it, while ownership and follow-up responsibilities can quickly become unclear.

From the outside, that creates a fragmented experience. Internally, it slows evaluation, introduces inefficiencies, and increases the likelihood of missed opportunities or incomplete information at the earliest stages of review.

The most effective organizations bring structure and clarity to this process. They define what information needs to be captured at first contact, how it should be recorded, and how opportunities move efficiently through the pipeline.

But importantly, they do this without losing the human element.

Structure creates consistency. People create trust. And in litigation finance, both matter.

Responsiveness matters but so does judgment

There is understandably a strong focus across the sector on speed. Opportunities move quickly, competition for high-quality matters is increasing, and firms want to accelerate triage and evaluation wherever possible.

But speed on its own is not enough. A rushed or overly transactional interaction can be just as damaging as a slow one, particularly when claimants or law firms are dealing with complex, high-stakes, or emotionally charged situations.

Equally, over-automation creates its own risks. Generic responses, unclear escalation pathways, or communication that feels impersonal can weaken trust very early in the relationship.

What matters is balance. 

In litigation finance, the value of first contact extends far beyond simply answering an inquiry. Early interactions often determine how efficiently opportunities are qualified, routed, and progressed, while also protecting valuable time for investment and legal teams by filtering out incomplete or non-viable matters early in the process.

At Moneypenny, we regularly see how structured intake and well-managed communication can improve responsiveness, reduce operational friction, and create stronger early-stage relationships with claimants, referrers, and law firms. Small improvements at this stage can have a significant downstream impact on both pipeline quality and overall efficiency.

In practice, that may mean using technology to improve responsiveness, consistency, and information capture, while ensuring experienced people remain central to judgment, relationship-building, and decision-making.

When that balance is right, the experience feels seamless rather than procedural.

Leadership shows up in the operational details

It is easy to think of leadership primarily in terms of investment strategy, growth targets, or market positioning. But in practice, leadership often reveals itself much earlier and in far smaller moments.

It shows up in what organizations prioritize, what they intentionally design, and what they refuse to dismiss as “just operational.” First contact is one of those moments.

When firms invest in structured intake, responsive communication, and the people responsible for handling those early interactions, the impact is tangible, not only in efficiency, but in stronger relationships, improved deal flow, and greater long-term trust.

The organizations that consistently stand out in litigation finance are not simply better at evaluating opportunities. They are better at demonstrating professionalism, clarity, and confidence from the very first interaction.

Because by the time formal case review begins, the first decision has often already been made.

Darrow Launches Portfolio Platform Letting Plaintiffs’ Firms Manage Litigation Like an Investment Fund

By John Freund |

AI-driven legal-risk company Darrow has launched a platform that lets contingency firms manage their dockets as investment portfolios, packaging case discovery, merits vetting, settlement-value forecasting, and live case tracking into a single dashboard explicitly modeled on asset-management workflows.

As reported by LawNext, the platform mines public data to surface potential matters, then layers analytics on comparable cases and exposure estimates so that firms — and the funders and insurers that back them — can underwrite portfolios with the same discipline applied to financial assets. Darrow says litigators using its tools have already surfaced roughly $22 billion in litigation-linked risk, including $10.3 billion of ERISA exposure tied to plans covering more than a million participants.

"Legal exposure doesn't announce itself. It builds quietly across industries," said Darrow co-founder and chief executive Evya Ben Artzi. The company, which has raised approximately $60 million across its rounds, including a $35 million Series B led by Georgian with participation from F2 Venture Capital, Entrée Capital, NFX, and Y Combinator, says it has been profitable for three years and now employs roughly 170 people.

For litigation funders, the launch reinforces a broader market shift toward standardized, data-driven case selection across both single-case and portfolio-funded engagements, particularly in mass tort, class action, and ERISA dockets where origination quality has historically lagged the analytical sophistication of the capital deployed.

New York Enacts Auto-Insurance Tort Reform Package, Tightening Damages Rules That Underpin Consumer Legal Funding Dockets

By John Freund |

New York Governor Kathy Hochul has secured a four-part auto-insurance and tort reform package as part of the state's FY27 enacted budget, marking what her office described as the most consequential overhaul of New York tort rules in a generation and one likely to reshape the economics of the state's personal-injury bar and the consumer legal funders that finance it.

According to the Governor's Office, the reforms cap damages payable to drivers engaged in criminal conduct such as drunk or uninsured driving, tighten the "serious injury" threshold to limit pain-and-suffering recoveries to objectively documented injuries, restrict mostly-at-fault drivers from recovering against other parties, and grant the Department of Financial Services expanded rate-setting authority, including a prohibition on basing premiums on homeownership, occupation, education, or zip code.

"No other Governor in a generation has taken on tort reform and walked away with a deal that will result in significant savings for New York consumers and businesses," Hochul said in a statement.

The package does not contain third-party litigation funding disclosure language, leaving New York's TPLF rules unchanged for the moment. Even so, the new caps and tighter injury thresholds are expected to compress settlement values across the state's high-volume auto bodily-injury docket — the same case mix that anchors a meaningful share of consumer legal funding portfolios serving New York plaintiffs. Industry observers will be watching closely for the law's effective date and DFS implementation timeline.

Tech, AI, and Litigation Capital Are Flipping the Plaintiffs’ vs. Defense Power Balance in U.S. Personal Injury Litigation

By John Freund |

A new analysis argues that the combination of artificial intelligence tooling and ready access to litigation capital is steadily reversing the historical resource advantage defense firms held over plaintiffs' lawyers in U.S. personal injury practice, with consequences likely to surface in higher verdicts and tighter insurer reserves.

As reported by Above the Law, columnist Stephen Embry highlights the rise of national plaintiffs' platforms such as Morgan & Morgan, which now staffs more than 1,000 lawyers across all 50 states and once filed roughly 25,000 lawsuits in a single week in Florida. Litigation finance, Embry writes, has neutralized the cash-flow disadvantage that historically constrained smaller plaintiffs' practices, while a generation of AI-native vendors — EvenUp for case management, Supio for document analysis, LawPro.ai for medical summarization, EsquireTek for discovery, and DemandPro for demand letters — is letting contingency firms operate at scale.

A Morgan & Morgan/LawPro.ai survey cited in the column found that more than 60% of plaintiffs' personal injury firms had already adopted and were scaling AI tools. Defense lawyer Frank Ramos, quoted in the piece, conceded that "defense firms…have been reluctant…to go all in on AI."

The article complements parallel reporting on private-equity and litigation-finance capital flowing into U.S. personal injury firms through management services organizations, reinforcing a thesis that capital and technology, deployed together, are quietly reshaping the underwriting math behind both PI plaintiffs' books and the insurance reserves arrayed against them.

Legal-Bay Extends Pre-Settlement Funding to Plaintiffs in Nationwide Sexual Abuse Litigation

By John Freund |

Consumer legal funder Legal-Bay has announced that it is providing non-recourse pre-settlement funding to plaintiffs pursuing sexual abuse claims against schools, religious institutions, youth organizations, healthcare providers, and employers, as a new generation of survivor-led suits continues to move through state and federal dockets across the United States.

According to PR Newswire, Legal-Bay is positioning itself as a dedicated funding partner for these matters, citing the prolonged timelines that sexual abuse cases typically follow and the financial strain plaintiffs often face while litigation is pending. The release referenced the cluster of clergy abuse claims that have driven several Catholic archdioceses into bankruptcy in recent years as a defining context for the current funding need.

"Sexual abuse cases require a high level of sensitivity, trust, and long-term commitment," said Legal-Bay chief executive Chris Janish. "Our pre-settlement funding programs are designed to support plaintiffs through what can be a very difficult legal process, giving them the financial stability they need while seeking justice."

The announcement marks the third Legal-Bay funding initiative publicized in roughly a week, following parallel outreach to AFFF firefighting foam and Depo-Provera plaintiffs. Taken together, the releases reflect the funder's continued push to align its consumer book around large, high-profile mass tort and institutional abuse dockets where settlement values are expected to develop over multi-year timelines.

Private Equity and Litigation Funders Build Out MSO Pipeline into U.S. Personal Injury Law Firms

By John Freund |

Private equity firms — and a growing number of established litigation funders — are accelerating their push into U.S. personal injury law firms through management services organizations, a structure that lets outside capital share in firm economics without running afoul of state rules against non-lawyer ownership of legal practices.

As reported by Bloomberg Law, Apollo Global Management, Fortress Investment Group, and Stifel Financial Corp. are all actively eyeing the space, with Fortress reportedly behind a $125 million investment into Rafi Law Group. Louisiana's Dudley DeBosier has launched a PE-sponsored MSO that has already acquired a second firm, and Holland & Knight is advising the Amaro Law Firm on an MSO-routed capital infusion expected to close by year-end.

Litigation finance players are squarely in the mix. Mass tort funder Certum Group has acquired an MSO partnered with Dallas trial firm Sbaiti & Co., and Burford Capital has expressed interest in U.S. law firm investments through similar vehicles. Advisory firm Samson Partners Group closed 10 MSO deals in 2025 and is working on roughly 20 in 2026, the bulk of them in personal injury, while Tierra Capital Partners is fundraising a $100–125 million co-investment fund dedicated to the structure.

The MSO route — typically handling IT, marketing, intake, and back-office functions — gives funders and PE sponsors economic exposure to plaintiff-side caseflow that has historically only been accessible through case-by-case advances or portfolio facilities.

Loopa Finance Backs Nearly 300 Chilean Families in $18 Million Villa Panamericana Construction Defects Suit

By John Freund |

Latin America–focused litigation funder Loopa Finance has announced that it will fund a civil action filed by nearly 300 apartment owners at the Villa Panamericana housing complex in Cerrillos, Santiago, against the developers and contractors behind the project. The claim, brought before Santiago's 10th Civil Court, exceeds $18 million in aggregate damages.

According to a Loopa Finance announcement, the suit is led by Nicolás Vassallo, partner at Chilean firm Abogabir Miranda, and targets Inmobiliaria Parque Cerrillos SpA, Empresa Constructora DLP S.A., Ameris Capital S.A., and related investment entities. Plaintiffs are seeking roughly $11 million in direct damages and temporary housing costs, nearly $7 million in moral damages, and additional compensation equal to 10% of each unit's purchase price to capture lost property value.

Villa Panamericana's Lot B comprises 17 buildings and 1,355 apartments originally built to house athletes at the 2023 Pan American and Parapan American Games, before being allocated to lower-income families through government housing subsidies and the Teletón program. Residents have reported water leaks, structural cracks, and serious electrical, plumbing, gas, and elevator failures, with preliminary expert reports citing violations of Chile's General Urban Planning and Construction Law.

"Access to justice should not depend on the affected families' financial resources," said Federico Muradas, Loopa's head of legal. Loopa's funding will cover legal and technical costs of the proceedings on a non-recourse basis, in what stands as one of the larger consumer-tied construction defect actions yet financed in Latin America.

Merricks Urges UK Court to Reject Innsworth’s Challenge Over £200M Mastercard Settlement Distribution

By John Freund |

The class representative in the Merricks v Mastercard collective claim has urged a London court to reject litigation funder Innsworth Advisors' judicial review of the £200 million settlement distribution, in what observers describe as the first substantive test of a Competition Appeal Tribunal settlement decision.

As reported by Law360, Walter Merricks's legal team told the High Court on Wednesday that Innsworth has already received an adequate return from the CAT-approved settlement and that its challenge should be dismissed. Innsworth argued earlier in the week that the distribution scheme is "illogical" and "flawed," contending that the tribunal failed to properly assess the funder's recovery.

The CAT had divided the settlement into three pots. Pot 1, totalling £100 million, is ring-fenced for class members. Pot 2, approximately £45 million, covers Innsworth's litigation costs. Pot 3, approximately £55 million, allocates roughly £23 million to Innsworth as the profit element of its return, bringing its total recovery to around £68 million. Innsworth contends that this amounts to only a 0.5x return on more than £45 million invested, and disputes the methodology used to set the figure.

The case has drawn close attention from the UK funding sector. A judicial review of a CAT-sanctioned distribution could establish important parameters around how courts assess funder returns in collective proceedings, particularly at a moment when the tribunal has signaled heightened scrutiny of certification and take-up in entrepreneurial class actions.

Legal-Bay Extends Non-Recourse Funding to AFFF PFAS Firefighting Foam Cancer Plaintiffs

By John Freund |

Consumer legal funder Legal-Bay has announced that it is providing pre-settlement funding to plaintiffs in the AFFF firefighting foam mass tort, as nationwide litigation tied to PFAS-related cancers and other diseases continues to advance toward bellwether trials.

According to PR Newswire, the AFFF multidistrict litigation has become one of the largest toxic tort proceedings in the United States, with thousands of personal injury claims consolidated in federal court alongside the municipal water contamination cases that have already produced multi-billion-dollar settlements with several chemical manufacturers.

Legal-Bay's funding is non-recourse, meaning plaintiffs repay advances only on a recovery, with no obligation if a case is unsuccessful. Eligible applicants include firefighters, military veterans, airport workers, industrial workers, and civilians diagnosed with cancers of the kidney, testicle, pancreas, prostate, liver, bladder, or thyroid, as well as thyroid disease, ulcerative colitis, and immune system disorders linked to PFAS exposure. The funder said applications are typically approved within 24 to 48 hours of receipt of case documentation.

"Toxic exposure litigation involving PFAS and firefighting foam can take years to fully resolve," said Legal-Bay chief executive Chris Janish. The announcement follows a similar Legal-Bay outreach to Depo-Provera plaintiffs earlier this week, reflecting a pattern of consumer funders positioning around large mass tort dockets ahead of bellwether outcomes that may define settlement values.

Germany’s Federal Court of Justice Imposes New Limits on Funders and Claim Aggregators in $590M Trucks Cartel Ruling

By John Freund |

The Bundesgerichtshof (BGH), Germany's Federal Court of Justice, has issued a closely watched judgment in the long-running Trucks Cartel litigation that upholds the use of collective claims vehicles in principle but sets significant guardrails around third-party litigation funding and claim aggregation.

As reported by Leaders League, the May 12, 2026 ruling addressed claims arising from the European Commission's 2016 cartel decision, brought on behalf of more than 3,000 entities across 21 jurisdictions and seeking approximately US$590 million. The BGH confirmed that cartel damages claims may be collectively aggregated and enforced by registered claims collection entities, reinforcing collective redress mechanisms in German private antitrust litigation.

The court imposed two material limits. First, third-party funders cannot exercise control that compromises the claims vehicle's obligation to act exclusively in the interests of the assignors, a conflict-of-interest standard that goes to funder governance rights. Second, claims aggregation cannot obstruct effective judicial review; excessive volume or complexity that renders proper assessment "impracticable" may violate the German Legal Services Act and result in dismissal for procedural abuse.

The BGH overturned the appellate decision and remanded the matter, directing the lower court to examine whether the funding structure created incompatible conflicts and, if the assignments survive, to divide claims within six months. The decision is expected to shape the architecture of funded collective antitrust actions across Europe, particularly in jurisdictions modelling Germany's claims-collection framework.

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