Legal Business

LB100 firms review partnership model as HMRC’s LLP changes loom

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The impact of HM Revenue & Customs’ decision to overhaul the way salaried partners are taxed is being felt across the City as a number of leading firms confirm they are reviewing their arrangements, although some of the largest Legal Business 100 firms have come out to categorically deny the changes will have any effect at all.

Firms including Herbert Smith Freehills, Ashurst, TLT, DWF, Weightmans, and Trowers & Hamlins have all confirmed to Legal Business that they are reviewing their partner remuneration arrangements in anticipation of the new rules, which will mean partners with under 25% of their salary attached to profits will be regarded as having a ‘disguised salary’ and treated as employees by tax authorities in a move expected to add thousands of pounds onto firms’ tax bills.

Legal Business

Deals: CC, Taylor Wessing and Ashurst act on infra and real estate deals

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Advisers benefit as investors target industrial assets

The shift towards global industrial real estate portfolios as an asset class last month saw Clifford Chance (CC) advise newly-formed SEGRO European Logistics Partnership (SELP) on its €472m acquisition of a portfolio of prime development land in Germany, Poland and France from funds managed by Tristan Capital Partners.

The CC team leading the deal included global head of real estate Adrian Levy, alongside London real estate partner Mark Payne and fellow City-based head of real estate tax David Saleh.

Legal Business

LLP latest: Speechly points to owed client fees for fall in profits as Ashurst and Hill Dicks also post profit drop

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Private-client focused Speechly Bircham has become one of the latest LB100 firm to post its limited liability partnership (LLP) accounts at Companies House, blaming its near-double digit drop in profits on fees due from one client despite overall cash collection having improved.

The top 60 firm, which revealed a broadly flat revenue, down 0.9% to £57m from £57.6m for the 2012/13 financial year, saw a 9% pre-tax profit slide to £18.4m from £20.1m.

Describing the last financial year as one of ‘consolidation’ after a period of expansion and the opening of overseas offices in Zurich and Luxembourg, the firm said profits were ‘adversely impacted by a significant provision made in respect of fees owing by one client of the firm,’ relating to the period before 1 May 2012.

Wages and salaries paid out reduced from £17m to £16.4m, while the average number of fee earners dropped to 157 from 165. Profit allocated to the member with the highest entitlement was £376,000 compared to £405,000 the previous year. Average profit per full equity member was also down to £286,000 from £309,000 during the 2011/12 financial year.

The firm’s bank loans and overdrafts reduced substantially to £5.4m from £9.2m – a 41% reduction which it said ‘reflects the improved focus on cash collections. With modern offices and good IT systems we have limited capital expenditure requirements over the next few years.’

The firm in November opened an office in Paris with an 11-strong team focused on private wealth tax planning and corporate and litigation services to private clients, private equity investors and corporates.

However, the firm also abandoned merger talks with fellow private client firm Withers last summer – a union that was seen as more advantageous to the smaller Speechly than Withers due to the considerable gap in underlying profitability between the pair.

Elsewhere, Ashurst’s LLP filings for the 2012/13 year last week revealed that the firm’s net funds reduced considerably from £20.9m to £6.9m during that period, while its cash at the bank and in hand also fell by 66% from £21.2m to £7.2m in 2013.

During the year, the group entered into finance leases and other financing transactions in respect of assets with a total value at inception of £140,000 from £35,000 in 2012.

The top-20 firm, which merged with Blake Dawson last year, officially tying up with what has been rebranded Ashurst Australia in November, saw its turnover to April 2013 increase marginally from £321m to £323m as its overall profits fell by 3.7% to £97.9m from £101.7m.

Overall operating costs at the firm increased by 4.1% from £214.8m to £223.5m, while staff costs also grew from £137.6m to £143.9m between 2012 and 2013.

Ashurst’s highest paid member took home 11% less in 2013, receiving £977,000 compared to £1.1m in 2012.

Meanwhile, Hill Dickinson’s LLP accounts for 2012/13 also last week stated that it had been a year of strong performances from the top 35 firm’s marine and health business groups, offset by the ‘continued impact of the UK economy for commercial legal services and also price pressure in certain sectors’.

Turnover increased by 2.2% to £113m, but profit before members’ remuneration fell by 13.4% to £27m.

The firm stated that an element of this decrease related to ‘significant actions taken by the board between February and April 2013 as it implemented a full review of client service line and geographic reach.

‘The outcome of this review necessitated a reorganisation and reduction of headcount and associated overhead expenditure,’ the LLP report concludes, adding, ‘The full benefit of this review will be most strongly evident in our anticipated financial performance for the year ending 30 April 2015 although it will also contribute significantly in the current financial year.’

Hill Dickinson announced in April 2013 that it would be reviewing jobs ‘in response to the prevailing market conditions’ and in July announced a total of 83 job losses, including 14 partners and 69 employees – 44 of which are leaving on a voluntary basis.

The news was confirmed shortly after the firm’s announcement that it had sold its Chester office to Midlands firm Knights Solicitors.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Damned statistics: BLP and Ashurst report higher trainee retention rates from smaller intakes

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Firms have kick-started the year reporting high trainee retention rates with Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP) and Ashurst retaining the vast majority of their newly qualified (NQ) trainees, although total intake numbers at the firms were noticeably lower than last time around.

BLP confirmed 89% of its spring 2014 qualifiers will remain at the firm, rising slightly from 86% of the autumn 2013 qualifiers, but maintaining its recovery from its March 2013 results when the firm offered positions to just 64% of trainees or 14 from a total of 22.

This year, the firm took on fewer trainees – 18 – and made offers to 17, of which 16 accepted roles. From the pack, one will transfer to Singapore while the rest will remain in the UK.

Training principal at BLP Anthony Lennox said: ‘I am delighted we have achieved such a high retention rate, which reinforces the fact that the calibre of trainees BLP has is fantastic and shows their commitment to the firm, and ours to them.’

Ashurst reported an even higher retention rate of 96% – increasing for the third intake running – with 23 trainees from a smaller group of 24 taking up roles this year, making the actual number of trainees retained lower than last September’s levels when 24 (or 80%), of its 30 trainees stayed on at the firm. However, this is up from its spring 2013 intake when 19 of 27, or 70%, of NQs were retained.

This year, one trainee will work in the firm’s energy, resources, real estate and infrastructure group based in Abu Dhabi while the remainder will stay in the London.

The news follows other firms also announcing favourable retention rates with Olswang revealing last week (10 January) it will keep 100% of all of its trainees. From a total of eight, seven will remain in the London branch, while one will be qualifying in the firm’s Thames Valley office. This is two more trainees kept on than in the autumn, when the firm retained 6 of its 11 trainees, giving it a retention rate of 54%.

Nabarro also revealed a 100% retention rate early this year (7 January), with all eight of its trainees having accepted positions at the firm’s London offices. This follows a 96% retention rate from a much bigger intake last September, when 25 from a total of 26 trainees were kept on.

Jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Ashurst delves into Magic Circle for Linklaters DCM partner as Beddow named corporate co-head

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Ashurst has tapped into the magic circle in a bid to strengthen its finance practice, hiring Linklaters debt capital markets (DCM) partner Francis Kucera to its City-based securities and derivatives practice.

In his new role, Kucera will strengthen Ashurst’s DCM offering in the emerging markets. He joins a two-partner team – including former Linklaters’ colleague Stephen Edlmann who joined in 2010 and Clifford Chance senior associate Derwin Jenkinson, who joined as a partner in January this year. The team is led by Anna Delgado, who joined from Allen & Overy ten years ago.

Kucera will begin his role at Ashurst in March 2014. The firm confirmed it is also actively looking to increase its DCM partner headcount globally, with the next hire most likely to be in Asia.

At Linklaters, Kucera gained wide-ranging expertise in international securities work on both the debt and equity side, particularly transactions across central and eastern Europe and the CIS region. He joined the Magic Circle firm as a trainee in 1989 and became managing partner in 2005 and co-managing partner of the Warsaw office in May 2009.

Recent work includes advising Barclays Capital on establishing an MTN Programme for Getin Bank of Poland and acting for the ministry of finance of the Czech Republic on its €3bn debt instrument programme.

Head of the debt capital markets team at Ashurst, Anna Delgado, said: ‘The expectation that there would be significant growth in the importance of debt capital markets following the financial crisis has certainly been borne out. There has been growth both in terms of size and the nature of participants in the market. We have a strong debt capital markets practice, which continues to be of strategic importance for the firm and one in which there are considerable opportunities.

‘Francis has a reputation for legal excellence and a strong client following, which make him a valuable addition to our existing practice. We have ambitious plans for the practice and we are confident that Francis will play a key role in helping us deliver on them.’

Kucera added: ‘I am delighted to be joining Ashurst. The demand for London-based capital market financings is strong and is only going to get stronger. There are huge opportunities for law firms and their clients in this area. Ashurst has a well-known practice and brand and I look forward to being part of the team that builds on that to create a full service, top tier capital markets practice.’

In other news, Simon Beddow has been named co-head of the firm’s global corporate, commercial and competition division, a role he will undertake with Sydney-based co-head Phil Breden. The post was previously held by Stephen Lloyd, who resigned from the firm in November and is set join to Allen & Overy, subject to partnership approval.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Comment: Victories, defeats and growing up – Ashurst faces up to life after Charlie

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Here’s one anecdote that didn’t make it into this month’s extended focus on Ashurst. Sometime soon after the firm had pulled back from its late-1990s dalliance with Clifford Chance (CC), the first of three public failed merger bids for the firm, at least one partner had second thoughts. An overture was made to the Magic Circle firm to enquire if the discussions were worth re-kindling. The response from CC: ‘The window of opportunity opens… and then it closes’.

And there you have it. Flatfooted and left behind by a thrusting Magic Circle firm.

Strategic dithering had come to define Ashurst, a painful position for a firm with such an illustrious history. A small club of firms has dominated City law for decades, certainly in the post war era but even as far back as the late 1800s when the rise of industrial and banking concerns was shifting wealth away from private individuals towards corporates. Ashurst Morris Crisp was a member of that club alongside Linklaters, Freshfields and the soon-to-launch upstart Slaughter and May.

That kind of history can weigh heavy on an institution, it certainly did for Ashurst through recent years. Now, for good or ill, the firm has at last gone through a fundamental reinvention via its merger with Australian leader Blake Dawson, which went live on 1 November, following an unusual staged integration process. The rubber-stamping of that union in September was a foregone conclusion but what was unexpected was that senior partner Charlie Geffen, the strong-willed leader that drove Ashurst towards the merger, would be voted out in favour in the relatively low profile litigator Ben Tidswell the following month.

That’s a big deal. If anyone had Ashurst running through them like the proverbial stick of rock, it was Geffen. Synonymous with the firm’s heritage in corporate and private equity and single-minded in his determination to move Ashurst forward, not since Anthony Salz ran Freshfields has there been a deal-maker as central to the brand of a major UK law firm. As such it is plain that the vote that unseated him has left Ashurst’s partnership deeply, existentially unsettled.

What caused that election result was in large part a reaction to a series of controversial measures taken on Geffen’s watch. He presided over an increasingly robustly run outfit in place of the consensual club of old (and Ashurst did too often live up to that cliché). The level of intervention Ashurst’s highly modified lockstep saw over the last five years has been exceeded among major City practices only by Linklaters (and in the larger firm’s case such tactics saw managing partner Simon Davies initially fail to be ratified for a second term as managing partner).

Like Davies, Geffen repeatedly focused on what he determined as the right course of action rather than the political role most law firm leaders rapidly adopt. Less time was spent winning hearts and minds. There was much grumbling about not working the floors or reaching out to enough of the firm, certainly beyond the spiritual heartlands of Ashurst’s City corporate finance team.

In comparison Tidswell represents a more consensual style which resonated with a partnership wearied by austerity and looking for a different message than that put forward by its spine-stiffening ‘war time’ leader. Having led the firm through the brutal post-Lehman years, there has been much talk of Churchill’s 1945 defeat, though for those favouring political allusions, the self-possession and lack of compromise made Geffen more like Ashurst’s Thatcher.

Geffen’s strength was an ability to size up the situation and take the necessary hard choices rather than accept a comfortable status quo that would probably have seen Ashurst consigned to second or three tier status globally. He took Ashurst further and faster than a more populist or diplomatic leader could have managed. Geffen’s weakness was an ability to convince himself that a credible intellectual position was the only course of action even when there were other alternatives.

Where does that leave the union? It’s more a deal of head than the heart as is fitting for an attempt to help Ashurst grow up. The reality is that there were not a lot of strategically attractive alternatives short of an outright US takeover and Ashurst had probably become too large even for that.

A solid case remains for the tie-up. The pair for once have displayed the cultural common ground typically proclaimed at such marriages (it helped that the slickly run Blake Dawson was operationally sharper in many regards than Ashurst). The staged merger structure was doubtless a product of expediency in terms of what Ashurst partners would accept back in 2011 but it worked. A firm renowned for fluffing strategic decisions ironically pulled off integration with an admirable lack of fuss and considerable polish. The much expanded investing power and shifting centre of gravity towards the Asia Pacific region are likewise valuable prizes. It will also help smooth internal nerves if the recent revival in Ashurst’s US finance practice, the troubled launch of which proved so divisive, can be sustained.

From a strategically weaker position, Ashurst has arguably pulled off a more promising deal than a string of comparable tie-ups managed by peers such as Herbert Smith Freehills, Hogan Lovells, Norton Rose Fulbright and King & Wood Mallesons. Most of these firms are still larger and have overall stronger practices than Ashurst but they also face an intimidating mix of cultural and operational challenges that have to varying degrees been kicked down the road. In contrast, Ashurst has largely addressed such issues. If Ashurst can calm a restless partnership over the next six to 12 months and avoid a run of senior departures, it looks well placed for the decade ahead.

If the obvious short-term imperative is to settle the troops, the medium term success of the deal will to a considerable extent be determined by how Ashurst performs in Australia, where it now has very substantial exposure. Here there is some cause for concern. The national economy has slowed considerably since the initial deal was agreed, which led to a drop in revenues at the legacy Blake Dawson from A$398m in 2011/12 to $390m in 2012/13. While the economic prospects look a little brighter for 2014 with a bruising general election out of the way, the going still looks soft and questions remain over the ability of Australia’s populist new prime minister Tony Abbott to build links with Asia trading partners (the G20 summit in Brisbane in November 2014 will give an indication of the current calibre of Australian statecraft).

In short, legacy Ashurst has been growing faster than its Australian partner, potentially upsetting the supposed merger-of-equals dynamic and there is no sign that the profit gap between the two halves of the business that was supposed to be closing has yet shut. There have been over-blown claims of a looming partner cull in Australia but the expectation is that the national ranks will thin modestly over the next three years.

These issues should be manageable. Geffen is understood to have taken a philosophical line on his defeat and may well remain with the firm after a period of reflection. Natural Geffen supporters are still coming to terms with the election but there is considerable goodwill for a new leader who promises more a change in style and level of dialogue that strategic direction. Even if Geffen does ultimately depart Appold Street, his leadership has given the firm a singular opportunity. It should seize it whole-heartedly because – as it has already found to its cost – the window that opens will close just as quickly.

alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

For more on Ashurst post-merger and post-Geffen, see ‘After Charlie’s War – can Ashurst achieve post-merger prosperity under a new leader?

Legal Business

Germany: McDermott hires Ashurst Munich partner to head private equity

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Ashurst has lost a second senior partner in Germany as Nikolaus von Jacobs leaves to head up McDermott Will & Emery’s Munich private equity practice, citing a growing interest among US private equity funds in European investment opportunities.

Von Jacobs, who previously headed Ashurst’s local private equity team, specialises in venture capital, public and private M&A as well as private equity. One of his main clients is  independent Luxembourg-based fund Palero Capital.

‘With Dr. von Jacobs we continue implementing our international growth strategy in Europe and within our three offices in Germany. Further growth is planned as we continue our strategic expansion,’ said David Goldman, head of McDermott’s international corporate advisory practice group.

McDermott has been bolstering its German presence this year, including hiring restructuring partner Matthias Kampshoff from Taylor Wessing to its Dusseldorf office in January.

‘I am very pleased to be joining McDermott in Munich,’ said von Jacobs, ‘McDermott’s growth in Germany and the quality of its lawyers has impressed me greatly.

‘McDermott’s combined strategy around private equity and industry-specific legal consulting is particularly compelling given the growing interest by US PE-funds to engage in European investment opportunities.’

The move comes after 1800-lawyer Ashurst’s corporate strength in Germany was weakened earlier this year with the loss of head of corporate Lutz Englisch, who left for Gibson Dunn & Crutcher in May.

The departures on the Continent at the newly-merged firm, which achieved full financial integration with Australian merger partner Blake Dawson in October, also follow a series of UK resignations, including that of head of corporate Stephen Lloyd, who is set to join Allen & Overy subject to an imminent vote by the Magic Circle partnership.

david.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

For detailed commentary on post-merger Ashurst read After Charlie’s War – can Ashurst achieve post-merger prosperity under a new leader?

Legal Business

Ashurst faces senior departures after key merger goes live

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It’s not been the ideal launch after the final phase of its high-stakes global merger. Within days of the union between Ashurst and its Australian ally going live on 1 November, the combined firm has seen a run of senior departures and barely concealed dismay in some quarters at the surprise leadership defeat of Charlie Geffen.

Global head of corporate Stephen Lloyd resigned at the start of November, within weeks of Ashurst voting with an overwhelming 97% majority in favour of full financial integration with Australian big six firm Blake Dawson, and shortly after litigator Ben Tidswell won the vote for the firm’s new chairman role.

Legal Business

After Charlie’s War – can Ashurst achieve post-merger prosperity under a new leader?

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A recession-weary Ashurst has finalised a long-planned but high-stakes global merger – only to eject the leader synonymous with its brand and strategy. Is Ashurst heading for peace-time prosperity or factional warfare?

The former Ashurst partner sits back in his chair and reads the text message. Having asked a friend about the mood at Appold Street in the wake of Ashurst’s expected vote for integration with its Australian ally and unexpected vote that unseated its high-profile head Charlie Geffen, the text response is succinct: ‘It’s a mess!’ The ex-partner smiles. ‘Well, it’s hardly surprising.’

Legal Business

Ashurst’s Lloyd set to join Allen & Overy subject to partner vote

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Ashurst’s high profile global head of corporate Stephen Lloyd appears set to join Allen & Overy (A&O) after resigning from the newly-merged firm in November.

While Lloyd’s move is still subject to a vote by the Magic Circle firm’s partnership, one corporate partner at A&O told Legal Business: ‘It’s not final, but it’s very likely. We are pretty excited about him joining. He is a really good operational lawyer and a good cultural fit.’

If the vote goes through, Lloyd will join the 2,700-lawyer firm’s corporate practice subject to any covenants he is held to by his former firm.

The corporate rainmaker’s hire will be a major boost to A&O’s corporate team, with which his private equity client base has a strong synergy and overlap including leading investment group Apax Partners. ‘There is a lot of potential to develop,’ added the partner.

Lloyd became a partner at Ashurst a decade ago and was named London corporate managing partner in 2009. He was appointed as global head of the corporate practice in July 2010 and has experience of advising companies, equity finance providers and investment banks on cross-border M&A and corporate finance transactions, with a strong focus on the private equity, healthcare and real estate sectors.

He resigned from Ashurst early in November, within weeks of its chairman election vote that saw incumbent Charlie Geffen lose to litigator Ben Tidswell and of its financial integration with Ashurst Australia in September.

A&O declined to comment.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk