Legal Business

KWM – ultimately a question of confidence

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These are tough times for the house that Stanley Berwin built, with exhibit A being recent news that King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) is undergoing a sweeping partnership restructuring set to trim its European business by nearly two dozen partners, or 15% of its ranks. While global managing partner Stuart Fuller (pictured) attempts to frame the move as repositioning KWM for the future, the storm clouds are ominous. The firm has suffered a string of significant exits in the last 18 months in its funds, litigation and corporate practices, losing several notable clients along the way. The firm was already going through a performance-driven partnership review set to manage out at least 10% of its ranks by this April (the firm’s German practice has struggled particularly). While the firm managed to achieve respectable growth in 2014/15 and increases in profitability in Europe, having to go through more major cuts is hardly an advertisement for its partnership.

Legal Business

KWM to cut 15% of legacy SJ Berwin partnership following major shake-up

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Following a major overhaul of its practice structure, King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) said in March it would axe 15% of its Europe and Middle East partnership, and make 45 business services employees redundant in London.

The move means 24 partners will leave the firm and is the second shake-up of the legacy SJ Berwin partnership in 12 months, when another 10% of the partnership across the region were asked to leave following a performance review.

Legal Business

KWM and Simmons clock poor retention rates as Eversheds hits 100%

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The rough and tumble of trainee retention season offers contrasting images to future lawyers as Eversheds keeps on all eight trainees while Simmons & Simmons becomes the latest firm accused of tampering with its figures.

Simmons & Simmons, which recently released a 78% retention rate for its spring trainees, has been accused of altering its figures after a poor year for keeping its young talent. The firm announced that nine trainees had gone through the qualification round ending in February, with eight offered jobs and seven accepting. However, it has since emerged that there were 13 trainees on the intake, rather than nine, giving Simmons & Simmons a lower retention rate of 54%.

A spokesperson for the firm would not confirm how many people started in the trainee cohort, stating that ‘it’s not manipulation’ and that the firm only counts people who ‘go through the process.’ She would not detail how long it takes for a trainee at the firm to be considered ‘going through the process’.

Simmons & Simmons previously posted a poor retention rate for its autumn 2015 cohort, with just 64% of the 28 trainees that begun the programme still with the firm as a newly qualified lawyer.

King & Wood Mallesons, which recently cut 15% of its European and Middle Eastern partnership, has kept on 14 of its 20 qualifying trainees, or 70% of this round.

Eversheds, on the other hand, posted a 100% retention rate with all eight trainees set to continue at the firm. Three of these are based in London, qualifying into commercial and financial services disputes and investigations practices, with a further four trainees qualifying in Birmingham and Cambridge. The firm also took on a trainee in Paris, to be based in the firm’s international arbitration practice.

Firms in the Magic Circle all released their retention rates earlier this year, with the general pattern being that firms have achieved lower retention rates than the same time last year, although Slaughter and May has bucked this trend by keeping on 91% of trainees, up from the 88% it kept on in spring 2015.

Our sister website The Lex 100 has created a retention rate table which will be updated as more figures are announced.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Revolving doors: KWM adds one in London while Hogan Lovells makes key international hire

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Despite axing 24 partners from its legacy SJ Berwin practice, King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) has hired one in London, while Hogan Lovells has made a key appointment in the US.

KWM has added to its London office with the hire of a new corporate partner, M&A and ECM specialist Greg Stonefield. Joining from Mayer Brown’s corporate and securities practice, Stonefield has wide sector experience across a range of industries including real estate, oil and gas, mining and metals and telecoms. Senior partner of Europe and Middle East Stephen Kon said Stonefield’s appointment will add depth to help the firm achieve its ambition to be one of the global elite. He said: ‘Greg’s hire supports the core strategic areas for the firm and our clients, and will further enhance our international reputation in European capital markets and corporate M&A.’

In international appointments news, Julie Brill will join Hogan Lovells’ Washington DC office as partner and co-director of the privacy and cybersecurity practice following her term as a commissioner at the Federal Trade Commission. Prior to serving on the Commission, Brill was an Assistant Attorney General in the states of North Carolina and Vermont for over 20 years. Co-director of the firm’s privacy and cybersecurity practice Marcy Wilder commented: ‘Julie brings immense substantive knowledge, enormous energy, and great enthusiasm to our privacy practice.’

Meanwhile, Matthew Getz will join Boies, Schiller & Flexner’s London office as partner in its international disputes and regulatory practice. Joining from Debevoise & Plimpton and qualified in both England and New York, Getz has advised large multinational companies in some of the world’s biggest ant-corruption internal investigations. With the expectation investigations and white collar practice will continue to be a core focus of the firm in future years, managing partner Jonathan Schiller noted Getz’s hire is part of a substantial increase to the resources the firm devotes to government investigations and internal investigations.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Heads roll on Queen Street: KWM to axe 15% of European partners in sweeping shake-up

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King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) told its London partnership this morning that 15% of its European and Middle Eastern partners will be axed, with an additional 45 business services roles in London to be made redundant.

Stephen Kon, the senior partner of KWM’s Europe and Middle East business, and global managing partner Stuart Fuller (pictured) informed staff at the firm’s London office that 15% of its 160-strong partnership across the UK, continental Europe and the Middle East would lose their roles as part of the restructuring. That means up to 24 partners will leave the firm as part of the process.

Fuller told Legal Business: ‘This is the most important thing the firm has done so that it is stronger and we focus on core markets and core clients and make sure we grow in the right areas. It is also so that we pay market returns to all people at the firm so this has the full support of Europe and the global firm.’

The move inevitably raises serious questions over the success of KWM’s 2013 union with London’s SJ Berwin amid claims from former partners that the level of expected referrals from its huge Asia-Pacific practice have failed to materialise. The firm’s core City private equity and funds practice has also been hit by competition and predatory recruitment from more profitable US rivals in recent years.

It is the second shake-up of the legacy SJ Berwin partnership in 12 months, with another 15% of the partnership across the region being asked to leave following a partnership review last year, though the previous initiative was cited as being based more on individual performance. The firm’s managing partner for Europe and the Middle East, William Boss, resigned less than a year into the post in January to focus on client work.

KWM also announced this February that it was overhauling its practice structure, cutting 17 practice teams into three overarching streams: corporate finance and funds; dispute resolution and regulation; and real estate. The three teams will be headed respectively by Tim Bednall, Tom Usher and William Naunton.

With 425 business support staff operating across the region, which covers nine offices, the redundancy of 45 of these roles will cut headcount by 11%.

Europe was the worst performing region of the firm last year, behind its cornerstone practices in Australia, Hong Kong and China, as global revenue dropped 1% to $1.02bn in 2015. London is by far the largest office in the Europe and Middle East region, generating around 65% of the region’s revenue of £191m.

KWM has been dogged by cash flow problems over the last year, with delayed payments to partners, but reduced its net debt position in the year ending 30 April 2015 by nearly £1m to £15.87m. The partnership also has a £20m bank loan set to expire in July 2016, according to the firm’s most recent filing for the Europe and Middle East LLP on Companies House.

However, Fuller denied that the drastic measures showed that the 2013 merger had failed, adding: ‘I have no concerns around the balance sheet. This is all part of the firm’s 2020 strategy and making sure that the practices are aligned globally around the core business areas and getting the benefit of the merger. We are strengthening the firm and it’s actually so we can execute even better the regional and global strategy. This is all part of the firm’s journey, the 2020 strategy, to be a globally elite firm.’

The announcement comes amid a challenging 2015/16 financial year for major commercial law firms, with transactional activity hit by a turbulent global economy and uncertainty ahead of the UK’s vote on membership of the EU in June.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

To read more about the firm see: ‘Sum of its parts – can King & Wood Mallesons match the hype?’

Legal Business

KWM restructures London as Europe managing partner returns to full-time fee-earning

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King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) is restructuring its London teams, which has delayed the election of a new European managing partner and comes amid cash flow problems in the legacy SJ Berwin practice.

The move comes as the firm rolls out its 2020 strategy, which KWM global managing partner Stuart Fuller described as setting ‘a vision to be in the global elite for the next century’.

Legal Business

KWM loses historic SJ Berwin client as buyout firm NorthEdge picks Paul Hastings for £300m fund raising

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Paul Hastings has won a first time instruction from UK buyout firm NorthEdge on the launch of a £300m fund, the second mandate the US firm has taken from King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) in as many months after it recently acted for historic KWM client Investindustrial.

Despite KWM pitching to retain the work, NorthEdge opted to follow funds partner Duncan Woollard with its instruction, after Woollard left the Hong Kong-based firm to join Paul Hastings eight months ago.

Woollard led on what is NorthEdge’s second investment vehicle, which is targeting companies based in the north of England worth between £20m to £75m. The buyout firm hit its hard cap of £300m within four months of fundraising, with commitments coming from leading institutional investors across Europe, North America and Australia.

When still at KWM, Woollard had led on NorthEdge’s previous investment vehicle, a £225m fund, in 2013.

Woollard was a core part of SJ Berwin’s much-lauded private equity funds team in the 2000s – which also contained Nigel van Zyl, who is now at Proskauer Rose. The firm’s private equity funds and M&A teams have since seen several exits, with deal heavyweights Tim Wright, Steven Davis and Richard Lever all departing following the City firm’s merger with KWM in 2013.

Woollard, who joined Paul Hastings as European head of funds last summer, also won an instruction on Investindustrial’s €2bn private equity fund at the end of last month after having advised it during his 19 years at KWM. The loss of these mandates comes amid a tumultuous period for the legacy SJ Berwin practice, with Europe and Middle East managing partner William Boss resigning in January as managing partner less than a year into the post, a partnership review last year that saw around 10% of the European partnership managed out and a business restructuring last month to reduce the number of practices in London from 17 to three.

Paul Hastings meanwhile has been rapidly recruiting into its City office, with Woollard being joined by Linklaters restructuring heavyweight David Ereira and Berwin Leighton Paisner’s head of structured debt and capital markets, Paul Severs, as the firm makes a play for finance, corporate and funds work.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

 

 

 

 

Legal Business

Veteran KWM litigator Mervis exits for Arnold & Porter

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Seasoned litigator Hilton Mervis has become the latest partner to quit King & Wood Mallesons’ (KWM) London office after agreeing to join Arnold & Porter.

Commercial litigator Mervis is well known for his work advising private equity houses and asset managers in disputes. He is one of KWM’s most senior City partners, having run for the senior partner post at predecessor firm SJ Berwin but losing to Stephen Kon in 2012.

His exit comes at a troubled time for KWM’s London office, with European and Middle East managing partner William Boss resigning just nine months into the role after a fractious partnership review that saw about 15 underperforming partners managed out of the firm and profit payments delayed. The search for Boss’s successor was postponed last month when the firm restructured its practices down from 17 to three.

Since SJ Berwin merged with KWM to give the firm a European presence there has been a exodus of talent, with disputes colleagues Nick Brocklesby and London litigation head Alex Leitch departing for US rivals in the past two years. Corporate heavyweights Steven Davis, Richard Lever and Tim Wright have also left during the past 24 months, to Proskauer Rose, Goodwin Procter and DLA Piper respectively.

After a quiet period for the London office of Arnold & Porter, Mervis becomes the firm’s second City hire in as many months following the arrival of intellectual property partner Michael Bywell from Minter Ellison Rudd Watts.

Mervis becomes the firm’s third disputes partner in London, which is currently home to 44 lawyers and 16 partners.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

 

 

Legal Business

KWM global revenue drops 1% as firm unveils 2020 strategy and restructures London practice

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King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) global revenue dropped 1% to $1.02bn in 2015 as the Hong Kong-headquartered firm unveiled a new global strategy to see it through to 2020.

Despite rapid growth in China, where the firm made 35% of its revenue last year, the firm suffered a 1% drop on the $1.04bn it generated in 2014 due to volatile currency movements in its two major markets, Australia and China. KWM said its global turnover would have been up by 8% to $1.13bn on constant currency basis, citing a 17% fall in the Australian dollar against the US dollar in 2015.

Growth accelerated in China last year, largely off the back of extra corporate and capital markets capability through a string of hires that included JPMorgan Chase’s ex-China head Zili Shao, but Europe put in a below-par performance. The Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) division of KWM, which the firm acquired through its merger with City firm SJ Berwin, has been through a period of turmoil with senior exits and William Boss’s early resignation as the region’s managing partner.

Nonetheless, the EMEA arm did benefit from a rise in the number of referrals from the rest of the network, with 104 mandates arriving from China alone.

Across the entire global network, referrals rose by 38% to 11,018 as KWM plots closer financial integration following its landmark Asia merger between Australia’s Mallesons Stephen Jaques and Hong Kong’s King & Wood in 2012.

Having recently had his term as the firm’s global managing partner extended by five years to 2020, Stuart Fuller timed the announcement with a new global strategy designed to push the firm towards full financial integration. Fuller said the firm, currently operating as a Swiss verein with separate profit centres, has ‘set a vision to be in the global elite for the next century’.

Three core strands of this strategy are growth of the firm’s corporate, energy infrastructure and US law capability. Fuller noted that launching a full service offering in the US, possibly through a merger, ‘has been the plan since 2013’ and added the firm is looking at the market with ‘intense scrutiny’.

Fuller said growth of KWM’s capital markets practice was a highlight of 2015 following a roll out of US law capability across the network and he hoped to build on that with further hires. He said that the firm’s instruction last year by South Korea and Canadian province British Columbia on two panda bonds, Renminbi bonds issued by non-Chinese entities, is an example of ‘work that previously would have gone to someone like Linklaters’.

The EMEA business has just begun a practice restructuring, with London the first to roll out a series of merged divisions with the aim of reducing the amount of management layers. The London office, which currently runs 17 practices and profit and loss accounts, will consolidate into three areas. These are corporate, funds and finance; dispute resolution and regulation; and real estate on its own.

Corporate partner Tim Bednall will lead the corporate, funds and finance division, which will also include employment, commerce and technology, restructuring & insolvency, employment and incentives and tax.

Competition specialist, Tom Usher, will lead the dispute resolution and regulation division, which will encompass litigation, arbitration, competition, financial regulation and intellectual property.

Real estate, one of the big winners from the restructuring, will be headed up by William Naunton, who KWM hired from Eversheds at the end of 2014, after convincing him to ditch his plans to launch his own boutique. Naunton recently led the opening of KWM’s Cambridge office to offer low-cost support the real estate practice in the City. The real estate division will encompass construction, real estate, planning & environment and property litigation.

The firm’s EMEA senior partner Stephen Kon told Legal Business that the practice restructuring ‘will bring more client focus as it creates a more flexible workforce that can draw out the firm’s synergies’. The restructuring means that the search for Boss’s replacement has been delayed, with Kon explaining that its wants to allow time for the new management trio ‘to bed down’.

The move follows a slimming down of KWM’s China practice to five divisions last year, and Europe is earmarked for similar re-arrangement. Ramping up its integration efforts, it has also created a raft of new global roles, with the firm seeking to recruit a global chief operating officer and global head of business development. Fuller says the firm’s first global COO will be based in London to ‘distribute the global roles around the firm’.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

KWM under scrutiny for administrative error in £40m real estate deal for Better Capital

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King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) has come under scrutiny for an ’embarrassing’ error made on a £40m real estate finance deal carried out on behalf of private equity group, Better Capital, last March.

Owned by venture capitalist veteran Jon Moulton, Better Capital instructed KWM last year on its £40m acquisition of Cav Aerospace. KWM’s team on the deal was led by former corporate co-head Richard Lever with real estate finance partner Ian Borman. Lever has since left for Goodwin Procter.

Better Capital, which also owns collapsed parcel delivery firm City Link, instructed Macfarlanes last month to advise on another round of investments to support the turnaround of the Cav Aerospace business.

Problems were then discovered in the funding structure from KWM’s original handling of the deal as the security was not registered at Companies House within 21 days, leaving the debt unsecured.

After securing the debt, KWM has in recent weeks filed an application at the Companies Court to declare an administrative error was made on the deal – which will be a public record – and proceedings are now ongoing. If approved by a judge, the firm will not be vulnerable to a professional negligence claim.

A City partner said: ‘It’s an administrative error that can happen to any firm – you leave something to a junior, they get it wrong and mistakes happen. But it’s desperately embarrassing.’

KWM has previously advised Better Capital on financings for home improvement group Everest, a deal valued at £25m. Better Capital recently reported that it was forced into writedowns on several of its companies in the six months to 30 September 2015 after poor trading. Cav Aerospace’s value was cut by £28m, while Everest’s value fell by £16m.

KWM and Macfarlanes both declined to comment. Better Capital did not respond to requests for comment.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk