29 January 2025
Litigation Capital Management Limited
("LCM" or the
"Company")
Trading
Update for First Half of 2025 Financial Year
Litigation Capital Management Limited
(AIM:LIT), an alternative asset manager specialising
in dispute financing solutions internationally,
provides the following trading update for the first half of
the 2025 financial year, covering the six months ended 31 December
2024.
During the period, we achieved four case wins
and incurred three case losses, resulting in an aggregate multiple
of invested capital (MOIC) of 3.7x on
realisations.
Period
|
Realisations
(A$m)
|
Invested
Capital (A$m)
|
MOIC
multiple
|
H1
|
52
|
14
|
3.7x
|
Note: Invested Capital
includes LCM capital invested into the three case losses in the
period.
These realisations include the successful
international arbitration claim brought against the Republic of
Poland as announced on 8 October 2024. On a fair value basis,
these realisations are expected to contribute A$4m to Total Income
in the period as these cases collectively were held at a fair value
of approximately A$48m prior to conclusion.
Fair value movements on ongoing cases are
expected to contribute positively in the period to the value of
A$1m. This is inclusive of a A$7m write-down of the fair
value of the Queensland Electricity case following the trial loss
announced on 4 December 2024.
After accounting for operating expenses,
finance costs, foreign exchange and tax in the first half we
anticipate reporting a modest Loss After Tax of approximately A$8m
(H1 FY24: Profit After Tax of A$7.3m).
Net debt as of 31 December stood at A$40.1m
(FY24: A$8.9m) primarily reflecting increased investment into
ongoing cases. As announced by the Company on 2 December
2024, LCM entered into a new US$75m credit facility to support
future growth.
New
Commitments
New commitments in the first half of FY25 were
A$25m (H1 FY24: A$90m). While the period saw fewer quality
opportunities meeting our rigorous investment criteria, this ebb
and flow of opportunities is not unusual, and we remain confident
in future capital deployment prospects.
Patrick
Moloney, CEO of LCM , commented: "While the first half of FY25 has been
a period of mixed results, we are pleased with the strong
realisations achieved and the ongoing progress of our
portfolio. The high multiple on invested capital reflects the
value we continue to generate from our disciplined approach to
dispute financing. We remain confident in our ability to
deploy capital effectively and to deliver attractive returns for
our stakeholders as we move into the second half of the financial
year."
Notes
The figures in this RNS are all on an LCM-only
basis.
Notice of Results
We expect to report our interim results on 18
March 2025.
Enquiries
Litigation Capital Management
|
c/o Tavistock PR
|
Patrick Moloney, Chief Executive
Officer
David Collins, Chief Financial
Officer
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cavendish (Nomad and Joint Broker)
|
Tel: 020 7220 0500
|
Jonny Franklin-Adams, Isaac Hooper
and Rory Sale (Corporate Finance)
Tim Redfern, Jamie Anderson
(Corporate Broking)
|
|
|
|
Canaccord (Joint Broker)
|
Tel: 020 7523 8000
|
Bobbie Hilliam
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOTES TO EDITORS
Litigation Capital Management (LCM)
is an alternative asset manager specialising in disputes financing
solutions internationally, which operates two business models. The
first is direct investments made from LCM's permanent balance sheet
capital and the second is third party fund management. Under those
two business models, LCM currently pursues three investment
strategies: Single-case funding, Portfolio funding and Acquisitions
of claims. LCM generates its revenue from both its direct
investments and also performance fees through asset
management.
LCM has an unparalleled track record
driven by disciplined project selection and robust risk
management.
Currently headquartered in Sydney,
with offices in London, Singapore, Brisbane and Melbourne, LCM
listed on AIM in December 2018, trading under the ticker
LIT.
www.lcmfinance.com
Inside
Information
This announcement contains inside information for the purposes
of article 7 of the Market Abuse Regulation (EU) 596/2014 as
amended by regulation 11 of the Market Abuse (Amendment) (EU Exit)
Regulations 2019/310. With the publication of this announcement,
this information is now considered to be in the public
domain.