Legal Business

Linklaters doubles up on IPOs as UK capital markets move swiftly into gear for 2016

legal-business-default

Linklaters has got the year off to a flying start for equity capital markets work, leading on the announced initial public offerings (IPOs) of CMC Markets and Countryside Properties, while also advising the underwriters as Clydesdale Bank plans to float.

The Magic Circle firm is providing English and US legal advice to online spread-betting company CMC Markets on its planned flotation on the London Stock Exchange in what will be the year’s first IPO.

Legal Business

White & Case to hire Linklaters big-biller Kelly to lead Asia push

legal-business-default

White & Case is set to hire Linklaters‘ big-billing Hong Kong partner Christopher Kelly as its Asia head of corporate as develops its practice in the region.

The corporate partner has agreed to join White & Case as it makes an M&A push in the area. 

Kelly is one of Hong Kong’s most respected corporate lawyers and is ranked as a leading individual in Hong Kong by the Legal 500 for private equity work. He resigned from Linklaters in January.

He will be reunited at White & Case with former Linklaters colleague Peggy Wang, who left this time last year to become head of private equity in Asia. Kelly struck up a successful working relationship with Wang during their time at the Magic Circle firm’s Hong Kong office, controlling a number of key corporate relationships, including private equity giant Carlyle and commodity trader Noble Group.

The duo led on the Singapore-listed trader’s $1.5bn sale of a 51% stake in its agricultural unit to Chinese state-backed grain trader Cofco in 2014. Kelly had also recently acted for AIG on the $20.5bn spin off of is Asian insurance aim AIA group and on the $494m Hong Kong IPO of Macau’s largest casino operator SJM Holdings.

Kelly and Wang become part of a growing band of Linklaters alumni to move to White & Case following the arrival of City private equity duo Ian Bagshaw and Richard Youle from the Magic Circle firm in 2013.

Youle and Bagshaw have added over 60 lawyers to White & Case’s London private equity team since their arrival, recently hiring Clifford Chance private equity infrastructure partner Caroline Sherrell and Debevoise & Plimpton’s Kenneth Barry. Longstanding clients HgCapital, Mid Europa Partners, Global Infrastructure Partners, Triton Partners, Novator and Arle all followed Youle and Bagshaw with instructions for White & Case.

Kelly is one of several senior Linklaters partners based in Asia to depart recently, with the firm’s capital markets practice hit hard. Well regarded Dean Lockhart, who has spent the last 15 years as a partner in Singapore and Hong Kong, and Jeremy Webb have both retired at a young age from the firm this month. Fellow capital markets partners Jon Gray and David Ludwick have also departed in the past 12 months, leaving for White Shoe firm Davis Polk and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer respectively.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

Latham takes another private equity partner from the Magic Circle as Linklaters’ Traugott departs

legal-business-default

US firm Latham & Watkins has hired Linklaters‘ German head of private equity Rainer Traugott as it continues its aggressive push into the European private equity market.

Traugott leaves Linklaters after 14 years at the firm and his exit comes as another blow to the firm’s private equity practice, following the departure of Ian Bagshaw and Richard Youle in London to White & Case in 2013, the loss of Peggy Wang in Hong Kong to the same firm last year, and the recent exit of Roger Johnson to Kirkland & Ellis in the City. Linklaters Hong Kong-based corporate partner Christopher Kelly, who handled work for the Carlyle Group, resigned earlier this month.

Traugott, who made partner in 2003, turned private equity house Triton into one of the firm’s biggest clients in Germany. He has also helped to build up the firm’s relationship with engineering conglomerate Siemens, primarily through lighting company Osram, a subsidiary which he advised when it spun-off in 2013.

His arrival at Latham’s Munich office comes a year after the firm hired Clifford Chance’s global co-head of private equity, Oliver Felsenstein, and partner Burc Hesse in Frankfurt.

Latham’s expansion in Germany followed a steady string of recruits in the City which began with the hire of David Walker three years ago from Clifford Chance. Felsenstein was Walker’s successor as global head of private equity at Clifford Chance. The veteran deal doer, who has close relationships with the Carlyle Group and Hellman & Friedman, subsequently hired private equity partners Tom Evans and Kem Ihenacho from Clifford Chance in London.

The firm’s rapid global expansion over the past five years, largely built on the back of its finance and private equity practices, saw it surpass Baker & McKenzie as the largest law firm in the world last year by revenue, with turnover of $2.61bn.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Subscribers can read more about the private equity market in: ‘ABC – the brutally simple world of a private equity lawyer.’

Legal Business

Linklaters and HSF land roles as Aussie pension fund ups stake in £5bn King’s Cross redevelopment

legal-business-default

As pension, sovereign and private equity funds rush to invest in prime London real estate, Linklaters has picked up a major client as Australia’s largest pension fund purchased a 42% stake in the £5bn redevelopment of King’s Cross.

AustralianSuper, which Linklaters corporate partner Jessamy Gallagher won as a client early last year, selected the Magic Circle firm to advise on its £435m purchase of a 42% stake in the King’s Cross project (pictured). The development will transform a 67 acre site in central London into 2,000 homes, a hotel and a retail complex estimated to be worth £5bn on completion. It is one of the biggest city centre regeneration projects in Europe, with 10 new parks and squares, 20 new streets and three new bridges across Regent’s Canal.

Gallagher, alongside real estate partner Martin Elliott, advised AustralianSuper as it purchased the UK government’s 36.5% stake and German logistics group DHL’s 6% stake. The UK government has received £371m from the sale, with DHL’s stake estimated to be worth around £60m. The deal means AustralianSuper now has the majority stake in the project, with a 67% interest, following an initial acquisition in April 2015, which Linklaters also advised on.

With Australian pension funds replicating the UK real estate push carried out by their Canadian peers, Gallagher has been aggressive in the Australian market, resulting in Linklaters winning a spot on AustralianSuper’s inaugural European legal panel last year.

One of the other firms to win a place, Herbert Smith Freehills, acted on the other side of this deal for the UK government. Real estate partner Julian Pollock led the HSF team on the sale, with the firm having advised government subsidiary London and Continental Railways on King’s Cross Central for more than two decades.

Pollock said: ‘Whilst it feels like the end of an era, the firm is enormously proud of its involvement in a world class regeneration project such as King’s Cross Central, having seen and helped it evolve from a largely derelict site to a vibrant new neighbourhood.’

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Linklaters and Ashurst win roles as housebuilder Countryside Properties prepares to float

legal-business-default

Linklaters and Ashurst have landed roles advising UK property developer Countryside Properties as it prepares to list on the London Stock Exchange, in a float likely to value the housebuilder at around £1bn.

Countryside, which is owned by private-equity firm Oaktree Capital Management, is planning an initial public offering (IPO) to raise £114m.

Linklaters is advising Countryside and its main shareholder Oaktree Capital, led by corporate partner James Wootton, alongside corporate partner John Lane and US capital markets partner Patrick Sheil. This is the second IPO the Magic Circle firm has advised on this month, having represented online spread-betting company CMC Markets on its plans to float in what will be the first IPO of 2016.

Ashurst is advising the underwriting banks JP Morgan, Barclays, Numis and Peel Hunt, with a team led by ECM head Nicholas Holmes, and partner Jennifer Schneck advising on the US securities side.

Countryside aims to use around £64m made from the IPO to reduce its debts by repaying amounts drawn on its revolving credit facilities. The remaining £50m raised will be used to speed up development in the group’s other sites.

The listing is expected in February and follows a strong year for the nation’s housebuilders that have benefited from a steady rise in property prices and increasing demand.

After completion of the offer the free float is expected to be a minimum of 25% of the issued share capital of the company and that the group will be eligible for inclusion in the FTSE UK indices.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

A&O and Linklaters win mandates as spread-betting company CMC Markets plans float

legal-business-default

Allen & Overy (A&O) and Linklaters have landed roles advising online spread-betting company CMC Markets as it plans to float on the London Stock Exchange, in what will be the first initial public offering (IPO) of 2016.

The announcement follows weeks of speculation and the company, which has been valued at up to £1bn, is expected to raise gross primary proceeds of approximately £17m to meet admission and staff incentive plan costs.

The company was founded in 1989 by former Conservative Party co-treasurer Peter Cruddas, who will remain the majority shareholder, with Goldman Sachs holding a 10% stake after paying an estimated £100m in 2007.

Linklaters is providing English and US legal advisers to CMC and Cruddas, with corporate partner Iain Wagstaff on the UK side and capital markets partner Patrick Sheil acting on US aspects of the float.

A&O is advising underwriters Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Royal Bank of Canada, led by corporate partner David Broadley and US securities partner Adam Wells, with advice on regulatory matters being provided by partner Damian Carolan.

The group expects to launch the offering in early February.

CMC had previously considered an IPO in 2007 before the global financial crisis.

The float comes after A&O advised on a series of UK IPO’s including Worldpay’s £2.48bn listing last year.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Revolving doors: A&O and Linklaters make key lateral hires as Clydes picks up Aussie team

legal-business-default

Allen & Overy (A&O) has made a key hire for its US securities practice with David Flechner joining the firm’s New York office. Flechner joins from Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton where he worked for a decade.

Flechner represents issuers and underwriters in SEC-registered and private offerings of debt and equity securities, predominantly focusing on Latin America. A&O said the appointment was in line with the firm’s strategy to grow its US securities practice, which currently has 24 partners.

Meanwhile magic circle rival Linklaters has hired Loyens & Loeff partner Guido Portier who joins as a civil law notary partner in the firm’s Amsterdam office. Portier was at Loyens & Loeff for ten years and had headed the firm’s corporate practice in its New York office. Linklaters said the hire was about strengthening the firm’s capability in the Dutch market.

In London, Simmons & Simmons has expanded with the appointment of Will Greig as a partner. The firm, which last week reported a modest 1% half year revenue rise, said Greig’s appointment is part of continued development and investment in its property finance practice. Greig joins from Pinsent Masons and specialises in real estate finance transactions with expertise in domestic and international cross border real estate financing. Simmons banking group head Alyson Lockett said: ‘Working closely with partners Mark Waghorn and Simon Kildahl, his experience will provide additional capability to our focus across the areas of real estate finance, insurance and construction.’

Down under, Clyde & Co has picked up five partners in Sydney who join with the firm with another 25 lawyers, all from Lee & Lyons. David Lee and Lucinda Lyons, who founded Lee & Lyons in 2002, join with partners David Amentas, Michelle Dunne and Christopher Smith in February next year. Clyde & Co senior partner James Burns said: ‘Australia is an increasingly important market for our clients and one in which we are seeing significant and rapid growth. We are committed to providing our clients with the leading insurance capability in Australia and the Asia Pacific region and this expansion is in line with that ambition. ‘

Meanwhile Fladgate has appointed a corporate team of two partners and an associate from Fasken Martineau. The West-end firm said the appointment of partners Nigel Gordon and Chris Chrysanthou and associate Zehra Kofturcu will add to the firm’s extensive AIM practice. Gordon was the heads of Fasken’s corporate practice group in London and co-head of the firm’s mining practice, while Chrysanthou also focuses on capital markets and M&A in the life sciences sector. Fladgate chairman Charles Wander said: ‘We expect the combined team to be recognised as one of the leading AIM practices in the UK. In addition, the significant experience that Nigel has gained through advising on the first central London-focused residential REIT to be admitted to AIM will also enhance our real estate and funds capability.’

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Comment: After the Harvard Kool-Aid and lost years can Moore galvanise Linklaters?

legal-business-default

Allen & Overy‘s veteran leader David Morley remarked sometimes that in running a law firm, success or failure is less about the decisions you make and more the ability to communicate what you are doing and why. Though directed at his own firm, the observation speaks to much of what ailed Linklaters over the last four years as a chasm opened between its leadership and partnership.

In managing partner Simon Davies and senior partner Robert Elliott, Linklaters had intelligent and energetic leaders intent on taking tough decisions to reposition the firm after the banking crisis. What was forgotten during a series of restructurings was that the partnership needed to be brought along to achieve their purpose. A decision can be absolutely valid but still entirely wrong if you can’t get the majority of your partnership to believe in it, not just grudgingly rubberstamp it.

The hope at Silk Street, with popular head of banking Gideon Moore just confirmed as the new managing partner, is that the City giant can finally move on after that divisive 2011/12 restructuring. While the post-Lehman 2009 cull had been viewed as unpleasant but necessary, the latter shake-up was another matter entirely, cutting deep into the corporate practice. Even some hard-nosed Linklaters veterans looked on aghast.

For years Linklaters had made a virtue of its ruthless, driven management style. At a certain point, however, the need for constant upheaval spoke less to ambition and more of an issue with partnership quality or basic ability to motivate the troops. The mystique was fading.

That Davies failed to initially secure a second term in early 2012 in a contest against no candidates was bad enough. Matters were aggravated when some felt the spirit of the firm’s deed had been stretched in pushing through his ratification at a subsequent partnership conference, further weakening support for Elliott.

The episode ushered in a period in which Linklaters’ c-suite was hamstrung for the rest of its term on any substantive decision. With Linklaters wrestling with an underweight contentious practice, a corporate team striving to reposition itself outside its core plc clients and the firm with the weakest US practice of London’s big four, this deadlock was ill-timed.

Not that it had looked as if it would pan out this way when Davies was elected as managing partner in 2007. Davies was earnest, bright and played with the straightest of bats. On paper it should have worked. As it was, the lack of soft skills mixed with technocratic jargon were never overcome – his enduring image was summed up by one former partner who says the management ‘were constantly driving us into more of a corporate structure because of the Kool-Aid they were drinking from Harvard’s fountain’.

The contrast between Davies and Moore is striking. Moore comes in with huge visibility in London, having been one of the architects of Linklaters’ celebrated assault on the banking duopoly of A&O and Clifford Chance. Anything but a technocrat, Moore has a solid operational track record and a superb run as a practitioner and business winner. That he is hard-working, understated and plain-speaking suits the current mood. It will be noticed that at 52, the leveraged finance partner has a good few years on his predecessor, even after two terms. Says one colleague: ‘Simon is a clever academic with an academic style of management. Gideon is a practice builder who’s come to management many years later than Simon.’ Moore also had conspicuous distance from the previous leadership and the 2011 restructuring, unlike his closest rival for the managing partner role, Michael Kent.

Given the thankless task of directly following a speech by William Hague on 17 November at Linklaters’ partners conference, Moore was long on thanks and team spirit and short on the agenda ahead, promising a period of listening.

Many expect a working party to review its lockstep as City rivals increasingly flex their models, but other than that, the focus is expected to be on pragmatic improvements and eating rivals’ lunches. One Moore supporter likens the approach to cycling coach Dave Brailsford: ‘He wants to do 100 things 1% better.’

While Moore looks to be what Linklaters needs right now, the question remains whether pragmatism will deliver enough vision to reinvigorate a firm used to management making cuts rather than investment. Moore put forward one of the more conservative agendas in the leadership contest and some believe more radical measures are needed, particularly to reboot its unloved US practice.

The focus will also be on who Moore will be working with next year, though Charlie Jacobs, for years positioned as the public face of Links’ M&A machine, looks the racing certainty. Though Linklaters has produced finer deal technicians, Jacobs is one of its strongest all-rounders with the entrepreneurial chops the firm generally lacks in its general M&A team. He would be expected to restore backbone to the senior partner role after years of dominant managing partners.

Providing the pair – certainly different personalities – can gel and don’t overcompensate in throwing out the strategic babies with the managerial bathwater left by the previous leadership, then the prospects look good.

Effective leadership (meaning with a mandate) can’t come a moment too soon. Linklaters was probably the most potent member of the Magic Circle in the mid-2000s but you’d struggle to find a neutral observer with the same view today. Linklaters remains a very fine firm filled with very fine lawyers but it won’t start seriously worrying its peers in New York and London until its partnership and leadership learn to talk something approximating the same language.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk, alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Rising star Rodham returns to Linklaters to boost private equity team

legal-business-default

Linklaters has made a rare lateral hire to bring Shearman & Sterling private equity partner Ben Rodham back to the firm just three years after leaving the Magic Circle firm.

Rodham (pictured), who left Linklaters as a managing associate at the end of 2012 to make partner at Addleshaw Goddard, has built a strong reputation during his time away from the firm. Highly regarded at Linklaters, Rodham is seen as being part of a golden generation of home-grown private equity lawyers, reuniting with young partners Stuart Boyd and co-head of private equity Alex Woodward as the firm looks to grow its practice.

Rodham joined Shearman just 15 months ago, helping the firm to become one of private equity house Bridgepoint’s go-to advisors in the City. Rodham also counts the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and Vitruvian Partners as clients.

On arrival at Shearman, the firm’s co-head of private equity Mark Soundy, said: ‘Ben is clearly one of the brightest rising stars in the UK private equity space’.

Rodham’s return to Linklaters reinforces a private equity team dented by the exit of City corporate partner Roger Johnson to Kirkand & Ellis. Nonetheless, Linklaters has pulled off some significant mandates for key PE clients, including advising Apollo on the €2.95bn acquisition of glassmaker Verallia from Saint-Gobain and South African investment company Brait on the £1.9bn acquisition of clothing retailer New Look from Apax and Permira and its £1.3bn acquisition of gym chain Virgin Active from CVC.

Woodward said: ‘We are really pleased to welcome Ben back to the firm. He has worked on a number of high-profile and complex transactions in recent years and his arrival will help the continued growth of our private equity practice and enable us to meet the strong demand for our services from key financial sponsor clients.’

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

For more analysis, read ABC – the brutally simple world of a private equity lawyer (£)

Legal Business

After Harvard Kool-Aid and lost years can Moore galvanise Linklaters?

legal-business-default

Allen & Overy (A&O)’s veteran leader David Morley remarked sometimes that in running a law firm, success or failure is less about the decisions you make and more the ability to communicate what you are doing and why. Though directed at his own firm, the observation speaks to much of what ailed Linklaters over the last four years as a chasm opened between its leadership and partnership.

In managing partner Simon Davies and senior partner Robert Elliott, Linklaters had intelligent and energetic leaders intent on taking tough decisions to reposition the firm after the banking crisis. What was forgotten during a series of restructurings was that the partnership needed to be brought along to achieve their purpose. A decision can be absolutely valid but still entirely wrong if you can’t get the majority of your partnership to believe in it, not just grudgingly rubberstamp it.