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Now litigation has value worth investment

In the chrome and glass office of every gen­er­al coun­sel in every major cor­po­rate, there will be two stacks of paper.

On the left is a pile of all the legal claims the com­pa­ny is defend­ing – a mount­ing, tee­ter­ing tow­er that must be con­stant­ly attend­ed to, for fear that it will col­lapse and engulf the hap­less lawyer.

On the right, anoth­er tall stack, but this one wears a lay­er of dust and only rarely is the GC’s eye cast towards it. These are the poten­tial claims that the com­pa­ny could be bring­ing against oth­ers; for breach of con­tract, copy­right infringe­ment and so forth.

But the claims are not with­out risk and require upfront cash from the legal bud­get already being drained by the defence lit­i­ga­tion. The poten­tial claims may be strong, but in their cur­rent state they have absolute­ly no val­ue on the company’s bal­ance sheet.

Whether those tow­ers of paper exist as a phys­i­cal real­i­ty or sim­ply in the mind’s eye of the GC, the ten­sion between the two types of claim is the same in every large busi­ness. Even where the head of legal active­ly wants to pur­sue claims, the bar­ri­ers to doing so can be high.

In comes the funder

Susan Dunn, head of lit­i­ga­tion fund­ing at Har­bour, explains: “GCs often recount hav­ing the same con­ver­sa­tion with their finance direc­tor. The GC tells the FD, ‘I’ve got a great claim and we ought to bring it’. The FD has two ques­tions, ‘Can you guar­an­tee that it will win and can you guar­an­tee that it will be with­in bud­get?’ And of course the GC can’t do either.”

This is where lit­i­ga­tion fund­ing comes in. If the claim is a good one, a lit­i­ga­tion fun­der will give a com­pa­ny the cash it needs upfront to bring it. If the case fails, the fun­der gets noth­ing. If it suc­ceeds, the fun­der is paid hand­some­ly from the dam­ages.

firms biggest challenges

Fund­ing is not cheap because the fun­der has tak­en on all of the risk. But even where the fun­der claims a large slice of the pie, the client will still have realised some val­ue from a case that it would not oth­er­wise have brought.

Ms Dunn con­tin­ues: “When you get fun­ders involved, you still can’t guar­an­tee that you’ll win, although I do think that we are quite good at pick­ing cas­es. But what you can guar­an­tee is that if you lose, it will cost the client noth­ing.

“The client will still need to spend a lot of time on the case – even with fund­ing, you can’t avoid that. But it will avoid the uncom­fort­able con­ver­sa­tion with the FD where he is say­ing, ‘You told me this would only cost x amount’.”

Snowball effect

Lit­i­ga­tion fund­ing start­ed out by pro­vid­ing a ser­vice for small­er com­pa­nies that had strong claims, but no mon­ey to bring them. How­ev­er, accord­ing to Ms Dunn, the dynam­ics have now shift­ed con­sid­er­ably. Where­as Harbour’s first fund, set up in 2007, main­ly financed claims for insol­vent clients, she esti­mates that near­ly a third of the clients of its third, most recent fund are “names that you would recog­nise” – banks, wealth funds and large list­ed enti­ties.

“The GCs are real­ly start­ing to get it now,” she says. “It is a bit of a club, with GCs who will know each oth­er, and once they start talk­ing [about using lit­i­ga­tion fund­ing] they begin to think, per­haps we should be doing that too. It is a real snow­ball effect.”

Tra­di­tion­al fund­ing involves fun­ders close­ly weigh­ing the mer­its of a par­tic­u­lar case and decid­ing whether to invest in it. But the indus­try is both grow­ing and evolv­ing.

clients biggest challenges

In April, fund­ing giant Bur­ford raised £100 mil­lion from a bonds issue on the Lon­don Stock Exchange – an exam­ple of the extent to which mon­ey is flow­ing into the sec­tor. Bur­ford, which now has lit­i­ga­tion finance com­mit­ments of around $1 bil­lion, has large­ly moved away from the sin­gle case fund­ing mod­el. Indeed, in 2015, only 13 per cent of its new com­mit­ments relat­ed to sin­gle cas­es, while 63 per cent were port­fo­lio deals, where­by it invests in a range of a firm’s lit­i­ga­tion.

Burford’s man­ag­ing direc­tor Nick Rowles-Davies explains that by fund­ing a book of lit­i­ga­tion, you can start to bring down the high costs the fund­ing indus­try is often crit­i­cised for.

He says: “If you are fund­ing a port­fo­lio, the risk is low­er because you are spread­ing that risk and you are unlike­ly to get it wrong on all of the cas­es. If you lose the first case, you will hope­ful­ly get it back on the next one. But if you start los­ing six or sev­en, then you are prob­a­bly in the wrong busi­ness.”

Funding for corporate purposes

While port­fo­lio fund­ing has been around for a few years, 2016 has seen the con­cept tak­en a step fur­ther with some fun­ders pro­vid­ing cash that can be used not just to bring lit­i­ga­tion, but also to defend it or indeed to use for some­thing else entire­ly.

Bur­ford announced in Jan­u­ary that it had pro­vid­ed $45 mil­lion to a FTSE 20 com­pa­ny that could be used “either to relieve legal expense bud­get pres­sure or for cor­po­rate pur­pos­es unre­lat­ed to the lit­i­ga­tion mat­ters”. The com­pa­ny in receipt of the invest­ment has been wide­ly report­ed as BT, though this is uncon­firmed, and the deal gained con­sid­er­able press inter­est.

Neil Purslow, chief invest­ment offi­cer at fun­der Theri­um, says report­ing of the FTSE 20 deal has put lit­i­ga­tion finance on the radar of GCs and finance direc­tors.

“Last year we did a deal in which we pro­vid­ed financ­ing for a com­pa­ny against a claim that it had. It did not use any of the mon­ey we gave it for that; it used it to do anoth­er trans­ac­tion. So we pro­vid­ed it with ven­ture cap­i­tal,” he says.

It is recog­nis­ing that the lit­i­ga­tion has val­ue – this is the next big men­tal shift

Mr Purslow explains that the firm in ques­tion was still under an oblig­a­tion to bring the claim, so that the fun­der could be paid from the pro­ceeds, but it car­ried the cost of the lit­i­ga­tion itself.

“This is a more flex­i­ble way of fund­ing. It breaks the link between the mon­ey fund­ed and the costs of the lit­i­ga­tion,” he adds.

So the neglect­ed pile of poten­tial claims becomes an asset and one against which mon­ey can be raised.

“It is recog­nis­ing that the lit­i­ga­tion has val­ue and it’s about what you as a fun­der can give to the com­pa­ny against that val­ue,” Mr Purslow con­cludes. “This is the next big men­tal shift.”