Legal Business

Hogan Lovells expands Tokyo practice with corporate hire from local boutique

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With a mandate to increase its Asia revenues, Hogan Lovells continues to recruit at partner level, today (28 April) announcing the hire of Wataru Kamoto from local boutique Hibiya-Nakata to its corporate practice in Tokyo.

A Japanese-qualified lawyer (bengoshi), Kamoto joins the Anglo American law firm on 30 April. The corporate specialist joined Hibiya-Nakata after leaving Allen & Overy (A&O) in 2011, and also previously worked at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer.

Kamoto was part of the team involved in the launch of Hibiya-Nakata in 2012 alongside Nobuo Nakata, who previously sat as a member of A&O’s corporate board.

This latest hire by Hogan Lovells is part of its efforts to enhance its Asia presence, which makes up 7% of overall firm revenues, in recent months through lateral hiring.

Paul Hastings project finance head Joseph Kim joined its Tokyo finance practice, while Kirkland & Ellis corporate partner Steven Tran was brought into Hogan’s Hong Kong corporate practice in September. It further hired Gide Loyrette Nouel’s Vietnam head Samantha Campbell to its Southeast Asia practice to head its offices in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.

Hogan Lovells global corporate head David Gibbons said: ‘We are pleased that Wataru will be joining our corporate practice in Tokyo. Not only does he have outstanding M&A experience, he also has built a strong reputation in both tax and antitrust. This will complement the M&A practice and extend the reach of our antitrust and tax practices in Asia even further.’

Sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Significant mandates: Hogan Lovells among raft of firms on GE’s financial restructuring

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Hogan Lovells plus a host of US firms have won roles on GE’s major financial restructuring, including the $26.5bn sale of its real estate assets, as it tries to create a ‘simpler and more valuable company’ by selling most of GE Capital’s assets.

Under the agreement, GE will sell the bulk of the GE Capital Real Estate assets – in what has been dubbed one of the largest real estate deals on record – to funds managed by Blackstone with Wells Fargo also acquiring a portion of the performing loans at closing. The company also has letters of intent with other buyers for an additional $4bn of commercial real estate assets, totalling a $26.5bn disposal.

Hogan Lovells’ cross-border team, which comprised over 75 lawyers, advised GE on the real estate sale led by partners Warren Gorrell, Bruce Gil‎christ, Prentiss Feagles, Lauren Bellerjeau, Waajid Siddiqui and Lee Berner, based in New York and Washington DC. The GE legal team was led by former Hogan Lovells partner Mark Landis, currently executive legal counsel–M&A at the company.

On the other side was Dechert representing Wells Fargo with US based partner Richard Jones leading, alongside London-based Jeremy Trinder, Jason Butwick, Mark Stapleton plus US partners Kahlil Yearwood, Philippe Phaneuf, David Linder, Daniel Dunn and, out of France, Philippe Thomas.

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett represented Blackstone with partners Greg Ressa, Sas Mehrara and Krista Miniutti leading. Bank of America and Kimberlite Advisors provided financial advice on the real estate deal.

On the wider restructuring of the business GE took advice from Weil, Gotshal & Manges on corporate and restructuring matters with Sullivan & Cromwell advising on the regulatory aspects led by Sullivan’s senior chairman Rodgin Cohen. 

Davis Polk & Wardwell led on tax matters for the company with a team including corporate partners Richard Sandler and John Meade, tax partners Neil Barr, Michael Farber and Michael Mollerus, partners Randall Guynn and Luigi de Ghenghi handling regulatory matters and investment management partners Nora Jordan and Gregory Rowland. 

GE expects to return more than $90bn to investors through to 2018, the majority of which will come from the $50bn share repurchase program with the remainder generated from the current dividend and the spinoff of its remaining 85% stake in Synchrony. The company expects that by 2018 over 90% of its earnings will be generated by its high-return industrial businesses, up from 58% last year.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Of ‘strategic importance’: Hogan Lovells launches in Australia with Allens partner duo

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Hogan Lovells has this morning (31 March) announced that it will establish a presence in Australia with Allens partners Nicky Lester and Tim Lester spearheading the launch in Sydney and Perth respectively.

Nicky Lester will lead its banking and finance practice in the country while Tim Lester will start up a corporate finance practice with a focus on the energy, natural resources and infrastructure sectors. Australian operations, which are targeted to grow to 9-11 partners by 2017, will be run from both Perth and Sydney.

Nicky Lester previously served as firmwide practice group leader for banking and finance at Allens while corporate finance partner Tim Lester, a former Hogan Lovells partner who was office managing partner of the firm’s Toyko outpost, specialises in large transactions and projects, both M&A and private equity.

The move is based on targeting Australian entities extending their operations into emerging markets such as Africa and to ‘allow the firm to leverage opportunities’ from cross-border trade flows to and from Australia from South East Asia, Japan and China. It added that it plans to grow the team and build a strong Australian base.

Hogan Lovells’ chief executive Steve Immelt said: ‘There is a significant alignment between our client interests in Australia, the United States, Africa and South East Asia. This move enables us to draw on the full resources of our global offering, especially in highly regulated industries such as energy and mining. We have long recognized the strategic importance of having an Australian capability in order to successfully develop our Asia practice but the opportunity had to be the right one.’

Regional managing partner for Asia & the Middle East, Patrick Sherrington, added: ‘Growing our Asia practice is a central part of Hogan Lovells’ core strategy. Our high quality banking and finance team and our commitment to key growth sectors, such as infrastructure, energy and natural resources is central to that. It is an exciting time for Nicky and Tim to be joining the firm and to be part of that clear vision.’

Others to open in Australia in recent months includes private-client focused firm Withers which created Withers SBL through an alliance with tax practice Balazs Lazanas & Welch (BLW) and corporate boutique SBL Shmith in December, while Bird & Bird announced in October it is merging with Sydney-based Truman Hoyle, 20 months after entering into a cooperation agreement with the firm.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Protecting the brand: British American Tobacco instructs Herbert Smith Freehills for plain packaging challenge

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British American Tobacco (BAT) has gifted Herbert Smith Freehills (HSF) with a major disputes mandate, and instructed the firm as the tobacco giant challenges the UK government’s plans to bring in plain cigarette packaging.

The London-headquartered BAT has further instructed Hogan Lovells to advise on intellectual property issues, while barristers brought in includes 39 Essex Chambers’ Nigel Pleming QC and One Essex Court’s Geoffrey Hobbs QC.

BAT constitutes a longstanding client of HSF, with City partner Philip Pfeffer advising on numerous judicial challenges to tobacco control regulatory measures including plain packaging, graphic health warnings, and ingredient bans. New York partner Benjamin Rubinstein also successfully represented the tobacco major in a decade-long civil racketeering lawsuit, filed by the US justice department against multiple US tobacco companies, seeking $280bn in disgorgement of past profits.

BAT is one of several tobacco giants vowing to fight the UK government in court, after Parliament approved the Standardised Packaging of Tobacco Products Regulations 2015 which includes a ban on cigarette packet branding. Set to come into force in May next year, tobacco manufacturers will be forced to sell cigarettes in plain packets with uniform size, shape and design featuring only brand name and health warnings.

Prior to a debate in the House of Lords, BAT confirmed it would ‘commence a legal challenge against the UK Government, if the House of Lords supports MPs who voted to implement plain packaging for tobacco products’.

BAT’s corporate and regulatory affairs director Jerome Abelman said: ‘This legislation is a case of the UK Government taking property from a UK business without paying for it. That is illegal under both UK and European law.’

‘Legal action is not something we want to undertake, nor is it something we enter into lightly – but the UK Government has left us with no other choice after running what can only be described as a flawed consultation process. Any business that has property taken away from it by the state would inevitably want to challenge and seek compensation.’

BAT intends to argue that plain packaging violates a number of UK, European Union (EU) and international laws, including EU trademark laws, as well as World Trade Organisation rules regarding international trade.

In December 2012 Australia became the first country to introduce plain packaging while last month Ireland’s president signed into law the Public Health (Standardised Packaging of Tobacco) Bill.

Other firms acting on behalf of Big Tobacco include Arthur Cox which is currently representing Japan Tobacco in its dispute over plain packaging legislation against the Irish government.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Hogan Lovells hires Bingham finance partner in New York and Mayer Brown trio in China

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Having sought to upgrade its finance practice in New York since the 2010 union of Lovells and Hogan & Hartson, Hogan Lovells has made a senior hire to its Manhattan arm with the addition of Ronald Silverman from Bingham McCutchen.

The appointment comes as the top-20 global law firm also secured three senior recruits to its Asia network.

Silverman, a restructuring and insolvency specialist, joins Hogan Lovells months after the widely-publicised 227-partner mass takeover from ailing US practice Bingham by Morgan, Lewis & Bockius. He represents financial institutions, hedge funds, and other investors and handles Chapter 11 and Chapter 15 work on both the debtor and creditor side. Major instructions include acting as counsel to bondholders in the multinational restructuring proceedings of solar company Suntech Power Holdings; and as counsel to bondholders in the €1.2bn restructuring of European telecoms firm Wind Hellas.

‘Ron’s practice and expertise further diversifies our already established practice in New York,’ said Sharon Lewis, global finance practice group leader at Hogan Lovells. ‘His focus in the oil and gas industry will be an incredible asset as restructurings in the industry are expected to increase in the next few years, both in the US and abroad.’

In Hong Kong, meanwhile, the firm has bolstered its IP practice with the addition of Alan Chiu and Eugene Low, respectively a partner and senior associate at Mayer Brown JSM, alongside consultant Kenny Wong, who headed Mayer Brown JSM’s IP/IT practice in Asia for over 15 years.

Chiu brings experience in contentious and advisory IP work, in particular managing anti-counterfeiting portfolios and coordinating customs seizure programmes for clients in the Greater China region. Low also works on contentious matters, and advises on gaming laws, technology licensing and disputes, and copyright clearance projects. Hogan Lovells remains relatively unusual among large global players in treating IP as a core practice.

Other lateral hires made to the 2,300-lawyer firm’s Asia practice in recent months, which currently constitutes just 7% of firmwide revenues, includes Gide Loyrette Nouel’s Vietnam head, Samantha Campbell, to its Southeast Asia practice; Paul Hastings project finance head Joseph Kim to its Tokyo finance practice; and Kirkland & Ellis corporate partner Steven Tran to the Hong Kong corporate practice in September.

Hogan Lovells recently unveiled its financial results for 2014, with revenues rising 3.6% for the year to hit $1.78bn.

Sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Leadership: Hogan Lovells re-appoints Nicholas Cheffings as chair

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Hogan Lovells has re-appointed London real estate disputes partner Nicholas Cheffings (pictured) as chair of the firm for a second three-year term.

Effective from 1 May, the firm’s chair serves as a member of the board and oversees Hogan Lovells’ ethos and standards; and is further expected to demonstrate the commitment and behaviours expected of partners in serving both clients and the firm, and plays an advisory role in relation to partners as required.

Cheffings was first elected as sole global chair in 2012, taking over from then co-chairs Claudette Christian and John Young, and also heads up the firm’s London real estate disputes team.

Chief executive Steve Immelt said: ‘Nicolas is a highly regarded partner with an excellent record of accomplishment in managing significant partnership and client issues with tact and diplomacy. We are pleased that he will continue serving as Chair.’

Cheffings added: ‘I have very much enjoyed the role over the past three years and I look forward to continuing to serve the firm, its partners and staff in my second term. This is a great firm with great people and it is a privilege to be able to continue in the role at such an exciting time for us.’

This month the firm also released its financial results for the 2014 calendar year, with modestly increasing by 3.6% to $1.779bn from $1.718bn in 2013, while revenue per lawyer (RPL) rose 1.5% to $753,974 from $742,613 in 2013.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

‘We have renewed momentum’: Hogan Lovells sees PEP edge up 0.8% after 3.6% revenue increase

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As Hogan Lovells prepares to celebrate its fifth anniversary in May, there may be mixed reaction from the partnership today (13 February) over its 2014 financial results, as revenue for the calendar year modestly increased by 3.6% to $1.779bn from $1.718bn in 2013, while revenue per lawyer (RPL) rose 1.5% to $753,974 from $742,613 in 2013.

Profit per equity partner (PEP) remains broadly flat having increased by just 0.8% to $1.217m from $1.208m. Other international firms to have already announced results have seen better performance with Dechert’s PEP rising 7.7% on the back of 8% turnover growth while Mayer Brown’s 6.7% revenue increase generated a 12.8% increase in PEP.

The firm’s five global practice groups saw corporate represent approximately 30% of total billings, as did its litigation, arbitration and employment group, while government regulatory and finance made up 15% each, and finally IP, media and technology generated 10%.

By region, the firm was evenly split with the Americas representing 46% of total billings while London and Continental Europe generated 47%. The firm’s Asia & Middle East offering, headed by disputes partner Patrick Sherrington, continues to significantly lag behind and made up only 7% of total billings, the same as last year.

It marks a stark contrast to last year’s performance when the firm broke away from a sustained period of flat financials to unveil its highest post-merger global results, posting a fee-income increase of 5.2% while profit per equity partner (PEP) and revenue per lawyer (RPL) increased by 10% and 3.7% respectively. Despite the economy continuing to take its toll and the obvious cultural challenges faced by firms who adopt a merger-of-equals model, it seems Hogan Lovells has nevertheless fallen some way short of the sky-high ambitions its audacious merger raised in 2010.

Chief executive Steve Immelt (pictured), who officially took the reins last summer from co-heads Warren Gorrell and David Harris, says he is pleased. ‘We had a big jump in 2013 versus 2012. Some of the issues last year was whether performance at that level was going to be sustainable or in some ways a one-year phenomenon. To improve on that is encouraging to me. But the demand for overall legal services is not soaring – it’s relatively flat. Firms have to work hard to improve on that.’

Of greater concern to Immelt is the firm’s RPL figure ‘because it gives you the most insight and direction’ and he aims to tackle the issue this year, ‘to try to get that number up so that it’s tracking more closely our increase in revenue is something I would like to try to shoot for in 2015. The key to RPL is more work – we’re not in a market where there’s an ability to raise rates to any material degree. In that situation your revenue drivers are primarily making sure you’ve got the right team and it’s fully realised.’

Immelt has also set a target to make Asia constitute 10% of revenue within the next two years, and notably the firm has made multiple hires in the region of late which he expects will filter down to results next year. The firm is currently ‘studying’ its options for growth in the region and may consider a similar route to its Mexican tie-up in July with Barrera, Siqueiros y Torres Landa (BSTL).

The firm can also point to the pickup of significant mandates from last year. The corporate piece – which Immelt says is progressing well and looking to build upon in New York and London – advised Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo Securities, and Deutsche Bank Securities on the $2.3bn IPO of Paramount Group, the largest REIT IPO in history, while the finance piece – which is also on management’s agenda for potential hires – took instruction advising the Republic of Ecuador in its return to the international sovereign bond market.

As for the firm’s well-documented tribulations over its merit-driven pay system, Immelt says the firm is working hard at ‘making sure partners understand direct consultations, and why they are where they are, rather than trying to find the magic formula that makes everyone happy.’

He adds: ‘Good, clear and consistent communication with individuals about their situation and we put a big emphasis on that this year.’

What may also help galvanise partners is the firm’s latest leadership initiatives – the most notable of which was the recent roll-out of a new leadership programme for experienced partners with Oxford Said Business School, to enable partners to build a unified approach to leading the firm and become distributors of a strong shared culture.

Immelt says: ‘We’ve done a better job of making partners understand the strategy and vision of the firm. This is a very concrete way of having more influence across the partnership by not just relying on me or David Hudd but people that know the firm’s ambitions and have the leadership skills to make that happen effectively. We have renewed momentum across the firm. I really do feel we have a clear sense of where we’re headed. Compared to a year ago, a group of people are able to tell you what it takes to achieve that – from the top to people on the ground.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Accounts revealed: Hogan Lovells records 3.9% international revenue boost as profits slide

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Transatlantic firm Hogan Lovells has become the latest to publish its limited liability partnership (LLP) accounts for the 2013/14 financial year, and has recorded a 3.9% revenue boost in its International LLP from £581m to £604m.

With the accounts dating to 30 April 2014 and excluding its Americas business, the firm also recorded a 2.8% decrease in profit before tax to £200m from £205m while profit for division among equity members fell from £172m to £163m. Operating expenses saw staff costs increase by 3.8% to £251m from £242m the year before as the number of fee earners increased by 40 members to 1,567 from 1,527 and the number of support staff dipped slightly to 1,438 from 1,449. Staff costs incurred during the year included salaries of £223m while average profit per equity member dropped to £785,000 from £801,000. Like previous years, the firm has no net debt outstanding.

The key management team was paid £9m in the 2013/14 financial year, up from the £8.6m they received in 2012/13, but the fillings also confirmed that the firm’s chief financial officer Richard Olver had resigned as of 31 December 2014.

The revenue boost marks a change from last year when it fell 1.6% from £591m to £581m, which the firm attributed to the weakening of the euro against Sterling during the relevant period. Operating expenses at the time, meanwhile, recorded a 14% drop from £145m to £124m, which the firm said reflected higher expenses in 2011/12 due to the one-off costs associated with surplus office space.

With its annual financials for the calendar year (ending 31 December 2014) set to be released next week, it follows a year of strategic investment made by the firm, including bolstering its Asia presence with Gide Loyrette Nouel’s Vietnam head, Samantha Campbell, to lead its offices in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, and Paul Hastings project finance head Joseph Kim to its Tokyo finance practice, while Kirkland & Ellis corporate partner Steven Tran was brought into the Hong Kong corporate practice in September.

On the LLP results, a firm spokesperson said: ‘Our results reflect genuine growth and demonstrate the strength of the firm’s breadth of practice and sector expertise, particularly in financial services, energy and life sciences/pharmaceuticals’.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Asia expansion: Hogan Lovells hires Gide Vietnam chief as it targets SE Asia

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In keeping with its continued expansion in Asia, Hogan Lovells has today (16 January) announced the hire of Gide Loyrette Nouel‘s Vietnam head, Samantha Campbell, to its Southeast Asia practice where she will lead the firm’s offices in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.

Set to join the firm in March, Campbell headed Gide’s banking and finance group in Vietnam and South-East Asia. Her experience includes advising on a broad range of international finance matters, including mainstream bank lending work (secured and unsecured), asset-based financings, acquisition financings, real estate finance transactions, debt restructurings and derivatives transactions. She moved to Gide in 2009 from US firm Sullivan & Cromwell, and was made up to partner in 2010.

Her hire follows that of Hogan Lovells’ first Vietnam-based corporate partner Jeff Olson who joined its Ho Chi Minh City office from Allen & Overy in October last year, constituting the firm’s ninth partner hire in Asia in 2014.

The firm has made continuous efforts to enhance its Asia presence, which makes up 7% of overall firm revenues, in recent months through lateral hiring. Paul Hastings project finance head Joseph Kim joined its Tokyo finance practice, while Kirkland & Ellis corporate partner Steven Tran was brought into Hogan’s Hong Kong corporate practice in September.

The firm’s regional managing partner for Asia and the Middle East, Patrick Sherrington, said: ‘Vietnam is a very significant and growing market for our international clients and is a gateway to ASEAN international trade. As one of the first international law firms in Vietnam, with a historical presence spanning 20 years, we view this jurisdiction as a key component of our regional strategy and are strongly committed to responding to our clients’ requirements for consistent high quality international legal services and local law advice across the zone.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Heading to the bar: Hogan Lovells streamlines dual management role as former arbitration co-head leaves

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Hogan Lovells’ former co-head of international arbitration, Simon Nesbitt, is set to depart the firm and join the Bar, a move which coincides with the firm’s decision to streamline the dual management structure of the practice and continue with a single head.

Legal Business has learned that the practice is now solely headed by Miami-based partner Daniel Gonzalez, with London-based Nesbitt recently moving into a consultancy role to assist with the transition away from having joint heads of international arbitration. He was appointed global co-head in May 2013 after succeeding partner Michael Davison who joined the firm’s international management committee. Nesbitt, who it emerged this morning has been appointed as Queen’s Counsel in a 93-strong round, will not leave the firm until March, and it is currently not known where he will move to next.

A leading individual in international arbitration according to the Legal 500, major mandates for Nesbitt includes acting for a Swiss aluminium trading group on the worldwide enforcement of a $100m arbitral award made under the Swiss Chamber of Commerce Rules against a Russian manufacturing plant; and acting in arbitration under the ICC rules on behalf of Chang Beverages, part of the major Thai beverage group, in a $1.8bn claim for breach of a Singapore-based joint venture with Danish brewer Carlsberg.

Despite the departure of heavyweight Nesbitt, the firm has plans to focus more heavily on investment treaty arbitration, including in its promotions last January when it made up London-based investment treaty specialist Markus Burgstaller to partner. Another key focus for Gonzalez going forward as sole head is geographical expansion within the Latin America region, a move which will follow the firm’s tie-up with leading Mexican firm Barrera, Siqueiros y Torres Landa (BSTL) in July.

On Nesbitt’s departure, litigation and arbitration head Michael Davison told Legal Business: ‘Since Simon took the decision to stand down as partner at the firm, we have been supporting him in his efforts to become an arbitrator. We would like to congratulate Simon on being appointed as a QC, which is a great tribute to the firm’s practice to which Simon has contributed greatly.’

Nesbitt’s departure mirrors that of other significant international arbitration departures in recent months. Legal Business revealed in November that Nicholas Fletcher QC, who led Berwin Leighton Paisner’s practice for the last five years, had resigned from the firm to join barristers’ chambers 4 New Square while Olswang arbitration chief Andrew Aglionby was also set to leave for the bar.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk