Fenchurch Legal Placed Into Administration as Investor Petition Succeeds
UK litigation funder Fenchurch Legal has been placed into administration, with the court approving the appointment of BV Corporate Recovery & Insolvency Services despite the funder's stated intention to contest the move. The outcome marks a rapid escalation from the winding-up petition filed earlier this month and raises fresh questions about the durability of the high-volume consumer claims funding model in the UK.
As reported by Law Gazette, the administration was sought by Lowry Trading, a company owned by a family trust, whose petition was granted by the court. Fenchurch's portfolio had concentrated on housing disrepair, financial mis-selling, and Plevin PPI claims, with the funder typically providing 12-to-18-month loans to cover law-firm working capital and disbursements. Its 2024 accounts showed net liabilities of almost £567,000, and the funder was owed significant sums by two collapsed north-west firms, Nicholson Jones Sutton Solicitors and McDermott Smith.
The administration underscores how exposed claims-heavy funders can be to downstream law-firm failures, particularly where loan books depend on a narrow set of claim types and a handful of solicitor relationships. It also follows a period in which UK regulators and the courts have tightened scrutiny of high-volume consumer claims pipelines, compressing margins for funders that had built businesses around them.
For the wider market, the question now is how Fenchurch's in-flight claims will be handled by the administrators, and whether successor funders will acquire portfolios or leave claimants and solicitor partners to seek alternative capital.








