Paul Weiss has added five partners to its New York finance group with a series of hires from Sidley, Kirkland & Ellis and White & Case.
Three of the partners join from Sidley, including leveraged finance co-head Nicholas Schwartz (pictured top, right). He will start at Paul Weiss before the end of the year, alongside fellow finance partners Mark Adler and Julie Ann Lamm (pictured top, left and centre).
Paul Weiss chair Brad Karp said in a statement: ‘Nick, Mark and Julie Ann are a truly stellar team of finance advisers, and we’re thrilled to welcome them to our firm. Their multifaceted debt financing skillset will amplify our market-leading capabilities at a time when we’re seeing increasing demand by our clients for sharp, solutions-oriented financing for their most consequential transactions.’
Corporate department chair Scott Barshay added: ‘I have known and worked with Nick and his team for over a decade, and I am thrilled to have them join us.’
Schwartz has extensive experience advising corporate and private equity borrowers in a range of leveraged finance matters. Adler has experience advising PE sponsors, portfolio companies, public companies, and alternative capital providers, while Lamm’s clients include corporate borrowers, PE sponsors, and portfolio companies.
Major clients the group has worked with include Clearlake Capital, with Schwartz and Lamm both involved in the Sidley team that advised the Santa Monica-headquartered PE firm on its $7.7bn take-private of data and analytics provider Dun & Bradstreet Holdings earlier this year. All three also previously worked at Kirkland.
The other two hires for Paul Weiss are project finance specialists Kelann Brook Stirling and Jamie Franklin, who join from Kirkland and White & Case respectively.
Karp said: ‘Kelann and Jamie are spectacular project finance lawyers, with deep experience in handling landmark energy and infrastructure deals. As investment in energy and infrastructure, in particular digital infrastructure, continues to surge, Kelann’s and Jamie’s expertise will enable us to advise our clients on the most ambitious, transformative projects in the market.’
Both lawyers have experience advising clients including PE sponsors, corporate borrowers, and institutional investors on a range of energy and infrastructure finance and development transactions.
Franklin joined White & Case as a partner from Latham & Watkins in 2020. He first served in the firm’s Singapore office, relocated to Houston in 2022, and makes the move to New York to join Paul Weiss. Meanwhile, Stirling joined Kirkland as a partner in 2018 from Latham, where he was an associate.
Also in New York, Gibson Dunn has hired Fried Frank partner Duncan McKay to lead its fund finance practice.
McKay brings experience across a range of fund finance and structured capital transactions for domestic and overseas clients including alternative asset managers, investment fund sponsors, and direct lenders.
He moved to Fried Frank in 2022 from Kirkland, where he made partner in 2018.
Gibson Dunn investment funds practice group chair Shukie Grossman said: ‘As the investment funds landscape continues to evolve and the demand for liquidity solutions and fund finance products steadily increases, Duncan’s innovative capabilities and best-in-class deal execution will be invaluable to our clients and will further strengthen the firm’s premier global platform.’
The firm has been steadily building its funds capabilities over the course of the year, with hires including DLA Piper global funds co-chair James O’Donnell in London in March, as well as Morgan Lewis partner Carolyn Abram in Dubai in June.
Also hiring from Fried Frank in New York is A&O Shearman, which has brought Jan Sysel into its fund finance practice.
A Fried Frank lifer, Sysel has spent more than two decades at the firm, and made partner there in 2015. He has experience in structuring and executing a range of complex fund finance transactions, in particular in fund formation.
On the West Coast, Kirkland has hired Latham’s global hospitality sector co-lead Meghan Cocci, bringing her into its Los Angeles office as a partner.
Cocci spent nearly six years at Latham, and has experience advising clients including private equity funds, real estate investment trusts (REITs), real estate developers, and family offices, on major transactions in the US and around the world.
Last March she advised private real estate firm Cain International on management and branding documentation relating to its $2bn construction financing to support its development of mixed-use urban project One Beverly Hills. She has advised US-based REIT Sunston Hotel Investors on its $265m acquisition of the Montage Healdsburg Resort in April 2021, as well as its acquisition of the Four Seasons Resort and Residencies Napa Valley that December, valued at $177.5m.
She has also advised on real estate matters in relation to larger transactions, including advising Realty Income Corporation’s $63bn merger with Spirit Realty Capital in October 2023.
‘Meghan is widely known as one of the top hospitality lawyers in the market,’ Kirkland executive committee chair Jon Ballis said in a statement. ‘Her arrival strengthens our leading real assets platform and bolsters our rapidly growing entertainment, sports and media experience. We’re thrilled to welcome her to Kirkland.’
Cocci added: ‘Kirkland is well poised to take advantage of any and all opportunities within the hospitality industry, and I can’t wait to start working with the team to help further grow and strengthen our relationships with clients in their most complex and exciting hospitality-related transactions.’
For its part, Latham has also made a hire from Kirkland, bringing private equity and M&A partner Chris Heasley into its Houston office.
Heasley made partner at Kirkland in 2018 after joining from Baker Botts, and has experience advising on the development, acquisition, and divestiture of energy, infrastructure, and technology-related projects and assets.
‘We are thrilled to welcome Chris to Latham and to continue to expand our preeminent energy M&A and private equity practice in Texas and globally,’ said Nick Dhesi, Houston office managing partner at Latham. ‘He is widely regarded as one of the top energy lawyers in Texas, and his impressive track record and experience, breadth of practice and industry relationships will do what we value most — serve our clients well.’

AG managing partner Andrew Johnston (pictured) put the firm’s success down to ‘the combination of a strong focus on domestic markets and clients, coupled with international growth.’
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