Sidley Austin has rolled into 2026 with yet another hire from Latham & Watkins, bringing over the firm’s former global co-chair of real estate, Jeremy Trinder.
After nearly ten years at Latham, Trinder is the tenth partner to leave the firm’s London office for Sidley in the last 18 months. Last year, Sidley brought in Latham London corporate co-chair David Stewart and capital markets partner Vladimir Mikhailovsky, following up on its 2024 hire of a five-partner leveraged finance team led by Jay Sadanandan and Sam Hamilton.
Additionally, Latham’s London finance co-chair Tania Bedi and high yield duo Scott Colwell and Patrick Kwak also moved to Sidley in 2024.
A spokesperson for Latham said of Trinder’s move: ‘We thank Jeremy for his contributions to the firm and wish him all the best in his next endeavor.’
Hogan Lovells has targeted Latham as well, as it announced Lisa Quelch will join as a partner in the firm’s infrastructure and energy practice.
Quelch has spent six years as an associate at Latham, and prior to this she began her career at HSF Kramer. She has experience working on infrastructure and project financings within emerging markets, with expertise across Africa.
For its part, Latham has made its own spate of hires in recent months, including bringing over three partners from A&O Shearman earlier this month, including the merged firm’s global head of real estate finance David Oppenheimer.
White & Case has made a series of hires across its European and APAC offices. In London, the firm has brought in funds partner Chris Jeanes, formerly a counsel at Akin.
Jeanes has worked on fundraising and secondary transactions, including a €400 million continuation fund for BlackRock as co-lead for private equity firm Seven2, as it financed two assets Marlink and Crystal.
The firm also hired three partners from DLA Piper into its real estate team in Paris, bringing over Antoine Mercier, Sarah Fleury and Romain Guénin. Each has advised on real estate financing and acquisition deals across Europe.
In Tokyo, the firm hired real estate partner Ed Sheremeta, also from DLA Piper. Sheremeta, who has over 25 years experience advising real estate investors, will join the firm’s global M&A acquisitions team, and leaves DLA after becoming co-head of real estate for Japan in September 2024.
Meanwhile in Sydney, W&C welcomed Will Stawell as a partner in its debt finance team. Stawell previously worked at White & Case as an associate from 2013 to 2016, and rejoins after nine years at King & Wood Mallesons.
Shoosmiths has expanded its London banking and finance team with its hires of partners John Dawson and Graham Knight.
Dawson joins after five years at CMS, with previous stints as a partner at both Vinson & Elkins and Clifford Chance, where he advised sovereign wealth investors and banks on international transactions.
Meanwhile, Knight brings particular experience in energy and infrastructure finance, and joins the firm after more than two decades at legacy Allen & Overy and stints in-house at Bank of America and Goldman Sachs.
Osborne Clarke has grown its London corporate practice further with the hire of Sunjay Malhotra, the third partner to join the practice in the past year.
Malhotra joins from Pinsent Masons, where he spent six years advising clients across the life sciences sector on venture capital financings and equity capital markets mandates.
WilmerHale has hired former United Health general counsel Rupert Bondy as partner and co-head of its crisis management and strategic response group in London.
Bondy has worked in-house for 30 years, with experience as general counsel for GSK, BP and Reckitt in the past.
Also swapping an in-house role for partnership is Google senior counsel Sarah West, who has rejoined Baker McKenzie’s dispute resolution team in London. West was previously a senior associate at Baker McKenzie before moving to Google in 2022.
Experienced at handling tech litigation, investigations and compliance, West rejoins the firm with expert knowledge of the Online Safety Act, among other regulations.
Elsewhere, CMS has hired the head of white-collar defence and investigations at Withers, Carl Newman, to its London corporate crime practice.
With over 25 years of experience, Newman has handled several high profile cases, such as defending BargainHunt broadcaster Charles Hanson against assault and controlling behaviour charges last year.
Also in the City, Charles Russell Speechlys has hired K&L Gates real estate special counsel Chiara Del Frate as a partner in London.
Del Frate, who worked across K&L Gates’ London and Milan offices, brings experience working with a number of large corporates and luxury companies across Europe, such as Audemars Piguet, Gucci and YSL.
Winckworth Sherwood has expanded its London tax practice with the addition of Arcangelo D’Apolito from Macchi di Cellere Gangemi.
With five years of experience at the Italian firm, D’Apolito also spent time at both KPMG and PwC as a tax manager, before becoming a partner in 2021.
Over in Milan, Ropes & Gray has launched an antitrust and foreign direct investment (FDI) practice with the hire of Jacopo Figus Diaz.
Formerly a senior counsel at Italian firm Legance, Diaz also spent time at Cleary’s office in Brussels as an associate. Dual-qualified in both the US and Italy, he has experience working on merger control proceedings before the European Commission and Italian Competition Authority for clients across media, manufacturing and financial services industries.
In Dublin, A&L Goodbody has hired two partners from Hogan Lovells, who will join its financial regulation advisory team. Eoin O Connor, former managing partner of Hogan Lovells Ireland, will head the practice group, while Eimear O’Brien joins as partner.
Meanwhile, Clifford Chance has hired global private capital lawyer Matthias Kerbusch into its Luxembourg office. Kerbusch began his career at Clifford Chance in 2012, but left to become a partner at Dechert in 2022.
He returns to Clifford Chance with experience advising on the formation and restructuring of Luxembourg-based investment funds, with a particular focus on alternative asset classes.
Also in Europe, Dentons welcomed former A&O Shearman counsel Soline Louvigny as a partner in its Paris debt capital markets team. Louvigny spent over 15 years at A&O Shearman, where she focused on ESG issuances and regulatory capital.
Crowell & Moring has hired Liesbeth Truyens into its international trade group in Brussels. Previously, Truyens spent five years as a partner at Belgian firm Schoups, and also has in-house experience in KBC Bank’s dispute resolution team.
Litigation firm Boies Schiller Flexner has hired competition partner Gianluca Faella in Rome. Faella joins after 20 years at Cleary, and his move marks his first partnership position.
Reed Smith has promoted new office managing partners across its European, Middle East and APAC teams. The managing partners include: antitrust lawyer Christian Filippitsch in Brussels, M&A specialists Anders Nilsson in the Middle East and Manoj Purush in Singapore.
The firm has also appointed Singapore-based Tim Cooke as the global chair of its international arbitration practice, succeeding Peter Rosher, who held the position for four years.
Squire Patton Boggs has also hired in Singapore, as the firm brought over DLA Piper’s head of financial services for Asia, Philip Lee, as a partner. Lee has acted as Asia regional head of financial services for the past two years, and before this served as DLA’s capital markets practice lead for APAC.
Over in the Middle East, Ashurst has hired its first real estate partner in the region, Chris Beaumont-McQuillan, who will join the firm’s Abu Dhabi office.
Beaumont-McQuillan will head Ashurst’s Middle East real estate practice, after three years in the same role at BCLP’s office in Dubai. Prior to this, he also worked as partner in Reed Smith’s London team.
Back in the UK, Ward Hadaway has hired corporate partner Paul Wigham into its Newcastle office. Wigham was previously a partner at Weightmans, where he has advised on tech-related M&A and fundraising transactions.
Finally, RWK Goodman has acquired Oxfordshire’s oldest law firm, HMG Law, which has operated for over 200 years in the Thames Valley region.
The two firms are to be based in RWK Goodman’s Oxford office from February, with client services roles unaffected by the combination.








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
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