Resolution professionals are increasingly turning to third-party legal funders in order to provide operating capital until liquidation is complete, or a new owner reorganizes the company. Read More…
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Legal Funding
Like much of the world, Canada’s legal system can be expensive to access effectively. Even well-off Canadians may not be able to afford to follow up on meritorious claims against powerful defendants. Enter third-party legal funding. This practice affords potential clients the financial support needed to pursue meritorious cases without the risk of incurring a huge legal debt.
The concept of blockchain investing is still a mystery to many consumers. To many it sounds complicated, risky, and predicated on guesswork. Blockchain-style investment in third-party legal funding is a new concept, and one that brings with it questions about transparency and disclosure.
Like many places in the world, Canada’s cost of litigation can be prohibitively high. Even meritorious claims may not be worth what it costs to pursue them—leaving good people victimized and the unscrupulous free from dissent. Enter third-party litigation funding. That’s when everything changes for Canadians seeking justice.
Over the last decade, third-party litigation funding has been increasingly popular as a means of increasing access to justice. At its core, TPF is a way to put investor money toward meritorious legal cases (often, but not always, class actions) in exchange for a share of the award or settlement it generates. As the cost of litigation increases, the need for legal funding grows.
Legal funding is an established and respected industry in Australia. It’s continually expanding and adapting to meet the needs of an increasing client pool. Leading funder Burford Capital has received and vetted more than 10,000 funding requests.
As the world economy inches toward some sense of post-COVID normalcy, asset-backed securities are demonstrating their resilience. Unlike traditional ABS classes like leases, car loans, student loans, or credit card debt, the term ‘esoteric ABS’ can be applied to assets that can be traded for non-recourse funding.
Legal Funding in Global Jurisdictions—How are They Different and What’s Next?
by John Freund
written by John Freund
The acceptance and mainstreaming of litigation funding are happening at different times and speeds in different parts of the world. Much of Europe has made use of the practice for nearly two decades. Other locales, like Singapore and Hong Kong, have only welcomed legal funding in recent years.
What exactly is social inflation? In the insurance context, it refers to progressively larger losses to insurers in the form of massive awards from juries. VerdictSearch data shows a 300%+ increase in verdicts in excess of $20 million compared to ten years ago. In the US alone, 79 class action settlements totaled an astonishing $2.3 billion last year. Social inflation is definitely occurring. But what’s causing it?
Influence. It’s one of the key concerns that lawmakers have about third-party litigation funding. The fear is that funders, who do not have a direct connection to a legal dispute, yet fund it in the hopes of earning a share of the award, may unduly influence decisions about the case that may adversely impact courts, plaintiffs, or defendants. So what happens when funded cases involve one or more federal governments?
Legal Funding for Liquidation Approved in British Virgin Islands
by John Freund
written by John Freund
Last month, a commercial court in the British Virgin Islands officially recognized the use of third-party legal funding by liquidators in an insolvency case. The practice had been going on for some time, but this first written ruling on the matter is considered an overt approval of the practice.