Legal Business

BHS inquiry latest: Olswang remains in focus as MPs probe fees

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As the inquiry into the sale of BHS continues, Work and Pensions committee chair Frank Field has asked Olswang to reveal details of its fees paid during the purchase of the retailer for £1 last year.

Labour MP Field wrote a letter to Olswang general counsel Stephen Hermer yesterday (31 May) with a series of follow up questions on payments made to the law firm by BHS buyer Retail Acquisitions Limited.

Field said: ‘We have a number of follow up questions relating to the fees and other sums paid to Olswang.’ The MP called for a response by 6 June.

Field’s letter asked for details of how much Olswang had charged Retail Acquisitions for its services and its fees for the successful purchase of BHS. He also queried what due diligence processes Olswang used with regards to its fees, asking: ‘How many steps back does Olswang look to trace the ultimate source of such monies?’

While Arcadia Group finance director Paul Budge had given evidence to the committee, stating that Retail Acquisitions had put £35m into a third party account with the firm, Field asked Hermer to explain steps taken by Olswang to find out how this sum was raised.

Last week, the Work and Pensions Committee and Business, Innovation and Skills Committee heard evidence from Hermer and Linklaters corporate partner Owen Clay regarding the sale of BHS. The retailer was owned by Sir Phillip Green’s Arcadia Group before its sale in 2015. It went into administration in April this year.

MPs expressed concerns about the sale of BHS to Retail Acquisitions, which is 90% owned by Dominic Chappell. Chappell had previously been declared bankrupt twice.

Field said that so far the inquiry into the sale had ‘prompted more questions than answers’.

The SRA said it was monitoring the evidence given by the lawyers involved.

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Updated: Linklaters and Olswang partners among lawyers grilled by MPs for roles in BHS sale

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Linklaters and Olswang have been heavily criticised in parliament this week over alleged failures to identify that the buyer of collapsed retail giant BHS had previously been declared bankrupt.

Partners from the LB100 firms appeared before the House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills Committee and the Work and Pensions Committee as part of the ongoing inquiry into the sale of BHS to Retail Acquisitions by retail tycoon Philip Green’s Arcadia Group for £1 last year.

Linklaters corporate partner Owen Clay advised Arcadia on the sale, while Olswang advised Retail Acquisition on the purchase. The latter is 90% owned by Dominic Chappell, who has previously been declared bankrupt on two occasions.

On the first day of hearings (May 23), Labour MP Frank Field, who chaired the 11-member committee, said: ‘We have got people like Sir Philip Green and Lord Grabiner QC who are very busy people who paid two legal firms to check up on the proper nature of the person they were selling to and it turns out this person was twice bankrupt, where do you think it puts those firms who told these key people that this was a good person to sell to?’

He added: ‘Don’t you feel responsibility? There were people paying you, presumably, very good fees and that there were two lots of firms involved and neither discovered the most obvious thing about this person?’

Linklaters’ Clay responded: ‘Given the particular terms of the contract, we did something that was, in my experience, unusual by asking another firm of solicitors what customer due diligence they had done. I was assured that they had done very detailed due diligence on that person.’

‘At the time, they had clearly been given a lot of information. They had done a lot of work and they came away with the impression he had been very open. They clearly had no sense at any time that there was any bad faith or dishonesty or anything like that that would have concerned them.’

At the second hearing (May 25) Conservative MP Richard Fuller asked Olswang GC Stephen Hermer what the firm’s understanding of finance available to the acquiring company was at the point of creating the legal documents for the sale. Hermer cited client confidentiality issues.

Field asked Hermer: ‘Is there no legal barrier to being able to buy a business with all these worries and debts when the courts have not declared you non-bankrupted?

Hermer said: ‘It is not legally impermissible, even as an undischarged bankrupt, to make an acquisition. I think that in this context there was clearly a question mark over Mr Chappell’s business acumen raised by the bankruptcy history, and in the context of a rescue bid for a large retail chain there was a judgment call that needed to be made on how much weight to put on that background.’

Hermer added that the firm does not give references about clients’ probity and about their business competence. ‘What we can do is confirm to people, if they ask – it is an unusual occurrence, but it did happen here – what due diligence checks we have done. What we do not do is give references on people’s probity and competence.’

Other lawyers involved include Nabarro partner Ian Greenstreet who also gave evidence having advised Arcadia owner Taveta on pensions matters between 2009 and 2015; as well as Eversheds pensions partner Emma King. Greenstreet and Clay declined to answer some questions citing client privilege – which neither of their clients had waived.

After BHS fell into administration in April, putting 11,000 jobs at risk, the committee launched an inquiry into the sale to Retail Acquisitions by retail tycoon Sir Philip Green’s Arcadia for £1 last year. Green also appeared before MPs to face questions over the affair. The Work and Pensions Select Committee is further investigating how the administration will affect the Pension Protection Fund (PPF), with the retailer’s pension scheme facing a £571m deficit.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Asia wrap: MoFo hires Magic Circle trio and Nabarro takes key Gadens partner, as BLP makes office move to support growth in Hong Kong

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This week in Asia, Morrison & Foerster (MoFo) added a trio of partners from three Magic Circle firms, as Nabarro has also strengthened its transactional practice in Singapore with the hire of former Gadens managing partner Marc Rathbone. Meanwhile, Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP) will move its premises in Hong Kong out of the Central District to Taikoo Place to allow for further growth.

In Hong Kong, Chuan Sun and Vivian Yiu have joined MoFo from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Allen & Overy respectively, while in Singapore, Yemi Tépé has joined the firm from Clifford Chance.

MoFo managing partner Eric Piesner said the hires illustrate the firm’s continued investment in Asia following the recent arrivals of partners Jason Nelms in Hong Kong and Joshua Isenberg in Tokyo. Sun joins MoFo’s technology transactions group, while Yiu brings significant experience in Hong Kong capital markets and Chinese-focused M&A matters to the firm’s corporate department. Tépé, who advised leading banks and financial institutions, major corporates and private equity sponsors, joins the firm’s financial transactions group.

In addition, Nabarro has also hired in Asia, strengthening its transactional practice in Singapore with the addition of Rathbone who specialises in infrastructure, construction and energy projects. Rathbone joins the firm from Gadens, where he founded the firm’s Singapore office in 2013 and was previously its managing partner.

Finally, BLP will relocate its premises in Hong Kong after signing a six year lease for 15,000 sq ft in Taikoo Place. The firm currently leases 9,500 sq ft in Central District, housing 40 staff, and said the new office can accommodate approximately 100 people and will enable further growth of the firm’s team.

BLP head of Asia Bob Charlton said: ‘Our move into the built environment centre of Hong Kong is an exciting development in the legal services market. A move to modern open plan working, already enjoyed by many of our colleagues in our London office, and by our investment in IT improvements, and smarter co-location of our teams, will also result in better communication and collaboration for our multidisciplinary teams on more complex matters for our high quality clients.’

kathryn.mccann@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Tough odds for City hopefuls as NRF and Camerons both make up only two London partners

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Norton Rose Fulbright (NRF) has promoted just two City lawyers to partner in a 39-strong promotions round that focused heavily on its US offering while CMS Cameron McKenna saw 12 make it to partner.

NRF announced today (29 April) that it has promoted 39 to partner – of which 12 are female – across seven of its global practice groups covering banking and finance, disputes, corporate, intellectual property, tax, real estate, and employment.

Only two made the grade in London – in finance and real estate respectively – while the US took the most appointments with 14, followed by Canada with seven, Europe with seven, Australia with six, Asia and South Africa with two respectively, and one in the Middle East. Banking and finance saw the most investment with 13 in the practice area appointed, followed by disputes with 12 and corporate with six.

The promotions constitute a marked drop on last year’s figures when 51 lawyers were made up to partner.

NRF chief executive Peter Martyr said it ‘underlines our global strategy across the firm and illustrates our continued dedication to the expansion of our core markets’.

CMS Cameron McKenna, meanwhile, made up 12 partners in a 31-strong round across the wider CMS grouping. This year in London only two were promoted alongside a further three in Scotland.

John Craske and Fiona Letham, who lead the Legal Services Unit at CMS, have also been promoted to the role of LSU director, with effect from 1 May. The unit currently comprises 30 paralegals, located in Glasgow and Edinburgh, and in the three years since its launch has more than tripled in size.

The promotions follow the election of Stephen Millar to managing partner of CMS Cameron McKenna earlier this year. Millar will officially succeed Duncan Weston on 1 May.

CMS senior partner Penelope Warne said: ‘It is very good to see the female representation of our global promotions remaining high a reflection of the inclusive culture we are proud of at CMS.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Norton Rose Fulbright partner promotions 2016:

Asia

Paul Coggins (banking and finance, Tokyo)*

Harold Tin (corporate, M&A and securities, Hong Kong)

Australia

Jeffery Black (banking and finance, Perth)

Ben Davis (dispute resolution, Melbourne)

Georgina Hey (intellectual property, Sydney)

John Moran (dispute resolution, Sydney)

Tim Mornane (banking and finance, Sydney)

Meriel Steadman (dispute resolution, Perth)

Canada

Demian Barbas (intellectual property, Montreal)

Catherine Biron (employment and labour, Montreal)

Andrea Brewer (corporate, M&A and securities, Toronto)

Horia Bundaru (dispute resolution, Montreal)

Evan Cobb (banking and finance, Toronto)

Michael Lieberman (real estate, Toronto)

Lara Mason (dispute resolution, Calgary)

Europe

Mark Craggs (banking and finance, London)

Sven Förster (dispute resolution, Munich)

Peter Holst (corporate, M&A and securities, Frankfurt)

Salvatore Iannitti (corporate, M&A and securities, Milan)

Floortje Nagelkerke (banking and finance, Amsterdam)

Charles Pinkerton (real estate, London)

Katrin Stieß (corporate, M&A and securities, Munich)

Middle East

Robin Balmer (banking and finance, Dubai)

South Africa

Zaida Kathrada (banking and finance, Johannesburg)

Brian Alade Shonubi (banking and finance, Johannesburg)

US

Jason Boland (banking and finance, Houston)

Alexander Clark (tax, Dallas)

Carter Dugan (dispute resolution, Houston)

Jessica Farley (dispute resolution, Houston)

Shea Haass (dispute resolution, Dallas)

Greg Moore (dispute resolution, Houston)

Spencer Persson (dispute resolution, Los Angeles)

Nathan Rees (intellectual property, Dallas)

Ann La Morena Rohlin (banking and finance, Los Angeles)

Peter Smith (tax, Austin)

Ronald Smith (dispute resolution, Dallas)

Jay Stiffler (corporate and securities, Houston)

Russell Trice (banking and finance, Los Angeles)

Alyssa Vazquez (banking and finance, New York)

 

CMS Cameron McKenna partner promotions 2016:

Banking and finance

Elitsa Ivanova (Sofia, Bulgaria)

Jenny Allan (Edinburgh)

Corporate and commercial

Darina Baltadjieva (Sofia, Bulgaria)

Jack Letson (Glasgow)

Marija Tesic (Belgrade, Serbia)

Nick Blair (London)

Olga Belyakova (Kyiv, Ukraine)

Competition and EU

Raško Radovanović (Belgrade, Serbia)

Energy, environment, projects and construction

Graeme Clubley (Aberdeen)

Jeremie Witt (Dubai, United Arab Emirates)

Piotr Ciolkowski (Warsaw, Poland)

Sarah King (London)

Legal Business

Linklaters and Olswang to face questions in Parliament over BHS controversy

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Linklaters and Olswang have been called before a Parliamentary committee to answer questions over the sale and contentious administration of BHS.

As part of a Parliamentary investigation both law firms will face questioning over the UK department store’s 2015 sale. Linkaters corporate partner Owen Clay last year advised Arcadia on the disposal of BHS, while Olswang represented Retail Acquisition.

Linklaters and Olswang confirmed that they had been called before Parliament but made no further comment.

With BHS falling into administration this week, putting 11,000 jobs at risk, the House of Commons Business Innovation and Skills Select Committee launched an inquiry into the sale to Retail Acquisitions by retail tycoon Sir Philip Green’s Arcadia for £1 last year.

Former BHS-owner Green is also expected to appear before MPs to face questions over the affair. The Work and Pensions Select Committee will also be investigating how the administration will affect the Pension Protection Fund (PPF), with the retailer’s pension scheme facing a £571m deficit.

In March Weil Gotshal & Manges represented BHS and BHS Properties on its proposals for Company Voluntary Arrangements as part of a wider turnaround plan to tackle the struggling retailer’s heavy property costs. The Weil Gotshal team was led by London head of restructuring Adam Plainer alongside restructuring partner Mark Lawford, head of banking Mark Donald, and real estate head Rupert Jones. KPMG also advised BHS. Weil is currently acting on the administration opposite DLA Piper.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

For more on BHS click here 

Legal Business

Partner promotions: Nabarro makes up four in the City as Olswang makes up one in reduced round

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Olswang has made just two partner promotions firmwide including one in the City, while Nabarro has promoted five in a City-heavy round.

The TMT firm has made up two lawyers in total this year with intellectual property (IP) and franchising lawyer Joel Vertes being made up in London, as well as TMT and sourcing lawyer Matt Pollins making the partnership in Singapore earlier this year.

The all-male round comes after the firm improved its partnerships’ gender diversity when it promoted a five-strong all-female round in 2015.

Olswang chief executive Paul Stevens said: ‘I’m particularly pleased that this year’s partner promotions are both lawyers who have trained, grown and excelled here at Olswang.’

Vertes has 13 years’ experience of advising on all aspects of IP and will also head Olswang’s franchising and licensing team, acting for clients on international transactions such as overseas brand launches and licensing arrangements. He will also focus on growing the firm’s international franchising practice in the retail and leisure sectors and will continue his contentious and non-contentious IP work for Olswang’s tech, media and sports clients.

While Vertes’ promotion will go into effect 1 May this year, Pollins was made up in February and advises clients from start-ups to global multinational corporations and governments on business and law in Asia. His practice spans commercial, transactional, regulatory and IP advice across TMT, sourcing and supply chain, including e-commerce, cloud, data, cyber security, digital media, gaming and logistics.

Nabarro, on the other hand, promoted five lawyers to its partnership of which four were made up in London with the remaining promotion in Sheffield. The majority of the round were made up in the firm’s dispute, real estate and tax practices.

Nabarro’s promotions will take effect from 1 May.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Olswang’s promotions in full:

Joel Vertes, IP, London

Matt Pollins, TMT, Singapore

Nabarro’s partner promotions:

Phil Anderson, tax, London

Steven Billingham, real estate, London

Cheryl Gurnham, real estate, London

Sergio Vella, real estate, London

Rachel Cooper, dispute resolution, Sheffield

Legal Business

Second time lucky: Nabarro elects real estate head Carvalho as senior partner

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Nabarro has today (7 March) announced its real estate chief Ciaran Carvalho (pictured) has been elected as senior partner of the firm, to succeed incumbent Graham Stedman on 1 May 2016.

Following hustings last week, Carvalho won a contested election against corporate head Iain Newman and disputes head Jonathan Warne after the trio presented their views on how they would lead the firm over the next four year term. It is the second time Carvalho has gone for the senior partner job, losing out to Stedman in 2013.

Carvalho will continue to advise clients and generate fees. He joined Nabarro in 2009 and major clients he has brought to the firm include Lendlease, Urban&Civic, Angelo Gordon, Union Investment and Employees Provident Fund of Malaysia.

He now steps into the leadership role to oversee the firm’s three-year strategy, announced last June, which includes increasingly revenue from international clients to a third of turnover by 2018 and renewed focus on four key sectors, including healthcare & life sciences, infrastructure, real estate and technology. The firm is also aiming to improve business processes and deployment of IT.

During his time in management, Stedman oversaw the firm’s recent move to 125 London Wall which generated property savings, office expansion in its Singapore and Dubai offices, and an office launch in Manchester. He leaves the firm in healthier stead than previous years, where it suffered from heavy dependence on high-end and commoditised property work and a slide in LB100 rankings.

The firm’s half year result in December last year showed revenue was up 4% to £56.3m for the six months to the end of October, compared to the £54.1m recorded the previous year.

In a statement Carvalho said: ‘I look forward to working with each and every one of them to help us win clients, spot domestic and international opportunities and deliver our strategy. Our focus on four sectors, increasing the work we win from international clients, and a programme of change to refine how we provide our services, are central to the firm’s future success.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Subscribers can read more about Carvalho in his ‘Life During Law’ profile here

 

Legal Business

Filling the void: DLA Piper makes key investment funds hire with senior Nabarro appointment

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DLA Piper has appointed Nabarro’s head of alternative investment funds, Andrew Wylie (pictured), to lead growth in its City investment funds practice.

Wylie joins as DLA’s London head of investment funds, which falls under the firm’s corporate practice. His arrival fills the void left by London head of funds Gawain Hughes, who departed last summer for US firm Morgan, Lewis & Bockius.

Wylie was a member of Nabarro’s partnership board and his clients range from hedge fund managers, private equity funds and real estate funds to family offices, pension funds and sovereign wealth funds. He advises on the full spectrum of funds work, including the structuring and establishment of funds and their restructuring and counts wealth manager Walker Crips, oil and gas fund manager Linton Capital and South Street Asset Management as clients.

DLA international head of corporate Bob Bishop said: ‘Andrew is a skilled and experienced lawyer who brings with him solid, wide-ranging funds experience and an impressive client list.’

Wylie is arguably the corporate practice’s biggest hire in the City since private equity partner Tim Wright, who joined from King & Wood Mallesons two years ago. More recently the firm has been making a play in the finance space, hiring Slaughter and May’s former head of derivatives Mark Dwyer and Baker & McKenzie’s former head of structured capital markets veteran Vincent Keaveny.

DLA UK head of corporate Charlie Cook added: ‘We’re looking to expand the funds team. There are lots of opportunities within our international business we could do for existing clients, even without winning external work. We have a strong real estate group and we believe there is also an opportunity to do more in real estate funds.’

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

Dundas & Wilson acquisition helps boost CMS turnover by more than 25%, accounts reveal

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CMS Cameron McKenna has revealed a 26% rise in group turnover to £259.2m from £206.1m, boosted by the acquisition of Scottish firm Dundas & Wilson in 2014 which posted turnover of £47m.

The firm’s LLP accounts revealed the turnover bump, alongside a 32% jump in pre-tax profit to £77.9m from £59.3m for the year to 30 April 2015.

The LLP covers a spread of offices including London, Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Warsaw, Prague, Sofia, Beijing and Rio de Janeiro. Profit available for discretionary division among members increased by 34% to £61.5m from £45.7m. The number of fee earners rose to 1,087 from 804 the previous year and support staff increased to 515 from 424. Salaries leapt from £47m to £66m.

The highest remuneration of a member for the year was £788,000, a fall on last year’s figure of nearly £1.3m which included a retirement provision of £593,000.

The firm incurred a charge of £2.64m on the takeover of Scottish firm Dundas & Wilson which the accounts said was for reorganisation, restructuring and integrating the acquisition during the year. The takeover was entered into on 1 May 2014.

The CMS group last summer unveiled double digit growth in revenue for the financial year ending 31 December 2014 with turnover up 11% to €934.5m (£753.3m), constituting a marked turnaround from revenues the year before, which showed a marginal increase of 1% to €842.1m from €837.7m for the year ending December 2013.

Last week the firm announced the appointment of its new UK chief Stephen Millar following a contested election to succeed longstanding managing partner Duncan Weston.

Set to take effect in May, Weston will take on the role of executive partner for global development, while Millar will be tasked with ‘refreshing’ firm strategy alongside senior partner Penelope Warne as Weston’s current three-year plan comes to an end.

Yesterday several firms posted their LLPs including Norton Rose Fulbright, Pinsent Masons and Dentons.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Future UK chief Millar lays out expansion plans as CMS becomes first international firm in Iran

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CMS Cameron McKenna‘s incoming managing partner Stephen Millar (pictured) has outlined his key priorities as the firm’s next UK chief, a plan which will focus both domestic and international strategic expansion. Millar’s plans for global development come as CMS Hasche Sigle has launched a new office in Iran, the making it the first international firm to do so.

Yesterday (1 February) it was announced energy partner Millar had won a contested election to succeed longstanding chief Duncan Weston.

Set to take effect in May, while Weston will take on the role of executive partner for global development, Millar will be tasked with ‘refreshing’ firm strategy alongside senior partner Penelope Warne as Weston’s current three-year plan comes to an end.

Speaking to Legal Business, Millar says a key priority in his election manifesto was ‘continuing to globalise the business’, with targets for expansion in the Middle East, Asia and North America. The proposal mirrors the ambition voiced by Weston last year when he outlined plans for Asia to constitute 30% of revenues, while a ‘potential combination with a US firm and our public strategy in terms of North America’ has long been an ambition of the firm.

Today’s announcement of CMS Hasche Sigle’s newest outpost in Tehran makes it the first international firm to launch in Iran, and comes just weeks after the lifting of international sanctions on the country, unfreezing billions of dollars of assets and allowing Iran’s oil to be sold internationally.

CMS Hasche Sigle, which had been planning the move since 2013, will be located in the Navak Tower in the Iranian capital and its outpost will include Iranian lawyers led by German-Iranian partners Jürgen Frodermann and Shaghayegh Smousavi.

Domestically, Millar will look to grow the firm’s City offering. He said: ‘Considering its size relative to the rest of the size of the firm it would be good if we were bigger in the City – we want to strengthen our focus.’

Millar added that there are no proposed changes to its partner remuneration model, which in its post-Dundas incarnation, operates as a heavily modified lockstep divided into a four-tier system.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk