Revolving doors: City lateral market’s big freeze means hires further afield

Lateral recruitment was largely left in the cold last week after a flurry of activity in late February, as London partner moves were nearly frozen out altogether.

In the City, Bristol-based LB100 firm TLT brought in Nick Pincott as a partner in its UK construction, infrastructure and projects team from Norton Rose Fulbright, where he was a partner in the firm’s energy projects group for more than a decade. Continue reading “Revolving doors: City lateral market’s big freeze means hires further afield”

Panel beaters – Balfour revamps Pinsents partnership as Barclays’ buying shake-up signals its last panel contest

Is big business turning its back on the conventional legal panel? This month at least sees two prominent examples, with listed infrastructure group Balfour Beatty extending and revamping its sole supplier partnership with Pinsent Masons as banking giant Barclays unveils its final global panel review.

Pinsents today (5 March) announced its sole supplier mandate with the FTSE 250 company had been re-signed until 2020, the second extension to a deal which kicked off in April 2013. The latest partnership, however, has introduced new pricing structures for greater flexibility. Continue reading “Panel beaters – Balfour revamps Pinsents partnership as Barclays’ buying shake-up signals its last panel contest”

Howard Kennedy faces £35,000 fine for lax client account handling but watchdog U-turn draws flak

Solicitors Regulation Authority SRA

Howard Kennedy and one of its former partners have been sanctioned for providing a client with a prohibited banking facility, with the top 100 UK law firm facing a £35,000 fine after a Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) investigation.

The ruling from the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT), which was published on Thursday (1 March), saw Howard Kennedy ordered to pay £46,950 in costs. Christopher Langford, a former partner and then consultant at Howard Kennedy, also admitted to facilitating payments in and out of the firm’s client account that were not related to any underlying legal transaction. Continue reading “Howard Kennedy faces £35,000 fine for lax client account handling but watchdog U-turn draws flak”

Comment: A shock to the system as Freshfields heavyweight departs

David Higgins

Given that it has been so well telegraphed that the $10m lateral was coming to the Square Mile, the shock among City peers at the hire of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer private equity veteran David Higgins (pictured) has been, well, shocking. ‘Outrageous’, ‘obscene’ and ‘mildly appalling’ are among the reactions from peers. One hopeful partner at a US firm notes: ‘The clients won’t be impressed with that number splashed all over the news.’

But such sentiments are a naive reading of how the industry is evolving. Yes, if you think of a lateral as wrangling an immediate book of business, such a package suggests needing to preside over $30m within three years to be called a success on a conventional yardstick. That would certainly be a stretch – though not impossible given what some of the strongest City laterals have managed – but that is not the benchmark. Kirkland & Ellis has been stuffed with leveraged finance talent for years while lacking an unquestioned corporate A-lister. The hyper-productive Matthew Elliott delivered that when he joined from Linklaters in 2016, but his practice has a very precise real estate slant. Continue reading “Comment: A shock to the system as Freshfields heavyweight departs”

Another legal IPO? Simpson Millar’s new owner advances £50m to law firms in two years

As expansive West End firm Gordon Dadds talks up its ambition to become a £100m business after going public last year, the new owner of Simpson Millar – which recently axed 91 jobs and had £17.7m in debt written off after its publicly-listed owner went bust – is not ruling out an initial public offering (IPO) after putting more than £50m into law firms over the last two years.

Following the administration of listed finance company Fairpoint Group last year, its former legal subsidiary, Leeds-based Simpson Millar, this week made 91 roles redundant following a consultation launched in December. Managing partner Greg Cox said Monday (26 February): ‘This was necessary to stabilise the firm after significant under-investment by Fairpoint Group during the period it owned the firm, which had resulted in a fall in revenue in 2017.’ Continue reading “Another legal IPO? Simpson Millar’s new owner advances £50m to law firms in two years”