The specific AI vendor and the full scope of the deployment remain undisclosed. Details on which document types beyond MFN elections are now subject to automated review, and the precise cost savings figures, have not been made public.
For in-house counsel, the Park Square case demonstrates that AI document automation is moving beyond pilot phases into production workflows with measurable ROI. Private credit and finance firms managing high-volume due diligence and covenant review should expect competitive pressure to adopt similar tools. Attorneys should monitor whether this trend extends to contract analysis and risk flagging—tasks traditionally requiring senior lawyer judgment—and whether regulatory bodies begin issuing guidance on AI use in legal work product and privilege contexts.