Claim monetization: A guide to unlocking legal asset value
- Antitrust & competition
Here’s a paradox: Even as more lawyers become more aware of legal finance as a tool to offload cost and risk, too many of them remain unfamiliar with one of its most potent uses, the monetization of pending claims.
Lack of awareness of claim monetization is all the more surprising given that it alleviates one of the biggest frustrations faced by companies involved in major commercial disputes: Their inability to control the timing and certainty of cash flows back to the business when they pursue recoveries through litigation. This has relevance in the broader C-suite. According to the 2019 Managing Legal Risk Report, nine out of ten (91.9%) CFOs say that greater control over timing and the ability to monetize legal assets on their company’s schedule is an important benefit of legal finance.
Why then are so many lawyers unaware of claim monetization? Perhaps because so much discussion of legal finance focuses on its most common use, in which a third party pays lawyers’ fees and expenses so that claims may proceed. In-house lawyers who only see legal finance as a tool to pay their lawyers may then mistakenly conclude that unless they can’t or don’t want to pay their lawyers out of pocket, legal finance isn’t for them. Far from it: Legal finance enables companies to unlock the asset value of pending claims—including companies that can afford to and do pay their lawyers out of pocket. In doing so, monetization gives companies (and their firms) the ability to control the timing and certainty of cash flows back to the business by accelerating a portion of a pending claim.
As its name implies, monetization is simply the conversion of a portion of a pending claim into cash, with a legal finance provider essentially advancing capital that would otherwise be captive until the resolution and payment of the claim in question.
Pending claims often represent vast latent value to the organization. Unfortunately, they carry a tremendous amount of uncertainty as to both outcome and timing—and because they are highly illiquid, traditional capital sources historically have been unable to assign asset value to them. Because legal finance providers have experience and expertise in assessing the value of legal assets, however, they can help companies unlock value through monetization.
Monetization accelerates an organization’s access to capital. Capital is provided upfront, without the company needing to wait for outstanding claims to resolve—offering immediate liquidity that may be used for virtually any business purpose. Unlike fees and expenses financing, in which money flows from the finance provider to pay lawyers as costs are incrementally incurred, capital provided through a monetization is provided in a lump sum upon investment and can be redirected to fund defensive positions in the legal department—or to build warehouses, hire staff, shore up corporate balance sheets or any other corporate purpose. And because the capital typically is provided on a non-recourse basis, the company is obligated to repay the investment only following the successful resolution of the matter.
Claims suited for monetization tend to be large-scale matters with significant damages, and must meet standard criteria for legal finance, which for Burford include:
Claims can be monetized at various pre-settlement stages, but as a general matter, more capital can be provided for matters that are more advanced through litigation.
For companies with high-value claims, there are several obvious benefits to monetization:
Companies seeking to monetize claims should take care in identifying a reliable legal finance partner with a clear track record and capital sources—respectively the top two most important factors cited by lawyers in choosing a funder, according to the 2019 Legal Finance Report.
By definition, monetization will require a special quality of finance provider. Many well-capitalized finance firms lack the expertise or the willingness to provide a lump sum investment for a legal claim because they lack the expertise to value that claim; conversely, few specialist legal funders have the capital to monetize significant claims.
It is important for companies to work with a finance provider with sufficient valuation expertise and talent, and with sufficient resources to provide the requisite capital—and when timing is of the essence, working with a provider that has access to its own permanent capital (as Burford does) helps ensure the process moves swiftly and smoothly.