Legal Business

LB 100 – The second 50: Scattered in the wind

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The gulf between success and failure among the firms occupying the second half of the LB100 is as pronounced as ever. From highly profitable boutiques to ravaged regionals desperate for a merger, we chart the haves and the have-nots

Collectively making up just a tenth of the LB100 firms’ total 2012/13 revenue for 2012/13 of £19.1bn, law firms ranked between 51 to 100 in the table can be polar opposites. The gap between high and low performing firms in these two quartiles is as startling, with profit per lawyer (PPL) varying from £177,000 at ascendant litigation specialist Stewarts Law to just £15,000 at the beleaguered Manches.

Legal Business

Litigation drives growth as Stewarts Law sees PEP break the £1m barrier

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The success of litigation-focused firms is again in evidence today (3 July) as Stewarts Law announced an increase in turnover of 29.5% to £45.2m for 2012/13 and average profits per equity partner of £1.1m.

The litigation boutique has seen its turnover almost quadruple from £11.9m in 2007/08 while net profit has hit £20.5m, following a year of key lateral hires and international expansion.

Managing partner John Cahill (pictured) said: ‘The last 12 months have seen the firm further strengthened through strong financials and increasing international expansion.

‘In the coming year, we will not stand still, we will launch a new tax litigation department, which will focus on high-profile tax cases and claimants.

‘Next year we hope to beak the £50m revenue barrier, and achieve 40% net profit and to form further strategic alliances overseas outside of the US. We are currently in discussions with a number of firms.’

The London-based firm spread overseas for the first time in May last year, opening offices in New York and Delaware after hiring former Grant & Eisenhofer securities litigation duo David Straite and Ralph Sianni. However, the firm is closing those offices after signing a strategic alliance with Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein following talks which lasted 12 months. Cahill said: ‘It is a model that we thought would be better long-term as it encourages collaboration rather than competition with firms like Lieff Cabraser.’

Stewarts made further lateral hires in November last year with the appointment of Manches’ high-profile family law team led by partner Helen Ward. Ward has been involved in a number of landmark cases including securing around £50m for client Guy Ritchie in one of the largest divorce settlements in UK history, following his divorce from Madonna in 2008.

Other litigation-only models to have enjoyed recent success include expansive US litigation boutique Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, which saw its turnover rise by almost 18% over the past financial year to $853m.

francesca.fanshawe@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

RBS investors secure litigation funding for action against bank

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Third-party funder Argentum has agreed to bankroll a multimillion-pound claim against The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) in London’s High Court.

The floodgates have opened for cases against RBS following its £20bn government bailout in 2008, as investors seek to recoup their losses following its nationalisation.

The group of 21 claimants includes a number of UK and international financial institutions and pension funds suing the bank over a rights issue in April 2008, in which RBS sold its shares at £2 per share. The claimants allege that the prospectus on which the rights issue was based was ‘defective’ and contained material misstatements and omissions.

Legal Business

Stewarts Law chases the American dream

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London disputes specialist Stewarts Law was shortlisted for Law Firm of the Year at the Legal Business Awards in February on the back of an outstanding performance during 2010/11. But with revenues up 42%, a profit margin of 41% and PEP of £890,000, you could be forgiven for wondering why it has now decided to open two offices in the US.