Second Ashurst partner exit this week as disputes specialist Giaretta joins Mishcon de Reya

Ashurst has seen its partner bench further diminished with the departure of disputes stalwart Ben Giaretta to Mishcon de Reya.

Giaretta – who joined Ashurst in 1999 – was made up to partner in 2009 and headed its Asian arbitration team out of Singapore for seven years. He moved back to the firm’s London office last year. Continue reading “Second Ashurst partner exit this week as disputes specialist Giaretta joins Mishcon de Reya”

The Brexit effect: Bristows to open first international office in 180-year history with Brussels launch

pop art woman with the word Brexit reflected in her sunglasses lens

Technology and life sciences specialist Bristows is to open in Brussels next year in a move that underlines the impact of Brexit on City stalwarts.

In what will be its first move overseas in its 180-year history, Bristows’ EU regulatory and competition lawyers will be using the new office from March 2018 as a base for representing international clients on EU law, with the firm currently not planning to recruit any new partners to work there full-time. Continue reading “The Brexit effect: Bristows to open first international office in 180-year history with Brussels launch”

Dentons targets in-house lawyers as it adds new consultancy service to Nextlaw family

Dentons has embarked on yet another chapter in its experimentation with the legal services model as the 8,000-lawyer giant announced the launch of Nextlaw In-House Solutions yesterday (15 November).

The fifth service line to come out of the firm’s spin-off Nextlaw business, the new consultancy service will see 50 of the firm’s lawyers – all former GCs – advise existing in-house lawyers on matters including procurement for panels, relationship with the c-suite and use of technology. Continue reading “Dentons targets in-house lawyers as it adds new consultancy service to Nextlaw family”

‘A milestone’: Keystone becomes third UK law firm to float on London Stock Exchange

Following the trail blazed by Gateley two years ago and Gordon Dadds this summer, New Law player Keystone will become the third UK law firm to float on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) with shares to begin trading on 27 November priced at 160 pence per share.

Mid-market challenger firm Keystone Law, which will raise £15m from joining AIM, is valued at £50m and will be known as Keystone Law Group Plc. Panmure Gordon has been instructed by the firm to act as financial adviser, nominated adviser and broker. Continue reading “‘A milestone’: Keystone becomes third UK law firm to float on London Stock Exchange”

Comment: What’s the point of Baker McKenzie? (And does Paul Rawlinson have an answer?)

Paul Rawlinson

Ever wonder what Baker McKenzie is waiting for? The firm once had a crystal clear market position as the only major commercial practice that got anywhere near being truly globalised. And while the sprawling nature of the network meant a 20-year battle to shrug off the franchise tag, Bakers has long achieved polished mid-market credibility in many key jurisdictions. While it was never a threat to the US and London elite, the logic for an emerging giant to handle the mid-stream work for global plcs speaks for itself. Yet Bakers has continually fallen short of its own rhetoric.

Having been an international trailblazer, growth has been pedestrian for a decade now and there is too little evidence of the oft-promised push up the value chain. Continue reading “Comment: What’s the point of Baker McKenzie? (And does Paul Rawlinson have an answer?)”

Letter from… Frankfurt: Where political deadlock is fine for business… but not all lawyers

What a difference a few hundred miles can make: an election not resulting in a clear majority; a government polling much worse than expected; a leader weakened; and complicated negotiations ahead. In London, such headlines spell uncertainty, prudence, even panic.

While any poll in the UK fills its legal community with trepidation, the Germans reacted to the results of the federal election on 24 September by either stressing that no-one should overestimate the impact of politics on business or by saying it was good news. Says Georg Seyfarth, veteran corporate partner of German blueblood Hengeler Mueller: ‘Building the coalition will be difficult and it will take time. However, eventually we will see a “Jamaica coalition”, which will be good for businesses. The M&A market will not be affected.’ Continue reading “Letter from… Frankfurt: Where political deadlock is fine for business… but not all lawyers”

Ashurst sees second City corporate departure to US firm in as many weeks

Ashurst’s beleaguered M&A practice has received a fresh blow as corporate partner Dominic Ross departs for the City office of White & Case.

Ross’ exit from Ashurst’s corporate practice marks the second in as many weeks to a US firm in London after it was announced that partner James Wood would join Sidley Austin in London two weeks ago (30 October). Continue reading “Ashurst sees second City corporate departure to US firm in as many weeks”

Freshfields ushers in sweeping reforms to ditch heritage as lockstep shop in hugely symbolic move

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has pushed through a wholesale overhaul of its partnership structure that will see top earners bringing home as much as five times its most junior equity partners.

The move – which was backed in a partners’ vote concluding today (14 November) – will see Freshfields’ core equity range widen from between 17.5 points and 50 points to between 12 points and 60 points, though the ‘core ladder’ will run from 12 to 40 points. Continue reading “Freshfields ushers in sweeping reforms to ditch heritage as lockstep shop in hugely symbolic move”

Revolving doors: Gibson Dunn & Crutcher continues City push as Bird & Bird hires in Europe

The push by leading US firms in London has continued in the past week, with Gibson Dunn & Crutcher the latest to strengthen its City cohort with a senior hire from a regulator, while Bird & Bird strengthened its international ranks with a lateral hire in Denmark.

Gibson Dunn bolstered its UK disputes and white-collar crime capabilities with the hire of Sacha Harber-Kelly. He joins from the Serious Fraud Office (SFO), where he worked for 10 years, most recently as a prosecutor in the anti-corruption and bribery division. Continue reading “Revolving doors: Gibson Dunn & Crutcher continues City push as Bird & Bird hires in Europe”

Fieldfisher sets pace again with 20% H1 growth as it unveils more key hires

After a string of international office openings and staking a claim as one of the fastest growing firms in the LB100, Fieldfisher has announced a 20% rise in turnover in its half-year results for 2017/18.

The firm’s half-year revenue is £76.8m, up from £64.1m. The figure excludes turnover from all the Swiss Verein members and covers Fieldfisher’s offices in the UK, Silicon Valley, Paris, Brussels and Germany This represents a significant uptick in the top line from the two previous years: in 2016/17, revenue was up 10% at the H1 stage, while the firm posted an 8% rise the year previous. Continue reading “Fieldfisher sets pace again with 20% H1 growth as it unveils more key hires”

‘Rationalisation and upgrade’: CMS UK sublets legacy Nabarro and Olswang headquarters

Six months into the UK’s largest ever legal merger, CMS has signed deals to sublet most of legacy Nabarro and Olswang’s London offices.

Lloyds Bank has today moved into Nabarro’s former premises at 125 London Wall, while University College London (UCL) and US law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan have taken four of Olswang’s five floors at 90 High Holborn. Continue reading “‘Rationalisation and upgrade’: CMS UK sublets legacy Nabarro and Olswang headquarters”

Disputes eye: How the talent flow demonstrates the Bar’s strength

Speaking to Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer disputes veteran Jon Lawrence this summer on his decision to join Brick Court Chambers, he said he was not ready for the golf course just yet.

But there has been a wave of Freshfields heavyweights of Lawrence’s vintage who have made a similar move, notably former managing partner Ian Terry, who went to One Essex Court and Raj Parker, who went to Matrix Chambers in 2016. Continue reading “Disputes eye: How the talent flow demonstrates the Bar’s strength”

SDT hands Locke Lord record £500,000 fine for ‘dubious financial arrangements’ of former lawyer

Solicitors Regulation Authority SRA

The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT) has handed Locke Lord its largest ever financial penalty imposed on a law firm, fining the US-based firm £500,000 after one of its former UK lawyers engaged in ‘dubious financial arrangements’ with a client’s bank account.

The lawyer in question, Jonathan Denton, had left Locke Lord in October 2015. Details of the decision published this week by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) disclose that the firm had ‘failed to prevent’ Denton from using a client account for ‘transactions that bore the hallmarks of dubious financial arrangements’. Continue reading “SDT hands Locke Lord record £500,000 fine for ‘dubious financial arrangements’ of former lawyer”

Promotion time: Latham keeps City round at two as new partners focused on Big Apple

latham ship illustration

Latham & Watkins may have been aggressively sweeping up City talent from rivals but the US-based giant is remaining conservative on making up its own in the Square Mile with the firm this week confirming the promotion of two partners in London.

Charles Armstrong in finance and corporate specialist Huw Thomas have been appointed to partnership in the firm’s City office, with the duo coming amid a 31-strong global promotion round. Latham also promoted two partners in London in 2016 amid a firm-wide tally of 27. Continue reading “Promotion time: Latham keeps City round at two as new partners focused on Big Apple”

Deal view: Ashurst strives to reboot M&A brand but deal market is getting tougher

Ashurst

Ashurst’s once-admired M&A reputation has taken a pounding of late. One former partner delivers representative sentiments: ‘Corporate was the jewel in the crown. The firm has changed from what it was six or seven years ago.’ Another notes: ‘It used to be joint number one with Clifford Chance for private equity. The practice faded away as it focused outside London.’

A controversial Australia merger, a soft run of financial performance and the loss in recent years of prominent partners has taken a major toll on its brand as a serious plc deal adviser. Continue reading “Deal view: Ashurst strives to reboot M&A brand but deal market is getting tougher”

Deutsche Bank names former Links veteran as new global law chief

Deutsche Bank

Deutsche Bank has appointed a new legal head, handing its chief compliance officer and head of global governance Florian Drinhausen one of the most powerful general counsel roles in the cross-border legal market.

The internal appointment comes after it was announced that co-general counsel (GC) Christof von Dryander and Simon Dodds are to leave the bank respectively at the end of 2017 and 31 March 2018. Continue reading “Deutsche Bank names former Links veteran as new global law chief”

Comment: BLP’s US merger bid – a certain loss of confidence

St Louis

If nothing else, it is safe to say Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP)’s not-very-convincing claim that management was not dead set on a US merger was stretching it. Because recent news that the firm is debating a union with Bryan Cave screams: ‘We really want a US merger!’

The talks come after last year having gone through a bruising but short courtship with the far larger Greenberg Traurig, the thrusting Miami shop which had a culture clash with BLP that could not have been more obvious if it had been heralded by fireworks. Continue reading “Comment: BLP’s US merger bid – a certain loss of confidence”

Reforms attempt to curb Rolls-Royce disclosure as litigation costs spiral upwards

Ed Crosse, Simmons & Simmons, Commercial Litigation Summit 2017

Pretty much everyone agrees that the current state of disclosure has grown into an unworkable and extortionate mess… but getting consensus for change has been elusive in recent years. Braving the debate between the supporters of Rolls-Royce disclosure and its critics, reforms are currently being pushed through to substantially scale back document-hunting in most commercial disputes.

The reforms, which were drafted by a group of lawyers, judges and clients called the Disclosure Working Group, will scrap the standard regime in favour of ‘basic’ and ‘extended’ approaches. The system will default to the ‘basic’ disclosure, which will see parties produce only the key documents necessary to the case. Both parties will then be obliged to discuss the manner of extended disclosure, with the court making the final decision to widen the process. The group was chaired by Lady Justice Gloster and included Simmons & Simmons partner Ed Crosse (pictured), Vodafone law chief Rosemary Martin and RPC partner Tim Brown. Continue reading “Reforms attempt to curb Rolls-Royce disclosure as litigation costs spiral upwards”

Revolving doors: Shepherd and Wedderburn taps Scottish rival for London partner as Mayer Brown loses two to Gibson Dunn

In a busy week of lateral recruitment in the UK, Shepherd and Wedderburn has made a key hire in London while Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, Kingsley Napley, and Keystone Law have expanded their teams.

Scottish stalwart Shepherd has tapped local rival Maclay Murray & Spens for London disputes partner Philip Sewell in the same week as Maclays merger with global giant Dentons went live. Continue reading “Revolving doors: Shepherd and Wedderburn taps Scottish rival for London partner as Mayer Brown loses two to Gibson Dunn”

‘A lot of noise without substance’: profession divided on impact of Paradise Papers

As the contents of the Paradise Papers soaks up column inches worldwide, the profession has offered a mixed response so far to the revelations, with some welcoming public scrutiny while others dismiss it as un-newsworthy.

On 24 October, offshore firm Appleby confirmed that a ‘data security incident’ took place in 2016, raising fears that client information could become publicly available. Appleby also acknowledged that it had received enquiries from the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), which had published the Panama Papers in 2016, regarding the data breach. Continue reading “‘A lot of noise without substance’: profession divided on impact of Paradise Papers”