Legal Business

CMS Cameron McKenna partnership spared from post-merger lock-in agreement

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Following CMS Cameron McKenna‘s announcement it would merge with Olswang and Nabarro, it has emerged that Camerons partners will be spared from any post-merger lock-in arrangement.

Partners within Camerons have confirmed, that unlike the firm’s 2014 Dundas & Wilson merger, they will not be subject to a lock-in. Meanwhile a partner at Nabarro said the firm will restrict departing partners for an unspecified period.

The partner said: ‘You would expect people would give thought to incentives to try and ensure everyone carries it through and give some momentum to the merger to ensure people stick around.’

In addition, a former Olswang partner told Legal Business partners from the media focused firm will be locked in until November 2017, although Olswang refused to comment on the matter.

Camerons previously imposed a two-year long lock-in on partners after taking over Dundas, although at the time senior partner Penelope Warne (pictured) said it was better described as an extended notice period to ‘bring about stability on both sides.’

The trio will operate under the CMS brand, giving Camerons revenues of around £450m in the UK. Nabarro and Olswang will join the CMS Cameron McKenna UK LLP partnership.

Other issues yet to be worked out include client conflicts, staff consolidation, office overlaps, and property arrangements.

Yesterday (11 October) it emerged the three firms are expected to move in together into CMS UK’s current Cannon Place headquarters.

Neither Camerons nor Nabarro would provide comment on any lock-in arrangements.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Read more on CMS Cameron McKenna’s last merger in: ‘The Programme – how Dundas & Wilson fits into the CMS masterplan’

Legal Business

Moving in: Camerons, Olswang and Nabarro ink deal for Cannon Place

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Soon to be merged firms CMS Cameron McKenna, Nabarro and Olswang are to move in together into CMS UK’s current Cannon Place headquarters.

Property database CoStar reported the firms agreed a deal to occupy about 80,000 sq ft that remains vacant in the building covering one and a half floors, conditional on the merger completing on 1 May 2017.

Landlord Hines is preparing the building for sale at a guide price of £510m. The property has been listed to lease at £67.5 per sq ft.

One Nabarro partner said: ‘of course the intention is to pull everyone together in one location but you’ve got leases, floor spaces – practical issues. You’ve had situations in the past where firms have merged and they’re sitting in their own offices. What sort of merger’s that?’

Speaking to Legal Business yesterday, Olswang chief executive Paul Stevens said the ‘day-to-day mechanics’ of the union are yet to be worked out including property arrangements alongside client conflicts, staff consolidation and office overlaps.

It is unclear whether Camerons will continue to reap the benefits of its long-term lease dubbed the ‘deal of a century’ reached in 2014 which included a six-year rent-free period on its 140,000 sq ft let, taking up three floors in the eight-floor Cannon Place.

It was confirmed Camerons, Nabarro and Olswang had voted to combine yesterday (11 October), taking on the CMS brand and giving Camerons revenues of around £450m in the UK.

The merger is due to complete next year, Nabarro and Olswang will join the CMS Cameron McKenna UK LLP partnership.

A statement said the partners of all three firms voted ‘overwhelmingly in favour’ of the union to ‘create a new powerhouse’ and the sixth-largest law firm by headcount. It was revealed that the three firms were in merger discussions less than two weeks ago.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk


Read more on CMS’ earlier merger with Dundas & Wilson in: ‘The Programme – how Dundas & Wilson fits into the CMS masterplan

Legal Business

Working the mechanics: Camerons, Nabarro and Olswang’s leaders on finalising the merger

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Having announced an audacious union yesterday (10 October) management at CMS Cameron McKenna, Nabarro and Olswang are set to kick off the arduous process of consolidating their respective businesses over the next six months, an exercise which will see potential staff redundancies.

Speaking to Legal Business, Olswang chief executive Paul Stevens said the ‘day-to-day mechanics’ of the union are yet to be worked out including client conflicts, staff consolidation, office overlaps, and property arrangements.

Camerons senior partner Penelope Warne (pictured) added: ‘It’s very early days. Clients are learning today and were made aware discussions were ongoing.’

All three firms stated they managed to attain an ‘overwhelming’ majority to vote yes on the deal.

Camerons traditionally requires an 80% majority hurdle to pass a merger with the vote restricted to the partners in the firm’s core equity with junior partners having a restricted vote. Since its merger with Dundas & Wilson, around 40% of the partnership were sitting on the lowest tier of equity, blocking them from voting on mergers. Olswang required a 60% vote but Nabarro refused to confirm how many it needed to get the deal over the line.

CMS’s UK practice has been rapidly expanding in recent years and just two years ago it merged with one of Scotland’s Dundas & Wilson. Meanwhile, Nabarro looked to Addleshaw Goddard as a potential merger partner in 2013. Concerns over Nabarro’s pension arrangements for partners have previously hampered merger attempts. According to its April 2015 LLP filing, the firm’s pensions deficit increased from £24m to £32m.

Nabarro senior partner Ciaran Carvalho said the firm had come to an agreement with Camerons in respect of its pensions deficit but he refused to say what the specifics were.

The combination of Camerons, Olswang and Nabarro would create a UK practice with core revenues of around £450m, rising to more than £950m if you include the wider CMS network.

All three are in close proximity with profit performance: while Olswang’s turnover tumbled by 11% to £112.5m for the financial year 2015/16, PEP remained steady at £490,000.

Nabarro, meanwhile, saw a modest rise to its turnover of 3.5% to £130.4m this past financial year, but struggled with PEP as it fell by 7% to £585,000. Nabarro’s PEP had risen by 20% in 2014/15.

Market reaction on the union has been notably sceptical. A managing partner at a rival firm said ahead of the merger: ‘It’s all for different reasons isn’t it? Obviously Olswang is because of the state it’s in, CMS is desperate to bulk up; I don’t think it is that bothered about whether or not it fits a particular strategy. It is a desire to get bigger. And Nabarro has been leaking a lot of people. And I suspect it’s just looking for a safe place to try and get a bit of a strategy – because it hasn’t really got one.’

One Nabarro partner told Legal Business: ‘Everyone can see Camerons is the biggest party in the process. You can extrapolate from that, possibly, looking at the way other similar sorts of things have been done in the past. You’ve got some strong brand names and, quite rightly, people want to hang on to those.’

One former partner at Olswang said: ‘There are a lot of partners banking on this merger to give them some direction and a lift because it’s been a bit gloomy. There’s no doubt the numbers have shrunk considerably. Not least across the partner base but associates aren’t being replaced.’

Olswang has seen over 30 partner exits in the past 18 months with the firm asking 12 to leave the firm around Christmas time as part of a strategic review, Legal Business understands.

It has been suggested that Camerons and Nabarro are interested in Olswang’s more lucrative TMT and real estate offerings respectively.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

‘A UK legal merger which makes sense’: CMS, Olswang and Nabarro vote in favour of union

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After weeks of speculation, CMS Cameron McKenna, Nabarro and Olswang have voted to combine, taking on the CMS brand and giving Camerons over 1,000 partners and revenues of around £450m in the UK.

The merger is due to complete on 1 May 2017. Nabarro and Olswang will join the CMS UK LLP partnership, which will be catchily renamed CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP.

A statement said the partners of all three firms voted ‘overwhelmingly in favour’ of the union to ‘create a new powerhouse’ and the sixth-largest law firm by headcount. It was revealed that the three firms were in merger discussions ten days ago.

With the addition of Nabarro and Olswang, the CMS grouping will have over 1,000 partners and over 7,500 employees across 65 offices in 36 countries around the world, with combined revenues of about £450m in the UK. Revenues of the firm would be €1.2bn globally, counting the wider CMS network.

The statement added: ‘The leadership, boards and partners of all three firms believe that this merger is an excellent fit in culture and values, presents an outstanding opportunity, and consequently have given their overwhelming support.’

CMS UK senior partner Penelope Warne said: ‘I am inspired today because we are delivering the next step to transform the legal services industry. Through this combination, we are delivering a modern firm that combines scale with an exceptional depth of sector expertise…The merger will also have considerable significance for the global growth plans of CMS and is a great endorsement of the extraordinary export of English law throughout the world.’

Andrew Inkester, managing partner of Nabarro, said: ‘This is a UK legal merger that makes sense. It creates a firm that is more than the sum of its parts, bringing together our market-leading expertise in six strategic sectors.’

Olswang chief executive officer Paul Stevens added: ‘Together, we materially strengthen all of our practice areas in the context of a firm with 65 offices worldwide. This new partnership will provide our new firm’s clients with a cutting-edge service in our strategic sectors as they grow their businesses and brands in the future.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Olswang exits continue as merger claims swirl around TMT player

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More than 30 partners have left the firm in the last 18 months

Having emerged as one of the worst performers in the Legal Business 100 last month and strongly touted to be in the market for a merger, September saw further departures from Olswang, adding to a steady stream of exits in recent months.

Legal Business

Olswang exits continue amid merger talks as restructuring head quits for US firm

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US firm McDermott Will & Emery has taken on Olswang‘s head of restructuring & insolvency Alicia Videon in the first exit from the firm since merger talks with CMS Cameron McKenna and Nabarro were revealed last week.

Videon spent more than eight years at OIswang leading on restructuring work on commercial real estate and advising on buyers and sellers of distressed debt. Videon is cited in the Legal 500 as being ‘at the top of her game’ for corporate restructuring work.

Before joining Olswang, Videon trained at legacy Lovells and spent three years as a partner at DLA Piper until 2008. Olswang has endured a string of exits before three-way merger talks with Camerons and Nabarro were confirmed last week.

Last week, Legal Business reported partners at all three firms were in holding meetings with management to discuss the merger. Camerons later released a statement confirming talks were taking place for a combination to create ‘a differentiated, modern firm.’

Chicago-based McDermott has been hiring in recent months, boosting its City presence with the addition of KPMG tax partner Russell Hampshire earlier this week. Hampshire spent 14 years as EMEA tax leader for technology at the Big Four accountant.

The firm also added Taylor Wessing corporate partner and healthcare specialist Hamid Yunis in September, who joins the team led by former colleague and London head of corporate Mark Davis.

Recent Olswang departures have seen life sciences co-head Stephen Reese leaving for Clifford Chance. Funds partner Barry Stimpson left for Bond Dickinson after being retained for a time as a consultant, while private equity partner Duncan McDonald jumped to Taylor Wessing.

In February, McDermott appointed private client partner Andrew Vergunst to lead the London office, while in September Ira Coleman was elected chair of the firm, taking up the role in January 2017. The US firm has around 550 partners and a turnover of $891.6m, however turnover for 2015/16 slipped around 1% according to the Global 100. The firm declined to comment on Videon’s appointment.

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

CMS, Nabarro and Olswang confirm discussions about potential merger

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After much speculation, CMS Cameron McKenna, Nabarro and Olswang have confirmed they are in merger talks.

A statement released by Camerons on behalf of all three firms said they are in discussions for a potential combination.

It said: ‘The leadership consider this combination would create a differentiated, modern firm that would combine scale with an exceptional depth of sector expertise.’

‘The combined firm would provide clients with a stronger and more global platform served by 65 offices across 36 countries, underpinned by a 250 year City heritage. There should be no assumption as to the outcome of these discussions and we will update in due course.’

Yesterday (29 September) it was revealed that Camerons has been in discussions with Olswang after news leaked of Nabarro’s involvement talks with the latter. The combination of Camerons, Olswang and Nabarro would create a UK practice with core revenues of around £500m, rising to more than £950m if you include the wider CMS network.

Known to clients and peer firms for several weeks, negotiations are said to have been ‘fraught’ particularly from Nabarro’s side – where the real estate team have been jostling for positions given the wide overlap between the firm and CMS.

One former partner Olswang partner said: ‘It has been fraught negotiations. Olswang is not in a great shape. And that put a few people off. And there is going to be some likely fall out from partners not wanting to stay or being asked to go. In Nabarro, it is likely to be the real estate side.’

A former Camerons partner said: ‘CMS would be more interested in bits and bobs of Olswang. The triple merger doesn’t make too much sense for them, however taking the best parts would be a really exciting move for CMS to get, but it would be a shame to lose Olswang from the market as it was once a really strong firm.’

A managing partner at a rival firm said: ‘It’s all for different reasons isn’t it? Obviously Olswang is because of the state it’s in, CMS is desperate to bulk up; I don’t think it is that bothered about whether or not it fits a particular strategy. It is a desire to get bigger. And Nabarro has been leaking a lot of people. And I suspect it’s just looking for a safe place to try and get a bit of a strategy – because it hasn’t really got one.’

Camerons has been expanding under new managing partner Stephen Millar with the firm focusing on its energy, life sciences and financial services sector strengths. The firm is in the second year of its merger with Scots firm Dundas &Wilson.

Nabarro, meanwhile, saw a modest rise to its turnover of 3.5% to £130.4m this past financial year, but struggled with profits per equity partner (PEP) as it fell by 7% to £585,000.

Olswang’s turnover tumbled by 11% to £112.5m for the financial year 2015/16 while firm PEP remained steady at £490,000. The firm placed blame on the firm’s ‘decoupling’ from its 50 lawyer, 14 partner Berlin office which was acquired by Greenberg Traurig last year.

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

Olswang and Camerons set for Friday partners meeting amid mounting claims of three-way merger with Nabarro

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Both Olswang and CMS Cameron McKenna are holding partners meetings tomorrow, as indications mount that the duo are gearing up for a three-way merger with Nabarro.

Olswang’s management team has called a meeting to discuss a ‘strategic proposal’ tomorrow, according to one former partner, while CMS is also holding a partners meeting on Friday (30 September).

Olswang, which has already been linked to CMS and Nabarro as it actively looks for a merger, and has been already been associated with Bird & Bird, Osborne Clarke, Simmons & Simmons and Cooley.

CMS had previously approached Olswang over a merger with little success but Olswang’s situation has changed dramatically in recent years following the acrimonious departure of chief executive David Stewart over strategic differences and a string of departures.

No stranger to the prospect of a tie-up, Nabarro held merger talks with Addleshaw Goddard in 2013. Concerns over Nabarro’s pension arrangements for partners have previously hampered merger attempts. The combination of CMS, Olswang and Nabarro would create a UK practice with core revenues of around £500m, rising to more than £950m if you include the wider CMS network.

However it is unclear whether the discussions will lead to a full merger, as two external sources told Legal Business discussions included the possibility of a split whereby Camerons would take corporate partners from Olswang and Nabarro would bring on Olswang’s real estate partners.

Camerons has been expanding under new managing partner Stephen Millar with the firm focusing on its energy, life sciences and financial services sector strengths. The firm is in the second year of its merger with Scots firm Dundas & Wilson.

Nabarro, meanwhile, saw a modest rise to its turnover of 3.5% to £130.4m this past financial year, but struggled with profits per equity partner (PEP) as it fell by 7% to £585,000.

Olswang’s turnover tumbled by 11% to £112.5m for the financial year 2015/16 while firm PEP remained steady at £490,000. The firm placed blame on the firm’s ‘decoupling’ from its 50 lawyer, 14 partner Berlin office which was acquired by Greenberg Traurig last year.

CMS, Nabarro and Olswang were unconvincingly unavailable for comment at press time.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk, matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Engineering success: Eversheds hires top Nabarro construction disputes partner Douglas

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Eversheds has hired disputes partner Jonathan Douglas from Nabarro to join the firm’s construction and engineering team.

Douglas (pictured) is a leading construction disputes lawyer with experience in high value litigation and arbitration and sits on Nabarro’s partnership board and executive.

Having made partner in 2005, Douglas was also the firm’s divisional managing partner for disputes. He has particular sector expertise in offshore wind, power and energy and office and retail work for owners and contractors.

Douglas joins Eversheds’ construction and engineering team of over 100 lawyers from Nabarro’s London office.

Eversheds’ hire reinforces a disputes practice that had recently lost star arbitration partner Stuart Dutson to Simmons & Simmons, who left after seven years at the firm. Dutson had a practice built around the energy and gas sector and was cited in The Legal 500 as one of 36 leading lawyers in international arbitration in London.

The LB100 firm also recently lost a second disputes veteran earlier in the year, with arbitration veteran Andy Moody leaving for Baker & McKenzie.

Eversheds global construction and engineering head Simon Oates said: ‘The addition of a disputes lawyer of Jonathan’s standing is key to continuing our development in the UK and internationally. Our clients are working on some of the biggest and most challenging infrastructure projects and this appointment greatly enhances the Eversheds team that is there to help, guide and protect them as they deliver.’

Douglas added: ‘I have enjoyed my time at Nabarro and wish my friends and colleagues there every success but I am also excited about the opportunity to join Eversheds’ specialist construction and engineering team with such a strong London presence and international capability.’

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Olswang turnover drops 11% after Berlin ‘decoupling’

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Olswang has seen a 11% drop in its turnover for the financial year 2015/16 with revenues tumbling by £14.2m to £112.5m, while firm’s profits per equity partner (PEP) remained steady at £490,000.

The 11% dip follows the firm posting a healthy 8% increase to its revenues for the 2014/15 financial year. Olswang lays blame for the drop to ‘decoupling’ from its 50 lawyer, 14 partner Berlin office which was acquired by Greenberg Traurig last year. The firm’s headcount was down by 10%, while Olswang equity partner count fell from 50 to 46 for the financial year 2015/16.

The firm said half of its revenues came from its TMT sectors, with strong results in its finance and real estate groups in the UK. It also halved its bank debt in the last year from £10.1m to £5.3m.

Investment has also been made in its new Olswang equIP platform which offers legal advice and support to UK scale-ups and entrepreneurs. The firm has signed up 20 clients since its launch in November last year.

Chief executive Paul Stevens said: ‘We have posted consistent profitability in a year of transition, and I am extremely pleased to see our bank borrowings significantly reduced. This financial discipline, along with many of the projects and initiatives currently underway, such as our move toward agile working and various IT improvements, will position us well in the years to come.’

Olswang is now believed to be in merger talks with CMS Cameron McKenna. A combination between the pair would create a £848m firm.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk