Emerald Ambitions

Ireland Emerald Ambitions

Barry Devereux, managing partner of Irish leader McCann FitzGerald, is not letting the bad Irish weather dampen his spirits. ‘The Irish market is buoyant and there are a lot of things going on. The economy is growing, markets are good and debt is relatively inexpensive. The climate is good for deal-making. Brexit is the reality, but it will undoubtedly provide opportunities across the financial services market in Dublin. It has given a fillip to the market in terms of the interest in real estate, and people looking for accommodation and office space. Dublin is doing very well.’

Dublin’s legal market continues to boom. The impact of Brexit undoubtedly dented the transactional market in the last six months of 2016, but the shock has, for the most part, subsided and many practice areas are busy. Real estate has enjoyed a particular resurgence after the painful post-bailout year, while corporate and finance lawyers are always in high demand. But the Irish market is also enjoying a boom in more niche areas, including data protection and intellectual property, particularly with the incoming General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and legal works in the fields of fintech, regulatory investigations and online gaming. Continue reading “Emerald Ambitions”

A long time in politics

david higgins

Oh for the days when politics was the last thing on the minds of City advisers. For years, British politics was an ignored backdrop for a legal profession used to a globalist, free-market agenda since the 1980s. How quaint such times seem in a national economy and City now overshadowed by Brexit and a convulsing political dynamic in a country once famed for stable one-party government.

Teaming up with NatWest, Legal Business gathered a group of senior City lawyers on the evening of the UK’s general election on 8 June to gauge what is on the agenda for the UK’s largest law firms. If nothing else it was striking how concerned – and disenchanted – City lawyers have become with the political classes and uncertainty… even speaking just hours before it became clear that the Conservative government was to lose its working majority. Continue reading “A long time in politics”

Legal Business 100: The second 50 – Eyes on the prize

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

As the debate over the future of London as a legal hub in a post-Brexit world rages on, London boutique firms and City practices that occupy the second half of the Legal Business 100 (LB100) have quietly got on with business.

While in 2015/16 this group of firms was arguably the strongest-performing in the LB100, Brexit – and its prevailing effect on the UK real estate market – has proven a stubborn opponent. As such, while collective performance is short of previous years, for the most part these London firms have battled through uncertainty to record stable results. Continue reading “Legal Business 100: The second 50 – Eyes on the prize”

Legal Business 100: Case study – Stewarts Law

john cahill

Stewarts Law, the UK’s largest litigation-only firm, had an eventful 2016/17 financial year, which resulted in its third consecutive period of double-digit growth. As a standout performer across the Legal Business 100 (LB100) as a whole, the firm had a record year with turnover rising 25% to £77.9m and profit per equity partner (PEP) climbing 19% to £1.9m, seeing it move up into the top half of the LB100 for the first time. It has become recognised as one of the fastest-growing players organically in the UK legal market, with revenue growing 123% over the last five years. PEP rose 110% over the same time period.

Year-on-year performance in 2016/17 was boosted by the resolution of some significant mandates last year, most notably the £4bn shareholder group action against The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) in which Stewarts’ claimant clients took a settlement offer in December 2016 in a case against RBS’ former chief executive Fred Goodwin and three other directors.

Stewarts is also currently in battle with Tesco on behalf of over 125 institutional funds, who claim they lost money as a result of Tesco overstating its profits by £263m in October 2014.

‘We keep an open mind, but we want to remain a litigation-only business, so it’s a small market for us in terms of mergers.’
John Cahill, Stewarts Law

Coming as a surprise to many after years of startling organic financial performance, Stewarts looked at a potential merger with boutique Enyo Law in early 2017 to create an £80m disputes specialist. The acquisition of Enyo was in the preliminary stages before it was called off, with Stewarts managing partner John Cahill saying at the time that the firm wanted to ‘continue down the path of organic growth and selected lateral hires’.

True to Cahill’s word, Stewarts has made a couple of select lateral hires of substantial seniority over the past year. Firstly, veteran litigator Ian Gatt QC arrived from Herbert Smith Freehills’ advocacy unit in October 2016, bringing with him over 30 years’ experience in both litigation and arbitration disputes.

In June this year, Stewarts brought in Dechert commercial litigation veteran David Hughes. Hughes, who also served as Berwin Leighton Paisner’s head of banking and finance litigation for nine years, slotted into Stewarts’ core commercial litigation practice. However, the firm did lose partner Daniel Loblowitz in July, who left to join property firm Jury O’Shea and build his own practice.

LB: Did any areas thrive or perform poorly over the last year?

John Cahill: Our commercial disputes department had a very strong year. But our newest departments that we’ve set up over the last few years, such as arbitration, tax and trust litigation, need growth and critical mass added to them. Our challenge for the next year will be to focus on building them up.

Has Brexit had any tangible impact over the last financial year?

Cahill: For us, no. In terms of the future, it’s difficult to make predictions. It’s likely that litigation will be less affected by the uncertainty of Brexit than other practices. Market uncertainty may reduce transactional volumes for a period of time, which will be a problem for firms doing that kind of work. If it’s going to bring a harder financial climate, the counter-cyclical nature of litigation may mean we find more work with our clients. It has to be a priority for the government that London remains an international centre for resolving disputes. It’s a major export, so it’s important this is not threatened.

Following the scrapped proposed merger with Enyo, is the firm looking forward to any other mergers?

Cahill: You’ve only got to turn on your computer or read the legal press to see that potential mergers are always being talked about. We keep an open mind, but we want to remain a litigation-only business, so it’s a small market for us in terms of mergers. We’re in no rush to go down that road.

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The last word: A period of drama

jeremy hoyland

From living with Brexit to harnessing technology, Legal Business 100 leaders state what must be done to thrive

HARD CHOICES NECESSARY

‘We’ve been building on our strengths and worrying less about the things we don’t do but other firms do. We’ve been forced to make choices that we didn’t have to ten years ago because it isn’t viable anymore to do everything or pretend to do everything. Not even the Magic Circle can do that. It is about identifying where you want to play and focusing on that.’

Jeremy Hoyland, managing partner, Simmons & Simmons Continue reading “The last word: A period of drama”

Associate pay smoke screen: it’s fooling no-one

Dollars, currency

Associate pay used to be simple. Lockstepped and transparent to the nth degree on both sides of the Atlantic, you knew exactly where you stood and exactly when the legal market was overheating.

There were obvious downsides to such transparency. Back in the late 1990s/2000s boom, a salary war triggered by Palo Alto law firms within weeks translated into huge hikes in New York. Soon enough London followed when SJ Berwin announced 25% pay hikes that spread through the market like wildfire. This was the first age of the online message boards, which further stoked the inflationary pay cycle. Continue reading “Associate pay smoke screen: it’s fooling no-one”

Client profile: Angus McBride, News UK

Angus McBride, News UK

The veteran criminal defence lawyer turned legal head on bridging the gap between journalism and law

While a student at the University of Wales, Angus McBride mulled his career prospects. During his first year at university, he was obliged to choose three subjects to study. ‘I took English literature and philosophy and then decided I was going to do law as well. It was a last-minute thought.’ Continue reading “Client profile: Angus McBride, News UK”

The LB100: Forex flatters market leaders but most struggle to find their form in another tough year

l b 100 logo

LB100 firms weather initial Brexit turbulence but good times remain a distant memory

Flattered by turbulent forex markets, the UK’s largest law firms outperformed smaller rivals in the Legal Business 100 (LB100), as the group weathered economic and political headwinds through 2016/17 to eke out an ultimately indifferent performance. Continue reading “The LB100: Forex flatters market leaders but most struggle to find their form in another tough year”

‘A more modern way’: as litigation bankrollers move into portfolio investment, funding edges further into the disputes mainstream

Boris Bronfentrinker, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan

Tom Baker charts the evolution of dispute funding from case-by-base institutional backers

Litigation funding has been a growing aspect of the dispute resolution sector for a decade now, but news this summer that two law firms have entered into broader partnerships with funders highlights the emergence of a more fundamental role for such bankrollers.

Continue reading “‘A more modern way’: as litigation bankrollers move into portfolio investment, funding edges further into the disputes mainstream”

As the City elite gets coy on associate salaries, US rivals are winning the battle for young talent

James Roome, London head, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld

Madeleine Farman assesses the impact of another round of pay rises on the City market

As US firms continue to hike associate pay for UK lawyers, members of the City’s legal elite are getting increasingly coy over what they are offering their junior ranks… but are such tactics sustainable in the long run?

Continue reading “As the City elite gets coy on associate salaries, US rivals are winning the battle for young talent”

Bangs and whimpers – LB100 performance is a lot weaker than it looks

l b 100 logo

In the wake of the banking crisis, some commentators claimed the legal industry was set for a bloodbath that would sweep away 10,000 solicitors’ jobs from a flabby trade. As so often, the profession defied the critics, handling its post-Lehman reboot with assurance. Now, after posting on the face of it impressive numbers for 2016/17 in the shadow of Brexit and two major electoral upsets, there is talk of the resilience of the industry. The Legal Business 100 (LB100) has, after all, grown from £12.25bn to £22.06bn over the last decade and this year the group at long last surpassed its record PEP of £703,000 set way back in 2008.

And yet scratch the surface and there is much cause for unease. A good chunk of the long-term growth of the UK’s largest firms is due to consolidation, while the 2016/17 results have been hugely flattered by currency movements. Taken as one year, the numbers are respectable, but the long-term view is ominous, particularly for the City’s traditional leaders. Continue reading “Bangs and whimpers – LB100 performance is a lot weaker than it looks”

Bargain hunters and mega deals to the rescue as Europe’s deal market rides out political shocks

David Avery-Gee, Linklaters

Marco Cillario finds deal professionals heaving a sigh of relief after a nail-biting end to 2016

Economic and political shocks took their toll on the deal market in the first half of 2017 as activity levels dipped but M&A professionals are sizing up the crucial post-summer period in an unexpectedly upbeat mood thanks to a run of big-ticket bids.

Continue reading “Bargain hunters and mega deals to the rescue as Europe’s deal market rides out political shocks”

What ails Freshfields? Time is running out for ‘The Last Champions’

edward braham and chris pugh

The headline of the last lengthy piece Legal Business carried on Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer said it all: The Last Champions. While there is no doubt that the Magic Circle has faced huge challenges asserting itself since the banking crisis, for many Freshfields was the member of the club with the best prospect of securing its place in the global elite.

But the City giant will be faring much worse on the profession’s saloon bar test if it keeps generating headlines like this summer, notably the news in July that co-managing partner Chris Pugh was stepping down less than halfway through his term. This surprise announcement came in the same month as financial results showed Freshfields being comprehensively outclassed by its City peers. Freshfields’ revenues have grown by just 17% in five years and the firm has been a fitful performer for nearly a decade now. While the metrics look better in profitability and revenue-per-lawyer terms, Freshfields has certainly not outpaced London rivals even on its core targets. Continue reading “What ails Freshfields? Time is running out for ‘The Last Champions’”

‘Collateral damage’: Profession gets a stark wake-up call on tech security in wake of crippling DLA cyber assault

Kathryn McCann assesses the impact of the cyber attack on DLA and the wider legal market

For years, the possibility of a major cyber attack on a leading law firm has been discussed. Inevitably, it finally materialised. On 27 June DLA Piper was crippled for days after the global giant’s systems were hit by what the firm terms a ‘particularly sophisticated strain of malware’. (In cyber jargon, malware is malicious software designed to disrupt, damage or gain access to computer systems.) Continue reading “‘Collateral damage’: Profession gets a stark wake-up call on tech security in wake of crippling DLA cyber assault”

Client Intelligence Report: Data view

client intelligence report logo

Q: For a routine instruction, how important are the following criteria when selecting a firm?

(1 = not at all important, 5 = expected, 10 = essential)

Analysis of the responses to this question from clients in the UK and US exposes marked differences between client priorities in the two jurisdictions. Scores are illustrated proportionally on the graphs below and to the right. Continue reading “Client Intelligence Report: Data view”

Ashurst pulls the plug on ill-fated 2009 move into US finance law with NY restructuring

Five New York-based partners left Ashurst in July for US finance firm Chapman and Cutler, with a sixth partner departing for Allen & Overy (A&O) last month.

Partners Patrick Quill, David Nirenberg, Steven Kopp, Doug Bird and Tom Glushko all left Ashurst, completing the full departure of the ten-partner team the firm hired from McKee Nelson in 2009 to launch a structured finance practice.

Continue reading “Ashurst pulls the plug on ill-fated 2009 move into US finance law with NY restructuring”

Expansive Pinsents ships in four Norton Rose Fulbright partners for third Oz office launch

Perth Nightime CityScape

Pinsent Masons is continuing its sustained international expansion drive with a new Australian arm in Perth and the hire of four infrastructure and energy partners from Norton Rose Fulbright (NRF).

The UK law firm’s new Perth branch, to open in the autumn, will be its third Australian office after Sydney and Melbourne and its fifth international launch in the last 18 months.

Continue reading “Expansive Pinsents ships in four Norton Rose Fulbright partners for third Oz office launch”

Eversheds opens fourth German office in Düsseldorf

Eversheds Sutherland expanded in Germany in August, opening its fourth office in the country after acquiring Düsseldorf-based firm Grooterhorst & Partner.

The new office, which is focused on real estate and insurance, opened with three partners: Johannes Grooterhorst, Marc Christian Schwencke and Ralf-Thomas Wittmann. The trio were joined by a team of 11 lawyers.

Continue reading “Eversheds opens fourth German office in Düsseldorf”