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Litigation as an Asset: Why UK Firms Abandon Strong Legal Claims

Two-thirds of senior UK lawyers admit that commercially viable legal claims are frequently left unpursued due to prohibitive costs and enforcement risks. A new report from Burford Capital and The Lawyer suggests that businesses now evaluate litigation through the same financial lens applied to any other corporate investment.

Litigation as an Asset: Why UK Firms Abandon Strong Legal Claims
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The London Disputes Report 2026 reveals a fundamental shift in how corporations handle legal conflict. While legal merit remains a baseline requirement, the final decision to litigate is increasingly dictated by economic variables such as duration, recoverability, and anticipated return on investment. This transition has turned disputes into balance-sheet items rather than purely legal concerns, drawing boards into the heart of litigation strategy.

Data from the survey underscores this financial pivot: 84% of respondents believe businesses demand a level of cost certainty that law firms currently fail to provide. Consequently, 60% of legal professionals report that settlement decisions are often motivated by management fatigue rather than the actual strength of a case. To navigate these pressures, 85% of those surveyed suggest that risk-transfer tools, such as legal finance, are essential for improving decision-making. Philipp Leibfried, Managing Director at Burford Capital, noted that organizations now require a transparent view of risks and cash flow before committing capital to a dispute, signaling a move toward greater financial discipline in the courtroom.

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