Legal Business

Turning the corner, honest: can Shearman turn a proactive run into a sustained revival?

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David Stevenson assesses Shearman’s hopes of regaining its potency

‘The work that’s been done over the last few years is bearing fruit. Like a tree blossoming,’ observes Laurence Levy, head of European M&A at Shearman & Sterling. Long-time Shearman watchers have, of course, become familiar with variations on the revival rhetoric that Shearman has used several times before. But has this once celebrated Wall Street name really rediscovered its winning ways?

Firm-wide, the jury is at best still out, but focusing on its London operation it is easier to be upbeat. The firm’s City arm broke the $100m turnover mark in 2010 and has generally been growing at a respectable clip since then, up from $112.6m in 2012 to $134.8m for the 2013 financial year.

Legal Business

Early numbers in US results season confirms solid growth as Shearman and Dechert lead the pack

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US leaders grind out growth in 2013 despite ‘anaemic economy’

Despite having to contend with what Latham & Watkins’ outgoing global chairman Bob Dell described to Legal Business as a still ‘anaemic economy’ last year, early results among the US law firms to disclose their 2013 financials are solid, with many forecasting a return to substantive growth this year.

Dechert was among the first to reveal its financials for 2013, with revenue up by 6.6% to $777.2m from $729m.

Legal Business

Revival watch – after a lost decade Shearman delivers pace-setting 9% fee hike as PEP soars to $1.8m

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It was a performance that the Wall Street thoroughbred badly needed and at last Shearman & Sterling has proved its many doubters wrong to unveil a 9.1% hike in revenues and a double-digit percentage increase in partner profits for its 2013 year.

Under the first full year of the leadership of senior partner Creighton Condon, the top 50 global law firm has posted a 9.1% rise in revenue to $820.5m, from $752m the previous year. Profit per equity partner (PEP) jumped 18.4% to $1.8m from $1,521,000 in 2012 while revenue per lawyer hit $1m, a 13.4% annual rise.

It is hard to over-state how much Shearman needed a confidence-inspiring year under its new management team after a decade that has seen its revenues plummet against its New York and global peers. In the five-year period to the end of the 2012 financial year, the firm saw its revenues fall by 18%, one of the worst performances in the Global 100.

Shearman’s headcount edged down over the year with just one addition to its equity partnership and its total headcount down by 4%, mainly due to the firm’s restructuring in Germany which saw the closure of offices in Munich and Dusseldorf.

One Shearman partner commented: ‘Management has been a key catalyst to galvanising a more cohesive approach to client development.’

The 840-lawyer firm has been an active recruiter of late, hiring 18 partners in 18 months and has moved to expand its litigation practice to balance out its traditionally corporate finance-heavy business.

Stand-out hires in London include private equity partner Mark Soundy and tax specialist Sarah Priestly from Weil, Gotshal & Manges. In New York, the firm strengthened its litigation team with a three-partner team from Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. Litigation partners Joseph Frank, Matthew Craner and Agnès Dunogué joined along with three Orrick leveraged finance partners, Ronan Wicks, Patrick Flanagan and Jason White.

Among the stand-out deals for last year included representing Liberty Global in connection with its $23bn acquisition of Virgin Media, the underwriters working with Petrobras on its recording-breaking $11bn debt offering programme, and affiliates of Toyota Motor Corporation in a pair of financings collectively worth close to $25bn.

Whether one strong year will be enough to convince its critics is doubtful but Shearman at last has a performance to rally the troops.

david.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

Click here for more US financial results and see Taking Manhattan for more analysis on the New York legal market.

Legal Business

Shearman settles controlling stake in Co-operative Bank for US hedge funds

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Behind the scenes of the first-ever creditor bail-in of a bank in the UK.

Last month The Co-operative Group’s £1.5bn recapitalisation plan for its beleaguered banking arm unravelled as subordinated bondholder activists advised by Shearman & Sterling negotiated hard and settled on a controlling stake of 70% of the shares of the bank.

Under the agreement, bondholders including US hedge funds led by Aurelius Capital Management and Silver Point Capital – dubbed the LT2 Group as they hold subordinated bonds – will receive 70% of the shares in The Co-operative Bank plus £100m in newly-issued securities. They will also inject £125m of fresh capital into the bank while parent company The Co-operative Group will retain a 30% stake.

Legal Business

Skadden and Shearman take lead roles as struggling BlackBerry agrees $4.7bn sale

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Following dashed hopes that BlackBerry’s new handset would reverse its falling fortunes, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and Shearman & Sterling have been assigned as lead advisors as the struggling smartphone maker sells its business to its largest investor, Fairfax Financial, for $4.7bn.

Skadden, which was instructed last month by BlackBerry as it reviewed its strategic options, is being led by New York corporate partners Stephen Arcano, Neil Stronski and Richard Grossman. Canadian firm Torys is also advising BlackBerry, led by corporate finance partner David Chaikof.

Toronto-headquartered Fairfax has turned to Shearman & Sterling, led by head of New York’s M&A group Scott Petepiece, capital markets partner Jason Lehner and counsel Sean Skiffington from Shearman’s global M&A group. McCarthy Tétrault is also providing legal advice led by Toronto senior partner Garth Girvan alongside US markets leader David Tennant.

In April Skadden represented Research In Motion (RIM) — the maker of BlackBerry — in the dismissal of a securities class action that alleged it made false statements regarding its financial condition and business prospects.

Shearman & Sterling also has a long-standing relationship with its client and in July represented Fairfax in its acquisition of pet insurance provider Hartville Group.

Under the deal to acquire BlackBerry, the Canadian investor has signed a letter of intent agreeing to pay $9 in cash per BlackBerry share. Due diligence is expected to be complete by November 4. The sale comes as, despite remaining popular with much of the business community, the smartphone group has lost considerable market share to rivals such as Apple’s iPhone.

Chair of BlackBerry’s board of directors, Barbara Stymiest, said: ‘The special committee is seeking the best available outcome for the company’s constituents, including for shareholders.’

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

European tax boost for Shearman as it becomes BFs with Tremonti

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Shearman & Sterling has boosted it European tax offering by entering into a ‘best friends’ cooperation agreement with tier one Italian tax practice Tremonti Vitali Romagnoli Piccardi e Associati.

The firms have previously worked together on high profile transactions for corporates and financial institutions and will remain fully independent but will now jointly pitch for work from both Italian and international clients.

Shearman currently has two offices in Italy, opening in Rome in 2002 on a capital markets platform and then in Milan in 2009 with a focus on M&A, financing and restructurings.

Domenico Fanuele, managing partner of Shearman & Sterling in Italy, said: ‘This alliance will form a platform to combine Shearman & Sterling’s extensive legal expertise, in Italy and internationally, with Tremonti Vitali Romagnoli Piccardi e Associati’s top-notch Italian tax capabilities.’

Tremonti Vitali was founded by Giulio Tremonti in the early 1980s and is ranked as a tier one firm Italian tax firm in The Legal 500. Other international firms to feature highly in the Legal 500 table, which is dominated at the upper levels by local firms, include Clifford Chance, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and McDermott Will & Emery.

Tremonti Vitali managing partner, Enrico Vitali, said: ‘The experience and professionalism of our colleagues at Shearman & Sterling and the complementarity of our practices were the decisive factors in determining our strategic cooperation, which positions us to further develop and enhance our respective businesses.’

david.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

   

Legal Business

Another senior departure for Shearman’s Euro practice as Links rebuilds French securities team with high profile hire

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The revolving door at Shearman & Sterling’s European practice was spinning once again today (11 July) with news that capital markets partner Bertrand Sénéchal has quit the US law firm to join the Paris arm of Linklaters.

Sénéchal’s practice covers a broad range of debt and equity securities work. The high profile partner has handled the French and US aspects of several large high-yield and Yankee bond transactions, and has advised major companies like Danone and Schneider Electric, as well as prominent underwriters.

‘Bertrand Sénéchal is one of the best French lawyers in capital markets. He is a natural fit with our five capital markets partners and is a superb addition to the team. We are very pleased about his arrival, which is an important step in our development plans for the practice,’ said Paul Lignières, managing partner of Linklaters in Paris.

The departure of Sénéchal, who has been a partner at Shearman’s Paris arm since 2005, comes amid a period of upheaval for the 840-lawyer firm’s European network. Notably Shearman earlier this year announced a major restructuring of its German practice, leading to the closure of offices in Dusseldorf and Munich. Latham & Watkins in May subsequently recruited three corporate partners in Germany – Harald Selzner, Rainer Wilke and Martin Neuhaus – while Allen & Overy in April recruited corporate partner Hans Diekmann.

Shearman’s French practice also in January saw the departure of arbitration partner Philippe Pinsolle to launch a Paris arm for US disputes leader Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan.

While Shearman asserts that the German restructuring is a positive move, the firm is generally regarded to have lost considerable ground since the early 2000s, when it was viewed by many as the top US adviser in Europe.

Linklaters, meanwhile, has been moving to restock its French securities practice after in February losing a major chunk of its Paris capital markets team to White & Case amid disagreements over strategy. The departing team comprised partners Cenzi Gargaro, Philippe Herbelin and Séverin Robillard along with a consultant and senior associate with all five joining White & Case as partners.

Sénéchal commented in a statement: ‘Linklaters provides an ideal platform to further develop my business activity. The truly globally-minded environment and the teamwork are decisive advantages to me and I am very pleased to join this French and international team.’

David.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Slaughter and May steps in for Siemens on €1.7bn sale of stake in NSN

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Shearman & Sterling has led for Nokia on its €1.7bn buyout of Siemens’ stake in Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) in a deal that has seen Slaughter and May step in for the German engineering giant.

Announced on 1 July, Shearman fielded a multi-disciplinary team across London and New York led by City M&A partner Jeremy Kutner for longstanding client Nokia. Slaughter and May led by London corporate partner Tim Boxell advised the Siemens team led out of its German headquarters.

NSN was formed in 2006 in a €16bn joint venture between Nokia and Siemens aimed at offering innovative mobile broadband technology and services. Advising on its formation was former Shearman City-based partner Jonathan Coppin opposite Clifford Chance (CC).In April this year CC also advised NSN on the sale of its business support systems business to Redknee Solutions for €40m.

The JV was governed by English law and Kutner, who was promoted to partner in 2011, led alongside London finance partners Mei Lian and Clifford Atkins and New York M&A partners Peter Lyons, Scott Petepiece and Samuel Waxman.

The deal was turned round in a week, during which Lian and Atkins put a €1.2bn loan facility in place. Kutner said: ‘They did an amazing job of getting it done in a short space of time.

‘For us the real thing about this type of transaction is how well we work across our practice. A lot of people say that is the case but here it really was. I was closing another deal in Singapore and when I went to bed the people in New York picked it up.’

Shearman was assisted by De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek and Slaughters by Houthoff Buruma in relation to NSN in the Netherlands.

The deal is expected to close in the third quarter of 2013.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Shearman bolsters London private equity team with double Weil Gotshal partner hire

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The brisk trade in private equity partners continues in the City with news today (15 March) that Shearman & Sterling has hired Weil, Gotshal & Manges’ experienced corporate partner Mark Soundy.

Soundy is joined by fellow Weil Gotshal partner Sarah Priestley, a corporate tax specialist focusing on private equity and hedge funds. Associate Simon Burrows will also move over from Weil to Shearman as partner.

At Weil Gotshal, the trio worked closely with private equity partner Jeremy Dickens who joined Shearman’s New York office in April.

Soundy moved to Weil in 2004 from Travers Smith Braithwaite and has focused on M&A, private equity and restructuring for more than 25 years. Clients include Silver Lake, Bridge Capital and Apax and he has particular experience in media deals. such as advising Apax Partners and HiT Entertainment on the $680m sale of HiT Entertainment to Matte.

Shearman’s EMEA managing partner, Nick Buckworth, told Legal Business that the addition of the private equity team ‘adds a bit of rocket fuel to the tank’.

He added: ‘We are delighted to boost our European PE practice with the addition of such a high quality team. They combine very well with our existing platform in London and, with the recent addition of Jeremy Dickens in New York, will be instrumental in helping drive our global PE business.’

The addition of this trio will help Shearman looks set to establish a private equity offering in London that up until now has been run single-handedly by corporate partner Jeremy Kutner.

Shearman is the latest firm to make a significant play in private equity in the City, following the hire of former global head of private equity at Clifford Chance, David Walker, by Latham & Watkins last month.

david.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Latham picks up three-partner Shearman team for Düsseldorf launch

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Latham & Watkins is to further expand its German corporate capability with the launch of a Düsseldorf office after hiring a three-partner team from US rival Shearman & Sterling.

Corporate and M&A partners Harald Selzner, Rainer Wilke and Martin Neuhaus will spearhead the new office, while Latham has also hired Shearman corporate litigator Markus Rieder to join its Munich office.

The hires – which come following Shearman’s announcement that it is to close its Düsseldorf and Munich offices  – are in line with Latham’s strategy to extend its corporate reach.

According to Munich managing partner (MP) Thomas Fox – who will also serve as the new MP of Düsseldorf – the firm is looking for German partners with German connections that can raise the firm’s client base with the likes of DAX 30 companies. Those include Eon, holding company Tengelmann Group, car manufacturer Daimler and Allianz, as well as large family-owned German mid-sized companies.

The new corporate team, which will be boosted by the transfer to Düsseldorf of Frankfurt litigation partner Christine Gartner, will advise on domestic and cross-border M&A and high end public company representation and complex disputes matters. The new office is expected to open at the end of May. Latham also has a presence in Hamburg and Frankfurt.

Latham’s chair and managing partner Robert Dell said: ‘We are focused on growing our business with blue chip industrials and other multinational companies, and this team fits our strategy perfectly. Our newest office in Düsseldorf, one of the world’s major industrial centers and a hub for manufacturing excellence and innovation, will be a key gateway for the strategic growth of our corporate capability.’

Joerg Kirchner, vice chair of Latham & Watkins’ global corporate department added: ‘The anticipated arrival of this team follows several significant lateral partner additions in London, continental Europe and the US; all of whom bring profound talents and will contribute significantly to the growth of our corporate and litigation capability.’

Allen & Overy recently hired Shearman Düsseldorf corporate partner Hans Diekmann for its local office.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk