The following hypothetical examples demonstrate how litigants, law firms and other stakeholders can benefit from contingent risk insurance.
Judgment preservation for plaintiff with insurance-backed monetization: A company wins an US$80 million judgment in a lawsuit for intellectual property infringement. The competitor appeals, and the resolution will take years. To protect against a reversal of the judgment, the plaintiff obtains a US$60 million contingent risk policy. They finance the premium and fund current operations with a US$30 million loan, using the insurance policy as collateral. This allows the company to monetize the judgment despite the ongoing appeal.
Judgment preservation for defendant: A defendant company is sued for breach of contract, with US$30 million in damages claimed. Although the court rules in favor of the defendant, the plaintiff appeals. To address investor concerns about a potential reversal, the defendant purchases a contingent risk policy. This coverage eases investor concerns and enables the company to raise funds without the threat of a reversal on appeal.
Adverse judgment insurance for defendant in an M&A transaction: The target of an M&A transaction is facing an US$80 million antitrust lawsuit. To mitigate the risk of a large damages award, the company obtains a contingent risk policy. The insurer determines that even if the company is found liable, the plaintiff is unlikely to obtain more than US$10 million in damages. With the policy in place, the company can reject a US$40 million settlement offer and negotiate from a stronger position. It can also remove a hurdle to the transaction, making itself more attractive to potential buyers.
WIP portfolio insurance for law firm: A newly formed law firm wants to take on more contingency fee cases but is concerned about unpredictable cash flows. The firm procures WIP coverage for a portfolio of three contingency fee cases with a US$20 million cover limit, which provides that if the firm has not received US$20 million in cash proceeds at the time the last case resolves or within five years, the policy will respond. The firm also secures insurance-backed financing on a non-recourse basis, repaid from either case proceeds or an insurance payout.
Protection from successor liability: A company plans to purchase a competitor's assets but is concerned about potential claims based on successor liability arising out of a pending arbitration the competitor is facing. To protect against this contingency, the company purchases a contingent risk policy to minimize the impact of any liability that could arise from an adverse finding.