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Litigation Funder Rocade Capital Acquires Law Finance Group, Creating $2.3 Billion Platform

By John Freund |

Rocade Capital has acquired litigation funder Law Finance Group LLC, the company announced Wednesday, combining the two firms into a platform with more than $2.3 billion in deployed capital. The deal marks a notable consolidation in a litigation finance market that continues to attract institutional interest as an emerging asset class.

As reported by Bloomberg Law, Arlington, Virginia-based Rocade Capital specializes in credit-style funding for mass tort and contingency-fee law firms. Law Finance Group brings a more diversified portfolio spanning appellate, commercial, and single-case investments. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

The acquisition broadens Rocade's reach well beyond its traditional mass tort niche. By absorbing Law Finance Group's book of business, Rocade gains exposure to additional practice areas and case types, positioning the combined firm to compete across a wider segment of the funding landscape.

Rocade Chief Executive Officer Brian Roth framed the transaction as a growth opportunity. "This is a great opportunity for us to grow and that's why we're bringing on the whole team and the whole portfolio," Roth said, indicating that Rocade retained Law Finance Group's personnel as well as its existing investments.

The deal reflects a broader pattern of consolidation within litigation finance, which Bloomberg Law characterized as "a niche but growing asset class." As funders scale their balance sheets and diversify across case types, combinations of this kind may become increasingly common, allowing established players to deepen their capital base and expand the range of claims they can support.

Second Circuit Denies Burford Rehearing in YPF Case, Leaving Supreme Court as Last Resort

By John Freund |

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has declined to reconsider its ruling in favor of Argentina in the long-running YPF expropriation dispute, dealing another blow to Burford Capital's effort to enforce what had been the largest judgment in American legal history. The decision leaves the litigation funder with only a narrow path to the U.S. Supreme Court.

As reported by the Buenos Aires Herald, the appellate panel earlier vacated U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska's first-instance award, which had ordered Argentina to pay roughly $16 billion to former shareholders of the state-owned oil company over its 2012 nationalization of YPF. Applying Argentine law, the panel found the shareholders' claims inadmissible. Burford's petition for rehearing has now been rejected, and the company has approximately 90 days to seek Supreme Court review.

On its Q1 2026 earnings call, Burford characterized the panel's reasoning as "quite weak" and noted that Judge Preska carried an unusually low reversal rate. Chief Executive Officer Christopher Bogart emphasized that the accounting impact was entirely noncash: the firm recorded a substantial write-down of the YPF asset's carrying value while still booking more than $100 million in cumulative cash profit on the investment.

Rather than rest its hopes on a Supreme Court petition, Burford signaled it will press its claims through bilateral investment treaty arbitration. Bogart noted that 86% of more than 50 investor cases brought against Argentina have produced pro-investor outcomes, framing arbitration as the more promising avenue for recovery.

Kansas Enacts Consumer Legal Funding Law, Offering a Bipartisan Regulatory Blueprint

By John Freund |

Kansas has adopted a comprehensive framework for regulating consumer legal funding, with Governor Laura Kelly signing the Transparency in Consumer Legal Funding Act, House Bill 2518, into law. Commentators have positioned the statute, which takes effect July 1, 2026, as a model for other states weighing how to oversee the fast-growing consumer funding sector.

As reported by the National Law Review, the measure passed unanimously in both chambers of the Republican-controlled legislature before earning the Democratic governor's signature, a rare show of bipartisan consensus on an issue that has drawn sharp debate elsewhere. The law defines consumer legal funding as a non-recourse transaction in which a company purchases a contingent interest in the proceeds of a legal claim, and it expressly states that such funding is not a loan and is not subject to lending laws.

The statute builds in extensive consumer protections, including a 10-business-day rescission period without penalty, plain-language contract requirements, full disclosure of all charges and the maximum repayment amount, and mandatory attorney acknowledgment. It also bars referral fees and kickbacks, prohibits misleading advertising, and restricts funding companies from influencing litigation decisions.

On transparency, the law requires disclosure of funding agreements upon request by parties and insurers while shielding attorney-funder communications from discovery. Supporters describe that balance as the statute's central achievement: protecting consumers through disclosure and accountability while preserving access to funding and safeguarding attorney independence, a template lawmakers in other states may look to replicate.

Administrator Probes Pre-Collapse Transfers at UK Litigation Funder Fenchurch Legal

By John Freund |

The administrator of UK litigation funder Fenchurch Legal is investigating a series of transfers that moved a large portion of the company's loan book and subsidiary shares in the days before it entered administration. The probe casts a spotlight on governance and asset-protection practices in the small-ticket litigation funding market.

As reported by the Law Society Gazette, Fenchurch Legal was incorporated in April 2020 and provided small loans to law firms handling high-volume claims, including housing disrepair, tenancy deposit, personal injury, and PCP car finance cases. At the time of its collapse, its loan book stood at roughly £16 million, financing about 9,500 claims.

According to the administrator's report, a substantial part of that loan book was assigned to subsidiary companies immediately before administration, and shares in seven subsidiaries were transferred the day before the appointment. Vincent A. Simmons was appointed administrator on April 1, 2026, following a High Court application by secured lender Lowry Trading over unpaid debt. The court rejected Fenchurch's challenge to that appointment on May 7.

The administrator is now examining the share transfers and loan-book assignments, as well as substantial payments the company made in the days immediately before his appointment. Creditors include Legaleze Ltd, owed £7 million, Mintos Marketplace at £933,000, and unsecured creditors of roughly £910,000, while Lowry Trading claims it is owed more than £4 million. The investigation underscores the heightened scrutiny facing funders whose models depend on high volumes of low-value claims.

The Growing Fight Over Discoverability of Third-Party Litigation Funding Agreements

By John Freund |

As third-party litigation funding becomes a routine feature of complex commercial disputes, courts and litigants are increasingly grappling with a threshold question: when, if ever, must funding agreements be disclosed to the opposing side? The answer remains far from settled, and the stakes for funders, plaintiffs, and defendants alike continue to rise.

As reported by Law.com, litigation has grown expensive enough that parties now routinely turn to outside funders to underwrite the cost of pursuing claims. That shift has prompted defendants to argue that funding arrangements are relevant to issues such as a funder's control over litigation strategy, potential conflicts of interest, witness bias, and the real party in interest, all of which, they contend, justify discovery of the underlying agreements.

Plaintiffs and funders counter that funding agreements are generally irrelevant to the merits of a claim and are often protected by work-product and attorney-client privilege. They warn that broad disclosure would chill access to capital, expose sensitive financial terms, and invite satellite litigation over collateral issues that have little bearing on the dispute itself.

The result is an uneven and evolving body of law, with outcomes varying by jurisdiction, forum, and the specific relief sought. For litigants on both sides, the analysis underscores the importance of structuring funding relationships with discovery risk in mind and of anticipating disclosure disputes before they arise, as the contours of when funding agreements must be produced continue to take shape across the courts.

New Twist in Makate ‘Please Call Me’ Saga as Former Funders Claim 40% of Vodacom Windfall

By John Freund |

The long-running dispute between Nkosana Kenneth Makate, the inventor of Vodacom's "Please Call Me" service, and his former litigation funders has taken a fresh turn, with the funders asserting an entitlement to 40% of any settlement Makate recovers. The clash places a litigation funding agreement, and the capacity of the party that signed it, at the center of one of South Africa's highest-profile compensation battles.

As reported by IOL, the contested arrangement traces to a November 2011 agreement under which Makate would retain 60% of any Vodacom recovery, with the remaining 40% going to Black Rock Mining, a vehicle associated with businessman Errol Elson. Black Rock maintains that it funded Makate's legal battle and intends to enforce its right to that 40% share.

Makate is now asking the Gauteng High Court to declare the funding agreement invalid or properly terminated. He argues that Black Rock "never existed, except on paper" and lacked the financial capacity to fund his litigation, alleging the company was deregistered from April 2014 until December 2020 and failed to meet its funding obligations. Makate says he personally carried the legal costs from January 2015 onward.

He further contends the arrangement amounts to fraud, citing Black Rock's alleged inability to perform, its failure to deposit sufficient litigation funds, and its failure to indemnify adverse cost orders. The outcome will test how South African courts scrutinize funder capacity and the enforceability of funding agreements when a long-delayed claim finally yields a recovery.

Funded $125 Million Class Action Beats ANZ in New Zealand as Bank Appeals CCCFA Ruling

By John Freund |

A litigation-funded class action has secured a landmark ruling against ANZ Bank New Zealand, with the High Court finding the bank breached the Consumer Credit and Consumer Finance Act and exposing it to an estimated $125 million in liability. The case stands as a striking example of how third-party funding can enable individual borrowers to take on a major financial institution, even one that lobbied Parliament to change the law.

As reported by LawFuel, Justice Geoffrey Venning ruled on May 4, 2026, that a coding error in ANZ's systems between May 2015 and May 2016 produced inaccurate loan variation letters that failed to account for accrued interest. Applying strict-liability principles, the court ordered refunds to representative plaintiffs and estimated total exposure across roughly 17,000 affected customers at about $125 million.

The proceeding would "almost certainly never have reached the courtroom" without backing from funders LPF Group and CASL Management, the report notes. The litigation also helped establish that common fund orders, which spread funding costs across all class members, are permissible in New Zealand, an important precedent for future collective actions.

After discovering its breach, the New Zealand Bankers' Association mounted an intensive lobbying campaign for amendments that would have retrospectively softened the legal standard, naming the class action directly. Parliament's Finance Committee received 1,543 opposing submissions against just 15 in support and ultimately exempted existing proceedings. ANZ has appealed, arguing the consequences are disproportionate, while ASB settled a larger related class action for $135.6 million in October 2025.

Omni Bridgeway Unveils Pro Bono Recycling Fund for Migrant Domestic Workers and Backs iyO in High-Profile IP Suit Against OpenAI, Altman, and Jony Ive

By John Freund |

Omni Bridgeway has moved on two distinct fronts in recent weeks, pairing a first-of-its-kind pro bono disbursement facility for migrant domestic workers in Asia with a high-profile commercial commitment to fund iyO Inc.'s intellectual property and trade secret suit against OpenAI, Sam Altman, and Sir Jony Ive. Taken together, the announcements showcase the breadth of the ASX-listed funder's pipeline — from access-to-justice initiatives at one end to flagship technology disputes at the other.

According to a joint Omni Bridgeway announcement, the funder has partnered with Hong Kong–based NGO Justice Without Borders to launch a "recycling" disbursement fund that covers court fees, expert reports, translation services, and court-ordered security for costs deposits in cross-border employment claims brought by migrant domestic workers across Hong Kong, Singapore, Indonesia, and other jurisdictions where JWB operates. The structure is designed so that recoveries are routed back into the facility, allowing each dollar of capital to support multiple claims over time. JWB executive director Celine Chan framed the initiative around the principle that "justice should not stop at a border or depend on ability to afford court fees," while Omni Bridgeway's Mitchell Dearness said the facility "fills a critical gap by covering costs that pro bono representation alone cannot address." The fund's headline commitment was not disclosed.

On the commercial side, according to a PR Newswire announcement from iyO, Omni Bridgeway is now backing iyO's federal litigation against OpenAI, Sam Altman, Jony Ive, io Products Inc., and former io co-founder Tang Yew Tan in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California (Case No. 25-cv-04861-TLT). iyO, a Google X spinout developing screenless, voice-controlled ear-worn devices, alleges trademark infringement of its federally registered "IYO" mark and trade secret misappropriation under both the California Uniform Trade Secrets Act and the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act over OpenAI's use of the "io" brand and the conduct of the io team after its acquisition. U.S. District Judge Trina L. Thompson granted a preliminary injunction in April 2026 finding iyO "likely to succeed on the merits of its trademark claim," after the Ninth Circuit affirmed an earlier temporary restraining order in December 2025. Trade-secret claims were added in March 2026.

For Omni Bridgeway, the two announcements land at a moment when public-market funders are working to demonstrate both portfolio breadth and capital efficiency to investors and clients. The recycling fund extends the firm's brand into access-to-justice territory long associated with NGOs and pro bono law firms, while the iyO matter places it directly into the most closely watched generative-AI dispute on the docket — a posture that allows Omni Bridgeway to argue, simultaneously, that litigation finance can democratize cross-border employment claims and underwrite the bet-the-product cases that define the next era of technology competition.

Litigation Capital Management Extends Northleaf Covenant Waiver to June 30, Flags Material Case Write-Downs

By John Freund |

AIM-listed litigation funder Litigation Capital Management has secured a one-month extension of its debt covenant waiver from senior lender Northleaf to June 30, 2026, while disclosing negative developments in two case investments and warning that material write-downs will be reflected in upcoming financial statements.

According to a Litigation Capital Management regulatory announcement, the waiver continues on existing terms, with interest on the Northleaf facility remaining elevated by 2.00 percentage points per annum and no additional waiver fee charged. The two affected investments account for approximately A$9 million in invested capital between them; LCM did not identify the specific funded matters but said the negative outcomes will require material write-downs in its forthcoming results.

The funder added that the strategic review initiated in September 2025 remains ongoing and that the waiver extension reflects Northleaf's "ongoing support while LCM works towards a long-term resolution of its capital position." LCM's London-listed shares fell roughly 13% on the news.

The update is the latest in a sequence of capital-stack adjustments and adverse case developments that have weighed on LCM since late 2025, and reinforces the operating reality that publicly traded funders face: portfolio-level returns can be overwhelmed at the equity line by a small number of high-conviction matters that resolve adversely. With the waiver now tied to a June 30 deadline, the next four weeks are likely to determine both the contours of the strategic review and the terms of any new lender arrangement.

Trade Press Revisits How Litigation Funding Became Entangled in U.S. Meat Industry Antitrust Battles

By John Freund |

The U.S. meat industry trade press has stepped back to examine how third-party litigation funding became central to the multi-year wave of antitrust cases against Tyson Foods, Pilgrim's Pride, and other major packers, with Burford Capital's funding of Sysco's protein price-fixing claims serving as the defining storyline.

As reported by Meatingplace, Sysco and Burford entered a Capital Provision Agreement under which the funder invested approximately $140 million from 2019 onward to back Sysco's direct-purchaser antitrust cases in beef, pork, chicken, and turkey. The relationship later fractured when Sysco moved to settle several matters at values Burford regarded as far below their merit-driven worth, leading to arbitration, the assignment of Sysco's remaining claims to Burford-affiliated vehicle Carina Ventures, and a high-profile Seventh Circuit ruling earlier this year that allowed Burford to challenge a $50 million Sysco settlement in the broiler chicken docket.

The feature traces how the dispute reshaped procurement-side antitrust strategy across the protein sector, with Sysco at one point accusing Burford in court filings of turning the federal docket into a "casino" in which the funder could veto rational settlement decisions made by the underlying claimant.

For litigation funders, the retrospective is notable less for new disclosures than for the audience it reaches — a trade publication whose readership is the corporate procurement and operations community now thinking about whether to bring, settle, or finance their own antitrust recoveries against the same packer defendants in the years ahead.

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