Ronen Avraham (Tel Aviv University – Tel Aviv University, Buchmann Faculty of Law; University of Texas at Austin – School of Law) & Abraham L. Wickelgren (University of Texas at Austin – School of Law; University of Texas at Austin – Center for Law, Business, and Economics) have posted Third Party Litigation Funding with Informative Signals: Equilibrium Characterization and the Effects of Admissibility (Journal of Law and Economics, Forthcoming) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
Litigation funders provide non-recourse loans to plaintiffs who repay these loans if and only if they prevail. The loan's interest rate reflects the funder's information about the strength of the plaintiffs's case. We analyze a monopoly and a two-firm Bertrand model. Bertrand competition does not eliminate funder pro ts or ineciency. Making the funding contract admissible evidence enables the funder to increase its chance of recovery by reducing the interest rate to signal to the court that the plaintiff has a strong case. Under monopoly, there is only a separating equilibrium without admissible funding. With admissible funding, there is either a pooling equilibrium or a separating equilibrium, but either increases the joint welfare of plaintis and funders. Under Bertrand competition, admissible funding increases joint welfare if court's can make adverse inferences from the absence of funding contracts. Plaintiffs are generally better off under admissibility if they discount the future suciently.
