Benchmark and Litigation funding: Difference between pages

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A standard set by the market (such as stock market index) or by an institutional investor (such as an internally developed benchmark) against which the performances of a fund or portfolio can be managed and tracked.
''Law.''
 
Litigation funding is where a third party provides the financial resources to enable litigation or arbitration cases to proceed.
 
The litigant obtains all or part of the financing to cover its legal costs from a private commercial litigation funder, who has no direct interest in the proceedings.
 
 
In return, if the case is won, the funder receives an agreed share of the proceeds of the claim.
 
If the case is unsuccessful, the funder loses its money and nothing is owed by the litigant.
 


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Benchmarking]]
* [[Adverse costs award]]
* [[EURIBOR]]
* [[Arbitration]]
* [[Spread to Treasury/ Governments]]
* [[Association of Litigation Funders]]
* [[Litigant]]
* [[Litigation]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]

Revision as of 20:42, 17 May 2019

Law.

Litigation funding is where a third party provides the financial resources to enable litigation or arbitration cases to proceed.

The litigant obtains all or part of the financing to cover its legal costs from a private commercial litigation funder, who has no direct interest in the proceedings.


In return, if the case is won, the funder receives an agreed share of the proceeds of the claim.

If the case is unsuccessful, the funder loses its money and nothing is owed by the litigant.


See also