Resolution Capital

Capital is part of the strategy, not a substitute for it.

In selected matters, AMROR helps clients assess, structure and source capital to support litigation, arbitration, asset tracing, investigations and enforcement. Funding is considered only where it improves the path to resolution and is subject to conflict checks, regulatory requirements and transparent disclosure of AMROR's role.

Aerial irrigation channels through cultivated land, suggesting capital as part of a controlled strategy

Why it matters

Claims can have value before they have cash.

Complex disputes often require capital before value can be recovered. The question is not simply whether money is available. The question is whether the economics, enforcement path, timing, reputation risk and settlement dynamics justify the next move.

AMROR brings the funding question into the wider strategy, so that capital, legal strategy, intelligence, communications and enforcement remain aligned with the client's objective.

Where AMROR can assist

Funding decisions need commercial discipline.

Claim review

Is the claim fundable?

Merits, economics, budget, recoverability and likely settlement value tested before heavy spend.

Capital path

What structure fits?

Funding, insurance, enforcement finance or other capital options considered against the actual strategy.

Presentation

Can it be packaged?

Claims framed for sophisticated counterparties with clear economics, evidence gaps and enforcement paths.

Control

Does capital distort the objective?

Capital should support leverage and resolution, not push the client into litigation for its own sake.

Resolution capital should sharpen the client's options, not capture the dispute.

AMROR's role is to keep the economics, pressure points and decision path aligned. Any capital solution must sit inside the wider strategy for recovery, containment or settlement.

A branching natural watercourse with multiple channels and one clearer path, suggesting capital options within a strategy

Independence and transparency

Funding creates power. It can also create conflicts.

Sophisticated clients will rightly ask who is advising, who is funding, who is being paid and whether any incentives affect the strategy recommended.

AMROR's position should be clear: arrangements are subject to conflict checks, regulatory requirements and transparent disclosure of AMROR's role. The client should understand the economics before any mandate proceeds.

Typical questions

Is the dispute worth pursuing?

What is the enforcement path?

What budget is realistic?

Would funding improve the client's options or merely prolong the dispute?

How should settlement value be assessed before capital is committed?

Two male Alpine ibex locking horns on a mountain slope

Next step

Start with the route, not the cheque.

AMROR can review whether a claim, recovery campaign or enforcement strategy is suitable for capital support before the matter becomes an expensive exercise in hope.