Litigation giant Quinn Emanuel has hired financial disputes and investigations specialist William Charles from Milbank, where he spent 11 years, making partner in 2020.
Charles represents clients ranging from hedge funds to energy firms and last year defended an investment vehicle for a FTSE-100 affiliated fund in a high-profile case.
‘I have enormous respect for Quinn Emanuel … Its unwavering focus on business disputes and investigations, and position as a global powerhouse in these areas, made this an opportunity I simply had to take,’ Charles said.
His arrival takes Quinn’s London partner count to 32, after the firm hired McDermott Will & Schulte arbitration co-head Andrew Savage in November.
Elsewhere, Sullivan & Cromwell has hired Patrick Clancy as counsel within its derivatives and structured products team.
Clancy previously worked as a partner at legacy Shearman & Sterling, but since the firm’s merger with Allen & Overy in 2024, he has been working as a consultant for Peerpoint, A&O Shearman’s flexible resourcing business.
He is the second former Shearman partner to move to S&C in the last year, following financial services and regulatory partner Barney Reynolds in June 2025.
On Clancy’s move, Reynolds said: ‘I have worked with Patrick for many years. He is one of the leading experts in his field, especially on the most innovative structured finance transactions.’
Hogan Lovells has added David Hansom to its global regulatory and IP practice as a partner.
Hansom, who will focus on guiding clients through government contracts and procurement, joins from Clyde & Co where he led the firm’s procurement team as well as co-heading the global education sector.
‘David’s arrival strengthens our ability to advise in the ever-evolving area of public procurement and government contracts both in the UK and beyond, at a time when governments are increasingly looking to the private sector to help deliver their policies,’ said Charles Brasted, deputy practice leader of global regulatory and IP.
Katten has bolstered its London restructuring practice with a double hire. James Davison joins as a partner from DLA Piper, where he led the restructuring and insolvency team. He brings experience across both debtor and creditor-side work, including leading cross-border restructurings across a range of sectors.
He is joined by Victoria Procter, who joins as a counsel, also from DLA Piper. Procter’s focus is on non-contentious financial and corporate restructuring across insolvency practitioners, clearing banks and other financial institutions.
The pair worked together on a number of complex mandates at DLA Piper and bring experience across a broad spectrum of sectors.
Pinsent Masons has hired former Travers Smith pensions head Susie Daykin, who focuses on trustee advisory and pension risk transfer matters.
She follows fellow pensions partner Dan Naylor, who made the move to Pinsents last September.
The firm also added to its litigation team with the hire of Jessica Wicker from UK-based merchant banking group Close Brothers, where she spent just under four years and was head of legal, litigation.
Global labour and employment partner Katherine Gibson has joined Morgan Lewis from DLA Piper, where she spent 12 years. Gibson’s practice includes employment litigation, restrictive covenants and data issues across domestic and international employers.
Akin has bolstered its tax practice with the addition of Sam Riesenberg, who joins in London and adds capabilities in sovereign and asset management across the UK and EMEA, with US tax advice in the UK becoming increasingly important for these clients.
He moves from Mayer Brown after just under two years, and prior to this he spent twelve years at KPMG advising on US and international tax matters from London.
Goodwin has hired Colm Murphy from Cooley in the firm’s life sciences team to build its European patent prosecution practice. Murphy brings three decades of experience advising on IP matters in life sciences across biotech, pharma and medical device patents.
US firm Michelman Robinson continues to grow the London office it launched last autumn with its hire of Harry Dimoulis as a partner in its commercial and business litigation practice.
Dimoulis joins from Linklaters, where he was a senior associate, acting on shareholder disputes, capital market litigation and cross border litigation.
In Leeds, Shoosmiths has hired Tim Pickworth as a litigation and regulatory compliance partner, joining from DAC Beachcroft where he launched and led the firm’s Leeds disputes team for five years.
HFW has also added to its disputes practice with the addition of Vanessa Liborio, who joins in Geneva from Orrick, having previously been a partner at Akin.
HFW Geneva office head Michael Buisset said: ‘Vanessa is one of Switzerland’s top international arbitration experts, with a proven track record in high-value, cross-border disputes, and deep relationships across the Swiss, European, and Middle Eastern markets.’
Also in Geneva, Charles Russell Speechlys has hired Luca Beffa as a partner its litigation and dispute resolution division. Beffa joins from Baker McKenzie, where he was co-head of the disputes team.
In Dubai, White & Case has hired Ian Bevan into its global M&A practice and real estate group.
Bevan joins White & Case’s Abu Dhabi office from A&O Shearman, where he spent over two decades, including as head of Middle East real estate and hospitality. His practice focuses on cross-border real estate funds, property financing and joint ventures.
Also in the Middle East, Akin has hired disputes partner Shane Jury from Ashurst in Dubai, bolstering the firm’s offering in complex litigation relating to shareholder, joint venture and M&A matters.
Before joining Ashurst in 2024, Jury spent just over three years as a partner in Addleshaw Goddard’s Middle East disputes team.
DLA Piper has hired Melusi Dlamini into its Johannesburg office to join its international finance practice.
Dlamini qualified in England and spent ten years at Norton Rose Fulbright, where he made partner in 2024. He brings experience advising sponsors and lenders on large-scale infrastructure projects such as data centres.
In Paris, Benjamin Marché has joined Eversheds Sutherland to head its banking and finance offering.
Marché moves from Squire Patton Boggs after joining in April 2022 as a partner from Shearman & Sterling, where he was a senior associate. His practice focuses on LBO acquisition finance, infrastructure and real estate financing.
Also in the French capital, BCLP has hired Vincent Trevisani as a partner into its energy, environment and infrastructure team. He joins after seven years at Ashurst, where he worked on M&A and project development matters in the energy and infrastructure sectors.
Colin Rice has joined Jones Day as a partner in Singapore from NRF. Rice moves into the financial markets practice, and brings extensive experience advising retail banks and funds on a broad range of financial market transactions, with particular focus on derivatives and structured products.
Finally, Simmons & Simmons has hired ten partners across its offices in the UK, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
The partners joining Simmons are:
- Oliver Wicker, London, structured finance and derivatives, joins from Slaughters
- Henry Bennett-Gough, London, tax, joins from PwC
- Mark Chivers, London, corporate, joins from The Takeover Panel
- Ali Fagan, London, dispute resolution, construction, joins from DLA Piper
- Emmanuel-Frédéric Henrion, Luxembourg, funds, joins from Clifford Chance
- Ermine Bolot-Massé, Paris, corporate, joins from Dechert
- Hannah Shipley, Dubai, tax, joins from DLA Piper
- Louise Dobbyn, Dublin, financial services regulation, joins from Matheson
- Michelle Phang, Singapore, corporate, joins from Ashurst
- Stefan Nerinckx, Brussels, employment, joins from Fieldfisher

Slaughter and May corporate and M&A co-head Simon Nicholls (pictured) also has faith in the strength of markets going into the new year, saying: ‘There’s a lot of assets looking for a home, and you need to find homes for them.’
One area partners all agree is not in any danger of slowing down is the technology sector, and the data underlines this, with global tech M&A values up 66% to $1.08trn, making it the top-performing sector by some distance.
Regardless of how the market shapes up, it’s clear that partners are excited for the year ahead.
Interviews
Features
Data
News
In-house
Lateral moves
Deals
Allen & Overy and Shearman & Sterling, 2024
McDermott Will & Emery and Schulte Roth & Zabel, 2025
Ashurst and Perkins Coie, 2025
Clifford Chance, Rogers & Wells and Punder Volhard Weber & Axster, 2000
Norton Rose and Fulbright & Jaworski, 2013
Hogan & Hartson and Lovells, 2010
DLA, Piper Rudnick and Gray Cary Ware & Freidenrich, 2005
Dentons and Dacheng, 2015
CMS, Nabarro and Olswang, 2016
Herbert Smith and Freehills, 2012
King & Wood Mallesons and SJ Berwin, 2013
Honorable mentions