Supreme Court of Canada Affirms Litigation Funding as a Tool for Insolvency Practitioners
By Naomi Loewith, Investment Manager & Nickolas Tzoulas, Associate Investment Manager, Omni Bridgeway
In today’s economic climate, insolvency practitioners must be diligent in preserving an estate’s assets and creative in identifying unrealized value. Insolvent entities occasionally have claims that, if properly resourced and advanced, could yield value for creditors and other stakeholders....
We hope you enjoyed your free content!
To continue, please become a TMA member.
Access the Journal of Corporate Renewal and other content in the Learning Link.
Become part of a global organization of turnaround and restructuring professionals with 54 Chapters and more than 400 events each year.
Build your personal brand and professional network with opportunities to connect, speak, lead, and win awards.
Nickolas Tzoulas is an associate investment manager in the Toronto office of Omni Bridgeway, which offers dispute finance from case inception through to post-judgment enforcement and recovery. He assesses commercial cases for funding, and acts as a sounding board for claimants, their counsel, and advisors at all stages of litigation. Previously a litigator acting for corporations, boards of directors, senior executives, and public institutions, Tzoulas holds an LL.B. from the University of Ottawa and a bachelor’s degree from McGill University.
Naomi Loewith is an investment manager in the Toronto office of Omni Bridgeway, which offers dispute finance from case inception through to post-judgment enforcement and recovery. Loewith assesses commercial cases for funding, and acts as a sounding board for claimants, their counsel, and advisors at all stages of litigation. Previously a litigator acting for corporations, boards of directors, senior executives, and public institutions, Loewith holds a law degree from Harvard Law School and a bachelor’s degree from Western University.