Legal Business

Dentons shakes up profit-sharing arrangement in China

legal-business-default

Following its landmark combination with Dentons to create a 7,500-lawyer legal giant, legacy Dacheng is restructuring its practice to reduce the number of profit pools from 15 to five.

With Dentons striving to integrate what is now the world’s largest law firm by employee headcount, the China arm of the firm, headed by senior partner Jinquan Xiao, has carried out a reorganisation to create increased profit-sharing between the firm’s 44 Chinese offices.

Home to some 4,000 lawyers, the partnership has voted through reform that will see the firm move away from office-by-office profit sharing in China and establish five profit pools. These will be: Western China; Mid-Western China; Shanghai; Beijing; and Hong Kong.

With more partners sharing profits, the firm hopes the change will motivate the partnership to share more work and cross-sell clients. It has also been billed as a cost-saving measure, with Dentons’ global chair Joe Andrew, commenting that ‘multiple profit pools means multiple costs – whether that be accountancy fees or admin’.

With Dentons’ rivals still in a catch-22 situation, caught between needing a merger to carry out Chinese law but hesitant to combine with more individualistic local firms with loose governance structures, the overhaul of the legacy Dacheng business comes just five months after the combination completed in November. It is the largest attempt to restructure a Chinese law firm in history and the plans are subject to regulatory approval.

This is the first stage of Dentons’ integration plan for China, with regional reform the first step towards creating a structure that will encourage local lawyers to cross-sell to other parts of the network. The move follows a review of the Chinese practice that aimed to replicate best practice across the Dentons business.

Dentons operates a Swiss verein model, with the legacy Dacheng business one of ten members operating separate profit pools but under the Dentons brand. It has set up firmwide incentives to refer work across the network, with Dacheng undergoing a rapid modernisation process to integrate it into the wider network after agreeing to combine with Dentons at the start of 2015.

Last year proved to be a breakthrough year for Dentons, with six law firms across the US, China, Australia, Singapore, Colombia and Mexico agreeing to join in a merger spree unprecedented in the legal industry.

Despite aggressive expansion, global turnover came in at under the $2.2bn the firm’s management had expected to achieve in 2015, registering $2.12bn in revenue.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Reform underway as Dentons shakes up profit-sharing arrangement in China

legal-business-default

Following its landmark combination with Dentons to create a 7,500-lawyer legal giant, legacy Dacheng is restructuring its practice to reduce the number of profit pools from 15 to five.

With Dentons striving to integrate what is now the world’s largest law firm by employee headcount, the China arm of the firm, headed by senior partner Jinquan Xiao, has carried out a reorganisation to create increased profit-sharing between the firm’s 44 Chinese offices.

Legal Business

Eversheds, Reed Smith and Dentons land spots on inaugural Avis panel

legal-business-default

Eversheds, Reed Smith, Dentons and K&L Gates have landed spots on a seven-firm global panel created by US car rental giant Avis.

Avis, the world’s third largest car rental agency, has condensed its use of law firms through a detailed panel review that will see it move from using around 650 firms to a seven-firm global panel.

Eversheds, Reed Smith, Dentons and K&L Gates have all secured spots for European legal work. Three US firms have also been selected.

The New York-listed company has an annual revenue of $8.5bn and has expanded rapidly in Europe over the past five years, purchasing car-sharing firm Zipcar for $500m in 2013 and Avis Europe, once a separate corporate licensing the Avis brand, for $1bn in 2011. The company has a fleet of 500,000 cars.

Avis created an innovative legal panel that bars its law firms from competing with each other for work. Each firm has been given pre-determined areas of work, with the idea being that the panel firms act as one unit, joining up their advice across their respective remits. The firms have agreed to a global blended rate.

The panel process was run by Michael Tucker, executive vice president and general counsel, and EMEA head of legal Gail Jones. Legal Business understands that Trevor Faure, the former general counsel at Big Four accountancy EY, was drafted in to advise Avis on its use of outside legal counsel.

K&L Gates has a long history of advising Avis, particularly in the US, where Washington DC-based partner William Kirk is known to provide lobbying advice.

Other recently concluded panel reviews include Siemens, which reappointed Eversheds and Osborne Clarke, while adding Addleshaw Goddard to its list of preferred firms, and Credit Suisse which appointed Ashurst along with the big four of the Magic Circle to its panel.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Dentons lands BLP head of corporate crime and investigations in bid to capture banking disputes

legal-business-default

Fresh from securing an 11-partner financial litigation team from now-defunct Matthew Arnold & Baldwin, Dentons has landed Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP) partner Daren Allen (pictured) as it attempts to capture more banking litigation work.

Allen will join Dentons after five years at BLP, having joined from DLA Piper at the start of 2011. He was head of the corporate crime and investigations team at BLP, and specialises in inquiries by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and litigation between banks and their customers.

The total number of complaints opened by the FCA, excluding payment protection insurance, increased by 12% to 1,255,166 between the last six months of 2014 and the first six months of 2015, and the City watchdog had its remit expanded during Wednesday’s budget when UK chancellor George Osborne announced it would be responsible for regulating claims management companies.

Allen has pedigree in this area, having assisted the Ministry of Justice in drafting the guidance on the UK Bribery Act and previously advised the joint money laundering steering group on the revised guidance notes for the financial sector. He becomes the second big-name hire from BLP in the last six months, with BLP’s former UK corporate chief David Collins being appointed in December to lead Dentons’ corporate push.

Allen’s arrival follows Dentons securing a 75-lawyer team from Watford’s Matthew Arnold & Baldwin, servicing banking litigation for the likes of Barclays and the Royal Bank of Scotland. He becomes Dentons 20th lateral hire in the UK since the start of 2015, with the firm looking to reinvigorate its UK presence following a merger-spree that has seen it become the largest law firm in the world by headcount. The firm agreed a landmark combination with China’s Dacheng at the start of 2015 in what became the legal industry’s biggest ever East-West deal and bulked out its US practice with the addition of McKenna Long later that year.

Dentons’ chief executive for the UK, Middle East and Africa Jeremy Cohen said: ‘Daren’s arrival greatly strengthens our financial disputes and contentious regulatory practice, which is a growing and strategically important part of the UK business.’

‘He added: Our involvement in a number of high profile cases has enhanced the firm’s reputation for banking litigation, and it is important for us to capitalise on this as well as the anticipated rise in regulatory disputes over the next few years.’

Read more on Dentons in: ‘The pitch – A new kind of global law firm emerges but can Dentons live up to the hype?’

Legal Business

Dentons’ venture NextLaw Labs invests in fee transparency firm Apperio

legal-business-default

Dentons‘ NextLaw Labs, a venture launched last year for financing new legal services technologies, has made its second major investment with legal tech start-up Apperio.

NextLaw Labs and Apperio will work together to streamline matter management, track legal spend in real time and standardise the legal tender process. Apperio’s tools enable clients to monitor the amount of partner/associate time spent on each transaction/case.

Initially known as Legal Tender, Apperio has a dashboard which allows companies to monitor firm’s performance. Clients can set alerts for when price thresholds are reached, and compare firms’ ability to stick to budgets against rivals.

Notably, Taylor Wessing, Olswang and CMS Cameron McKenna are among a host of firms who already signed up to Apperio in April last year. Clients subscribe to Apperio by paying a quarterly fee, and are charged in accordance to the amount of legal work they want tracking, ranging from an overall legal spend of £350,000 up to £10m. Dentons would not provide details on how much the investment was worth.

NextLaw chief executive Dan Jansen said a prototype was already being tested with Dentons partners and business development professionals in London.

He added: ‘This is a client and law firm product we will be selling this to lots of law firms, it helps that Dentons is using this, but if I can only sell to one customer then I’ll have a crap ROI.’

In May 2015, Dentons announced the establishment of NextLaw, which was created to develop a suite of technologies to change how lawyers practise law and provide better solutions to clients. In August last year it invested in an IBM Watson app to answer lawyers’ questions. 

In other technology news, Legal Business revealed earlier this week Mishcon de Reya has launched a new venture with e-discovery provider Unified and software developer kCura, agreeing a fixed-price three-year contract.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Subscribers can read more on Dentons in the cover feature ‘The pitch’.

Legal Business

Dentons wins bid to get £30m RBS Libor dispute moved onto financial list

legal-business-default

Lawyers at Dentons, acting for the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), have successfully moved the £29m Property Alliance Group (PAG) Libor dispute into London’s newly-created financial court.

In proceedings brought in September 2013, PAG alleges RBS induced it to enter four interest swap rate agreements between 2004 and 2008 that employed sterling Libor as a reference rate and ‘implicitly misrepresented that it was not rigging the relevant Libor rate’. A trial date has been set for May this year, and there have been a number of preliminary decisions by Justice Birss on matters such as disclosure.

However RBS requested the case be transferred into the financial court, and a hearing was held on the issue on 27 January, while PAG, represented by Cooke, Young & Keidan, opposed the application, and complained that the request was made out of time.

However Sir Terence Etherton, chancellor of the High Court, decided despite the fact a new judge would be needed, the case should be transferred.

The judge said that even though the value of the claim was less than £50m, which is the size of claim the court had been established to hear, the proceedings fell within the definition of ‘financial list claim’ as required by the Civil Procedure Rules.

The judgment said: ‘Allied to those considerations is the point that if, particularly in relation to the libor allegations, this case is to be viewed in a general sense as a test or lead case, which will be followed by others suitable for and likely to be commenced in or transferred into the financial list, it is desirable that it be dealt with by a judge of the financial list in order that the judgment following trial carries appropriate weight and respect in the financial markets.’

The judge added that it was well known there are others who have claims and are likely to litigate similar issues arising out of the alleged rigging of Libor rates.

He added: ‘It seems reasonably clear that the judgment following trial in the present proceedings will have an impact on other cases already launched and those which will be launched in the future. It is also likely that decisions about provisions in the agreements between RBS and PAG limiting RBS’s exposure to claims for negligence will have relevance elsewhere in the markets.’

Cooke, Young & Keidan instructed Brick Court Chambers barrister Tim Lord QC while Dentons instructed David Foxton QC of Essex Court Chambers for RBS.

The financial list debuted late last year, and its first decision, a dispute between Blackstone fund GSO Credit, Barclays Bank and HCC International Insurance Company was released in January. Last month the high-profile £3bn bond dispute between Russia and Ukraine was also filed at the specialist court.

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk

Read the full decision here

Legal Business

Magic Circle play: Dentons hires Clifford Chance veteran Voisey

legal-business-default

Dentons continues to build its City offering through lateral recruitment, confirming the hire of Clifford Chance (CC) senior capital markets partner Peter Voisey (pictured) in a bid to capture greater market share.

The firm has also hired Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer projects lawyer Alistair Black who joins as a partner and will work within the firm’s energy, transport and infrastructure practice (ETI).

Voisey retired from CC’s partnership at the end of April last year after 15 years at the firm, having joined its securitisation practice in 2000 from Hogan Lovells.

He will now work alongside Dentons structured finance partner Ed Hickman, who joined the firm in 2012 from Linklaters, to further grow the practice.

Black, meanwhile, joins from Freshfields where he was a senior associate. He specialises in LNG, oil and gas, conventional, renewable and nuclear power and petrochemicals sectors, and his skillset covers project development, project finance and corporate M&A.

Dentons London head of banking & finance Paul Holland said: ‘The recovering markets, increasing regulatory cost of capital and rise of alternative sources of finance all present an opportunity for us to build out a high quality structured finance practice in London. As the market continues to evolve away from traditional loan financing Peter’s arrival will help us to move up the quality ladder and secure more complex transactions from our existing banking relationships.’

London head of ETI Matthew Hanslip Ward said: ‘The global energy markets offer huge opportunities for Dentons. The confluence between the gas and oil and electricity generation industries, and shift towards renewables, means that those firms with a real energy pedigree and a seamless global network are well-placed to capture work in this strategically important sector.’

Dentons has recently made multiple hires to boost its UK offering, including Pinsent Masons corporate partner Stephen Levy earlier this month, while in January it hired Matthew Arnold & Baldwin’s 75-strong banking and finance litigation team, including 11 partners and 64 fee earners. Last year Nikolas Colbridge and Martin Mankabady joined the firm from Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and Clyde & Co respectively.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

See ‘The pitch’ for our in-depth analysis of Dentons.

Legal Business

City corporate push: Dentons makes M&A play with Pinsent Masons partner Levy

legal-business-default

Dentons has made a corporate play in the City with the hire of Stephen Levy, who departs Pinsent Masons after almost a decade at the national firm.

Levy, who moved from Hammonds to head up Pinsent Masons’ corporate team in Manchester in 2006, is a specialist in cross-border UK M&A and private equity. He has advised UK private equity funds including Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, H.I.G. Capital, Anchorage and Montagu Private Equity, as well as large corporates Landis+Gyr and Peel Group.

Dentons UK head of corporate David Collins, who was recruited in December last year to lead the firm’s cross border M&A push said: ‘The recent growth of our UK corporate practice combined with Dentons’ expanding international footprint, our strong profile in mid-market M&A and our enhanced reputation for equity capital markets and private equity work, provide us with an opportunity to continue to grow our market share in these areas.’

The hire follows the recent additions of Nikolas Colbridge and Martin Mankabady as is part of the global firm’s push to strengthen its corporate brand in its home market. Colbridge joined from Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in September last year, while Mankabady was appointed in November from Clyde & Co.

Dentons UKMEA chief executive Jeremy Cohen said: ‘Expanding the corporate team is one of our key priorities for the region. In the UK we are consistently rated in the top tier for mid-cap M&A and over the last three years we have grown a private equity practice that has started to achieve some notable successes in mid-market UK and emerging markets transactions.’

While the firm only made up one partner in the City in its latest round of promotions, it made 21 promotions across the globe, with 79% of those newly-made partners located in the US and Canada.

Dentons recently posted a 6% increase in revenue in its accounts for the UK, Middle East and Africa as turnover rose to £157m from £148m, while overall profit before taxation climbed about 12% to £42.4m from £37.9m.

Read more about Dentons in this month’s cover feature: ‘The pitch – A new kind of global law firm emerges but can Dentons live up to the hype?

 

 

 

 

Legal Business

London overlooked: Dentons creates one new City partner amid US-heavy promotion round

legal-business-default

In a move that goes against its accelerated global expansion this past year, Dentons has promoted just 47 associates to partner in its 2016 round – with a hefty 79% located in the US and Canada – but just two in the UK.

The firm announced today (9 February) 21 promotions across its US offices with a further 16 made up in Canada. The firm’s European offices accounted for seven promotions across Warsaw (3), Istanbul (2), Prague (1), and Brussels (1).

Corporate M&A associate Daniel Acres was the only individual to make partner in London, while Milton Keynes-based employment associate Sarah Beeby was the only other lawyer promoted from the UK. The firm’s Middle East offering saw one disputes lawyer promoted in Oman.

Practice wise, disputes featured most heavily with 12 promotions, followed by corporate with five, financial institutions, tax, and employment all had three.

Global chair Joe Andrew said: ‘This year’s partner promotions are a testament to Dentons’ polycentric culture and the rich diversity of our people, clients and markets. We are particularly proud that this year, nearly half of our newly promoted partners are women.’

The promotions follow news of Dentons UK, Middle East and Africa LLP accounts for the 2014/15, which revealed the firm’s revenue increased by 6% for the 2014/15 financial year to £157m from £148m, while overall profit before taxation climbed 12% to £42.4m from £37.9m.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk


For more on Dentons, see our analysis: ‘The pitch’, and the comment piece: ‘Comment: Doing something radical – how Dentons sort of won me over.’

 

Dentons promoted the following partners in 2016

 

Canada

Calgary:

Rachel Howie, disputes

April Kosten, employment and labour, immigration

Nathan Roberts, corporate and M&A

Doug Schweitzer, restructuring, insolvency and bankruptcy

Edmonton:

Claire Bond, disputes

Keith Hennel, tax

Ameen Tejani, financial institutions

Montreal:

Charles Bardou, corporate

Ottawa:

Kelly Elliott, financial institutions

Toronto:

Jesse Brodlieb, tax

Heather Di Dio, pensions, benefits and executive compensation

Hartley Lefton, business law

Alexandra North, financial institutions

Christina Porretta, research

Vancouver:

Cindy Cheuk, restructuring, insolvency and bankruptcy

Helen Park, business law, immigration

 

Europe

Brussels:

Nadiya Nychay, competition and antitrust

Istanbul:

Gülistan Baltacı, disputes

Semih Sander, disputes

Prague:

Daniel Hurych, banking and finance

Warsaw:

Tomasz Janas, energy

Michał Jochemczak, disputes

Aleksandra Minkowicz-Flanek, employment and labour

 

UKMEA

London:

Darren Acres, corporate and M&A

Milton Keynes:

Sarah Beeby, employment and labour

Muscat:

Haleem Mohammed, disputes


US

Atlanta:

Josh Curry, IP and technology

Douglas Eingurt, corporate and M&A

David Gordon, restructuring, insolvency and bankruptcy

Petrina Hall McDaniel, disputes

Dallas:

Mansi Desai, capital markets

Kansas City:

Brian Baggott, disputes

Los Angeles:

Frederic Norris, disputes

New Jersey:

Jonathan Jemison, disputes

New York:

Shujaat Ali, capital markets

Kristina Beirne, corporate and M&A

JillAllison Opell, insurance

Richard Stempler, real estate

Richard Williams, tax

Phoenix:

Christopher Lee, hotels and leisure

San Francisco:

Bonnie Lau, disputes

Jason Ross, capital markets

St. Louis:

Danette Davis, real estate

Rachel Milazzo, disputes

Washington, DC:

Younggyu Kim, IP and Technology

Dana Pashkoff, government contracts

Erin Sheppard, government contracts

Legal Business

Dentons UKMEA posts 6% revenue lift as profit jumps 12%

legal-business-default

Dentons LLP accounts for the UK, Middle East and Africa have revealed the firm’s revenue increased by 6% for the 2014/15 financial year to £157m from £148m, while overall profit before taxation climbed about 12% to £42.4m from £37.9m.

The LLP covers a spread of offices including London, Milton Keynes, Amman, Abu Dhabi, Singapore and Tashkent, with the firm attributing its performance to transactional activity being ‘significantly higher’ in the UK while it continued ‘to focus our activity through our chosen geographies and sectors.’

Profit for the financial year available for discretionary division among members took a 12% drop from £3.9m to £3.4m, and staff costs rose by 4% from £72.8m to £75.8m.

The estimated entitlement of the highest paid member for the current year stood at £838,000, a significant increase the previous year’s figure of £703,000. The figures in the LLP accounts do not necessarily equate to the highest paid equity member and can relate to ‘golden handshakes’ to retiring members.

Wages and salaries rose to £52m from £49m and the number of fee earners and administrative staff rose to 858 from 846.

It’s been a year of accelerated growth for the world’s largest law firm by lawyer headcount. Following its audacious tie-up with China’s Dacheng in January 2015, it brought Australia’s Gadens and Singapore’s Rodyk & Davidson into the Dentons fold, adding another 700 lawyers to its Asia-Pacific platform.

In December Colombia’s Cárdenas y Cárdenas and Mexico’s López Velarde, Heftye y Soria agreed to become the ninth and tenth verein members of Denton. More deals are expected in Latin America and few would be surprised if Dentons pursued another major UK tie-up.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

For more on Dentons, see our analysis: ‘The pitch’, and the comment piece: ‘Comment: Doing something radical – how Dentons sort of won me over.’