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º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's collective redress future at risk after CAT intervenes in Merricks v Mastercard settlement

The CAT's recent intervention in the Merricks v Mastercard class action, revising the terms of the funding agreement, sets a troubling precedent for litigation funders and risks chilling investment in collective redress

The Competition Appeal Tribunal approved a £200m settlement for a claim brought by Walter Merricks against Mastercard on behalf of consumers

Craig Lonie, in his analysis of the Merricks v Mastercard case, highlights the potential risks litigation funders face in class action cases.

The Competition Appeal Tribunal's (CAT) recent approval of the settlement in the protracted Merricks v Mastercard litigation drew attention due to its magnitude – a claim for 46 million consumers once valued at up to £14 billion, eventually settled for £200 million, as reported by .

However, within the judgement lies a more subtle and potentially destabilising development: the Tribunal's decision to amend the financial terms agreed between the class representative and the litigation funder.

In doing so, the CAT crossed a boundary that should concern anyone interested in the future of collective redress in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

It didn't merely scrutinise the legality of the funding arrangement – it effectively rewrote it, by capping the payout to the litigation funder, Innsworth Advisors.

This sets a worrying precedent for litigation funders and threatens to deter the very investment that underpins access to justice in complex group claims.

How the CAT intervened in Merricks v Mastercard

The crux of the matter centres on the Competition Appeal Tribunal's (CAT) decision regarding the distribution of a settlement, which deviated from the initial agreement between class representative Walter Merricks and the litigation funder Innsworth.

Under the standard practice in funded collective actions, Innsworth backed the claim with the understanding that they would receive a return based on a multiple of their investment if successful.