‘We’ve always been an entrepreneurial firm, but listing was a step into uber-entrepreneurial territory,’ says Gateley CEO Rod Waldie of the firm’s decision to become the first UK law firm to float in 2015.
Earlier this month (8 June), Gateley passed a significant milestone: 10 years since listing on London’s Alternative Investment Market (AIM).
When the firm floated on 8 June 2015, it had revenue of £60.9m and a market capitalisation of £100m. A recent trading update stated an expected growth rate of 4% for the 2024-25 financial year – up from last year’s £172.5m to ‘not less than’ £179m, meaning the firm’s revenue will have grown by nearly 200% over the last decade.
And this growth in revenue has come alongside a significant increase in headcount, driven, in part, by the 14 acquisitions the firm has made since (see list below).
At the time of its IPO, the firm had 154 partners and 380 lawyers. Now, it has 183 partners and 630 total lawyers; not to mention an additional 387 non-lawyer fee earners – meaning almost 40% of its 1,017 fee-earners come from the consultancy side of its business.
Given the mixed outcomes for firms that have listed in the years since Gateley, this growth is not to be sniffed at.
‘That’s a hell of an achievement,’ says Ian Rosenblatt, founder and senior partner of Rosenblatt Law, which emerged from the ashes of failed listed parent RBG Holdings. ‘They must have excellent management who are able to deal with the endless jack-in-the-boxes that pop up.’
So what drove Gateley’s decision to list? Waldie (pictured right) says it stemmed from the firm’s strategic board (with former senior partner Michael Ward and London corporate head Nick Smith credited with spearheading the strategy) wanting to do something that would set Gateley apart from its peers and help it climb the revenue rankings from its then position of 48th in the LB100.
‘We were looking at how we go through the next tier, up to around 25th. We looked at the competitors between 50 and 25 – it’s a very crowded legal services market and a lot of the firms looked fairly similar. We wanted to differentiate Gateley in some way, make ourselves look different, and therefore potentially make ourselves look more compelling, both internally and externally.’
He adds that the listing was viewed as the best way to implement the identified ‘D, D and I’ strategy: ‘differentiate through diversification, along with a different way of incentivising our people.’
Waldie, who led the firm’s property team at the time of listing and replaced Michael Ward as CEO in May 2020, says the board wanted to broaden equity beyond a ‘small number of senior people’ and says it was ‘wonderful’ that on the day of the IPO everyone at Gateley, regardless of their role, received shares.
The impact of the diversification is similarly clear. Only two of the £56.83m-worth of acquisitions the firm has made since listing have been pure law firms – the 2018 acquisition of Surrey-based GCL Solicitors and the 2020 addition of Tweed Legal in Belfast.
The rest have seen Gateley branch into work including IP protection, chartered surveying and leadership development. The firm also launched a collective action practice (Austen Hays) last year, having recruited Slater and Gordon’s head of collective actions, Chaya Hanoomanjee, in 2023 to lead it.
Indeed, Gateley’s most recent half-year financials show organic revenue from non-legal work growing significantly faster than legal work, with consulting now bringing in around 30% of revenues.
And the firm isn’t done yet. As Waldie comments: ‘The adjacencies have broadened for us in every context, and we’ll continue to keep an eye on opportunities in spaces we find strategically interesting.’
Waldie says he hopes to see more law firms join Gateley on the market and points to IPOs as a possible exit for PE firms, who have been ratcheting up their interest in the legal sector in recent years.
Whether this happens may depend on how his fellow listed firms fare. Of the five firms that have followed Gateley onto the market, Ince Group and RBG Holdings entered administration amid a wave of recriminations, while DWF was taken private by Inflexion in 2023. That leaves Gateley, Knights, and Keystone Law as the survivors. All of those three firms are growing and looking robust, but it is fair to say that IPOs are not proving that popular for firms right now.
Keystone founder and CEO James Knight is honest about shift to law firms being able to list. ‘It’s no secret that it has not been an outstanding success,’ he says, adding that Mishcon de Reya’s costly abandonment of its listing plans in January 2022 was the ‘final nail in the coffin’ for law firm flotations in the immediate future.
Amish Bakhai, managing director at investment bank DC Advisory, is another sceptic: ‘The trend we’ve seen – not just in legal or accounting services, but across the board – is that there’s now a huge amount of private capital available, from a variety of sources, such that there often isn’t a strong reason to list the business on public markets.’
In contrast, Freeths corporate partner Jeremy Swift, who led on the April flotation of accountancy firm MHA for a market capitalisation of approximately £271m, believes the listing demonstrates that the door hasn’t completely slammed shut for law and professional services firms.
‘There is clearly a demand for high-quality professional service businesses amongst the investment community. I can see room for high-quality law firms to list in London, though I suspect that they will need to be different to those currently on the market.’
Access to external capital is often cited as a primary reason for law firms to list, but Waldie is keen to emphasise that for Gateley, the driving force was the need to corporatise: ‘The LLP model doesn’t lend itself particularly well to acquisitions – the listed structure gave us all of the levers we felt we needed.’
The firm does however have a recently agreed £80m revolving credit facility with Bank of Scotland, HSBC, Barclays and NatWest, with an uncommitted £20m ‘accordion’ option. While the facility provides a buffer against market volatility, it will also be ‘pointed at acquisitions’, according to Waldie.
Some of the money will also be available for lateral team hires, in the vein of the six-lawyer corporate team Gateley recruited from Clyde & Co led by partners Nora Al Muhamad and Darren Harris in March this year as part of what Waldie refers to as a ‘reboot’ of the firm’s Dubai operations.
Waldie describes the hires as a ‘big investment and a clear intention of our intention to grow in Dubai.’
He is quick to clarify, however, that Gateley is not out to plant flags across the globe: ‘What I don’t see in the foreseeable future are lots of Gateley bricks and mortar offices popping up in lots of different jurisdictions.’
Despite the modest rise of 4% in the most recent financials. Waldie’s ambitions remain high: ‘the medium-term target is to grow revenue both organically and through complementary acquisitions to at least £250m.’
And the burning question, with the benefit of hindsight: would he have still recommended listing back in 2015? The answer is a resounding yes: ‘I’m firmly of the view that we couldn’t have achieved what we’ve achieved absent the listing.’
Gateley’s post-listing acquisition: a timeline
2016
April: Tax incentives specialist Acquires Capitus – £2.72m
September: Property consultancy Hamer Associates – £2.05m
2018
April: Human capital Kiddy & Partners – £3m
May: Residential law specialists GCL Solicitors – £4.15m
November: Inward investment consultancy International Investment Services
2019
September: Acquires land referencing consultancy Persona Associates – £250,000
December: t-three, a leadership development consultancy – £3.4m
2020
March: Reputation and media boutique Tweed Law – £2m
March: Corporate advisory and built environment consultancy The Vinden Partnership – £6.75m
2021
July: Chartered quantity surveyors Tozer Gallagher – £700,000
2022
January: Adamson Jones, a patent and trade mark legal practice – £2.5m
April: Smithers Purslow, a multi-disciplinary surveying firm – £20m
October: Symbiosis IP, a patent attorney firm focused on life sciences – £2.5m
2023
July: Chartered surveyors RJA Consultants – £6m
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