Claim No: IL-2025-000064 - [2025] EWHC 2545 (Ch)
Chancery Division of the High Court

Claim No: IL-2025-000064 - [2025] EWHC 2545 (Ch)

Fecha: 06-Oct-2025

The defendant submits that, at most, he referred to Humber at the highest degree of generality, and that the summary to which the court was referred was of minimal value. The parties are, accordingly

The defendant submits that, at most, he referred to Humber at the highest degree of generality, and that the summary to which the court was referred was of minimal value. The parties are, accordingly, at loggerheads as to whether or not the defendant has ‘defined Humber’, as opposed to whether he has set out ‘aide-memoiresat a high level of abstraction for his own recollection. The expert's task when determining the ‘public domain assessment’ issue will be to assess whether the ‘confidential information’ was ‘generic and/or widespread industry knowledge’ (as well as in the public domain). In view of the claimants' objections, it may assist if the issue were renamed the ‘Industry Knowledge Assessment’. In coming to an assessment on this issue, the expert would look squarely, for example, at the description of Humber at paragraph 15 of the claimants’ confidential schedule and would be able to inform the court whether (as the claimants contend) the description set out there is an extremely valuable ‘trading strategy’, or (as the defendant contends) an abstract summary of common and/or generic concepts within the algorithmic trading industry. There is considerable merit in a single joint expert coming to this determination, which would assist the court with getting to grips with the actual ‘danger’ the defendant was (or is) likely to cause the claimants if not restrained by injunction.