Legal Business

Slaughter and May wipes £600m from cartel claim against British Airways

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Three months after forcing High Court judge Mr Justice Peter Smith to recuse himself from deciding on a £1bn claim against British Airways (BA) over a rant about his luggage, Slaughter and May has had Smith J’s refusal to strike-out about £600m from the claim overruled.

The Court of Appeal has ruled Smith J’s decision to adjourn a strike-out application from BA, on the grounds that its alleged cartel activities had not intended to injure flower importer Emerald Supplies and 564 other shippers, caused ‘delay’ and should be struck out.

Smith J, who recused himself from the case after becoming embroiled in a dispute with the airline after his luggage went missing on a BA flight, had originally suggested that the question of BA’s intent to damage users of its air freight services be heard in trial.

BA is the lead defendant in the case against 23 airlines, including Air Canada, Air France-KLM, Cathay Pacific Airways and Singapore Airlines which stems from a finding by the European Commission in 2010 that BA had colluded with 11 other air carriers to inflate air freight prices by fixing fuel and security surcharges. BA was fined €104m for its involvement in the cartel.

The Court of Appeal disagreed with Smith J’s decision to adjourn the strike-out application against the economic tort claims and held that BA did not have the necessary intention the damage the parties as it did not know where the loss would fall, unknowing if the shippers would pass on the costs.

As a result, 60% of the claim has been struck-out, reducing the size of the claim from £1bn to £400m.

The Court of Appeal ruled: ‘It seems to us that if these economic tort claims could be advanced, it would have two results, both of which seem to us to be undesirable.  First, it would extend the effect of competition law and upset the balance which the draftsman had thought appropriate when framing the rules for unfair competition. Second, it would in reality dilute the concept of intention and bring it unacceptably and perilously close to a concept of foreseeability.’

The decision is a milestone in the evolution of competition damages litigation and the size of the claims that can be made against corporates in the English courts on the back of decisions by the European Commission.

The Slaughter and May team acting for BA was led by litigation partners Richard Swallow and Jonathan Clark. The pair instructed Jon Turner QC of Monckton Chambers and Conall Patton and Gideon Cohen of One Essex Court as counsel.

Competition law boutique Hausfeld & Co acted for the claimants and instructed Iain Milligan QC of 20 Essex Street and Paul Harris QC of Monckton Chambers as its counsel.

In related proceedings in the US last year, BA was one of 25 airlines that agreed to a $900m settlement with shippers claiming damages from cartel behaviour. BA’s share of the settlement was $89.5m.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Winning work: Freshfields takes Slaughters’ place as government cuts its stake in Lloyds

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has stolen a march on rival Slaughter and May after winning the role representing the UK government in its latest disposal of holdings in Lloyds Banking Group.

UK Financial Investments (UKFI), which oversees the HM Treasury’s stake in Lloyds, carried out the sale with a Freshfields team led by London corporate partners Mark Austin and Julian Makin advising.

The work is a significant win for Freshfields as UKFI previously instructed Slaughters’ corporate team, led by partner Nilufer von Bismarck, when the government first sold a 6% share in the bank three years ago. This came after the government initially held around a 45% stake in Lloyds after it was bailed out with £20bn of funds following the 2008 financial crisis. Von Bismarck also acted for the government when Lloyds and The Royal Bank of Scotland took part in its asset protection scheme in 2009 which saw Lloyds raise £21bn in capital.

The sale, which brought state ownership at the bank down to less than 13%, comes after the government launched a trading plan at the end of last year and takes the total recovered to almost £14bn. 

In April this year, Lloyds group general counsel Andrew Whittaker stood down from his role after two years and was succeeded by deputy GC Kate Cheetham. More recently however, Linklaters’ managing partner Simon Davies confirmed he will retire from the Magic Circle firm at the end of 2015, a year ahead of the end of his current term, to join Lloyds Banking Group as its chief people, legal and strategy officer, and also take a place on the bank’s executive committee.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

‘Why £70k? That’s where we think we need to be’: Travers Smith boosts NQ salaries by 9% to match Slaughters

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Having enjoyed another respectable financial performance for the 2014/15 year, Travers Smith has boosted its newly qualified (NQ) associate salaries by £6,000 to £70,000 from £64,000, constituting a 9% rise and putting its rates on a par with Slaughter and May and Hogan Lovells.

Speaking to Legal Business on the 9% pay boost, managing partner David Patient (pictured) said: ‘Why £70k? That’s where we think we need to be in this market – we have terrifically talented people we want to reward properly – it’s very competitive out there. It’s specific to the type of work we do, corporate and disputes, and giving an incentive to retain top talent. To do high quality work you need high quality people. We have that. To have them you need to pay high quality salaries. Full stop.’

Patient added that the wave of US firms offering mid-Atlantic salaries is not of major concern to the firm: ‘I don’t lose any sleep [over losing associates to US firms] but we’re in a market at the moment that’s very competitive. If you look at websites that publicise US law firm salaries they are considerably higher than those at the leading UK firms. Inevitably that may turn people’s heads. You have the so-called “diamonds and deposits era” in your life where you want more money. But the UK firms aren’t going to compete on salaries with US firms – I question how sustainable that is for lots of them. If a US firm is competing for work in London the pressure on fees will mean there will end up potentially being downward pressure on salaries. They might be having their day but how sustainable is that?’

This year the City outfit, which offers around 25 training contracts annually, posted strong results for the past financial year, registering a 9% rise in revenue to break the £100m boundary. This was buoyed by an active deal market in the City, particularly within the private equity space where high returns on post-financial crisis investments sparked a series of sell-offs.

The firm capitalised on its strong deal reputation to pull in £8.8m extra in turnover to reach revenues of £106m while profit per equity partner rose 6% to £935,000 as the average pay for equity partners rose by £55,000 from last year.

This summer also saw Allen & Overy announce it was gifting associates with a £20,000 increase in their base salaries as the firm incorporates bonuses into the annual pay packet.

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Dealwatch: Slaughters and Freshfields lead as Zurich bids £5.6bn for UK’s RSA

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Magic Circle duo Slaughter and May and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer have won roles as Switzerland’s Zurich Insurance Group bids to buyout its FTSE-100 listed rival RSA for £5.6bn.

Slaughter and May is advising RSA Insurance Group on the all-cash offer, led by corporate and commercial partners Andy Ryde and Robert Innes. The team also included competition partner Jordan Ellison, Jan Putnis covering financial regulation and pensions and employment specialist Jonathan Fenn.

Freshfields is acting for Switzerland’s largest insurer Zurich with corporate partners Sundeep Kapila and George Swan leading.

The RSA board received Zurich’s all-cash proposal with shareholders receiving 550p per RSA share and allowed to retain a 3.5p interim dividend announced by the insurer earlier this month.

As of this morning [25 August] the RSA board said would recommend the possible offer to RSA shareholders, as long as there is a ‘satisfactory resolution’ to other terms. The offer comes after Zurich announced it was assessing a potential offer for RSA last month [July] following press reports.

RSA announced it had been awarded an alternative business structure licence by the Solicitors Regulation Authority in March this year, in a joint venture with Parabis Law.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Dealwatch: Fieldfisher wins role opposite Slaughter and May on private equity takeover of Currencies Direct

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Tech-focused firm Fieldfisher bagged an advisory role opposite a five-partner team from Slaughter and May as private equity duo Palamon Capital Partners and Corsair Capital purchased online foreign exchange provider Currencies Direct for £200m.

Founded in 1996 by Asian businessman Mayank Patel, Currencies Direct exchanges currency for businesses and individuals buying property overseas. The business serves more than 150,000 retail clients and has grown into continental Europe, Australia, South Africa and the US over the past decade. The acquisition is structured so that Currencies Direct management increase their ownership of the company, with Patel maintaining a share and becoming honorary president of the firm.

The London-based company enlisted Fieldfisher to advise on its sale to the private equity houses. Fieldfisher’s team was led by corporate partner David Wilkinson, with support from tax partners Andrew Prowse and Derek Hill, pensions partner Mike Calvert and corporate partner Nicholas Thompsell.

A large deal for Fieldfisher, a revived M&A scene for mid-market deals has helped to propel the firm past the £100m barrier, with revenue rising 19% in the past two years to push turnover to £113m in 2014.

Meanwhile, Slaughters‘ rising star Susannah Macknay led in advising Palamon Capital Partners and Corsair on the purchase of the FX company. Macknay, who last year was instructed on mining giant BHP Billiton’s huge demerger that saw its less profitable aluminium, silver, coal, manganese and nickel businesses spun off into a new company estimated to be worth around $14bn, led a five-partner team at the Magic Circle firm. She was supported by tax specialist Mike Lane, pensions partner Jonathan Fenn, financial regulation lawyer Jan Putnis and finance partner Caroline Phillips.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Cleary, Cahill, Slaughters and A&O share a Coke on bottler’s €28bn three-way merger

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A raft of Global 100 firms, including Allen & Overy (A&O) and Slaughter and May, have won work as three of Europe’s bottlers combine to form the world’s largest independent Coca-Cola bottler.

The three-way merger will see bottling operations Coca-Cola Enterprises (CCE), Coca-Cola Iberian Partners and Coca-Cola Erfrischungsgetränke (CCEAG) merge into a new European bottler, serving over 300m consumers across 13 countries and with net revenues of $12.6bn. The new business has been estimated to have a value around €28bn.

A&O acted for Spanish-company Coca-Cola Iberian Partners with a large cross-border team from London, New York, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Paris, Luxembourg and Brussels.

The Magic Circle firm’s team was led by M&A partners Ed Barnett in London and Eric Shube in New York, while Dave Lewis in New York led on US tax advice. German partners Matthias Horn and Hans-Peter Loew advised on the contribution of the German bottler CCEAG, while other partners advising on the transaction included London partners Sarah Henchoz for employment, James Roe on equity capital markets, Chris Harrison covering Tax and Alasdair Balfour antitrust. In Amsterdam Justin Steer from the equity capital market group provided support while Uria Menendez also served as legal counsel.

A large cross-border team from Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, based in New York, London and Brussels acted for The Coca-Cola Company led by partners Matt Salerno, Vic Lewkow, Simon Jay, Sam Bagot, and Raj Panasar. Partner Nick Levy advised on antitrust and counsel Kathleen Emberger advised on employee benefits matters. Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom provided tax advice with New York based partner David Rievman advising.

Cahill Gordon & Reindel represented CCE led by corporate partners Helene Banks and John Schuster, antitrust partner Elai Katz and tax partner Craig Horowitz. Slaughters represented CCE on UK matters with a team including William Underhill and Padraig Cronin, who were supported by competition partner Bertrand Louveaux,; pensions and employment partners Charles Cameron and Roland Doughty; and tax partner Steve Edge. Hengeler Mueller in Germany, Pérez-Llorca in Spain and De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek in the Netherlands also all picked up work from the deal.

CCE’s franchise relationship committee used Clay Long Esq and Baker Hostetler as legal counsel.

A&O partner Ed Barnett commented: ‘This was an extremely complex cross-border transaction involving three very established entities with strong brand equity coming together to create a new company that will deliver significant synergies and drive profitable growth.’

At closing, Coca-Cola Iberian Partners and The Coca-Cola Company will own 34% and 18% of the combined company respectively, with CCE shareowners owning 48% on a fully diluted basis. CCE shareowners will receive, for each CCE share held, one share of Coca-Cola European Partners and a one-time cash payment of $14.50. The cash payment, totaling around $3.3bn, will be funded by the new company using newly issued debt.

The merger is expected to close in the second quarter of 2016, and is subject to approval by Coca-Cola Enterprises Limited’s shareowners.

jaishree.kalia@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Kirkland picked to defend Baxalta as Slaughters and Ropes take the lead on Shire’s $34bn hostile takeover

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Shire has turned to longstanding adviser Slaughter and May in the UK while Ropes & Gray won the mandate in the US as it looks to takeover rival drug company and Kirkland & Ellis-client Baxalta in a hostile $33.9bn deal.

Slaughters‘ Martin Hattrell, who previously advised on the pharmaceutical giant’s $51bn bid for Abbvie, is working on the deal for Shire alongside a team including corporate partner Adam Eastell, tax specialist Tony Beare and competition partner Claire Jeffs.

Having turned to Davis Polk & Wardwell on the Abbvie deal, the Dublin-headquartered company opted for Ropes to work on US aspects of the deal this time around. The firm’s team was led M&A partner Christopher Comeau, whose previous work includes acting for Cubist Pharmaceuticals on several $500m+ acquisitions and its $9.5bn sale to Merck, and included securities & public companies partner Paul Kinsella and tax partners David Saltzman and Christopher Leich.

The deal is aimed at creating ‘the global leader in rare diseases’ and comes after Baxalta was spun-off from Baxter at the start of July 2015. Shire is proposing to combine the companies offering 0.1687 Shire ADRs per Baxalta share – giving the company an implied value of $33.9bn.

Meanwhile, Kirkland has been selected by the board of Baxalta, which rejected the deal earlier in July finding not in the best interests of the shareholders, to advise on the bid with a team led by corporate partners Scott Falk and Daniel Wolf, who previously acted for American General Corp on its $23bn hostile takeover by AIG in 2001. Kirkland previously advised Baxter on the spin-off of its Biosciences division which became Baxalta.

The combined firm would target having $20bn in sales by 2020 with 65% of that coming from products targeting rare diseases. The company would also look to the launch over 30 products designed to achieve over $5bn in sales.

michael.west@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Dealwatch: Slaughter and May and Ashurst win big on Ladbrokes £2.3bn merger with Gala Coral

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As consolidation continued apace in the gambling sector following the merger of 888 Holdings and Bwin.party last week, Slaughter and May and Ashurst won key roles on Ladbrokes £2.3bn tie-up with bookmakers Gala Coral.

If approved by Ladbrokes shareholders and competition authorities, the deal will create the largest UK Licensed Betting Office with additional business in Italy, Belgium, Spain and Australia. The merged company, which will own casinos, high street betting shops and online operations, is looking to have net revenues of £2.1bn with an EBITDA of £392m, though that excludes £65m in cost savings which the duo expect, and a capitalisation of £2.3bn.

Slaughters advised Ladbrokes both on the merger as well as a proposed share placing of 9.99%. The team included corporate chief Andy Ryde, M&A partner Mark Zerdin, finance partner Ian Johnson, and competition specialist Betrand Louveaux, while pension advice was given by partners Jonathan Fenn and Roland Doughty with tax being handled by Gareth Miles and IP/IT by Rob Sumroy. Slaughters’ partner Jane Edwards handled real estate matters. BonelliErede acted on Italian law aspects with corporate partner Mario Roli advising.

The deal saw both Slaughters and Ashurst field their corporate head with co-head of corporate Simon Beddow leading the team at Ashurst advising Gala Coral, alongside corporate partners Dominic Ross and Jonathan Parry. Finance advice was given by Helen Burton with tax partner Alex Cox and pensions specialist Marcus Fink also acting.

Beddow commented: ‘It is a pleasure to act for our longstanding client Gala Coral on this significant deal in the gaming sector. The various legal teams have worked together well to overcome the challenges thrown up along the way and demonstrated once again how the lawyers in the City of London help it to maintain its pre-eminence as a place for undertaking large, complex and innovative deals.’

Magic Circle duo Allen & Overy and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer acted last Friday (17 July) as the bidding battle for online gambling company Bwin.party came to an end with 888 beating GVC to acquire the FTSE 250-listed rival for £898m. Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom picked up work from one of the founding shareholders of 888 with a team led by M&A partner Michal Berkner.

michael.west@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Slaughter and May’s trainee retention slips to 89% for 2015 autumn intake

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The first Magic Circle to report its trainee intake numbers for autumn 2015, Slaughter and May has revealed it is keeping on 33 trainees out of a cohort of 37 – unusually low for the firm which regularly posts rates of over 90%.

Slaughters, which is known for its high retention rates, made 35 offers to those qualifying in September 2015 with two having decided to withdraw from the process before offers were made. A further two decided not to accept the offers made by the firm resulting in 33 lawyers now being set to join the firm this autumn and giving a trainee retention rate of 89%. The figure is in line with this spring’s intake when 88% of the 42-strong cohort accepted offers.

However, though a lower percentage than last year, the intake is flat in gross terms with 33 lawyers having been hired by the firm from a smaller intake of 34 qualifying trainees – a rate of 97%. 

Earlier this week, Taylor Wessing announced it was keeping on 87%, or 20 out of 23 trainees. Two trainees apiece join the intellectual property, private client, corporate finance, disputes, private equity and tax practices while corporate technology, real estate, finance, corporate, commercial & projects, restructuring, financial services regulatory, employment, and pensions practices all received one.

A host of US firms have also revealed their retention rates so far with many keeping on 100% of their smaller intakes including Sullivan & Cromwell, which is keeping all four of its first trainees qualifying in the City; Weil, Gotshal & Manges and Shearman & Sterling.

michael.west@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Jacobs frontrunner for next Linklaters senior partner

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Slaughters’ senior partner race also underway

‘There’s no-one else,’ mused one ex-Linklaters partner. ‘If Charlie Jacobs isn’t the next senior partner at Linklaters, it would be a bigger upset than UKIP winning the next general election. If I was Ladbrokes, I’d give better odds for Farage for PM than any of Charlie’s rivals at Linklaters.’