Freshfields ramps up London private equity real estate with double Ropes hire

Freshfields has bolstered its private equity real estate capabilities with a double partner hire from Ropes & Gray.

David Seymour and Will Bryant are joining the magic circle firm after over a decade together at Ropes, with Seymour making partner in 2016 and Bryant in 2021.

The duo, who also previously worked together at Slaughter and May, are both ranked by the Legal 500 for commercial property: investment – Seymour as a leading partner and Bryant as a next generation partner.

The Ropes website lists them as the US firm’s sole London partners for real estate investments and transactions, working alongside two counsel and three associates.

They have a track record of work on cross-border transactions, advising clients including European and global private equity real estate funds, sovereign wealth funds, pension funds and family offices, with industry experience covering data centres, logistics, major retail and social and educational investments.

Last year they led a team advising The Baupost Group on a £900m joint venture acquisition, together with KKR as its 50:50 partner, of a portfolio of 33 Marriott hotels across the UK. Other notable work for Bryant has included advising Brookfield on the JV aspects of its acquisition of three Heathrow warehouses in 2023.

Freshfields has been pushing forward with ambitious expansion in recent years, with revenue rising to more than £2bn for the first time in 2023-24. While the US is the firm’s fastest-growing region, the firm has also been investing in its infrastructure capabilities in the UK, recruiting energy and infrastructure partners Alistair McKechnie, Jessamy Gallagher and Stuart Rowson from Paul Hastings.

The firm has been a standout performer in recent deal rankings, placing second in the global tables for Q1 after acting on 33 deals with a total value of just over $100bn.

The exits for Ropes come after the firm also recently saw the departure of key private equity partner Helen Croke to White & Case.

In a statement announcing the moves, Alexander Watt, who heads up Freshfields’ London private equity real estate group, said that Seymour and Bryant join Freshfields at a ‘pivotal moment’ as the firm look to expand its global offering across private capital and strategic investors in the real estate sector, while global real estate head Niko Schultz-Suechting noted the importance of real estate as ‘the biggest asset class in the private capital space’. 

Seymour and Bryant will begin work at Freshfields in the coming weeks.

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Clifford Chance revenue hits £2.4bn as US and Middle East drive growth

Clifford Chance saw global revenue climb 9% in 2024-25 to hit a new high of £2.4bn, with partnership profit up 11% to £944m, the firm announced today (23 July).

Profit per equity partner (PEP) edged up more than 3% from last year’s figure of £2.04m to  £2.11m. 

The Middle East notched up the biggest percentage increase in turnover, with a 36% jump, followed by the US with 18%. Europe (including the UK) and Asia Pacific reported growth of 6% and 5% respectively.

Global managing partner Charles Adams said: ‘All our regions recorded robust growth, most notably the Middle East. Despite more challenging market conditions in the US during the second half of the financial year, we maintained our strong growth trajectory taking our revenue increase in the region to more than 50 per cent in the past two years.’

The firm attributed its performance to the rapid expansion of private credit, which fuelled growth for its private equity, M&A and funds teams amongst others. Other sectors driving growth include technology and AI, healthcare and life sciences and energy and infrastructure.

Commenting on the firm’s performance globally Adams said: ‘Our record results underscore the resilience of our balanced global platform, the diversity of our client base, and the strength of our exceptional team in advising clients on their most complex matters.

‘All regions and practice areas contributed to our strong performance amid macroeconomic headwinds, and our sustained profitable growth has enabled continued investment in talent and operations, positioning our firm for future success.’

Clifford Chance is the second magic circle firm to release its financial results this year, posting one day after Linklaters, which grew revenue by 11% and PEP by 15%.

Both firms have highlighted US performance in their results – as part of a renewed focus on the region that has seen UK firms ramp up their Stateside lateral partner hiring in recent years.

In the last year, Clifford Chance added 13 new partners across its New York, Houston and Washington DC offices, bringing its US partner headcount to a total of 122.

Notable New York hires included several partners from White & Case, with Bryan Luchs joining in March and Robert Chung following in April, after the firm hired its current US M&A co-head Chang-Do Gong from the US firm in May 2024.

The Houston office CC launched in 2023, meanwhile, is now home to a total of 15 partners and 41 fee earners, with recent additions including capital markets partner Om Pandya, who joined from Latham & Watkins last September.

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Slaughters, DLA, Freshfields and Linklaters switch on £38bn Sizewell C nuclear plant deal

Slaughter and May, Linklaters, DLA Piper and Freshfields have taken lead roles as the UK confirms a long-awaited £38bn deal with a range of private investors to build the Sizewell C nuclear power plant.

Set to be only the second nuclear power plant built in the UK in a generation, after construction on Hinkley Point C began in 2017, Sizewell C is expected to supply low-carbon electricity to six million homes for at least 60 years, according to the project’s website.

The deal will see the UK government take a 45% equity stake, with the remainder split between Centrica (15%), EDF (12.5%), Amber Infrastructure (7.6%) and Canadian investors, La Caisse (20%).

Slaughters is advising Centrica, which has committed £1.3bn in funding. Energy and infrastructure partners Daniel Mewton and Hywel Davies are leading with support from tax partner Sarah Osprey.

DLA Piper is advising the consortium of Amber Infrastructure and La Caisse. The team was led by finance partner Derwin Jenkinson and corporate partner Steven Bryan, who both joined DLA last February after leaving Paul Hastings in 2023. Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer is also advising La Caisse on the deal with the team being led by global co-head of infrastructure Gavin Williams, supported by partners Silke Goldberg, Emma Stones and Steven Dalton.

Freshfields has been advising EDF on the matter for four years. The core deal team led by partners Edward Cole, who specialises in cross-border transactions, often in regulated sectors, and Vanessa Jakovich, who serves as compliance and regulation co-lead in the firm’s global ESG risk and advisory group.

The Linklaters team, which has been advising the government on the project since 2018, is led by the firm’s UK government lead Charlotte Morgan, with support from energy and infrastructure partners Maryam Adamji and Stephen Le Vesconte.

‘We are proud to have supported the UK Government on this significant step for both domestic energy security and the UK’s net zero journey’, Morgan said in a statement.

‘We are delighted to have contributed to developing the legal and regulatory structures to make this pivotal investment a reality and to help secure a low carbon energy future,’ she added.

Addleshaw Goddard is advising the UK National Wealth Fund on the debt financing of up to £36.55bn. Rory Connor and Richard Goodfellow are leading the cross practice team.

From Slaughters, Mewton reiterated the importance of the deal for the UK’s infrastructure: ‘This is a landmark transaction for the UK, ensuring secure, low carbon power for the next 60 years. Nuclear power – large scale and small modular reactors – is reemerging as a key component of the energy mix across Europe, and this transaction is an important benchmark for the wider market.’

UK chancellor Rachel Reeves described the investment as a ‘powerful endorsement of the UK as the best place to do business and as a global hub for nuclear energy.’

She added: ‘Delivering next generation, publicly-owned clean power is vital to our energy security and growth, which is why we backed Sizewell C.  This investment will create thousands of good quality jobs and boost the local economy as we deliver on our Plan for Change.’

Sizewell C is set to be the first nuclear power project in the UK to be financed under the Regulated Asset Base (RAB) model. The RAB model allows infrastructure projects to begin collecting revenues from consumers during construction, lowering the cost of capital by sharing risk between investors and electricity bill payers.

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LB100 2024: The largest UK-headquartered firms in the world by revenue

The full table of stats and data from the 2024 LB 100 report, which ranks the top 100 UK-headquartered law firms by revenue.

Click on the table headers to sort, and sort by 2024 ranking to reset the table.

Check out our LB 100 2024 overview for our analysis of the rankings by revenue, and see here for our analysis of the LB 100 ranked by PEP.

For more on LB 100 profitability, see our breakdown of which firms performed best on a five-year basis.

wdt_ID wdt_created_by wdt_created_at wdt_last_edited_by wdt_last_edited_at 2024 ranking Firm Total revenue (£m) YOY change Total lawyers Equity partners Revenue per lawyer (£k) Cost per lawyer (£k) Profit per lawyer (£k) PEP (£k) YOY change Net income (£m) Profit margin
2 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 1 DLA Piper 3,008.0 6 5,000 343 602 442 159 2,511.3 17 797 26
4 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 2 Clifford Chance* 2,300.0 12 3,792 433 607 396 210 2,040.0 2 883 38
6 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 3 Allen & Overy* 2,200.0 6 2,868 476 767 391 376 2,200.0 21 1,047 48
8 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 4 Hogan Lovells 2,158.0 9 2,816 361 766 484 283 2,204.0 19 796 37
10 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 5 Freshfields 2,141.2 16 2,331 438 919 428 491 2,398.6 15 1,051 49
12 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 6 Linklaters 2,100.0 10 3,299 528 637 351 286 1,900.0 7 942 45
14 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 7 Norton Rose Fulbright 1,817.9 8 3,567 506 510 306 203 1,126.1 30 570 31
16 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 8 CMS 1,702.0 7 5,259 742 324 219 105 741.6 -4 550 32
18 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 9 Herbert Smith Freehills 1,306.0 10 2,562 338 510 336 173 1,315.0 12 445 34
20 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 10 Eversheds Sutherland 1,190.5 0 3,811 208 312 223 89 1,300.0 1 271 23
22 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 11 Ashurst 961.0 9 2,066 253 465 276 189 1,336.0 14 338 35
24 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 12 Slaughter and May 893.2 10 649 105 1,376 729 647 4,000.0 14 420 47
26 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 13 Clyde & Co 844.4 7 2,664 236 317 252 65 739.0 4 174 21
28 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 14 Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner 672.0 -2 1,283 200 524 405 119 764.2 1 152 23
30 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 15 Pinsent Masons 649.6 7 1,981 187 328 254 74 793.0 0 146 23
32 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 16 Simmons & Simmons 574.0 10 1,228 189 467 301 166 1,076.0 6 204 36
34 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 17 Gowling WLG 573.7 8 1,442 396 398 246 152 562.0 41 222 39
36 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 18 Bird & Bird* 545.0 10 1,716 399 318 251 67 725.1 8 114 21
38 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 19 Addleshaw Goddard 495.6 12 1,270 130 390 290 101 984.0 1 128 26
40 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 20 Taylor Wessing† 480.7 9 1,253 259 384 310 73 915.0 13 237 49
42 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 21 Womble Bond Dickinson*** 461.0 9 949 228 486 350 136 566.8 2 129 28
44 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 22 Osborne Clarke 456.8 21 1,446 234 316 202 114 771.0 12 180 39
46 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 23 DWF 435.0 14 1,637 110 266
48 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 24 Fieldfisher*** 391.6 6 929 100 422 308 113 966.0 4 96 25
50 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 25 Kennedys 384.0 23 1,209 116 318 261 56 586.2 29 68 18
52 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 26 Macfarlanes*** 337.2 14 490 58 689 344 344 2,890.0 37 155 46
54 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 27 DAC Beachcroft 326.5 9 1,213 99 269 212 58 700.0 7 69 21
56 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 28 Irwin Mitchell 304.3 10 943 83 323
58 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 29 Withers 303.4 5 696 90 436 360 76 589.1 9 53 17
60 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 30 Mishcon de Reya 302.0 18 638 240 473
62 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 31 Stephenson Harwood 264.2 16 659 83 401 304 97 775.0 7 64 24
64 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 32 HFW 251.0 11 607 88 414 289 124 855.0 8 75 30
66 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 33 Watson Farley & Williams 238.4 11 229 113 1,041 749 292 593.0 2 67 28
68 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 34 Charles Russell Speechlys 218.3 13 568 70 384 304 81 661.0 30 46 21
70 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 35 Travers Smith 215.0 9 466 79 461 310 152 1,300.0 21 71 33
72 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 36 Shoosmiths*** 207.0 7 703 41 294 249 46 781.0 16 32 15
74 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 37 TLT*** 174.0 11 623 35 279 234 45 660.0 10 28 16
76 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 38 Gateley 172.5 6 546 316
78 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 39 RPC 172.0 9 538 75 320 256 64 493.0 1 35 20
80 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 40 Mills & Reeve 168.0 14 633 99 266 189 77 495.0 1 49 29
82 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 41 Burges Salmon 163.0 27 534 78 305 211 95 661.0 42 51 31
84 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 42 Knights**** 150.0 6 643 233
86 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 43 Hill Dickinson 145.5 12 554 108 263 165 97 500.0 45 54 37
88 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 44 Freeths 145.4 13 612 39 238 194 44 691.0 11 27 19
90 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 45 Trowers & Hamlins 142.3 5 534 89 267 215 51 307.2 -6 27 19
92 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 46 Weightmans*** 140.1 12 722 46 194 169 25 391.0 26 18 13
94 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 47 Keoghs 119.6 11 484 247
96 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 48 Ampa 119.2 14 457 141 261 194 67 374.0 22 53 44
98 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 49 Browne Jacobson 118.0 12 568 101 208 155 53 30 25
100 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 50 Brodies 114.3 8 448 39 255 182 73 846.0 0 33 29
102 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 51 Penningtons Manches Cooper 112.2 5 426 39 263 223 40 440.0 4 17 15
104 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 52 Birketts*** 102.4 20 629 45 163 130 32 458.4 -1 20 20
106 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 53 Farrer & Co 101.3 11 307 46 330 237 94 623.9 6 29 28
108 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 54 Lewis Silkin 100.3 17 311 78 322 220 102 411.2 -2 32 32
110 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 55 Taylor Rose 96.2 11 918 4 105
112 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 56 Stewarts 93.0 12 207 22 449 302 147 1,419.6 16 30 33
114 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 57 Burness Paull*** 90.2 8 371 38 243 171 73 716.4 27 30
116 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 58 Keystone Law 87.9 17 528 166
118 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 59 JMW 82.0 10 539 24 152 128 24 642.0 11 13 16
120 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 60 Forsters 81.7 8 239 32 342 269 73 549.2 11 17 21
122 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 61 Slater and Gordon**** 77.7 -16 300 259
124 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 62 Bevan Brittan 76.2 16 343 19 222 179 43 777.8 6 15 19
126 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 63 Fladgate 75.3 1 201 24 375 273 102 861.3 -7 21 27
128 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 64 Bond Turner**** 74.8 33 170 440
130 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 65 Howard Kennedy 74.4 15 243 46 306 239 67 362.0 21 16 22
132 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 66 Walker Morris 74.0 10 258 32 287 172 115 928.1 13 30 40
134 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 67 Harrison Clark Rickerbys**** 71.9 3 370 194
136 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 68 Capsticks 71.8 14 500 23 144 113 30 659.0 12 15 21
138 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 69 Kingsley Napley 71.8 17 236 20 304 264 40 466.0 106 10 13
140 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 70 Shepherd and Wedderburn 71.4 7 291 39 245 170 75 564.8 10 22 31
142 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 71 Leigh Day** 70.0 0 282 37 248
144 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 72 Foot Anstey 67.7 11 254 13 266 242 24 475.0 -2 6 9
146 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 73 gunnercooke 67.6 14 439 3 154 139 15 6 9
148 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 74 Blake Morgan 63.2 3 268 28 236 203 32 323.0 20 9 14
150 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 75 Bristows 60.4 14 161 46 375 239 137 478.3 31 22 36
152 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 76 Clarke Willmott*** 59.5 -2 257 27 232 188 43 419.9 -13 10 17
154 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 77 Thompsons**** 59.1 8 220 21 268
156 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 78 Wedlake Bell 58.2 15 207 24 281 225 57 487.0 30 12 20
158 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 79 Fletchers Solicitors 58.0 35 382 152 127 25 10 17
160 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 80 Ashfords 55.0 9 350 22 157 120 37 593.2 21 13 24
162 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 81 RWK Goodman*** 54.9 4 254 64 216 173 43 275.7 2 10 18
164 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 82 Brabners 53.9 15 282 25 191 157 34 380.0 9 10 18
166 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 83 Veale Wasbrough Vizards 53.9 26 260 24 207
168 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 84 BDB Pitmans** 53.1 -1 216 42 246 208 38 8 15
170 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 85 Harbottle & Lewis*** 51.9 9 139 30 373 214 159 740.9 9 22 43
172 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 86 Devonshires**** 51.6 17 252 21 205
174 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 87 Russell-Cooke 50.4 9 215 60 234 146 89 318.3 16 19 38
176 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 88 Wiggin 50.0 0 112 25 446 294 153 684.0 4 17 34
178 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 89 Michelmores 48.9 14 212 29 231 184 47 341.4 11 10 20
180 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 90 Ward Hadaway 48.0 7 309 13 155 139 16 377.0 -1 5 10
182 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 91 Hugh James**** 47.5 260 183
184 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 92 Cripps 47.3 6 201 35 235 183 52 328.6 -5 11 22
186 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 93 Winckworth Sherwood 44.0 3 213 14 207 135 72 384.6 -9 15 35
188 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 94 Thorntons 44.0 16 213 21 206 174 33 327.7 36 7 16
190 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 95 Stevens & Bolton 42.3 18 160 44 265 160 105 360.0 22 15 36
192 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 96 Sacker & Partners 42.2 25 64 19 657 301 357 1,186.5 29 23 54
194 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 97 Moore Barlow 41.6 1 198 29 210 171 39 267.0 33 8 18
196 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 98 DMH Stallard*** 41.5 7 220 20 189
198 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 99 Fox Williams 40.8 17 119 27 343 169 175 763.3 22 21 51
200 aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM aryan 09/07/2025 02:52 PM 100 RBG 39.2 -12 103 381

† Net income is UK-only

*Firm provided no headcount information, figures are estimated

**Firm provided no financial information, figures are estimated

***Annualised figures

****Firm provided no information, figures are estimated

Revolving Doors: Simpson Thacher, Cooley and Cadwalader hire in London as magic circle firms make moves in Paris

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett’s London office has grown with the hiring of Richard Hanson as a partner in its securitisation and structured products practice. Hanson joins the team from Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, where he spent a short nine-month stint after leaving Morgan Lewis & Bockius.

Commenting on the hire, European managing partner Wheatly MacNamara said: ‘Rick’s experience and deep understanding across each of the investment funds, real estate, energy and infrastructure markets makes him an excellent complement to our robust corporate team in London.’

The addition marks the latest expansion of the firm’s London office, following its December 2024 hires of leveraged finance partners Bryan Robson and William Gwyn from the London office of rival US firm Sidley Austin, and its hire of fellow leveraged finance partner Dan Peach from Linklaters last November.

Simpson Thacher recently named partners James Howe and Geoff Bailhache as co-heads of European M&A in its London office. They take over as department heads from Legal 500 Hall of Fame partner Ben Spiers, who led the team for nine years.

Howe joined the firm from Gibson Dunn in 2020, while Bailhache arrived in 2021 from private equity house Blackstone.

Two other U.S. headquartered firms have also strengthened their London teams with lateral partner hires, as Cadwalader has hired leveraged finance specialist Edward Holmes, who arrives after a 14 year career at Paul Hastings, while Cooley has added Jonathan Cohen, co-head of Ashurst’s tech M&A practice, to its partner roster.

Cohen’s arrival will bolster Cooley’s venture capital offering in the UK. ‘Jonathan’s experience, drive and entrepreneurialism are a perfect match for us,’ co-head of the London office Claire Keast-Butler said in a press release. ‘We are excited about the contribution Jonathan will make to our growth strategy as the go-to firm for disruptive high-growth technology and life sciences companies and investors in the UK and Europe.’

The hires follow in the wake of recent notable departures from both Cadwalader and Cooley, with the former losing fund finance partner Samantha Hutchinson to King & Spalding along with her five-strong team in June 2024, and the latter losing London managing partner Justin Stock to Akin last July.

Also in London, Charles Russell Speechlys has hired Mark Dewar and Greg Stonefield, into its commercial team and corporate team respectively.

Dewar joins the firm after heading up the commercial contracts practice at DLA Piper, while Stonefield arrives from Eversheds Sutherland’s international corporate finance department.

Elsewhere, Vinson & Elkins has hired finance partner Harry Upcott from A&O Shearman. Upcott’s expertise focuses on the aviation and satellite financing sectors, advising financial institutions, operators and airlines on leasing and M&A transactions.

Broadfield has hired Michael Dempsey from Addleshaw Goddard into its planning, infrastructure and public law team, while Baker McKenzie has hired private equity real estate partner Mark Thompson from Mishcon De Reya.

Clyde & Co has appointed commercial litigation partner Ian Roberts as its UK insurance practice chair. A Legal 500 leading partner for insurance: foreign firms in Singapore, Roberts steps into the newly formed role after ten years leading the firm’s South East Asia insurance practice.

Keystone Law has bolstered several of its departments with the appointment of five partners and one consultant solicitor to the firm. Rebecca Garner, Anouska Kapur, Deepak Manghnani, Robert Ganpatsingh, Charlotte Pollard, and Neave Maguire will boost Keystone’s rising aviation, residential property, commercial property, dispute resolution, private client, and construction & engineering practices.

Previously, Garner was a partner at Stephenson Harwood, Kapur from Child & Child, Manghnani from Adams & Remers, Ganpatsingh from DMH Stallard, Pollard from Buckles Solicitor, and Maguire was a senior legal consultant at Systech.

In Ireland, DWF has appointed Liam Harnett as a partner in its Dublin office and global risks team. Harnett joins with extensive experience in complex commercial disputes, having previously spent five years in Clyde & Co’s London office before returning to Dublin, where he has spent the last four years.

In France, Freshfields has built out its Paris bench with the addition of corporate M&A partner Benoit Marpeau and a team of one counsel and two associates from the French boutique firm Peltier Juvigny Marpeau & Associés.

Linklaters has continued its Paris hiring spree by adding partners Pierre-Amoux Mayoly and Shirin Deyhim from McDermott Will & Emery into its leveraged finance practice. The duo join the firm after the firm’s hire last week of an eight-lawyer global restructuring and insolvency team from French firm Darrois Villey Maillot Brochie.

In Brussels, Norton Rose Fulbright has further reinforced its antitrust and competition practice with the appointment of Jean-Nicolas Maillard and Yves Botteman.

Maillard and Botteman both join from Dentons, where Maillard was head of the firm’s EU practice. Maillard’s practice focuses on EU and French competition law, in particular cartel and antitrust investigations, while Botteman brings expertise on EU and national merger control and cartel and antitrust investigations before the European Commission.

In Germany, Heuking has snapped up Taylor Wessing’s Munich life sciences team, with partners Manja Epping and Stefanie Greifeneder set to move in early 2026 alongside new partner Sonja Ackermann. The trio are likely to be followed by three to five associates.

Epping and Greifeneder bring significant expertise in regulatory and contractual issues in the pharmaceutical and medical device industry.

In Frankfurt, McDermott hired Johannes Eckhardt, the head of legal for M&A at multinational science and tech company Merck, as a partner in the healthcare and life sciences transactions team.

And lastly, Jones Day hired international arbitration partner Kay-Jannes Wegner in the firm’s global disputes practice, based in the Singapore office.

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PEP breaks £3m at Macfarlanes as firm announces new senior partner

Sebastian Prichard Jones

Macfarlanes has reported double-digit revenue growth, with turnover rising to a new record and partner profits breaking through the £3m mark for the first time.

Revenue at the City firm has risen to £371.4m, a 10.1% increase on the annualised 2023-24 figure of £337.2m.

While last year the firm reported revenues of £309.1m for 2023-24, that figure accounted for an 11-month financial year, and so has been adjusted to provide an accurate year-on-year comparison.

Meanwhile, profit per equity partner has risen to to a new record of £3.1m, up from £2.87m.

The PEP increase was driven by an 8.8% increase in operating profit to £206.5m, up from £189.8m last year.

The news comes as the firm announced today (22 July) that senior partner Sebastian Prichard Jones is set to step down at the end of his second term in March 2026. He will be succeeded by Damien Crossley, the head of the firm’s tax practice.

Prichard Jones (pictured) thanked the firm’s clients and people for what he described as a ‘good result’.

‘Our transactional practices performed strongly despite a slightly muted market,’ he said. ‘The UK general election and its aftermath underpinned a standout performance from our private client and tax practices. We were fortunate that our clients remained active throughout.’

Private client specialist Prichard Jones became senior partner in April 2020, having been named as successor two years previously in 2018 following a consultation process with the partnership rather than a formal election.

During Prichard Jones’ tenure, the firm’s revenue has grown by more than half, rising 56% from £237.7m in 2020, while PEP has climbed 63% from £1.9m to £3.1m. Since 2022 he has worked alongside managing partner Luke Powell.

Macfarlanes made up nine partners in its most recent promotion round, its largest since 2019. In a further sign of growth, it also signed a lease last week for an additional 10,753 square feet of office space at 100–108 Fetter Lane, a stone’s throw from its headquarters at 20 Cursitor Street. The new space will accommodate the firm’s litigation team.

Commenting on the upcoming change in leadership, Prichard Jones said: ‘I am delighted to be handing over as senior partner to Damien. He has led the tax team through a period of exponential growth and impact. I am looking forward to seeing the firm continue to fly under his leadership.’

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‘The best is yet to come’: Linklaters posts double-digit PEP and revenue growth as US profit surges

Linklaters has pushed revenue and partner profits to new record highs, with double-digit growth across all key financial metrics for 2024-25.

The magic circle firm grew its top line by 11% over the year to reach £2.32bn, up from last year’s £2.1bn, while profit per equity partner (PEP) climbed 15% from £1.9m to £2.2m, marking the first time it has exceeded the £2m threshold.

Pre-tax profit also set a new benchmark, breaking the £1bn mark for the first time, with a 14% increase from £942m to £1.08bn. 

Managing partner Paul Lewis told Legal Business that the results were ‘testament to the fact that we’re heading in the right direction’.

‘I’m very pleased with the results, not just because of the numbers, but because the mandates behind them are clear evidence that our strategy is working,’ he said. ‘They show momentum – the line I had with the partnership was “the best is yet to come”.’

While the firm declined to provide a breakdown of revenue by geography, it reported profit growth across all core markets, with US profits up by 57% and Asia up 13%, alongside single-digit growth for Europe (3%) and the UK (8%).

Stateside growth has been a key priority for Linklaters, and since May 2024, 13 of the firm’s 27 lateral hires have been in the US.

Lewis pointed to the impact of the January 2024 hire of a New York M&A team led by former Shearman & Sterling global managing partner George Casey, who has since been appointed as the firm’s first chairman of the Americas.

‘Meaningfully, we’ve been growing since last January when George and the team came on board,’ said Lewis. ‘We wanted to start that real, transformational big bang with M&A. We’re absolutely blue ribbon M&A globally – we’ve got a brilliant global corporate client base. We need to be on the US side of those big global deals, and George and the team have been fantastic on that front.’

On US profits, Lewis described the the 57% growth figure as ‘slightly misleading’.

‘It actually understates the full picture – it reflects only the US profit and loss and doesn’t capture the global impact; the multiplier effect of bringing top-tier teams on board, driving cross-border, cross-practice work’, he explained. ‘It’s a material increase on what was already a strong year for the US last year.’

Other key recent additions for the firm in the US have included a four-partner finance team led by the former global co-head of A&O Shearman’s financial markets practice David Lucking, a four-partner litigation team from New York boutique Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler, and, most recently, capital markets and M&A partner Kristina Trauger, who joined from Proskauer Rose, where she co-headed the capital markets group.

Further notable additions around the world have included the hire of an eight-lawyer team from French firm Darrois Villey Maillot Brochier in Paris, led by François Kopf, who joined as global chair of restructuring and insolvency.

The year also saw the firm scale back in the CEE region, with its 80-lawyer Poland office transferring to Addleshaw Goddard.

Lewis picked out energy as a key area of activity for the firm: ‘We’ve seen a huge amount of activity globally across sectors related to energy, infrastructure and digital infrastructure. On the pure energy side, the energy transition continues to drive interest, including in areas like carbon capture and storage. Tech remains important too, but energy has probably been the single biggest driver.’

That focus has been reflected in the firm’s corporate mandates, including advising Dow on its $6bn partnership with Macquarie Asset Management to launch Diamond Infrastructure Solutions, Volkswagen on its $5.8bn investment and joint venture with Rivian, and Rio Tinto on its $6.7bn acquisition of Arcadium Lithium.

On the capital markets front, the firm advised the underwriters on the largest global tech IPO in 2024, Talabat Holding’s $2bn Dubai listing, and the largest global IPO of 2025, CATL’s $5.3bn Hong Kong debut.

Lewis and senior partner Aedamar Comiskey were re-elected to their respective posts this June, with both of their terms now running until 2029, and Lewis said that the re-election marked an endorsement of their vision from the partnership.

The strategy is really clear: we want to accentuate the work we do for the world’s leading corporates, banks, funds and financial sponsors. We want to focus on the complex, the cross-border, the high-profile work. We’ve got our priority areas, and they’re doing very well.’

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Charles Russell Speechlys puts topline turnover up 11%, with increases to both profit and PEP

Charles Russell Speechlys has posted its financial results for the 2024-25 financial year, with firmwide revenue up 11% to £242.3m from £218.3m in 2023-24.

The firm’s profits rose by 3.7% from £45.8m to £47.5m, while profit per equity partner (PEP) increased just over 3% from £661,000 to £681,000.

The UK underperformed the wider firm, up 9% year-on-year to £190.3m from £174.4m – falling short of the £193.7m of revenue which the firm posted in 2023.

International offices, however, drove particularly strong performance, achieving 18% growth across all locations outside the UK. Asia emerged as a standout region with 84% revenue growth, complemented by contributions from European offices in Luxembourg, Switzerland and Italy.

Managing partner Simon Ridpath commented: ‘We are delighted with our growth this year, as our private capital strategy continues to flourish across our global business. We’ve added strategic hires in Europe, the Middle East and Asia, opened a new office in Milan, and invested in innovation and technology to better serve our clients.’

He continued: ‘Our firm is well-positioned to guide clients through high-profile transactions, personal matters and complex disputes and to deliver premium advice to both new and established wealth. I am thankful to everyone at the firm for their hard work and focus on delivering exceptional service to meet our clients’ complex legal needs, and to our clients for the trust they continue to place in us.’

Strategic investments during the financial year included establishing a new international tax team of US-qualified attorneys serving APAC clients, as well as opening its Milan office in November 2024 with its hire of family law and wealth management specialist Maria Cristiana Felisi.

The firm’s financial results coincided with its announcement of a double partner hire, with Mark Dewar and Greg Stonefield joining the firm in the commercial and corporate teams respectively.

Dewar joins from DLA Piper, where he headed up the firm’s commercial contracts practice, while Stonefield arrives from Eversheds Sutherland, where he was a partner in the firm’s international corporate finance practice.

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Trading places: A&OS US exits continue as securities litigation co-head joins Freshfields and duo quit for new boutique

Freshfields has sealed the hire of A&O Shearman’s co-head of US securities and shareholder litigation Agnès Dunogué, in the latest in a raft of exits from the firm since its transatlantic merger in May last year.

A Legal 500 leading partner for securities litigation: defense, Dunogué joined legacy Shearman & Sterling in 2014. She was appointed to her role as practice co-head on the the completion of Shearman’s merger with Allen & Overy last May.

She will retain her seniority at Freshfields, joining as co-head alongside Meredith Kotler, who has been at the firm since 2019 after joining from Cleary.

Freshfields US managing partner Sarah Solum said in a statement: ‘Agnès is a top-tier securities litigator who will further enhance our offering for public company clients and financial institutions and further cement the reputation of our leading securities and shareholder litigation team.’

Firmwide securities and shareholder litigation co-head Mary Eaton added: ‘I’ve had the privilege of litigating in the same securities space as Agnès for a number of years. She is a well-known, well-respected securities litigator and brings a wealth of experience and expertise. She will be a key driver in the next phase of the team’s growth in the US.’

A&O Shearman also saw a further two partner departures in New York last week, with prominent litigators David Esseks and Gene Ingoglia leaving to establish disputes boutique Esseks Ingoglia, which is set to focus on trials, high-stakes litigation and investigations and white-collar defence.

Esseks served as an assistant US attorney for the Southern District of New York (SDNY), including as chief of the securities and commodities fraud task force. He joined A&O in 2007, and most recently served as global co-head of investigations and white-collar in the merged firm.

Ingoglia, meanwhile, was also an assistant US attorney at SDNY from 2005 to 2014, when he joined New York litigation boutique Morvillo. He moved to A&O in 2017.

Elsewhere, Willkie has made a trio of hires into the Dallas office it opened last May, welcoming Jesse Betts and Jessica Hammons from Akin and Nathan Meredith from A&O Shearman. All three partners have experience in private equity transactions, in particular in the energy sector.

Both Betts and Hammons joined Akin from Thompson & Knight in 2021, while Meredith joined then-Shearman in 2020, also from Thompson & Knight. The hires bring Willkie’s Dallas partner headcount to 15.

Orrick has launched a Miami office with the hire of a three-partner M&A team from national US firm Akerman. The firm has welcomed Ken Wiggins, who was co-head of M&A and private equity at Akerman, as well as partners Santiago Assalini and Sam Ramos.

Orrick chair Mitch Zuklie said in a statement: ‘South Florida is a magnet for top innovators, companies and funds in the four sectors we are focused on: tech, energy and infrastructure, finance and life sciences.

‘We’re incredibly excited to enter the Miami market following the model that has driven our success in Santa Monica, Boston, Texas and elsewhere: hiring top local talent that connects with Orrick’s strengths and sector focus globally.’

A further six Orrick lawyers will also make the move to help launch the new office, including venture capital partner Andrew Erskine, who currently splits his time between Santa Monica and Los Angeles.

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Slaughters and Kirkland clean up on Reckitt’s $4.8bn Advent sell-off

Slaughter and May and Kirkland & Ellis have picked up lead advisory roles as British multinational Reckitt sells its Essential Home business to Advent International for an enterprise value of up to $4.8bn (£3.56bn).

The deal sees Advent buying a 70% stake in the business, which includes leading global brands such as Cillit Bang, Calgon and Air Wick as well as around 75 brands in around dozens of markets around the world, with Reckitt retaining an interest in Essential Home through a 30% equity stake in Advent’s acquisition vehicle.

Slaughters corporate and M&A partners James Cook, Simon Tysoe and Richard Smith are leading the firm’s team for regular client Reckitt, working alongside partners including competition partner Lisa Wright and finance partner Kevin Howes.

Kirkland is advising Advent International, with private equity partner Adrian Maguire leading the team alongside technology and IP partners Andre Duminy and Joanna Thomson and debt finance partners Christopher Shield, Thomas Raftery and Leon Daoud.

Last year Maguire led a team that advised Advent on the sale of UK parcel delivery company Evri to Apollo in a deal worth £2.7bn, with Raftery and Daoud also involved.

The carve-out of Essential Home is a key part of Reckitt’s plan to reshape its business into a more efficient, consumer health and hygiene-focused company.

Latham & Watkins have advised the arrangers financing the deal, with a team led by London finance partners Joydeep Choudhuri and Danielle Brown and London tax partners Aoife McCabe and Karl Mah.

Reckitt’s interest in six manufacturing plants will also transfer to Advent when the deal completes, which is expected to happen on 31 December this year, subject to regulatory approvals. Essential Home will also own the Mortein brand in North America.

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‘A bright horizon, but without the stepping stones to get there’ – top fintech lawyers react to the Chancellor’s Mansion House speech

Leading City partners have warned that making London more attractive to fintechs will require more than the reforms put forward by Chancellor Rachel Reeves, with better access to capital and a shift in attitude from regulators required in order to bring the financial services market out of the doldrums.

London fintech partners have reacted with cautious optimism to Reeves’ Financial Services Growth & Competitiveness Strategy – set out in her Mansion House speech earlier this week (15 July) – which aims to make the UK the ‘world’s most technologically advanced global financial centre, a leading jurisdiction for fintech firms to start up, scale and list.’

‘What fintechs need is immediate access to cash and liquidity, and this is still some way off. So there’s a harsh reality of being able to see a bright horizon but not having ready access yet to the stepping stones to get there,’ said Fiona Ghosh (pictured right), a partner at Ashurst’s digital economy transactions practice.

The reforms include the launching of a bespoke fintech scale-up unit led by the PRA and the FCA, the creation of a brand-new type of stock exchange for private company share trading (PISCES), and the piloting of a digitally native, tokenised UK government bond, a ‘Digital Gilt Instrument’ (DIGIT), using distributed ledger technology.

‘To grow unicorns into major global businesses, you have to provide a supportive regulatory environment where you’re not going to pull them back from innovation unnecessarily, but where they’ll be able to access capital to fund what they need to do to get to the next stage,’ commented Arun Srivastava (pictured right), a corporate partner and fintech regulatory advisor at US firm Paul Hastings.

A stifled market?

In her speech, which came a week after City AM reported that fintech executives from Zilch, Atom Bank and Revolut had told the Chancellor that they would need to be incentivised to list in London, Reeves stated that regulators had gone too far in seeking to eliminate risk. She said: ‘Regulators in other sectors must take up the call I make this evening, not to bend to the temptation of excessive caution, but to boldly regulate for growth in the service of prosperity across our country.’

This approach was broadly welcomed by partners. ‘They have to empower them to regulate in a way that is not zero risk, that is proportionate, but also creates space for these businesses to enter the market and to grow,’ said Srivastava.

Clifford Chance partner Diego Ballon Ossio (pictured right) highlighted the tension between consumer safety, innovation and growth: ‘It cannot be the case that you put customer protection as the only paradigm of financial services regulation, because ultimately that is one of the factors which stifled the market.’

Stuart Davis, global co-chair of the fintech industry group at Latham & Watkins, noted that while much of the regulation targeted by Reeves is not directed at fintechs, a shift in the regulatory climate could still prove beneficial.

‘Fintechs will be closely watching whether regulators now deliver on the calls to lighten the regulatory burden, as many of the suggested areas for deregulation focus on banks and traditional financial services rather than challengers.’

‘Fundamentally what I think needs to be calibrated correctly is openness to new business models, to new activities, to new ways of doing old things,’ added Ballon Ossio, ‘I think that will come with an increased risk appetite and understanding that things sometimes go wrong.’

A step in the right direction

Despite the residual challenges, the Chancellor’s speech has generally been positively received by financial services lawyers.

Ben Koehne, head of financial services at Addleshaw Goddard, said that ‘unlocking pension and insurance capital for UK investment is essential—not just for scale-ups but also for deepening the UK capital markets. A joined-up strategy between the Treasury, regulators and market participants will be key to delivering on this ambition.’

Davis called the proposed reforms ‘another step in the right direction. The narrative around regulators being facilitators and, in essence, getting out of the way, is the right narrative’.

Etay Katz, head of digital assets at Ashurst, went further, calling the strategy ‘sensationally refreshing.’ ‘This is now a reality and may be a historical moment in a new chapter of making the UK a global leader in this tremendously important field of digital finance.’

Looking at the reforms from a fintech perspective, Ghosh remarked that ‘this is symptomatic of a wholesale mindset shift of our domestic economy from one that is quite heavily regulated sector by sector, to one that is genuinely looking at global growth driven, hopefully, through simplification.’

‘London is now clearly the least frictional place to access the public markets in Europe,’ added Davis. ‘The go-live of PISCES later this year could also be a very attractive gateway to listing for UK fintechs as they rightsize themselves and their cap tables ahead of any IPO.’

Srivastava said that the reforms could lead to ‘cultural transformation, adding: ‘they have the potential to deliver tangible output, and I think they’re genuine in their desire to make the UK competitive and supportive for the tech industry.’

Speaking about Reeves, Ghosh concluded: ‘the markets feel that they genuinely have in front of them somebody who’s trying to make systemic change for fintechs – root and branch.’

Katherine Ryan to host LB Awards as top in-house names join judging panel

Award-winning comedian Katherine Ryan is set to host the 2025 Legal Business Awards, which will be held at the Grosvenor House Hotel on 30 September.

The comedian, writer and actor has been confirmed as the host for the prestigious awards, which recognise the very best in the legal profession across 26 categories spanning the Bar, in-house and private practice.

With the shortlist set to be announced next month, firms will battle it out to take home coveted awards including Law Firm of the Year and US Law Firm of the Year alongside a host of practice-area focused awards, while in-house teams will be competing for recognition including GC of the Year and In-house Team of the Year.

This year’s awards are being judged by a more than 30-strong panel including well-known names from corporate legal teams and former private practice partners.

Judges include BT Group GC Sabine Chalmers, Rio Tinto legal governance and corporate affairs COO Chris Fowler, VodafoneThree GC Andrew Yorston, Smith & Nephew group GC Helen Barraclough, Starbucks EMEA GC Huma Allana van Reesch and News UK GC Angus McBride.

The panel also includes former Law Society president I. Stephanie Boyce, former Weil London head Mike Francies and former Travers Smith managing partner David Patient, as well as editors from Legal Business and the Legal 500.

For more information about the awards click here, and to book your table click here.

Full LB Awards judging panel:

  • Sabine Chalmers, general counsel, company secretary and director of regulatory affairs, BT
  • Chris Fowler, COO, legal governance and corporate affairs, Rio Tinto
  • Nicki Schroeder, group GC, Reach
  • Dan Guildford, GC, Financial Times
  • Andrew Yorston, GC, VodafoneThree
  • I. Stephanie Boyce, former President of the Law Society of England and Wales
  • Nigel Paterson, GC and company secretary, Currys
  • Helen Barraclough, Group GC, Smith & Nephew
  • Angus McBride, GC, News UK
  • Huma Allana van Reesch, GC, EMEA, Starbucks
  • Mike Francies, former London managing partner, Weil Gotshal & Manges
  • Matthew Wilson, GC, Fremantle
  • Stuart Brown, GC, Bupa UK
  • Samantha Thompson, head of group strategic projects legal affairs, Ericsson
  • Harpreet Sagoo, GC, Ricardo
  • Fiona Bradley, head of legal, Mitchells & Butlers
  • Jeremy Mavor, UK GC, National Grid
  • David Patient, former managing partner, Travers Smith
  • Blair Parker, head of legal services UK and Ireland, DHL
  • Harriet Gallagher-Powell, GC (group corporate), Legal & General
  • Meghan Foreman-Purves, head of legal, Europe, CIBC
  • Daniel Winterfeldt, GC, EMEA and Asia, Jeffries
  • Ruth Anderson, Head of legal EMEA, SEKO Logistics
  • Gideon French, Group M&A legal counsel, ArcelorMittal
  • Vivienne Inmonger, assistant GC, Ameresco
  • Simon White, Deputy GC, IQVIA
  • Rosie Teo, GC, Tillo
  • Joy Van Cooten, former associate GC – EMEA & APAC, ACI Worldwide
  • Lara Oyesanya, non-exec director, PensionBee
  • Nayeem Syed, senior legal director – Technology Procurement, London Stock Exchange Group
  • Georgina Stanley, editorial director, Legal Business and Legal 500
  • Ben Wheway, data editor, Legal Business and Legal 500
  • Joseph Boswell, global editor, GC Powerlist
  • Melissa Yebisi, research editor, GC Powerlist

Big law firms are betting on Boston – but does the market have room for more?

‘Historically Boston was a very insular market’, says Andrew Sucoff (pictured right), chair of Goodwin’s Boston office. ‘There weren’t a lot of lateral moves. That was true across the industry, but it was particularly true in Boston.’

Now, the market is changing. In Sucoff’s words: ‘What was acceptable in New York, London, and other major metropolitan areas in terms of lateral hiring started to become more acceptable in Boston. Once that happened, other firms who saw Boston as an attractive market started to establish beachheads.’

Boston is, unquestionably, on the up. No fewer than five leading law firms opened offices in the city across 2024 and 2025, with Paul Hastings launching in April 2024, Simpson Thacher and Blank Rome in May, Freshfields in February 2025, and Fenwick & West in April this year.

‘Boston is a popular location for firms to open new offices’, says Brown Rudnick transactions partner John Cushing, ‘Many times, those new offices are led by and staffed, initially, with lawyers from other firms already established in Boston. A number of well-known local and regional firms have been acquired by national players.’

According to data provider Leopard Solutions, there were a total of 97 partner hires into AmLaw 100 firms in Boston in 2024 – a 73% increase on the previous year’s tally of 56 hires, and nearly double 2022’s figure of 49.

‘Compared to New York or the Bay Area, Boston is still underpenetrated’ – Wesley Holmes, Latham

Wesley Holmes (pictured right), Boston managing partner at Latham & Watkins, which became an early new entrant in 2011 when it saw the opportunity to bring its global offering to the city, believes there is still more room for growth from international firms.

‘There were a number of historically Boston-based firms that had been around for 100-plus years that really dominated the market’  he says in reference to how the city legal market used to look before insisting that  ‘compared to New York or the Bay Area, Boston is still underpenetrated in the legal market.’

On partner numbers alone, the data bears his point out. While partner recruitment has increased dramatically in recent years, Boston saw significantly fewer lateral hires into top 100 firms in 2024 than Chicago (142 hires) and Los Angeles (123), not to mention the larger markets of Washington DC (291) and New York (449 hires).

However, Boston has seen far faster growth than any of these other markets. Alongside Washington DC it was the only city in that group where lateral partner hires did not dip at least once in the years between 2022 and 2024.

The reason for the new interest from international firms comes down to what Sucoff refers to as Boston’s reputation for ‘eds, meds, and finances’.

He explains: ‘There are 44 colleges and universities in the greater Boston area, as well as 22 full-service inpatient hospitals. We have the Route 128 corridor, which is called the Silicon Valley of the East, so we also have an incredible tech sector. And we have the largest life science cluster in the world, by almost any way of measuring.

‘The colleges and universities work with the medical schools in a symbiotic relationship. Then there’s the city’s active financial services sector, which provides funding for companies in tech and life sciences, whether those companies are startups or further along in their life cycle.’

The history

Proskauer chair Tim Mungovan (pictured right) says: ‘What makes Boston such a good market is that it has a very stable knowledge-based economy. It has world-class educational institutions, all clustered in a small geographic area, with extraordinary graduate schools, including law schools, engineering schools, and business schools.

‘In the 1980s it was an economy very much focused on banking and mutual funds, which according to legend were developed and initiated in Boston, and it was also at the forefront of the computer revolution. In the 1990s there was a strong push towards private equity and venture capital, and in the 2000s that focus on capital management shifted to hedge funds and private capital, and Boston became, if not as big as New York, a credible rival to New York.’

But while this economic backdrop made Boston attractive to law firms, new entrants still lacked the opportunity to establish themselves in the market. For Proskauer, which launched in Boston in 2004, this opportunity came via  the collapse of local firm Testa, Hurwitz & Thibeault.

‘Testa Hurwitz was focused on what we can call the internet economy version 1.0, and was therefore very exposed when the dot-com bubble burst in 2001’, says Mungovan. The firm also suffered succession issues after the untimely 2002 death of founding partner Dick Testa, with the combination enough to provoke a growing exodus of partners.

‘With the rise of private capital, Boston became a credible rival to New York’ – Tim Mungovan, Proskauer

‘Proskauer originally recruited an IP and patent litigation team that was intended to be an extension of our IP practice in New York’, says Mungovan, referring to the 2004 hires of partners Steven Bauer, Joseph Caprano, and Daniel Bernstein, who launched Proskauer’s office in the city. ‘But as Testa started to disintegrate, a lot of the partners there wanted to speak to us.’

This culminated most notably in Proskauer’s hire of seven private equity partners at the end of 2004, including Robin Painter and David Tegeler, who went on to co-head Proskauer’s private funds group for almost two decades from 2005 through 2023.

The ripples of Testa’s spring 2005 collapse continued to spread, and other new entrants benefited from the firm’s demise. In 2007, for instance, Cooley opened in the city, launching an office with 10 new partners including office co-heads John Hession and Lester Fagen. The partners joined from a range of firms, including McDermott, but all 10 had previously worked at Testa.

But it was not just new firms in the market that benefited. Sucoff comments: ‘About 20 years ago we absorbed 90 lawyers from Testa, which was the leading technology firm in the country. It provided the perfect opportunity for us to launch into the tech space, as well as giving us a big boost in life sciences.’

Among the Testa partners Goodwin brought over in 2005 were current management and executive committee members Mark Bettencourt, who became the firm’s managing partner in 2019, and Carl Metzger, who was named litigation department chair in October 2024.

Other notable Testa alums at the firm include global life sciences chair Mitchell Bloom, technology co-chair Kenneth Gordon, public M&A/corporate governance practice co-chair Deborah Birnbach, and special purpose acquisition companies (SPAC) practice lead Jocelyn Arel.

Testa’s collapse may have done much to shape the Boston legal market of today but other firm failures also played a part. Collapsed financial restructuring firm Bingham McCutchen was unsuccessful in its attempts to achieve a rescue merger with Morgan Lewis in 2014, with the Philadelphia firm instead cherry-picking more than 200 of its partners, including an influx of talent for the Boston office it had launched in 2003. Meanwhile, Burns & Levinson’s wind-down in September 2024 provided the raw material for Blank Rome and Simpson Thacher’s launches in the city.

Looking ahead

As rate increases push the highest-paying global elite firms to focus on only the most profitable work, they are also creating opportunities in the mid market. Michael Scott, co-managing partner of Nutter McClennen & Fish, a Boston-headquartered firm with four offices across the United States, comments: ‘Partners from the AmLaw 50 are interested in our firm, citing resource constraints, bureaucracy, billing rates, and intense focus on driving the highest profit margin. At a firm like ours, there are a lot more opportunities to expand a practice and leverage our entrepreneurial and collaborative platform.’

Russell Beck, co-founding partner at Boston litigation and employment firm Beck Reed Riden, argues that smaller boutique firms are well placed to thrive: ‘Small firms with a specialty are the ones that’ll survive’, he says. ‘Boston really lends itself to boutique firms.’

But whether you are looking at the biggest international firms or the mid-market, some question how much more expansion the Boston legal market can support.

One Boston head at a top 100 firm describes the raft of recent market entrants as making only ‘very nascent efforts’, and expresses doubts over those firms’ abilities to grow in the longer term.

‘The NIH has been a massive contributor to R&D in life sciences. A lot of that funding has now been cut back’ – Andrew Sucoff, Goodwin

There are also warning signs on the demand side, too, with partners reporting a slowdown in real estate in particular.

While higher interest rates impact activity levels across the board, with real estate particularly affected, in Boston there are specific concerns around such work for the once-booming life sciences sector.

‘There’s currently a glut of empty lab space’, says Mungovan. ‘Some companies haven’t grown fast enough to fill the space that they paid for. That’s driven a slowdown in real estate.’

However, Mungovan is not overly concerned: ‘Every industry goes through cycles’, he says, noting that his firm is ‘taking a countercyclical approach’.  ‘We see a tremendous amount of opportunity in investment of all kinds in real assets, whether those assets are digital infrastructure or top-tier office space. What we see in London and New York, we also see in Boston – there is still demand for the premium properties.’

Others though fear that there’s a risk that issues in the life sciences market could be further exacerbated by cuts to federal funding. ‘The National Institute for Health has traditionally been a massive contributor to research and development in life sciences’, says Sucoff. ‘A lot of that funding has now been cut back.’

Goodwin life sciences chair (and Testa alum) Mitch Bloom (pictured below right) expands: ‘The life sciences sector – particularly in Boston – has been navigating a period of short-term uncertainty. Factors like reduced research funding, leadership transitions at the FDA, and proposed federal drug pricing reforms have all contributed to a more cautious investment climate. Additionally, the recent administration’s stance on tariffs and vaccine regulation could potentially further complicate the life sciences landscape.’

On the whole, though, partners have faith that the industry will find a way through, despite any challenges triggered by Trump’s administration. ‘There are other sources of capital that will come in’, says Holmes. ‘There’s a lot of talent here, and dollars tend to find that.’

Bloom takes a similar view: ‘Boston’s ecosystem—bolstered by a deep talent pool, world-class academic institutions, and committed investors—continues to be a global hub for innovation. While regulatory shifts may pose challenges, I believe businesses and investors alike will adapt, and the sector will continue to thrive.’

Holmes concurs: ‘Big pharma moved away from having massive internal R&D programmes and started relying on the broader life sciences ecosphere and emerging companies to be their external R&D. Then when those companies reach a level of maturity that’s attractive, big pharma comes in. That will continue, though it’s possible you’ll see earlier-stage investment from big pharma.’

Sucoff predicts this will lead to ‘consolidation’ – which will benefit the firms best placed to advise larger companies and funds, with private capital set to remain a big driver of work in Boston.

‘There are funds being formed with a ton of dry powder, to come in and buy companies and be rescue capital’, says Sucoff. Meanwhile, Holmes notes a longer-term dynamic whereby, ‘Growth in the [Boston] private equity sector has been similar to that in law firms, with longstanding major players and newer entrants contributing to the expansion.’

Here, as in other financial centres, partners predict that the amount of capital currently held by buyout houses and their need to deploy it and return money to investors will be enough to bring deal activity back.

Simpson Thacher, Paul Hastings and Freshfields are among the firms which have been hiring in private capital partners to meet this demand as a key cornerstone of their respective launches.

To this extent, the situation in Boston echoes that of other key legal markets. Speaking of his firm’s historic growth, Proskauer chair Mungovan concludes: ‘We increasingly focused on what’s now called private capital. That was the rocket fuel – not just for Boston but for the entire firm.’

In Boston, as elsewhere, firms are looking to gain access to that rocket fuel.

For more on Boston, see our coverage of the Legal 500 US elite rankings.

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Firms that opened in Boston 2024-25

Firm Office launched Total lawyers (partners)* Lateral hires
Fenwick & West April 2025 9 (5) Matthew Pavao, Cooley, IP, April 2025
Heidi Erlacher, Cooley, IP, April 2025
Chen Chen, Cooley, IP, April 2025
Jim Hauser, Gunderson Dettmer, corporate, June 2025
Freshfields February 2025 4 (1) Matthew Goulding, Latham, private capital, February 2025
Blank Rome May 2024 33 (17) Michael Andreasen, Burns & Levinson, corporate, May 2024
Frank Segall, Burns & Levinson, cannabis, May 2024
Josef Volman, Burns & Levinson, M&A, May 2024
Catlin Barrett, Burns & Levinson, finance, May 2024
Rodney Bedow, Burns & Levinson, tax, May 2024
Max Borg, Burns & Levinson, cannabis, May 2024
Gil Breiman, Burns & Levinson, tech and life sciences, finance, May 2024
Alison Harrall, Burns & Levinson, corporate, May 2024
Mark Manning, Burns & Levinson, finance, M&A, May 2024
Scott Moskol, Burns & Levinson, cannabis, May 2024
Robert Petitt, Burns & Levinson, corporate, May 2024
Chard Porter, Burns & Levinson, corporate, M&A, May 2024
Thomas Reith, Burns & Levinson, litigation, May 2024
Stephen Brook, Burns & Levinson, corporate, M&A, May 2024
Robert Chow, Burns & Levinson, corporate, M&A, May 2024
Luke Reid, K&L Gates, maritime, June2024
J. Fraser Collin, Dragonfly (in-house), corporate, MYA, August 2024
Simpson Thacher May 2024 26 (10) Kenneth Burdon, Skadden, funds, May 2024
Matthew Fisher, Kirkland, PE, November 2024
Zachary Hafer, Cooley, government and internal investigations, February 2025
Yonatan Levy, Ropes & Gray, funds, February 2025
Joseph Conahan, Wilmer, M&A, March 2025
John Ilardo, Kirkland, PE, May 2025
Paul Hastings April 2024 17 (7) Bill Schwab, Sidley, PE, May 2024
Alex Temel, Sidley, PE, May 2024
Andrew Goodman, Goodwin, M&A, shareholder activism and takeover defense, August 2024
Ian Engstrand, Goodwin, M&A, September 2024
Scott Chase, Goodwin, securities and capital markets, October 2024
Sarah Gagan, Latham, technology transactions, February 2025

*Lawyer and partner numbers from firm website. Accurate at time of publication. 

‘Ten years ago those opportunities weren’t there’ – change at the top as DACB marks 11 years of growth

DAC Beachcroft has extended its growth streak to 11 years, posting a 6.4% revenue increase to £348.1m from last year’s £326.5m, the firm revealed in results issued today (17 July).

Profit per member, meanwhile, passed £750k for the first time, with pre-tax profit up a little over 7% to £76m. In the UK, revenue rose 6.6% to hit £313.6m, up from £294.3m.

Outgoing managing partner David Pollitt (pictured) told LB he was ‘really pleased’ with the results, adding, ‘It’s been a hard year, and everyone’s put in a real shift. None of this happens overnight, it’s down to hard work.’

Pollitt told LB that the firm had enjoyed a strong year ‘across the board’, but highlighted the employment practice as a ‘particular highlight’.

Real estate was also singled out as having had a strong year. DACB boosted its offering in the area with its March hire of partners Gerald Kelly and Jim Roberts from Macfarlanes in London, as well as its September 2024 hire of Joanne Sears from Gateley.

Pollitt said the laterals had been involved in high-profile transactional work for some of the firm’s key clients.

The last financial year also saw the firm commit to international expansion. Last May it opened an office in Peru, in September it opened a Hong Kong base, and this January it launched offices in New York and Los Angeles following the recruitment of a 30-strong group of lawyers from two local firms. The firm also signed strategic association agreements with firms in Australia and Ecuador in May and June, respectively.

Of the US move, Pollitt said: ‘We’ve landed well, and I think our plans are to expand carefully, but in key states across the US, starting in insurance, and then perhaps, over time, expanding into other sectors.’

This November, he will step down after ten years as managing partner to be succeeded by the firm’s head of insurance Helen Faulkner (pictured). 

Of the change, Pollitt said: ‘I am delighted to be handing it over to Helen, who’s sat with me on exec for the last 10 years, and has been one of the key architects of the growth and success that we have achieved.’

Pollitt, who will stay on at the firm as a partner,  is proud of what he has achieved during his tenure. He has overseen revenue growth throughout each of his 10 years at the top, with the firm growing 75% from £198.9m in 2015 to £348.1m in 2025.

Under his watch, the firm has also expanded its global footprint significantly, opening offices in Paris and Belfast in 2019 and Buenos Aires, Rome, and Milan in 2023, as well as its 2024-25 launches.

Of his legacy, Pollitt described a transformation of the firm: ‘I don’t think the firm is recognisable from what it was when I started. Over that time, the brand reputation, client demand, quality of clients, international reach, and culture have all evolved significantly. I mean, it’s all there now, we think. But the mix here — the blend — is really quite special. Ten years ago, the opportunities we now have available to us as a firm weren’t there.’

Faulkner delivered a succinct appraisal of Pollitt’s impact: ‘He’s given us confidence.’

She described herself as ‘keen to roll up my sleeves and get started’ with the managing partner position.

However, she clarified that she did not feel pressure to begin with all guns blazing: ‘I’m in a lovely position. I’m taking over when the firm is very strong and stable, which gives us the freedom to decide what we want to do next. I can build and develop from a solid platform. There’s no urgency for me to act immediately, so I have time to listen, reflect, and think about how to build on what we’ve already achieved.’

She continued: ‘The majority of what we’ve done internationally has been insurance-led, and I’ve been at the forefront of that. I do quite like change — not disruption, but change — as long as it’s controlled, making sure we bring our colleagues and clients along with us and listen to their needs.’

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Trading places: Paul Hastings picks up from Latham and Paul Weiss as Linklaters continues US push

Paul Hastings has added to its New York finance bench with its hire of high-profile partner duo Corey Wright and Lisa Collier (pictured) from Latham & Watkins.

Wright is a Legal 500 leading partner for capital markets: debt offerings and high-yield debt offerings, as well as for commercial lending advice to banks.

Before moving to Latham in January 2023, the duo worked together at Cahill, where Wright made partner in 2007 and Collier in 2011.

They have a track record of work for banks and other financial institutions on a range of major leveraged finance transactions, with notable recent work including advising on the $17.5bn leveraged bridge loan agreement relating to Warner Bros. Discovery’s separation into two entities, as well as acting on a $4bn high-yield loan relating to Rocket Companies’ acquisition of home loan servicing company Mr. Cooper.

Paul Hastings chair Frank Lopez said in a statement: ‘We’re thrilled to welcome Corey and Lisa. Their longstanding relationships serving top-tier financial institutions are highly synergistic with many of our core practices. Corey’s reputation is stellar as one of a handful, if not the leading, finance practitioner of his generation. Corey and Lisa’s arrival will further elevate our position as the go-to firm for complex, high-stakes financings and create significant opportunities to gain even more market share at the top of the market.’

The firm also made a pair of hires from Paul Weiss, including hiring M&A partner Kristiina Leskinen in New York, as well as bringing antitrust litigator Joshua Soven into its Washington DC office, in one of a number of ongoing litigation exits from Paul Weiss.

Soven joined Paul Weiss in 2022 after four years at Wilson Sonsini and five years at Gibson Dunn. Before that he spent nearly a decade at the Department of Justice (DOJ), including as chief of the litigation 1 section of the antitrust division. He joins Paul Hastings with a wealth of experience advising on antitrust matters relating to high-profile M&A, including for major tech clients such as LinkedIn on its $26bn sale to Microsoft in 2016.

Paul Weiss has also seen two more partners leave to join Dunn Isaacson Rhee, the DC litigation boutique established by four partners who left Paul Weiss in June.

The hires see the new firm expand beyond the US capital, with Erin Morgan joining in New York and Meredith Dearborn in San Francisco. Dearborn joined Paul Weiss from Boies Schiller Flexner in 2020, at the same time as Bill Isaacson and Jessica Phillips – two of the four partners who left to form Dunn Isaacson Rhee. Morgan, meanwhile, is a Paul Weiss lifer, who spent almost 12 years at the firm and made partner there in 2023.

Also in the capital, Latham has hired former deputy assistant attorney general Andrew Forman as a partner in its antitrust and competition practice.

Forman served as deputy assistant attorney general in the DOJ antitrust division from May 2022 to this January, after leaving Paul Weiss in 2021, before which he spent nine years at Cadwalader.

At the DOJ, Forman led a range of antitrust enforcement matters relating to both merger and non-merger conduct, covering a range of industries including technology, healthcare and life sciences, pharmaceuticals, insurance, and finance.

Mandy Reeves, managing partner of Latham’s DC office, said in a statement: ‘It’s wonderful to welcome Andy to our team here in the nation’s capital. His deep history of leadership in managing complex civil enforcement programs and special competition initiatives, honed through his experience at both the DOJ and FTC as well as private practice, will be a tremendous asset in providing our clients with best-in-class advice and counsel.’

Also on the move is Silicon Valley tech litigator and trial lawyer Neel Chatterjee, who has left Goodwin for King & Spalding, where he will co-lead the firm’s intellectual property practice.

In April, Chatterjee cofounded Law Firm Partners United (LFPU) with fellow Goodwin trial lawyer David Cross, who is based in Washington DC. Now with more than 870 members on LinkedIn, LFPU is a forum for partners at top 200 US firms to discuss and organise on matters relating to the rule of law, in particular in response to the Trump administration’s ongoing battles with law firms.

In a LinkedIn post announcing his move, Chatterjee said that he intended to continue his work on LFPU as well as his pro bono cases and his roles with nonprofits and legal organisations.

On his plans for his time at King & Spalding, he said: ‘Simple and ambitious – we plan to build the best, most inclusive, next generation IP litigation trial practice in the Bay Area and the Country.’

In New York, Linklaters has expanded its corporate offering with its hire of capital markets and M&A partner Kristina Trauger. Trauger joins from Proskauer where she was a partner for three years and co-headed the firm’s capital markets group. She was previously a partner at legacy Shearman & Sterling, where she worked with George Casey and Heiko Schiwek, who both joined Linklaters in January 2024.

In June, Linklaters named Casey as its first chairman of the Americas, at the same time reappointing Tom McGrath as Americas managing partner. Later last month, the firm also announced that it had extended to 2029 the terms of both senior partner Aedamar Comiskey and firmwide managing partner Paul Lewis, with a statement that reiterated the firm’s commitment to growth in the US.

Other firms making notable recruits in New York include Simpson Thacher, which has brought Fried Frank M&A partner Lawrence Natke into its fund transactions practice and Milbank M&A partner Kyle Smit into its energy and infrastructure practice, and Ashurst, which has boosted its New York finance bench with its hire of partner Joe Giannini from Norton Rose Fulbright.

Also in New York, Willkie has brought over A&O Shearman debt finance partner Gus Atiyah. Atiyah co-headed the global debt finance group at A&O Shearman, and has expertise across a range of private finance transactions.

Elsewhere, Weil has hired entertainment, sports and media partner David Markman into its Los Angeles office. Markman joins from DLA Piper, where he co-chaired the firm’s entertainment transactions practice.

Vinson & Elkins has made a trio of partner hires across its US offices, bringing over investment management partners Samuel Francis in New York and Reed Schuster in Austin, as well as project finance partner Caitlin Lawrence in Houston.

Francis and Schuster join from Kirkland & Ellis, and bring expertise in a broad range of fund formation and operation matters, with Francis specialising in regulatory guidance and investment support and Schuster specialising in Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) examinations and investigations.

Lawrence, meanwhile, rejoins the firm from Baker Botts, where she made partner in 2023 after leaving V&E as a counsel in 2022.

In Chicago, Jenner & Block has hired a five-strong mass tort team from Mayer Brown led by partners Richard Bulger and Daniel Ring. Ring was co-lead of both the litigation and dispute resolution practice and the product liability and mass torts practice at Mayer Brown, while Bulger co-led the firm’s environmental action group.

At Jenner they will co-chair the firm’s expanded mass tort practice alongside current Jenner partners, and special counsels Tyler Alfermann and Daniel Rottenberg.

Jenner co-managing partners Ishan Bhabha and Rany Mehrberg said in a statement: ‘Adding leaders of Rich and Dan’s calibre, along with their experienced team of litigators, builds upon our already strong foundation and further expands Jenner & Block’s ability to fully serve clients at the highest levels in mass tort and product liability litigation. Their leadership adds to our existing capabilities to defend, litigate, try, and resolve matters. Combined with Dean and Joanna’s tremendous experience and track record of success, and our well-established litigation bench, we have a comprehensive offering that can handle these matters from first filing through final resolution.’

In addition to its New York moves, Simpson Thacher has also hired Bryce Kaufman into its banking and credit practice in Houston. Kaufman was a counsel at Latham, and brings expertise across a range of energy and infrastructure financing matters.

Finally, regulatory insurance partner Steven Davis has rejoined Philadelphia-headquartered firm Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young after leaving in 2023 for Duane Morris, where he headed the firm’s insurance and reinsurance industry group.

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PE heavyweight Allardice leaves White & Case for Latham

Latham & Watkins has hired prominent private equity partner Ross Allardice (pictured), the firm announced today (16 July), bolstering its London M&A and buyout practice.

Allardice is making the move to Latham less than four years after he returned to White & Case from Dechert in 2021. He first joined W&C in 2013 from Kirkland & Ellis, before leaving the firm for Dechert in 2016.

He joins Latham with experience advising PE houses, financial sponsors, and portfolio companies on a range of complex cross-border transactions, with particular expertise in the healthcare and life sciences sectors, as well as in financial services and technology.

Nordic Capital has been a key client for Allardice during his time at both Dechert and White & Case, with deal highlights including advising on its €2.1bn sale of financial institutions trading tech and services provider Itiviti to Broadridge Financial Solutions in 2021, on its acquisition of innovation and IP management tech solutions and services provider Anaqua last November and, most recently, on a significant investment by Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPP Investments) in Nordic Capital portfolio company Regnology, which provides regulatory, risk, and supervisory tech solutions, in January.

Ed Barnett, who took over as managing partner of Latham’s London office last September, said in a statement: ‘Ross is an outstanding addition to our market-leading private equity M&A practice in London. We’ve built one of the best private equity teams in the City and have fantastic momentum in the market. Ross has a well-earned reputation for advising some of the most active global investors on their most important transactions. His deep knowledge, experience, and connections are a perfect fit for our platform, and we’re thrilled to welcome him to the firm.’

London PE partner and executive committee member Kem Ihenacho added: ‘Ross is an excellent fit for our practice both in London and globally. His track record in advising on large-cap LBO transactions strategically complements our leading capabilities, and his arrival marks another major milestone in the continued growth of our practice. Beyond adding one of the City’s leading dealmakers to the team, Ross brings a wealth of deal expertise, an extensive client network, and entrepreneurial drive that will be highly accretive to the practice and an asset to our clients.’

Allardice is the sixth partner Latham has hired into its London office in 2025, with notable laterals including A&O Shearman structured finance partners Franz Ranero and James Smallwood in April. The pair’s arrival followed a clutch of finance laterals in 2024 including Cahill trio Jonathan Brownson, Joydeep Choudhuri, and Prue Criddle in May and Akin partners Paul Yin and Fergus Wheeler at the turn of the year.

The firm has also seen a number of departures from its London office, including a total of nine partners who moved to Sidley Austin in 2024-25.

For its part, White & Case strengthened its City PE bench recently with the hire of Helen Croke from Ropes & Gray in June. Against this growth, White & Case has also lost a total of eight energy and infrastructure partners around the world to Paul Hastings since George Kazakov and Din Eshanov left the firm in the spring.

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Kirkland and Davis Polk lead as Ferrero seals $3.1bn tie-up with cereal giant Kellogg

Davis Polk and Kirkland & Ellis have won the lead roles as Nutella-maker Ferrero Group prepares to buy US cereal company WK Kellogg Co for $3.1bn.

A team from Davis Polk in London and New York is advising  Ferrero on the deal, with New York M&A partners Daniel Brass and Michael Senders leading a team that also includes lawyers across the firm’s executive compensation, tax, IP, antitrust and competition departments. Partners Nick Benham and Aaron Ferner are providing financing advice from London.

The New York firm is a regular adviser to Ferrero, with Brass advising the chocolate and confectionary company on a number of recent deals, including  its acquisition of protein snack maker Power Crunch earlier this year, Wells Enterprises in 2022 and Nestlé’s US confectionary business in 2018.

WK Kellogg has turned to longstanding adviser Kirkland for advice. New York corporate partners Allison Wein, Alix Simnock and Daniel Wolf are leading on the transaction alongside capital markets partner Bob Hayward.

The firm has advised the US food company for almost 25 years, with lawyers from its debt finance, tax, executive compensation, antitrust, employment, technology and IP transactions practices also advising on the latest deal.

The transaction, which is due to close in the second half of 2025, will see Ferrero acquire all outstanding equity in Kellogg for $23 per share. Once the deal completes Kellogg will no longer trade on the New York Stock Exchange and will instead become a wholly owned subsidiary of family-owned private company Ferrero, which also owns brands including Kinder, Tic Tac and Ferrero Rocher.

Cereal company WK Kellogg, which owns iconic brands including Rice Krispies, Frosted Flakes and Foot Loop, became an independent company in 2023 when Kellogg split into two. The rest of the business became Kellanova, which is in the process of being acquired by Mars Inc, subject to antitrust clearance.

Kirkland advised Kellanova when the planned $36bn acquisition was announced last year, with Wein leading the firm’s team alongside Erich Schiele. That deal saw Skadden advising Mars. 

‘Buyers are out there’ – why M&A partners are feeling positive despite geopolitical thunderstorms

stock market illustration

‘The volatility in the world isn’t going away anytime soon, it just has to be priced in. We have to focus on what deals can get done,’ says White & Case London M&A partner Sonica Tolani about her predictions for H2 following a mixed start to the year.

The latest data from LSEG shows that M&A activity increased by 33% year-on-year over the first half of 2025 to $1.98trn – the strongest opening period for dealmaking by value since 2022.

But with Trump’s 2 April Liberation Day tariff announcements triggering geopolitical chaos, this increase in value obscures the fact markets have been far from stable, with global deal volume down 10% over the six-month period – representing a five-year low by deal numbers.

‘It’s been an interesting H1, April saw significant volatility with many deals being paused. That said, there’s still plenty to play for in H2, and I’m relatively positive,’ comments Nigel Wellings (pictured right), co-head of European corporate at Clifford Chance. ‘Buyers are active and on the hunt for opportunities. We’re seeing them team up to pursue some of the larger, more complex deals.’

The rankings

The LSEG data shows Freshfields was the best performing UK-origin firm in the global value rankings, working on 104 deals worth $166.7bn to come in seventh place behind first placed Latham & Watkins (380 deals worth $277.5bn), Sullivan & Cromwell (92 deals worth $229.5bn), Wachtell (55 deals worth $204.9bn), Kirkland & Ellis (312 deals worth $203.4bn), Skadden (106 deals worth $173.3bn) and Davis Polk (79 deals worth $169.6bn). The tally makes Freshfields the only UK firm to feature in the top 10, with A&O Shearman the next best placed UK-origin firm in 11th place with roles on 140 deals worth almost  $123bn.

Significantly, US firms didn’t just lead the tables in the global rankings. They also took the top six spots in LSEG’s UK involvement table by value, with Kirkland, Latham and White & Case taking the top three places, ahead of Freshfields, Norton Rose Fulbright, A&O Shearman and Slaughter and May in spots seven to ten in the table respectively.

Notably Freshfields, A&O Shearman and Clifford Chance all climbed up LSEG’s global principal adviser table, with all three making the top 10 in a table headed by Latham.

Mega deals

A quick glance at the LSEG numbers highlights some key trends, with the number of mega deals valued at more than $10bn in particular helping drive up the total global M&A value over the first half of the year.

Despite the total number of deals falling to around 24,000 globally, the number of mega deals close to doubled year-on-year, helping to inflate total global values up by a third.

In total, there were 32 mega deals worth a combined total of $606.9bn – making it the strongest H1 for $10bn+ deals since record-keeping began in 1980. These transactions were particularly prevalent in industries such as technology and in markets like the US, which accounted for three of the top five global announced megadeals. These saw Latham and Wachtell advise on Cox Communications’ $35bn acquisition, Davis Polk and Skadden advise on the spinoff and US listing of Holcim’s North American business Amrize for $33bn and Freshfields and Fenwick & West advise on Alphabet’s $32bn acquisition of Wiz.

Freshfields head of global transactions, Julian Pritchard (pictured right), explains: ‘There are always some deals for which the strategic logic is so compelling that they won’t be put off course by short term volatility, and that is more likely to be the case for the larger strategic deals that are transformational for the parties.’

Breaking it down

With more large single buyer deals announced in recent weeks– such as Merck’s $10bn acquisition of respiratory-focused pharmaceutical company Verona Pharma, which has generated roles for Freshfields and Latham, or Ferrero’s $3.1bn bid for cereal maker Kellogg, on which Davis Polk and Kirkland are advising, partners are generally feeling more confident about the rest of the year than H1.

‘There’s some incredible momentum, and while macroeconomic factors remain challenging, there is capital to be deployed and appetite for deals in sectors where investors see strategic value and growth potential,’ points out Sam Newhouse (pictured right), Latham & Watkins’ global vice chair of M&A.

This is particularly true in busier sectors such as tech, financial services and energy. According to LSEG data, tech M&A accounted for 18% of global deal value at $347.4bn, driven in large part by acquisitions of AI businesses and an increase in fintech activity. Financial services was the next busiest sector, with deal activity up 49% from H1 2024 to 17% of global deals value, followed closely by energy and power M&A.

White & Case’s London head of public M&A, Patrick Sarch, suggests that energy in particular is ripe for consolidation, predicting a ‘Supermajor mega merger’ between large publicly traded international oil and gas companies.

He adds: ‘the stars are aligning and conditions are becoming more conducive for consolidation amongst these massive competitors.’

Elsewhere, private equity-backed buyouts accounted for almost a quarter of global deal activity in H1, with the total value of  private equity-backed deals climbing 24% year-on-year to $413.3bn; a figure that represents the third largest opening period ever for PE-backed M&A.

‘Activity levels are positive and our private capital clients are investing across a range of sectors and deal sizes, with momentum in take-private transactions and real assets, especially digital and broader infrastructure,’ says Kirkland corporate M&A partner Matthew Elliott.

Looking at deal activity by geography, while US target M&A still accounted for the greatest proportion of deals at 43%, the value of European target M&A fell 4% to $340.6bn.

In contrast, Asia Pacific deal making saw its strongest performance in three years, with combined deal value hitting $408.8bn –  an increase of 82%.

‘The Asia IPO market has seen a dramatic shift in momentum,’ said Pritchard, ‘with dozens of companies now looking to IPO in Hong Kong, as one of the limited number of international listing venues available for China based companies.’

Looking ahead

According to partners, while challenges remain, the underlying fundamentals suggest a robust pipeline and an active market for the second half of 2025.

Tolani (pictured right) remains positive about the M&A market’s prospect for H2:  ‘I’m an eternal optimist, and I’d like to think that the second half of the year is going to be strong.’

Ian Lopez, head of European M&A at Fried Frank, is similarly hopeful about the outlook for the second half of the year: ‘We are watching the markets closely as geopolitical conflicts, interest rates and tariffs on the US side play out. There’s a cautious climate right now, but if it turns around, we can expect private equity exits to pick up, which will hopefully result in a pickup in deal activity.’

Over at Freshfields, Pritchard also predicts markets will become more stable. He concludes: ‘M&A is often described as a conviction play, and the thunderstorms in the market following the geopolitical events and major shifts in global trade policy in Q2 certainly had an impact on conviction levels. Now there is a sense that global trade policy will move away from the extremes that had been previously feared, and M&A feels more navigable.’

LSEG Top Legal Advisers H1 2025: by global deal value

Firm Rank (last year) Total deal value Number of deals
Latham & Watkins 1 (3) $277.5bn 380
Sullivan & Cromwell 2 (8) $229.5bn 92
Wachtell 3 (5) $204.9bn 55
Kirkland & Ellis 4 (4) $203.4bn 312
Skadden 5 (1) $173.3bn 106
Davis Polk 6 (7) $169.6bn 79
Freshfields 7 (6) $166.7bn 104
White & Case 8 (13) $148.7bn 143
Paul Weiss 9 (2) $140.2bn 103
Cleary 10 (10) $123.3bn 64

 

LSEG Top Legal Advisers H1 2025 – UK involvement by value

Firm Rank (last year) Total deal value Number of deals
Kirkland & Ellis 1 (6) $37.4bn 34
Latham & Watkins 2 (2) $37.2bn 64
White & Case 3 (11) $34.4bn 34
Fried Frank 4 (12) $31.7bn 4
Debevoise & Plimpton 5 (87) $31.6bn 10
Gibson Dunn 6 (31) $27.3bn 9
Freshfields 7 (7) $21.5bn 30
Norton Rose Fulbright 8 (64) $19.7bn 31
A&O Shearman 9 (8) $15.1bn 42
Slaughter and May 10 (1) $13.9bn 13

‘Lifting ourself into the upper mid-market’ – Taylor Wessing posts double-digit revenue growth and breaks £1m in UK PEP

Taylor Wessing has broken through £500m in global revenue and £1m in UK partner profits for the first time.

The firm posted its 2024-25 financial results today (15 July), with topline turnover of £526.2m (€619m), up 10% from £480.7m last year. The result marks a second consecutive year of accelerating growth, following increases of 9.5% increase in 2023 and 4% in 2022.

UK Managing Partner and global co-chair Shane Gleghorn (pictured) described the result as a ‘great outcome’, adding that it was ‘testament to the hard work of our people, particularly their focus on premium, high-profile transactions, high-stakes disputes and complex regulatory work.’

The UK was a standout performer, with profit per equity partner (PEP) rising 20% to £1.1m, up from an estimated £915,000 last year. Revenue kept pace, increasing 15% to £283.7m from £227.1m.

The results mean that UK revenue has now increased by 80% in the five years since 2020.

Gleghorn said that the firm’s recent UK success is partly down to a sharpened focus on high-value work, describing it as ‘lifting ourself into the upper mid-market.’

He added that this approach also applied to the firm’s private equity practice, which he described as ‘effectively a fifth sector’ for the firm, in addition to its four key international sectors of technology, media and communications; life sciences and healthcare; real estate, infrastructure and energy; and private wealth.

Gleghorn highlighted several practice areas as having had strong years: ‘Our disputes and investigations teams delivered fantastic growth. In the UK in particular, we saw strong double-digit growth in that area. The regulatory piece as well played out very effectively. We also saw strong momentum in our patent litigation practice and were delighted with our corporate team’s performance in a somewhat difficult market.’

Beyond the UK, Gleghorn identified the Benelux region as an area with ‘very strong growth’, adding that the firm had seen growth across all of its European regions.

He also singled out the firm’s Dublin office, opened in September 2021: ‘This was the year Ireland really came online for us. Three years ago it was essentially a startup and it’s now becoming a strong, profitable contributor to our global revenue.’

Posting €619m in revenue takes Taylor Wessing closer to its target of reaching €1bn in revenue by 2028–29.

The firm will need to grow by a further 61.6% over the next four years to meet that goal, something that Gleghorn believes is ‘absolutely attainable’ with the right strategy: ‘We planned on the basis that it would be difficult to achieve through internal promotion alone, so we have anticipated it requires an ambitious strategy of inorganic growth supporting strong organic growth.’

Gleghorn points to team hires such as the 2021 addition of corporate partners Andrew Edge, Chris Cowley and the now-retired Andrew McLean from Stephenson Harwood, along with a 13-lawyer private wealth team from BCLP, as evidence of the firm’s approach to headcount expansion.

With that strategy set to continue, Gleghorn is keen to add to UK headcount. ‘Growth through the hire of teams is very effective and can be better than one-off individual lateral hires,’ he said. ‘In this coming financial year, we will look to do some team hires in the UK.

In recent years, the firm has set about expanding in Europe. In 2023, the firm announced a partnership with Iberian law firm ECIJA, and in January this year it announced a partnership with Italian firm Orsingher Ortu, a 29-partner firm with offices in Rome and Milan.

Gleghorn said that the firm had no immediate plans to plant further flags: ‘This year, our primary focus is likely to be on consolidating our expansion in our existing locations, including the new alliances in Iberia and Italy, rather than pursuing new geographies.’

He added that Europe was crucial to the firm’s aim of increasing the amount of work the firm does for US companies coming into Europe. Taylor Wessing has two US outposts in New York and San Francisco, which it uses to facilitate access to its European network.

‘We now have the five major European economies covered, which means we’re well positioned to mirror US clients’ expectations’, said Gleghorn. ‘And, of course, Ireland is a particularly important jurisdiction in that context.’

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‘Ignoring it doesn’t make sense’ – the Green Ambassadors navigating a shifting ESG landscape

The stakes surrounding sustainability have never been higher.

Over 2024 and the first part of 2025, private practice lawyers and in-house counsel grappled with the increased corporate, regulatory, and political scrutiny surrounding ESG policies and activities. Anticipating the introduction of the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), legal teams were increasingly called upon to chart the scope and application of these regulations and navigate how policies, targets, and statements could best satisfy new requirements.

Increasing regulatory focus in the sustainability space went hand-in-hand with an increase in the maturity of the actors involved, changing the nature of legal work. As Sarah Haugvad Andresen at Arntzen de Besche explains, ‘We have seen a shift from preventive compliance-based work to a more mature market which is giving rise to more disputes and risk management concerns’.

Owing to the nature of major European corporates – which reach global stakeholders, fall in scope of cross-border and extraterritorial regulation, and which are impacted by policy decisions including tariff borders – private practice and in-house lawyers must maintain a broad oversight of the sustainability horizon and take an holistic view of the emerging risks. As Linklaters’ Victor Louvet notes, ‘we must remain cognisant of developments outside the EU. You can’t simply limit advice to EU requirements when clients operate internationally’.

However, legal challenges emerge due to a lack of global cohesion between regulatory regimes, corporate cultures, and trade and supply chain policies. To Hogan Lovells’ Sebastian Gräler, moving forward, ‘the conflict between different regulations across jurisdictions will be a key issue’.

An impact can be felt across each aspect of ESG. On an environmental level, companies required to publish against EU regulation like the CSRD and CSDDD will likely be active in jurisdictions which either require more partial reporting, or which currently set no reporting requirements. Social policies, including European best practice regarding DEI, are opening companies up to scrutiny, particularly in the US. Amid these processes, corporate governance becomes particularly tricky where activist stakeholders either seek to push companies further along their green development, or scrutinise corporate ESG behaviour as potentially violating antitrust laws and conflicting with the fiduciary duty to prioritise financial returns.

Risk and reward

In this unsteady regulatory, political, and cultural landscape, legal teams must be able to find a solid footing. ‘Crucially’, Louvet argues, ‘we must maintain position-neutral guidance – our role isn’t to judge the morality of ESG strategies but to clearly outline risks’.

Owing to legal teams’ longstanding expert roles in helping clients navigate risk landscapes, framing ESG as a vital modern risk allows private practice and in-house lawyers to take up a key role in embedding sustainability throughout corporate activities. In this way, through combining a focus on regulatory risk and climate need, legal teams are also well-placed to communicate the importance of faithfully adopting green best practice.

As Anna Kuusniemi-Laine at Castrén & Snellman explains, ‘Frankly, when we talk about risks for a company, why should it matter whether it’s called an ESG risk or something else? It’s still a financial risk and ignoring it doesn’t make sense’.

Taking into perspective how certain geographies approach ESG issues, Kuusniemi-Laine argues that ‘it is also a question of how we frame these issues’ and ‘using terms which are apolitical’ helps counsel to translate the importance of sustainability considerations in hesitant environments.

Despite these challenges, Gräler doesn’t foresee ‘a fundamental shift in the overall goals, at least in Europe. Climate neutrality targets will remain, and human rights and environmental standards will continue to rise’.

However, anticipating more enforcement and regulatory action, Gräler argues ‘it is crucial to integrate ESG into your overall strategy. That way, you’ll be ready to respond effectively to these changes’.

How can in-house legal teams best integrate sustainability into corporate strategy? To Line Berg Madsen at Kromann Reumert, ‘It is about tying sustainability together as a cross-sectional discipline, bringing together legal, sustainability, the C-suite, the board, and operational people.

‘Then it’s about creating more detailed governance, with a specific arena which houses the necessary tools: policies, action plans, contracts, risk and litigation mitigation. Once you establish the overall governance side – including responsibility and oversight – you are better-placed for reporting and implementation’.

Underscoring the important impact a well-organised and holistic ESG structure can create, Haugvad Andresen suggests that ‘companies which have already invested heavily in building ESG systems are starting to see it give them a competitive advantage’.

Building materiality

Yet regulatory vacillations are, in certain ways, engendering uncertainties as to the advantages to be gained. ‘The Omnibus package is – on an unprecedented scale – simplifying and deregulating ESG regulations before they’ve even fully come into force’, Berg Madsen notes.

Noting the extent to which companies moved to integrate CSRD and CSDDD before their postponement and alteration under the Omnibus process, Louvet identifies ‘growing client frustration about the compliance costs they’ve already incurred to align with current requirements, only to face the prospect of a complete regulatory revamp by the end of the year’.

Importantly, Haugvad Andresen notes that regulatory uncertainty creates ‘unpredictability at a time when many companies are starting to take meaningful action’. On the one hand, companies which have consciously served as early adopters of sustainability reporting standards and best practice find themselves ahead of the regulatory suite; on the other hand, acknowledging significant compliance costs and the anti-ESG sentiment that exists among particular stakeholder groups, certain companies are looking to reconsider the strategy steps and investments previously considered crucial to their transition plans.

However, Louvet sees a way of reconciling these outlooks: ‘while there is frustration about costs already accrued, most view the Omnibus as welcome relief’. Despite initial strategy and competence costs, future reporting requirements will be simplified. Moreover, since certain sectors and stakeholders will continue to expect climate reporting, many companies will find ‘the effort is not wasted’.

Importantly, suggestions remain that the Omnibus package allows companies and counsel to pause for breath and appropriately navigate a more realistic way to understand ESG and sustainability in relation to their particular corporate cultures and requirements and embed it into their operations like any other business need.

Berg Madsen thus suggests that in-house counsel and companies should ‘focus on materiality and use this time to practice deploying sustainability frameworks operationally and strategically. By doing so and making it quantifiable and qualitative, sustainability impact, risk, and opportunity can be an effective decision-making tool’.

By remaining focused on the ‘more material aspects within ESG regulation’, Berg Madsen believes companies can ‘promote longer-term decisions for climate, biodiversity, and human rights purposes’ which serves as a north star to guide them during uncertainty.

Leading lights

How can private practice lawyers best place themselves to assist clients in maximising the opportunities inherent in the shifting ESG regulation? To Haugvad Andresen, ‘we need cross-sector knowledge. We need to understand clients’ suppliers, industry-specific challenges, and any potential implementation issues’.

Just as sustainability knowledge should not be isolated according to industry sectors, particular legal specialisms – whether transaction-, regulatory-, or disputes-focused – will each need to understand how ESG and climate regulation impacts their client-base and practice. By speaking consistently with clients, engaging in legal and industry sector dialogue, and bringing the entire firm along on the sustainability journey, private practice lawyers can remain attuned to new developments and play a key role in the formulation of best practice as it emerges.

By remaining on the front foot, as Kuusniemi-Laine expresses, the legal sector can ‘maintain a proactive role’ and serve a crucial dual task. ‘As lawyers, we must actively assist our clients in navigating both the regulatory landscape and the green transition that needs to happen’.

 

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