Sunday 23 December 2012

Axiom Legal Financing Fund stakeholders to oppose receivership application


Battle lines are being drawn up between the various stakeholders in the beleaguered Axiom Legal Financing Fund (the “Fund”).

Taylor Moor (“TM”), who acted as the main distributors of the Fund, are angry that the directors notified that shareholders that they would apply to the Cayman Grand Court for KPMG to be appointed as receivers of the Fund, without putting it to a shareholder vote.  Originally, this was one of the matters upon which the shareholders were expected to vote at the EGM earlier this month, but at short notice the resolution was withdrawn and the directors announced that they intended to go ahead with the receivership application unilaterally. TM intend to take legal action to oppose this move.

TM believe that the Fund should be put into liquidation rather than administration, with independent insolvency practitioners being appointed as liquidators. They believe that this would enable the liquidators to conduct a thorough investigation into the past affairs of the Fund and to take action against anyone who has been guilty of wrong-doing. The powers of Receivers are materially more limited in this regard. Furthermore, they are unhappy that the sole aim of a receivership is to ensure an orderly closure of the Fund – a decision which they believe is premature given that the investigation into the Fund’s loan portfolio is far from complete.

TM are also unhappy with the costs of investigating the situation to date ($1.3 million) and the lack of a complete and coherent report detailing the findings.

Whatever the merits of the case, this does seem to be a situation of poor stakeholder management by the Fund directors.  They must be aware of the sensitivities of the investors and need to be seen to take all steps that are necessary to investigate fully and take action if wrong-doing has occurred.  By proceeding with a receivership application in circumstances where they have not permitted the shareholders a vote on the issue, and in the knowledge that the main distributor of the Fund is clearly opposed, they are setting themselves on a difficult and antagonistic course.  Given the atmosphere of allegations and suspicion, it does appear unnecessarily inflammatory to proceed with an application that may limit a comprehensive investigation, without fully explaining the rationale for that to those who stand to lose their investment.

The Cayman Islands court is expected to hear the parties on 31st January.

Monday 17 December 2012

Axiom Legal Financing Fund managers asleep at the wheel


KPMG, the firm appointed initially to carry out a review of goings-on at embattled Axiom Legal Financing Fund, are reported to have said that whilst the fund does not appear to be a Ponzi scheme the managers of the suspended £117m fund carried out "little or no due diligence" on the cases in which they invested shareholders' money, and did not follow investment criteria.

Following a period of suspension, the funds directors have now appealed to have the fund wound up because it is unable to meet its financial obligations.  According to IFA online, the court documents disclose that KPMG's investigations "reveal grounds for suspecting there has been mismanagement" of the fund's assets, and that the net asset value of the fund has been overstated.  The size of the shortfall is not clear at this stage.

The loans made by the fund appear to have been made to law firms conducting genuine cases, but are unlikely to be repaid within the time frames required by the fund’s investment criteria.  Loans should only have been made to cases which could be completed within a year, whereas most, if not all, of the cases being funded will take much longer than this to resolve – in some cases up to 3 years – and in at least one case a loan appears to have been made to a firm which was close to insolvency at the time. 

There is also controversy regarding the payment of a “facilitation fee” of 50% of the loan value.

The findings disclosed in the court paper seem to show a situation where there has been a real breakdown in good governance at the fund.  However, it is not yet clear whether some of the stronger allegations of fraud made by OffshoreAlert are well founded – the court papers suggest that further investigation  is required before a conclusion can be drawn on that issue.

Wednesday 12 December 2012

Axiom Legal Financing Fund to be wound up


Axiom Legal Financing Fund, which has faced a slew of fraud allegations in recent weeks, is reported to have been put into receivership by its directors following a vote at an Extraordinary General Meeting held in London yesterday.

Until a few months ago, the award-winning Fund had been considered a great success but OffshoreAlert, a Miami based company, began to publish a series of articles raising red flags regarding the Fund’s activities, ultimately suggesting that it appeared to be a Ponzi scheme and questioning the bona fides of the CEO of Tangerine Investment Management, the Fund’s investment manager .

The £117m Cayman Islands based Fund was suspended in October following a flood of redemption requests in response to the allegations, and KPMG were appointed to review what had gone on.  It is understood that KPMG will be now be appointed as receivers, following yesterday’s shareholder vote.

It is not clear where this will leave the investors in the Fund, but some are already believed to be taking legal advice about their options.

Sunday 2 December 2012

Carillion blend legal in-sourcing and out-sourcing services in innovative new market offering


The issue of how to avoid having to pay top-dollar fees for commoditised legal work has been an issue of concern for clients for some years now.  Although lawyers can and do often stress the benefits of having highly qualified experts dealing with a case, the reality is that in many areas of law and commerce a lot of the more straight-forward work which has traditionally been done by lawyers can be done more cheaply and more efficiently elsewhere.  Why pay £300 per hour for a junior lawyer in a private firm to draft something that can be provided much more cheaply through competent technicians in low cost locations? CPA was one of the first companies to recognise that large clients might want to insist on some of their legal work being outsourced by their lawyers to cheaper providers, and made a significant fortune out of that market.  Carillion, the FTSE 250 construction group, was one of the early adopters of CPA’s services and encouraged Carillion’s legal panel members to use CPA in order to achieve cost savings.

However, Carillion, has now gone much further than this, and has taken its own interesting hybrid approach to the issue.  Firstly, it has in-sourced a lot of its routine legal work setting up its own Carillion Advisory Services with 60 paralegals doing much of the relatively standardised work on Carillion’s own business needs.  That in itself is nothing unusual – plenty of large businesses have their own in house legal department -  but CAS is also offering legal aid advice to third party clients, and Carillion is now requiring the 12 law firms on its panel of advisors to use CAS for the commoditised elements of the work they are undertaking for the group, in order to minimise costs.

And in a step further still, it is being reported that at least one of the panel firms, Clarkslegal, is now offering CAS services to some of its other clients as a lower cost resource.   So essentially, Carillion has spawned its own legal services outsourcing business, which will now have a wide range of third party clients, as well as handling the company’s own basic legal needs.

At present, the business is not offering legal services which are regulated, but this is not ruled out for the future.  This would see CAS converted into an alternative business structure (ABS).

From my perspective, I think that in having its own in-house team of legal executives, Carillion will probably be able to drive efficiency savings for itself and for third parties to which it offers similar services.  A lot of construction and property related work is relatively commoditised and lends itself well to this approach.  Furthermore, as Carillion’s 12 firm panel of Carillion legal advisers includes some big hitters, including Slaughter and May, Linklaters, Ashurst, Addleshaw Goddard, DLA Piper and Pinsent Masons, CAS should get its venture off to a flying start by effectively requiring them to unbundle their work and refer some of it to CAS.  Who knows where this could lead if CAS proves itself adept at working the model. 

For me, the only slightly discordant note in the offering is the legal aid services, which seem to be to be a very different kettle of fish from commercial advice and document preparation.  I suspect that this offering is more a hangover from the development roots of the CAS team (which became part of the Carillion Group through acquisition) rather than a cue to its future direction.

Saturday 1 December 2012

Investors in Axiom Legal Financing Fund urged to boycott EGM and sack directors


Taylor Moor, the main distributor of embattled Axiom Legal Financing fund is reported by IFA online to have urged investors to sack the fund's directors and boycott the EGM to be held on 11th December.

Axiom, a Cayman fund which provides financing for no-win, no-fee legal cases in the UK, was suspended in October following serious allegations of fraud made by OffshoreAlert.  The allegations have been strenuously denied by those involved, and KPMG has been engaged to investigate the situation.

However, having apparently grown impatient with the lack of sufficient explanation from the directors on how this situation has arisen, the fund’s main distributor, Taylor Moor, has written to investors saying "it is time for investors to take control of the situation" and to replace the current directors with new, impartial individuals.

According to IFA Online, Taylor Moor has urged investors to boycott the emergency EGM to discuss the future of the fund on 11th December, because KPMG have not been given enough time to investigate.  Concerns are being expressed that because the investors have so little information available, they will be in no position to vote on the important matters to be discussed at the EGM.