Legal Business

Comment: Things I would have said about the future of law if I hadn’t forgotten my notes

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I was recently asked to speak on a panel debate for Georgetown Law at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s City office to discuss the big issues facing the profession. As the panel’s host, Freshfields managing partner Ted Burke, sent the speakers some outline topics and questions beforehand, I sketched out some points to help order my thoughts.

I doubt what I put down below reflects that closely what was actually said in a flowing debate – not least because I left my notes in my bag – but looking back at my scribble afterwards, it seemed quite an accessible off-the-cuff take on the major legal industry issues of the day. As such I have taken the liberty of turning the notes, in only slightly edited form, into a post for our relaunched website.

 

Question: M&A for the first quarter of 2013 dropped 76% against the previous quarter and March was the worst quarter in three years. Transactional activity, particularly in Europe, seems anaemic. How are firms keeping themselves busy?

AN: It’s not going to get better any time soon. My feeling is that law firms have to adjust to a fundamental shift, not only in work levels but also in the balance of their business. This means they will be deriving more from their contentious practice and less from transactional work for the foreseeable future and that’s a real cultural shift for City law firms.

Question: A lot has been written about changing client expectations, particularly since the financial crisis. What exactly has changed and how are law firms adapting to meet these expectations? Is the changing bargain with the clients, if there is one, temporary (perhaps cyclical) or structural?

AN: Client expectations haven’t changed that much. The paradigm shift in law is like teenage sex – more talked about than going on. Given the economic context, what clients want hasn’t changed as much as it arguably should have. Plc clients remain very conservative – which has been a boon to advisers. Not sure that I see a tipping point. The related issue that affects law firms is less clients driving a harder deal, it’s clients becoming rivals to external counsel via bulking up their own legal teams. Empire-building is a bigger threat to Big Law than alternative billing arrangements.

Question: Firms are increasingly adopting widely divergent geographic strategies – some wishing to pursue a ‘local champion’ strategy, some wishing to cover the world and some seeking something in-between. What is the best approach? Where should law firms focus globally?

AN: Commercial law firms largely have to go global. Now that’s easier said than done. The EU will remain crucially important to Anglo Saxon advisers, though in relative terms its appeal has obviously ebbed a little. But there is so much protectionism in many emerging economies that it limits their relative appeal. The big question remains the US. You could argue that too many UK practices are burning time in Asia, making relatively little money in the process, when they should be manning up Stateside.

Question: Law firms have grown in size and expanded geographically in an exponential way over the past few decades. And yet, the business model has not changed in any radical way. Most are still run as partnerships without outside investors. And most still refuse to bring in outside professionals to run the firms. Is it time for any of this to change?

AN: The law firm model has evolved – certainly more so in the UK than in the US where governance standards are generally still patchy. Some of the governance in the US is embarrassing. In the UK, the law firms that collapsed were basically uppity regionals that over-reached – in the US you have had a series of old-line, established outfits that have cracked. That’s a terrible ad for the US legal profession.

I don’t see much of a future for investors in a law firm – they’ll start from scratch more likely. I do think UK law firms should keep pushing to renew and update their model, otherwise there is a genuine danger that what currently works well could become unsustainable or excessively open to a disruptive challenger. You have the Peter Drucker question – are law firms excessively addicted to high margins? I would say they are and that has dangers because you’re giving a lot of space to new market entrants. A risky amount of space.

Question: The Law Society in England and Wales recently hosted an international summit that produced a series of recommendations with respect to diversity. These included introducing gender targets and embedding flexible working practices. Are targets and flexible working practices the answer? What else needs to be tackled to achieve gender and other diversity?

AN: On diversity the legal industry has moved on from not giving a fig ten years ago to feeling guilty and embarrassed but still not doing much about it – I don’t know if you’d call that progress. To be fair, the last two years have seen some progress in the UK with social diversity initiatives like PRIME, which is to be welcomed.

Nothing ‘needs’ to be done to tackle diversity in a purely economic sense. It’s an empirical fact the law firms don’t need to retain female lawyers to be financially successful. If they did, there would be a lot more women partners right now. It’s how the tournament of partnership works. As to ethnic groups, City law firms have no problem hiring non-whites – they like the cosmopolitan, global village sensibility. They have problems hiring less-privileged people who look and sound a little different to them.

But a lot of the debate about diversity starts from a false prospectus. When we pretend that law firms ‘need’ from a labour market perspective to tackle these issues we do a disservice to the profession. On a basic level lawyers sense that it’s not true no matter what they feel compelled to say in polite company. This is a moral decision – you either think that the status quo demeans what it means to be a lawyer on the basis of fairness and equality of opportunity or you don’t. That’s a debate for the profession to resolve, it can’t be resolved by the media or outsiders. As it happens, I suspect there are issues of enlightened self-interest in that law firms would benefit somewhat from a wider talent pool if they took a lead on diversity and social mobility but let’s not pretend they are central to financial success. I’m very free market in outlook but it’s a modern disease to believe there is a market-driven solution to every dilemma. One of the most interesting articles on business I have read this year was in the Harvard Business Review about the decline of statesmanship at major US companies. Sometimes, it just takes leadership to secure change.

Question: Recently, there have been some interesting and newsworthy reports on the culture of financial institutions, first the Salz report on Barclays and then the report by Andrew Tyrie’s commission on HBOS. But there hasn’t been much news about the value of law firm culture – should there be?

AN: I suppose the coverage of Dewey’s collapse contained a lot about culture and its role in the firm’s demise but, no, it is rarely discussed head-on. Law firms do have cultures but often not the ones they think they have.

Culture does matter in my experience. Firms with cohesive partnerships out-perform peers, all things being equal, and are better able to withstand the inevitable reverses that all major businesses face. The rise of lateral recruitment raises troubling questions in this regard as pretty much every major law firm that has collapsed in the last decade had multiple headhunters on speed dial.

One of the challenges with culture is that having one in a positive sense means avoiding hypocrisy – it means sometimes not doing things you may economically want to. Saying, ‘No’ is hard for anyone in business, doubly so for type A, insecure professionals that bill by the hour.

 

alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

It’s your profession – accept it, change it but be honest

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There are plenty of editors who live on the conference circuit but I’ve never been one of them. Still, I did accept a spot on a recent Georgetown panel discussion hosted at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s London office to talk about the wider issues facing the profession. You know the kind of stuff: recession, diversity, Google Law.

As often happens on these occasions, I was struck by the strong emotions that are triggered if you dispassionately describe how the legal industry works. In this case the trigger was my argument that the law firm model and the tournament of partnership, in pure economic terms, functions perfectly fine while losing large numbers of female associates.

Legal Business

Global firms strengthen white-collar practices

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A number of global firms boosted their white-collar defence practices last month with a spate of hires from US and UK government agencies. The hires come as regulators on both sides of the pond continue to tighten their grip on domestic and international businesses.

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer hired Matthew Friedrich, former acting head of the criminal division at the US Department of Justice (DoJ), to bolster its white-collar practice based in Washington DC.

Legal Business

Freshfields Pick ‘outstanding’ energy hire

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has demonstrated that US firms in the City are not the only ones to be making high-profile partner hires, announcing the recruitment of respected Shearman & Sterling partner and head of global project development and finance Tim Pick in April.

The arrival of Pick, described as ‘outstanding in all respects’ in the latest edition of The Legal 500, is a significant appointment for Freshfields. He will join as a finance partner in London and will focus on advising clients in the energy and natural resources sector in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

Legal Business

Freshfields hires HSF financial services regulatory partner

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer continues to boost its disputes practice in Hong Kong with Herbert Smith Freehills’ (HSF) financial services regulatory partner Tim Mak set to join the firm.

Mak will work alongside Asia head of financial services Royce Miller and contentious regulatory partner Georgia Dawson. Mak is tri-lingual and will specialise in both contentious and non-contentious regulatory matters but has particular experience in civil and criminal proceedings and investigations.

‘We have seen increasing client demand for banking related advice, investigations and arbitration,’ said Christopher Pugh, global head of disputes at the firm. ‘We are strengthening our contentious regulatory expertise for banks with Tim Mak, who has a strong profile for contentious and non-contentious work for major financial institutions in Asia.’

The hire is in line with Freshfields’ strategy to bulk up its disputes team in Asia. Previously, the firm named global heads Lucy Reed as head of international arbitration and Geoff Nicholas as co-head of global investigations, who both relocated to Asia in 2012. Additionally, John Choong will make partner in May while Dawson made partner in May last year.

‘Additionally, the firm re-opened in Singapore last September and aims to expand its arbitration practice further as well as its investigations practice in Singapore, Indonesia and elsewhere in the region,’ added Pugh.

Mak’s departure is the latest in a number of HSF disputes partner exits, including senior litigation partner Simon Bushell who left the firm to join Latham & Watkins in February and financial regulatory duo Nikunj Kiri and Martyn Hopper who joined Linklaters in January 2013 and September 2012 respectively. More recently, veteran litigator Ted Greeno announced his departure for Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan.

Mak first joined Herbies in 1995 as a paralegal in Hong Kong. He trained, qualified and became an associate in 1998, and then worked in-house at the Securities and Futures Commission as assistant counsel in May 2000. He re-joined the firm two years later and made partner in the financial services regulatory department in April 2007.

Freshfields’ Asia managing partner Robert Ashworth said: ‘The regulatory environment in which global financial institutions operate has become more and more challenging over recent years and our clients require access to outstanding advice and support on both contentious and non-contentious regulatory matters in all the key global financial centres. Tim is a fantastic addition to our international team.

‘With 15 years on the ground experience in Hong Kong, including acting for PRC clients listed in Hong Kong on SFC matters, Tim knows the market and knows the regulators.’

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields makes high-profile lateral hire with Shearman’s Pick

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has scored a significant coup in hiring respected Shearman & Sterling partner and head of global project development and finance Tim Pick to boost its energy and natural resources capability.

Pick, described as ‘outstanding in all respects’ in the latest edition of The Legal 500, will join as a finance partner in London and will focus on advising clients in the energy and natural resources sector in Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

Freshfields’ head of international energy project finance, Alan Rae Smith, said: ‘Despite continued economic uncertainty, the increasing global appetite for energy and the challenge of ensuring long-term security of supply are global fundamentals that remain. Tim’s in-depth expertise in the energy sector and project finance in Europe, Africa and the Middle East, and his exceptional client focus, will further boost our global offering in this area but in particular on large-ticket energy project financings.

“Tim’s in-depth expertise in the energy sector and project finance in Europe, Africa and the Middle East, and his exceptional client focus, will further boost our global offering”
Alan Rae Smith, Freshfields 

Rae Smith himself joined Freshfields from Allen & Overy in 2010 and the firm made a string of laterals hires to its energy practice in Asia last year. It hired Allens partner Gavin MacLaren in South East Asia; Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy partner Mark Plenderleith in Tokyo and former Dewey & LeBoeuf Beijing partner Gang Yuan as counsel in China.

Pick joined Shearman in 1999 – and spent six years working in Abu Dhabi from 2003. He made partner in 2005 and was named head of international project development and finance in 2011.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Trophy US hire for Freshfields as it lures former head of DoJ’s crime division

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has recruited former acting head of the criminal division at the Department of Justice (DoJ) to bolster its US white-collar practice.

Matthew Friedrich joins from US litigation firm Boies, Schiller & Flexner, where he had a partner since 2009. Prior to this, he spent 13 years at the DoJ in various leadership roles including the assistant attorney general for the criminal department, where he managed a team of 740 individuals on fraud, intellectual property and cross-border transactions by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS).

Friedrich will be based in Washington DC focusing on white-collar investigations and litigation, alongside dispute resolution partner Tim Coleman and the firm’s New York-based white-collar team.

Friedrich said: ‘Regulators are reigning in on corporates and financial institutions and a lot of these are based in Washington so an expanded presence is needed here. From an international perspective, the New York team, Tim and I will use Freshfields existing white-collar bench and global footprint to advise clients across multiple jurisdictions very quickly.’

Friedrich is the firm’s sixth white-collar partner in the US, bringing the litigation practice to 16 partners and 83 lawyers.

Most recently, the firm beefed up its international disputes practice, appointing five new partners across its Hong Kong, New York, London and Paris offices.

Previously, Freshfields hired former Sullivan & Cromwell partner Michael Lacovara in September 2012. Before this, the firm launched a global investigations practice in February 2010 to advise multinational corporates on regulatory issues relating to corruption and financial reporting.

Global head of litigation Christopher Pugh said: ‘Matt bolsters the Washington arm of what is now truly one of the world’s leading international white-collar defence practices and brings us important new expertise in the fields of national security and foreign investment. With experienced investigation lawyers in the key commercial centres of the world, we are providing our clients with seamless global representation in complex multijurisdictional investigations.’

For The US Legal 500 rankings for white-collar defence work, click here.

Jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

FSA slaps Pru with £30m fine before its split

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The Financial Services Authority (FSA) handed out its last penalty before being split up after fining companies in the Prudential Group (Prudential) a total of £30m.

According to the watchdog, the fine relates to Pru’s failure to inform the regulator that it was seeking to acquire AIA, the Asian subsidiary of AIG, in early 2010.

Stephenson Harwood and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer landed roles advising on the fine.

The Pru turned to Freshfields’ head of financial institutions David Scott for advice on the fine.

Tony Woodcock, commercial litigation partner at Stephenson Harwood landed a role acting for Tidjane Thiam, the insurer’s chief executive.

‘Prudential, led by Thiam as CEO, failed to give due consideration to its obligation to inform the FSA of this transaction, which would have had a huge impact on the ground had it gone through. That was a serious error of judgement for which the Prudential is paying the price,’ said Tracey McDermott, FSA director of enforcement, in a statement.

According to the FSA, the Pru failed to inform it at the earliest opportunity to allow them to approve or reject the deal on regulatory grounds.

The FSA issued record fines in 2012, totalling £313m after issuing 57 penalties. Compared to 2011, the FSA handed out £65.5m in fines although the Libor scandal was a major factor in the exponential rise in penalties last year. Already this year, the FSA has handed out over £135m in penalties, with the Royal Bank of Scotland getting hit with an £87.5m fine over the Libor issue in February this year.

This was the last fine to be handed out by the FSA, as it was split into two parts becoming the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) on 1 April.

Slaughter and May corporate heavyweight Charles Randell, is the only City lawyer to be appointed to either of the new regulation bodies. Randell will sit on the PRA’s board.

But if the change in name of the organisation may have caused some to think that the level of fines might drop, one partner at a Magic Circle firm is not convinced.

‘My expectation is that fines will continue to increase. The FSA was moving towards a tariff system, which increased fines in line with a company’s revenue. Although until Prudential no one was criticising the FSA for level of fines,’ they said.

Despite Martin Wheatley, chief executive of the FCA, publicly stating that level of fines will not change companies’ behaviour, many think it will be business as usual for the regulator. One City partner said: ‘The FSA is always trying to hold senior management to account, as seen with the targeting of Prudential’s Thiam.’

A new name perhaps but it looks like financial regulatory partners will be kept busy for the future.

david.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields latest to promote new partners with 14 making the grade

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has appointed 14 new partners, with just under half of the promotions made in London.

The Magic Circle firm made up six associates in the City, boosting partner headcount in its corporate, finance, dispute resolution, employment and tax practices.

Freshfields made the unusual move of promoting into its high-yield practice after it promoted Denise Ryan to partner. The firm bolstered its high-yield practice in 2010 after hiring Gil Strauss from Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. But Strauss, who headed up the practice, left for Weil Gotshal & Manges last year.

The Magic Circle firm has also beefed up its international disputes practice, appointing five new partners across its Hong Kong, New York, London and Paris offices.

Freshfields has moved to boost its financial institutions disputes practice in the City, appointing Christopher Robinson as a partner. The firm also made up two disputes partners in its New York office, making up international arbitration specialist Elliot Friedman and white-collar and global investigations partner Kimberley Zelnick in the Big Apple.

Meanwhile, over half of the firm’s promotions for 2013 – eight – come outside of London. Freshfields added three new partners in Germany, two in New York while Vienna, Hong Kong and Paris each got one new partner.

Senior partner Will Lawes said: ‘Our class of 2013 partners are all highly talented lawyers whose outstanding qualities will help us to enhance our market-leading offering and exceptional client service.’

Other UK firms to promote new partners include, Berwin Leighton Paisner, Olswang and Slaughter and May.

david.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields to provide scholarships for aspiring black lawyers

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer is launching a scholarship with the Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust (SLCT) to help students from black and ethnic minorities gain access to the profession.

The scholarship will allow four successful male candidates committed to pursuing a career in the legal profession to receive a £3,500 annual contribution towards living expenses, as well as training, mentoring, work experience at Freshfields and a guaranteed interview for a training contract.