Legal Business

HSF alliance firm Prolegis launches Singapore disputes practice with Morgan Lewis team

Prolegis, the boutique which struck a formal law alliance (FLA) with Herbert Smith Freehills in 2015, has launched a disputes practice in its Singapore heartland with the hire of a team led by Daniel Chia (pictured) from Morgan Lewis.

Chia, who led the Asia disputes practice at Morgan Lewis, will take on the role of director and head of litigation and will bring with him three other lawyers. Jonathan Tang and Yanguang Ker will join Prolegis as directors, along with associate Charlene Wee.

Prolegis’ new disputes team will work closely through the FLA with HSF’s Southeast Asia disputes practice, led by Alastair Henderson, particularly with the firm’s 14-lawyer disputes team in Singapore.

Chia regularly appears before the Singapore High Court, the Court of Appeal and the Singapore International Commercial Court in major commercial disputes, arbitration-linked cases and restructuring and insolvency proceedings.

The team has experience representing multinational and Singapore companies, private capital funds and technology companies in payments and cryptocurrency services, as well as high-net-worth individuals.

Simon Chapman KC, Asia head of dispute resolution at Herbert Smith Freehills, said: ‘This major investment in the Prolegis practice provides our clients with seamless access to Singapore law disputes advice through the FLA. Daniel and his team’s eminent reputation in the Singapore courts is the perfect complement to our own market-leading Asia disputes practice.’

‘This is a major milestone in our investment plans for this region,’ said HSF Singapore managing partner Fatim Jumabhoy. ‘To meet growing client demand, we will continue to target the best lateral hires, nurture our longstanding alliance relationships and develop our existing talent.’

ayesha.ellis@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Herbert Smith Freehills renews commitment to Singapore with local firm alliance

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Herbert Smith Freehills (HSF) has established a formal alliance with Singapore firm Prolegis, almost two years after it chose not to renew its licence to practise locally.

HSF, which decided not to renew its Singapore Qualifying Foreign Law Practice (QFLP) in February 2014, has had a ‘best friends’ relationship with three-partner firm Prolegis since February this year.

Singapore’s attorney general V K Rajah has approved the formal law alliance (FLA), which means HSF retains its independence, while the firms can integrate marketing, billing, client service and legal services. However, HSF must still direct its Singapore law work to Prolegis, which has relocated its staff to an office next to HSF in Singapore’s Raffles Place.

HSF south-east Asia managing partner Alastair Henderson told Legal Business the firm prefers the FLA structure as it provides more flexibility.

He said: ‘For our clients, Singapore law is an increasingly important part of their business in south-east Asia. The Singapore government is promoting it as the governing law for transactions, so we want to give our clients the best possible one-stop shop for Singapore law.

Prolegis founder Ban Leong Oo added: ‘We don’t have the regional reach that HSF has, and we don’t have the relationships that a global elite firm like HSF has. So really it’s a combination of that network which will help us.’

HSF gave up its QFLP claiming it did not want to commit to specific growth plans as required by the licence, while four of the other six firms originally awarded QFLPs, Allen & Overy, Clifford Chance, Latham & Watkins and Norton Rose Fulbright, were given five year renewals in 2014.

The other firm to be awarded a QFLP, White & Case, has also had its licence renewed, for four years, in April this year. 

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk