Part 3 of 7: LECG imploded, its European economists scattered across three doors, and a patient English private equity house backed a macro-research boutique at a reported four-times-revenue valuation. In this project file, that is where outside capital first becomes a visible part of the UK economics-consultancy story.
On 17 March 2011, LECG Corporation filed an SEC late-filing notice for its 2010 annual report; by early May it had filed to terminate its registration after a sequence of practice sales. The collapse was sudden but the firm was not small. At its peak, a year earlier, after absorbing SMART Business Advisory and Consulting in a merger that was supposed to save it, LECG employed more than a thousand professionals across almost 40 offices worldwide (SEC 8-K, June 2010). By the time the lawyers arrived the headcount had already thinned. Yet the firm had been one of the large global economics consultancies, and in European competition work it was a major independent house on the continent. It fell quickly. It took a decade of accumulated talent with it.
LECG had been co-founded in 1988 by David Teece, a Berkeley economist with a Kiwi accent and a taste for the adjacent practice, alongside Richard Gilbert (also of UC Berkeley), and it had grown by buying up boutique after boutique. By 2011 its European competition team ran to more than 40 economists. Jorge Padilla, a Spaniard based in Madrid, presided over an EMEA network spanning London, Brussels, Madrid and Paris that included Justin Coombs, Lorenzo Coppi and Neil Dryden. On paper the business looked valuable; in the event it was insolvent.
The LECG collapse is one of the formative events of the modern UK economics consultancy market. In the project file for 2010 to 2015, it visibly moves a large block of competition-economics talent and redraws the competitive lines. The 40-plus European economists did not file out through a single door. They scattered through three.
The third path matters for the longer arc. BRG is treated here as an LECG successor in the project chronology. The trade press treated Compass Lexecon's capture of the Padilla team as the headline story of 2011, and for the European competition market it was; Teece's decision to start over matters too. BRG hired aggressively, grew quickly, and by 2015 its London office was billing enough to register on the GCR 100 rankings. The inheritance is visible in the chronology even if it is less prominent in BRG's public firm story.
Compass Lexecon arrived at 2011 as a curious hybrid. Its American side had been stitched together from two firms: Lexecon, founded at the University of Chicago in 1977 by Richard Posner, William Landes and Andrew Rosenfield, and joined soon after by Daniel Fischel; and COMPASS (Competition Policy Associates), founded in 2003 by Clinton-era and ex-DOJ economists Meg Guerin-Calvert, Janusz Ordover, Jonathan Orszag, Peter Orszag, and Robert Willig. FTI Consulting's 2003 10-K puts the Lexecon purchase price at about $129.2 million in cash, and FTI's 2005 10-K puts the completed COMPASS acquisition cost at about $73.9 million, including cash and FTI stock. FTI says Lexecon and COMPASS combined to form Compass Lexecon in 2008. Its European side was a different story. London held a handful of economists; Brussels, Madrid and Paris had little visible presence in the public source trail used here.
The LECG absorption changed that quickly. More than 40 European competition economists arrived in a single package, under a CEO-grade hire in Padilla. In the project chronology, the EMEA practice moves from a small European footprint to a recognised European practice during this period.
Kirsten Edwards-Warren's later career shows how that credibility channel worked. The project people file records her as a Compass Lexecon EMEA co-head from February to December 2024, then as an Econic Partners co-founder/director from December 2024. Her path sits in a broader pattern for the era: senior regulator or agency credibility moved into private advisory firms, and clients followed names as well as brands.
By 2015 Compass Lexecon sat in the top tier of Global Competition Review every year visible in this project's GCR file. Its European footprint ran through London, Brussels, Madrid, and Paris; its client roster spanned major merger files on the continent. The firm that had barely existed in Europe in 2010 was now one of the region's leading competition-economics practices, a rapid four-year change in the source set.
In October 2014 LDC, the private equity arm of Lloyds Banking Group, took a minority stake in Capital Economics. The entry valuation was reported at roughly £70 million; LDC's later exit note says the business had grown revenue to more than £22.5 million by the time of the 2018 Phoenix sale. The available source trail gives a transaction value, not a statutory turnover figure. If the reported transaction value is read as roughly four-times revenue, it implies a high-teens revenue business, so this section treats the entry figure as an estimate rather than a statutory turnover claim. The number stuck.
In this dataset, it is the earliest private-equity deal row for a UK pure-play economics research firm. PE money had already entered the broader advisory sector, Hellman & Friedman had bought into AlixPartners in 2006, and CVC Capital Partners had taken AlixPartners from H&F in 2012, but those were restructuring platforms, not economics boutiques. LDC is the first house in the project file to back a subscription-led macro research firm as a standalone economics asset.
The economics of the deal were defensible. Capital Economics had built a subscription book with high gross margins, low client churn, and a brand anchored on Bootle himself, who had won the £250,000 Wolfson Economics Prize in 2012 for the best plan for dealing with eurozone exit, a piece of publicity no marketing budget could have bought. The firm threw off cash; it carried no real capital intensity; its costs were largely rents and salaries. In private-equity terms it was exactly the sort of business that ought to have been picked off years earlier.
LDC's thesis appears simple from the later exit note: fund international expansion, build out the digital subscription product, grow revenue faster than costs, then exit. On LDC's own exit account, revenue grew 30 per cent after the 2014 investment and reached more than £22.5 million in the latest financial year before exit. In March 2018 Phoenix Equity Partners acquired a controlling stake at a valuation of circa £95 million. But that comes later.
The LDC deal mattered for three reasons. It set a public price benchmark for one UK economics-research firm; it showed that at least one private-equity buyer would underwrite the subscription-led economics model; and it gave later parts of this project a concrete valuation reference for businesses that had previously been hard to price. The later deals, Phoenix into Capital Economics in 2018, Growth Capital Partners into Flint in 2021, Cinven's majority investment in Flint in 2025, sit downstream of that benchmark in this narrative, though each had its own buyer thesis and evidence trail.
Three specialist firms anchor this part of the second-tier story. Fideres already existed by 2009; Fingleton and Flint followed in 2013 and 2015. Each was built around a specific post-crisis niche that the incumbents could not serve, or did not want to.
Fideres was built around post-2008 financial litigation. Thomas and Hennig knew structured products from the inside, an unusual profile in this project's source set for an expert witness firm, where many visible experts had spent their careers in academia, regulators, or established consultancies. On 2 July 2014 Alberto Thomas gave evidence to the Treasury Select Committee on benchmark manipulation, speaking to the LIBOR rigging scandal that had shaken confidence in London's banking quarter. For a firm incorporated in March 2009, that was an early credibility event.
The strategic point is that Fideres's opening was post-crisis. A pre-2008 version of the firm would have faced a different case pipeline. The business model required bank-misconduct claims, a litigation-funding and class-action client base, and regulatory findings that could support damages work. In this project chronology, those ingredients become visible between 2009 and 2014.
Fingleton's founding rationale, as the firm tells it, was drawn from the bench. After seven years running the OFT, he built a firm around a gap he believed he had seen in corporate regulatory strategy: lawyers spoke law; economists spoke models; CEOs still needed someone to translate the commercial logic of the business into terms a regulator would accept. The client proposition, as the firm frames it, was that regulatory strategy is a C-suite problem, not only a legal one, and that former regulator experience changes how the commercial problem is translated for regulators. The argument found its market.
Flint defined a new category: political-economic consultancy. Not public affairs, not classical economics, not management consulting, but a hybrid practice advising multinational corporates and sovereign investors on the intersection of government, regulation, and markets. The founding trio was deliberately non-partisan, Fraser had served across Labour and Conservative administrations as a civil servant, and Richards, though formerly a Number 10 policy adviser under Tony Blair, sold the firm on its independence rather than any party loyalty.
The timing was useful, though the explanation should be kept modest. The telecoms sector was heading into another Ofcom strategic review; the post-crisis regulatory settlement was still being bedded down; and the 2015 political cycle was releasing senior operators back into the market, a labour-supply theme that Part 4 traces once the referendum of 2016 sharpens it. Corporates wanted senior advisers who understood how Whitehall actually worked. Flint's founders, between them, had run large pieces of it.
While the specialists were being stitched together at the edges, the mid-tier partnership firms spent the years from 2010 to 2015 consolidating what they already had. This is the quiet part of the story, and one of the structural pieces needed to understand what the sector looks like today.
Baringa Partners had spun out of The Structure Group in 2002 and had spent the intervening years building a direct book of UK energy and financial services clients. In October 2014 Adrian Bettridge, who had joined the firm in 2007, took over as Managing Partner from co-founder Mohamed Mansour. He inherited a business of £78.3 million revenue and 30 LLP members at year-end 31 March 2014; by FY25 both figures had risen roughly sixfold (£450m revenue, 178 members). His tenure became a fast growth phase in Baringa's filed history, but the structural decision to stay partner-owned was already visible by the time he took the chair. The project source set records no external-capital deal or sale process for Baringa in this period. The partnership kept reinvesting from inside the model.
Frontier Economics continued its employee-owned model unchanged. Incorporated in April 1999 and trading by the summer, Frontier had been employee-owned from its first trading day; by FY2015 its filed accounts show 168 staff and revenue just under £30m, before the later growth that took it to 460 staff and £97m of revenue by FY2025 in the published dataset. No PE deal, no sale, no partnership restructuring. The founders had written employee ownership into the founding documents precisely to prevent any of that from happening.
RBB Economics kept its partnership tight. The first extracted row in the current database with an explicit member count is FY2016, at 15 members, with Simon Bishop as managing partner. RBB's model was the inverse of LECG's: stay small, keep the partnership senior, and avoid hiring simply to meet volume. The LECG collapse made that model look less eccentric. By the mid-2010s RBB's public profile put the wider firm across multiple offices, while the inner partnership remained deliberately capped.
Oxera made a significant structural move in this period. In April 2014 the Oxford-based firm converted its main trading entity to a Limited Liability Partnership; Oxera Consulting LLP was incorporated at Companies House on 3 April 2014 (OC392464). The legacy limited companies, Oxford Economic Research Associates Ltd, Oxera Holdings Ltd, Oxera Services Ltd, became dormant and were formally dissolved in May 2023. The conversion was a legal restructuring rather than a commercial event, but it mattered. It gave partners direct equity in the profits rather than shareholder claims on a corporate parent, and it brought Oxera into line with a common structure across the UK mid-tier.
By the end of 2015 the UK economics consultancy market, as visible in this project's filings and source notes, had settled into a clearer shape. The LECG collapse, Fingleton launch, LDC deal and Oxera LLP conversion were now in the rear-view mirror. This is what the market looked like in the source-set snapshot.
| Firm | Est. 2015 revenue | Structure | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| RBB Economics | ~£31.4m | LLP, tight partnership | 15 members in FY2016 filing row |
| Frontier Economics | ~£29.8m | Employee-owned | Eight European offices |
| Oxera | ~£18m | Newly converted LLP | April 2014 conversion |
| Compass Lexecon | n/a (FTI sub.) | FTI subsidiary | Central London competition player |
| NERA UK | declining | MMC subsidiary | Smaller than its heyday |
| CRA International (UK) | growing | CRA subsidiary | Steady build |
| Brattle Group (UK) | growing | US partnership | Energy and regulation |
| BRG (UK) | growing fast | US-led | Post-LECG absorption |
| Capital Economics | ~£6.7m | PE-backed (LDC) | First PE deal in this project file |
Two features of this snapshot deserve attention. First, the filed/source-set picture looks comparatively settled. Nothing in the table is in visible distress; NERA UK was smaller than it had been in its 1990s heyday but still operating, and every other line was flat to growing in the source set. Second, the ownership visible here was mostly UK or US. The foreign ownership visible in this snapshot is mainly American, and it ran through subsidiaries.
The alumni family tree that would define the second wave was not yet in motion. The project chronology records few major spinouts in 2015 itself. Mark Pragnell was still Managing Director of Cebr and had not yet moved to Capital Economics, let alone founded Pragmatix Advisory. The Compass Lexecon departures that later created Econic Partners were still a decade away. The major RBB spinouts had not happened. The Oxera alumni were still inside Oxera.
What was building under the surface, quietly, was a set of senior people who had been in place for a decade or more and were starting to look at the numbers. The LDC deal later showed that a subscription-led economics firm could attract a reported four-times-revenue valuation from the right buyer; the Compass Lexecon story showed that 40 economists could move across the street and reassemble a practice inside a new brand; the Fingleton and Flint foundings showed that a single senior regulator with the right address book could start a credible firm from scratch. Those lessons are visible with hindsight. Whether everyone in the senior ranks understood them in 2015 is a narrative inference, not a fact the filings can prove.
The dominoes were set. The next visible ones in this narrative start falling in 2017.
In the 2015 source-set snapshot, the UK economics consultancy market was profitable, growing, and comparatively settled. Three things were about to happen in the next five years that would reshape it.
First, US-linked expansion: Cornerstone Research had already arrived in 2014, Analysis Group would open in London in 2017, and BRG would keep on growing. Second, a private-equity control transaction: Phoenix Equity Partners would acquire a controlling stake in Capital Economics in 2018, valuing it at circa £95 million. Third, a Brexit-linked boom in regulatory and political-economic consulting that would carry Flint, Fingleton, and the next wave of specialist firms into the tier above.
Part 4 covers 2015 to 2020: the global arms race.
Read Part 4 →