Gibson Dunn to open in Spain with Freshfields corporate heavyweight

Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher has continued its recent European expansion with the hire of a heavyweight corporate partner from Freshfields to launch a Madrid office for the firm.

Armando Albarrán, who heads up Freshfields corporate/M&A and capital markets groups in Spain, has spent nearly 30 years at the firm.

His practice has a focus on the energy, infrastructure, real estate and telecoms sectors, acting for clients including global private equity firms Cinven and KKR, as well as Spanish corporates such as Amadeus, Naturgy and MasMovil.

‘Armando has advised on many of the most significant Spanish and cross-border transactions,’ said Federico Fruhbeck, co-head of Gibson Dunn’s PE group in Europe. ‘His arrival positions us to advise clients on their most sophisticated Spanish matters, while also working with our London and continental European teams to deliver integrated, cross-border advice.’

The Spain launch tracks with steady growth and considerable investment across Europe for Gibson Dunn. In London, the firm has more than doubled its headcount over the last five years, from 84 lawyers in 2020 to 218 today.

The Madrid office, which is set to open later this year, will be the firm’s first in Spain and seventh in Europe, following last year’s launch in Zurich. It will join longstanding offices in Brussels, Frankfurt, Munich, Paris and London.

Chair and managing partner Barbara Becker described Madrid as a ‘vital European hub for private equity and cross-border M&A, particularly for sponsors and multinationals executing high-value transactions between Europe and the Americas.’

The move is the latest in a series of senior exits for Freshfields across Europe, following the news that four corporate partners – including global co-head of M&A Wessel Heukamp – were joining Latham & Watkins in Germany in December.

Earlier this week, Skadden also announced the hire of former co-global managing partner and senior competition partner Rafique Bachour in Brussels.

Bachour, who has spent over 25 years at Freshfields, recently stepped down from his role as one of three global managing partners at the firm.

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In-house moves: Coca-Cola waves goodbye to Wardle after ten years, with new GCs at Meta, giffgaff, and more

Clare Wardle

Coca-Cola Europacific Partners has appointed Svetlana Walker as its new general counsel and company secretary, set to start in the role in April after the departure of long-serving GC Clare Wardle (pictured).

Wardle joined the multinational bottling giant in 2016, when it was formed from the combination of Coca-Cola’s three major bottling companies in Western Europe. She will step down on 1 April 2026 after more than a decade in the role.

Wardle has held a number of senior in-house positions at leading companies, including at multinational retailer Kingfisher, where she was group legal director from 2010 to 2012 and group general counsel from 2012 to 2016.

Coca-Cola Europacific Partners chief executive officer said: ‘Clare’s leadership has been pivotal in shaping the strong legal and governance foundation that underpins our business today. Her strategic insight and commitment have helped the business grow and expand consistently since its creation.’

Walker will step into her new role on 1 April. She joins from packaging manufacturer Klöckner Pentaplast, where she has spent nearly three years as general counsel and chief compliance officer. Before that she spent four years at US consumer goods giant Kimberly-Clark, where she held a number of senior legal roles.

Elsewhere, Sarah Gray has been appointed GC at railway pensions administrator Railpen.

Gray joins from the Post Office, where she most recently served as interim group general counsel for a year, before which she was group legal director for nearly four years. Gray has previously held senior in-house positions at Santander UK and RSA Insurance Group.

Speaking of her appointment Gray commented: ‘It is an exciting time to join Railpen, with reforms underway across the pensions and railway sectors. I look forward to applying my experience in legal, compliance and governance to support the leadership team.’

Gray is replacing Sally-Ann James, who is retiring after over four years as GC. James was previously GC at Metro Bank (UK) and worked as head of contract and commercial at the Co-operative Banking Group before that.

Mobile virtual network operator giffgaff has hired Reena Sedov as GC, replacing Lisa Revitt, who has served as interim GC for the last year.

Sedov joins giffgaff from Virgin Media O2, having most recently served as head of legal – B2B and wholesale. Sedov has worked extensively in the telecommunications sector, holding various senior legal roles at O2 and Tesco Mobile.

Centrica GC Ailsa Longmuir has departed her post at the FTSE 100 energy company and has joined Vodafone as head of corporate and operations.

Longmuir joins from Centrica, where she spent 15 years, progressing through a number of senior roles in the energy marketing and trading department, until being appointed GC of the group’s trading arm, Centrica Energy, in 2023.

In the US, former Microsoft chief legal officer Hossein Nowbar has joined NYSE-listed software company ServiceNow as president and chief legal officer.

Nowbar spent 28 years at Microsoft before stepping down last September, and held a number of senior roles at the company before being appointed CLO in 2023.

Chairman and CEO at ServiceNow, Bill McDermott said: ‘Hossein brings the leadership this moment demands as we accelerate our profitable global growth strategy. Having served as a trusted advisor and strategic partner to senior technology and policy leaders at Microsoft, he has seen firsthand what world-class legal and corporate governance looks like at scale. Hossein represents a strategic addition as we enter our next phase of growth while upholding the trust of our customers, shareholders, and partners worldwide.’

Microsoft saw a further high-level departure at the start of this year, as C.J. Mahoney, corporate vice president and GC, product, services and go-to-market legal, left the tech conglomerate to become chief legal officer at Meta.

The move follows the announcement at the beginning of December that Meta CLO Jennifer Newstead was leaving her post to join Apple.

Mahoney has spent the last five years at Microsoft in a range of top legal roles, including across cloud, AI, US international trade, and Microsoft’s cloud computing platform Azure.

Mahoney also served a two-year stint in government, working in the Executive Office of the President as deputy United States trade representative, between 2018 and 2020, before which he was at Washington DC white-collar defence boutique Williams & Connolly for nearly ten years.

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Baker McKenzie, HSF Kramer and Dentons among big winners in new Legal 500 APAC rankings

Baker McKenzie, Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer and Singapore’s Rajah & Tann are among the firms with the most ranked partners in the latest Legal 500 APAC research, which went live yesterday.

The new guide, which ranks firms for 291 practice areas across 22 APAC jurisdictions, are the result of more than six months of research, and include 4,770 practice rankings and 3,635 individual rankings.

More than 150 Baker McKenzie partners are ranked in the new guide, including 23 Hall of Famers across Australia, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea and Thailand – more than any other firm.

Two of Singapore’s top firms are second and third for total ranked partners – Rajah & Tann and Allen & Gledhill, with 99 and 73 respectively, followed by HSF Kramer on 72.

Looking at practice rankings, the top three firms are Dentons, with a total of 80 rankings, just ahead of Bakers on 77 and DLA Piper on 63.

Bakers has more top-tier APAC rankings than any other firm with 43, followed by HSF Kramer with 31 and A&O Shearman on 26.

The total number of practice rankings increased by 17% this year, while the research was informed by more than 4,000 additional referee responses on the previous year.

The APAC coverage also includes the Australia Bar, which features a total of 133 barrister rankings across five practice areas.

New rankings for 2026 include the Maldives, where five firms are newly recognised.

The APAC rankings are separate from Legal 500’s Greater China research, which covers China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macau, and which was released late last year.

Legal 500 also this week announced the 2026 Asia Pacific Green Ambassadors, coming on the back of the UK Green Ambassadors identified last year, including lawyers from firms such as Linklaters, Hogan Lovells and Ashurst.

The selection of the new APAC names was based on research into how private practice lawyers of various specialisms are leading the way on decarbonisation and the green transition across Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore.

You can learn more about the 2026 Asia Pacific rankings guide here. If you have any queries about the new rankings, please visit our helpdesk or email us at [email protected], and for more information on our subscription options, please contact Chris Cooke at [email protected].

‘It was seismic’ – the 2025 rulings that will reshape the London disputes market this year

broken scales

The number of claims filed in the commercial court may have hit a five-year low in 2025 but, in other respects, the year was a success for the UK disputes market, with a number of key judgments set to define activity over the years to come.

Data from litigation intelligence provider Solomonic shows there were fewer claims filed in the commercial court in 2025 than at any point in the last five years, with the 361 claim tally down from 529 in 2024 and 784 the year before that.

In the CAT, meanwhile, 2025 was the quietest year since 2020, with 45 claims issued – down from 71 in 2024, and only marginally more than the 42 brought in 2020.

But it isn’t just the numbers that matter; as while claim volumes dwindled, the UK saw some big decisions that will shape the disputes market going forward.

‘At the start of last year, claimant firms will have been looking at the big thematic litigation and saying, it’s about time we got some judgments,’ says one disputes head, reflecting on 2025.

With new certainty emerging in key areas including group actions, the Competition Appeals Tribunal (CAT), and litigation funding, here top partners and market commentators set out the rulings that mattered in 2025 and explain why.

Number of claims filed in the Commercial Court and the CAT, 2025

Taking jurisdiction: Município De Mariana v BHP 

‘There is an increasing willingness on the part of our courts to take jurisdiction over cases that historically they might not have been so interested in taking,’ says Richard Swallow, head of the disputes and investigations group at Slaughter and May, summarising a key trend of recent years.

‘The key,’ he continues, ‘is finding a jurisdictional hook, like a UK-domiciled parent company.’

2025 saw a major development on this front in the November High Court ruling in Município De Mariana v BHP, which held UK parent company BHP Group liable for losses resulting from the 2015 collapse of the Fundão Dam near Mariana, Brazil.

The claim is valued at approximately £36bn, with a second-stage trial on quantum due late 2026 to early 2027. 

The decision was ‘seismic,’ says Ashurst UK dispute resolution head Jon Gale (pictured right), and ‘likely to mean that there will be more mass tort claims brought in England.’

CAT scrutiny: Merricks v Mastercard 

‘The Competition Appeals Tribunal (CAT) continues to be a very attractive jurisdiction for class actions, because of the opt-out procedure, which we don’t have in the High Court save narrowly for representative actions,’ explains Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer disputes partner Natasha Johnson (pictured right).

However, she also notes pressures ‘in relation to funding and an increased focus on costs.’

Ted Greeno, co-managing partner at Quinn Emanuel’s London office, makes a similar point: ‘The collective regime is still, 10 years on, in its infancy, and there remains uncertainty as to various aspects of the regime.’

This uncertainty has seen proceedings move slowly, with capital tied up for long periods of time – a particular issue for investors, given the high cost of CAT proceedings. ‘Cases in the CAT are ridiculously expensive,’ says Susan Dunn, co-founder of Harbour Litigation Funding and chair of industry body the Association of Litigation Funders (ALF). ‘The average budget is in the £20m-£30m range.’

‘Everybody involved decided to air their dirty linen in public’

These concerns over the operation of the CAT were thrown into sharp relief by the final settlement in July of Merricks v Mastercard.

The first large-scale opt-out action issued in the CAT, the claim was brought on behalf of a class of more than 40 million people, and alleged that Mastercard had imposed unlawful fees on transactions between 1992 and 2008.

This year it settled for just £200m – around 1% of its original value of £16.7bn, accounting for interest and inflation.

Funder Innsworth Advisors objected to the settlement and launched proceedings against class representative Walter Merricks, prompting Mastercard to offer to pay Merricks’ costs up to £10m.

One partner describes the affair as ‘outrageous,’ while another commentator says: ‘Everybody involved decided to air their dirty linen in public.’

Freshfields London and Dublin managing partner and antitrust litigator Mark Sansom (pictured right), who led the team that advised Mastercard on the case, highlights the impact of the decision: ‘It was the first settlement in such a big case that’s had to withstand such intense scrutiny, with another party in the room trying to throw stones at it.’ 

He continues: ‘The Tribunal is asserting a broad jurisdiction to look into the way things have turned out at the end of proceedings and, if necessary, revise the entitlement that the litigation funder has to a return.’

Certification questions: Evans v Barclays Bank & Ors, train tickets, and Kent v Apple

The opt-out class actions regime was further clarified by several decisions on certification. 

In December, the Supreme Court upheld the CAT’s denial of certification to an opt-out claim against a group of banks in the long running foreign exchange proceedings in Evans v Barclays Bank & Ors.

‘One key implication of the judgment,’ explains Sansom, ‘is that the Tribunal has more discretion than the Court of Appeal considered was the case to decline to certify claims on an opt-out basis if the merits are weak and if you have a class of people who are frankly big enough and well-resourced enough to pursue litigation on an opt-in basis.’

Earlier in the year, the Tribunal also dismissed three parallel class actions against train operating companies alleging that charging boundary fares to customers with travelcards constituted abuse of dominance. 

Keith Thomas (pictured right), securities litigation practice head at Stewarts, explains the background to the cases: ‘What some claimant firms have done is take what are fundamentally mass consumer claims and used the fact that the defendant has a dominant position to bring the claim within the opt-out consumer competition regime of the CAT, even though the behaviour complained of is not actually competition related.’ 

The decision sees the CAT draw limits on the range of consumer issues that can be packaged as competition claims to access the opt-out class actions regime.

‘We have seen some pushback from the CAT on claims that are more consumer-related in nature and I expect this will continue,’ says Ashurst’s Gale. 

‘The system is bedding down to become genuinely useful’

Many in the industry welcome the decisions. ‘It’s good that the CAT didn’t just wave damages claims through,’ says Therium Capital Management founder Neil Purslow. ‘The fact that some cases that are brought fail doesn’t undermine the legitimacy of the system.’ 

The year also saw positive signs for claimants. In October, the CAT found in favour of the claimants in Kent v Apple, ruling that Apple’s practices with its App Store constituted abuse of dominance.

‘From a claimant’s perspective you would certainly say it’s good to see,’ says Addleshaw Goddard global head of disputes Mark Molyneux (pictured right). ‘We’re 10 years in, and with that result we’re seeing the regime do what it was designed to.’

Dunn echoes this point: ‘It’s good to see some positive outcomes in the CAT. The system is bedding down to become genuinely useful.’ 

From the defendant side, Sansom takes a similar view: ‘What we should all want is a balanced regime where meritorious cases are able to progress towards trial and have their day in court, and claims that are frankly weak, and which are wasteful of costs and the Tribunal’s time, should be filtered out before they get into years of litigation.’

Reversing PACCAR

‘We’re seeing litigation funding being scrutinised, and coming out positively, with its benefits to public policy being recognised,’ says Purslow.

There’s been a cultural shift in the UK,’ says Pallas Partners founder and managing partner Natasha Harrison (pictured right). ‘Litigation funding is a big part of it. It’s fueling it, because the claimants can bring this litigation with little or no downside financial risk.’ 

However, in 2025 the funding market remained chilled in the shadow of the Supreme Court’s 2023 PACCAR decision, which held that litigation funding agreements that calculated returns based on a percentage of final damages constituted damages-based agreements, and were therefore unenforceable. 

‘The PACCAR decision led to a reduction in the use of the English and Welsh courts, and a concern that the UK wasn’t doing everything it could to protect its status as a venue for complex commercial disputes,’ says Burford Capital vice chair David Perla.

He continues: ‘While firms have figured out how best to navigate the multiples-based structure, a legislative fix is necessary, and we are eager for that fix.’ 

‘There’s still £2.5bn pounds of litigation funding in the London market looking for claims’

The Ministry of Justice’s December announcement that it plans to reverse the effects of PACCAR and introduce ‘proportionate representation’ to ensure fairness and transparency was welcomed by many across the industry.

‘Restoring clarity around the enforceability of litigation funding agreements is an important step for the UK’s globally respected legal system, and we welcome the Government’s commitment to providing that certainty,’ says Burford CEO Christopher Bogart.

With reform now back on the legislative agenda, most partners expect funding to become a more settled feature of the disputes landscape in 2026.

As Dunn puts it: ‘Removing one of the big factors driving instability is only a good thing.’

Slaughters’ Swallow (pictured right) estimates that there is still ‘£2.5bn pounds of litigation funding in the London market looking for claims’. At his firm, around half of disputes turnover now comes from defending funded claims.

Harrison is positive about investor appetite: ‘There’s a huge interest in legal assets at the moment. It’s an uncorrelated asset, and that’s very attractive to investors,’ she says.

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Ashurst, Linklaters and Clifford Chance ramp up capital contributions as LLPs highlight CC’s CEE spin-off

Ashurst, Clifford Chance and Linklaters all significantly ramped up capital contributions from partners during the 2024-25 financial year, according to accounts filed on Companies House.

The three firms’ accounts show partners paid in at least double the amount of capital contributed during the previous financial year, with this increase most pronounced at Linklaters, where contributions increased five-fold. The firm’s LLP accounts show partners provided £34m in capital contributions last year, an increase of 423% from £6.5m in 2024.

At both Ashurst and CC, partners’ contributions roughly doubled. The largest monetary increase was seen at CC, where partners contributed an additional £100m in capital, rising from £106m in 2024 to £206m in 2025, a 94% increase.

Ashurst’s accounts, which come amid merger talks with Perkins Coie, show capital contributions climbed more than 145% from £3.1m in 2024 to £7.6m in 2025. Ashurst’s accounts also show that the firm’s payments to former members rose from £2.1m to £4.9m. Both this and the increase in capital contributions reflect the growing size and profitability of the firm, LB understands.

CC and Linklaters declined to comment on the increase in capital contributions.

The accounts also highlight a number of other changes across the firms. Most notably, CC’s accounts show that the firm spun its offices in Prague and Bucharest off into separate entities with effect from 1 March 2025, with both offices now operating in association with CC as Clifford Chance Prague Association and Clifford Chance Badea Association.

The firm said in a statement: ‘On 1 March 2025, we moved to a closely integrated, long-term association model with our partners in Prague and Bucharest. This approach enables both offices to invest and grow in ways that best serve their local markets, while continuing to deliver best-in-class, integrated service to our clients as part of Clifford Chance’s global offering.’ 

Looking at the firms’ regional revenue breakdown from the accounts. For CC, Europe accounted for nearly 66% of its total £2.41bn firmwide revenue in FY2024-25, down marginally from 67% the previous year.

Meanwhile, US turnover accounted for nearly 16% of its global total from less than 15%, following a nearly 16% increase to £385m.

Linklaters’ European revenue climbed 4% to £704.4m in 2025, with APAC revenue rising 9% to £277.7m, Middle East turnover climbing almost 17% to £48.5m and UK turnover climbing 11% to £1.06bn – almost half of Linklaters’ total turnover.

The firm’s largest revenue increase was in the Americas, where revenue climbed 27% to £189.1m – roughly 8% of total revenue in 2025.

Looking at previously reported LLP accounts, the Americas accounted for 25% of A&O Shearman’s overall revenue in 2024-25. The figure is marginally higher than Freshfields, where the US brought in 21% of firmwide turnover at £473.3m. This figure made the US Freshfields’ fastest growing region, with turnover climbing 21%.

Ashurst’s revenue from locations outside of the UK, EMEA and APAC grew 7.5% to £60.0m. The firm currently has offices in New York, Austin and Los Angeles with a handful of partners across the sites.

LB previously reported that A&O Shearman’s first accounts post-merger also revealed that partners’ capital contributions more than doubled, totalling £421.3m in 2025. Legacy firm A&O’s 2024 accounts posted £208.9m in capital contributions, by comparison.

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Addleshaws leader on corporate ambitions, key clients and why a US merger isn’t part of the £1bn 2030 strategy

Speculation about who’s merging with who has never been higher, but one firm that legal market watchers can cross off their merger list, at least for the next four years, is Addleshaw Goddard.

Andrew Johnston, who took up the firm’s managing partner role in May 2024, tells Legal Business that whatever peers such as Ashurst, Taylor Wessing and Hogan Lovells are doing, Addleshaws has no intention of adding the US to its already ambitious 2030 strategy.

‘Building out a relatively unique, high-quality and well-delivered UK, European and Middle Eastern platform is the priority, rather than looking further afield at a US deal. I’m quite comfortable with others making the choices they are but we’re ploughing our own furrow and that’s the right thing for this business. [The US] isn’t what our partners want and I don’t think it’s what our clients want right now so I’m certainly not second-guessing our strategy because of some activity in the market,’ he insists.

That’s not to say a US deal won’t be part of the longer term plan, of course, as Johnston is clear the firm has to have a strategy for the world’s biggest legal market but, if a tie-up is ultimately on the cards, it won’t be happening anytime soon. 

‘I’ve been very clear that a US merger isn’t on my immediate agenda but it’s a big market and a market that we have to have a clear strategy for. Who knows what choices we’ll decide are the right ones for this business after 2030,’ he stresses.

When Johnston took over, Addleshaws was already in a strong position after a decade of tight leadership under John Joyce. While Joyce took up the management mantle when the firm had a cash deficit, by the 2024 financial year-end Addleshaws had cash reserves of £139m and an international expansion plan that was already well underway. 

‘I didn’t come into the role feeling like the nuts and bolts needed to be changed,’ says Johnston. ‘What I felt was needed was an injection of confidence and ambition into the business and some clarity to our purpose.’

And he has set out to provide partners with this confidence and ambition. At his first partner conference, Johnston announced that Addleshaws was targeting revenue of £1bn by 2030, a number that effectively meant doubling in size.

He admits there may have been some sharp intakes of breath but points out: ‘We’ve been running at double digit growth for five or six years, so it effectively breaks down into 11% annualised growth and [an additional] £100m.’

Johnston is talking with Legal Business in one of the meeting rooms at the firm’s new London office. Located at 41 Lothbury opposite the Bank of England, he says the building is a nod to the firm’s ambition and intent with the AG2030 strategy. The entrance to the Grade II listed building, with its cavernous former banking hall, marbled floor and towering columns, certainly conveys ambition. Like the AG2030 strategy, the building is about eliminating any potential sense of drift in the business. Scale and ambition are part of its strategy.

So far the focus has been on building out existing offices, as well as a handful of launches across EMEA, with the firm launching a Madrid office in 2024 and acquiring Linklaters’ Warsaw office and opening in Abu Dhabi in 2025.

‘We remain open minded that there will be further international expansion; there’s no question about that,’ Johnston says, adding that the firm has made clear its desire to open in the Netherlands. Beyond that he says: ‘We’ll be consolidating the offices we’re currently in … I’m focused on quality not quantity. We need people that can help us move the business forward in a meaningful way.’

He points to this commitment to consistent quality across geographies, clients and practices as a differentiator for Addleshaws. ‘It’s delivering that consistent quality for our clients in any market that we are in, making sure that we continue to grow in the right markets, continue to focus on the right clients, and that’s why clients need to be at the heart of the strategy.’

As part of this, the firm is now focusing internally on an ever-shifting list of 50 key clients which generate a significant percentage of its revenue, aiming to ensure that it is working with these clients across as many practices and jurisdictions as possible. The breakdown of these clients falls evenly across the firm’s key sectors: financial services, which already accounts for around a third of London revenue, retail and consumer and real estate.

With the firm ‘pivoting towards more City-focused practices than we’ve had before,’ the last few years have seen Addleshaws build a structured finance practice, as well as furthering its capital markets capabilities with a triple hire from Pinsents Masons in 2024.

M&A and private equity also form part of this push with Johnston calling private equity, where the firm sits in the top tier of Legal 500’s mid-market rankings thanks to work with clients including TDR and Inflexion, the ‘crown jewel’ of Addleshaws’ corporate practice.

As part of this focus on key clients, Johnston wants the practice to be more pan-European. ‘Now we’ve got a European platform it gives us the opportunity to sell that service in a different way,’ he says. ‘I want to make sure that the work we’re doing is, wherever possible, multi-jurisdictional. It’s one of the practice areas that will make the international platform hang together.’

While the £1bn revenue target may be ambitious, Johnston isn’t just chasing revenue growth: ‘There’s no point growing an attractive top line if the bottom line is going down the pan.’

Though not changing the underlying remuneration system, Johnston knows driving partner performance is important for profitability. As part of this it’s crucial, he says, that the firm is better able to recognise and reward outperforming partners – something the firm is working on addressing.

‘We want to call it a performance mindset rather than a performance culture. You can be a great place to work and still be more crisp about the mindset that sits behind the business … You need to nurture a culture and make sure it doesn’t get away from you.’ For Addleshaws, a core part of this culture means not losing sight of its national spine: London, Manchester, Leeds and Scotland, as it grows internationally. 

Johnston points to a combination of continued domestic focus and international growth as being a winning recipe. ‘Bringing those two things together has been powerful for us. We’ve seen great traction in the Middle East and across some of our European platforms. But that has come off the back of having a really strong focus on growth in the UK,’ he says. 

The business Johnston inherited didn’t call for a radical overhaul. ‘We’ve been a great firm doing really good work for lots of great clients,’ Johnston concludes. ‘What we need to do is have that confidence to tell the market and to tell clients what we’re doing and what we’re capable of achieving.

 ‘The £1bn target isn’t just a great headline. It will create a business of scale, and with scale, I hope we will be a business with choices,’ Johnston says.

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Decarbonisation, Data, and DEI – Legal 500’s Asia Pacific Green Ambassadors look ahead to 2026

With the publication of Legal 500’s 2026 Asia Pacific Green Ambassadors, we spoke with some of our featured individuals for a roundup on how the sustainability landscape is expected to develop in the year ahead.

ESG reporting

Changes in the focus and process of ESG reporting will be key in the year ahead, suggests Laure de Panafieu of Linklaters in Singapore: ‘mental health and wellbeing is receiving increased media, regulatory and policymaker attention, making it a core “S” pillar within ESG’.

Listed companies across the region are recognising the importance of incorporating mental health frameworks into their sustainability reports, as this can help mitigate reputational, financial, and legal risks while building and competitive advantage. This is because corporate and legal talent is increasingly seeking out accountable DEI efforts.

De Panafieu also pointed toward the growing use of ‘data and technology to facilitate sustainability reporting’, as AI tools are well-placed to handle huge volumes of ESG data, monitor companies’ climate vulnerabilities and impacts, and map supply chain risk.

Digital infrastructure

2025 saw huge investments in data centre campuses, fibre and telecoms infrastructure, and chip foundries across the Asia Pacific region, with the digital infrastructure sector benefiting from increasingly efficient technologies and the availability of green and sustainable finance.

To James Orme at Milbank in Singapore, echoing global trends, ‘some developers in the region are now looking to create clean or less carbon-intensive behind-the-meter solutions to power data centres’.

Orme suggests that green projects are helping to address two related problems: ‘with negative press around the demands on national power grids, bringing your own clean energy offers a competitive advantage; and, with certain hyperscale customers’ carbon neutral targets, a renewable-powered data centre can be more attractive’.

Environmental law and biodiversity

As Anna White of Corrs Chambers Westgarth in Australia explores, ‘there is a growing appreciation from Australian companies of the interconnectedness of climate, biodiversity and water systems, and the need to adopt integrated approaches that address these challenges holistically in environmental management, policy and corporate strategy’.

Notably, carbon credits will serve as a key area of legal work. Australia’s efforts to align its carbon and biodiversity markets will be met by the impact of its new climate-related financial disclosure regime, which White suggests ‘will continue to enhance climate literacy across organisations and prompt companies to critically assess the role of carbon credits in their decarbonisation strategies’.

Investment funds

Despite a macroeconomic slowdown in ESG investments, Penelope Shen at Stephenson Harwood in Hong Kong identifies ongoing investor and market confidence. Notably, Shen points to how ESG investors, through loyalty to their funds, are helping to create a resilient market. Meanwhile, the Hong Kong SFC is committed to ‘gatekeeping against greenwashing and has continued to collaborate with industry stakeholders to enhance investor awareness and confidence in ESG products’.

Moreover, Shen highlights how ‘the Hong Kong government has reaffirmed its commitment to developing green and sustainable finance’, placing emphasis on the new energy, aviation, and maritime sectors, as well as impact investments. Legal teams can thus look ahead to crucial and pioneering work across fundraising, management, and deployment.

Sustainable finance

Despite some regions tending toward a simplification of sustainability regulation, Gilly Hutchinson at Linklaters in Hong Kong notes that ‘regulators in certain Asian jurisdictions have maintained a steady momentum towards developing their sustainable finance and disclosure frameworks’.

Indeed, Hutchinson anticipates ‘the continued rollout and finessing of sustainability disclosure regimes across Asia in 2026’, with jurisdictions working to integrate the ISSB standards into their domestic frameworks.

As 2026 progresses, legal teams can look to how sustainable finance best practices are being elaborated within their jurisdiction, helping to create workable green solutions that meet investor appetite and help pursue global climate goals.

 

More Green Ambassadors:

Asia Pacific 2026

Submissions are open for our UK, US and Europe Green Ambassadors:

How we select Green Ambassadors

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Skadden recruits former Freshfields global managing partner and Latham London KC

Skadden has made a pair of high-profile partner hires in just one day, building its offices in Brussels and London with hires in competition and disputes, respectively.

In Brussels, the firm has hired former Freshfields co-global managing partner and antitrust specialist Rafique Bachour.

The move comes after Bachour, who has spent over 25 years at Freshfields, recently stepped down from his role as one of three global managing partners at the firm.

He had held the position since 2021, working alongside the London-based Alan Mason and Germany corporate partner Rick van Aerssen, as well as senior partner Georgia Dawson.

When Freshfields reappointed Dawson to a second term last year, the firm said Bachour was stepping back from the leadership role ‘to focus on his market-leading client practice’.

During his career he has worked with clients including sovereign wealth funds and multinational corporations on antitrust and regulatory elements of M&A, joint venture and foreign investment deals.

He has recently been advising Canadian mining company Teck Resources on its $53bn merger with Anglo American, a deal which would create one of the world’s largest copper companies. That deal, on which Freshfields is working alongside elite US firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz, is expected to be approved in February of this year.

Bachour will join Skadden’s antitrust and competition team in Brussels, which currently holds a tier two ranking in Legal 500’s EMEA guide.

The team’s other key names include European practice head Ingrid Vandenborre and Bill Batchelor, both of whom are recognised as leading partners. Fellow Brussels partner Frederic Depoortere retired at the end of 2025.

Of his move, Bachour said in a statement: ‘Skadden’s global reach and standing in the market create an exceptional platform to help clients navigate issues across sectors and jurisdictions. I look forward to working with the firm’s outstanding lawyers worldwide as we support clients facing increasingly intricate regulatory, investigative and geopolitical challenges.’

Skadden executive partner Jeremy London added: ‘Rafique is a prominent and high-calibre antitrust and competition attorney with an exceptional blend of cross-border regulatory experience and strategic, business-oriented thinking.’

‘We have continued to grow in Brussels over the last few years, and his joining will further support our plans for the office and the wider global antitrust/competition Group,’ said London.

Freshfields’ global antitrust, competition and trade group is led by Alastair Chapman, who works alongside London head James Aitken. Key names in Brussels include Andreas von Bonin, who leads the antitrust group in the office, and Onno Brouwer, who jointly heads the firm’s global antitrust litigation group.

A spokesperson at Freshfields said of Bachour’s departure: ‘We wish Rafique all the best.’

Meanwhile, Skadden has also hired Sophie Lamb KC from Latham & Watkins’ London office.

Lamb joins the firm after nearly a decade at Latham, including time spent as global co-chair of the international arbitration practice. She also served as the UK’s representative on the ICC Court of Arbitration until 2022, and is recognised by Legal 500 in the Hall of Fame for international arbitration and as a leading partner in public international law.

She brings expertise acting for clients including major corporates, soverign states, and private equity houses before a range of tribunals and courts.

Her hire brings the firm’s total number of KCs to three, with Lamb joining Europe international litigation and arbitration group head Kate Jackson-McGill KC and Daniel Gal KC

Commenting on the hire, Skadden executive partner London said: ‘Sophie is an exciting addition to our market-leading International Arbitration & Litigation team, which we are continuing to invest in, particularly in the London market.

‘Her experience, deep international networks, and proven track record guiding high-value, cross-border matters further strengthen our ability to provide clients with world-class representation in complex, high-stakes disputes across jurisdictions.’

Lamb added: ‘Skadden’s global platform, its stellar reputation and breadth of experience provide an exceptional opportunity to further support clients navigating challenging international disputes. I look forward to collaborating with my new colleagues across the firm.’

A Latham spokesperson said: ‘We thank Sophie for her contributions to the firm and wish her all the best in her next endeavour.’

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Quinn Emanuel posts steady growth in London, with revenue hitting £227m

Richard East

Quinn Emanuel has reported revenue and profit growth in its London office for 2025, with revenue hitting a new high of £227.1m, and profit margin climbing to 68%, as the firm prepares for another busy year in the courts.

The firm’s London office today (13 January) reported revenue up 3% from £220.1m in 2024 to £227.1m, and profit up 7%, from £143.4m in 2024 to  £153.9m, with a profit margin of 68%, up from 65% in 2024.

London senior partner Richard East said: ‘We are pleased to report a very solid performance, matching our standout 2024 results but with improved profitability.  2025 was a fantastic year in which we presided over 11 high court trials, multiple appeals in both the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court and several major arbitrations. Following on from these significant successes, we look forward to sustaining our performance in 2026.’

Headcount figures for the London office remained stable, with a modest reshaping of the broader team.

As of 1 January 2026, the London office comprised 32 partners, unchanged from the previous year, counsel headcount rose by 5 to 12 in total, and associate numbers dipped slightly from 85 to 81.

Key lateral hires over the last year included international arbitration heavyweight and practice co-lead Andrew Savage, who joined from McDermott Will & Schulte in November.

The firm has continued to build into the new year, bringing over financial disputes and investigations partner William Charles from Millbank.

The firm has several major cases lined up for the year ahead. These include representing Aabar Holdings in a shareholder group action against natural resources titan Glencore in October, and acting for car manufactures Hyundai and Kia in the pan-NOx emissions group litigation in the High Court – one of the largest group proceedings ever brought in the UK.

The firm will also be representing two former Arcadia Petroleum executives in a damages claim against the company’s billionaire owner John Fredriksen, following their complete exoneration from a £250m oil trading fraud case in 2024, which the firm also advised them on. 

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Freshfields rebuilds German PE with Kirkland hire after four-partner exit to Latham

Freshfields has added four new partners to its private equity and M&A partnership in Germany and Austria as the firm looks to rebuild after the departure of four prominent partners in December, including the firm’s global co-head of M&A.

The additions come in the form of one lateral hire and three partner promotions. Freshfields has also announced that a further two partners already resident in the firm’s other German offices will now split their time to bolster the Munich office.

Private equity partner Florian Sippel (pictured) joins Freshfields’ Munich office from Kirkland & Ellis where he spent a year after completing two years as an associated partner at Germany-headquartered firm Noerr.

Sippel advises PE funds and investors with a specific focus on tech, e-commerce and software and has previously acted for clients such as Blackstone and Permira. Sippel is rejoining Freshfields after seven years there as an associate from 2014 to 2021.

Also in Munich, David Schwintowski has been promoted to the partnership and brings an exclusive focus on transactions in the insurance sector, acting on deals such as Vienna Insurance’s €1.4bn merger with Nürnberger .

Lukas Triechl has also been promoted to partner and will work out of both the Vienna and Munich offices where he will advise on data-driven projects and digital matters, with a focus on the automotive industry. He also advises PE and telecommunication companies on digital infrastructure transactions.

Finally, in Frankfurt, Carsten Bork, who advises PE houses on cross-border transactions in the infrastructure and energy sector, makes partner. Clients of Bork’s include CPP Investments, Brookfield and AXA IM.

‘We are strengthening our overall position in M&A and Private Equity and we increase our deep industry expertise in technology, insurance, and infrastructure,’ said Patrick Cichy, head of Freshfields corporate and M&A practice in Germany and Austria.

The hires come after the shock departures of private equity specialist Markus Paul, Freshfields’ global co-head of M&A Wessel Heukamp, Carten Haak and Verena Nosch, who all joined Latham & Watkins in December.

Paul and Heukamp had spent their entire legal careers at Freshfields and are highly regarded in the German private equity market.

In addition to the hire and promotions, Frankfurt partner Heiner Braun and Stephan Waldhausen, global co-head of the industrials sector located in Düsseldorf, will both spend half their time in Munich to further strengthen the office.

The hires and relocations mean that Freshfields’ Munich office now has over 90 lawyers, including 19 partners.

Braun advises PE clients like KKR, specialises in complex regulatory matters and, in 2024, led on DSV’s €14.3bn acquisition of Schenker.

Waldhausen brings similar credentials; his clients include Porsche SE, Siemens Energy and Deutsche Telekom and he has particular experience in takeovers as well as strong relationships with listed industrial and technology companies.

Global private capital practice group co-head Arend von Riegen said: ‘We are excellently positioned for the future to advise our private capital clients on all topics that are highly relevant to them. We rely on a cross-generational approach, trusting in both established names and emerging talents, all of whom we have trained ourselves – a proven hallmark of quality in the market.’

Trading places: Paul Hastings hires Cravath investigations chair as Paul Weiss private credit co-head departs

Paul Hastings has hired disputes heavyweight John Buretta (pictured) as co-chair of its litigation department, marking the firm’s fourth partner hire this month.

Buretta joins Paul Hastings’ New York office from Cravath, where he spent more than 12 years, including as chair of its investigations and regulatory enforcement practice.

He brings extensive experience advising clients including corporates, board of directors, and audit committees, as well as company owners, individual board members, and senior management figures, on a wide range of matters including investigations, regulatory enforcements, and civil proceedings.

Before his time at Cravath, Buretta spent 11 years at the Criminal Division of the US Department of Justice (DOJ), most recently as principal deputy assistant attorney general and chief of staff.

While at DOJ he worked on cases related to corporate fraud, money laundering and public corruption, among other crimes, and spent more than two and a half years as director of DOJ’s Deepwater Horizon Task Force.

Global managing partner at Paul Hastings, Sherrese Smith, said: ‘John is widely recognized as one of the best litigators of his generation – a powerhouse whose deep government roots and strategic mindset make him a formidable force for clients facing bet-the-company disputes.’

‘His arrival moves our already top-of-market litigation practice to another level and further demonstrates that Paul Hastings is a destination for elite talent,’ she added.

Also joining Paul Hastings in New York from Cravath was tax partner Andrew Davis, who spent ten years at the firm and made partner in 2021.

Davis brings experience advising on the tax elements of a range of M&A deals, including public-company transactions, PE deals and strategic combinations across industries including tech, manufacturing and financial services.

Paul Hastings has been aggressive in building its M&A practice in recent years, with notable US hires including Eric Schiele, who joined the firm last March as global M&A co-chair from Kirkland & Ellis, and who previously spent just under two decades at Cravath.

The firm hired a further two partners in Washington DC, bringing over two life science regulatory partners from Hogan Lovells: Lynn Mehler and Phil Katz.

Mehler joins as chair of Paul Hastings’ life sciences regulatory practice, having served 15 years at Hogan Lovells, latterly as global life sciences and health care industry co-head. She brings experience advising clients on FDA and US drug enforcement agency regulatory matters.

Meanwhile, Katz joins Paul Hastings after two decades at Hogan Lovells, where she built and led the firm’s pharmaceuticals and biotechnology regulatory practice group before Mehler became practice leader.

Paul Hastings chair Frank Lopez said: ‘The movement of a top-of-the market life sciences regulatory team is incredibly rare and we are grateful that Lynn and Phil share our vision for creating a premier full-service life sciences platform.’

Elsewhere, Latham & Watkins hired Sara Margolis to its complex commercial litigation practice in New York, bringing experience across high-stakes trials and complex disputes in federal and state courts.

Margolis joins following ten years at US litigation boutique MoloLamken, where she made partner in 2021.

Global chair of Latham’s complex commercial litigation practice, Steve Feldman, said in a statement: ‘As regulatory scrutiny intensifies and litigation in these sectors expands, her courtroom experience and proven trial instincts strengthen our roster of young, dynamic trial talent in New York.’

Meanwhile, Paul Weiss has seen its global co-chair of private credit and financial services Anastasia Peterson leave the firm, departing from the New York office to establish a Middle East-focused private capital and advisory platform.

Peterson spent three years at Paul Weiss, based primarily in New York with time also spent in London. She joined as a partner in January 2023, before becoming global co-chair of financial services in November 2023, and spent ten months in as global co-chair of private credit.

Her exit comes as she announces plans to build her own strategic capital and advisory platform ‘focused on structuring and mobilizing capital across the Middle East and other value-adjacent markets, with a core emphasis on private credit, structured finance, and cross-border platform development,’ according to her LinkedIn.

LB understands that her two co-chair roles will not be replaced, with partners Jarryd Anderson and Joe Glatt continuing as chairs of financial services and private credit, respectively.

Also in New York, Simpson Thacher has hired M&A partner Jared Wilner to lead its insurance transactional and regulatory team. He joins from Mayer Brown’s corporate and securities practice and global insurance industry group, where he was a partner for three years.

Fox Rothschild has hired Stephen Aschettino in New York as chair of its new fintech and digital assets practice and co-chair of its financial services industry group.

A fintech veteran, Aschettino joins from Steptoe & Johnson, where he spent two years as payments team leader. Prior to this, Aschettino helped lead and develop fintech teams at Foley & Lardner, Loeb & Loeb, and most recently Norton Rose Fulbright, where he spent three years as US head of fintech.

Also active was Morgan Lewis, with a pair of tax hires in its offices in New York and Miami.

The firm welcomed Daniel Hudson into its Miami private client and taxation practice from Florida business firm Berger Singerman, while in New York it hired Dentons managing associate Alexios Hadji as a partner in its tax practice. Hadji rejoins the firm after six months at Dentons.

Finally in New York, Clifford Chance has brought in Michal Netanyahu as a private equity partner. She joins from Freshfields, where she spent four years as counsel, advising private equity sponsors on cross-border M&A, leveraged buy-outs, joint ventures and restructurings among other matters.

On the West Coast, Arnold & Porter has made two real estate transactions hires as part of its strategic build-out in the region, bringing in partner Katherine Wax in Seattle and counsel Katie McHenry in Los Angeles.

Wax brings the total headcount to 35 lawyers and staff at the Seattle office Arnold & Porter opened last July with a raft of hires from K&L Gtes, including Seattle office head Pallavi Mehta Wahi, now chair of Western US strategic growth at A&P.

Meanwhile, MacHenry joins from K&L Gates, where she spent more than four years as a counsel.

A&P Western US strategic growth chair Wahi said in a statement: ‘With their deep understanding of the West Coast market, they will help drive our continued growth and ability to deliver sophisticated, results-oriented counsel in the region.’

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Exclusive: HSF Kramer hires former Mayer Brown Europe finance head in London lev fin play

Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer has brought Mayer Brown’s former head of European finance into its London office, building its leveraged finance offering in the City.

The firm has hired Stuart Brinkworth, who brings two decades of experience advising UK and international sponsors, bidding consortia, and lenders on cross-border transactions across a range of sectors, including financial services, technology, business services and sport.

He joins after almost eight years at Mayer Brown, where he was European head of leveraged finance until September. Before this he was London head of finance at Fried Frank, after joining from Hogan Lovells in 2015.

Kristen Roberts, HSF Kramer managing partner for finance and restructuring in the UK and EMEA, said: ‘Stuart is highly regarded for his commercial acumen, trusted client relationships and technical excellence. His arrival adds further bench strength to our leveraged finance and private capital offerings across our UK and EMEA platform, aligning with one of our strategic growth priorities. We warmly welcome Stuart to the firm.’

Brinkworth added: ‘The opportunities at Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer to cross-sell between practices, such as private equity and restructuring, and across the firm’s international network, create an exciting platform for me to build out my private equity-facing practice.’

Brinkworth’s recent mandates include advising Sullivan Street Partners on the financing of its acquisition of Senior Plc’s aircraft construction business last July, and advising Vitruvian Partners on the financing of its acquisition of rail tour operator Great Rail Journeys last May.

In addition to mid-market private equity-backed leveraged buyouts, Brinkworth also advises on management buyouts and buy-ins, public bids, and matters related to distressed situations.

Brinkworth was also an early adopter of unitranche loans, a hybrid structure that combines senior and subordinated debt, as a funding source in the leveraged finance market in Europe.

His hire comes after HSF Kramer in October hired a five-lawyer banking and finance team from BonelliErede in Milan, including partner Emanuela Da Rin.

In the last year, the firm also saw a trio of departures from its London private equity practice, with its head of international private equity in London, Eleanor Shanks, departing for Morrison Foerster in November.

Shanks’ move was preceded by the departure of two PE partners, Ambarish Dash and David D’Souza, who also left HSF Kramer for Morrison Foerster last May.

The firm currently has five PE partners in London, including John Taylor, who has acted for clients including Inflexion, Three Hills Capital and Carlyle.

A Mayer Brown spokesperson confirmed Brinkworth will be leaving the firm and said, ‘He leaves with our best wishes.’

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Weil and A&O Shearman lead on $260bn mining megadeal

Weil and A&O Shearman have secured lead advisory roles as Glencore and Rio Tinto enter preliminary merger talks that, if succesful, could create the world’s largest mining company.

Legal Business understands that Weil is advising Glencore, while A&O Shearman is representing Rio Tinto, as it explores options to acquire Glencore.

If the deal goes ahead, it would be one of the largest mergers on record for companies listed on the London Stock Exchange, with a combined enterprise value of $260bn.

Weil’s team is understood to be led by London office co-managing partner David Avery-Gee and corporate partner Sarah Flaherty.

Avery-Gee, who was at Linklaters for 20 years until his departure for Weil in 2020, has extensive experience working with Glencore, working with the mining company at both Linklaters and Weil.

His mandates at Linklaters include advising on Glencore’s sale of a 40% stake in Glencore Agricultural Products to the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board in 2016. Meanwhile, at Weil, has has advised on matters including Glencore’s 2023 sale of Cobar Management, owner of the Cobar copper mine in New South Wales, Australia, as well as advising Glencore Canada on its acquisition of lithium ion battery recycling company Li-Cycle, in a deal that completed last August.

Weil’s role advising Glencore will be seen as a coup for the US firm, given Glencore’s UK heritage and its historic links to UK law firms. The company’s headquarters is in London, and its primary listing is on the London Stock Exchange, with a secondary listing in Hong Kong.

A&O Shearman’s role for Rio Tinto also marks a major corporate mandate for the firm.

In the past, the mining giant has often relied on Linklaters for M&A support. Most recently, Linklaters advised Rio Tinto on its $6.7bn acquisition of Arcadium Lithium, which completed in March 2025, with a transatlantic team of partners from the firm’s New York and London offices.

Glencore and Rio Tinto have engaged in merger talks before, most recently in 2024, when the discussions fell through due to differences over culture, valuation, leadership and operations.

On the resumed talks, Glencore confirmed in a press release that it is in ‘preliminary discussions’ with Rio Tinto concerning ‘a possible combination of some or all of their businesses, which could include an all-share merger between Rio Tinto and Glencore.’

It continued: ‘The parties’ current expectation is that any merger transaction would be effected through the acquisition of Glencore by Rio Tinto by way of a Court-sanctioned scheme of arrangement.’

Rio Tinto also confirmed the discussions in a press release.

Rio Tinto has until 5 February to either announce a firm intention to make an offer to acquire Glencore or confirm that it does not intend to make an offer.

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Hogan Lovells Cadwalader: the data behind the biggest ever law firm merger

The proposed merger of Hogan Lovells and Cadwalader is set to bring together two firms with starkly contrasting recent histories. A closer examination of the data highlights both the rationale for the deal and the story behind how they got to this point.

Patience over pace

Hogan Lovells is already the product of one of the biggest ever law firm mergers – the 2010 combination of UK firm Lovells and Washington DC’s Hogan & Hartson, which created a $1.66bn firm.  While the merged firm’s subsequent growth has not always been spectacular – with only two years of double-digit growth since the tie-up – over the last 15 years, total turnover has climbed by a more than respectable 78% to almost $3bn in 2024.

Indeed, looking at the 10 biggest firms in the Global 100 in 2011, Hogan Lovells has seen the fifth biggest increase in revenue over the years that followed, even if this 78% growth has been dwarfed by the likes of Latham & Watkins and Kirkland & Ellis at 225% and 400% respectively over the same period.

In contrast, Cadwalader has found consistent growth harder to achieve. Its revenues remained broadly stagnant at around $450m between 2011 and 2020, before a post-Covid bump to $638m, meaning its turnover has climbed by 42% since 2011.

Revenues: a comparison of Cadwalader and Hogan Lovells since 2011

Profit and loss

Although revenue growth may have been relatively slow and steady, Hogan Lovells has seen profit per equity partner rise more sharply since the 2010 merger, up 163% from $1.2m (£729,000) to $3.1m (£2.4m).

And while Cadwalader’s 2024 PEP is higher at $3.7m, that figure masks a choppier track record over the same period, with profits falling in as many years as they have risen since 2011, swinging from a low of $2.06m in 2015 to a high of $4.38m in 2021.

This fluctuation is a stark contrast to Hogan Lovells, which has seen PEP tick up almost every year over the same period.

PEP: a comparison of Cadwalader and Hogan Lovells since 2011

What Cads gives Hogan in New York

Given its legacy, Hogan Lovells has a much larger global footprint, with more than 300 Legal 500 practice rankings across the UK, US, Latam, Europe, APAC and the Middle East, compared to just 32 rankings for Cadwalader in the US and London. Hogan Lovells also has almost 300 ranked partners around the world, with the strongest presence in disputes (20) and real estate (16).

In the US, where Hogan Lovells has 12 offices, the firm has 41 rankings, including top-tier practices in healthcare, cyber law and government relations.

However, what the merger offers Hogan Lovells in New York can’t be underestimated. The transatlantic firm has long sought to bulk up in Manhattan and, in Cadwalader, it gains tier 1 practices for securitisation and derivatives & structured products, as well as tax: financial products, a practice with a heavy focus on complex financial restructuring.

Cadwalader also has tier 2 rankings for commercial lending: advice to bank lenders, municipal restructuring and shareholder activism: advice to shareholders, three areas in which Hogan Lovells is unranked.

Cadwalader’s key names for structured finance in the US

Derivatives and structured products
Lary Stromfeld, management committee member, Legal 500 Hall of Fame
Brian Foster, co-head of fund finance, Legal 500 leading partner
Ivan Loncar, co-chair of financial services, Legal 500 leading partner

Securitisation

Michael Gambro, co-chair of capital markets, Legal 500 Hall of Fame
Neil Weidner, partner, Legal 500 Hall of Fame

Tax: financial products
Linda Swartz, tax chair, Legal 500 leading partner
Mark Howe, partner, Legal 500 leading partner

Why it’s the biggest merger of all-time

Hogan Lovells Cadwalader has been billed as the largest law firm combination in history and, based on revenues at the time of announcement, it just pips A&O Shearman – although it’s a very close call.

When the A&O Shearman merger was announced, the firms said in a statement that their combined revenue would be around $3.4bn compared with Hogan Lovells Cadwalader’s equivalent figure of $3.7bn.

However, confirmed revenues for their final years as separate firms show the legacy A&O and Shearman turnover added up to $3.575bn, going on to rise to $3.65bn for the first year of existence – far closer to the most recently announced mega-merger.

Hogan Lovells is also marginally larger than A&O Shearman on lawyer headcount, with a combined 3,130 lawyers in 2025, based on Global 100 figures, narrowly ahead of A&O Shearman’s 3,105.

Where do the two firms gain client plaudits?

In addition to practice rankings, Legal 500 data also offers insight into what clients think about their law firms. While Cadwalader is highly regarded in structured finance and funds, Hogan Lovells scores particularly highly in areas such as commercial litigation, civil fraud and pensions disputes.

Crisis management, communication and ‘putting the fish on the table’ – SIG Group CLO Philippe Huber

After several years in private practice with leading Swiss firm Bär & Karrer, Philippe Huber went in-house with Transocean just before the company’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig was involved in a major environmental disaster. Building on the experience he gained during this crisis and other major projects, his career went from strength to strength, and he is now chief legal officer and company secretary of Switzerland-headquartered packaging giant SIG.

You have had a very multicultural academic and professional journey, and you now lead a highly cross-regional team. What does that diversity of backgrounds and cultures really bring to the table?

First and foremost, multiple viewpoints and perspectives, which allow for a more differentiated approach to issues. This is not only an advantage when assessing risks, particularly to avoid blind spots. It also proves essential to effectively shaping culture.

To give you an example, having team members with different backgrounds involved in designing and delivering compliance training is particularly valuable. Greater cultural awareness and sensitivity allow us to tailor our programmes more effectively to the needs of our global workforce.

Issues need to be addressed early, candidly and constructively – to “put the fish on the table”

From a broader business perspective, having teams with diverse backgrounds provides a significant advantage, particularly in understanding the needs of our customers and the environment in which we operate.

That said, building and working with diverse legal teams does come with challenges. Diversity can make it more difficult to achieve alignment and find common ground within teams. However, the solutions developed are often more robust and better accepted, precisely because multiple voices have contributed to the process.

What practices have you found most effective for building cohesion and trust across regions and cultures within your team?

For me, open and transparent communication is fundamental to building trust and cohesion across regions and cultures. Issues need to be addressed early, candidly and constructively – to “put the fish on the table” (as per an expression originating from Sicily) – rather than letting problems or conflicts linger. I believe this is key to effective leadership, particularly in diverse, geographically dispersed teams.

In my role, this translates into regularly bringing the whole team together. We use these meetings to exchange insights and best practices, discuss shared challenges, and develop common approaches and solutions.

Beyond these scheduled meetings, I actively encourage peer-to-peer interaction in global projects and day-to-day work. Peer coaching is another effective tool to support one another and to grow as a team across regions and cultures.

As part of your in-house career, you played a central role during the Deepwater Horizon crisis and in leading a proxy fight against a US shareholder activist. What leadership principles do you rely on during intense periods, and which of them remain most relevant in today’s increasingly volatile corporate environment when managing crisis?

While the Deepwater Horizon incident and the proxy fight against a US shareholder activist were very different in nature, there are leadership principles that apply to virtually any crisis.

The first and perhaps most important principle is to stay calm. This sounds simple, but when confronted with a burning platform or “barbarians at the gate”, it is anything but. Remaining calm is essential to being able to think clearly, take sound decisions, and provide stability to the organisation.

Preparation also plays a critical role. While it is impossible to anticipate every crisis scenario, companies should regularly perform risk and vulnerability assessments and prepare accordingly. This includes drawing up a playbook and identifying a core crisis team, composed of key internal people and external advisers with all relevant functions represented. Having a playbook to fall back on in the first hours of a crisis is invaluable, although regularly reassessing the situation and adapting to developments is equally important.

Another critical principle is disciplined communication. It is essential that the organisation speaks with one voice, both externally and internally. In a crisis, defining a single spokesperson becomes key. Communication requires careful handling, as the potentially lasting impact on a company’s reputation is often decided in the court of public opinion long before legal proceedings are concluded.

Two further principles are worth mentioning. First, business continuity must be ensured. Even in a serious crisis, day-to-day operations cannot be neglected. This often requires a small, focused crisis team to manage the situation while the wider organisation continues to operate as smoothly as possible. Second, effective crisis leadership requires strong energy management. Crises are marathons, not sprints, and leaders must manage their own and their teams’ stamina over prolonged periods.

Ultimately, crisis leadership comes down to preparation, clarity, discipline and resilience.

Nowadays, “thinking outside the box” seems to be part of every GC’s playbook. What does it mean for you?

As lawyers, we are trained to quickly analyse the facts, apply the rules and make reasonable legal judgements. While these are essential skills, they carry the risk of thinking one-dimensionally and remaining confined within the “box of legal thinking”. When dealing with complex business challenges, I try to take a deliberate step back and look beyond the obvious solution.

Reframing an issue can help to better understand the interests and pressure points of the other party or parties. Looking for solutions that address their concerns without undermining my own core interests fundamentally changes the dynamic. This often results in outcomes that are not only legally sound, but also commercially sensible.

Particularly when facing challenges with a customer, success is not about winning a legal argument but about finding a mutually satisfactory solution that allows the business relationship to continue and grow. Unconventional and innovative thinking can lead to genuine win-win outcomes that strengthen trust and create value beyond the immediate issue.

Looking back at your career from private practice through to executive leadership, what advice would you give young lawyers aiming for senior in-house roles?

First, establish yourself as a business partner, not just an adviser. In private practice, the job is usually done with providing the advice. In-house, that is only the starting point. To succeed, you must be seen as someone who not only identifies risks but also proposes pragmatic, commercially relevant solutions. Understanding and speaking the language of the business is essential. When you consistently deliver value, you earn credibility and a genuine seat at the table.

Second, be curious. We are operating in a fast-changing environment, turbocharged by AI. Younger lawyers should ask themselves what their role might look like in the future, where they can add value, and how they can have an impact. Curiosity, openness and exploration create access to opportunities.

Third, embrace change and seize opportunities. Challenging situations and crises often provide the greatest opportunities to show leadership. Lawyers are trained to stay calm, analyse complexity quickly and bring structure to uncertainty. These skills position us well to lead through change.

Rather than backing away from challenges, young lawyers should step forward, take ownership and aim to make a lasting impact.

US firms top UK and global rankings in record year for M&A megadeals

US firms dominated the M&A rankings in 2025, according to the latest data from the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG), with Kirkland & Ellis and Latham & Watkins claiming the top spots for UK and global deals by value.

With 2025 the biggest year for global M&A in four years, and partners in London gearing up for a busy 2026 despite geopolitical instability, the LSEG data highlights the extent to which a small group of elite US players are eclipsing rivals on both sides of the Atlantic.

LSEG’s data tracked $4.6trn of deal activity globally throughout 2025 – a 49% increase on 2024, despite the volume of transactions dipping by 3% to 52,000, which represents a five-year low in deal numbers. Included in the haul were 68 megadeals worth more than $10bn apiece – double the number in 2024 and the strongest year for megadeals on record.

Global growth

LSEG Top Principal Advisers full-year 2025 by deal value

Firm Rank (last year) Total deal value Number of deals
Kirkland & Ellis 1 (1) $830bn 745
Latham & Watkins 2 (2) $719.7bn 786
Wachtell 3 (7) $652.9bn 108
Skadden 4 (3) $606.3bn 231
Freshfields 5 (5) $339.4bn 237
Cleary 6 (6) $322.3bn 117
Paul Weiss 7 (4) $318.8bn 257
Cravath 8 (15) $315.6bn 58
Gibson Dunn 9 (11) $280.8bn 269
Simpson Thacher 10 (8) $280.1bn 225

Deal activity increased across the Americas, EMEA and APAC last year, but with US target M&A accounting for half of all deal making, the LSEG adviser rankings demonstrate the growing involvement of US firms.

Despite this, a handful of UK-origin firms claimed spots in the top principal adviser list globally, with Freshfields once again the top-performing non-US firm, working on 237 deals worth $339.4bn to hold onto its fifth place spot from last year’s rankings.

Freshfields was joined in the top 20 principal adviser value table by Clifford Chance, A&O Shearman, and Linklaters, in 12th, 15th, and 20th place respectively.

Kirkland retained its position at the head of the global value table – taking a principal adviser role on 745 deals worth a total of $829.9bn in 2025, with Latham holding onto second place after managing 786 transactions worth $719.7bn.

Both firms won roles on some of the biggest announced deals of the year, with Latham advising Paramount on its $103.56bn joint hostile bid for Warner Bros Discovery (WBD). The firm also served as primary counsel to Silver Lake  on the acquisition of EA Sports by a consortium comprising Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), Silver Lake and Affinity for $49bn.

Kirkland meanwhile has been advising on Kimberly-Clark’s $50.62bn acquisition of Tylenol manufacturer Kenvue, as well as advising the consortium on the EA Sports deal.

Fellow US firms scoring well in the global primary adviser rankings include Wachtell advising on 108 deals worth $652.8bn to take third place and Skadden in fourth place with roles on 231 deals worth $606.3bn.

Other US firms in the top 10 include Cleary, Paul Weiss, Cravath, Gibson Dunn and Simpson Thacher.

Both Wachtell and Skadden have also been involved in the WBD deals, with Skadden working for Netflix on its $99.1bn bid, and Wachtell acting for WBD throughout.

As the only non-US firm in the top 10 global value table, Freshfields’ position as a serious M&A player in the US was secured through roles on a number of large mandates. Other UK firms seeing a significant boost in their position in the rankings include Clifford Chance and A&O Shearman, which climbed from 17th place to 12th and 23rd to 15th respectively.

Commenting on deal activity in 2025, Kate Cooper, a London M&A partner at Freshfields, described 2025 as ‘a year of two halves,’ following tumultuous policy decisions in the US at the start of 2025.

‘We saw boards feeling quite uncertain around that time about making commitments, either towards growth in the US or away from or to diversify into different areas or geographies. And that was quite challenging, I think, for most sectors to navigate through.’

She added: ‘The second half of the year, we’ve definitely seen more activity. I think right now, there’s probably quite a few processes that are beginning to ramp up with a view of next year in the first half.’

Looking at global deal activity by volume, Goodwin Procter leads the pack, working on 945 announced deals in 2025, totalling $123.6bn. This pushed DLA Piper into second place, with roles on 804 transactions worth $67.6bn. Latham came third by deal volume globally, closely followed by Kirkland, with Cooley rounding out the top five with roles on 557 deals reaching $108.6bn in value.

M&A in the UK, Europe and Asia-Pacific

LSEG Top Legal Advisers full-year 2025 – any UK involvement by deal value

Firm Rank (last year) Total deal value Number of deals
Latham & Watkins 1 (1) $86.3bn 145
Kirkland & Ellis 2 (6) $81.7bn 85
Linklaters 3 (3) $78.2bn 65
Freshfields 4 (5) $63.8bn 66
Clifford Chance 5 (12) $54bn 68
White & Case 6 (20) $53.6bn 77
Slaughter and May 7 (2) $52.9bn 50
A&O Shearman 8 (14) $47.9bn 85
Debevoise & Plimpton 9 (16) $47.9bn 21
Simpson Thacher 10 (22) $36bn 39

Looking at the UK and Europe, US firms were similarly dominant in the value rankings, with Latham coming top in the UK and second in EMEA by deal value, working on 145 deals worth $86.3bn in the UK and 306 deals in EMEA worth $200.46bn.

Kirkland placed second in the UK, working on $81.7bn worth of deals – this reflects a significant jump on 2024 when it came sixth by value.

Magic circle firms make up the rest of the UK top five, with Linklaters taking third place after handling 65 deals worth $78.2bn, followed by Freshfields, with 66 deals worth $63.8bn and Clifford Chance, which worked on 68 transactions worth $54bn.

Charlie Turner, a Linklaters corporate partner who advised on the $9.2bn Magnum Ice Cream company spin out from Unilever and IPO, predicts that there will be more carveouts in 2026.

‘I think we’re going to see more companies reviewing their businesses and considering carveouts and divestments, as they continue to drive value through the disposal of non-core assets,’ he said.

He added: ‘Carveouts can be a good news story. Companies divest themselves of non-core businesses to allow them to become more streamlined and focused, helping to support and drive greater performance in the remaining business whilst generating returns for shareholders or reinvestment. For a buyer, the carved-out business can offer real opportunity to create value. It can be win-win.’

Over at White & Case, which came sixth in the UK rankings, Patrick Sarch said: ‘We’ve seen more competitive situations in 2024 and 2025 than in any year since 2016, pointing to a sustained period of heightened competition between bidders.’

Across Europe, Freshfields worked on the highest value of deals, advising on 190 transactions totalling $247.58bn.

Latham is the second best performer in the region, with A&O Shearman and Clifford Chance featuring in third and fourth respectively, and Kirkland taking the fifth spot.

Meanwhile in APAC, Linklaters is the top performing British firm, placing second on the highest valued deals announced in the region last year. Acting on 50 transactions valued at $71.7bn, Linklaters’ performance is superseded only by Hong Kong-headquartered King & Wood Mallesons, which worked on 149 deals totalling $98.88bn.

HSF Kramer and Clifford Chance also made it into the top 10 in the APAC rankings, placing sixth and tenth respectively.

In the latter end of the table, Kirkland placed 13th, Ashurst, soon to be merging with US firm Perkins Coie, jumped to 17th from 40th, and Freshfields placed 20th.

Latham was just outside the top 20 in APAC, ranked 22nd – down from first in 2024.

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LSEG Top Legal Advisers full-year 2025 – any European involvement by deal value

Firm Rank (last year) Total deal value Number of deals
Freshfields 1 (1) $247.6bn 190
Latham & Watkins 2 (2) $200.5bn 306
A&O Shearman 3 (11) $186.4bn 238
Clifford Chance 4 (10) $153.5bn 220
Kirkland & Ellis 5 (5) $151.6bn 162
Skadden 6 (4) $136.5bn 97
Linklaters 7 (3) $126.4bn 192
Sullivan & Cromwell 8 (7) $116.7bn 55
White & Case 9 (6) $114.5bn 256
Cleary 10 (8) $93.8bn 74

‘We must show our value beyond contracts and advice’ - Nestlé’s MENA GC on taking a seat at the top table

Vera Kolesnik, general counsel and compliance officer for Nestlé’s Middle East and North Africa business, on major MENA projects, thriving during instability and how legal teams can demonstrate their value as a business partner

What are some of the key projects on the horizon for you and your team?  

I have been supporting the construction of the first Nestlé food factory in Saudi Arabia, with an estimated investment of 270 million riyals (£54m). The project is set to open in 2026, and is part of the nearly $1.9bn investment that we announced in 2022.  

Nestlé’s MENA legal and compliance team has also been involved in establishing the legal framework for the partnership with Dubai AI Campus, which aims to develop an AI tool to anticipate consumer trends and shape the future of the food and beverage industry.  

The development and implementation of an anti-counterfeit strategy for the MENA region has been another key operation. The primary focus has shifted from seizing counterfeit goods in the market to identifying and disrupting the sources, such as manufacturing hubs or storage warehouses of counterfeit foods, to interrupt illicit supply lines.  

I am constantly looking to streamline the legal function to reduce non-strategic legal work and enhance efficiency, by moving tactical and low-value adding operations from the regional legal team to Nestlé business service centre. I am also continuing to grow the maturity of our compliance programme, with a roll-out of anti-money laundering and anti-bribery and anti-corruption policies. 

How do you approach managing legal aspects during periods of instability or crises, and how does your legal strategy align with the broader business strategy to ensure the organisation’s resilience? 

Periods of instability and crisis are undoubtedly challenging, but they also highlight the critical role of legal in supporting the business. During such times, the legal team can demonstrate its value as a business partner, providing valuable and practical solutions, and facilitating informed decision-making for business teams.  

This has allowed our lawyers to take a well-deserved seat at the management table

Today, lawyers are expected to set standards for ethics, compliance, and values, making them vital to the organisations and their culture. This is particularly important in turbulent times.  

Aligning legal strategies with business objectives is essential. Understanding both short and long-term goals helps us integrate with business teams, participate in decision-making, and communicate how legal strategies support broader achievements. We must show our value beyond contracts and advice by being proactive partners, and this has allowed our lawyers to take a well-deserved seat at the management table across all clusters of the MENA region.  

What do you think are the most important attributes for a modern in-house counsel to possess?  

Building a future-ready in-house team is a central element of my legal strategy. As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly integrated into our workflows, the competencies required within in-house legal teams are evolving. While digital proficiency will be essential moving forward, ultimate legal judgement will continue to remain with legal professionals. Routine legal analytics will transition toward client-focused legal advisory, emphasising strategic and tailored decision support.  

How can general counsel foster a corporate culture that supports ESG principles and compliance across all levels of the organisation?  

Effective legal departments are actively involved in their company’s ESG agendas and collaborate with business teams. Lawyers increasingly contribute to ESG-related activities, which is an expanding area for legal professionals. Both regulatory and non-regulatory frameworks apply, requiring traditional legal expertise as well as new knowledge.  

Sustainability projects are becoming more complex, involving participants from various sectors such as private enterprises, government bodies, municipalities, and NGOs. Legal professionals must develop new models that address this complexity.  

Specific technical expertise is also necessary, including areas like circular economy, recycling, regeneration, and emissions, as these components are now integrated into standard business practices.

In the MENA region, we are particularly active in extended producer responsibility regulations and waste management policy discussions.

As we progress towards transforming our packaging material to be designed for recycling – to support our ambition that none of Nestlé’s packaging, including plastics, ends up in landfill or as litter – we play an active role in regulatory discussions by engaging with government and industry associations to advance the roadmap on the regulations.  

Nestlé’s responsible sourcing core requirements help us apply global standards for human rights and ethical business practices throughout our supply chain. These include the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, OECD Guidelines, the International Bill of Human Rights, and ILO’s Fundamental Principles. They support other Nestlé strategies like our human rights framework and roadmap, our net zero roadmap and our agriculture framework.

Our goal is to consistently apply these requirements across our supply chain to improve how products are made, positively impacting people, nature, and the climate, and laying the groundwork for regenerative food systems at scale.

Revolving Doors: Quinn poaches Milbank partner as S&C adds to City structured finance team

Litigation giant Quinn Emanuel has hired financial disputes and investigations specialist William Charles from Milbank, where he spent 11 years, making partner in 2020.

Charles represents clients ranging from hedge funds to energy firms and last year defended an investment vehicle for a FTSE-100 affiliated fund in a high-profile case.

‘I have enormous respect for Quinn Emanuel … Its unwavering focus on business disputes and investigations, and position as a global powerhouse in these areas, made this an opportunity I simply had to take,’ Charles said.

His arrival takes Quinn’s London partner count to 32, after the firm hired McDermott Will & Schulte arbitration co-head Andrew Savage in November.

Elsewhere, Sullivan & Cromwell has hired Patrick Clancy as counsel within its derivatives and structured products team.

Clancy previously worked as a partner at legacy Shearman & Sterling, but since the firm’s merger with Allen & Overy in 2024, he has been working as a consultant for Peerpoint, A&O Shearman’s flexible resourcing business.

He is the second former Shearman partner to move to S&C in the last year, following financial services and regulatory partner Barney Reynolds in June 2025.

On Clancy’s move, Reynolds said: ‘I have worked with Patrick for many years. He is one of the leading experts in his field, especially on the most innovative structured finance transactions.’

Hogan Lovells has added David Hansom to its global regulatory and IP practice as a partner.

Hansom, who will focus on guiding clients through government contracts and procurement, joins from Clyde & Co where he led the firm’s procurement team as well as co-heading the global education sector.

‘David’s arrival strengthens our ability to advise in the ever-evolving area of public procurement and government contracts both in the UK and beyond, at a time when governments are increasingly looking to the private sector to help deliver their policies,’ said Charles Brasted, deputy practice leader of global regulatory and IP.

Katten has bolstered its London restructuring practice with a double hire. James Davison joins as a partner from DLA Piper, where he led the restructuring and insolvency team. He brings experience across both debtor and creditor-side work, including leading cross-border restructurings across a range of sectors.

He is joined by Victoria Procter, who joins as a counsel, also from DLA Piper. Procter’s focus is on non-contentious financial and corporate restructuring across insolvency practitioners, clearing banks and other financial institutions.

The pair worked together on a number of complex mandates at DLA Piper and bring experience across a broad spectrum of sectors.

Pinsent Masons has hired former Travers Smith pensions head Susie Daykin, who focuses on trustee advisory and pension risk transfer matters.

She follows fellow pensions partner Dan Naylor, who made the move to Pinsents last September.

The firm also added to its litigation team with the hire of Jessica Wicker from UK-based merchant banking group Close Brothers, where she spent just under four years and was head of legal, litigation.

Global labour and employment partner Katherine Gibson has joined Morgan Lewis from DLA Piper, where she spent 12 years. Gibson’s practice includes employment litigation, restrictive covenants and data issues across domestic and international employers.

Akin has bolstered its tax practice with the addition of Sam Riesenberg, who joins in London and adds capabilities in sovereign and asset management across the UK and EMEA, with US tax advice in the UK becoming increasingly important for these clients.

He moves from Mayer Brown after just under two years, and prior to this he spent twelve years at KPMG advising on US and international tax matters from London.

Goodwin has hired Colm Murphy from Cooley in the firm’s life sciences team to build its European patent prosecution practice. Murphy brings three decades of experience advising on IP matters in life sciences across biotech, pharma and medical device patents.

US firm Michelman Robinson continues to grow the London office it launched last autumn with its hire of Harry Dimoulis as a partner in its commercial and business litigation practice.

Dimoulis joins from Linklaters, where he was a senior associate, acting on shareholder disputes, capital market litigation and cross border litigation.

In Leeds, Shoosmiths has hired Tim Pickworth as a litigation and regulatory compliance partner, joining from DAC Beachcroft where he launched and led the firm’s Leeds disputes team for five years.

HFW has also added to its disputes practice with the addition of Vanessa Liborio, who joins in Geneva from Orrick, having previously been a partner at Akin.

HFW Geneva office head Michael Buisset said: ‘Vanessa is one of Switzerland’s top international arbitration experts, with a proven track record in high-value, cross-border disputes, and deep relationships across the Swiss, European, and Middle Eastern markets.’

Also in Geneva, Charles Russell Speechlys has hired Luca Beffa as a partner its litigation and dispute resolution division. Beffa joins from Baker McKenzie, where he was co-head of the disputes team.

In Dubai, White & Case has hired Ian Bevan into its global M&A practice and real estate group.

Bevan joins White & Case’s Abu Dhabi office from A&O Shearman, where he spent over two decades, including as head of Middle East real estate and hospitality. His practice focuses on cross-border real estate funds, property financing and joint ventures.

Also in the Middle East, Akin has hired disputes partner Shane Jury from Ashurst in Dubai, bolstering the firm’s offering in complex litigation relating to shareholder, joint venture and M&A matters.

Before joining Ashurst in 2024, Jury spent just over three years as a partner in Addleshaw Goddard’s Middle East disputes team.

DLA Piper has hired Melusi Dlamini into its Johannesburg office to join its international finance practice.

Dlamini qualified in England and spent ten years at Norton Rose Fulbright, where he made partner in 2024. He brings experience advising sponsors and lenders on large-scale infrastructure projects such as data centres.

In Paris, Benjamin Marché has joined Eversheds Sutherland to head its banking and finance offering.

Marché moves from Squire Patton Boggs after joining in April 2022 as a partner from Shearman & Sterling, where he was a senior associate. His practice focuses on LBO acquisition finance, infrastructure and real estate financing.

Also in the French capital, BCLP has hired Vincent Trevisani as a partner into its energy, environment and infrastructure team. He joins after seven years at Ashurst, where he worked on M&A and project development matters in the energy and infrastructure sectors.

Colin Rice has joined Jones Day as a partner in Singapore from NRF. Rice moves into the financial markets practice, and brings extensive experience advising retail banks and funds on a broad range of financial market transactions, with particular focus on derivatives and structured products.

Finally, Simmons & Simmons has hired ten partners across its offices in the UK, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.

The partners joining Simmons are:

  • Oliver Wicker, London, structured finance and derivatives, joins from Slaughters
  • Henry Bennett-Gough, London, tax, joins from PwC
  • Mark Chivers, London, corporate, joins from The Takeover Panel
  • Ali Fagan, London, dispute resolution, construction, joins from DLA Piper
  • Emmanuel-Frédéric Henrion, Luxembourg, funds, joins from Clifford Chance
  • Ermine Bolot-Massé, Paris, corporate, joins from Dechert
  • Hannah Shipley, Dubai, tax, joins from DLA Piper
  • Louise Dobbyn, Dublin, financial services regulation, joins from Matheson
  • Michelle Phang, Singapore, corporate, joins from Ashurst
  • Stefan Nerinckx, Brussels, employment, joins from Fieldfisher

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Why Wise is heading to the US – Jessica Winter on listings, leadership and working in fintech

Earlier this year, UK fintech Wise announced plans to switch its primary listing from the UK to the US, with the planned move coming only four years after the company made its debut on the London Stock Exchange.

Jessica Winter, chief legal officer at Wise, oversaw the company’s first listing and is enthusiastic about the prospect of expanding in the US, albeit with the hope of a smoother process this time, having had to work on the London IPO entirely remotely during the global pandemic.

‘We had to do the whole thing from our bedrooms, because it was during the pandemic, end to end. It’s a testament to the people involved. We managed to build and forge new relationships, despite doing everything remotely.’

Wise was the first-ever tech direct listing in the UK, meaning that rather than having the stock price determined during the bookbuilding process, price discovery occurred on the day of listing, as shareholders sold to public buyers.

‘We were the first direct listing of a technology company in the UK, and we thought that was the most transparent way of coming to market. One of our core pillars is transparency. So rather than having the price decided before the day, the price was decided live on listing day.’

‘We had to do the whole thing from our bedrooms, because it was during the pandemic, end to end. It’s a testament to the people involved. We managed to build and forge new relationships, despite doing everything remotely.’

While the direct route was riskier, the rewards were high. After the first full day of trading, the company hit a nearly £8.75bn valuation.

Now, four years later, Wise has confirmed plans to move its primary listing to the US, in a bid to tap into new investment opportunities, while also maintaining a secondary listing in London.

‘We had to think long-term about what works best for Wise, and we had heard from our owners about liquidity challenges over the years. It was a combination of factors: the US being such a large capital market, but also the biggest opportunity in the world for our products today. Those factors combined helped us form that decision.’

News of the planned move came at a difficult time for the London Stock Exchange. Dealogic reported the weakest listing figures in three decades for the first half of 2025, while there has been countless press coverage about the decline of London’s position.

Winter though is emphatic about the importance of keeping a listing in London: ‘We are still demonstrating our commitment to the UK. We are still hiring here; over a fifth of our employee base is in London, and we will stay.’

‘We don’t confine decision-making to any one group of people; we try to empower as many Wisers to make decisions as possible’

Winter and her team are heavily involved in the listing process, and not just the legal and functional aspects.

‘We are inherently very inclusive at Wise, and we don’t think of ourselves as super hierarchical. We don’t confine decision-making to any one group of people; we try to empower as many Wisers to make decisions as possible. I encourage my team and myself to think of ourselves not just as the lawyers in the room, but the smart problem solvers in the room.’

Winter herself is well-placed to offer guidance, not only from her experience of the 2021 listing but also from the seven and a half years she previously spent in the corporate department at legacy Herbert Smith Freehills, where she kicked off her lifelong aspiration to work in law.

Winter tells LB that she has wanted to be a lawyer since she was three years old. ‘My grandmother was a lawyer, and I found that very inspiring. I would follow her around the house and take cast-off drafts of her legal documents and pretend they were mine.’

Growing up in the US, Winter studied liberal arts at Yale, before going on to take a master’s in Oxford and another at Stanford Law School as she moved to turn her aspiration into reality.

While she was passionate about the academic aspect of law, Winter found further satisfaction once she began working. ‘What I loved about being a lawyer was really crystallised after I started practising law,’ she says.

‘Some of the biggest lessons you learn in your career are from perceived failures’

Joining legacy Herbert Smith in 2010, she cites the successful listings of Just Eat and AIB as career highlights, while the unsuccessful Prudential takeover of AIA and, a year later, the failed G4S takeover of ISS, are up there with some of her career challenges.

‘Some of the biggest lessons you learn in your career are from perceived failures. These were two really big M&A transactions that didn’t end up happening. I learned so many lessons about the power and importance of communication. If you have conviction about a merger or a proposed transaction, you have to take the time to explain it to your stakeholders, to your employees, to your customers, to your shareholders and that helps to build a consensus on whether or not the deal actually happens.’

On how she handles disappointments like these, her advice is simple: ‘Eyes forward.’

At the beginning of 2018, Winter decided to take a position in-house at the insurance and asset management company Prudential, driven by the desire to gain a deeper understanding of the clients she was working for.

‘As a corporate lawyer, you already have privileged access into whichever company or industry you’re working for on a particular deal. And it stoked this curiosity in me, of wanting to get much closer to a company over a longer period of time than the typical six-month time horizon for a corporate transaction.’

After a brief stint at Prudential, she joined Wise in 2019 as head of corporate and has remained at the company ever since.

While still a fairly young company, Wise has gone from strength-to-strength since its inception in 2011, and Winter, a happy customer of the product, was keen to work for a tech company.

‘I saw the potential of Wise more than any potential pitfalls’

‘Even by the time I joined, we were a profitable company, still private, but they had figured out a way to grow really quickly while being financially sustainable. And that was really attractive. I saw the potential of Wise more than any potential pitfalls. Like others who have joined Wise over the years, I was also a fairly early customer and I was impressed by the product.’

The decision paid off, and Winter hasn’t looked back. In early 2022, she was made chief legal officer, and she now heads a legal function of 70 lawyers globally.

‘I’m almost surprised by how long I’ve been in fintech. The nice thing about financial services is that there is a huge variety. It’s a highly regulated industry. At the same time, you’re dealing with concrete customer problems, and we are so global. So, I can see the combination of these things staying interesting and rewarding for a long time to come.’

Throughout her career, having a strong team around her and a sense of community has kept her motivated and enthusiastic about her work. To foster this in her own team, Winter emphasises the importance of leading by example.

‘I’m almost surprised by how long I’ve been in FinTech. The nice thing about financial services is that there is a huge variety.’

‘I’m a really intentional leader. I like to lead by example. I want my team to know that what we’re doing is aligned to the mission and I’m staying close to the work. I set really high standards for the team because I set really high standards for myself.’

With her enthusiasm for Wise and her role in-house clear, Winter doesn’t believe there’s a right or wrong choice between working in-house or in private practice.

‘I highly encourage both private practice and in-house. If you’re starting out, try to find a way of enjoying the work, and the work itself becomes more interesting. Around the work you’ll build relationships and start building a community. So, gravitating towards the type of law you find interesting, the practice areas you actually enjoy and the people you like to work with.’

[email protected]

Winter’s tips for success:

‘To succeed in the legal field, it’s important to think about the law, and lawyering, as a practice. The law is a living thing and new laws get made all the time, especially at the boundary. To get there, we need to hone our practice, constantly improving our techniques and processes alongside innovation, teamwork, and creativity.’

‘You don’t need to be a certain mold of person when you walk through the door. You don’t need to be a paradigm of a tech founder. What you learn and what you can become at Wise is someone who is very curious who thrives on challenge and is capable of moving at pace. We give people the opportunity to develop those skills.’

Career timeline

2010-2017: Senior associate, corporate department, Herbert Smith Freehills

2018-2019: Senior lawyer, Prudential UK

2019-2022: Head of corporate, Wise

2022-present: Chief legal officer, Wise

Wise – key facts

Size of legal team: 70

External legal spend: not disclosed

Preferred Advisers/panel firms: Cooley, Gibson Dunn, Slaughter and May, Linklaters

Total company revenue: £1.21bn in FY25

Employees worldwide: over 6,500+ across 11 key locations

From legal adviser to trusted partner: speaking the language of business

In-house lawyers are often asked questions such as: what legal risks could affect our upcoming campaign? How can we mitigate those risks without disrupting operations? What are our chances of winning the court case? If we receive a complaint, can we defend ourselves? How do similar organisations deal with the regulatory constraints? What changes do we need in our processes to stay compliant?

These questions point to a simple truth: legal advice alone – even if technically sound – may not fully meet business needs. What business leaders value is advice that is sharp, practical, and attuned to operational realities. They expect legal input to illuminate how legal risks affect business operations, strategy, and reputation.

This article explores how in-house lawyers can learn to speak the language of business and become trusted partners.

Why do businesses hire in-house lawyers?

At first glance, the answer seems obvious: companies need advice to minimise legal risks. But the real reason goes much deeper. Businesses do not just want lawyers to solve legal problems. They look for partners who understand the business, respond quickly, and collaborate across teams to deliver results.

While external counsel often provide excellent advice, they operate at arm’s length. In-house lawyers, by contrast, are part of the organisation, with the advantage of being able to see the bigger picture, understand internal dynamics, and translate legal risks into business implications.

Businesses also expect their lawyers to grasp what drives success, such as revenue targets, customer experience and governance priorities. Without factoring in these elements, advice may be disconnected from reality.

Why is there often a gap between legal language and business language?

Lawyers are trained to think in terms of statutes, precedents, and risk mitigation. Business leaders focus on growth, market share, and competitive advantage. When these perspectives collide, friction naturally follows.

Take a simple example. A lawyer advises the management team that their approach carries significant regulatory risk. The management hears: ‘Your project cannot launch as scheduled,’ and dismisses the advice as impractical. A more effective approach might be: ‘This could expose us to penalties that may harm our brand and delay product launch.’ Framing the issue in terms of business impact shifts the conversation from compliance to strategy.

Business leaders work under tight timelines and performance pressures. If legal advice lacks a business lens, it can feel like a barrier. Legal risks therefore need to be framed in terms of cost, reputation, or operational impact, so that decision-makers can reach informed and balanced decisions.

How can lawyers get closer to the business?

Understanding the business changes how legal advice is delivered. To be a trusted adviser, lawyers need more than legal expertise and should also understand how the business creates value. Familiarising with business objectives, the industry landscape, and organisational risk appetite provides the context that makes advice relevant and actionable.

For instance, when advising on a marketing campaign, knowledge of brand strategy and the regulatory environment helps suggest changes that keep creativity while reducing risk. In contracts, aligning terms with business goals and risk tolerance provides better safeguards and relevance.

Understanding business also means knowing the people, processes, and priorities behind decisions. Staying curious about organisational developments is essential, even those that seem unrelated to law or the scope of the legal department. The real value comes from keeping abreast of changes, looking deeper and considering broader impacts. This perspective enables lawyers to connect the dots and deliver advice that genuinely resonates with business needs.

What mindset shift helps in-house lawyers succeed?

To speak the language of business, lawyers need to embrace a broader mindset.

Law firm lawyers act as independent advisers, typically working with a set of instructions and assumptions. In contrast, in-house lawyers are employees of the organisation and work closely with internal operations and decision-making. Their success is not measured solely by legal accuracy, but by how effectively they can balance legal insights with business requirements.

This shift requires thinking like a business partner. Lawyers need to understand shared objectives and deliver advice that is clear, practical, and based on a solid business understanding, not lengthy legal analysis filled with disclaimers.

For instance, the procurement process in an organisation involves workflows and multiple teams. While lawyers often focus on contract review, those who actively seek to understand the procurement process are better positioned to identify potential internal control issues and recommend solutions to improve governance and operational efficiency.

Collaboration makes this mindset shift possible. Lawyers should invest time and effort in connecting with business teams and building mutual trust and respect. When trust is established, business teams are far more likely to involve lawyers early in their projects rather than waiting until the last minute for compliance checks.

How can legal advice be anchored in business context?

Legal advice has the greatest impact when it is firmly rooted in business realities. One way of achieving this is through the ‘FACTS’ approach (Familiarity, Analysis, Context, Tactics, and Solutions).

Familiarity involves taking time to understand the factual background and identifying the issues that genuinely matter. Without a solid grasp of the facts, any analysis risks drifting away from what the business is trying to achieve.

Analysis requires setting out the legal position in clear, jargon-free language and, where helpful, using simple analogies so complex concepts feel accessible to non-lawyers.

Context is equally important. Legal issues rarely stand alone, so situating them within a wider business setting – whether internal operations, industry practice or developing legal trends – helps decision-makers appreciate their broader implications.

Tactics involve converting observations into different possible approaches. This is where lawyers help the business understand the likely consequences of each option, such as cost, timeline pressures, reputational considerations, and how well each approach aligns with broader organisational goals.

Finally, Solutions pull everything together. This means offering clear direction that is both legally sound and commercially workable.

By following these steps, lawyers can enhance both the depth and practicality of their advice, making it easier for the business to use and far more influential in day-to-day decision-making.

What ultimately makes in-house legal advice valuable?

The real value of in-house legal advice lies in its usefulness and practicality. When lawyers explain legal issues in business terms, businesses can better balance ambition with responsibility, align strategic plans with compliance requirements, and pursue growth while remaining resilient.

By thinking like business partners and putting legal risks in business contexts, lawyers can truly speak the language of business.

Eddie Chan is a legal director at the Hong Kong Tourism Board.