Legal Business

Freshfields ushers in sweeping reforms to ditch heritage as lockstep shop in hugely symbolic move

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has pushed through a wholesale overhaul of its partnership structure that will see top earners bringing home as much as five times its most junior equity partners.

The move – which was backed in a partners’ vote concluding today (14 November) – will see Freshfields’ core equity range widen from between 17.5 points and 50 points to between 12 points and 60 points, though the ‘core ladder’ will run from 12 to 40 points.

The comprehensive overhaul will usher in three discretionary gates, with the third gate allowing top performers to earn up to 60 points in a move aimed at helping the City giant counter the mounting strategic threat of leading US rivals.

The move is not only a decisive shift from Freshfields’ once-obsessive support for classic lockstep partnership but also aims to deal with an increasingly messy compromise in which the firm has brought in a mishmash of off-lockstep deals in recent years both above and below its core ladder. In addition to the core range, there was a 10 to 30-point ladder for a disparate group of support practice areas and partners in secondary markets while a group of primarily New York law partners had been paid above the top of its lockstep.

There will be two discretionary gates slicing the 12-40-point scale into three sections, with the third gate kicking in at 40 points. The model will hand management huge control over partner remuneration, leaving Freshfields with a heavily-modified lockstep or, on some readings, a largely merit-driven system.

The wholesale shake-up also sees its equity points re-calibrated, taking profit-per-point to over £50,000, pushing top earnings above £3m for a select few.  Under the current model, plateau partners can earn up to £2.2m. One insider predicted the firm would initially have no more than 5% to 10% of its partnership above the core 40-point range.

Freshfields senior partner Edward Braham said in a statement: ‘We felt this was the right time to look closely at our lockstep. The partners have engaged, consulted and voted positively for the new structure which now cements our model for the foreseeable future. We are an ambitious, confident and aligned partnership and we are in a very positive place to make the most of the many opportunities we have.’

The firm had faced calls for major reform back in 2015 during its leadership election when a camp led by contender Simon Marchant argued that Freshfields had to make a far more substantive break from a traditional lockstep partnership based primarily on time served. Ironically, this push was defeated by the winning candidate Braham, who had pledged to largely preserve its current pay model.

The move makes Freshfields the top City firm to have made by far the most aggressive shift away from the classic lockstep model, though Clifford Chance, Linklaters and Allen & Overy have ushered in more modest reforms to their partnerships in recent years. The shift will give Freshfields far more ammunition to retain and hire top performers and build out its crucial New York law practice and also heap additional pressure on London rivals to consider more aggressive reforms. However, one partner at arch-rival Linklaters said that the firm had no intention of revisiting its remuneration model after last year widening its pay bands.

The vote comes as City firms are facing unprecedented pressure from US rivals for key partners in a number of product lines, including private equity, leveraged finance, funds and white collar crime. Freshfields itself has been through an unsettled period recently with co-managing partner Chris Pugh stepping down this summer amid leadership tensions and the firm lagging its peers in the 2016/17 reporting season. A growing number of partners have argued that the firm has been losing ground against key global rivals in recent years.

While there will be strained efforts to paint the shake-up as preserving Freshfields’ remuneration model, there is no doubt the City giant most wedded to lockstep has abandoned the approach amid intense pressure from its own rainmakers for a move far closer to that of US rivals. For most neutral observers, the shift at Fleet Street is a long overdue recognition that the legal market had fundamentally changed since the banking crisis at the expense of the Magic Circle. But the decision will send reverberations through the global legal market for years to come.

alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

For more commentary on the firm see ‘What ails Freshfields? Time is running out for ‘The Last Champions’ 

For more analysis on the impact of US firms’ recruitment of Magic Circle partners see this month’s cover feature, ‘The Departed’ (£) 

Legal Business

Comment: What ails Freshfields? Time is running out for ‘The Last Champions’

The headline of the last lengthy piece Legal Business carried on Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer said it all: The Last Champions. While there is no doubt that the Magic Circle has faced huge challenges asserting itself since the banking crisis, for many Freshfields was the member of the club with the best prospect of securing its place in the global elite.

But the City giant will be faring much worse on the profession’s saloon bar test if it keeps generating headlines like this summer, notably the news in July that co-managing partner Chris Pugh was stepping down less than halfway through his term. This surprise announcement came in the same month as financial results showed Freshfields being comprehensively outclassed by its City peers. Freshfields’ revenues have grown by just 17% in five years and the firm has been a fitful performer for nearly a decade now. While the metrics look better in profitability and revenue-per-lawyer terms, Freshfields has certainly not outpaced London rivals even on its core targets.

Of the two announcements, the departure of Pugh is the more damaging, representing the second loss to its c-suite in 18 months with executive partner Michael Lacovara quitting for Latham & Watkins in 2016. Sensitivities over departing leadership at Fleet Street are already considerable given the resignation of managing partner Ted Burke part-way through his term in 2013.

Many internally see the move as reflective of tensions between senior partner Edward Braham and Pugh, respectively former heads of corporate and dispute resolution who both stood in 2015 for senior partner before running as a joint ticket. Under this reading there has been discord between Freshfields’ heritage as a transactional firm and Pugh’s track record in substantially building up its disputes, antitrust and arbitration practices, with the deal junkies reasserting themselves. Aside from losses in arbitration with the 2014 launch of boutique Three Crowns, the firm has seen a number of its brand-name disputes veterans retire or move on, such as Ian Terry, Jon Lawrence and Raj Parker. Many doubt that Pugh will remain, while it has been noted that with Burke’s departure the contentious practice lost a powerful advocate. The internal response is that disputes remains as core as ever and will be receiving fresh investment, while the work of standout partners in their prime like James Kennedy and Mastercard pointman Mark Sansom is highlighted.

In the words of one insider on the departure of Pugh from senior leadership: ‘Management was aware of the seriousness of the situation, but the view was taken that it was right for the firm.’

Yet questions over management persist. While the pairing of senior partner Will Lawes and Burke was much admired, there are more mixed views on the current leadership. In part this is linked to the unresolved debate from the 2015 election when the rival joint ticket of Simon Marchant and Klaus-Stefan Hohenstatt promised more of the radical change that many argue is needed to keep pace with more profitable US rivals. Some felt the cerebral Braham is too conservative for an institution that has previously reinvented itself with much success when required.

Though there were personal reasons behind Lacovara’s departure – and his forthright style jarred with some – the loss of a high-performing ex-Sullivan & Cromwell partner who got things done was a blow to Freshfields’ leadership team and US credibility.

So it looked particularly bad to have Pugh stand down. Bad but necessary, as tensions had built up with Braham and other members of the leadership team. Contrary to some suggestions, such discord was focused on style and chemistry not Pugh being held responsible for sluggish trading. In the words of one insider on the departure of Pugh from senior leadership: ‘Management was aware of the seriousness of the situation, but the view was taken that it was right for the firm.’

Likewise, the 2016/17 results have been received poorly internally even in the context of a firm focused on profitability and quality of business over revenue growth. With several large disputes ending and an indifferent run of big-ticket deal work, the year ended far worse than expected. Sure, Freshfields has shrunk its partnership from 474 a decade ago to around 400 currently but it did not expect to get its clock cleaned this year by Clifford Chance (CC). (The mood will not have been helped this month by losing out on a DC disputes team to CC.)

As such the message internally is that events of recent months are being taken as a wake-up call for a firm in danger of losing its hard-fought position. But is Freshfields ready to take the hard decisions on reshaping its business, still most pressingly in the battle to secure a meaningful US breakthrough and in facing up to the reality that the firm needs substantial reform to its lockstep pay model? There is talk of Braham shedding some of his initial caution but he stood on a ‘lockstep good’ platform. Freshfields is also attempting the very tricky balance of progressing its business while continuing to shrink its partnership.

Now is certainly the moment for Freshfields to rediscover its strategic daring. Perhaps the last chance. The ‘Last Champions’ of the Magic Circle should remember that brand is a lagging indicator – and Freshfields has not done well enough since the banking crisis to make good on its global ambitions. Its platform and reputation for quality remain formidable assets. Alone, they will not be enough.

alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields and Kirkland land roles in biggest ever UK airline collapse

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Kirkland & Ellis have won advisory roles as Monarch Airlines filed for administration in the early hours of Monday (2 October).

The job – one of the most high profile corporate failures of the year – has attracted two of the City’s top insolvency teams, with Freshfields fielding a team under its veteran restructuring chief Ken Baird.

Big Four accountancy firm KPMG was appointed administrator for the airline after it stopped operating, leaving 110,000 customers stranded overseas and cancelling around 300,000 future bookings.

The announcement came after terror attacks in North Africa, the weak pound and an increasingly competitive aviation market took its toll on the UK’s fifth-largest airline, which reported a £291m loss for the year to October 2016.

KPMG UK head of restructuring Blair Nimmo and partners Jim Tucker and Mike Pink are joint administrators to the airline. Nimmo, Tucker and KPMG director Steve Absolom have also been appointed administrators to the group’s tour operator Monarch Travel Group. Its engineering operation Monarch Aircraft Engineering will continue to trade normally.

Baird and fellow Freshfields finance partner Catherine Balmond are leading the team advising KPMG. Kirkland is advising the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA).

‘While this timing is unusual in insolvency situations, it was necessary for the appointment to be made once all Monarch aircraft were on the ground,’ Nimmo commented in a statement, adding that the administrators’ primary focus for the first 48 hours was to work with the CAA on repatriating the customers due to travel back to the UK within the next two weeks.

After Monarch’s Air Operating Certificate was suspended with immediate effect on Monday morning, the government tasked the CAA with bringing back to the UK 110,000 people stranded overseas.

More than 11,800 were flown home on Monday on 61 flights. Around 44,000 others are expected to follow this week.

Stephenson Harwood has also picked up a role advising the Pension Protection Fund.

Founded in 1968, the Luton-headquartered airline operated flights to more than 40 destinations with a capacity of six million seats from five UK bases: London Gatwick, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds-Bradford and Luton.

UK’s largest ever airline to enter administration, it had employed about 2,100 people, around 250 of them retained to help with repatriation operations.

Freshfields has previously acted for Monarch in two key deals in the airline’s 49-year history. The company secured the largest investment in its operations from Greybull Capital in October last year, meaning it was able to maintain its licences from the CAA for the following 12 months. The Magic Circle firm also acted for the airline operator when Greybull acquired the majority of the group in 2014.

marco.cillario@legalbusiness.co.uk

Legal Business

Deal watch: Magic Circle firms in busy start to autumn as Freshfields and CC take leading roles in global buyouts

Global 100 firms have taken the lead on a trio of multibillion-dollar deals announced this week as the autumn deal season kicks off in earnest.

London’s big four international firms have featured large opposite Wall street rivals, with Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer acting on Hellman & Friedman’s $5.3bn acquisition of Nets and Clifford Chance (CC) on Unilever’s $2.7bn buyout of Carver Korea.

Nordic payment processor Nets will be acquired by Evergood, a newly formed company which is controlled by funds managed by Hellman & Friedman (H&F). The private equity house first approached the Copenhagen-based group in June along with a number of other potential buyers.

H&F’s all-cash offer of $26 per share values the company at $5.3bn and the deal is expected to complete in the first quarter of 2018.

A team led by Freshfields partners David Higgins, Tim Wilmot and Andrew Hutchings advised H&F, alongside Danish Euro Elite firm Kromann Reumert. Latham & Watkins also advised the private equity house on the financing, with a team led by Christopher Kandel.

Copenhagen-headquartered Nets turned to Danish firm Gorrissen Federspiel for legal advice, led by partners Rikke Schiøtt Petersen and Olaf Carl Ehrenskjöld.

Inge Hansen, chairman of Nets said: ‘Having considered all options available to us, including continuing as a listed company, we are satisfied that the cash offer of DKK 165 [$26] per share to all shareholders is the most attractive alternative available. We believe Hellman & Friedman is a responsible, growth-oriented owner who will be able to take a long-term strategic approach to the development of Nets to the benefit of our stakeholders.’

This is the second multibillion-dollar deal Freshfields has acted on this year for H&F: in March, the Magic Circle firm advised the private equity house on its acquisition of Allfunds Bank.

Elsewhere, CC and Ropes & Gray acted as Unilever acquired cosmetics maker Carver Korea for $2.7bn from Goldman Sachs, Bain Capital and the company’s founder.

The Magic Circle firm’s Singapore-based partner Valerie Kong is heading the team advising Unilever, alongside local firm Bae, Kim & Lee.

South Korean partner Jaewoo Lee and US partner William Mone led the Ropes & Gray team acting for Bain Capital. Korean firm Kim & Chang also advised Bain Capital and Goldman Sachs.

Meanwhile, in an all-US adviser deal, Davis Polk & Wardwell and Weil, Gotshal & Manges are advising on Swiss engineering group ABB’s $2.6bn acquisition of GE Industrial Solutions.

The Zurich-headquartered group will purchase GE’s global electrification business based in Atlanta. The business employs around 13,500 employees worldwide and turned over around $2.7bn in 2016.

A New York-based Davis Polk corporate team including partners Phillip Mills and Michael Davis advised ABB. The firm also provided tax, IP, technology and environmental advice, with partners Avishai Shachar, Frank Azzopardi and Jeffrey Crandall involved.

The Weil team advising GE Industrial Solutions was led by New York-based partners William Gutowitz and Jackie Cohen. The firm also worked on the tax, IP, technology, environment and real estate components of the transaction.

Tarak Mehta, president of ABB’s electrification products division said the acquisition ‘strengthens our position as partner of choice for electrification globally and in North America’.

The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2018.

marco.cillario@legalbusiness.co.uk

Legal Business

What ails Freshfields? Time is running out for ‘The Last Champions’

The headline of the last lengthy piece Legal Business carried on Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer said it all: The Last Champions. While there is no doubt that the Magic Circle has faced huge challenges asserting itself since the banking crisis, for many Freshfields was the member of the club with the best prospect of securing its place in the global elite.

But the City giant will be faring much worse on the profession’s saloon bar test if it keeps generating headlines like this summer, notably the news in July that co-managing partner Chris Pugh was stepping down less than halfway through his term. This surprise announcement came in the same month as financial results showed Freshfields being comprehensively outclassed by its City peers. Freshfields’ revenues have grown by just 17% in five years and the firm has been a fitful performer for nearly a decade now. While the metrics look better in profitability and revenue-per-lawyer terms, Freshfields has certainly not outpaced London rivals even on its core targets.

Legal Business

‘Knowhow and track record’: Magic Circle dominates new panel as seven firms dropped in government legal services revamp

Magic Circle firms constitute four of the nine advisers appointed to the government’s new finance and complex legal services panel with seven law firms left out after a reboot of its legal services framework continues.

Freshfields Bruckhaus DeringerLinklatersSlaughter and May and Clifford Chance are part of the new panel advising on matters including finance, refinancing, capital markets, corporate transactions, projects and regulation.

Dentons, Ashurst, Berwin Leighton Paisner, Hogan Lovells and Simmons & Simmons will also sit on the Crown Commercial Services’ advisory group, which will replace the finance and regulation panel when this expires in January next year.

Addleshaw Goddard, Allen & Overy, Burges Salmon, Mills & Reeve, Nabarro (now CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang), Pinsent Masons and Squire Sanders (now Squire Patton Boggs) were on the previous panel but have not been named this time around.

The contract runs for two years from 21 August, with an option to extend for up to 24 further months.

Dentons will offer an integrated service in Scotland through its recently announced merger with Maclay Murray & Spens, while sub-contractor Brodies will support Simmons on Scottish law. Another sub-contractor, Bates Wells Braithwaite, will give Simmons additional public and administrative law support.

Christopher McGee-Osborne, who led Dentons’ panel bid, said the appointment of the firm, which has advised the government for more than 30 years, demonstrated it has ‘the public sector knowhow and track record to deliver the best advice and service to central government’.

Helen Hancock, a finance partner at Simmons & Simmons said: ‘As a firm we have had a strong focus on government and public sector work for many years. We were on the previous panel, and this new panel arrangement is an opportunity for us to build on our track record in what we see as a focus for us going forward.’

Other recently announced panels replacing parts of the government’s legal services framework include rosters for general legal services and rail legal services.

In March 2016, the government announced an initiative to cut down the number of go-to-firms it uses for external advice by almost 40%. The reduction formed part of a bid to improve legal services delivery across the public sector.

marco.cillario@legalbusiness.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields freezes associate pay bands after 2016 largesse but battle for top juniors to intensify

Amid a simmering market for junior City lawyers, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has opted to hold the line on associate salaries following a round of bumper increases in 2016.

Newly-qualified (NQ) solicitors at the Magic Circle firm currently earn £85,000. This rate was established last year when the City giant substantially overhauled its comp structure to hike base salaries from £67,500 to £85,000, a 26% rise. The increase included the rolling in of bonuses, though overall compensation was also increased.

Freshfields London managing partner Julian Long said the firm has ‘continued to review our competitive position, which, in terms of total compensation, remains strong in the market’. He added Freshfields would ‘continue to review and update, taking account of the market, to make sure our approach properly rewards our people for the work they do and the high standards they consistently achieve.’

The decision comes amid continuing upward salary pressure for junior associates, thanks largely to six-figure packages on offer at US-based rivals. In June it emerged that Linklaters had nudged up its base rate for junior lawyers by £1,000, handing NQ solicitors £82,000, which gives its new solicitors the ability to earn a total package of £90,000 including bonuses. Slaughters made the decision in June to hold its associate salaries after it boosted associate base salaries by 10% as of 1 January 2017. NQ pay increased 9% to £78,000, while 1PQE salaries rose 10% to £87,000.

Clifford Chance (CC) declined to disclose its pay bands for junior lawyers. It is understood that the firm has brought its junior lawyers’ base rate pay up to match the UK’s 2.7% jump in inflation, which for a newly-qualified base rate of £85,000 would suggest increases of over £2,000 for juniors.

Such moves reflect an increasing opacity in the compensation of junior associates in recent years as leading London firms have moved away from strictly-banded – and transparent – pay models based on post-qualification experience in favour of more merit-driven systems.

Whether such shifts will be enough to persuade the most ambitious young lawyers to resist the advance of more generous US rivals remains very much a moot point.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields co-managing partner Pugh steps down a year and a half into role

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer‘s joint managing partner Chris Pugh (pictured) is stepping down less than half way into his term, the second person to vacate the position early in four years and the firm’s third unscheduled c-suite departure since 2013.

Former disputes head Pugh will leave the role but remain at the firm, continuing his client-facing work. He took up the role, which carries a five-year term, in January 2016 after a three-month transition period.  

His exit leaves just two of the four strong management team who were elected to head up the Magic Circle firm in 2015. It was revealed executive partner Michael Lacovara had quit to join Latham & Watkins in June 2016.

Senior partner Edward Braham and co-managing partner Dusseldorf-based Stephan Eilers will remain on in their management roles.

In 2013, Freshfields’ managing partner Ted Burke confirmed his decision to leave the Magic Circle firm, which saw him stand down from the managing partner position a year early.

Edward Braham, Senior Partner: ‘As part of a focus on streamlining and reducing the number of hours spent on management activities, we are moving from having two managing partners to one. Chris Pugh will return to our disputes practice, where his varied skills and experience are much in demand by many of the firm’s clients across the world, and Stephan Eilers will continue as sole managing partner.’

‘We are seen by our clients as a firm that, unlike many of our competitors, is equally strong on both the contentious and non-contentious side of our practice. Our contentious practice continues to perform exceptionally well – Chris re-joining the team reinforces this strength.’

Pugh was in charge of the firm’s disputes resolution team for six years before taking up the position of joint managing partner. He initially canvassed separately from Braham in a bid to go head-to-head with the corporate veteran in the senior partner elections but the duo later decided to unite on a single platform.

Pugh and Braham took over from former senior partner Will Lawes and managing partner David Aitman.

The news follows the release of the firm’s flat turnover for 2016/17 earlier this month with a top line of £1.33bn providing an 0.3% increase. Net income also dipped by 1% to £612m, but profit per equity partner (PEP) increased by 5% to £1.55m, up from £1.47m.

The Magic Circle firm has been on a profitability drive for the past twelve months which has included a string of significant changes for the firm.

Six finance partners also left the firm at the end of April with two more losing equity status as Freshfields implemented a restructure of its finance practice. The firm completed the fit out of its low-cost services hub in Manchester which the firm opened in 2015.

The firm also offered 180 of its staff voluntary redundancy as part of a London secretarial support staff review, which reduced headcount down to around 160.

Looking ahead, Freshfields plans to cut its 103-strong German partnership by up to 20 partners by 2020. It is also expected almost a quarter of the global partnership will be on the firm’s second-tier lockstep as early as 2020.

Madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Slaughter and May leads as Freshfields and Paul Weiss take key roles on £900m Michael Kors buyout of Jimmy Choo

Slaughter and MayFreshfields Bruckhaus DeringerPaul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom are all advising on Michael Kors’ £900m offer for luxury British fashion company Jimmy Choo.

Under the agreement, the shoemaker would become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Michael Kors. Its shareholders will receive £2.3 in cash for each of their Jimmy Choo shares, 36p above the £1.68 share price the day before Jimmy Choo’s parent JAB Luxury announced it would launch a formal sale process in April.

Slaughter and May acted for Michael Kors in the UK, while Paul Weiss advised the company on US corporate and financing aspects. The Slaughters team is comprised of London-based corporate and commercial partner Jeffrey Twentyman, competition partner Lisa Wright and tax partner Sara Luder.

Paul Weiss team’s team was led by New York-based corporate partners Justin Hamill and Tom de la Bastide, alongside co-head of North America capital markets and securities John Kennedy.

Freshfields acted for Jimmy Choo via corporate partner Christopher Mort, with support from corporate partner Alison Smith, employment partner Nick Squire and antitrust partner Alex Potter.

Skadden represented Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan as financial advisers. The Skadden team included M&A New York-based partner Paul Schnell and Washington-based partner Jeremy London, as well as London-based corporate partner Scott Hopkins and banking partner Clive Wells.

The boards of directors of both companies have approved the transaction but has yet to be voted in by Jimmy Choo’s shareholders.

The deal will be subject to regulatory approvals in the EU, US and Russia and is expected to complete in the fourth quarter of 2017.

When Jimmy Choo floated on the London Stock Exchange in 2014, the issuer, private investment firm JAB Holdings owned by the German billionaire Reimann family, instructed Freshfields with Mort as leading partner. Hogan Lovells acted for Jimmy Choo at the time on its long-term incentive plans, while Linklaters advised on refinancing matters.

The Michael Kors offer is part of a string of foreign takeovers generating work in the city this year as foreign buyers take advantage of the drop in the value of the pound since Britain voted to leave the EU.

Georgiana.tudor@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

‘Firing on all cylinders’: Freshfields appoints Paul Weiss lawyer to head US IP team

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringerhas appointed Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrisonlawyer Menachem Kaplan (pictured) as its first partner to head up the firm’s intellectual property (IP) capabilities in the US.

Kaplan joins Freshfields today (24 July) as the firm’s first IP partner to be based in New York. He joins Freshfield’s international IP offering led by three existing IP partners elsewhere – Avril Martindale and Giles Pratt in London and Frank-Erich Hufnagel in Dusseldorf.

His practice focuses on IP, with an emphasis on licensing, joint ventures, emerging technologies and settlements.

An experienced patent lawyer, Kaplan has worked for the last 11 years at Paul Weiss, his latest role as a counsel in the firm’s corporate department. Previously he was a foreign associate in Argentinian firm Marval, O’Farrell & Mairal in Buenos Aires for a year.

Kaplan’s key mandates include the Nortel bankruptcy and the sale of the Nortel patent to Rockstar Consortium in 2011, where he represented the buyers, including Ericsson and Microsoft. He also represented General Atlantic in March this year on in their strategic investment in General Information Services.

Peter Lyons, Freshfields’ US managing partner said that the ability to navigate the tech space ‘with sophistication’ is critical to the firm’s clients. Co-head of the firm’s global M&A practice Matthew Herman also said that Kaplan’s ability to ‘handle the most complex of IP-driven transactions for clients will be immediately accretive to our strong team of NY-based transactional lawyers’.

Kaplan told Legal Business that Freshfields has been very busy in the US ‘across the board’ and that ‘IP is becoming more and more of a global strategy, so he welcomed the opportunity to join a global platform already firing on all cylinders.’

He said he will continue to execute the firm’s existing corporate strategy.

‘Getting additional corporate mandates, with IP as key, will help support the growth of the corporate department and the global platform,’ he added.

In the last two years, Freshfields boosted its US platform with a string of star hires including Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson corporate trio Valerie Ford Jacob, Michael Lewitt and Paul Tropp, Shearman & Sterling’s M&A veteran Peter Lyons, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett’s experienced corporate disputes specialist Linda Martin and, most recently late last year, corporate partner Aly El Hamamsy from Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft.

Georgiana.tudor@legalease.co.uk