Legal Business

US spree: Morgan Lewis hires five-partner team for Shanghai launch as Latham taps A&O for German hire

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US-bred law firms have kicked off the key post-summer season with a rash of hires, with Morgan Lewis & Bockius hiring a team from Dentons to launch in a key Chinese market as Latham & Watkins recruits yet another Magic Circle partner in Europe.

Dentons’ former Asia managing partner Mitch Dudek, along with partners Todd Liao, Alex Wang, Eddie Hsu and Cindy Pan, are leading team to Morgan Lewis to launch in Shanghai. The partners join with a team of 23 lawyers with experience in corporate, real estate and finance work.

Dudek was the founding partner of Dentons’ mainland China practice and its Shanghai office, launching the office in 2011. He also helped secure Dentons’ combination with Chinese law firm Dacheng in 2015.

The Shanghai launch furthers the top 20 US law firm’s Asian expansion, having opened in Singapore in 2015 and taking a team of lawyers from Bingham McCutchen in 2014 to open in Tokyo. The 1,900-lawyer Morgan Lewis now has 29 offices worldwide, including an outpost in Beijing.

Latham, meanwhile, continues its recent run of aggressive European expansion with the hire of Allen & Overy (A&O) capital markets partner Oliver Seiler in Frankfurt, its second partner from the Magic Circle firm in three months. Seiler currently heads A&O’s German international capital markets group and co-heads the City firm’s EMEA equity capital markets practice.

Latham has been on a hiring spree in the UK and Germany, with Seiler’s arrival following fellow A&O finance veteran Stephen Kensell into Latham’s City arm in July. Kensell was formerly head of A&O’s cornerstone banking practice, and ran for the senior partner post at the Magic Circle firm earlier this year. Latham – currently the world’s highest billing law firm – has substantially hiked revenues in recent years in its London arm, up 12% in 2015 to $263m, against firm-wide revenues of $2.65bn.

Seiler’s arrival also follows a string of senior Latham recruits into Germany from Magic Circle firms, with Clifford Chance’s co-head of private equity Oliver Felsenstein joining 18 months ago alongside buyout partner Burc Hesse, CC’s German banking chief Alexandra Hagelüken following in October and Linklaters’ German head of private equity Rainer Traugott arriving in March.

Rüdiger Malaun, a partner in Latham’s Munich office and global co-chair of the capital markets practice, said: ‘There are strong synergies between our equity capital markets, private equity and high yield practices and Oliver’s arrival is an important step in our plans to build the market-leading transactional practice in Germany and Europe.’

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk, tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

If it ain’t broke… Do A&O’s New Law business lines live up to the hype?

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After a series of ventures Allen & Overy has become the bellwether among the legal elite for innovation. But do the new business lines live up to the marketing?

‘We’re going to close the doors soon,’ says David Wakeling, the Allen & Overy (A&O) partner leading the City giant’s new tech-based service, MarginMatrix. It’s not often you hear a law firm talk of turning away potential clients, particularly not when they are some of the world’s largest banks.

Legal Business

Q&A: Allen & Overy’s Scott Zemser talks leveraged finance, lockstep and competing in the US

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Legal Business caught up with Allen & Overy’s (A&O) new global co-head of leveraged finance, Scott Zemser.

How has the leveraged finance market evolved?

I started off doing leveraged finance in the 90s. It was a very different environment back then. Dinosaurs roamed it was so long ago. At that time it was mostly club deals, you didn’t really see funds that you see today: CLOs, mutual funds, debt funds of private equity shops. It didn’t exist until the late nineties when you started seeing advances in the Morgan Stanley debt funds coming in and buying up this debt. But most of the time you saw three, four, five banks do a club deal, they held it to their own account and you rarely saw as much selling as you see now. Then it started evolving in the late nineties, early 2000s when you started seeing more lead arrangers acting more as facilitators for these syndicated loans – some were holding, some weren’t holding piece of these loans, you saw revolvers and term loans. Then you started seeing the market evolving into revolvers and terms with two pieces of term loans. At the same time you started seeing this funds certain type of world in the middle of the 2000s with bridge facilities coming into play. It’s really evolved into an enormous global asset class which has been resilient and performed extremely well.

Other top firms are making significant investments in leveraged finance, is it crucial to have a strong offering?

You have to have a strong leveraged finance offering globally. It’s London, it’s New York, it’s Paris, it’s Frankfurt, you could go on and on. You need it because it’s a dynamic type of asset class. You have deals that start in the UK and end up in the US, you have a deal in the US and it ends up with tranches in Europe, Asia and Australia. But it’s not just having a strong leveraged finance practice, knowing the market helps when you have a strong sponsor practice. What’s most important is being commercial and understanding how those deals work. The only way to do that is to do a lot of deals.

Is leveraged finance a tough area to build a business in?

It’s very difficult to build a business in. There are so many parts to it. There have been some that have taken the view that New York is their epicentre and have used local counsel in the various jurisdictions – top firms, incredible groups and don’t necessarily have that depth and breadth of an A&O. It really comes down to who you want to be. It’s very expensive to build a network and if you look at the real players in global leveraged finance they’ve done it for over 50 years. You can’t build this tomorrow.

Why Allen & Overy?

There really aren’t many choices at this quality and global level. It made it a bit easier because I had worked opposite A&O and had come across these guys for years. I viewed them as my competition in Europe for so many years. I’m going to be honest, there was this fear [from competitors] that A&O would somehow fix this [US] problem and build a New York practice. I spent enough time in Europe that I worried about it. Well, we’re there now. It was a good cultural fit.

It’s widely reported that A&O broke lockstep to bring in your new team. How important is it for firms trying to crack US to ensure competitive pay?

There’s no question this has been pushed around for years. You see it in London and we see it in New York. There’s no question you need to pay what’s market. A&O has shown it’s willing to do that and will continue to do that. It’s no simple process. My view as a US lawyer competing against the UK firms is that it’s not easy to compete against an A&O. They’ve been there forever and their relationships are deep, but they didn’t have this US part. It’s just that there’s a different remuneration system in the US and it’s changed in London the last few years as well. A&O have proven that they’re willing to do what they need to do to continue to build in the US and there’s a price for that.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Asian ambition: A&O moves capital markets partner Miller to Hong Kong for regional head role

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Allen & Overy has boosted its Asian offering with partner Stephen Miller moving from London to Hong Kong to take on the newly-created role of head of Asia capital markets.

Previously practice head of ‘the best capital markets practice in London by a country mile’ as described in The Legal 500, the appointment of Miller illustrates the firm’s dedication to its capital markets offering in the region.

Miller’s appointment to the firm’s Hong Kong office in September, follows the hire of US qualified partner Alex Tao in July. Tao arrived from Davis Polk & Wardwell where he held the position of counsel. In March the firm also brought in Charlotte Robins to its regulatory practice in Hong Kong from Norton Rose Fulbright.

As the firm brought in Tao, Allen & Overy shuffled capital markets partner Alex Stathopoulos from Hong Kong to its Singapore office.

Allen & Overy’s recent changes to the team in the region placates a number of exits the firm’s Hong Kong office has witnessed over the past three years. The firm lost a number of US qualified capital markets to Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy with partner David Kuo joining the firm early last year following partner James Grandolfo in 2013.

The Magic Circle firm has recently made a substantial investment in its Manhattan practice, breaking lockstep in July to bring on a team which included finance partner Scott Zemser, who joined with Alan Rockwell and Judah Frogel from White & Case. Proskauer Rose partner Rajani Gupta also moved to Allen & Overy with Todd Koretzky, an associate from Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy who was been made up to partner by the firm.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Big Apple takes a bite out of partner profits as Allen & Overy breaks lockstep for US hires

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Allen & Overy (A&O) has broken its lockstep for its new Manhattan hires as the firm made a major finance play to compete with the US elite earlier this month.

Legal Business understands the firm broke its lockstep for the hires, about two years after introducing remuneration changes which were aimed at bringing in star laterals.

The Magic Circle firm announced the new team in July led by finance partner Scott Zemser, who joins with Alan Rockwell and Judah Frogel from White & Case.

Proskauer Rose partner Rajani Gupta also moved to A&O with Todd Koretzky, an associate from Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy who has been made up to partner by the firm.

At press time the firm declined to comment on which hires the lockstep was broken for or how much they would be paid. The firm’s lockstep ladder runs from 20 to 50 points, with partners at the top of equity picking up £1.9m last year.

In order to reward lateral hires with the bonus, the sponsoring partner is required to put a proposal to a committee set up by former senior partner David Morley in 2014 which focuses on how to award partners for ‘outstanding performance’. The committee will then decide whether or not to award the lateral with extra points. This remains subject to a full partnership vote when bringing in any lateral hire.

The new team’s clients include Bank of America, BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan.

The US is a high priority for A&O’s management team, senior partner Wim Dejonghe and managing partner Andrew Ballheimer. Following their election, the pair told Legal Business: ‘There’s a misconception that it’s just about New York, it’s about growing US law capability across the world. It’s not about how big your US office is, it’s about how credible your US law offering is around the world.’ A&O plan to ‘steadily build’ its US offering, with management open to all possibilities.

The move follows its big four peer Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer which broke its lockstep for star high yield partner Ward McKimm last year. He joined the firm from Kirkland & Ellis for a reported $6m per year pay packet.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

For more see the comment piece: ‘Lockstep has to go for Magic Circle to enter new global elite’

Legal Business

All bets are off: Magic Circle duo and Norton Rose act as William Hill rejects takeover bid

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Slaughter and May, Allen & Overy (A&O) and Norton Rose Fulbright have all taken key roles as William Hill has rejected a £3.6bn takeover bid from Rank Group and 888 Holdings.

Slaughter and May advised William Hill on the offer, while Allen & Overy corporate partners Ed Barnett and Annabelle Croker advised 888 Holdings. Rank Group was advised by Norton Rose Fulbright EMEA corporate head partners Raj Karia and partner Chris Randall.

The deal would have seen the creation of BidCo, merging Rank and 888 and acquiring William Hill for a cash offer and shares in the new company.

William Hill rejected the deal, which offered an 11% premium on the betting groups latest share price. A statement from William Hill chairman Gareth Davis said the deal ‘substantially undervalues William Hill’ and was ‘a very complex three-way combination at a low premium involving substantial risk for William Hill shareholders’.

A&O’s Barnett and Croker previously acted for 888 opposite Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer in July 2015 in its bid to takeover FTSE 250 gambling firm Bwin.Party Digital Entertainment for £898m. 888’s bid was ultimately rejected in favour of a deal from GVC, advised by Addleshaw Goddard, for £1.1bn.

Gambling has been a lucrative sector for law firms in recent years after a spate of mergers and acquisitions. Last August Freshfields and Arthur Cox lined up on the merger between Paddy Power and Betfair for a £5bn deal. Freshfields partners Edward Braham and Oliver Lazenby led on the Betfair side, while Paddy Power turned to longstanding adviser Arthur Cox and corporate partner Maura McLaughin, as well as A&O’s Antonio Bavasso for antitrust advice.

In July 2015, Slaughters acted on Ladbrokes £2.3bn tie-up with bookmakers Gala Coral, advised by Ashurst. Slaughters corporate chief Andy Ryde led on the deal, alongside M&A partner Mark Zerdin and finance partner Ian Johnson.

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

 

 

Legal Business

Simmons loses another patent heavyweight as A&O takes IP head

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Allen & Overy (A&O) has made its fifth major lateral hire this month, taking on Simmons & Simmons head of IP Marc Döring in a boost to its patent litigation offering.

He joins former Simmons IP partner Marjan Noor, with the firm announcing her arrival in June. A&O also hired Simmons partner Tom Butcher to head up the firm’s Middle East TMT and IP practice in March.

Döring’s experience is focused on intellectual property disputes, primarily patent litigation in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical device, hi-tech and chemical industries. He joins the firm’s 15 partner strong global IP group.

A&O IP partner Nicola Dagg described Döring as ‘a renowned and formidable IP litigator who brings the skills and experience that will complement our existing team and help us to exploit new opportunities down the line.’

Global head of litigation Tim House added: ‘Our IP offering is unique among the big international firms with top tier IP partners in key European jurisdictions and, with this move, an unrivalled galaxy of stars in the UK. Unlike others in our peer-group, we have consistently prioritised IP as a strategic growth area for the litigation practice and Marc adds an additional dimension to our already strong offering.’

Döring joins four US lateral hires the firm announced last week making a significant boost to its finance practice. A&O took on three partners from White & Case, one from Proskauer Rose, as well as an associate from Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy as partner. The group of five join the Magic Circle firm’s New York team.

Finance partner Scott Zemser, joining from White & Case, will head up the team, with fellow White & Case partners Alan Rockwell and Judah Frogel joining him. Rajani Gupta has also moved to the firm from Proskauer Rose with Todd Koretzky rising to partner in his move from Milbank.

The new team’s clients include Bank of America, BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan.

The five partner US finance hire will soften the blow of the loss of one of London’s most high-profile banking lawyers to US firm Latham & Watkins. Legal Business revealed this month Stephen Kensell had made the move following a failed bid for senior partner earlier this year.

In June new leaders Wim Dejonghe and Andrew Ballheimer indicated their goal is to ‘keep growing in a quality way’ with further growth expected across the US, China and Europe.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

 

 

Legal Business

Making it in Manhattan: A&O pulls off four-partner finance hire to boost US presence

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Allen & Overy (A&O) has made a major addition to its US finance practice with the lateral hire of four partners in New York. The Magic Circle firm took three partners from White & Case, one from Proskauer Rose, as well as adding an associate from Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy as partner.

The new team is led by finance partner Scott Zemser, who joins with Alan Rockwell and Judah Frogel from White & Case.

Rajani Gupta comes to A&O from Proskauer Rose, while associate Todd Koretzky joins from Milbank. Koretzky will be made up to partner on his arrival.

The new team’s clients include Bank of America, BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan.

A&O global co-head of banking Philip Bowden (pictured) said: ‘The addition of this highly experienced team of US lawyers, led by Scott Zemser who has over 25 years of US and international leveraged finance experience, greatly enhances our ability to support clients globally regardless of the type of law or place of origin of their financing transactions.’

The firm’s global leveraged finance practice now comprises 50 partners across the US, Europe and Asia.

A&O senior partner Wim Dejonghe said: ‘There are very few top-tier US or global firms that can field a combined US and European leveraged finance practice the way we can now. The addition of these high calibre partners in New York not only strengthens our global finance practice, but demonstrates our strategic commitment to significantly grow our US practice.’

In an interview last month on his election as senior partner, Dejonghe said the firm had set its sights on improving its US offering. ‘American law is gaining market share and we are building our practice to deal with that,’ he said.

While it has been building out its US finance offering, A&O recently lost one of London’s most high-profile banking lawyers to US firm Latham & Watkins. This week Legal Business revealed Stephen Kensell had joined the US firm, following a failed run for the Magic Circle firm’s senior partner role earlier this year.

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

Growing the Pi: Gibson Dunn and A&O act on improved US offer for Premier Farnell

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Allen & Overy (A&O) and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher have advised on an improved bid for UK-based electronics manufacturer Premier Farnell.

Gibson Dunn acted for US technology company Avnet on the offer of £691m, a 12.1% premium on the previous offer made by Swiss components manufacturer Dätwyler earlier this month.

The previous offer for Premier Farnell, which produces the Raspberry Pi minicomputer, came to an all-cash offer of £615m, a deal valuing the company at an enterprise value of £792m.

The bid by Avnet was for £1.85 per share, up on the original offer by Dätwyler of £1.65 per share, which saw Slaughter and May advising the Swiss firm.

The deal would see Avnet acquire Premier Farnell’s online services as well as the Raspberry Pi. The single-board computer is about the size of a credit card and has sold more than eight million units, making it the UK’s best-selling computer.

Premier Farnell was advised by A&O corporate partners Richard Browne and Annabelle Croker, who also acted on the original offer.

Avnet were advised by a team led by Gibson Dunn’s London corporate partner Nigel Stacey. New York corporate partner Barbara Becker acted on the US side of the deal, advising regular client Avnet.

Stacey joined Gibson Dunn’s City office from Ashurst in 2014, after being with the firm for 16 years. Earlier this month Stacey, alongside corporate head Charlie Geffen,  advised former Ashurst client Terra Firma on its sale of Odeon & UCI Cinemas Group for $1.2bn.

The offer for the electronics firm is the latest in a run of deals for UK technology companies, with ARM holdings agreeing to be acquired by Japanese group SoftBank for £24.3bn. Slaughters and Davis Polk & Wardell acted for ARM, and Morrison Foerster, Freshfields, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton acted for SoftBank.

Slaughters and Davis Polk also faced off in the buyout of VocaLink for £700m. The Magic Circle firm acted for the UK payments systems company, while Davis Polk acted for purchasers MasterCard.

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Upping the ante: Latham appoints former A&O leadership contender Kensell

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Latham & Watkins‘ unrelenting assault on the City market has seen the US firm land one of London’s most high-profile banking lawyers, Allen & Overy’s Stephen Kensell.

Kensell, who earlier this year ran for the senior partner post at A&O but missed out to the firm’s then managing partner Wim Dejonghe in March, leaves after 22 years at the Magic Circle firm. The management reshuffle took effect on 1 May, with Dejonghe replacing highly respected David Morley as senior partner and corporate co-head Andrew Ballheimer made managing partner.

One of the most senior banking lawyers in the City, Kensell co-headed A&O’s banking group between 2008 and 2016. He and Andrew Trahair stepped down as co-heads of A&O’s engine-room practice earlier this year having served two terms.

Kensell has emerged as one of the City’s foremost banking practitioners over the last two decades, acting on the creditor-side of event-driven financings, with particular expertise in leveraged, investment grade M&A and IPO related finance.

Latham London managing partner Jay Sadanandan said: ‘We have firmly established ourselves among the elite firms for high-end leveraged and acquisition financing work in London, thanks to our unique ability to switch between all forms of loan, bond and hybrid capital structures across multiple jurisdictions. Stephen’s wide-ranging experience at the very top of the profession will further enhance our platform in the City and globally.’

The move is the latest in a long line of high-profile hires for Latham, with the firm landing rising arbitration star Sophie Lamb from Debevoise & Plimpton, restructuring partner Simon Baskerville and financial regulatory partner Rob Moulton from Ashurst and real estate finance specialists Jeremy Trinder and Quentin Gwyer this year.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk