Legal Business

Deal watch: Corporate activity in November 2016

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PE DOUBLE FOR CC

Clifford Chance (CC) completed two major private equity deals in a month, advising as Cinven, Permira and Mid Europa Partners acquired Allen & Overy client Allegro for $3.3bn. In addition, CC acted for Cinven as well as CVC Capital Partners on the acquisition of consumer finance provider NewDay, opposite Slaughter and May, which advised long-time client and seller Värde Partners, and Jones Day, which represented the management of NewDay.

 

Legal Business

Rising Star: Charles Hayes, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

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Key clients: CVC Capital Partners, Charterhouse Capital Partners, Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, Middle East sovereign wealth funds

Partner since 2016

F1 is a big one for me [Hayes led on the Formula One sale to Liberty Media Corporation in September]. Particularly as a partner having tracked through the 2012 IPO attempt in Singapore. It’s a huge deal to do and one of great professional pride in the first few months of partnership.

Legal Business

Rising Star: Victoria Sigeti, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

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Key clients: Cinven, 3i Group, Permira, General Atlantic

Partner since 2015

A key deal for me was the IPO of Spire Healthcare: I’d done the original buyout for Cinven in 2007 as a mid-level associate and then stayed with that deal until the IPO in 2014. That type of deal gets you under the skin of a business. It creates deep relationships with clients.

Legal Business

Rising Star: Alison Smith, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

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Key clients: Anheuser-Busch InBev, Tesco, Smiths Group

Partner since 2015

As a teenager I was desperate to be a criminal defence barrister. I did work experience with a barrister when I was 16 and loved it. At some point after becoming more educated about the profession, I wanted to work as part of a big deal team.

Legal Business

Freshfields continues defence work advising on £1.1bn Project Allenby Connaught extension

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, CMS Cameron McKenna and Pinsent Masons are advising as the Ministry of Defence (MoD) has gifted a £1.1bn construction contract to Carillion, extending what is already the largest accomodation Private Finance Initiative the Ministry has undertaken.

Freshfields is advising longtime government client the Ministry of Defence (MoD) on the extension of the 35-year contract for Project Allenby Connaught, opposite CMS Cameron McKenna which advised Aspire Defence, the special project vehicle set up for the project.

Pinsent Masons is advising the joint venture (JV) between Carillion and KBR which has been awarded the construction and facilities management contract for the army barracks.

The project is already worth £8bn and the development will provide 130 new buildings of single living accommodation for soldiers to provide modern, purpose-built living and working accommodation for some 18,700 soldiers, including resettlement personnel who will return from Germany in 2019.

Freshfields’ team is being led by London head of infrastructure and energy Alex Carver alongside of counsel Max Cairnduff.

The Magic Circle firm previously advised the MoD on the original Project Allenby Connaught transaction in 2006, as well as its competition to appoint a strategic business partner for the Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) in 2014 for a 10 year contract worth £400m. The team was previously led by partner Nick Bliss before his retirement from the firm in April this year.

Bliss had a led on a number of projects for the Ministry, including the letting of a concession to Solent Gateway to manage Marchwood Military Port in 2015. He was viewed as the strongest projects partner in Freshfields’ practice, although the Magic Circle firm has recently brought on Shearman & Sterling partner Tim Pick in 2013.

CMS Cameron McKenna fielded a team led by Robert Gray and Jonathan Dames. The firm has been acting for Aspire Defence since the project started in 2006.

Gray told Legal Business: ‘This was a really important deal for the MoD and the army in terms of the accomodation and a great addition to what has been very succesful project over 10 years.’

Pinsents team was led by Jonathan Hart. The firm was re-appointed to Carillion’s panel in 2015, with a mandate expected to last until December 2017 and also acted on a 50:50 joint venture of Carillion and Equitix on the Priority School Building Programme (PSBP) Midlands, the fourth batch of the Education Finance Agency’s (EFA) Priority Schools Programme.

georgiana.tudor@legalease.co.uk

For more on City project teams see: ‘Price of debt – austerity and the plight of a project finance partner’

Legal Business

Bringing home Bacon: Kirkland takes US private equity partner from Freshfields

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Kirkland & Ellis has gone back to Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer for another lateral hire, this time taking corporate partner Doug Bacon from the Magic Circle firm’s New York office.

Advising private equity firms, companies and corporations on complex multinational mergers and acquisitions, Bacon’s client list includes Novartis, Honeywell International, The Blackstone Group, KKR, TPG, Apax Partners, MSD Capital and First Reserve Corp. Prior to Freshfields, he was an associate at Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.

Bacon joins returns to his hometown to join Kirkland’s Houston office which the Chicago-headquartered firm has been working to boost following its opening in 2014. Today (26 October) the office has 93 lawyers.

Bacon said: ‘It was a tough decision, but when the opportunity arose to return to my hometown with a firm of the calibre of Kirkland & Ellis, I was thrilled to join.’

Kirkland and Freshfields are renowned for swapping talent, with the Magic Circle firm taking on capital markets partner Andrew Hagan in February this year. The move followed Kirkland’s hire of Freshfields finance partner Michael Steele in the City in July last year, one month after high-yield heavyweight Ward McKimm quit the US firm to join Freshfields and become co-head of its European leveraged finance group.

The US firm has continued to post robust numbers with a global revenue of $2.3bn from $2.15bn in 2015. While turnover is up 7%, profits per equity partner had a slower uptick growing just 3% to $3.6m. In 2014, partner profits surpassed the $3.5m mark rising 7% to $3.51m, which came after a 1% increase in 2013 to $3.28m. Its non-US revenue was up 10%, growing faster than overall revenue and driven by London.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields lands major Carlyle deal with $3.2bn Atotech acquisition

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In its first major mandate for The Carlyle Group in recent years, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has advised as the private equity firm picked up chemicals firm Atotech from Total for $3.2bn.

Carlyle turned to Freshfields for advice with London-based corporate partners David Higgins, Adrian Maguire and Paris-based corporate partner Florent Mazeron taking the lead. Finance partner Sean Lacey also acted on the deal.

Latham & Watkins also advised Carlyle, on financing aspects,with a deal team led by Washington DC partners Jeff Chenard and Manu Gayatrinath and London partner Dominic Newcomb. Washington partners Patrick Shannon and Jason Licht acted on high-yield and bridge financing matters. Antitrust advice was provided by Marc Williamson, Luca Crocco and Peter Todaro while David Dantzic advised on corporate matters.

Meanwhile Total turned to a Jones Day Paris team including M&A partners Audrey Bontemps and Sophie Hagege, government regulation partner Francoise Labrousse, labour partner Jean Michel Bobillo and capital markets partner Linda Hesse.

Freshfields partner Higgins said: ‘The international nature and complexity of the deal played to our strengths as a firm and we look forward to working with The Carlyle Group in the future’.

This is the second significant private equity deal Freshfields has acted on in recent months with corporate partner Charles Hayes taking the lead advising CVC Capital Partners as it looked to sell off Formula One to Liberty Media Corporation for £6.4bn.

Gaining its fair share of private equity work, last month it was revealed Jones Day advised co-owner of Penton Business Media Wasserstein & Co through FTSE 100 publishing company Informa’s $1.56bn bid for the US trade publisher.

Carlyle has long been a client of Clifford Chance (CC) and Linklaters, although that has waned in recent years, with Latham & Watkins the beneficiary of several departures from CC. On the other hand, Freshfields has proven resilient to exits and is viewed by clients and private practitioners as having overtaken Clifford Chance as the top City player in high-end private equity.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

For more on private equity in the City see: ‘ABC – the brutally simple world of a private equity lawyer’

 

 

Legal Business

Freshfields acts for the BBC in battle over presenters tax payments

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has advised the BBC ahead of an investigation into the employment status and tax avoidance claims against 100 current and former employees.

The BBC sought advice from the Magic Circle firm in the build up to a tax tribunal hearing in July between HMRC and newsreaders Tim Willcox and Joanna Gosling.

Willcox and Gosling are appealing against an HMRC judgment which said the pair failed to pay enough tax as they claimed they were not employed by the broadcaster, but were instead working for their own personal service companies.

The BBC litigation department instructed Michael Furness QC of Wilberforce Chambers and Hui Ling McCarthy of 11 New Square for the broadcaster’s application to provide evidence to the first-tier tax tribunal. The broadcaster’s litigation team is headed by Nick Wilcox who joined from RPC in 2014 following the departure of Nadia Banno to Baker & McKenzie.

Willcox and Gosling were advised by 11 New Square silk Jonathan Peacock QC with Marika Lemos and Georgina Hicks of Devereux Chambers, instructed by tax consultancy David Kirk & Co.

HMRC general counsel Gill Aitkin instructed Fountain Court Chamber’s Adam Tolley QC and Devereux Chambers’ Christopher Stone. HMRC solicitor Katherine Pleming gave evidence to the tribunal.

The case is important as it regards the employment status of many newsreaders, presenters and journalists, many of whom worked on freelance or self-employed contracts.

The BBC changed its employment rules in 2013 to provide a clear test to the employment status of journalists. HMRC first began inquiring into 23 cases last May, but by autumn 2015 it had increased this investigation to 100 individuals.

In tribunal documents the BBC’s evidence said: ‘HMRC have indicated to the BBC that there are around 100 additional cases under consideration involving current or former BBC presenters.’

Freshfields has been advising on the case since 2015, writing to HMRC stating: ‘The BBC continues to be willing to participate in the proceedings provided it can do so on an impartial basis and in a way which appropriately protects its own interests and those of its staff and on-air talent.’

Tribunal judge Anne Redston ruled against the BBC’s appeal to submit its own evidence.

Freshfields refused to comment on the case.

A BBC spokesperson said: ‘As the judgment says this is an industry wide issue and affects those who have been engaged in this way for a number of different organisations. The exact number of cases that will be taken forward will be determined by HMRC.’

The BBC added that the decision related to tax issues before 2013.

matthew.field@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

CMA plucks from Freshfields and Hogan Lovells in ongoing restructure

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As part of an ongoing restructure, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has made three key appointments to its legal team with hires from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Hogan Lovells.

Freshfields senior associate Colin Raftery joins the CMA on 21 November as a director of mergers. Currently sitting in the firm’s antitrust, competition and trade group, Raftery advises on all aspects of EU and UK competition law. He joins current directors of mergers Stephanie Canet and Andrew Wright.

Former senior associate at Freshfields Martim de Lancastre Valente joins the CMA as a legal director alongside former senior associate at Hogan Lovells Tim Capel. The pair will join the CMA this month.

Earlier this year Latham & Watkins hired the CMA’s director of mergers Jonathan Parker after two years at the watchdog. Clifford Chance also took its pick from the CMA in April, hiring director of mergers Nelson Jung as a City partner. The competition watchdog has been plagued by high staff turnover since it launched, and the granting of competition powers to the Financial Conduct Authority last year has not helped matters, with the City regulator bringing in a string of big names from the lower paying CMA.

Having long been viewed as stable, the UK’s competition law agenda has been shaken up significantly over the last 12 months, with the CMA’s public attack on the proposed merger of mobile networks O2 and Three in May a recent example.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Read more in the feature: ‘Less bark, more bite – competition to the fore as tougher enforcement arrives’

Legal Business

Freshfields and Baker Botts take pole position on F1 sell off

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Over 100 lawyers involved as PE firm sells sport to Liberty Media

Just six months a partner, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s Charles Hayes has led the firm’s team advising Formula One Group (F1) and CVC Capital Partners on the £6.4bn sale of F1 to Liberty Media Corporation, advised by Baker Botts.