Legal Business

Private equity: Weil and Freshfields act as OMERS sells V.Group to Advent

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Weil, Gotshal & Manges and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer have won roles on OMERS Private Equity’s first European exit as it sells V.Group to Advent International.

The private equity arm of pension fund Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System plans to reinvest in V.Group while the company’s management team will retain a minority stake in the maritime firm. V.Group manages over 1000 vessels out of 70 international offices on behalf of its customers across commercial shipping, cruise, energy and defence sectors.

The value of the transaction was not disclosed. OMERS originally bought V.Group in 2011 for $520m, with Weil also advising on the purchase.

Weil co-head of private equity Marco Compagnoni (pictured) advised OMERS on the deal. The firm also acted for OMERS and its portfolio company DTI earlier this year on its agreement to buy Epiq Systems together with Harvest Partners for $1bn.

Travers Smith advised V.Group management on the deal with a team led by private equity partner Adam Orr.

Freshfields’ London private equity head Adrian Maguire advised Advent alongside finance partners Denise Ryan and Sean Pierce also acted on the deal. Ince & Co provided specialist maritime law advice to Advent with a team led by global head of corporate Stephen Jarvis.

Maguire also acted for Advent on its sale of the Priory to Acadia Healthcare alongside corporate partner Julian Pritchard for £1.3bn, after buying it in 2011 for £925m.

The deal comes as Maguire readies himself to become head of the firm’s global financial investors sector group taking over the role from heavyweight David Higgins. The firm’s GFI group, one of its eight sector groups, covers private equity funds, pension funds, infrastructure funds, sovereign wealth funds and alternative capital providers.

He will take over the role in January working alongside fellow co-head Markus Paul who is based in Frankfurt.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Read more: ‘ABC – the brutally simple world of a private equity lawyer’

Legal Business

Q&A: Latham’s Lacovara on litigation, Trump and leaving Freshfields

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Legal Business catches up with Latham & Watkins litigation partner and former Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer executive partner Michael Lacovara about his move to the firm, US elections and his time within the Magic Circle.

Why Latham?

It was a difficult decision to leave Freshfields for a number of reasons but Latham was a pretty natural choice for me. I had clerked at Latham as a summer associate in 1988 and there were still some folks around from way back when. I knew a lot of their antitrust lawyers and I had a good sense of their practice, particularly the litigation practice they’re trying to grow in New York, and that was very much where I wanted to take the last arc of my career.

How much litigation is coming out of the US at the moment?

Enough to keep me and everyone else at Latham very busy. We’ve occasionally said to non-US clients that at times America’s number one export is litigation. At least for the moment we don’t see any signs that that’s abating because there’s a lot of particularly big companies and big financial entities that they think are worth fighting about. We remain in a very active regulatory environment on both the financial and the corporate side, which leads to a lot of investigation and litigation work.

What’s the mood like now that Trump’s been voted in as President?

I happened to be in San Francisco on the night of the election, which is one of the most liberal cities in the United States. The mood at the time was shock and awe but what’s interesting is that one of the traditions that Americans can be proud of is we really do believe, no matter how surprising the American President is in some quarters, a peaceful transition of power and the existence of a spirited but loyal opposition is key to our system.

What impact will this have on the legal market?

It’s interesting because Trump hasn’t been as deep or elaborate on his policy pronouncements. He has on the antitrust side expressed something of a traditional populist sentiment in the United States that he’s opposed to big business and big mergers, which may mean that, unusually for a Republican administration, there’ll be pretty vigorous antitrust enforcement on both the conduct side and the merger side.

You had an executive position at Freshfields, why the decision to leave?

My mother who’s a psychologist would say, ‘You always want to do something if you’re running to, not running from’. It was very, very difficult to leave Freshfields where I had many good friends, where I felt I was doing some good things on the management side, but as a personal matter living two weeks in London and two weeks in New York was very difficult. The attraction to being able to build a practice on a US platform and a global platform that Latham has was too compelling to turn down.

What was your biggest achievement at Freshfields?

That’s probably a question put to my former partners, but I hope while I was in management I brought some additional level of rigour and focus on the business side of the firm to make sure efforts were really expended on serving clients and serving each other in being a somewhat more efficiently run exercise.

How is the culture different at US and UK firms?

I’m not sure I would say Latham’s a US firm so much as a firm which has its largest offices in New York. I’m a New Yorker by birth and in New York and at most New York law firms, folks are very direct with each other. You say what you mean, good, bad or indifferent and you move on as colleagues and friends. That’s how I grew up as family and in practice.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Read more in the feature: ‘The firm most likely – can anything halt Latham’s global rise?’

Legal Business

Freshfields latest to bulk up in the US with Cadwalader corporate hire

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has boosted its US platform, taking corporate partner Aly El Hamamsy from Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft.

El Hamamsy’s clients include Santander, Citigroup, JPMorgan, Cigna Corporation, Salix Pharmaceuticals, Mercuria Energy Group, Barclays and Exelon Corporation. He will be based in the firm’s New York office.

Freshfields made a string of hires in the US last year, taking on Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson corporate trio Valerie Ford Jacob, Michael Lewitt and Paul Tropp as well as Shearman & Sterling’s M&A veteran Peter Lyons. The Magic Circle firm also took on Simpson Thacher & Bartlett’s experienced corporate disputes specialist Linda Martin and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom counsel David Almroth who was promoted to partner as part of the move. The firm now has 38 partners in the US.

Earlier this year Freshfields lost its executive partner Michael Lacovara, who was based in New York, to Latham & Watkins’ litigation & trial department. Freshfields absorbed Lacovara’s exit by splitting his management role between the firm’s three remaining members of its global leadership: Chris Pugh, Ed Braham and Stephan Eilers.

El Hamamsy (pictured) said: ‘If you look at where the demand in the legal market is going in the most complex, cross border matters, clients are increasingly looking for turnkey solutions and Freshfields, with its geographic and subject matter breadth and depth and excellence, really is a unique platform in the legal market globally.’

Freshfields US M&A head Mitchell Presser said: ‘In the US we certainly don’t view there being competition from the Magic Circle. We view it as competition for global advice. The US market is one of the most mature and competitive markets that you can imagine. We have a really differentiated offering that really helps us. Our combination of global strength across all the key markets is a real differentiating factor for us in the US and that’s the place we do compete. That’s where we have a strong competitive advantage.’

Meanwhile, Cadwalader confirmed in September it would close its Beijing and Hong Kong operations by the end of 2016, cutting 25 staff including four partners. An internal document confirmed a committee of partners including the management committee had recently conducted a strategic analysis of the firm’s direction. Managing partner Patrick Quinn said the firm is now keen on focusing on organic growth and stressed that Cadwalader is in a very solid financial position, with demand being up and on track for improved profitability compared with last year.

In the City, Cadwalader grew its office by 17% last year, upping its head count to 56 lawyers.

Read more: ‘When will the US become a land of opportunity for Freshfields?’

Legal Business

Freshfields PE heavyweight Higgins to stand down as head of GFI group

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer private equity head Adrian Maguire is to become head of the firm’s global financial investors (GFI) sector group taking over the role from heavyweight David Higgins.

The firm’s GFI group, one of its eight sector groups, covers private equity funds, pension funds, infrastructure funds, sovereign wealth funds and alternative capital providers.

With clients such as Cinven and Warburg Pincus, Maguire is frequently cited as a key partner within the City’s private equity market. He will take over the role in January working alongside fellow co-head Markus Paul who is based in Frankfurt.

Regarded as one of the top private equity players in the City with clients such as Blackstone and Cinven, Higgins (pictured) will relinquish his role, which he held for six years, to focus on full time client work.

Freshfields has recently advised CVC Capital Partners as it looked to sell off Formula One (F1) to Liberty Media Corporation for £6.4bn with rising star Charles Hayes leading the team.

In January it was revealed Maguire led the Freshfields team advising Advent International on the sale of the Priory, the rehab clinic known for its celebrity clients, to Acadia for £1.3bn, after buying it in 2011 for £925m.

Freshfields advised Carlyle Group as the private equity firm picked up chemicals firm Atotech from Total for $3.2bn with both Maguire and Higgins taking a role.

Freshfields remains a top player in the City’s private equity market, with a brand built on a reputation originally built on by Chris Bown’s push to treat sponsor work as core to the business.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Read more in: ‘The M&A Report – Private equity offers the clients for all seasons’


 

Legal Business

Freshfields and Hengeler act as Blackstone inks largest European real estate deal this year

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Hengeler Mueller have won spots advising as Blackstone Group purchased a portfolio of offices from IVG for €3.3bn, the largest European real estate transaction this year. 

Blackstone picked up one of the largest portfolios of office real estate in Germany, OfficeFirst, which is comprised of 97 properties. The sale follows a failed float of the portfolio on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange last month. Blackstone had previously offered to buy OfficeFirst before the IPO.

Freshfields’ team advising IVG was led by partner Wessel Heukamp and included corporate partners Kai Hasselbach, Andreas Fabritius, corporate real estate partner Timo Elsner, banking partners Frank Laudenklos and Maximilian Lang, cartel partner Frank Röhling and tax partners Christian Sistermann, David Beutel and Ulrich Blaas.

Corporate partners Thomas Müller, Karsten Schmidt-Hern, Alf-Henrik Bischke, competition partner Markus Röhrig, employment partner Christian Hoefs and public law partner Jan Bonhage advised Blackstone from Hengeler Mueller.

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett advised Blackstone with a team led by Wheatly MacNamara, while Kirkland & Ellis advised the ultimate owners of IVG. For Kirkland partners Achim Herfs, Bjoern Holland and Christopher Field acted on the deal.

Earlier in the month it was revealed Freshfields had also advised TPG Real Estate on the $2.7bn sale of P3 to Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC. The deal was Kirkland & Ellis’s first for the wealth fund and the biggest European real estate deal of the year until Blackstone’s purchase. 

Freshfields’ team was led by the co-head of the firm’s sovereign wealth fund group Alex Watt, corporate partner Patrick Ko and finance partner David Trott while London corporate partners Matthew Elliott and Celyn Evans, debt finance partner Michael Steele, competition partner Paula Riedel and tax partners Jonathan Kandel and Frixos Hatjantonas advised from Kirkland.

The Magic Circle firm is also advising medical products company ConvaTec on its anticipated $1.8bn IPO, making it the largest post-Brexit initial public offering on the London Stock Exchange. Linklaters advised the banks on the deal.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Read more on Freshfields in:The last champions – meet the leaders intent on sealing Freshfields’ place in the global elite’

 

 

Legal Business

Goodbye Fleet Street: Freshfields picks 100 Bishopsgate for new headquarters

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After doubling space at its Manchester low cost-hub last year, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer is to sign a new lease in the City at 100 Bishopsgate.

The firm has been looking for 300,000 sq ft as its Fleet Street lease in London will expire in 2021. The leasing deal is expected to be one of the biggest this year.

Having been at Fleet Street for almost 30 years, the Magic Circle firm began assessing its options earlier this year and had considered subletting part of its Fleet Street premises. The firm whittled down its shortlist to two locations around July with 60-70 St Mary Axe the second option.

A partner at the Magic Circle firm told Legal Business: ‘It will have the effect of cutting costs, but with all the moves we made moving people to Manchester the firm needs a lot less space.’

Freshfields opened the doors to its low-cost Manchester services hub in July 2015. Later that year the firm selected a permanent location, One New Bailey, located by Spinningfields in Salford, doubling the size of its current office to 80,000 sq ft. It is expected to move into the new premises next year.

In April the firm confirmed it would open a second low-cost hub. At the time Freshfields chose Vancouver, Canada as its favoured location.

Freshfields currently occupies 221,000 sq ft at its Fleet Street base with an additional 150,000 sq ft at its nearby 28 Tudor Street offices. 100 Bishopsgate is to be completed in 2018.

Other firms on the move include Ashurst, which is to relocate its entire London operation to 1-10 Brushfield Street in Spitalfields in 2019. On a 20-year lease, Ashurst will take up the entire office space, around 275,000 sq ft, in the London Fruit & Wool Exchange when the building is completed.

Freshfields declined to comment.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

 

 

Legal Business

Kirkland wins first mandate from Singapore’s GIC in biggest European real estate deal of the year

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Kirkland & Ellis has advised opposite Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer in the largest European real estate transaction of the year as Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC picked up P3 from TPG Real Estate for $2.7bn.

GIC signed a deal to acquire P3 from TPG Real Estate and its shareholder Ivanhoe Cambridge last week (4 November) in a deal which spans across nine jurisdictions. The transaction is subject to regulatory approval and is expected to close by the end of 2016.

Acting for the wealth fund for the first time, Kirkland advised GIC with a team including London corporate partners Matthew Elliott and Celyn Evans, debt finance partner Michael Steele, competition partner Paula Riedel and tax partners Jonathan Kandel and Frixos Hatjantonas.

Freshfields acted for TPG Real Estate with a team led by co-head of the firm’s Sovereign Wealth Fund Group Alex Watt, corporate partner Patrick Ko and finance partner David Trott.

Elliott (pictured) said: ‘The transaction is representative of the recognition by the market of the demand and value for Pan European logistics and warehouse space. Opportunities of scale are in limited supply which plays into the hands of those investors whose strategic focus lies in growing sector coverage.’

Freshfields previously advised GIC on its acquisition of a 28.5% stake in UK pension insurer Rothesay Life from Goldman Sachs in October 2013, and again when the wealth fund acquired half of Carlyle’s majority stake in roadside recovery service RAC in September 2014.

Trott said: ‘Real estate is an interesting space, it’s interesting sovereign wealth continues to take strategic investments looking for long term quality assets. This is a further signal that Singaporean wealth funds are strong and only going to continue. The deal shows health for real estate, no shortage of opportunities and buyers, as Europe and the UK are cheap.’

The transaction comes as real estate, equity capital markets and M&A practices are expected to slow down significantly in the year ahead in the light of Brexit, according to NatWest’s latest Perspective on Legal Market report out today (8 November).

georgiana.tudor@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Simpson Thacher taps Freshfields for M&A heavyweight Spiers

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Wall Street leader Simpson Thacher & Bartlett has made a rare London hire after recruiting high-profile Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer partner Ben Spiers to boost its M&A practice.

Spiers’ practice focuses on public and private mergers and acquisitions, securities and corporate restructurings, particularly within the TMT sector. Recent mandates include advising Hewlett-Packard Enterprises on the sale of its software business for $8.8bn to UK tech firm Micro Focus, and acting for SoftBank this summer on its £23.4bn deal to acquire UK tech flagbearer ARM Holdings, the largest public M&A deal in the UK in 2016 so far.

Spiers, who spent five years heading up Freshfields’ TMT group, also served as relationship partner for Air Products, Hewlett-Packard, BT, MTN and Smith & Nephew, while other clients include Sony, Motability Operations, Axel Springer, Morgan Stanley and FMC Corporation. He spent two periods on secondment during his time at the Magic Circle law firm: the first to Hewlett-Packard in Palo Alto and the second, as a partner, to Morgan Stanley’s UK investment banking division.

Despite generally avoiding the level of departures seen by many peers, Freshfields has seen a number of notable partner departures in the last 12 months from its international offices. In April a four-partner Paris team including employment head Emmanuel Benard departed for US firm Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, while New York based executive partner Michael Lacovara quit for Latham & Watkins in June.

The appointment comes amid a period of explosive UK growth for Simpson Thacher, which has built up a profitable business around the firm’s core private equity and funds clients in the City. The firm’s 17-partner London practice now generates over £100m.

Bill Dougherty, chair of Simpson Thacher’s executive committee, said: ‘Ben is one of England’s leading M&A lawyers. His skills and experience will be of great benefit to our clients in the UK, continental Europe and globally.’

Spiers said: ‘My career at Freshfields has been hugely rewarding and varied, acting for great clients alongside first class lawyers. However, joining Simpson Thacher is a unique opportunity and one I am looking forward to immensely.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

See ‘Global London: The Barbarians storming the gate of City deal work’ for more on the UK corporate ambitions of Simpson Thacher and its Wall Street peers. (£)

Legal Business

The M&A Report: ‘Who Are Ya?’ – Mark Rawlinson: Freshfields’ playmaker leaves the pitch

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There is little space at the top among the elite M&A dealmakers, but as of October there is a vacancy for another heavyweight as Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s Mark Rawlinson departed Fleet Street for investment bank Morgan Stanley.

After 34 years at Freshfields, Rawlinson ended his time with a run of headline deals ensuring that he went out on a high. It capped an ultra-exclusive standing for Rawlinson, established alongside Slaughter and May’s Nigel Boardman, as one of the City’s top deal advisers at an age when even the most driven partners are usually losing a yard.

Legal Business

Freshfields and Linklaters lead on largest post-Brexit IPO

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ConvaTec’s $1.8bn float bright spot in a subdued autumn market

Linklaters and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer are advising on medical products company ConvaTec’s anticipated $1.8bn initial public offering (IPO).