Litigation is the formal process of taking legal action in a court of law. For an investor, this means a company you own (or are thinking of owning) is involved in a lawsuit, either as the one being sued (the defendant) or the one doing the suing (the plaintiff). Think of it as a corporate trip to the courthouse. While the drama might make for a good TV show, it’s a serious event for a business that can introduce massive uncertainty. Litigation can be a black hole for cash, sucking up money for legal fees, settlements, and potential damages. It can also tarnish a company's reputation and distract its management team from what they should be doing: running the business. However, in some rare cases, litigation can unlock hidden value. The key for an investor is to understand the nature of the lawsuit and to correctly price the risk—or the potential reward.
A company's role in a lawsuit—defendant or plaintiff—dramatically changes how an investor should view the situation. One is typically a headache, while the other could be a lottery ticket (though a very risky one).
This is the most common and often the most dangerous scenario for investors. When a company is sued, it faces several threats:
As an investor, your first stop for information should be the “Legal Proceedings” or “Contingencies” section of a company's annual (10-K) and quarterly (10-Q) reports. Companies are required to disclose any legal action that could have a “material” impact on their business.
Occasionally, a company is the one initiating a lawsuit. This often happens in cases of patent infringement, intellectual property theft, or breach of contract. Here, the company is seeking financial compensation for damages it believes it has suffered. A successful outcome could result in a large, one-time payment that boosts the company's cash reserves and bottom line. However, this is far from a sure thing. The legal process is long, unpredictable, and costly. Viewing a plaintiff-side lawsuit as a guaranteed win is a rookie mistake. It's better to see it as a potential, but highly speculative, bonus—not a core reason to invest.
While litigation is scary, fear can create opportunity. For a value investing practitioner, a lawsuit isn't just a risk to be avoided; it's a situation to be analyzed.
The market often overreacts to bad news. When a major lawsuit hits the headlines, investors may panic, driving the stock price down far below what the potential damage warrants. This is where a diligent investor can find an attractive margin of safety. The classic example is Warren Buffett's investment in American Express during the 1960s “Salad Oil Scandal.” A client of an Amex subsidiary defaulted on loans secured by barrels of salad oil, which turned out to be mostly water. The market panicked, fearing the liabilities would bankrupt American Express. Buffett, however, did his own research. He talked to customers, merchants, and competitors and concluded that the scandal hadn't damaged the company's core business of credit cards and traveler's checks. He estimated the maximum possible loss, determined that the company could easily absorb it, and invested heavily, making a fortune when the market realized its fears were overblown.
Before investing in a company embroiled in litigation, you need to do your homework. Here’s a simple checklist to guide your analysis:
Litigation is a double-edged sword. It injects risk and uncertainty into any investment. For most investors, it's a red flag. But for the disciplined value investor, the panic and pessimism that lawsuits create can serve up incredible bargains. The key is to replace fear with analysis, calculate the true risk, and act only when the price offers a significant margin of safety.