Four partners and one local partner have made the move from White & Case to Hogan Lovells, with Ferigo Foscari, Iacopo Canino, Alessandro Seganfreddo, Piero de Mattia and Bianca Caruso joining as partners in the firm’s Milan office.
Continue reading “Hogan Lovells snaps up corporate and finance team from White & Case in Milan”
The silk class of 2025: ten names to note
The King’s Counsel system remains the most prized designation for elite advocates in the world. One hundred and five lawyers – 104 barristers and one solicitor – were selected from the 2024 process, the results of which were announced last week.
The overwhelming majority of the new silks are already ranked very highly within their practice areas in Legal 500, and it would be a fool’s errand to try to pick a ‘best of’ for that reason, but here are ten of the designees who illustrate the broad range of talent in their professions today, as well as the broad scope it covers.
Adam Wagner, Doughty Street Chambers
Doughty Street Chambers is the set with the largest number of members parading to Westminster Hall, with five in the 2025 cohort, a distinction shared with Essex Court Chambers. Notable for being one of the most prominent barristers on X (formerlyTwitter) since the 2010s – a time in which, at a previous chambers, he was a founder of UK Human Rights Blog – Wagner was one of the most visible commentators on the mechanics of the lockdown policies created in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Following the pandemic, of late he is notable for representing pro bono the families of British-linked hostages who were kidnapped as part of the October 7th terrorist attack on Israel, including that of UK-Israel dual national Emily Damari, who was released by Hamas earlier this month.
Laura Poots, Pump Court Tax Chambers
A natural candidate for silk as winner of tax junior of the year at the 2024 Legal 500 Bar awards, Poots is ranked tier 1 for the tax: corporate section as well as also being ranked for tax: personal and tax: VAT and excise. Recent cases of note include representing HM Revenue and Customs in the Court of Appeal in a dispute with hedge fund BlueCrest Capital Management. A more unusual instruction in her career was her – unled – 2022 role representing the Falkland Islands’ Commissioner of Taxation in that jurisdiction’s Court of Appeal in a case regarding its tax “ring-fencing” of petroleum extraction activities. Poots is not the only female tax barrister being recognised in this round, with Marika Lemos of Devereux Chambers also appointed.
James Berry, Serjeants’ Inn Chambers
In a career punctuated by a two-year stint as Member of Parliament for Kingston and Surbiton – defeating, and then losing his seat to, current Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey – James Berry’s return to the Bar has borne fruit, having earnt silk the hard way through the conventional appointment process rather than as a political “nylon” (the colloquial term for a junior given the designation as a result of a political appointment). He is ranked as a top-tier junior in Legal 500’s police law (forces and constables) section on the strength of his practice representing both forces and officers – earning him the award for public services and charities junior of the year at the Legal 500 UK Bar Awards 2024. His recent work includes representing the Metropolitan Police in disciplinary proceedings against the former head of the Metropolitan Black Police Association, who was found to have shared racist messages in a WhatsApp group.
Julia Smyth, Landmark Chambers
Smyth, the 2024 Legal 500 Bar awards immigration junior of the year, is notable for her public law practice, focusing on immigration, nationality and the welfare state. Formerly in-house government lawyer, she represents Child Poverty Action Group, a core participant in the economics module of the Covid-19 inquiry. However, much of her notable work of late has been in the immigration and nationality space, regularly representing the government in the Court of Appeal. In one recent case, she represented the government, defeating an appeal by an Albanian man who fraudulently applied for British citizenship under a false name and date of birth, also claiming to be Kosovar, against the decision to strip him of his British citizenship. The set – which dominates planning law as well as being notable – has four appointees this year – its record.
Edward Craven, Matrix Chambers
In a diverse practice illustrated by ranking in nine Legal 500 practice areas, Edward Craven is best known for cases at the interaction of human rights, technology and business. In 2024, he was a lead junior in the case of a number of Nepali and Bangladeshi migrant workers, who were found to be able to bring their claim against Dyson, for alleged human trafficking it its Malaysian supply chain, in the English courts – his work in this space playing a key role in securing him the title of group litigation junior of the year at the 2024 Legal 500 Bar awards. Regarding AI, he also represented the defendant in Andrew Prismall v Google UK Limited, securing a strike-out of a claim over the Royal Free Hospital’s co-operation with Sir Demis Hassabis’ Google Deepmind to detect and treat acute kidney injury. Other work includes sports and financial crime cases.
Nakul Dewan, Twenty Essex
Already a notable senior lawyer on the international arbitration circuit, Nakul Dewan adds English silk to a career which has seen him designated as a Senior Advocate in 2019 by the Supreme Court of India. He is already ranked as a tier one leading Silk in Legal 500 Asia Pacific’s Regional International Arbitration: the Bar coverage, on the strength of his Indian designation. Dewan is active both as counsel and arbitrator across a range of commercial and energy disputes, and is one of the small but growing cohort of English barristers primarily based in Singapore. He follows in the footsteps of Harish Salve KC of Blackstone Chambers, who has dual designation both in India (in 1992) and England (2020).
Jacqueline Renton, 4PB
Ranked in the top tier for family: children and domestic abuse in Legal 500, Jacqueline Renton is notable for her practice in private international law in the family context. Many of her cases concern the Hague Convention 1980, including 77 reported cases, 16 Court of Appeal cases and six appeals to the UK Supreme Court. Recently, she – pro bono – represented the father of a fifteen-year-old in 2024 Court of Appeal case Re P, in which the child sought to stay in the United Kingdom with his Spanish father, against the wishes of the child’s mother, who sought a Hague Convention return order.
Niranjan Venkatesan, One Essex Court
As victor of junior of the year at the 2023 Legal 500 Bar Awards, Niranjan Venkatesan’s name is an unsurprising feature of this year’s list of appointments. While also called to the Indian Bar – in an appointment round with several selections showcasing the English legal profession’s links to the world’s largest common law jurisdiction – his practice is no means defined by those connections, having appeared across a varied range of large cases in the Commercial Court and International arbitration, such as having appeared as a leading junior for the defendants in the Invest Bank v El-Husseini litigation.
Daniel Feetham KC, 3 Hare Court and Hassans
One may think that Legal Business has committed a typographical error, or worse, a major blunder in protocol, by including Feetham KC’s postnominals prior to this year’s ceremony in Westminster Hall. Not so: he already has the designation in respect of Gibraltar, the jurisdiction in which he was born, raised and built his career in private practice, rising to role of head of litigation at market-leading firm Hassans. He adds English silk to his CV, having become a full member of London set 3 Hare Court in 2023. In politics, he served as Minister of Justice from 2007 to 2011 among other roles in the British Overseas Territory.
Jason Pobjoy, Blackstone Chambers
Jason Pobjoy has a diverse practice, covering both public law and commercial cases. In public law, he is known for his work for the claimants in the litigation over the government’s proposal to relocate asylum seekers to Rwanda, and for the Duke of Sussex in the judicial review surrounding his security arrangements, as well as for the Government Legal Department in Russian sanctions cases, such as those concerning ex-Formula One driver (and son of oligarch Dimitry) Nikita Mazepin. Of late, he represented Elliott Management in an appeal of its judicial review of the London Metal Exchange’s decision to suspend trading in nickel futures in March 2022, after a price spike which – if the trades stood – would have left LME members on the hook for a $20bn margin call. In late 2024, in a now-unusual case for an English barrister to take on post-Brexit, instructed by Carter-Ruck he successfully represented a Moldovan client in a judicial review.
Dealwatch: Baker McKenzie and Gibson Dunn lead on $5bn data centre investment while US trio orchestrate $27bn energy deal
Baker McKenzie and Gibson Dunn have played key roles in KKR’s $5bn investment in a stake in Gulf Data Hub, one of the largest independent data centre platforms in the Middle East.
Revolving Doors: White & Case hires Travers technology head as Fried Frank makes double hire
Starting off this week’s lateral roundup, White & Case has bolstered its global intellectual property practice and technology industry group in London by hiring Legal 500 IT and telecoms leading partner Dan Reavill. Continue reading “Revolving Doors: White & Case hires Travers technology head as Fried Frank makes double hire”
A&O Shearman only firm to pick up new KC as silk appointments rise
This year’s 2024 round of King’s Counsel appointments saw only one solicitor advocate take silk – in line with each of the last two years and down from five in the 2021 round and six in the 2020 round.
Continue reading “A&O Shearman only firm to pick up new KC as silk appointments rise”
Revealed: A&O Shearman partner exits pass 100 mark since merger announcement
More than 100 legacy Allen & Overy (A&O) and Shearman & Sterling partners have left or retired since the merger of the two firms was announced in May 2023, according to Legal Business research.
Continue reading “Revealed: A&O Shearman partner exits pass 100 mark since merger announcement”
‘Every lawyer has a role to play in sustainability’- Clydes’ Wynne Lawrence on ESG legal pathways
Clyde & Co’s Wynne Lawrence, who was recently named as one of Legal 500’s new UK Green Ambassadors, is a founding member of the firm’s climate risk and resilience practice group. In this Q&A, she discusses the genesis of her professional interest in climate change, building a team of ESG rising stars, and how junior lawyers can make a difference Continue reading “‘Every lawyer has a role to play in sustainability’- Clydes’ Wynne Lawrence on ESG legal pathways”
Putting a number on it – how do clients rate Slaughter and May?
Late last year, Legal Business and Legal 500 unveiled a data project that has been in the works for some time – looking at how highly firms are recommended by clients.
That data, collected from Legal 500 referees, offers an entirely new perspective on the world’s largest law firms, enabling us to reorder the Global 100 by a new customer satisfaction metric – Net Promoter Score (NPS)*.
Of the eighteen UK-heritage firms in the Global 100, the firm with the highest NPS is Slaughter and May (and we will be revealing NPS for the LB100 very soon) but NPS is not the only metric we have data for – we also ask referees to score law firms on metrics such as billing, communication and value for money
So while Slaughters comes highly recommended by clients – how does it compare to its peers on criteria such as partner and associate quality and availability?
(The rest of this article is available to logged-in users only. If you are not logged in and unable to do so above, please click ‘Forgot your password?’ below to gain access to the full article). Continue reading “Putting a number on it – how do clients rate Slaughter and May?”
‘A win-win solution’: Paul Hastings advising on investor bid to acquire TikTok’s US operations
Paul Hastings is advising a consortium of investors on an all-cash offer to acquire TikTok’s US operations and assets from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance.
Clydes sets sights on Seattle and Texas growth as US long game continues to pay off
Earlier this month, Clyde & Co launched in Texas, the latest step in a two-decades-long journey into North America which has seen it establish a 19-strong network of offices across the US and Canada.
Revolving doors: Skadden and Goodwin launch new offices as Weil and Clifford Chance add key laterals
As the new year unfolds, Goodwin has launched its seventh European office in Brussels, hiring antitrust partner Stephen Mavroghenis from Quinn Emanuel. He was previously head of then-Shearman & Sterling’s Brussels office and co-head of its global antitrust group.
CMS to cut up to 15 real estate lawyers in London
Up to 15 lawyers in CMS’ London real estate team could lose their jobs as the firm looks to cut costs for a second time in 16 months.
It is understood that no partners will be affected in the redundancy round. Continue reading “CMS to cut up to 15 real estate lawyers in London”
‘A fascinating area to work in’ – Travers Smith’s Heather Gagen on forging an ESG career
Travers Smith’s Heather Gagen, who leads the firm’s ESG and impact group, was recently named as one of Legal 500’s new UK Green Ambassadors. In this Q&A, she discusses the rise of ESG, the realities of balancing work and life with a young family, and offers advice for lawyers looking to build a career in the sustainability sector Continue reading “‘A fascinating area to work in’ – Travers Smith’s Heather Gagen on forging an ESG career”
Hogan Lovells and Akin announce 2025 partner promotions
Hogan Lovells and Akin became the two latest firms to announce their 2025 partner promotions last week, with 28 and 22 new partners respectively.
Continue reading “Hogan Lovells and Akin announce 2025 partner promotions”
Clifford Chance snaps up Skadden M&A heavyweight Embley
Clifford Chance has hired one of the most well-known M&A partners in the City, Bruce Embley, who previously served as co-head of Freshfields’ global M&A client group before leaving for Skadden in 2020. Continue reading “Clifford Chance snaps up Skadden M&A heavyweight Embley”
‘There’s a lot of money in Chicago’ – the city’s top lawyers on what’s driving business in the Midwest
Following last month’s release of Legal 500’s first US city elite rankings, Legal Business checked in with the newly ranked Chicago lawyers to learn more about the city’s legal market from the perspective of top regional and national firms.
‘A big space to attack’ – how shifting markets are opening up opportunities for firms across the UK
When talking to managing partners at law firms based across the UK, one thing is clear – there’s no shortage of challenges for them to contend with.
Whether it’s keeping their staff happy, competing for quality work, or staying on top of client priorities, law firm leaders have their hands full.
But while they juggle all these challenges, shifting dynamics in the major legal markets across the UK mean that new opportunities are emerging for national and regional players, as a tier of firms long viewed as the national elite increasingly turn their attention to the international arena.
‘A clear shift toward fewer but larger deals’ – mega-deals fuel growth as partners predict 2025 M&A trends
Leading M&A partners are predicting an increase in deal activity in 2025 driven by sectors including tech, financial services and private capital, as full year M&A legal adviser rankings from the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) highlight the increasing influence of top US firms on the market.
‘Everyone will be watching’: disputes partners pick out the trends to watch for 2025
If there’s one thing litigators aren’t disputing, it’s that workflow is not likely to drop as we settle into 2025.
Activity in the UK dispute resolution market ‘is showing no signs of abating’, says Paul Lewis, joint managing partner of Herbert Smith Freehills’ global disputes practice. He maintains that with litigation remaining one of the country’s top exports, the market is set to stay busy. ‘The reputation of the English Courts continues to be at an absolute high’, he says, making the UK an attractive place for both claimants and litigation funders.
Investor-related disputes are a key driver for the steady uptick in claims, suggests Oliver Middleton, chair of the London litigation and trial department at Latham & Watkins. He points out that the increasing sophistication of investors has resulted in ‘a lean towards a US-style approach to litigation, which involves parties using it as a tool rather than as something to avoid.’
Revolving doors: Simpson Thacher, Latham, Sidley lead New Year London moves
Revolving into 2025, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP has bolstered its London leveraged finance practice hiring Bryan Robson and William Gwyn from US rival Sidley Austin.
Continue reading “Revolving doors: Simpson Thacher, Latham, Sidley lead New Year London moves”
