In New York, Cleary Gottlieb has hired equity capital markets co-head Ilir Mujalovic and capital markets partner Harald Halbhuber from A&O Shearman.
Mujalovic, who was global co-head of US capital markets and global ECM, was a lifer at the firm, joining legacy Shearman & Sterling as an associate in 2003, and returning to the firm in 2014 after three and a half years at Bank of America Merill Lynch.
He is recognised by Legal 500 as a leading partner for capital markets: equity offerings, and joins Cleary as head of the firm’s equity capital markets practice.
Meanwhile, Halbhuber joined then-Shearman as a partner from Davis Polk in 2011.
‘The continued growth of our corporate practice in the US is a priority for us,’ said Jeff Karpf, Cleary managing partner since January. ‘Our world-class capital markets team has been at the forefront of precedent-setting transactions for decades, and adding Ilir and Harald’s deep knowledge and relationships further expands our ability to handle complex transactions for our clients.’
The departures are the latest in a string of exits for A&O Shearman: as of last October, more than 130 partners had left the firm since the merger between Shearman and legacy Allen & Overy went live in May 2024.
Covington & Burling has hired two leading tech M&A partners from Freshfields, including the UK firm’s US tech and life sciences transactions lead.
John Fisher, who served as head of Freshfields’ US technology and life sciences M&A group, joins Covington in Palo Alto, while Tomas Rua, who was a partner in the same group, joins in New York.
The pair joined the firm in 2020, with Fisher joining as part of a four-partner hire from Sidley Austin that launched Freshfields’ Silicon Valley office. Rua joined as an associate from Cleary, and made partner in 2024.
‘We partnered with John and Tomas as co-counsel on some of the most complicated and highly regulated tech M&A deals last year,’ said Covington corporate practice chair and M&A practice co-chair Catherin Dargan.
She continued: ‘They have established strong reputations for advising technology clients on some of the industry’s most intricate and strategically important transactions and will expand the work we already do with leading technology companies.’
Leading secondaries partner Robert Emerson has joined Latham & Watkins’ investment funds practice in New York.
Emerson joins Latham after three years at Goodwin, where he developed expertise on a range of liquidity solutions for private equity and investment funds, and led fundraises for domestic and foreign clients which scaled to over $15bn.
Simpson Thacher has added a partner each to its energy and infrastructure and capital markets practices in New York.
John Anselmi, who joins Simpson’s banking and credit practice, focuses his practice on financing project and infra transactions through banking finance, private credit and bonds, for sectors from liquified natural gas to data centres in regions across the globe.
Prior to the move he spent 23 years at Sullivan & Cromwell, most recently as a special counsel. He joins Simpson as a partner.
Keith Harden joins the firm’s capital markets practice, and brings expertise in structured finance and securitization, especially in real estate. Prior to the move, he was at Dechert for five years, becoming a counsel this January.
Cadwalader has hired two partners in its financial restructuring practice across New York and London.
Shai Schmidt, who is based in New York, joins from boutique Glenn Agre Bergman & Fuentes, where he spent five years, and Jakeob Brown moves across after nine years at Akin, where he was a counsel.
Orrick has hired Agatha Kluk as a partner in New York. Kluk, who advises founders, board members and investors across the tech ecosystem, joins from Perkins Coie, which acquired her boutique Kluk Farber Law in 2022.
Fried Frank has strengthened its M&A and private equity practices in its New York and London offices.
Nathan Pusey, who is based in the US, previously spent eight years at Morgan Lewis, while Rhett McPhie was a partner in Kirkland’s London office for five years.
McPhie’s practice is focused on secondaries and private capital sponsors and funds, and Pusey bring experience in asset management M&A.
DLA Piper has launched a new cross-border capital solutions practice with three partner hires from Akin.
Ranes Ramanathan and Alex Cushman join in New York, with Daniel Wayte joining in the London office. The team will focus on providing counsel on bespoke financing strategies across debt, equity and hybrid investment situations.
Ramanathan will lead the group and brings experience in restructurings and complex situations after co-leading Akin’s private credit and special situations practice.
In Washington DC, Steptoe has hired life sciences and antitrust litigator Jonathan Janow from US national firm Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, where he spent almost seven years.
Janow brings experience in high-stakes disputes in federal and state courts, with matters ranging from trade secrets to class actions.
Clifford Chance has also hired in antitrust in DC, with Stacy Frazier joining the firm after three years as the deputy general counsel at UnitedHealth group. Frazier bring in-house experience from Fortune 100 companies, where she managed a broad portfolio of antitrust issues from transaction to litigation matters.
O’Melveny has also grown its antitrust team with the hire of two litigators, who join the firm as partners.
Diana Aguilar joins the firm from the US Department of Justice, where she was a trial attorney in the Antitrust Division, and Lauren Weinstein joins from litigation boutique MoloLamken, where she made partner in 2020.
They join the firm’s San Francisco and Washington DC offices, respectively.
Finally, Philadelphia-headquartered firm Blank Rome has hired corporate and M&A partners Robert Zinn and Megan Wotherspoon into its Pittsburgh office from K&L Gates.
Zinn co-led K&L Gates’ corporate practice for 15 years and helped found its manufacturing and fintech industry groups, he is also a Legal 500 Hall of Famr lawyer for mid-market M&A.
Meanwhile, Wotherspoon was a firm lifer, at the firm for nearly two decades and making partner there in 2015.

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