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Ashdown Litigation Partners Argues Capital Protection Is the Key to Institutional Litigation Finance

By John Freund |

A new analysis from Ashdown Litigation Partners contends that insurance-backed capital protection is the mechanism most likely to transform litigation funding from a specialist alternative into an institutional-grade asset class. The paper argues that the traditional binary outcome of litigation funding, in which a failed claim returns nothing to the funder, is fundamentally incompatible with the fiduciary duties of pension funds, endowments, and other allocators that must preserve capital.

As reported by Ashdown Litigation Partners, the firm's research team frames the solution as a two-layered "credit wrap" that combines Capital Protection Insurance, under which a tier-one insurer reimburses investors if returns fall below defined thresholds, with After-the-Event insurance that addresses adverse cost exposure under the English "loser pays" rule. Together, the two products convert an all-or-nothing litigation outcome into a structured exposure with a defined downside.

The authors acknowledge that the protection comes at a cost. Premiums consume capital that would otherwise generate litigation returns, and contingent premiums paid on success further compress upside, reducing effective MOIC and IRR. Ashdown's position is that the trade-off is worth making because, in its words, "without protection, the allocation cannot be made at all."

The analysis reflects a broader industry effort to reshape litigation finance in the image of mainstream credit and insurance-linked products. If the approach gains traction, it could open the door to participation from pension schemes, endowments, local authorities, and family offices previously unable to access the asset class.

Patent Monetizer IP Edge Rebrands and Shifts Toward Higher-Value Litigation Funding Model

By John Freund |

IP Edge, long regarded as one of the most prolific patent assertion firms in the United States, is rebranding and repositioning its business following years of judicial scrutiny and a federal ethics investigation into its use of shell LLCs. The firm is moving away from its historical high-volume model toward a smaller book of more sophisticated, higher-value patent cases intended to reach trial rather than settle early.

As reported by Bloomberg Law, co-founder Gautham Bodepudi acknowledged that "there definitely is a narrative of patent trolls or nuisance litigation" surrounding the firm, which was the subject of a 2022 inquiry by US District Chief Judge Colm F. Connolly. That inquiry led to three IP Edge-affiliated lawyers, including Bodepudi, being referred to ethics panels in 2023 over questions about the unauthorized practice of law through LLCs owned by friends and family members of employees.

Under its new approach, IP Edge is handling between 10 and 15 active matters and has facilitated more than $40 million in patent litigation financing. The firm is structuring deals that use insurance as collateral to attract private equity firms, private credit funds, and family offices seeking uncorrelated returns.

Bodepudi described the insurance-wrapped structure as one that creates "a more attractive opportunity" for traditional investors, echoing a broader industry push to package patent and commercial litigation exposure in forms compatible with institutional capital preservation mandates. The rebrand underscores how patent monetization and litigation finance continue to converge around credit-wrapped structures.

Counsel Financial Structures $95 Million Bank Credit Facility for Plaintiff Law Firm

By John Freund |

Counsel Financial has enabled a $95 million revolving credit facility from a syndicate of commercial banks for a leading global plaintiffs' litigation firm, in a transaction that illustrates how specialized litigation finance expertise can unlock expanded bank lending to contingent fee practices. The facility is collateralized by the firm's portfolio of mass torts, class actions, and complex litigation matters, and carries interest-only terms designed to align repayment with the irregular cash flows of contingent fee recoveries.

According to Newswire, Counsel Financial served as underwriter and collateral monitoring agent on the deal, providing portfolio analysis that allowed the participating banks to recognize fuller collateral value than conventional underwriting approaches typically permit. The result was a larger borrowing base and expanded liquidity for the firm than a traditional bank facility alone would have supported.

The structure reflects a growing trend in which litigation finance specialists act as intermediaries between commercial banks and plaintiff firms, translating the complexities of contingent fee inventories into terms that mainstream lenders can evaluate and underwrite. For plaintiff firms, the approach offers access to cheaper bank capital alongside, or in place of, traditional non-recourse litigation funding.

Neither the borrowing firm nor the participating banks were identified in the announcement. The transaction adds to a series of recent facilities demonstrating that banks are increasingly willing to lend against litigation assets when paired with specialized monitoring and underwriting expertise from the litigation finance sector.

Investor Files Winding-Up Petition Against London Funder Fenchurch Legal

By John Freund |

London-based litigation funder Fenchurch Legal has been hit with a winding-up petition filed by an investment manager, escalating a months-long dispute between the parties over a multimillion-pound loan facility. The petition, lodged in the English courts, seeks to compulsorily wind up the funder and marks a significant turn in a conflict that has been brewing since earlier in the year.

As reported by Law360, the petition follows a period in which Fenchurch and the investment manager became embroiled in litigation over the terms and performance of the underlying loan arrangement. Winding-up petitions are typically used by creditors to pressure a company into repayment or to place it into compulsory liquidation if the debt remains unsatisfied, and are regarded as a serious step that can quickly affect a company's ability to operate.

Fenchurch Legal, which has specialised in financing portfolios of smaller consumer and commercial claims through a fund structure aimed at institutional and professional investors, has faced mounting scrutiny in recent months over the state of its core fund and the handling of investor capital. The latest petition adds to the pressure on the funder's ability to continue as a going concern.

The dispute highlights the growing tensions between litigation funders and the institutional capital providers that back them, particularly where portfolio performance and fund liquidity have come under strain. Market participants will be watching closely to see whether Fenchurch reaches an accommodation with its investor or whether the matter proceeds to a full hearing.

Lawyers for Civil Justice Urges Federal Rulemakers to Mandate Litigation Funding Disclosure

By John Freund |

The federal courts' Advisory Committee on Civil Rules is set to take up the question of third-party litigation funding disclosure at its April 14 meeting, with defense-aligned group Lawyers for Civil Justice urging the committee to adopt a rule requiring parties to disclose funding arrangements in federal civil cases.

As reported by the National Law Review, Alex Dahl, writing on behalf of Lawyers for Civil Justice, argues that funders routinely take 30 to 40% of recoveries and often influence settlement decisions, litigation strategy, and expert selection. Dahl contends that courts cannot effectively manage cases without knowing whether a party has ceded decision-making authority to a non-party financier, and that existing disclosure requirements for insurance agreements and amici supporters provide a clear analogue for funding transparency.

The proposal would amend the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to require disclosure of litigation funding agreements in a manner comparable to the insurance disclosure rule added in 1970. Proponents argue that, as courts recognized then, transparency allows "counsel for both sides to make the same realistic appraisal of the case."

Litigation funders and many plaintiffs' counsel have historically opposed blanket federal disclosure mandates, arguing that funding arrangements are attorney work product and that selective state-level and court-by-court rules have been sufficient. The Advisory Committee's discussion is the latest sign that the debate over federal disclosure, dormant at various points over the past decade, is once again moving toward the rulemaking agenda.

Report Spotlights California Real Estate Developer Funding Climate Litigation Against Oil Majors

By John Freund |

A new investigative report has identified California real estate developer Dan A. Emmett as a central financial backer of the wave of climate-liability lawsuits targeting major oil companies, as well as a funder of academic work at Columbia University aimed at shaping how judges approach the cases.

As reported by the Washington Free Beacon, Emmett's philanthropic and activist funding has supported both the litigation effort, advanced by plaintiffs' firm Sher Edling on behalf of state and municipal governments, and related work at Columbia's Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, which produces scholarship and judicial education materials on climate science and liability theories.

The suits, filed by a growing number of states, counties, and cities, seek to hold oil majors financially accountable for damages attributed to global warming and extreme weather events. Defendants and industry groups have long argued that the litigation is driven less by traditional plaintiffs than by an orchestrated network of ideological funders, activist firms, and academic allies, a characterisation the report seeks to document in detail.

The piece comes at a time of intensifying scrutiny of the financing behind public-interest and mass tort litigation, with disclosure of third-party funding under debate in federal rulemaking and several state legislatures. For the litigation finance industry, the story underscores how blurred the lines have become between philanthropic funding, activist capital, and the commercial models that define the sector's mainstream.

Litigation Finance Is Pulling Defense-Focused BigLaw Into Plaintiff-Side Work

By John Freund |

Defense-oriented BigLaw firms that once avoided contingency work are increasingly building out affirmative litigation practices, and legal commentator David Lat argues that litigation finance is a central reason why.

As reported by David Lat's Original Jurisdiction, firms including Kirkland & Ellis, Willkie Farr & Gallagher, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, and Mayer Brown are expanding plaintiff-side practices in response to corporate clients that are running formal affirmative recovery programs. Kirkland has reported more than $2 billion in client recoveries from affirmative litigation, Willkie chairman Craig Martin now devotes roughly a third of his practice to plaintiff work, and Gibson Dunn partner Robert Weigel dedicates an estimated 75% of his docket to plaintiff-side judgment enforcement and similar matters.

Burford Capital features prominently in the piece, with U.S. commercial investments lead Evan Meyerson describing how funders provide bespoke fee structures that allow historically hourly-billing firms to take on contingency and hybrid engagements without reshaping their economics. The article notes that Vanessa Biondo, formerly of Mayer Brown, has moved in-house at Burford, reflecting the growing cross-pollination between funders and elite defense firms.

The trend reinforces a theme that has animated the litigation finance market for several years: capital providers are not merely supporting plaintiffs with meritorious but under-resourced claims, they are also reshaping how the largest corporate law firms allocate risk, structure fees, and pursue recoveries for their own clients.

Kansas Enacts Transparency in Consumer Legal Funding Act

By John Freund |

Kansas has become the latest state to adopt a regulatory framework for consumer legal funding, with Governor Laura Kelly signing the Transparency in Consumer Legal Funding Act into law. The measure passed with unanimous bipartisan support in both chambers of the Kansas legislature and establishes baseline standards for how consumer legal funding companies operate in the state.

According to EIN Presswire, the new law affirms that consumer legal funding is not a loan and codifies several consumer protections. Those include a 10-day cancellation window allowing consumers to rescind agreements without penalty, a non-recourse structure ensuring consumers owe nothing if their case is unsuccessful, and a requirement that contracts be written in plain language. Funding companies must also provide full financial disclosure of funded amounts, fees, and maximum repayment schedules.

The statute additionally prohibits funders from influencing settlement decisions or the direction of litigation, preserving attorney independence and client control over case strategy. A referral fee ban eliminates kickbacks to attorneys or medical providers, addressing a long-standing concern among industry critics.

Eric Schuller, President of the Alliance for Responsible Consumer Legal Funding, called the legislation "a thoughtful, balanced framework that ensures consumers fully understand their agreements while preserving access to critical financial support during litigation." The Kansas law adds to a growing patchwork of state-level consumer legal funding regulations and reflects continued momentum toward standardized disclosure requirements across the industry.

Legal Finance ABS for Institutional Investors: Market Securities Expands Offering

By Celso Filho |

The following article was contributed by Celso Filho, Global Head of Special Projects at Market Securities, and co-founder and CEO of Rachel AI.

Life insurers and other institutional investors face a structural allocation challenge: securing sufficient volumes of rated, long-duration, yield-bearing assets to match long-tail liabilities. Public investment-grade bond markets remain large, but they do not consistently provide the spread, structure, or customization required. As a result, insurers have steadily increased allocations to private placements, asset-backed securities, and other forms of private credit.

According to Milliman's 2026 analysis of NAIC statutory filings, private bonds now account for approximately 46% of U.S. life insurers' bond portfolios — up from 29% a decade ago — reflecting a sustained and accelerating shift toward alternative sources of yield and duration. The trend is sharpest among PE-owned life insurers, where structured securities account for approximately 49% of total bonds — underscoring how deeply the search for rated, yield-bearing paper has become embedded in the asset allocation strategies of the most capital-active players in the sector.

Market Securities is addressing that demand by bringing to market asset-backed securities backed by legal finance receivables, including pre-settlement plaintiff advances and receivables linked to contingent fee arrangements with law firms. These assets introduce a distinct return profile driven by legal case cash flows rather than traditional corporate credit cycles, and they can be structured into rated securitizations suitable for institutional portfolios.

The opportunity is crystallizing across three investor tiers — each approaching the asset class from a different angle, but converging on the same structure and, together, driving the institutionalization of legal finance.

  1. Insurers and other rated-mandate investors represent the largest pool of demand. Operating within strict capital and rating constraints, they allocate to investment-grade instruments at 125 to 200 basis points over Treasuries and can deploy hundreds of millions per transaction. Their participation defines the scale of the opportunity — and creates the demand for rated, structured exposure that legal finance ABS is uniquely positioned to meet.
  2. Private credit managers, sovereign wealth funds, and large family offices occupy the senior and mezzanine tranches, targeting enhanced yield with structural protections. Unlike insurers, these investors are not dependent on ratings and underwrite assets directly, focusing on risk-adjusted returns, structure, and downside protection. They provide the capital depth required to scale transactions and anchor issuance.
  3. Specialist legal finance investors sit in the junior and equity tranches, underwriting legal risk directly and targeting returns in excess of 25%. These investors take first-loss positions, pricing legal risk at the asset level — and for them, securitization offers a compelling strategic advantage: lower cost of capital and greater leverage availability than traditional fund formation, particularly relevant in today's challenging fundraising environment.

These tiers are complementary rather than competitive. Rated investors bring scale and duration demand; private credit and sovereign capital provide flexible, non-rating-constrained liquidity; and specialist managers contribute underwriting expertise and first-loss alignment. Securitization is the architecture that aligns them — converting legal finance receivables into a format that institutional capital can size, rate, and deploy against.

Market Securities sees this convergence as structural rather than cyclical, and legal finance ABS as the mechanism through which it becomes permanent.

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Celso Filho, CFA, CAIA is Global Head of Special Projects at Market Securities, based in the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC). He is also co-founder and CEO of Rachel AI, a London-incorporated litigation finance technology and analytics platform. Celso began his career as a lawyer, practising for seven years before transitioning into investment banking and specialty finance, with prior roles at Citigroup and Credit Suisse. He holds an MBA from INSEAD.

LITFINCON Announces European Debut With Amsterdam Summit

By John Freund |

The global litigation finance conference series LITFINCON is expanding to Europe, with organizer Siltstone Capital announcing a two-day summit at the Rosewood Amsterdam on October 7–8, 2026.

As reported by PR Newswire, LITFINCON Europe will bring together litigation funders, law firms, institutional investors, and general counsels for eleven panels covering topics ranging from regulatory divergence across the UK, EU, and U.S. to deal mechanics, AI adoption, and developments at the Unified Patent Court. The conference will close with a 75-minute unscripted "Candid Conversations" session.

"Capital is flowing into the space at an unprecedented rate, and the demand for high-quality, senior dialogue has never been higher," said Robert Le, co-founder of Siltstone Capital. Jim Batson, the firm's CIO for legal finance, added that "LITFINCON has built its reputation on bringing the right people into the right room."

The Amsterdam venue — a set of five interconnected 19th-century palace buildings along the Herengracht canal that once served as the city's main courthouse — marks a fitting location for the conference's European launch. The Rosewood Amsterdam's historic connection to the Dutch judicial system underscores the growing intersection of legal proceedings and institutional capital on the continent.

LITFINCON originated in Houston and has rapidly scaled into a multi-city global series. The European debut follows LITFINCON Asia, scheduled for June 4, 2026, at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore. Sponsorship, speaking opportunities, and registration are now available at litfinconeurope.com.

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