Latham & Watkins has significantly bolstered its German PE and M&A practices with the hire of a total of four partners from Freshfields, including the firm’s global co-head of M&A.
Private equity specialists Markus Paul and recently promoted PE and M&A partner Carsten Haak will join Latham in Frankfurt, while Freshfields global co-head of M&A Wessel Heukamp and M&A and PE expert Verena Nosch are joining in Munich.
Latham already boasts a strong practice in both PE and M&A, with Legal 500 rankings in Tier 1 and Tier 2 for PE transactions: large deals (€500m+) and M&A: large deals, respectively.
Latham’s corporate department global chair, Charles Ruck commented: ‘Private equity has long been a core pillar of our global strategy and the arrival of this fantastic team of dealmakers further strengthens our practice in every major market globally.’
Burc Hesse, managing partner of Latham’s German offices, added: ‘Their arrival is a testament to the exceptional growth we have achieved in recent years and our preeminent position in the market. The team not only strengthens our practice in Germany but also reinforces our commitment to delivering outstanding results for our clients, both in Europe and worldwide.’
In London, Ropes & Gray has hired EQT’s group general counsel of M&A and investments, Paul Dali, into its private capital transactions practice, set to start at the firm in 2026.
Before his stint in-house Dali worked as an associate at Swedish commercial firm Advokatfirman Vinge KB, and before that Linklaters.
A spokesperson for the firm said: ‘Paul joins us from our client EQT, where he led significant asset management M&A as Group General Counsel of M&A and Investments.’
At the start of November, Ropes lost private equity duo Dan Oates and Angela Becker to Akin, which came off the back of further private equity departures earlier in the year.
Helen Croke moved to White & Case in June, while PE real estate partners David Seymour and Will Bryant departed the group in July for Freshfields.
In addition to Dali’s hire, Gretchen Greene has joined the firm as the first ever chief of artificial intelligence strategy. Greene joins the firm from Meta, where she has spent the last three years as AI policy senior manager. She joins the firms San Francisco offices.
Ropes chair Julie Jones commented: ‘The AI revolution demands bold leadership and innovative thinking, Ropes & Gray has been leading the legal industry, and Gretchen will help us catalyze our early action to deliver differentiated value to our clients.’
In London, Eversheds Sutherland has continued to expand its corporate department with the hire of Simon Arlington from Morrison Foerster. Foerster spent nearly eight years at MoFo, and specialises in tech M&A and PE transactions.
In the last two months, Eversheds has made a number of key hires in London. Last month, Laura Marcelli and Matt Davies joined the firm’s transactional risk insurance group from DLA Piper, and in September finance partner Martin Corrigan and corporate partner Kashif Siddiqui joined, from Latham and Pepco Group respectively.
Baker McKenzie has bolstered its real estate finance team with the addition of Luke Harber as a partner. Harber has spent the last seven and a half years in-house at Citi, first as vice president and then as a director. Before his stint at Citi, Harber was a senior associate at legacy Allen & Overy.
Trowers & Hamlins has hired Georgie Messent from Squire Patton Boggs to its environmental and regulatory practice in London.
Messent spent just over a year at Squires’ as head of environment and advises on all aspects of environmental regulatory and compliance issues, transactions and litigation. Before this Messent was at PwC handling environmental and sustainability legal advice.
Elsewhere in the UK, Brodies has launched in Leeds with the hire of construction expert Bill Barton and an eight-lawyer team.
Barton joins from his own construction boutique Barton Legal. He is ranked as a leading partner in the Legal 500 construction ranking in Yorkshire, and handles both contentious and non-contentious matters within construction.
Squire Patton Boggs has hired Deborah Brown to its restructuring and insolvency group in Birmingham from Keystone Law.
Brown has been with DLA Piper since 2007, where she began as a trainee solicitor and rose to the rank of legal director in 2020, while also leading the restructuring and insolvency team in the Midlands. She will join Squire Patton Boggs as a partner and is particularly well-versed in non-contentious corporate recovery, restructuring and turnaround.
Last up in the UK is Ward Hadaway, which has hired Weightmans private wealth team lead Louise Miller as a partner in Newcastle. Miller brings experience across estate planning, wills, trusts and probate, and joins the firm’s private client team.
Finally, in Europe, Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer has announced that Esteban de Santos Smith will join the group’s Spanish corporate practice in January 2026.
De Santos Smith has spent the last eight years at Linklaters, recently as a managing associate. He will join the firm’s Madrid office as a partner.

‘The scale is simply massive’

