Legal Business

Old normal update – Linklaters outpaces Slaughters to hike starting associate pay by £2,500

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A further reminder comes this week that despite much talk of the pressure on the legal market (see Comment: Things I would have said about the future of law if I hadn’t forgotten my notes), leading City players continue to be highly profitable with Linklaters announcing on Tuesday (7 May) that it is raising its salary bands for associates.

The move sees Linklaters increase newly-qualified pay from £61,500 to £64,000. Year one post-qualification experience (PQE) associates see a more modest £500 rise to £69,500. Years two and three PQE respectively earn £78,250 and £89,000, a rise of £2,250 and £1,000. Trainees see a £500 rise, increasing in seat one to £39,500.

The rises put Linklaters just ahead of magic circle rival Slaughter and May, which last week announced modest increases to its underlying pay bands.

The review is separate to the annual increases in pay associates gain as they move up the qualification ‘ladder’. Linklaters also operates a bonus scheme for ‘exceptional’ performance. The rises at Linklaters and Slaughters underline expectations that most City firms will agree modest increases in associate pay in 2013 after three years in which market rates for associates have largely been frozen.

Salaries for City associates have fallen around 15% in real terms since 2009, when many firms effectively dropped the salary for newly-qualified lawyers from around £66,000 to £60,000 in response to the banking crisis.

While some voices have argued that junior associates are over-paid given the prolonged slump in Western economies, pressure remains on leading City firms given the higher compensation on offer at the UK arms of many US rivals.

One solution to this tension firms have hit upon is bringing in a stronger element of discretionary promotion to associate progression and pay, a shift from the traditional ‘associate lockstep’ model in which lawyers are paid strictly on years of post-qualification experience.

While that trend is set to continue, and City firms continue to modestly downsize their UK intakes in response to the sullen domestic economy, pay for those lucky enough to gain a training contract is likely to be maintained or modestly increase in the years ahead.

alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Comment: Slaughters bumps up lawyer pay but associate lockstep’s days are numbered

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Slaughter and May today (30 April) became the first major City law firm to announce a review of its associate pay bands – triggering minor rises in the underlying rates its lawyers earn from trainee level to three years post-qualification.

Newly-qualified see salaries rise from £61,500 to £63,000; one year PQE pay rises £500 to £69,500; two year PQE from £76,500 to £78,000; three year PQE earn an extra £1,500 at £87,500. Trainee salaries are up by £1,000, increasing to £39,000 in year one and £44,000 in year two. The rises kick in from 1 May.

This is, of course, in addition to the sizeable increases as associates pass through the ranks. Commenting on the move, Slaughters’ incoming executive partner Richard Clark said: ‘Our view remains that the economic climate is still uncertain but we are cautiously optimistic for the rest of 2013.’

While these are substantial sums, they remain well below the peak offered in 2008, when magic circle firms were paying around £66,000 for newly-qualified solicitors. That figure has been substantially eroded by inflation and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s controversial (but justified) decision in 2009 to halt its associate lockstep progression, which was widely followed.

The latter move effectively reset UK associate compensation downwards by around 10%, going a long way towards making boom-era cost-bases adjust to the post-Lehman environment.

It remains likely that other peers will follow Slaughters with comparable modest rises this year but the underlying picture hasn’t changed. City firms are using inflation and the straightjacket of associate lockstep to control salaries while demand remains subdued. Indeed, many observers believe associate pay is still too high given the gloomy market.

However, such assertions probably understate the substantial shift since 2009 in that associate pay has rapidly moved from the entirely dominant lockstep to a more flexible, merit-driven version. Though the jargon differs between firms, the basic idea is the same: seniority-driven pay to three year PQE, soon after which kicks in some form of discretionary promotion or assessment that defines salaries and career tracks. While the mid-tier pioneered it, Freshfields’ recent introduction of a four-stage ‘milestone’ framework was hugely significant. Even the famously conservative Slaughters is currently bringing in some grading beyond the four year PQE point.

This is a considerable and rapid shift by the standards of City law. Despite the oft-repeated claim that most partnerships have ditched lockstep, the majority of top 50 UK firms deploy only moderate variations on the seniority-based equity ladder. And that is after a 20-year evolution of dishing out the profits. In comparison, associate pay is being redrawn far more quickly.

Largely, that’s a good thing. Associate lockstep is slow-moving, inflexible, prone to transmitting excessive wage inflation and tends to deliver pay rises at the wrong point in the economic cycle.

This decisive break with the old model is very different to the US. Major US advisers have kept compensation heavily structured post-qualification despite the downturn, so far with problematic results. As yet there is no sign of that consensus breaking down in the world’s largest legal market, despite increasingly bad-tempered – and rather ill-directed – grumbling from clients about ‘paying for training’.

You don’t have to be a legal futurologist to believe that this relative flexibility will stand UK firms in good stead in the years ahead as they strive to reinvent and renew their businesses for a more disruptive and demanding age. Still, with US rivals making ground in the City, and continuing to offer a lot more for junior talent, phasing out lockstep remains a tricky balance to strike. Just not tricky enough to stop it happening. That means comp’ for junior lawyers will be pushed down and a select band of mid-level associates in hot practices areas will be earning more in the years to come.

alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Banks could face backlash on legal panel reviews

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With the latest round of bank panel reviews in full swing, early indications show signs of a backlash from law firms as banks place increasing demands on panel candidates at the same time as driving down costs.

In October, The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) announced the results of its long-running panel review. By reducing its number of sub-panels from 13 to five, it has significantly lowered the number of law firms on the panel from around 100 previously to between 55 and 60 now. Meanwhile, former panel firms Slaughter and May, Olswang and Mayer Brown didn’t pitch to join the panel this time around.

Legal Business

Australia tempts yet another major international player

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Linklaters has joined the ranks of its Magic Circle peers by moving into the Australian market via an alliance with Allens Arthur Robinson (AAR).

The alliance, which went through on 1 May, was planned over a year ago, according to a source close to the firm. AAR, which had operated an exclusive relationship with Slaughter and May, is viewed by many as one of the best in the region.

Legal Business

Magic Circle reigns but cracks are there

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In the same way the sports media has speculated long and hard these past couple of years on the ‘demise’ of Tiger Woods, much has also been said about the Magic Circle also losing its aura of invincibility since the global financial crisis.

The Magic Circle’s relentless pursuit of domination has inspired awe over the last two decades but at the same time has drawn brickbats when things have gone awry. It is all too easy to build something up only to knock it down.

Legal Business

Kop Kings – Liverpool FC

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From the fields of Anfield Road to the offices on Bunhill Row, the takeover of Liverpool Football Club was played out in the full glare of the courts and the press. Legal Business talks to the key legal players

When John William Henry II descended the curving flight of stairs into the cool, inconspicuous client reception at Slaughter and May’s offices on Bunhill Row on the afternoon of 15 October 2010, he was met by an unusual sight. As the threshold of a law firm that has long prided itself on its understated manner, it’s usually exceptionally quiet. But that afternoon there was little evidence of calm: pandemonium had taken hold.

Legal Business

Piece of the action

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The legal sector has been warily assessing the possibility of outsourcing some services for several years. But with Slaughters now investigating the viability of LPOs, suddenly everyone is taking serious notice

As recently as a year ago, the prospect of Slaughter and May outsourcing legal services overseas seemed as likely as a US president winning the Nobel Peace Prize. Yet, as a new decade dawns, President Obama has his medal and legal process outsourcing (LPO), and notably offshoring, is being weighed up by leading law firms and corporate counsel alike.