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Litigation funder Asertis announces: new Commercial Disputes funding division backed by a €1.7bn (approx. £1.46bn) fund; financing of Mercedes group action; and new CIO and lateral hire from Harbour

Litigation funder Asertis today announces the launch of a new commercial litigation and arbitration disputes funding division backed by a well-known fund with available capital of over €1.7bn (approx. £1.46bn), as well as their financing of the Slater & Gordon Mercedes group litigation, and their new CIO and a further lateral hire from Harbour Litigation Funding.

Known for their insolvency litigation funding, Asertis’s new service will focus on funding commercial disputes, including those relating to general commercial, competition and corporate, consumer and group action litigations and infrastructure. With €1.7bn (approx. £1.46bn) of funds available through an affiliate of European fund Arrow Credit Opportunities SCSp, Asertis is able to make funding decisions quickly at its own discretion, from its own balance sheet.

Led by Chief Investment Officer Harshiv Thakerar, formerly of Global Growth Capital and Augusta Ventures, Asertis is positioned to fund commercial disputes across England and Wales, offshore markets, other common law jurisdictions and the EU.

J-P Pitt, formerly a Director of Litigation Funding at Harbour Litigation Funding, also recently joined Asertis as an Investment Manager. J-P brings with him extensive expertise in commercial disputes funding, asset recovery and enforcement, drawing on his previous experience at Harbour and as a qualified solicitor.

Asertis also announces today that it is financing the Mercedes Group Action led by Slater and Gordon. The claim centres around allegations that Mercedes, similar to other carmakers embroiled in the dieselgate scandal, installed software in their diesel engines to cheat emissions tests. Slater and Gordon are the joint lead solicitors in the Volkswagen Emissions group action, which is thought to be the largest group action in British legal history. Mercedes owners may be eligible to join if they have purchased or leased, whether new or second hand, a diesel Mercedes made between 2008 and 2018.

Harshiv will head the commercial disputes funding division, working with J-P and CEO Ian Madej to build on Asertis’s established insolvency funding division and spearhead the growth of the new commercial disputes service.

Commenting on the launch of the commercial disputes funding division and his appointment, Harshiv said: “I am delighted to have joined Asertis, working with the team to develop and grow our new commercial disputes funding service. Although a relatively new entrant into the increasingly crowded commercial litigation funding market, we are in the enviable position of being nimble and able to make funding decisions with certainty, autonomy and speed.”

J-P said: “I am thrilled to have joined the Asertis team at such an exciting time in their development. I look forward to using my experience in litigation funding to deliver agile funding decisions, rapidly, under this very significant credit line.”

Asertis CEO Ian Madej commented: “Harshiv and J-P both have an extensive understanding of complex disputes, particularly those with a multi-jurisdictional dimension. Asertis has grown rapidly since its launch last year and we have already funded and purchased several significant cases, including the Mercedes group action litigation. Coupled with our new membership of the Association of Litigation Funders, Asertis has fast established itself in the market and we look forward to working with Harshiv and J-P to continue our rapid growth.”

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Sentry Expands Free Funding Market Search for Litigators

By John Freund |

Sentry Funding’s free tool enabling litigators to instantly search the funding market on behalf of clients has been expanded.

Sentry’s free ‘decision in principle’ feature enables lawyers to evidence to clients that they have conducted a broad market search, even if funding is not ultimately taken out.

Having deployed £125m in funding across a range of case types, Sentry now has access to an even broader funding marketplace, covering 34 global jurisdictions. Finance is provided by 13 funders, five of which are members of the Association of Litigation Funders.

With the recent addition of Sentry’s first US-based funder, the US offering will now be expanding over the next few months. 

A faster process

Sentry has deployed the latest technology to make the search for funding even easier. 

  • The intuitive application process now only asks questions relevant to previous answers, saving lawyers time.
  • The commercial marketplace has been redeveloped with 63 new data points added to the funder criteria matrix - improving the accuracy of case / funder matching
  • Sentry has also begun building out its AI capabilities, starting with an automated auditing tool for live case progression audits. 

Tom Webster, chief executive officer at Sentry Funding, said:

‘By broadening our reach and speeding up the process, we’re making it even easier for lawyers to raise funding. We’re also giving litigators an easy way to show clients they have fully researched the market, rather than just approaching one or two funders. 

‘The service is free to use, so even if clients decide they do not ultimately want funding or if none is available for that case, for the lawyer, it makes sense to use our “decision in principle” feature, so they can put evidence on file that they did check the market.’

Sentry Funding is an SaaS (software as a service) technology provider that gives solicitors access to a diverse marketplace of litigation funders. It works with solicitors, funders and third-party providers to ensure claimants are getting the most efficient service for their funding needs. 

The Sentry Portal also acts as a case management system that runs a transparent digital case file for solicitors, funders, after-the-event insurance providers, barristers, cost lawyers and other relevant third parties.

NorthWall Capital Hits €2.9 B AUM on Private Credit Momentum

By John Freund |

NorthWall Capital has rocketed past €2.9 billion in assets under management after pulling in an additional €1.6 billion of institutional capital in 2025 alone. The London-based alternative credit manager says the surge reflects allocators’ intensifying hunt for scaled, multi-strategy platforms as Europe’s banks retrench and borrowers seek bespoke sources of credit.

A press release from NorthWall Capital details first-close totals across four distinct strategies. The flagship Credit Opportunities fund secured €731 million—already eclipsing its prior vintage—while the newly launched Senior Lending vehicle raised $503 million, translating to roughly $750 million of deployable firepower once leverage is applied. Asset-Backed Opportunities collected €252 million for collateral-rich loans in sectors underserved by traditional lenders, and the specialist Legal Assets platform locked down $169 million to extend the firm’s law-firm lending programme.

Founder and CIO Fabian Chrobog said the fundraising validates “the consistency of our approach” and NorthWall’s ability to craft solutions that resonate with investors and counterparties alike. With headcount slated to hit 40 by year-end, the firm plans to lean further into complex, situational credit born of bank deleveraging, regulatory shifts and sponsors’ need for certainty of execution.

Victory Park Expands Legal Credit Leadership with Maleson Promotion

By John Freund |

Victory Park Capital (VPC), a global alternative asset manager specializing in private credit, has announced that Justin Maleson will expand his role to Managing Director, co-heading the firm’s legal credit investment strategy. The promotion underscores VPC’s ongoing investment in its legal finance capabilities and follows Maleson’s initial appointment in 2024 as Assistant General Counsel.

An announcement from Victory Park Capital details Maleson’s new responsibilities, which include sourcing, analyzing, and managing investments across legal assets, while maintaining oversight of the firm’s legal operations. He joins Chad Clamage in co-leading the strategy, working alongside team members Hugo Lestiboudois and Andrew Pascal, under the continued oversight of VPC CEO and founder Richard Levy.

Maleson brings a strong background in litigation finance and commercial law to the position. Before joining VPC, he served as a director at Longford Capital, where he specialized in originating and managing litigation funding transactions. His earlier tenure as a litigation partner at Jenner & Block further deepened his exposure to complex legal matters, equipping him with the expertise needed to navigate the nuanced legal credit space.

VPC’s legal credit team emphasizes an asset-backed lending model, prioritizing downside protection and predictable income streams. The firm aims to capitalize on inefficiencies within the legal funding market by leveraging its internal expertise and broad network of relationships. With Maleson’s appointment, VPC signals its intent to further scale its legal credit strategy, positioning itself as a key player in the evolving legal finance sector.

Maleson’s elevation comes at a time of increasing sophistication in litigation finance, where experienced legal minds are playing a pivotal role in portfolio construction and risk management. As VPC bolsters its leadership, the move may foreshadow further institutionalization of legal asset investing and heightened competition in a maturing market segment.