Legal Business

Fieldfisher loses Facebook to Hogan Lovells as the firm hires Bristows partner as privacy head

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Fieldfisher has lost key instructions from social networking giant Facebook which is set to direct privacy and information law work to top-ten firm Hogan Lovells.

The news emerges just weeks after its high profile head of privacy Eduardo Ustaran joined Hogan Lovells to lead its European arm within the global privacy and information management practice. Fieldfisher did, however, yesterday (29 July) announce a successor for Ustaran with the recruitment of Bristows partner Hazel Grant.

While Facebook do not currently operate a formal panel for external legal advisers, Fieldfisher’s strength in the technology, media and telecommunications sector previously saw it act for the company.

On Facebook directing work to Hogan Lovells, Fieldfisher’s head of technology, outsourcing and privacy, Robert Shooter, told Legal Business: ‘Facebook don’t have a panel as such. With Eduardo leaving us, undoubtedly some clients will follow him (and we anticipate clients joining us following Hazel’s hire). Facebook may choose to go with Eduardo to Hogans, or instruct both firms.’

Ustaran’s departure was a blow to Fieldfisher, despite its leading privacy practice that also counted Vodafone, Thomson Reuters, Ernst & Young, Nintendo, Reed Elsevier and Orange Business Services among its clients. It was not confirmed at the time of writing whether Fieldfisher had retained its position on Vodafone’s newly revamped panel.

Fieldfisher is also losing a four-strong associate team who are joining Ustaran at Hogan Lovells, while former Fieldfisher legal director Sian Rudgard already joined as of counsel in June.

The exit of Ustaran, a dual-qualified English solicitor and Spanish abogado, was considered contentious after he was given an exceptional 18-month notice period at the time of his resignation last October. He did, however, exit the firm to join Hogan Lovells in June, almost a year before the notice period expired.

In April, the firm also saw the departure of data protection and privacy partner Stewart Room for PwC Legal, and trade mark and brand protection practice head Mark Holah for Bird & Bird.

The firm has made some lateral hires of its own. As well as Grant, who is set to join the firm in late August, other partner recruits includes Osborne Clarke’s head of technology Mark Webber.

And with high profile client names including VMware, Netflix, Expedia and Box still on the roster, Shooter adds: ‘We’re still one of the largest privacy groups in Europe and we’re top ranked. We’re delighted about Hazel joining us and [partner] Phil Lee leading the charge in Palo Alto.’

Shooter added that the technology, outsourcing and privacy group is also enjoying a busy period and is seeking to hire partners to expand further, specifically in Manchester. ‘We’re looking at the Manchester market. With our merger with Heatons earlier this year, we’re looking to build on our existing team. We believe there is a business case for hiring a technology partner in Manchester and from there building a team. There are some really exciting times ahead.’

Hogan Lovells declined to comment. Facebook did not respond to requests for comment at the time of writing.

Sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

A&O, Addleshaw and Hogan Lovells line up on Co-op’s £620m pharmacy spin-off to Bestway

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As the Co-operative Group moves to reduce its £1.2bn capital deficit and focus on core business lines it has turned to longstanding advisers Allen & Overy (A&O) and Addleshaw Goddard to lead on the £620m sale of its pharmaceutical business to Bestway Group, advised by Hogan Lovells.

Addleshaw corporate finance partner Richard Thomas led the deal for the Co-op, supported by corporate partner Richard Fleetwood and associates Andy Green, Ryan Barber, Dean Cox. The Co-op is a longstanding client of Thomas, who is also a member of Addleshaw’s healthcare group and counts as clients Lloyds Pharmacy and Capita, which he advised on its acquisitions relate to its Medicals Direct Group.

At A&O, banking partner David Lines and pensions partner Dana Burstow led for the Magic Circle firm, which last year advised the Co-op on a capital generation plan in the aftermath of it unveiling a hole of in excess of £1bn, and which saw finance partner Alistair Asher join as Co-op Group’s general counsel.

Tom Brassington, a corporate partner at Hogan Lovells who counts Johnson and Johnson among his clients, advised Bestway.

This latest transaction is due to complete in October 2014.

The deal sees 774 pharmacies transferred to Bestway in a move that will mean the group, run by Asian tycoon Sir Anwar Pervez, will own the third largest chain of pharmacies in the UK and have an annual turnover of around £3.4 billion.

Brassington said: ‘Hogan Lovells has worked with Dawood Pervez and the Bestway team for a number of years and we were extremely happy to assist with this major acquisition for the group. The Co-op Pharmacy’s focus on supporting and servicing the needs of local communities makes it a natural fit with Bestway’s existing portfolio of businesses.’

Richard Pennycook, interim group chief executive of The Co-operative Group, said: ‘The proceeds will enable The Co-operative to reduce debt and invest in our business and is part of the focused delivery of our clear strategic plans and priorities.’

Tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Hogan Lovells ties up with Mexico’s Barrera, Siqueiros y Torres Landa

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Hogan Lovells has made further inroads in Latin America by tying up with leading Mexican firm Barrera, Siqueiros y Torres Landa (BSTL), constituting the firm’s 46th and 47th offices in Mexico City and Monterrey.

With the combination expected to go live on 1 August, at which time the top 10 LB100 firm will begin operating in Mexico as Hogan Lovells BSTL, the new offices will have 70 lawyers, including 16 partners, and will focus on corporate, commercial, disputes, energy, real estate, telecoms and media, and transport work.

Established in 1948, BSTL is acknowledged by The Legal 500 as first-tier in competition & antitrust and disputes, and second-tier for energy and natural resources and insurance. 

The latest move to Mexico – which follows the announcement at the start of this year that the firm had launched its second office in Brazil, with the hire of former Clifford Chance partner Isabel Costa Carvalho – is a longstanding ambition raised to one the top items on new chief executive Steve Immelt’s agenda for his four-year term, which officially began on 1 July.

It follows a period of wider expansion for the 2,300-lawyer firm, which in December combined with South African law firm Routledge Modise, citing a physical presence in Africa as increasingly important due to the majority of its top 200 clients having operations on the continent.

On the combination with BSTL, Immelt said: ‘2013 ushered in sweeping structural reforms for Mexico, which could unlock major potential for investors and companies in a broad range of industries that are looking to capitalize on the current environment.

‘Hogan Lovells understands the potential Mexico offers for our global clients and knows it is important to have full service capabilities on the ground in this region. BSTL is a firm with 65 years of history sharing our values, quality and international outlook, making them the perfect addition to our leading Latin America practice.’

BSTL’s co-managing partner Juan Francisco Torres Landa added: ‘Both Hogan Lovells and Barrera, Siqueiros y Torres Landa are prominent firms in their markets with high-quality lawyers and practices. The combination ensures that we continue offering our clients outstanding legal services on a truly global platform.’

Sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Hogan Lovells leads for Vodafone on €145m Cobra acquisition

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Hogan Lovells’ Milan office has led on Vodafone’s €145m acquisition of Italian car electronics maker Cobra Automotive Technologies as the machine-to-machine sector is identified as the latest untapped market.

Milan-based M&A partner Luca Picone spearheaded Vodafone’s acquisition of Cobra. Leah Dunlop, who heads the Hogan Lovells corporate practice in Italy, also advised.

Alexander Deacon, head of legal corporate at Vodafone, ran the acquisition in-house.

Cobra was advised by by Alfredo Craca, a partner at Craca Di Carlo Guffanti Pisapia Tatozzi & Associates.

The deal valued Cobra, which is listed on the Milan stock exchange, at €1.49 per share in cash. Picone’s previous deals include advising Japanese IT company NTT Data on the acquisition of the entire share capital of the IT consulting company Value Team and private equity fund Terra Firma’s acquisition of solar assets Rete Rinnovabile from Terna for €670m, the largest acquisition in the Italian solar energy sector.

Vodafone’s agreement with the main shareholders of Cobra, who together hold almost 74% of the share capital, saw the group agree to tender their shares into the offer, which is expected to be launched in the coming weeks and will be subject to Italian law. Vodafone has also entered into an agreement with certain minority shareholders of Cobra’s Telematics subsidiary to acquire their 20% shareholding for €20 million.

The British multinational yesterday (16 June) announced its intention to acquire the Italian group in what has been identified as the race for machine-to-machine communications, whereby users can control household appliances and manage handheld devices by voice.

Tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

‘We’ve got to complete the unification process’: Hogan Lovells incoming CEO and deputy talk strategy

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As co-CEOs David Harris and Warren Gorrell enter their final weeks leading the partnership at transatlantic firm Hogan Lovells, newly-elected sole CEO Steve Immelt is putting relationship building high on his list of priorities, alongside harder objectives such as further global expansion and fine-tuning the firm’s remuneration system.

Working alongside City-based deputy chief executive David Hudd, who has his own objectives to boost the firm’s corporate and finance practices, Washington DC-based disputes lawyer Immelt and Hudd have now carved out their key priorities and individual and collective responsibilities.

Immelt will focus on strategy as well as external and internal client development initiatives, while managing the firm’s international management committee and partnership generally. Hudd will take over finances, operations and the future of the finance and corporate practices.

Since its audacious 2010 merger, the top 10 firm has largely failed to bring in the expected transactional names in corporate in London or finance in New York, where it sought to build a stronger underwriter practice.

Hudd tells Legal Business: ‘We’ve got to complete the unification process. It’s also no secret that we plan to further strengthen our corporate and finance practices. We’ve made huge progress in the last ten years. New York is a big priority along with parts of our London offering. I will be spending a lot of time with the heads of corporate and finance to further develop those practices organically and through lateral hires.’

This coincides with the wider message Immelt wishes to execute inside and out of the firm and he tells Legal Business: ‘We have to be realistic that we’re four years on and although we’ve accomplished a lot, I don’t think anybody can say we’re done with the process of building deep relationships between partners that are the fundamentals of a successful firm. The ethos has to embrace collaboration and an important element of co-ordination, and it has got to be client-centred with a problem solving approach.

‘I would like every partner to go out and attack problems with a view to what’s the cleanest fastest solution for a client. Firms that succeed in difficult markets like this are those that spend a lot of time obsessing about their clients, and about how to go to market. I want us to align on the importance of outstanding client service and for it to continue to be the lifeblood of our firm. I see that as a strategy.’

Other items on Immelt’s agenda for his four year-term, which officially begins on 1 July, include looking for potential development in Latin America with an eye on Mexico specifically, and reviewing the firm’s current remuneration model by 2016.

Specifically, Immelt wants to end problematic partner squabbling over origination points – the formula used to recognise ownership of clients.

Immelt says: ‘The best approach is to drive from the top down a very clear sense of what we expect in behaviour. You certainly don’t want to create an environment where people think selfishness or squabbling is the way to go. I expect our practice leaders to be aware of what’s going on and to step in real time to be certain that people are fair and generous, and thinking collaboratively. No one could ever say in a contribution-based system like ours that you could CCTV everything. You wouldn’t want that but we push hard to go below the surface. We try to set examples and engage through communication. David [Hudd] and I want our leadership to reflect that.’

One positive milestone in the merger journey was this year ending a period of flat financials, after Hogan Lovells in February unveiled its highest post-merger global financial results. Fee-income increased 5.2% to $1.72bn, while profit per equity partner rose by 10% to $1.21m and revenue per lawyer was up 3.7% to $742,613.

With the thorny issue of whether to revert from a dual management structure to a single chief executive and practice heads decided, Hogan Lovells is already putting to bed some of its higher profile post-merger power struggles.

Immelt concludes: ‘I’ve always thought this was a terrific idea but actually getting it to work was a lot harder than I thought it would be. From the tiniest thing to whether humour has a “U” in it to a complicated client conflict… it made us recognise that in order to make progress, we would have to find middle ground. We’re now seeing that relationship building push out not just at senior management level. If you don’t get that human element right, you can’t succeed.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Q&A with Hogan Lovells new chief executive Steve Immelt

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As Washington DC-based Steve Immelt next month takes over the reins from Hogan Lovells co-chief executives David Harris and Warren Gorrell, the disputes lawyer talks to Legal Business about the strategy going forward and partner ambition.

How did your appointment come about?

I wasn’t a part of the soundings process, but the board had talked to practically every partner in the firm to get their views – it was a comprehensive effort to get a sense of the partnership, which was invaluable.The board asked a number of people if they would consider the position. I was asked and decided I would.

Legal Business

Hogan Lovells second global firm to exit Prague in a month

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Transatlantic firm Hogan Lovells has become the second top-ten Legal Business 100 firm in recent weeks to announce it is withdrawing from Prague, blaming difficult market conditions.

Following a ‘strategic review of the market’ undertaken by the international management committee, the firm is aiming to complete its exit from Prague over the summer, with the exact date still to be decided.

Legal Business

18 months’ notice commuted to eight – Field Fisher’s Eduardo Ustaran joins Hogan Lovells

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Field Fisher’s high profile former head of privacy Eduardo Ustaran joins Hogan Lovells today (4 June), almost a year before the expiry of the exceptional 18-month notice period announced at the time of his resignation last October.

Ustaran, a dual-qualified English solicitor and Spanish abogado, who built and until last year headed Field Fisher’s first-tier privacy and information law group, will now lead Hogan Lovells’ European team within the global privacy and information management practice. It is understood the top-10 firm is looking to make further hires in this area.

His arrival today follows a statement by Field Fisher in October that his leaving date would be 1 May 2015: an announcement that appeared to come as much as a surprise to Hogan Lovells as to the legal market at large.

Ustaran’s departure is a blow to Field Fisher, despite its leading privacy practice that counts Vodafone, Thomson Reuters, Ernst & Young, Nintendo, Reed Elsevier and Orange Business Services among its clients.

It is understood that Field Fisher, which was also hit this year by the resignation of data protection and privacy partner Stewart Room for PwC Legal in April, and trademark partner Mark Holah for Bird & Bird, is still in negotiations over Ustaran’s clients.

Room will join PwC Legal in October to lead its cyber and data security practice.

On Ustaran’s arrival, Hogan Lovells’ global co-head of privacy and information management practice, Christopher Wolf, said: ‘We already have a strong privacy team in the US, London and in continental Europe, handling US, UK and multi-jurisdictional data protection projects. Eduardo will significantly boost our capabilities in this area. In particular, Eduardo has a highly-regarded track record in advising on complex and business-critical data protection issues, including his involvement in the development of the future EU data protection framework through his advisory role to the UK Ministry of Justice.’

Ustaran added: ‘There has been significant growth and specialisation in data protection and privacy in the EU and globally. I am delighted to be joining one of the largest, most experienced and most global data privacy and information management practices in the world.’

Field Fisher said: ‘We can confirm that Eduardo Ustaran has left the partnership of Fieldfisher and joined Hogan Lovells. We wish him well at his new firm. Moving forward, our focus is on continuing to build on Fieldfisher’s long-standing reputation for excellence in privacy and information law under the leadership of Simon Briskman and Phil Lee.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Salary reviews: Hogan Lovells raises trainee and NQ pay again

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Hogan Lovells has increased its pay for both trainees and newly-qualified (NQ) lawyers for the second year running after a freeze on trainee pay in 2012.

The firm’s first-year trainees will receive £500 more, pocketing £39,500, while second-year trainees will receive slightly more at £45,000, up £1,000 from last year. NQ lawyers will see a more generous increase at £65,000 up from £63,000 in 2013.

The increases follow on from last year’s new rates, which were slightly higher than this year, when first and second-year trainees both received an extra £1,000, and NQ lawyers saw pay rise by £1,500. These came after the firm froze trainee pay in 2012 and only increased NQ wage by £500.

The firm said it does not release pay bands for its post-qualified lawyers, as it uses a merit based system.

The new salaries place the firm ahead of Ashurst, which offers its first and second-year trainees £39,000 and £44,000, while NQ lawyers take home £63,000.

The Magic Circle has also recently issued a mixed bag of pay rises in the last month, with Linklaters and Slaughter and May offering improved pay across all trainee and associate bands, while Allen & Overy announced a freeze on trainee and NQ pay levels.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

 

Hogan Lovells’ trainee and NQ pay levels since 2011:

First Year Trainees (£) Second Year Trainees (£) NQ’s (£)
May 2011 – May 2012 38,000 43,000 61,000
May 2012 – May 2013 38,000 43,000 61,500
May 2013 – May 2014 39,000 44,000 63,000
New confirmed salaries – May 2014 39,500 45,000 65,000
Legal Business

A&O, Hogan Lovells and Skadden line up on $1.46bn acquisition of Aeroflex by UK rival Cobham

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Allen & Overy (A&O), Hogan Lovells and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom are among firms to be awarded mandates on British aerospace and defence supplier Cobham’s all-cash acquisition of US communications equipment maker Aeroflex for $1.46bn.

For US advice Cobham turned to Skadden’s corporate partner Eric Cochran but on English law, the company returned to A&O led by M&A partner Richard Browne.

In 2011 A&O advised Cobham on its €78m acquisition of Telerob Holding from financial investor EquiTrust.

Hogan Lovells provided English law advice to Aeroflex, led by London corporate partner Tom Brassington. In the US, Shulte Roth and Zabel advised Aeroflex, led by John Pollock.

The acquisition by Cobham of its New York rival is the largest in its 80-year history and illustrates the British defence company’s need to diversify away from its dependency on US defense spending, which account for around a third of its sales. As budgets are tightened by governments on both sides of the Atlantic, Cobham has said that its acquisition of the far more commercial Aeroflex, which derives around 70% of its revenues from commercial customers, will help it to diversify. Last year the FTSE 250 company, which saw its pre-tax profit fall by 4% to £288m, bought Axell Wireless for £85m.

‘We believe Aeroflex and Cobham are a natural fit and that Aeroflex will benefit from the larger scale, market presence, and resources of the combined organisation,’ said Len Borow, Aeroflex’ chief executive.

David.stevenson@legalease.co.uk