Tackling Predatory Litigation Funding Act
Summary
HR3512, the Tackling Predatory Litigation Funding Act, proposes a 40.8% federal excise tax on litigation finance proceeds, directly targeting third-party funders. The bill is in early legislative stages, but the structural threat has already contributed to recent price declines in $BX, $KKR, and $APO. Investors should monitor committee markup for signs of momentum.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR3512 imposes a ~40.8% excise tax on litigation finance proceeds, directly reducing funder profitability.
- 2.Bill is early-stage but has bipartisan companion bill in Senate, raising passage probability.
- 3.$BX, $KKR, and $APO have all seen negative 7-day price action correlating with the bill's legislative activity.
- 4.No spending authorization — this is a pure tax increase on a specific financial niche.
Market Implications
Investors in $BX, $KKR, and $APO should account for litigation finance exposure as a near-term overhang. The 7-day price declines of 1.39% to 1.89% likely reflect this legislative risk being priced in. If the bill advances through Ways and Means markup, expect further sector pressure. However, given the bill's early stage and the 30-day positive trends in all three stocks, the current impact is manageable — not existential. The asset class is a small fraction of each firm's total AUM. Litigation finance pure-play companies (private) would be hit hardest; public exposure is diversified.
Full Analysis
The Tackling Predatory Litigation Funding Act (HR3512) was introduced on May 20, 2025 by Rep. Kevin Hern (R-OK) and referred to the House Ways and Means Committee. It is in an early legislative stage with no hearings or markup scheduled. A companion bill (S1821) exists in the Senate, increasing the probability of eventual movement. The bill imposes a new excise tax on third-party litigation funders equal to the highest individual income tax rate plus 3.8% — approximately 40.8% currently.
The money trail: The bill does not allocate any government spending — it is a revenue-raising measure. It imposes zero direct funding obligations; instead, it reduces the profitability of the litigation finance industry by taxing proceeds at the entity level. The mechanism is a tax increase, not an appropriation. Authorized spending is $0, but the tax is estimated to capture a significant share of industry profits.
The three publicly traded firms with confirmed litigation finance exposure — Blackstone ($BX), KKR ($KKR), and Apollo ($APO) — all show negative 7-day price changes through April 30, 2026. $BX is at $119.96, down 1.39% in 7 days; $KKR at $100.26, down 1.55%; and $APO at $121.91, down 1.89%. This week-long slide coincides with the bill's reintroduction press cycle and analyst notes flagging legislative risk. The 30-day trends remain positive (+4.32%, +8.38%, +9.41% respectively) suggesting the broader market rally in financials is partially offsetting this sector-specific headwind.
Legislative timeline: The bill requires passage through Ways and Means, full House, Senate Finance Committee, full Senate, and presidential signature. With a Republican sponsor and 21 cosponsors, it has partisan momentum but faces opposition from the litigation finance industry lobby. The companion bill in the Senate indicates bicameral coordination. Key milestones will be markup in Ways and Means and inclusion in any broader tax package.
Intelligence Surface
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Multiple independent sources confirm this signal’s market thesis
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
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