How to "Legally" Earn a 406% Return

By Matthew Milner, on Wednesday, April 8, 2015

David and Goliath are once again at war.

In this modern-day version, David is a small business, and Goliath is a vast conglomerate with unlimited resources.

Goliath has stolen David’s intellectual property – and despite the fact that David is in the right, he can’t afford a courtroom battle on his own.

Luckily, David, as always, has a secret weapon:

And not only can it bring justice for David…

But it can bring investors like you market-beating returns.

Profiting from Business Litigation

Business litigation – where one company sues another for such things as breach of contract or intellectual property theft – is an expensive proposition:

Depositions, expert witnesses, court fees, trial exhibits…

And then there’s the biggest expense of all: legal fees.

But for the victor, the payouts can reach millions, or even billions, of dollars.

So it’s no surprise that financiers from Wall Street found a way to get involved.

Essentially, these financiers pay the litigation costs of a plaintiff like David…

If David loses, the financiers lose their money – but if he wins, the financiers keep a big chunk of the profits.

It’s like venture capital for lawsuits.

One such financial company, UK-based Burford Capital (LON: BUR), has invested more than $500 million into these cases. Does it win them all? No, but historically, the winners have more than made up for the losers…

As an example, on one winning case last year, Burford made 52 times its money.

Overall, its return on capital for the year was 60%.

The thing is, because funds like Burford have such large pools of capital to allocate, they typically invest in large cases – cases that require millions of dollars.

But where does that leave smaller cases – ones like David’s?

A New Option for David

Historically, a small company that’s been wronged would have to give up its fight, or settle out of court – often, for just a fraction of what the case might be worth.

But now, small businesses have a new option:

They can turn to a company called LexShares that offers “crowdfunded litigation finance.”

Basically, many individual investors like you each contribute a small amount of capital. The capital is pooled together to fund a specific litigation case like David’s.

If David loses the case, you lose your money; but if he wins, you share in the proceeds – just like the big Wall Street firms.

LexShares Evens the Playing Field

LexShares was founded by Jay Greenberg, who previously ran Deutsche Bank’s technology investment group, and Max Volsky, an attorney with an expertise in lawsuit funding.

It focuses on cases where plaintiffs need $100,000 to $1 million to fund their business litigation – cases that are too small for the Wall Street firms.

To manage risk, LexShares only takes cases that meet certain criteria – for example, cases with strong legal merit, a clear timeline to resolution, and a successful attorney already signed on.

LexShares only got started late last year – and lawsuit investments typically take 2 to 4 years to generate a return – so it doesn’t have a track record yet.

But Max Volsky has a track record – it’s from a litigation finance fund he founded previously. In brief, Volsky oversaw more than 10,000 investments in legal claims, and his annual rate of return over the past ten years exceeds 50%.

With LexShares, Volsky and Greenberg are aiming for similar returns:

In practice, that means a $100,000 investment in a case that settles within a year must pay out $150,000, while a case that takes four years to resolve would need to pay out $506,250 – for a 406% return.

To attract investors like you, LexShares lets you invest in cases of your choice (the investment minimum is $2,500), and it charges no upfront fees or management fees.

LexShares only makes money if you make money – it keeps 20% of any profits.

Earning Returns from Private Deals

Equity crowdfunding – where “accredited investors” can earn financial returns by investing in private deals – now touches a wide variety of alternative investments:

From Start-ups and Hedge Funds, to Real Estate and Oil & Gas deals.

Now, with LexShares, investors can access returns from commercial litigation.

You can read more about LexShares here >>

For those who are intrigued about this opportunity but aren’t yet accredited (at least $1 million net worth or $200,000 in income), here are three public business litigation companies you can invest in today:

Burford Capital (LON: BUR)
Juridica Investments (LON: JIL)
IMF Bentham (ASX: IMF)

And remember: thanks to “Reg A+” of the JOBS Actall investors, regardless of their wealth or income, will soon be able to invest in many of the private deals we write about at Crowdability.

Please note: Crowdability has no financial relationship with LexShares, or with any company mentioned in this article. We’re an independent provider of education, information and research on start-ups and alternative investments.

Best Regards,


Founder
Crowdability.com

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Tags: Burford capital Business litigation Commercial litigation Crowdfunded litigation-finance Imf bentham Jay greenberg Juridica investments Lexshares Max volsky Venture capital-for-lawsuits

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