In an economy marked by volatility, legal risk is likely to surface earlier and escalate faster than in more stable cycles.
Rising bankruptcy filings, pressure on commercial real estate, and workforce reductions are warning signs, but the way risk spreads and is enforced looks different from past downturns. Clients are increasingly turning to counsel for risk-based judgment, including how far to push, when to restructure, and how to protect core operations before financial pressure turns into litigation.
Our latest white paper helps California lawyers prepare for how economic instability can ripple across practice areas, highlighting the risks that tend to amplify during downturns and practical steps attorneys can take to protect clients (and their own firms).
What you’ll find inside:
- Why economic downturns amplify litigation risk in California, including heightened scrutiny of marketing, advertising, and data practices
- Employment law pressure points: terminations, layoffs/RIFs, wage-and-hour and discrimination claims, and WARN notice requirements
- Bankruptcy-related risk: how entity formation, asset/liability allocation, and contract design can prevent distress from cascading across affiliated businesses
- Real estate and lending stress signals, including loan workouts, foreclosures, and commercial lease renegotiations
- Secured transactions fundamentals under UCC Article 9 and why priority and remedies matter before bankruptcy follows secured-transaction failures
- Law firm risk: stronger intake discipline, clearer scope, documented risk discussions, and knowing when to engage specialized counsel
- A practical “preparation” checklist for managing risk and positioning your practice to meet demand in a volatile environment