LB100 Global Elite – London Stalling

In its first major overhaul since the introduction of peer groups in 2004, the Global Elite table is only five firms long.

Herbert Smith has transferred to the City International table after exhibiting profitability levels far below the elite group average.

But while Global Elite earnings may combine to provide the highest grossing turnover average in the LB100 (at £1,056m that average tops the billion pound barrier for the first time) growth is resolutely meagre. Indeed Herbert Smith’s 3% rise in revenues would have hit the peer group average exactly.

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LB100 Major International – One Verein Day

The Major International peer group made its LB100 debut last year and there’s no doubt that it was a timely introduction.

Comprised entirely of firms eschewing full financial integration in favour of looser Swiss Verein-type structures, the players included under this banner have continued to blaze a trail with their entrepreneurial approaches to law firm growth.

CMS, which includes former Major City firm CMS Cameron McKenna, is a new addition to the table following its milestone decision to report its financials on a firmwide rather than country-by-country basis. The group employs the European Economic Interest Grouping (EEIG) model favoured by PwC. As other City firms announce their intention to secure ambitious international mergers, it seems a prudent bet that this table will swell further as the Verein model continues to be used as a preferred route to expansion.

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LB100 City International – New Frontiers

For this year’s LB100, we have a new peer group: City International. This group comprises firms that have leading practices in the City but also have a strong international practice, deriving a healthy proportion of their income from offices outside the UK.

All the firms in the peer group have posted increases in turnover and, barring a few, increases in average revenue per lawyer (RPL). Many firms have bolstered revenues by merging or opening new offices in buoyant markets such as the Middle East and Latin America. Thirteen of the 17 firms in this peer group opened one or more new offices last year. However, for some firms the expansion has come at a price in profit per lawyer (PPL).

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LB100 City Domestic – A Tale of Two Cities

It was the best of times. It was the worst of times. In a year where eurozone turbulence rocked the continental market and wider global growth failed to meet forecasts, being a solely UK-based firm seemed like a good bet.

Well, for some at least. Variability has always been a feature of the London peer groups as the main players can straddle very different markets. So in the name of healthy competition, this year sees the introduction of the City Domestic and City International peer groups to the LB100.

Formed out of the previous Major City and London Midsizers groups, the aim is to try to improve standardisation. This City Domestic peer group brings together those City-based firms in the LB100 that derive almost all of their revenues from London offices.

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LB100 Major UK – Pairing Up

As far as merger headlines go, the Major UK peer group has had a bellyful over the past 12 months.

Even in a year where the LB100 has seen consolidation across the board, the UK’s leading national firms still stand out as the most acquisitive. It’s a trend driven by necessity.

On the face of it, the merger between insurance players Beachcroft and Davies Arnold Cooper (DAC) was probably the most high-profile union but although DAC Beachcroft saw turnover rise by a hefty 22% to £163.2m in 2011/12, its growth still didn’t top the group.

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LB100 South – Down South

The situation remains typically sluggish in the South, where firms continue to tread water as far as profits are concerned and struggle for market share in this hugely competitive region.

Yet again, most firms in this peer group suffered flat or declining turnover and many have reported falling equity partner numbers; both signs that, despite unmistakable optimism among lawyers, things are far from pre-crisis levels. Average revenue across the peer group is up just 1% to £29.5m, still down on the £33m average in 2008. Once again, this is the worst-performing peer group in the LB100.

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LB100 Central – Fighting Back

Two years of holding the dubious distinction of being the worst performing peer group in the LB100 based on revenue has acted as a call to arms to law firms in central England and Wales.

The past year has seen the region consolidate at a storming rate to reverse the slide, climbing above the South and Scotland peer groups.

Ipswich-based Birketts posted a 12% annual increase in turnover to £26.7m following its first full financial year since amalgamating with nine-partner Chelmsford outfit Wollastons in September 2010.

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LB100 North – Northern Soul

The line-up of North peer group firms has changed again. Following the departures of DWF and Hill Dickinson to the Major UK group last year, Weightmans joins them after 2011’s merger with Mace & Jones and the acquisition of Vizards Wyeth’s insurance team propelled the firm’s revenues into the big league.

Last year Weightmans was already £10m ahead of its nearest rival, Pannone. This year it is over £30m. Keoghs now tops this group with revenues of £47m.

But even without Weightmans, there is still a large gulf between the top firms and those bringing up the rear in this peer group. Dickinson Dees is now the largest firm by fee-earners in the North and its revenues are up by a modest 1% to £46.1m. This means the firm has arrested a three-year slide in revenues but is still some 23% behind its 2008 peak of £60m. Its five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) stands at -4% – the worst in the group behind Cobbetts.

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LB100 Scotland – Flying the Saltire

One firm in particular again stands out from the morass of misery that has beset the Scottish legal market in recent years, as it did last year: Brodies.

Brodies has recorded one of the highest real-term turnover increases this year in the entire LB100: up 16% to £42.8m, leapfrogging Shepherd and Wedderburn, which has remained static. This is no flash in the pan either: Brodies five-year revenue compound annual growth rate (CAGR) is 7%, easily the highest in the peer group and all achieved without a merger.

The firm is also highly profitable. Net income is up 30%, again the highest in the group, putting profit per lawyer (PPL) at a healthy £50,000.

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Ireland – Céad míle fáilte

hurling

Shanghai’s location at the estuary of the Yangtze River attracts rainfall for a third of the year. Lawyers from the region will feel at home in Ireland then, a country not renowned for its weather. Earlier this year, law firm A&L Goodbody officially launched its pioneering Chinese Lawyer Exchange Programme, signing agreements with 15 Chinese law firms and universities, such as Beijing’s King & Wood Mallesons and Shanghai’s East China University of Political Science and Law. The programme will provide six-month placements at the firm’s Dublin office as well as in-house experience with clients such as Pfizer, Bank of Ireland and Telefónica O2. Such is the initiative that Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny applauded the firm for its ‘enterprise’ and ‘courage’.

The purpose of the project is to promote inbound and outbound investment between the two countries. Foreign direct investment (FDI) into Ireland has long been a bright spot for the Irish economy, with headline multinationals such as Microsoft and Google choosing Ireland to base their European operations during the 1990s. More recently, however, there has been a surge in momentum. Continue reading “Ireland – Céad míle fáilte”

Ireland – Court Appeal

rugby game

Asked whether the Irish legal market is awash with contentious work, one leading litigator sighs deeply and quips: ‘Well, the country is certainly full of contention.’ Every dip in any economic cycle brings a raft of litigious work, but the spectacular collapse of Ireland’s banking and property sectors following the global credit crisis has brought unprecedented large-scale litigation, restructuring and administration (termed examinership in Ireland).

‘We are busier than we’ve ever been,’ confirms Liam Kennedy, head of dispute resolution at A&L Goodbody. ‘The first half of last year was all crisis litigation, but since then we’ve had a lot of big-ticket work, such as high-level restructuring, insolvency, regulatory and international asset tracing litigation.’ Continue reading “Ireland – Court Appeal”

Malta – Island Haven

Despite the ongoing European crisis, Malta has proved to be one of the best performers in the eurozone. LB asks Malta’s leading firms what is so special about this Mediterranean island.

Although Malta has shown resilience during the global downturn, it has not been bypassed completely. M&A volume has reduced and the island’s banking sector is more cautious than ever about credit exposure. Nonetheless, Malta’s own slowdown has been relatively painless when compared to other European jurisdictions. The island is fiscally conservative and its level of state debt is fairly low, with most of it held locally. Consumer debt is also low.

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Wealth management – Filling big shoes

The global diversification of wealth continues to drive the efforts of law firms’ private client teams as the world’s population of affluent individuals continues to climb. LB tracks the latest developments.

The international private client teams at major law firms are thriving. The practice area, for decades regarded as the black sheep of the family, has now been warmly accepted into the fold. In some cases private client has become more than a much-loved practice area.

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Global 100 – Global Elite – Hollow victory

The Global Elite continues to dominate the international legal market. But with ailing global markets and little to no M&A, not every firm has much to celebrate

Europe is in crisis, the UK has hit a double dip recession and US markets continue to fluctuate. Likewise the debt markets are closed, M&A sits on ice and big-ticket litigation is few and far between. But the Global Elite retains its dominant position. The world’s behemoths remain relatively unscathed by the knock-on effect of ailing global economic and financial markets.

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Global 100 – Dewey & LeBoeuf – Lessons from a downfall

Dewey & LeBoeuf went from 26th in last year’s Global 100 to filing for bankruptcy in May this year. What can the Global 100 learn from the firm’s demise? 

Finley, Kumble, Wagner, Underberg, Manley, Myerson & Casey; Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison; Heller Ehrman; and Howrey, the US legal market has quite a track record when it comes to large law firm failures.

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