US quartet line up on AT&T’s $85.4bn takeover of Time Warner

Demonstrating dominance in their home market, four US firms have taken advisory roles as AT&T has offered to acquire Time Warner for $85.4bn. Regular adviser Sullivan & Cromwell is advising AT&T alongside Arnold & Porter, while Cravath, Swaine & Moore has taken the lead for CNN and HBO owner Time Warner, with Weil, Gotshal & Manges.

Continue reading “US quartet line up on AT&T’s $85.4bn takeover of Time Warner”

GCs are seizing the day (from their advisers)

Can anything truly threaten the premier league of global law firms? Certainly the going has been more challenging since the banking crisis for all sections of the legal industry, whether you are betting on ‘flight-to-quality’ or ‘more-for-less’, but overall the world’s top 100 commercial law firms look no nearer to an existential threat. AI? The accountants? New Law providers? The former reflects a genuine force set to substantially change the industry, though it is not apparent whether that will come at the expense of high-end law firms. The latter two players have yet to come near to living up to the fanfare made for them. Continue reading “GCs are seizing the day (from their advisers)”

Taught leaders

lb268bIn 2012 the MBA degree established itself as the most popular subject of postgraduate education in the US, accounting for more than a quarter of all enrolments according to the US Department of Education. Along with the usual diet of macroeconomics, management theory and financial accounting, MBA programmes have ensured that those who seek to carve out a corporate career focus on one quality above all others: leadership.

Continue reading “Taught leaders”

The new order

Having seen Legal & General’s shares initially tumble on the Friday morning immediately after the UK’s vote to leave the EU – like so many financial services businesses – general counsel Geoffrey Timms is concerned that the business impact of Brexit could become a self-fulfilling prophecy. ‘Markets are emotional rather than factual. We can talk ourselves into trouble. There’s this end-of-the-world view online. Britain is still in a good place. Yes, the government has to fight uncertainty, but so does Europe. One hopes common sense will prevail.’

Continue reading “The new order”

New tools, new challenges

It is possible artificial intelligence will change all our working life immeasurably in the next 20 years. It might put us all out of work; nobody knows. Even if it did happen in 20 years’ time, it is of no use to me in the way that I do my job right now and not much use to you as in-house lawyers to know what might happen. What is important is to understand what is possible now, what you can do with it and what the dangers are of trying to implement technology without thinking through what you are trying to get out of it. I will give some hard-earned experience picked up at the dirty end of a lot of technology projects.

Continue reading “New tools, new challenges”