Leading the high-profile moves of recent weeks, DLA Piper hired A&O Shearman leveraged finance partner Gordon Houseman, who has joined the firm’s international finance practice.
Houseman, a Legal 500 next generation partner for London high-yield finance, has become A&O Shearman’s latest high-yield departure following a series of departures from legacy Allen & Overy, including former Legal 500 Hall of Famer high-yield partner Kevin Muzilla, who retired in the lead up to the A&O Shearman merger in May 2024.
With over a decade of advisory experience, Houseman advises organisations across various industries in debt and equity capital markets, specialising in high-yield bonds, Term Loan B, private credit, and corporate and acquisition financing, while also supporting restructuring and insolvency matters.
Elsewhere in the City, Latham & Watkins hired tax partner Serena Lee from Akin and EU and copyright partner Sophie Goossens from Reed Smith.
Lee, a Legal 500 next generation partner for London corporate tax, joins after eight years at Akin and had previously spent a year as a legal adviser at HMRC and three years as an associate at legacy Allen & Overy, where she also qualified. She has particular expertise in investment fund work.
‘Serena’s sophisticated transactional knowledge and technical expertise will be an invaluable asset to our clients,’ said Katharine Moir, global chair of the firm’s tax department in a statement.
Goossens has moved after nearly eight years at Reed Smith where she co-led the firm’s AI team and its games team. She joins Latham’s AI, communications and copyright practices and as a member of the firm’s technology industry group.
Prior to Reed Smith, her experience includes three years as a senior attorney at August Debouzy in Paris and a year as head of legal at Paris-based music production company Green United Music.
Ed Barnett, Latham’s London office managing partner said in a statement: ‘Sophie has built an impressive track record advising leading technology and media companies, making her a great addition to our practice in London and globally, as well as a tremendous asset to our clients.’
Proskauer hired M&A partner Sylvain Dhennin, who joins the firm after nearly a decade as a partner at Hogan Lovells. With experience advising private equity sponsors as well as financial institutions and corporate, Dhennin’s arrival sees the firm continue the private capital buildout of the last year, with hires including legacy Allen & Overy banking head Philip Bowden joining alongside Megan Lawrence last July, Cahill partners Jake Keaveny, Warren Newton, and Court Tisdale in September and October, and former A&O Shearman and Milbank partner John Goldfinch in November.
Jeremy Dennison rejoined Travers Smith after seven years in-house at midmarket PE house Livingbridge, where he was general counsel 2018-23 and partner and general counsel from January 2023. He left Travers as a senior associate in 2018 and rejoins as a partner in its private equity and financial sponsors (PEFS) group.
The firm also brought funds lawyer John Daghlian into its asset management sector group as a senior consultant.
Continuing its London expansion, Paul Weiss welcomed BCLP tax partner Kyle O’Sullivan to the firm. O’Sullivan joined BCLP in a vertical move in April last year following eight years as an associate at Slaughter and May. His practice covers UK corporate tax law, corporate financing and disputes with HMRC. He has notable experience in the energy sector.
Paul Weiss has grown rapidly in London since its English law launch in November 2023. Recent additions include Simpson Thacher capital markets partner Uma Sud and financial regulatory partners Prem Mohan and Revathi Raghavan who joined from Kirkland & Ellis.
Ashurst bolstered its securitisation offering with the appointment of Tauhid Ijaz from Hogan Lovells. Ijaz, who started his career at Clifford Chance, has joined after 26 years at Hogan Lovells. He advised on complex structured finance and securitisation transactions, including significant risk transfer, balance sheet management, consumer asset securitisations, and funding transactions for specialist funders.
Speaking to Legal Business, Ijaz said: ‘The market presents numerous opportunities, many of which Ashurst is actively pursuing. Tom Picton has been instrumental in developing the practice, and I am excited to join and contribute to its continued success.’
Greenberg Traurig hired banking and financial services partner Kevin-Paul Deveau from Reed Smith. Deveau brings experience in private credit, bespoke financing arrangements, acquisition finance, and fund finance. He joins the firm’s London and Middle East finance practices.
Deveau has moved after six years at Reed Smith and previously spent time at Dechert and Clifford Change in London as well as Blake, Cassels & Graydon in Toronto, where he began his legal career.
‘Kevin-Paul brings a breadth of multijurisdictional legal expertise that plays well to our strengths in global finance,’ Greenberg executive chairman Richard Rosenbaum said in a statement.
Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe hired a three-lawyer team led by restructuring partner Prav Reddy from Katten Muchin Rosenman. He joins after just under five years at Katten and previously spent 13 years at Charles Russell Speechlys.
Reddy advises office holders, creditors, debtors, PE funds, banks and distressed companies on cross-border restructurings.
‘Orrick is well known for its collaborative approach and innovative advice. I’m excited to join this entrepreneurial team and to continue building a distinctive offering for funds, financial investors and companies together’, Reddy said in a statement.
Harbottle & Lewis added private client disputes partner Charles Lloyd from Macfarlanes and reputation management partner Michael Yates from Taylor Wessing, with the pair set to join in April.
Lloyd, a Legal 500 Hall of Famer for contentious trusts and probate, arrives after nearly 25 years at Macfarlanes and brings experience in private client disputes, particularly international trusts and estates litigation.
Information litigator Yates joins after just under four years at Taylor Wessing and previously spent time at Lee & Thompson and Schillings.
Harbottles co-managing partner Tony Littner said in a statement: ‘Charles and Michael are perfectly placed to complement our existing practice groups and contribute significantly to our continued growth and success.’
The fallout from the collapse of Memery Crystal parent RBG Holdings continued, with Haynes Boone picking up Memery Crystal corporate partner Lesley Gregory.
Gregory brings experience across public and private M&A, and joins former colleagues including Nick Davis, who moved to Haynes Boone from Memery Crystal as London office co-head last month as part of a seven-lawyer hire from the defunct firm.
Keystone Law welcomed eight lawyers to its ranks including Kirkland restructuring partner Elaine Nolan, a Legal 500 leading partner for corporate restructuring and insolvency, and Memery Crystal duo, Carl Rohsler, a Legal 500 Hall of Famer for London gaming and betting, and Nick Alfillé, formerly head of Memery Crystal’s corporate team.
Nolan, who began her career at Weil, Gotshal & Manges, has moved after almost 17 years at Kirkland. She advises strategic investors, sponsors and insolvency practitioners, on national and international financial restructurings and insolvencies.
In a statement posted on LinkedIn, Nolan said she was excited to be working with fellow Kirkland alumni Gabe Harley, who moved to Keystone in September 2024 and that the pair would, ‘continue to advise on various restructuring matters, with a particular focus on retail and consumer mandates’.
The other new hires are London family law partner David Thompson, who arrives from Seddons; commercial property partner Jo Bewley, who arrives from BPE Solicitors; residential property partner Felicity Sergeant, who arrives from Streathers Solicitors; employment partner Emma Loveday-Hill, who arrives from Prettys; and corporate and commercial partner Daniel Rose, who was general counsel at Dorfman Family Office.
Hot on the heels of hiring a 25-strong team from Memery Crystal, Fladgate has turned to another collapsed law firm, Avonhurst, to pick up corporate partner Josh Swerner.
Swerner centres his practice on PE transactions, domestic and cross-border M&A, joint ventures and corporate advisory work. With stints as CMS and Linklaters on his CV, he arrives at Fladgate following five years at Avonhurst, which has ceased to trade according to its website.
Finally, outside London, DAC Beachcroft made a pair of vertical hires, bringing in Addleshaw Goddard construction legal director Thomas Hurst in Leeds and Bevan Brittan technology disputes senior associate Wesley O’Brien in Bristol. Both lawyers join DAC as partners.

Away from Europe and the Middle East, fellow corporate co-head Dipesh Santilale (pictured right) points to Hong Kong and Singapore as key growth targets for the firm, particularly in the wake of US retrenchment from the region. ‘With certain US firms pulling back, we’re seeing significant growth opportunities for us in the region, and we are looking at similar growth opportunities across a number of jurisdictions,’ he states.

That is something that is increasingly recognised by senior lawyers too. ‘The reality is we all message more than we used to,’ observes Norton Rose Fulbright EMEA chair Farmida Bi (pictured). ‘That’s just how business has evolved.’
For McDonald (pictured), training is key to ensuring these interpersonal skills are developed. ‘Handling impromptu requests is an important skill for service providers, and it’s beneficial to practice it. It’s essential for making people feel comfortable reaching out to you.’ He continues: ‘It’s a skill like a muscle – initially, it might feel uncomfortable, but with continued practice, it becomes easier, and you enhance your capability as a helpful professional.’