Adding value beyond capital: During case review
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Cost-based comparison-shopping may be an understandable mainstay of consumer decision-making, but what’s relevant for buying a toaster doesn’t apply when it comes to financing commercial disputes. For in-house and law firm lawyers it’s an at best limited and at worst potentially harmful way to select a legal finance partner.
So if lawyers ask us why they should take Burford’s capital rather than someone else’s—reasoning that money is money, and so why not get the cheapest money available?—we note that given the scale and diverse sources of our available capital, Burford will always be competitive on cost. But we also note that after a decade in business and having reviewed many thousands of requests for funding for commercial disputes, it’s clear that the challenges our clients face are rarely (if ever) just about the money. And it’s also clear that they routinely choose Burford because of the value we offer beyond the capital we provide.
To unpack what that can look like, we review below the ways in which Burford can add value for companies, law firms and lawyers from the earliest stages of the review process through to when Burford makes an investment, which we oversee in our respective roles managing Burford’s US investment pipeline and its US litigation investment portfolio.
Not surprisingly, given the fact that we typically assume upfront dispute costs and lose our capital if the underlying matters aren’t successful, Burford’s case review process—what we call underwriting or diligencing—is careful and thorough. As a general matter, it’s a three-stage process:
Burford can add value to the client and the law firm regardless of whether we end up financing a matter at the end of this process—and I’ll note that Burford reviewed more than 1,400 funding inquiries in 2018, but ultimately invested in far fewer.[1] Our hope is of course that we’ll be able to provide financing, but even if we don’t we become familiar with a case and the parties involved. As we gain that familiarity and dive into matters, we can add value in a variety of ways:
A law firm or claimant who seeks a legal finance partner based solely on price risks missing out on these qualitative benefits. Of course the cost of capital matters—but law firms and claimants can and should expect more.
[1] Burford 2018 Annual Report, available at http://www.burfordcapital.com/FY2018.
Read more of "Adding value beyond capital":
Part I • Part II
To read the article in full, download the Spring 2019 Burford Quarterly.