Being great at one thing is not enough – remaking a City leader for the times

Mark Rigotti

LB: What have been the big wins for Herbert Smith Freehills [HSF] over the last two years?

Mark Rigotti (MR): It has been the shift from integration. That’s by definition backwards-looking so it’s good to move on. We’ve been strengthening some of the smaller offices. We’re different from the Magic Circle that have long-established European practices. We’ve grown about 50% in five years in mainland Europe. The German, Madrid and Paris offices are all significantly bigger. There are more European clients and more leadership positions going to Europeans. That’s a big cultural shift. Continue reading “Being great at one thing is not enough – remaking a City leader for the times”

After an expansive 2017, Norton Rose Fulbright starts year with Asia pullback

Abu Dhabi

Norton Rose Fulbright (NRF) made headlines in 2017 by pulling off mergers in the US and Australia, but 2018 has started with the firm retrenching internationally, closing in Kazakhstan and Abu Dhabi while Paul Hastings raided its Japanese corporate team.

NRF Tokyo head of corporate, M&A and securities Eiji Kobayashi joined Paul Hastings’ Japanese base in mid-January, with a four-person team, including two associates, one paralegal and one secretary, to follow him a few weeks later. Continue reading “After an expansive 2017, Norton Rose Fulbright starts year with Asia pullback”

An ‘amicable’ discussion sees Weil Gotshal exit Hungary as 20-strong team joins Bird & Bird

Budapest

Bird & Bird has bolstered its Budapest operations by adding a 20-strong Weil, Gotshal & Manges team, bringing the US firm’s presence in Hungary to an end.

Both parties insisted that the two-partner team move on 1 February was the result of an ‘amicable arrangement’ between the firms rather than headhunting by Bird & Bird. Continue reading “An ‘amicable’ discussion sees Weil Gotshal exit Hungary as 20-strong team joins Bird & Bird”

On a roll: Eversheds Sutherland sees December deal flurry carry over

Poundland shop

Eversheds Sutherland corporate head Richard Moulton cannot remember a busier December than in 2017 and believes the January deal market is already gathering pace.

As the transatlantic tie-up marked a year since going live this month, the firm has enjoyed a robust start to 2018. On 4 January, Eversheds advised as British retailer Poundland secured a £180m loan to reduce its reliance on its South African owner Steinhoff International, under investigation following accounting irregularities estimated at £7bn. Continue reading “On a roll: Eversheds Sutherland sees December deal flurry carry over”

Deal view: Eversheds deal team – so much promise but so much steady

Eversheds Sutherland

Newcomers to London quickly learn the rules of the escalator: stand still on the right or keep moving on the left. The risk with changing your mind is you can land flat on your face.

For Eversheds Sutherland, the consensus view is that its corporate team has stood on the right for years, moving along but hardly dashing. And why not? You still get where you are going. Continue reading “Deal view: Eversheds deal team – so much promise but so much steady”

Carillion collapse: Global 100 firms take centre stage as construction giant enters liquidation

Slaughter and May office

Freshfields is acting for the official receiver

One of the largest UK insolvencies for years, the collapse of construction giant Carillion is poised to have a wide-ranging impact on a number of industries, not least among the most prominent restructuring and insolvency advisers in the City. Continue reading “Carillion collapse: Global 100 firms take centre stage as construction giant enters liquidation”

Dealwatch: the Magic Circle players kicking off 2018

Net-a-Porter
  • Clifford Chance (CC) and Linklaters advised as media company Informa entered talks to acquire events organiser UBM. Corporate partners Katherine Moir and Steven Fox led the CC team advising Informa on the deal, which would create a company worth £9bn. Linklaters corporate partners Michael Honan and Iain Fenn acted for UBM.
  • Linklaters also joined Kirkland & Ellis on the restructuring of South African retail holding company Steinhoff International reported to have €2.7bn in convertible bonds and debts of €10.7bn. Restructuring partners Sean Lacey and Kon Asimacopoulos led the Kirkland team advising the convertible bonds alongside Munich restructuring partner Sacha Lürken, while Linklaters’ Richard Bussell advised Steinhoff.

Continue reading “Dealwatch: the Magic Circle players kicking off 2018”

Letter from… Milan: Living in style yet still playing the generation game

Milan

‘All the top people in this country have grey hair,’ notes one Milan playmaker. It is a truth Italians know all too well: those pulling the strings of the country’s politics and economy are often years past the average European age of retirement. And law is no exception.

The country’s top firms still owe their success to a few veteran rainmakers and their decade-old connections. Individuals like Sergio Erede, Michele Carpinelli and Francesco Gianni, all past 65, still define Italy’s legal market more than 20 years since foreign advisers first arrived in scale. The three largest independents – BonelliErede, Chiomenti and Gianni, Origoni, Grippo, Cappelli & Partners – all generate comfortably over €100m (exact figures must be taken with a pinch of salt).

Continue reading “Letter from… Milan: Living in style yet still playing the generation game”

The Icarus syndrome – the highs and lows of Slater and Gordon

Icarus illustration

Pride before a fall. Everything was going well when the world’s first listed law firm, Slater and Gordon, announced another blockbuster UK buyout in early 2015.

‘In getting to this point, we undertook a very extensive due diligence process,’ said the firm’s managing director, Andrew Grech. ‘The business we are buying is of high quality with robust infrastructure and systems, and good people. This move will accelerate and consolidate our position in the UK market, and bring benefits to the clients and staff of both businesses.’

Continue reading “The Icarus syndrome – the highs and lows of Slater and Gordon”

Evolutionary forces – US body for legal ops hits Europe as new breed of client emerges

watch detail

Disruption looms as James Wood reports on first European conference for CLOC

Richard Susskind must have lost count of the number of times he has spoken about the future of law, but in his introductory remarks to the 2018 CLOC EMEA Institute gathering in London he seemed cheerfully off balance. Many of the concepts Susskind has prophesied are now realities at large US companies and even sceptics would concede that the emergence of sophisticated legal operations teams feels like a decisive shift for the industry.

Continue reading “Evolutionary forces – US body for legal ops hits Europe as new breed of client emerges”

Cadwalader takes multiple hits in London as Milbank and Brown Rudnick swoop in

Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft

It has been an expansive start of the year in terms of partner hires for a group of finance-focused US shops with tight London operations.

First Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft’s City restructuring practice was decimated by the departure of four partners to Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy, led by global financial restructuring co-chair Yushan Ng, with Jacqueline Ingram, Karen McMaster and Sinjini Saha following him. McMaster and Ingram had already followed Ng in changing firms in 2013 from Linklaters, where they were associates. Saha was made partner when she joined Cadwalader from Simpson Thacher & Bartlett in 2015.

Continue reading “Cadwalader takes multiple hits in London as Milbank and Brown Rudnick swoop in”

Can Freshfields limit the damage as Kirkland tempts PE heavyweight with $10m transfer?

David Higgins

Nathalie Tidman assesses the fallout as M&A veteran quits an unsettled City giant

Even for a market grown blithe to big-name M&A partners quitting for the dollar, Kirkland & Ellis’s recruitment of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s David Higgins just before Christmas sent a jolt. Continue reading “Can Freshfields limit the damage as Kirkland tempts PE heavyweight with $10m transfer?”

Disputes Eye: Enyo goes to ground – what next for the pioneering disputes shop?

Simon Twigden

It has been the question raised over wine by many seasoned litigators for months now: what’s going on at Enyo Law? At the beginning of last year, the litigation boutique hit the headlines thanks to surprise merger talks with fellow disputes specialist Stewarts Law, but since the discussion was abandoned the influential outfit has gone to ground.

Formed by ex-Addleshaw Goddard partners Simon Twigden (pictured), Pietro Marino and Michael Green, Enyo was launched in 2010 with a post-Lehman preoccupation of litigating against banks. The concept was simple: pick up the big-ticket work that larger firms were conflicted out of. Continue reading “Disputes Eye: Enyo goes to ground – what next for the pioneering disputes shop?”

Higher learning

EU flag with locks

1998 seems like a lifetime ago, where e-commerce was a fantasy for ordinary people just discovering the internet. Yet 1998 was year zero for the European Union’s Data Protection Directive – the basis for legislation protecting personal data across member states today.

But over the past two decades, digitalisation has detonated a data explosion, giving rise to data mining on a level of sophistication and scale that was unthinkable at the time the directive was conceived. In keeping with the spirit of our globalised age, data, like everything else, is ‘big’ – and so are the threats.

Continue reading “Higher learning”

Alphas – the hunt for female deal stars (and why it’s hard to be a City woman)

Denise Gibson

‘You will have to go out and find the women – they won’t come to you,’ warns Travers Smith partner Lucie Cawood when Legal Business began researching this cover feature. That proved an astute prediction.

Searching for senior female talent in the City, amid weeks spent amassing nearly 60 interviews with partners, law firm leaders, corporate heads and recruiters, it becomes clear that it takes more work to get women deal lawyers talking than their male equivalents. A lot more. Continue reading “Alphas – the hunt for female deal stars (and why it’s hard to be a City woman)”

Client Intelligence Report: Data view – Big talk on legal ops fails to change buying habits

Anecdotally, in-house budgets are being scrutinised like never before, and law firm billing is starting to catch the attention of chief financial officers.

As almost any general counsel (GC) will tell you, legal teams are coming under sustained pressure to introduce metrics and benchmarks, along with more robust financial management and project management tools, to help demonstrate their grasp on value. In short, procurement methodologies are now being applied to legal services. Continue reading “Client Intelligence Report: Data view – Big talk on legal ops fails to change buying habits”

M&A/Corporate

Aedamar Comiskey

Aedamar Comiskey and Jessamy Gallagher, Linklaters

Linklaters’ head of corporate Aedamar Comiskey (pictured above) stands as one of the few female heavyweights in public M&A. The former senior partner contender has established herself as a substantial business generator, acting as Linklaters’ relationship partner for key clients including Aviva and HSBC. With many of her clients selling businesses of late, she recently worked on John Wood Group’s £2.2bn takeover of Amec Foster Wheeler and Visa Europe’s €21.2bn sale to Visa.

‘She’s so dynamic and successful.’

‘She is technically very strong and does a good job of balancing the transactional side and the management stuff,’ notes Ashurst’s Karen Davies, one of more than a dozen peers to laud the Linklaters veteran. Despite fielding the full portfolio of skills, Comiskey wears her status lightly. ‘Aedamar is so successful and dynamic and has balanced her roles with her family life for many years,’ says senior partner Charlie Jacobs. ‘A great role model.’

In a firm with a strong roster of female partners, arguably the other standout M&A name is Jessamy Gallagher, who co-heads the firm’s infrastructure group. Major work includes in 2017 advising National Grid on the sale of a majority stake in its £13.8bn UK gas pipe network. Says Jacobs: ‘She is a real force and the sky is the limit.’ Also cited is Tracey Lochhead, who has acted on substantive matters for Glencore, The Royal Bank of Scotland, Investec and Absa Group, not to mention developing Linklaters’ relationship with sponsor Cerberus.


Vanessa Blackmore, Sullivan & Cromwell

While US-bred firms have made huge inroads in the City they still have a poor record in fostering female partners in M&A. The most striking exception remains Sullivan & Cromwell’s Vanessa Blackmore, who has sustained an enviable run of premium work spanning M&A, restructuring and equity capital markets across Allen & Overy and then Sullivan & Cromwell, which she joined in 2006. A heavily-edited list of clients over the years includes Credit Suisse, Anglo American, Liberty International and Cable & Wireless.

One of the few female M&A heavyweights to have changed firms, Blackmore received multiple citations. Fox Rodney Search managing director Siobhán Lewington sums up: ‘There aren’t many like her.’


Nilufer von Bismarck, Slaughter and May

Nilufer von Bismarck

Firm but fair. But mainly firm.

With the much-admired Frances Murphy sadly passing away in 2016, Nilufer von Bismarck stands as the dominant female operator in the City’s best M&A team. The corporate and equity capital markets veteran has sustained a robust practice across more than 25 years in the City. ‘Technically very strong – formidable and brilliant,’ notes one of many peers to highlight her work.

Von Bismarck has handled work for a string of corporates over the years, including substantive work for the UK Green Investment Bank, Lagardère and Investec. However, she remains best known for a leading role in the Slaughter and May team advising the Treasury on a series of high-stakes interventions in the banking markets amid the financial crisis, the kind of work that this year saw her awarded an OBE. Tactically astute, her old adversary Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s Will Lawes would respond to being boxed in by the Slaughters partner during negotiations: ‘We’ve been Nilufered.’ She’s firm but fair. But mainly firm. A class act.

Von Bismarck herself cites Rebecca Cousin – who co-heads the firm’s data protection and privacy group and has handled big-ticket work for Royal Dutch Shell, Reckitt Benckiser and Royal Mail. Of Slaughters’ junior partners, Victoria MacDuff, who was made up in 2016, is already very strongly tipped. Sally Wokes is another partner to watch.


Karen Davies, Ashurst

The boys’ club of Ashurst’s corporate team was certainly not, historically at least, kind to women – which gives extra credit to Karen Davies’ tenacity. One old-school alumni pledged to ‘never speak to Legal Business again’ if we included Davies in our list. But having thoroughly kicked the tyres on her work and spoken to peers, we are prepared to take our chances. Aside from making it on to Ashurst’s board, the deal veteran in the last three years has established herself as one of the firm’s most prolific practitioners in substantive M&A. She counts Xchanging and Babcock among longstanding clients and frequently acts for the investment banks. Davies led a team advising engineering software giant AVEVA on its £3.5bn reverse takeover in 2017 by Schneider Electric. Notes one recruiter: ‘It was an intensely macho environment. She stuck with it despite the men talking down to her and she’s got her own business.’ Concludes Weil, Gotshal & Manges’ Mike Francies: ‘[Davies] has gone from a very good lawyer to become an outstanding adviser on complex situations.’


Claire Wills, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

‘Pretty phenomenal,’ says one recruiter of Claire Wills’ client and deal list, to say nothing of her position as co-head of global financial institutions at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer. She is the relationship partner for Barclays, HSBC, JP Morgan, Prudential and Tesco, having advised the latter on two substantial carve-outs.

While the veteran Wills remains the most cited operator in Freshfields, the firm boasts one of the strongest line-ups of female talent in the City, with well-regarded female partners across the vintage.

With healthcare specialist Jennifer Bethlehem already well established, arguably the name to rise the most in prominence in the last two years is Natasha Good, who has filled the space partially vacated in TMT transactions by Ben Spiers’ departure for Simpson Thacher & Bartlett in 2016. Of the rising stars, Alison Smith (general M&A) and Victoria Sigeti (private equity) are highly recommended.

Significant players

While no single article could reflect every outstanding female partner in an area as broad as corporate, there are a host of well-regarded individuals to have emerged across 60 interviews conducted for this article. Among them are Clifford Chance (CC)’s consumer goods head, Sarah Jones, who now works primarily out of New York. In London, young partners Melissa Fogarty and Katherine Moir have already built strong reputations, with Moir in January leading for Informa on its £3.9bn bid for UBM. Says one CC veteran of the pair: ‘Complete superstars… truly terrific.’ Of the established lawyers at Allen & Overy, Gillian Holgate is the standout while Annabelle Croker is the one to watch among its young partners. Having only made partner in 2015, Croker was cited by The Legal 500 the following year and is noted for bolstering links with clients like Morgan Stanley. The career of Linklaters corporate partner Sarah Wiggins is distinguished by advising a string of core clients as well as heading Linklaters’ London corporate practice and membership of its executive board.

While Herbert Smith Freehills has work to do, new partner Caroline Rae is already noted after advising the likes of TSB Banking Group, Goldman Sachs and Lonmin on substantive work. With energy and infra one of the firm’s strongest deal disciplines, Sarah Pollock is another key name having run high-end work for EDF, Macquarie, Cavendish and Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners.

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Private equity

Claire McDaid

Claire McDaid, Willkie Farr & Gallagher

While it is always difficult to untangle the platform from the individual, Willkie Farr & Gallagher’s Claire McDaid’s (pictured above) record as a business-builder could not be clearer. The former Kirkland & Ellis partner was recruited in 2014 along with Matthew Dean to spearhead a City private equity practice for the New York institution.

The result has been one of the most impressive new-builds in the City in recent years, with a team driven by McDaid handling an active book of 60 sponsor clients. ‘She’s very effective,’ notes Clifford Chance’s Amy Mahon, who worked opposite McDaid on the 2017 acquisition of eircom. The Cameron McKenna-trained lawyer has handled a run of deals at Willkie for Bregal Freshstream, Davidson Kempner, PAI Partners, Wendel, Time Warner and HIG.


Wheatly MacNamara, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett

Wheatly MacNamara

‘A real superstar’ is the consensus on Wheatly MacNamara, who has become a go-to adviser for Blackstone Real Estate’s prodigious European operation.

Fellow corporate partner Clare Gaskell commends MacNamara’s ‘amazing practice’. The Stanford Law graduate is also noted for a collaborative approach which has seen her coolly steer through complex deals like Blackstone’s €12.25bn sale of Logicor to CIC last year. MacNamara’s relationship with former Simpson Thacher & Bartlett partner Farhad Karim, who moved to the sponsor as London-based senior managing director and global general counsel of real estate, has, if anything, tightened the long-standing Blackstone/Simpson Thacher partnership.

Despite a lean City arm, Simpson Thacher has plenty of well-regarded lawyers in the sector, with Gaskell and leveraged finance partner Sinead O’Shea also receiving repeated recommendations. With work for Blackstone, KKR, JP Morgan, Silver Lake, Bain Capital, Apax and Permira – O’Shea’s roster of sponsor clients is as good as it gets.


Helen Croke, Ropes & Gray

‘She is straightforward and tough – in a good way,’ reflects one partner at a US rival of Helen Croke, who was cited by more than half a dozen peers in our research. Paul Dolman, head of private equity at Croke’s previous home, Travers Smith, likewise notes: ‘I was sorry to have lost Helen – a very good deal lawyer.’

Former Travers colleague Lucie Cawood observes: ‘Helen was a massive inspiration – she was phenomenal. I saw her [when an associate] and thought “Wow – I want to do that!” She’s doing very well.’ While some peers question if Croke has yet to entirely find her feet during a transition phase at Ropes & Gray, which she joined 12 months ago, no-one doubts her as a formidable operator, as demonstrated through work for core clients like Bridgepoint, and Intermediate Capital Group (ICG), which she last year advised on the $3.5bn buyout of software company Visma.


Samantha McGonigle, Weil, Gotshal & Manges

‘A client called me and asked if I knew Sam because he was sitting next to her at breakfast,’ recalls Willkie Farr & Gallagher partner Claire McDaid. ‘“She’s amazing,” said the client. I shouted: “You already have a lawyer!”’

Such are the realities of pitching against Weil, Gotshal & Manges’ Samantha McGonigle, one of the most cited young buyout partners in the Square Mile. The confessed deal junkie was a junior member of the Lovells team that transferred to Weil Gotshal with Marco Compagnoni in 2006. Repeat clients include Advent, Baring Private Equity, Oaktree Capital, Montagu Private Equity and HgCapital. McGonigle regularly works on deals and business development with finance partner Reena Gogna, herself credited with developing Weil Gotshal’s relationship with JP Morgan. Aside from peers at Clifford Chance, Kirkland & Ellis and Ropes & Gray, McGonigle has been cited by The Legal 500, IFLR and Financial News.


Amy Mahon, Clifford Chance

Amy Mahon

‘The most visible woman at Clifford Chance.’

Amy Mahon remains the most widely cited female partner in private equity, which takes some doing in the most competitive product line in City law. One admiring finance colleague calls her ‘the most visible woman at Clifford Chance’.

Among those highlighting Mahon’s contribution include several partners at Simpson Thacher & Bartlett as well as peers at Ropes & Gray and Willkie Farr & Gallagher. Notes one recruiter: ‘She’s loyal to CC but could go wherever she wants.’

Mahon cites CC playmaker Matthew Layton as her key mentor. ‘He was collaborative, genuine, persuasive. Matthew taught me to be all over the detail, well-prepped and not waste anyone’s time.’ Aside from handling deals for clients including Apax, KKR Infrastructure, Hermes and EQT, Mahon bolstered her commercial credentials with a two-year stint at Macquarie before re-joining CC at partner level. Class and consistency.

Significant players

In a sector with new talent always emerging, the robust Caroline Sherrell has made significant inroads at White & Case in infrastructure – one of the hottest parts of the buyout scene – since joining the firm two years ago from Clifford Chance. Kiran Sharma at Ropes & Gray is another partner earning the notice of peers.

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