Dispelling the Myths of Litigation Funding

This article appeared in Accounting and Financial Planning for Law Firms, an ALM publication delivering analysis and intelligence for Corporate Counsel, Managing Partners, Financial Planning Professionals, and Law Firm Administrators. Visit the website to learn more.

Litigation finance, or the practice of providing capital using legal claims as the underlying asset, is a growing industry. Its use by law firms alone grew four-fold between 2013 and 2016, according to Burford s 2016 Litigation Finance Survey. However, the more a new industry grows, the more it is talked about and, inevitably, misunderstood. So it goes for litigation finance in 2017. And while litigation finance can be a useful problem-solving tool in a variety of circumstances, to optimize its use, the legal and corporate industries should first collect the facts.

Here, I dispel three of the most common misconceptions about litigation finance.

Myth #1: The growth of litigation finance is driven by outside investors.

Fact: The growth of litigation finance is driven by demand from clients and lawyers.

You ve probably seen headlines that litigation finance is becoming more common as large law firms and companies increasingly explore sophisticated transactions that can run into the tens of millions of dollars. With such numbers, it s easy to see why some believe that the growth of litigation finance is supply-driven (due to supply of investment dollars) rather than demand-driven (with demand created by the needs of clients and law firms).

On the contrary, litigation finance is growing based on demand in the marketplace. In an environment where, according to the Litigation Survey, more than nine out of 10 clients (94%) say that increased pressure on legal budgets, staffing, and spending is a significant challenge today up from 80% in 2014 and 73% in 2013 it makes sense that these parties would seek a solution through outside financing. This demand, combined with litigation finance s applicability to a variety of client and law firm needs, is what has fueled the rise of the largest players in the industry. Most major litigation financiers provide solutions to clients that span startups to the Fortune 100, and firms of every size, from boutiques to the AmLaw 100.

To illustrate, litigation finance can usually be applied in all of the following circumstances:

A litigant or law firm seeking financing engages with a finance provider that will consider commercial legal receivables as financeable assets.

Financing can be provided at any stage of the proceeding for pending claims, claims on appeal or legal receivables awaiting payment.