Hardman & Co was appointed to provide expert witness support in a complex divorce proceeding, providing independent financial analysis and valuation expertise to assist legal advisers and their client.
The client was a founder and major shareholder of a UK-listed small-cap company, with a substantial personal equity stake built up over the course of his executive career. Facing matrimonial proceedings, his legal team required an independent expert to address a critical valuation question: whether it was reasonable to use the prevailing share price to value his shareholding, or whether a material discount should be applied to reflect the practical realities of disposing of such a holding in the open market.
Hardman was engaged to produce a rigorous, evidence-based expert witness report. This covered the liquidity profile of the stock, the likely discount to market price that any disposal would require, the practical mechanics and realistic timescale of a sale, the applicable brokerage costs, and the implications of transferring a portion of the stake to the other party. The report was required within a matter of weeks, with a court deadline driving the timetable.
What distinguished Hardman’s contribution was not simply the delivery of a professional opinion. It was the construction of a bespoke, data-driven analysis, built from tens of thousands of comparable director share transactions, distilled into a focused, court-ready body of evidence designed to withstand challenge from the opposing side.
The client’s legal team needed to establish, with credible evidential weight, that the prevailing share price could not simply be taken as a proxy for the realisable value of his shareholding. His stake was large relative to the stock’s typical daily trading volumes. Any attempt to sell or transfer a meaningful portion of it would, in practice, move the market against him, depressing the very price being used as the reference point.
The legal team came with a precise set of questions: whether a discount to market price would arise on an open-market disposal; what the size of that discount might be; how long a phased sale would realistically take; what brokerage costs would be involved; and what the consequences would be if a portion of the shareholding were transferred to the other party. Critically, they did not want opinion alone: they required the report to be grounded in external, verifiable evidence wherever possible.
The instruction came via a trusted introduction from a respected figure in the capital markets with direct, long-standing knowledge of Hardman’s analytical capability. He understood that this engagement would demand something considerably more rigorous than a standard market practitioner’s view.
The lawyers were explicit from the outset: they did not want an experienced broker saying ‘in my view, the discount would be around 5-10%.’ They wanted evidence that could withstand cross-examination. That combination of deep capital markets expertise and analytical discipline is precisely what Hardman was positioned to provide.
The project moved through several distinct phases:
The primary challenge was time. The formal instruction was received with only 2 weeks until the delivery deadline, during which Hardman’s lead analyst was also committed to other obligations. The full scope of work: research, data construction, drafting, and multiple rounds of legal review, was completed within the required timeframe without compromising the quality or depth of the analysis.
The data challenge was equally demanding. No pre-built database existed with the granularity required. Constructing one meant knowing which data sources to draw on, understanding how to combine them meaningfully, and applying the judgement to filter a very large raw dataset down to a small number of genuinely relevant comparators, while being able to explain and defend every step of that process to a legal audience with no background in capital markets.
Hardman delivered a comprehensive, evidence-based expert witness report addressing each of the legal team’s questions through a combination of professional opinion, independently gathered market practitioner testimony, and a body of transactional data that had been specifically assembled for the purpose.
The key conclusions reached were:
The value Hardman provided extended well beyond the report itself. What the legal team received was a body of evidence, built from primary data, independent practitioner testimony, and forensic analysis of comparable transactions that was specifically constructed to withstand challenge in court. Where the opposing side was likely to rely on practitioner opinion unsupported by comparable data, Hardman’s analysis could be interrogated transaction by transaction.
Three things distinguished Hardman’s contribution on this engagement:
Hardman & Co provides independent financial analysis, valuation expertise and specialist support for complex projects where clear, robust and well-evidenced insight is required.
Our team works with legal advisers, investors and businesses on bespoke assignments involving valuation, due diligence and financial analysis.
Every situation is different. If you would like to discuss how we could support your matter, get in touch.