Legal Business

‘Natural choice’: long relationships see Freshfields and Linklaters bag roles on Poundland bid

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Both Linklaters and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer scored lead roles on an attempt by South Africa’s Steinhoff International Holdings to take over British retailer Poundland. Steinhoff, a $22bn homeware and clothing conglomerate, made a bid to take over Poundland, which it already had a 23.26% stake in. At press time, Poundland had rejected Steinhoff’s initial bid, but Steinhoff upped its holding in the UK discount retailer to 23.52%.

Steinhoff already owns PEP, which sells discount clothing, footwear and homeware across 1,800 stores in Africa, as well as UK chain Harveys Furniture.

Legal Business

Freshfields rides out choppy deal market to outpace CC and A&O with £82m revenue hike

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer posted a revenue increase of 7% to £1.327bn for the 2015/16 financial year, clawing back from last year’s flat results when revenues rose just 1% to £1.245bn. The increase puts the firm well ahead of Magic Circle peers Clifford Chance (CC) and Allen & Overy (A&O), which posted revenue increases of 3% and 2.3% respectively.

Co-managing partner Stephan Eilers (pictured) said while the Brexit vote had been a surprise, the firm had the largest and probably the most successful financial practice in Frankfurt and the strongest EU/regulatory practice in the financial markets in London and in Brussels.

He added: ‘The main reasons for our success across the year, particularly on the revenue side are continued growth in the US with the corporate enlargements we have taken there.

‘The German-US links have strengthened with the corporate enlargement in the US and on the cost side Manchester is now taking hold of our efficiency issues.’

The Magic Circle firm also increased its profits per equity partner (PEP) to £1.473m, just slightly under its 2013/14 figure, which sat at £1.48m before the firm saw an 8% dip last year bringing PEP to £1.37m.

The year was marked by the opening of the firm’s Manchester back-office centre, stripping back its worldwide support network in the process. Dubbed the Global Centre, Freshfields hopes to extend the function to other international offices, offering a 24/7 service, starting with Europe and Asia.

Eilers added that the legal services centre should post more than £10m in turnover next year, and while this year it was still an investment, this year it should break even.

Across the next five years the firm aims to open two more international hubs with one earmarked for Vancouver, Canada and one in Asia.

The firm advised on 190 M&A deals worth $587.6bn in 2015 according to Dealogic’s global league table, taking on a number of key roles in notable transactions across the past year. Freshfields continues to instruct Anheuser-Busch InBev in its takeover bid for SABMiller, which would create a $275bn company and won the mandate advising BG in the £47bn takeover by Royal Dutch Shell. It also took a lead role advising the London Stock Exchange (LSE) in its third attempt at a tie-up with Deutsche Börse, which would create a combined value of about £21bn.

Of the Magic Circle firms, both CC and A&O have posted more subdued increases in revenue. The first of big four to release their financials this year, A&O, posted another year of growth with revenue rising by a modest 2.3% to £1.31bn. Amid the slowdown in top line growth PEP remained stable at £1.2m following last year’s 8% jump. Meanwhile CC’s revenues were up 3% to £1.39m while PEP has leapt by 10% to £1.23m, the firm’s highest to date.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Read our wrap of big four 2015/16 financial results here.

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

 

 

 

Legal Business

Freshfields and Skadden face off as Japanese telco wins $1.2bn arbitration award from Tata Group

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In one of the biggest cases for the London Court of International Arbitration (LCIA) this year, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer have advised as Tokyo telco NTT Docomo pursued $1.2bn in damages from a Tata Group linked company for a breach of shareholder agreement.

Skadden advised Tokyo-listed telecoms group NTT Docomo, which acquired a 26.5% stake in Tata Teleservices for $2.7bn, but announced its intentions to exit the venture after a series of setbacks.

NTT Docomo said the shareholder agreement gave it the right to request that Tata Group holding company Tata Sons would find a suitable buyer to purchase its shares for 50% of what it had paid or a fair market price. Tata Sons argued that Indian exchange control regulations prevented it from paying the agreed price, but the tribunal concluded that this did not mean it was excused from meeting its contractual obligations.

Tata Sons was advised by Freshfields in an all-British tribunal seated in London, which was chaired by One Essex Court QC Christopher Style, with former English Court of Appeal judge Lord Hoffmann and 20 Essex Street QC David Sutton serving as co-arbitrators.

Skadden London partner David Kavanagh and New York-based partners Lea Haber Kuck, John Gardiner and Greg Litt worked on the case for NTT Docomo, Japan’s largest mobile phone firm, along with Indian firm Khaitan & Co partner Sanjeev Kapoor. Freshfields London head of arbitration Nigel Rawding QC acted for Tata Sons alongside advocates Harish Salve, Darius Khambata and AZB & Partners in Delhi.

The mandate is the latest in a string of high-profile arbitrations for Freshfields which was recently hired by Oman’s largest sovereign wealth fund, the State General Reserve Fund of Oman, to sue Bulgaria over its role in the collapse of Balkan bank KTB. Bulgaria is being advised by Arnold & Porter.

Kavanagh said: ‘This is one of the largest cases in the LCIA in 2016 and one of the largest LCIA awards in recent years.  It was also very notable that the award was issued within just two months of the hearing so it is a great advert for the efficiency of LCIA arbitration.  Indian related disputes are a significant and growing area in international arbitration.’

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Brexit fallout: US firms feel the pressure in London but A&O and Freshfields commit to New York pay increases

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With most US law firms experiencing something of a slowdown in the London market following the instability around the referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU, and subsequent Leave victory, questions remain around whether investment will keep coming or be held back to focus on other markets.

Six US firms have doubled in size in the City between 2010 and 2015: Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld; Paul Hastings; Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft and King & Spalding.

Then there are the likes of Latham & Watkins, White & Case and Shearman & Sterling, which arguably have the most rounded and successful London offices of the US firms, and between them added around 100 lawyers last year. However, one London managing partner of a US firm said: ‘US partners don’t like subsidising other offices’ and warned ‘problems will arise if things don’t start to pick up’.

The list of worries in the market centres on two points. The first is income, and fears the weakening of the British pound against the US dollar will lead to a sharp fall in London revenue for US firms. The second involves costs, with many US firms having recently committed to office expansion to fulfil what seemed like an insatiable appetite for growth, and extended New York pay rises to London. That managing partner added: ‘Firms that made crazy increases to their NQ salaries will have a problem now, as they’ve completely stepped outside the London market and as a result their cost base is not a London cost base.’

The counter arguments to this is that many US firms use London as a European base for US clients, which are billed in US dollars, and are well hedged against the US market whereas Magic Circle firms are largely centred around the UK and continental Europe.

White & Case London executive partner Oliver Brettle (pictured) told Legal Business: ‘We had a very successful 2015 building on several years of success before that and have proven it’s possible to have consistent success in London. We’ve got to ride out this storm and this year’s events will be seen to be an aberration. London has been a great market for White & Case, Latham & Watkins and Shearman & Sterling. The Magic Circle firms have also increased their London heft relative to the rest of their firms, so we’ve all had successful times in London. No one runs a firm based on half a year’s results.’

Nonetheless, even firms as committed to the London market as White & Case, which has pledged to employ 500 lawyers in the City by 2020, are being impacted. Indeed, many US firms have held off on their lateral recruitment plans.

Brettle added: ‘The main issue is the uncertainty the market is currently experiencing. Some aspects of our business will do well, counter-cyclical work for example, but that isn’t usually as voluminous or as remunerative as deal work. If M&A continues downward, UK capital markets continue to be on hold, and the risk contagion spreads to the rest of Europe, it will be hard for any firm in London to have a ‘good’ year. However, if politicians realise that uncertainty is going to restrict the markets that produce the tax revenues that keep the UK going, let’s hope that the way forward can be found to handle things in a way which gets certainty in the short term. Uncertainty is the shadow here and so we need the politicians now to try and shorten that shadow.’

Shearman & Sterling EMEA managing partner Nick Buckworth told Legal Business: ‘Even if there were to be some [client] movement to the continent, for our business we’re well positioned to provide seamless support to them. Even if they do move, it’s a question of why. I don’t think there’s going to be a sudden rush by the key deal makers to live in [continental] Europe. Personally I think London will ride the wave. Our senior management will be listening to what we have to say. There will be no knee-jerk reaction from them. We’ve got a balanced, lean and efficient business in Europe so no reason for us to rush to make any changes here. We want people to feel comfortable and confident they have a long term future here.’

However, the Magic Circle firms are also set to experience difficulty, firstly because of concerns in their main European market, but also over the sharp currency shift that will make US operations even more expensive. With many UK firms still struggling to break New York, and the big four London elite firms all having committed in the run-up to the referendum to Cravath, Swaine & Moore’s associate pay rise beginning at $180,000 for first year associates, those costs will increase steeply.

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Allen & Overy have both confirmed that they have committed to the pay rises. Meeting the $180,000 rate would have cost Magic Circle firms around £120,000 a week, a figure that has risen to £136,000 following the collapse in sterling after Brexit. Clifford Chance and Linklaters are yet to respond to comment.

Meanwhile, a post-Brexit vote Shadow Cabinet rebellion has included the resignation of two top legal figures in the Labour Party – Shadow Lord Chancellor Lord Falconer and Shadow Attorney General Karl Turner.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Freshfields loses executive from leadership quartet as Michael Lacovara joins Latham

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Michael Lacovara, executive partner at Magic Circle firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, has quit to join Latham & Watkins.

Lacovara, who is based in New York, leaves just six months after being appointed executive partner. He joins Latham as a partner in the litigation & trial department in the firm’s New York office.

Well-respected throughout the firm, Lacovara became executive partner as part of a management reshuffle that saw Chris Pugh elected joint managing partner alongside Cologne-based Stephan Eilers, and Edward Braham elected senior partner. The new management structure, voted through by the partnership last June, came into effect at the beginning of this year.

Part of a four-man global leadership team at Freshfields, Lacovara manages the firm’s global business services functions, and is responsible for the continuing refinement of the firm’s operating model and enhancement of its operational efficiency and client-service delivery.

Lacovara is credited with the launch of Freshfields’ legal services hub in Vancouver, Canada, as it bids to drive down costs by moving business support to lower-cost locations. The move followed a large launch in Manchester, which will see up to 700 IT, human resources and document review jobs created or moved to the north of England.

He leaves Freshfields after just four years at the firm, after making a high profile move back into private practice in 2012 from securities trading and investment banking firm Cortview Capital Holdings, which he co-founded in 2010 and served as president.

A former Sullivan & Cromwell partner, Lacovara is a well-regarded litigator in the US and co-founded S&C’s Palo Alto office in 2000. He represented Microsoft in the federal government’s landmark antitrust case against the software giant, and counts HSBC and Goldman Sachs as clients.

He left S&C in 2004 to join investment banking client Sandler O’Neill as its first general counsel and built up a strong business pedigree before his return to private practice. He went on to become chief operating officer at Sandler O’Neill, before moving to investment bank Rodman & Renshaw Capital Group as chief executive.

Freshfields will absorb Lacovara’s exit by splitting his management roles between the firm’s three remaining members of its global leadership: Pugh, Braham and Eilers.

The news comes just a day after star M&A lawyer, Mark Rawlinson, confirmed his decision to leave Freshfields after 34 years at the firm to head Morgan Stanley’s UK unit. Rawlinson held a string of senior posts at Freshfields, including stints as head of corporate and UK head.

In a brief statement, Pugh said: ‘We thank Michael for his contribution to the firm.’

Read more on Freshfields’ leadership and strategy in the feature: ‘The last champions – meet the leaders intent on sealing Freshfields’ place in the global elite’

 

Legal Business

Freshfields’ top deal lawyer Mark Rawlinson quits for senior banking role at Morgan Stanley

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Mark Rawlinson, one of the top City lawyers of his generation, is to quit Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer to join Morgan Stanley as its new chair of UK investment banking.

He will join the global financial services corporation in October after 34 years at the Magic Circle law firm. Rawlinson (pictured) entered talks with Morgan Stanley last summer and signed off on the decision last week. The role will be primarily client-facing.

A protégé of former Freshfields senior partner Anthony Salz, Rawlinson became a partner at Freshfields in 1990, later appointed to head of corporate from 2008 before moving into the role of London head in 2011, which he held for two years.

He is generally viewed alongside longtime friend Steve Cooke and fellow Slaughter and May heavyweight Nigel Boardman as one of the City’s top M&A lawyers. Rawlinson remained a highly productive operator throughout his career, recently advising ABInbev on its £71bn acquisition of SABMiller, BG Group on the £47bn offer from Royal Dutch Shell and the London Stock Exchange Group on its current merger with Deutsche Börse.

Speaking to Legal Business, Rawlinson described the offer as a fresh challenge at a ‘brilliant brand’. He added: ‘I’ve been at Freshfields for 34 years and 26 as a partner. Everything I’d set myself in terms of goals, I’ve achieved. This opportunity came up, it’s massively in my sweet spot – it’s all deals. With them asking, I’d be an idiot not to do it.’

Rawlinson said he hoped he would bring his credibility with boards to the role. ‘There’s a lack of people of my age and vintage in M&A in big banks these days. I think they were looking for that deal credibility.’

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Click here to read our Life During Law interview with Mark Rawlinson.

Legal Business

Freshfields’ top deal lawyer Mark Rawlinson quits for senior banking role at Morgan Stanley

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Mark Rawlinson, one of the top City lawyers of his generation, is to quit Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer to join Morgan Stanley as its new chair of UK investment banking.

He will join the global financial services corporation in October after 34 years at the Magic Circle law firm. Rawlinson (pictured) entered talks with Morgan Stanley last summer and signed off on the decision last week. The role will be primarily client-facing.

A protégé of former Freshfields senior partner Anthony Salz, Rawlinson became a partner at Freshfields in 1990, later appointed to head of corporate from 2008 before moving into the role of London head in 2011, which he held for two years.

He is generally viewed alongside longtime friend Steve Cooke and fellow Slaughter and May heavyweight Nigel Boardman as one of the City’s top M&A lawyers. Rawlinson remained a highly productive operator throughout his career, recently advising ABInbev on its £71bn acquisition of SABMiller, BG Group on the £47bn offer from Royal Dutch Shell and the London Stock Exchange Group on its current merger with Deutsche Börse.

Speaking to Legal Business, Rawlinson described the offer as a fresh challenge at a ‘brilliant brand’. He added: ‘I’ve been at Freshfields for 34 years and 26 as a partner. Everything I’d set myself in terms of goals, I’ve achieved. This opportunity came up, it’s massively in my sweet spot – it’s all deals. With them asking, I’d be an idiot not to do it.’

Rawlinson said he hoped he would bring his credibility with boards to the role. ‘There’s a lack of people of my age and vintage in M&A in big banks these days. I think they were looking for that deal credibility.’

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Click here to read our Life During Law interview with Mark Rawlinson.

Legal Business

The usual suspects: Linklaters and Freshfields take roles as Steinhoff gears up for Poundland takeover

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Magic Circle duo Linklaters and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer have scored lead roles on an attempt by South Africa’s Steinhoff to takeover British retailer Poundland.

Steinhoff, a $22 billion furniture, homeware and clothing conglomerate, has acquired a 23% stake in Poundland and confirmed that it is considering making an offer for the UK discount retailer.

Steinhoff already owns Pep, which sells discount clothing, footwear and homeware across 1,800 stores in Africa, and UK furniture chain Harvey’s.

Linklaters M&A heavyweight Charlie Jacobs, who is set to succeed Robert Elliott as the Magic Circle firm’s senior partner in October, has been instructed by Steinhoff. Steinhoff is part of South African Christo Wiese’s retail empire. He is chairman of Steinhoff and its biggest shareholder. Wiese, through his various investment vehicles and companies, is a longstanding client of Linklaters and Jacobs.

Linklaters has benefitted from Wiese-backed companies splurging on UK retailers in the last two years. The firm’s private equity partner Alex Woodward led last year as Wiese’s private equity vehicle Brait purchased Virgin Active for £1.3bn and took a 90% stake in clothing retailer New Look in a £780m deal.

The Wiese work follows a string of high-profile instructions for Jacobs, who has been advising commodities giant Glencore on its ongoing plans to slash $10.2bn from its $30bn debt pile and landed a lead role last year on the world’s biggest brewing deal, advising SABMiller on its mammoth $107bn takeover by AB InBev.

Freshfields corporate partner Oliver Lazenby is advising Poundland. A rising star in the Magic Circle firm’s corporate department, Lazenby advised Poundland on its £55m acquisition of rival 99p Stores last year.

Poundland also turned to Freshfields for its IPO back in 2014. The team for that mandate was led by corporate partners Mark Austin and Adrian Maguire.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Updated: Keeping up with the US – Freshfields and Clifford Chance match Cravath associate pay rates

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In a bid to compete with its US rivals, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Clifford Chance have followed in the footsteps of Cravath, Swaine & Moore, matching the salaries of its US-based associates, bringing pay to $180,000.

In a memo sent out by Freshfields regional managing partner Adam Siegel seen by US publication Above The Law, the firm’s first and second year associates in its New York and Washington offices will receive $180,000 a year. Those who joined in 2007 or later will receive $325,000. The new salaries will come into effect on 1 July.

Similarly, Clifford Chance announced on Thursday (9 June) it would match the figures, and said US summer associates pay will be increased to the semi-monthly rate of $7,500.

The boost in pay comes after news broke earlier this week of Cravath’s first lift in associate pay in almost ten years. The firm’s first year associates will see a raise of $20,000 to their pay packets taking home $180,000. Associates at Cravath their seventh and eighth year will receive an extra $35,000 moving their salaries up to $300,000 and $315,000 respectively.

The pay hike led to similar rises from Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, Weil Gotshal & Manges, Cahill Gordon & Reindel, Kirkland & Ellis and Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy. London salaries at Kirkland and Milbank will also match the US pay scales.  

Freshfields announced its associate pay for UK-based lawyers early last month, bumping up its newly-qualified salaries to £85,000, a rise of £17,500, which this year folded discretionary bonuses into salaries and £15,000. The move follows a freeze last year.

The firm also unveiled pay increases for junior associates. Those with one year’s post-qualified experience (PQE) sit within the same pay band as NQs – its ‘career milestone foundation’ (CMF) level – and will also not receive a separate bonus, while those with two and three years’ PQE, who fall within its career milestone (CM1) band, will see pay rising to between £105,000 and £115,000, up from £87,500 and £100,000.

Clifford Chance (CC) matched Freshfields’ associate pay, also awarding their NQs a £85,000 salary, a rise of £15,000 for CC which also included bonuses in its figures.

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Clifford Chance US associate pay

Class of 2016 – $180,000

Class of 2015 – $180,000

Class of 2014 – $190,000

Class of 2013 – $210,000

Class of 2012 – $235,000

Class of 2011– $260,000

Class of 2010–$280,000

Class of 2009– $300,000

Class of 2009–$315,000

Class of 2007 and more senior -$325,000

Legal Business

Associate pay up across Magic Circle as Freshfields wraps bonuses into base salaries

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NQs at Freshfields receiving £17.5k extra

Newly-qualified (NQ) solicitors at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer have received the largest bump in pay of the Magic Circle so far this year, taking home around 25% more than last year.

At Freshfields, NQ pay packets have been boosted by an extra £17,500 after the firm announced it would be folding in its discretionary bonuses, with pay set to rise 26% to £85,000 on last year’s figure of £67,500. The move follows a freeze last year.