Legal Business

Trainee retention: CMS Cameron McKenna keeps on 62% of spring 2015 cohort while Pinsents manages 79%

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CMS Cameron McKenna revealed what it described as an ‘uncharacteristically low’ trainee retention rate today (27 March), with only 61.5% of its 26-strong intake staying with the firm while Pinsent Masons secured 15 trainees but from a smaller round of 19.

CMS’ trainees will mostly join in London, which is receiving 14 of the 16, while Bristol will take two of the newly-qualified lawyers. The proportion reflects that of the original intake which had 23 based in the City and three in Bristol.

Penelope Warne (pictured), CMS’ senior partner, said: ‘Our wish is to offer positions to as many trainees as possible. As a firm we are utterly committed to developing and nurturing long-term careers. Although offers were made in the region of 80%, on this occasion a number of trainees decided to take positions in-house or outside the practice of law which meant that take-up was uncharacteristically low.’

Meanwhile, Pinsent Masons managed to secure 15 trainees out of its initial qualifying class of 19, giving it an overall rate of 79%. The firm saw 16 of the 19 actually apply for roles, with an offer being made to all of them.

The mark is a slight improvement on the firm’s Autumn rate which saw 76% of the 66-strong round accepting positions. On that occasion 60 applied with offers made to 51 and all but one of those accepting.

michael.west@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Media attention: Quinn Emanuel leads high-profile Clarkson mandate in potential BBC dispute

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Motoring broadcaster Jeremy Clarkson has turned to litigation boutique Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan’s disputes partner Martin Davies as legal adviser after the BBC announced it would not be renewing the Top Gear presenter’s contract.

The controversial presenter was dropped from the BBC on Wednesday (25 March) following what was dubbed a ‘fracas’ with Top Gear producer Oisin Tymon. Clarkson was suspended from the show on March 10 after it emerged that he physically attacked Tymon in a row while filming on location in North Yorkshire.

Davies is leading the case should any potential commercial dispute develop in concerns to his employment contract. It is understood the presenter could face police investigation after the BBC conducted an internal inquiry overseen by BBC Scotland director Ken MacQuarrie, in which Clarkson actions were described as an ‘unprovoked physical and verbal attack’.

Olswang senior partner Mark Devereux first represented Clarkson during the BBC’s official disciplinary investigation after the incident occurred on 4 March. Both Quinn Emanuel and Olswang refused to comment.

Slater & Gordon senior principal lawyer in employment and partnership Paul Daniels, who is representing Tymon, said: ‘This last month has been a nightmare for Oisin, his friends and his family. Through absolutely no fault of his own he found himself at the centre of a massive news story, but despite that he has conducted himself with dignity, restraint and balance.’

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

£1.1bn of student digs: Nabarro, Clifford Chance and Morgan Lewis take lead on Liberty Living acquisition

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Nabarro and Clifford Chance have picked up a major real estate instruction advising on the £1.1bn acquisition of UK student accommodation provider Liberty Living by Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB).

One of the UK’s largest student accommodation providers with over 40 residences located in 17 of university towns and cities, the deal saw CPPIB acquire 100% of the Liberty Living management platform and Liberty Living Management Two from the Brandeaux Student Accommodation Fund to create a single integrated company.

Nabarro advised CPPIB with a cross-practice area team including funds and indirect real estate partner Amanda Howard alongside partner Christopher Luck, real estate partner Nick Collins, banking & finance partner Mike Delaney, tax partner Kirsten Prichard Jones, intellectual property partner Louise Gellman, employment partner Richard Brown and pensions partner Anne Marie-Winton.

Magic Circle firm Clifford Chance advised the Brandeaux Student Accommodation Fund with a team including partners Adrian Levy, Imogen Clark, Catherine Cook and David Saleh. London partner Iain Wright, with support from partner Kate Habershon, led for Morgan Lewis & Bockius which advised the owner of Liberty Living Management Two.

Commenting on the acquisition, Nabarro partner Amanda Howard said: ‘The student accommodation sector is now a key part of many global investment portfolios. The number of overseas students coming to study in Britain has triggered exponential growth. We are always excited to work on deals of this scale and complexity for international investors. CPPIB is perfectly placed to develop the Liberty Living brand.’

Other major instructions handled by Nabarro include partner Marie Scott advising Google on the £1bn acquisition and development of a site at Argent’s King’s Cross estate in 2013 for the development of its new UK headquarters, which includes around one million square feet of office space.

Clifford Chance also recently landed a leading role on the acquisition by Legal & General Property of Bishopsgate Long Term Property Fund Unit Trust and its 24-strong portfolio of commercial properties for £370m, on which it advised Dutch fund pension fund manager PGGM which partnered with Legal & General.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

For more on real estate activity, see Back in the game – revival at last for real estate but the players have changed

Legal Business

Investing in London: Cooley keeps up City push with Olswang’s former PE head Rosen

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After its mass hire from Edwards Wildman Palmer and Morrison & Foerster to launch in London earlier this year, Cooley has made good on plans to keep expanding in the City with the hire of Olswang’s longstanding corporate partner Stephen Rosen.

Rosen leaves Olswang after 13 years as a partner at the TMT firm, which included heading its private equity and venture capital group. During his tenure, he focused on acting for high growth companies, investors, and management teams on corporate transactions. He was also a member of Olswang’s life sciences group and regularly represented spin outs and VC funded companies in the life sciences arena.

Some of his key deals include advising the management team of RBS Aviation Capital on its $7.3bn sale to Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation and representing Convergence Pharmaceuticals on its spin out from GlaxoSmithKline and fundraising of €35m by a group of European and US venture capital investors.

Olswang said in a written statement: ‘Corporate partner Stephen Rosen will be leaving the firm in due course to pursue new opportunities, following completion of the firm’s notice period.’

Rosen joins Cooley’s recently launched 55-lawyer UK practice which the firm established by taking partners from Morrison & Foerster and Edwards Wildman Palmer at the beginning of this year.

While Olswang’s partnership was served a blow in October last year after its former chief executive David Stewart stepped down, the firm has made positive strides this year, and hired intellectual property partner duo from US firm Winston & Strawn in February, as well as appointing its senior corporate TMT Partner Mark Bertram as its new head of corporate.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

In-house: Mercedes Benz appoints Nabarro and Shoosmiths to UK legal panel as WLG loses out

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Nabarro and Shoosmiths have secured a joint appointment to the legal panel of Mercedes-Benz UK following a competitive tender process, while Wragge Lawrence Graham & Co has failed to win a place.

Announced in a joint statement today (24 February), the appointment ‘allows Nabarro to build on a relationship of more than six years’ with the German automotive brand while Shoosmiths is a new addition to the panel.

The tender process was initiated by Mercedes-Benz group general counsel and compliance officer Jonathan Lipman, who joined the business in 2013 from PSA Peugeot Citroen, after former legal chief Iain Larkins left the role to found virtual commercial firm Radius Law.

Commenting on the panel, Lipman said: ‘We review our legal suppliers rigorously. The re-appointment of Nabarro is testament to the quality of advice and other support the firm continues to provide Mercedes-Benz. In appointing Shoosmiths, we are confident we have found a firm that will work effectively as an extension to our own team and look forward to working with them. The firms are expected to support us particularly in the areas of property, financial services, corporate and competition’.

The last review took place in 2009, with Nabarro and legacy Wragge & Co winning the two spots available while Shoosmiths and Pinsent Masons lost out.

Nabarro’s client relationship partner for Mercedes-Benz, Jonathan Warne, said: ‘We have worked closely with Mercedes-Benz for many years and have developed a deep understanding of the key commercial and legal issues and opportunities facing their business. We never take longstanding clients for granted, so we very much appreciate this opportunity to continue working with Jonathan and his colleagues for another three years.’

Robin Webb, Mercedes-Benz client partner at Shoosmiths, added: ‘We are excited to have been appointed to the Mercedes-Benz legal panel and are looking forward to working closely with the team. We take a very innovative and commercial approach to client service and will seek to develop efficient and collaborative solutions in conjunction with the business.’

Other in-house panel reviews of late include the UK legal arm of French insurer AXA, which is set to look at its relationships with Magic Circle and international firms to scope how effectively they can work for the company, and follows a review of the UK specific ‘business-as-usual’ panel which was cut from seven to two and now comprises Pinsent Masons and DAC Beachcroft.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Grand designs: DLA Piper to move City operation to Cameron McKenna’s old office

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Seeking to expand its office space in the City, DLA Piper has signed a lease to move into CMS Cameron McKenna’s old London base at Mitre House.

DLA Piper is planning to move out of its offices in 3 Noble Street (pictured) and 1 London Wall and reassemble at Mitre House once refurbishments are completed. Plans are to  expand the building by two floors providing 201,000 sq ft of office space.

The proposed move will give DLA Piper 50,000 additional sq ft in the City with it currently holding 110,000 sq ft at 3 Noble Street and 40,000 sq ft at 1 London Wall. With leases expiring on its two current properties in 2019, the firm is hopeful that the developer, Mercer Real Estate, gains planning permission so that it can move in.

Mercer Real Estate submitted new plans to refurbish Mitre House, 160 Aldersgate Street last week, after more than 100 objections from current residents. The majority of complaints centred on the increased height of the building, with Barbican residents concerned about a loss of daylight. Some also mentioned the building’s proposed roof terraces, fearing that there would be additional noise nuisance from partying.

The latest planning application states: ‘The evolution of the design has been informed by a rigorous process of public consultations with local stakeholders and meetings with the City of London Planners.’

A spokesperson for DLA Piper told Legal Business: ‘We have signed a lease and we do intend to move there but it’s subject to planning permission. It’s going to be a bigger office.’

In a recent survey into law firms in London, property advisor CBRE found that 83% of City firms are seeking to cut their rental costs. The research also discovered that the area occupied per fee earner across the 100 biggest firms in London has shrunk by 5% to 490 sq ft in the past year while it found that office space for partners across these firms cost, on average, £22,400 in 2014.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Life During Law: Ciaran Carvalho, Nabarro

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I decided I wanted to be a lawyer aged 14. My parents’ friends were looking after me while my parents were away. They didn’t have children and wondered what to do with me – we started playing around with words during a game of Scrabble and after that it turned into a career talk because I was slightly argumentative. It struck a chord.

Titmuss Sainer & Webb was a real estate firm before forming an alliance with Dechert Price & Rhoads. The London property guys were worried because they wondered what a US firm would think of real estate. For me, it was an enormous benefit. It opened my eyes to international clients, the wider world, and not just domestic practice.

Legal Business

Targeting Manchester: Nabarro bolsters office with Pinsents and Eversheds hires

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Nabarro has bolstered its recently opened Manchester office with the hire of corporate partner Howard Gill and real estate partner Peter Winnard.

Gill joins from Pinsent Masons as the firm’s first corporate partner in the city with the office previously being real estate oriented, though he does handle work from real estate and hotel clients. Winnard, who joins from Eversheds, has experience in development and regeneration real estate work in the North West.

The firm is in hiring mode, having also announced appointments both in Dubai with the hire of Ravinder Bhullar from Baker Botts, and to its infrastructure, construction and energy practice (ICE) with the hire of Kevin Joyce, a project partner and disputes specialist also from Pinsent Masons.

Commenting on the appointments, the firm’s senior partner, Graham Stedman, said: ‘We have rapidly built, high quality partner-led teams in both Dubai and Manchester which are already winning good work. This focused investment is matched by recruitment to our Infrastructure, Construction and Energy practice which has a central role in connecting our international hubs with the needs of an increasingly global client base.’

kathryn.mccann@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

H1 2014/15: Nabarro posts 3% revenue increase for half year

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Having posted broadly flat financials in recent years and endured a tough period, more than many top-30 firms, Nabarro has today (11 December) unveiled a 3% revenue rise for the 2014/15 half year to £54.1m for the six months to end October, compared to the £52.5m recorded the previous year.

The firm said financials have been positive across the firm with particularly ‘strong performances from corporate, funds and real estate as well as a burgeoning infrastructure, construction and energy practice launched in May’.

The firm added it continues to have no debt, a strong cash position and an unused overdraft. The performance constitutes a marked upturn for the firm which last year recorded flat H1 revenues for 2013/14, with figures rising by a marginal 0.3% from £52.3m to £52.5m.

Annual financials by the firm this year unveiled broadly flat turnover of £116.7m, a rise of 0.3%. Profit per equity partner rose 12% to £480,000, constituting a double digit increase for a second successive year while profit per lawyer also increased 11% to £83,000.

The firm this year moved its London headquarters into newly refurbished offices at 125 London Wall in October, a deal which it expects to make annual savings of £1m.

This year also saw the French firm August & Debouzy leave Nabarro’s European alliance, which also includes Germany’s GSK Stockmann + Kollegen, Italian firm Nunziante Magrone and Spanish firm Roca Junyent, blaming its departure in part on the desire to grow its own network. It announced a new French partner in Lefèvre Pelletier & associés in October, however, and the agreement brought a North African presence to the network with offices in Algiers and Casablanca as well a Chinese contingent with outposts in Guangzhou and Hong Kong.

Further international expansion included opening a Middle East hub in Dubai in what became its third international office, while internal affairs for the firm saw the partnership re-appoint Andrew Inkester as managing partner after an uncontested election.

Senior partner Graham Stedman (pictured) said: ‘This is a good set of results and a positive half year for Nabarro. Although the global economic outlook and political uncertainty in the UK may pose some challenges in the second half of the year, our pipeline of high quality work gives us cause to be optimistic.’

Other firms to announce half year results of late includes Olswang, which despite enduring the highly publicised and unexpected resignation of its chief executive David Stewart several weeks ago, posted an 11% increase in turnover to £63.9m, compared to £57.6m. Osborne Clarke also enjoyed double digit growth with revenues across the international business increasing by 17% from €77m (£61.1m) to €89.1m (£70.7m).

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Evasive Action – Can Olswang live up to its own ambitions?

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TMT leader Olswang is hard to pin down these days as profits ebb, reports of discord emerge and a leader suddenly departs. Can the firm push on with its ambitions to take brand Olswang global?

‘David is in back to back meetings every day for the next four weeks,’ says the Olswang staffer. ‘It would be just impossible to set up a call.’

The Legal Business correspondent listens to another evasive response after again asking to speak to Olswang’s then chief executive David Stewart. It’s not very convincing.