Sidley Austin has hired from Latham & Watkins again, as it brings over the firm’s former co-head of UK equity capital markets, James Inness.
After over 13 years at Latham, Inness will join former colleagues David Stewart and Vladimir Mikhailovsky, who both moved to Sidley’s London office last year.
More recently, Sidley also recruited Latham’s global co-chair of real estate Jeremy Trinder.
‘We are excited to have James join our growing London cross border capital markets offering – he is a stand out UK equity capital markets lawyer known to us and many of our partners and has a strong client following,’ said Sidley management committee chair Yvette Ostolaza.
‘Adding another strong equity capital markets partner in London was a strategic priority for the firm – we have significantly enhanced our capital markets practice and offering to clients following a number of other recent strategic hires,’ she continued.
Elsewhere in the City, Fried Frank hired M&A partner Rhett McPhie from Kirkland & Ellis, where he has spent the last five years. He joins alongside PE partner Nathan Pusey, who has moved to the firm from Morgan Lewis in New York.
Fried Frank managing partner and M&A and PE practice cohead Steven Epstein said of McPhie and Pusey’s hires: ‘Their arrival advances a strategic growth priority by continuing to deepen our asset management M&A capabilities to support the expanding needs of our client base.’
Also making moves this week was Gowling WLG, which has hired Guy Stevenson from Orrick to head its London financial services regulation team.
Stevenson, who has particular experience advising clients on regulatory authorisation for new business models and on launching and scaling their UK operations, joins after four years at Orrick, where he was a counsel.
Meanwhile, Kirkland & Ellis has also made moves in Europe, becoming the latest firm to bulk up its PE offering on the continent with its hire of Sebastian Heim.
Based across Munich and London, Heim will join Kirkland from Millbank, where he began his career 15 years ago. He is recognised by Legal 500 as a next-generation partner for PE transactions in Germany.
A number of US-headquartered firms have bulked up their European PE teams in recent months, with Latham recruiting a four-partner team from Freshfields last December and following up with a clutch of hires from Clifford Chance last month, Proskauer hiring a trio of partners from Hogan Lovells in Paris, and Weil bringing over Willkie’s Germany co-managing partner Kamyar Abrar.
Back in London, Taylor Wessing has expanded with three recent hires, with the addition of DLA Piper real estate tax partner Gemma Grunewald, Travers competition lawyer Stephen Whitfield and IP partner Henry Priestley, formerly of Russells.
The hires mark the second, third and fourth partners to join Taylor Wessing following its decision to merge with Winston & Strawn, as RPC partner Jeremy Drew also joined the firm’s IP practice last month.
In the Middle East, Gibson Dunn has hired former Linklaters Saudi Arabia managing partner Waleed Rasrommani as a corporate and M&A partner.
Back in London DLA Piper has also made hires, as it brings in private equity partner Markjan van Schaardenburgh from Ashurst, as well as finance specialist Mark Brown, who left Linklaters in 2023 before taking a career break, and tax partner Gareth Amdor, who joins from Reed Smith.
DLA also grew elsewhere in Europe, as Cathrine Foldberg Møller is set to join its finance practice in Luxembourg from Simmons & Simmons.
For its part, Ashurst was also active, bringing Heidi Blomqvist into its London corporate team as a partner.
Blomqvist joins after more than a decade at White & Case, where she made partner this year. She brings experience advising corporate and PE clients on a variety of transactions in the energy and infrastructure space.
Also expanding in real estate are Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, which brought former Gibson Dunn partner Claibourne Harrison to its London office, and Shoosmiths, which has hired Simon Collis from Steptoe.
Linklaters managing associate Jasmine Olomolaiye is moving to Foot Anstey in London, where she will join the investigations, corporate crime and sanctions team.
Fieldfisher has hired investment funds partner Mark Shaw, who will join the firm’s London office from Pinsent Masons.
Broadfield has made a series of hires in London, including swiping Pillsbury partner Gavin Watson, who will become the firm’s global head of energy and infrastructure.
The firm will also bring in private wealth partners Jonathan Kropman from JMW Solicitors and Katherine Forster, who was previously a legal director at Birketts.
Penningtons Manches Cooper has also expanded in London with the hire of personal injury and medical negligence partner Robert Dransfield, who spent just under 20 years at Stewarts.
In another exit from DLA, sports specialist legal director James Thorndyke will join Simons Muirhead Burton as a partner in the firm’s London office.
Wedlake Bell has grown its City team as it brings in divorce and family partner Rebecca Christie, formerly a senior associate at Fladgate.
DWF has hired former DAC Beachcroft partner Ian Plumley, who specialises in insurance and reinsurance.
Plumley will join the firm’s London office, bringing with him over 30 years of experience in the sector.
In Manchester, Addleshaw Goddard has hired real estate partner Kirsty Chalkley from Shoosmiths.
On the continent, McDermott Will & Schulte has expanded its Milan banking and finance practice with the addition of transactions specialist Andrea Giaretta, who joins as a partner from Freshfields, where he was a senior associate.
Pinsent Masons has hired Linklaters counsel Belén Lavandera as a partner in its employment team in Madrid, while in Geneva Charles Russell Speechlys has hired tax partner Frédéric Ney from Swiss firm Bär & Karrer, where he was a senior associate.
In the UAE, Dechert has rehired financial services and investment partner Phillip Sacks from White & Case, where he has spent the last two years. As he returns to the firm, Sacks will serve as managing partner for Dechert’s Dubai office.
Finally, offshore firm Harneys has hired Katrina Edge as the head of its banking and finance practice in Jersey. Edge will join the firm after over 20 years at Ogier, where she most recently served as global head of banking and finance.

The discussions reflected how rapidly the external environment is reshaping the demands placed on in-house legal teams, with a big-name line-up of panellists sharing their perspectives.
The afternoon also saw a frank and open discussion between Smith & Nephew group GC Helen Barraclough and her go-to outside counsel, Reed Smith partner Ben Koplin (pictured), who examined the ins and outs of a productive adviser-client relationship and what GCs can do when expectations of external counsel are not being met.
The afternoon featured a keynote speech from Sarah Wynn-Williams (pictured), former director of global public policy at Facebook, as well as a crisis management session




While flexible and hybrid models are becoming increasingly embedded at large firms, cultural expectations at home have not shifted as quickly.
only come through consistency.
Hong Kong
Beijing
Paris
Brussels
Singapore
Leaders at Ireland’s ‘Big Six’ – A&L Goodbody, Arthur Cox, Matheson, McCann Fitzgerald, Mason Hayes & Curran and William Fry – all agree that 2025 was a strong year for the domestic market, with international firms that have joined the Dublin fray in recent years also commenting on the draw of the Irish market for international opportunities.
Moore (pictured) continues: ‘We definitely saw the classic phrase of ‘when the US sneezes, the world catches a cold’ being exacerbated last year. Liberation Day and the application of tariffs spooked an awful lot of people, but actually the world just got on with things again.
‘It’s very possible we’ll continue to see smaller mid-market mergers into the future’, comments Widger, ‘not necessarily to become challengers to the bigger firms, but in order to be more efficient and economic, and ensure a better offering for a certain segment of the market’.
‘While some of the leading firms in the market had already adopted automation products, the focus has turned to generative AI products, especially at the higher end of the market’, comments Keogh. ‘That being said, firms are aware of the issues around confidentiality and other potential pitfalls, including the quality of the work generated, so everyone is at their own stage on the AI journey’.
Hogan Lovells partner Angus Coulter (pictured), the former head of the firm’s London competition team, describes the CMA’s current stance as