Legal Business

With an external legal spend in excess of $1bn since 2010, BP launches panel review

Energy giant BP, which has paid around $1bn in external legal fees in relation to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in 2010, has announced a review of its UK law firm adviser line-up.

Firms have been asked to tender for a place on the FTSE 100 company’s new roster, pending the expiry in May of a three-year panel put in place in 2011. The review will be completed towards the middle of 2014.

The current panel includes Magic Circle firms Linklaters and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, as well as Norton Rose Fulbright, Olswang, Herbert Smith Freehills, CMS Cameron McKenna and Scottish firm McGrigors.

The review is being led by high-profile group general counsel Rupert Bondy, who also oversaw the 2011 overhaul.

Linklaters is a longstanding adviser to BP, with corporate partner Stephen Griffin having advised on BP’s $27bn sale of a 50% share in TNK-BP to Rosneft, the major Russian integrated oil and gas company, as well as the dual-track IPO and $9bn private sale process of its chemicals business Innovene.

At Freshfields, meanwhile, ex-corporate head Mark Rawlinson prepared BP’s defence against a potential bid in the wake of the oil disaster.

The panel review follows the announcement in February that provision has been made for a further $150m of external legal costs related to the spill.

NewsinBrief

CMS and Dundas place 60 support staff roles at risk

CMS Cameron McKenna and Dundas & Wilson have placed 60 support staff roles at risk following the duo’s recently announced union.

Confirmed on 21 March, there are 40 roles at risk at Dundas & Wilson, which will require a consultation process, while around 20 jobs are at risk within CMS and its third-party suppliers Integreon, Initial and Xerox. CMS confirmed there will be no impact on any fee-earning roles.

Barclays group GC Bob Hoyt paid over £700,000 in shares

Barclays’ recently appointed group general counsel Bob Hoyt has been awarded more than £700,000 in shares just four months into the role.

Following 2013’s controversial bonus round, the bank announced on 18 March that it is rewarding 12 of its top executives almost £32m in shares – around 20% less than last year – with Hoyt handed 302,596 shares, worth around £704,000.

Slaughter and May announces bumper partner promotion round

While partnership promotions among the City elite have generally been on the wane in recent years, Slaughter and May announced on 19 March the promotion of seven lawyers to its partnership in London, a significant increase on the previous two years, which have seen only two partners made up.