Overview
We help clients improve the likelihood of recovery after a judgment or award, and we can arrange dispute funding where appropriate.
Asset Recovery
Winning in court or arbitration does not always mean getting paid. In fact, more than half of companies that succeed in commercial litigation or arbitration are ultimately unable to enforce the judgment and recover the compensation awarded.
Our specialists in asset tracing and corporate intelligence help clients address this challenge: obtaining a favourable court judgment or arbitral award but receiving no actual payment. We turn debts arising from judgments and awards from unenforceable legal paper into accessible funds. We also advise on the feasibility of enforcing any judgment or award.
While every matter is unique, our asset recovery services typically include:
- Gathering intelligence: applying corporate intelligence to turn judgment debts into recoverable assets
- Tracing assets: locating assets of individuals and corporate entities
- Proving ownership: establishing both legal and beneficial ownership
- Retrieving evidence: obtaining primary documentary or digital evidence and interviewing witnesses of fact
We combine data-driven analytics with human intelligence to verify findings and deliver actionable insights on judgment debtors and their hidden assets. Together with our law firm partners, we then pursue recovery through multi-jurisdictional asset preservation orders and related enforcement actions.
Commercial and Consumer Litigation Funding
We arrange funding, specifically through conditional fee agreements and damages-based agreements, for a wide range of disputes, including commercial litigation, international arbitration, shareholder claims, intellectual property cases, tort and personal injury claims, and enforcement of judgments and awards.
Each case is carefully selected based on the strength of the claim and the potential return on recovery. Although litigation funding is most often extended to claimants, in certain cases it may also be available to defendants.