Legal Business

Garrigues in Latin America: a step ahead – Javier Ybañez discusses the firm’s international position.

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We would like to think that staying one step ahead is one of Garrigues’ hallmarks – one of our obsessions. Garrigues was the first Spanish law firm to become an institutional organisation and leave behind the traditional model of an inherited family business to become a firm owned purely on merit, and this some decades before our competitors chose the same route.

Being the first to take such a difficult step is probably what instilled our enduring pioneering spirit. Many years ago we were the first major Spanish law firm to open an office in New York and, more recently, the first to publish a corporate social responsibility report. To some extent, this background has undoubtedly driven us to be the first major Spanish law firm to open its own offices in the principal Latin American cities.

Legal Business

Latam briefing: Garrigues extends local network, foreign players continue push and Brazil leader secures antitrust coup

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Market developments around the region continue apace: in the Dominican Republic, where the recent tie-up between Squire Saunders and Patton Boggs will be particularly felt (the former Squire Sanders, Peña Prieto & Gamundi was a key market player), further movement has seen the departures of Marielle Garrigó and Fabiola Medina (from Pellerano & Herrera and Medina Rizek, respectively), to establish new firm Medina Garrigó.

Elsewhere, ongoing developments in the turbulent but much touted Mexican market have most recently crystalised in Holland & Knight’s establishment of a litigation practice with the recruitment of experienced in-house figure Daniel Jiménez as a senior counsel. Formerly at state electricity utility CFE, Jiménez is also a former head of the in-house litigation team at the public company Luz y Fuerza del Centro. The recruitment brings the headcount of legal professionals at the office to 16.

Also in the disputes sector, this time in Guatemala, Arías & Muñoz has recruited the former founding partner of Consortium Centro América Abogados’ Guatemalan office, Mario René Archila Cruz, to head up its local disputes practice.

In the face of the severe ramping up of activity by Brazil’s competition authority, CADE, TozziniFreire has pulled off a notable coup with the recruitment of two significant competition and antitrust figures from rival firms. Marcel Medon Santos arrives from Azevedo Sette Advogados, and Márcio de Carvalho Silveira Bueno from Vieira, Rezende, Barbosa e Guerreiro Advogados; both acted as practice head at their respective former firms.

Finally, Garrigues continues to make good on its intention to establish fully-fledged offices in key Latin American jurisdictions with the notable strengthening of its Peruvian office, recruiting four key figures from full-service outfit Rubio Leguía Normand. The hire of Oscar Arrús, along with Sergio Amiel, Thomas Thorndike and José Francisco Meier, effectively constitutes the hiring of Rubio’s entire finance team, a sector in which all four enjoy notable market profile.

Tim.girven@thelegal500.com

Tim Girven is editor of the Latin American edition of The Legal 500. Click here to read his blog.

For more on Latin America see this week’s report on the ground-breaking tie-up between two leading firms in the region.

Legal Business

As Brazil cools Latam heat – Garrigues moves into Colombia; SJB primes Saudi move

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With Brazil’s economy continuing to disappoint during 2013, there is increasing focus on other economies across Latin America. Moving to meet that demand Iberian giant Garrigues has announced that it is to acquire Colombian outfit Zarama y Asociados.

Garrigues has secured the signatures of Zarama y Asociados sole partners, Fernando Zarama and Camilo Zarama, along with the rest of the fee earners at the firm. The deal allows Garrigues to make a significant play in one of the fastest growing and most touted of Latin America’s economies, combining the practice with the Spanish firm’s Bogota branch.

Zarama is a tax boutique led by Fernando Zarama, former director of the Colombian Director of Taxers and National Customs Duties (DIAN) and secretary of the district tax authorities. Camilo Zarama is dual qualified in Colombian and Spanish law and spent six years at Garrigues in Madrid before joining the Colombian law firm.

This is the first stage of the 1,700-lawyer firm’s plan to set up a full service office in Colombia. The team is led by Latin America chief Javier Ybañez and his team of 20 fee earners includes specialists in corporate, finance, capital markets, public law, competition, employment and dispute resolution.

Garrigues – one of the largest law firms in Continental Europe – earlier this year abandoned its strategy of tapping into the highly coveted Latin American market through a referral network, dubbed Affinitas, in favour of opening its own offices.

Garrigues managing partner, Fernando Vives commented: ‘These outstanding signings bring the initial stage of our launch in Colombia, a country with excellent economic prospects, to a close. Our goal is to maximise our commitment to clients on the ground, as borne out by these new incorporations.’

Once plagued by crime and social problems, Colombia has seen substantial investment in infrastructure and energy as well as modernisation of its industries in recent years, thanks in part to a trade agreement with the US last year. Garrigues joins the likes of Baker & McKenzie and Norton Rose Fulbright who are active in the country.

Garrigues’ move into relatively untapped markets comes as SJ Berwin confirms that it is to open a new office in Riyadh through an alliance with a local firm, which has not yet been disclosed. A spokeswoman for SJ Berwin – which on Friday (1 November) officially integrates with Asia Pacific giant King & Wood Mallesons – said that the firm will have the office in place by Q1 next year.

david.stevenson@legalease.co.uk

Click here for our in-depth report on Latin America.