Imagine your company spends $175 million to acquire a promising startup, only to discover later that you might need to pay another $142 million in legal fees for the very executives you’re now suing. That’s exactly where JPMorgan Chase finds itself in the ongoing Frank startup saga.
Here’s what you need to know:
- JPMorgan acquired student aid platform Frank for $175 million in 2021
- The bank has already paid $115 million in legal fees for former executives
- Recent filings reveal potential additional costs of $142 million
- This case exposes critical due diligence gaps in corporate acquisitions
The Legal Bill Battle You Haven’t Heard About
JPMorgan recently announced it won’t cover Charlie Javice’s mounting legal bills, despite already paying substantial fees for her defense. According to Constantine Cannon’s analysis, the bank has already spent $115 million defending Javice and co-defendant Olivier Amar.
What makes this situation particularly messy? JPMorgan is simultaneously suing Javice for fraud while having previously covered her legal expenses. The bank claims she misrepresented Frank’s user numbers during acquisition talks. But here’s the twist: the very legal bills they’re now contesting could balloon to $142 million based on recent court filings.
Why This Should Terrify Every Corporate Acquirer
This case isn’t just about one bad acquisition. It reveals systemic problems in how large companies evaluate startup purchases. The $175 million price tag for Frank seemed reasonable at the time, but the hidden legal costs could nearly double the actual acquisition cost.
As CKH Law Center reports, the situation demonstrates how indemnification agreements can backfire spectacularly. When JPMorgan acquired Frank, they likely included standard legal protection clauses for executives. Now they’re discovering these clauses have teeth.
The real question every acquisition team should be asking: How thoroughly are we examining potential legal exposures beyond the obvious financial metrics?
The Due Diligence Lessons Hidden in Plain Sight
Traditional due diligence focuses on financials, technology, and customer metrics. But this case shows why legal exposure analysis deserves equal attention. Here’s what most companies miss:
- Indemnification scope: How broad are the legal protection clauses?
- Executive history: What potential legal liabilities do founders carry?
- Contingent costs: What’s the worst-case scenario for legal fees?
JPMorgan’s situation reveals that even sophisticated financial institutions can underestimate these risks. The $115 million already spent on legal fees represents nearly two-thirds of the original acquisition price. And with potential additional costs of $142 million, the total could exceed the initial investment.
What This Means for Future Deals
This case will likely change how corporate acquirers approach startup purchases. We’re already seeing more attention to:
- Enhanced legal due diligence teams
- Stricter indemnification clause negotiations
- Deeper background checks on founding teams
- Better assessment of regulatory compliance history
The United States legal system’s complexity means these issues aren’t going away. In fact, as startup valuations continue fluctuating and acquisition pace accelerates, we’ll probably see more cases like this emerge.
The bottom line:
JPMorgan’s $175 million Frank acquisition has become a cautionary tale about the hidden costs of corporate deals. The $115 million in legal fees already paid – with potential for $142 million more – demonstrates that the biggest acquisition risks often lurk in the legal details everyone glosses over during the excitement of deal-making.
For any company considering acquisitions, the lesson is clear: your due diligence process needs to treat legal exposure analysis with the same rigor as financial modeling. Because sometimes, the legal bills can cost more than the company itself.
If you’re interested in related developments, explore our articles on Why 10 Million Pre-Registrations for Where Winds Meet Reveals Mobile Gaming’s Future and Why Amazon’s Recruiter Layoffs Reveal a Deeper Corporate Betrayal.



