Friday Rundown

The rundown of this week’s top news stories.

1. Brexit Secretary signs order to scrap 1972 Brussels ACT – ending all EU law in the UK [OGV.UK]

2. Greene King to be sold to Hong Kong’s richest family for £2.7bn [via The Guardian]

3. De Niro’s company sues ex-employee for $6m for embezzlement and Netflix bingeing [via The Guardian]

4. Criminal cases delayed across England and Wales as courts lie idle [via The Guardian]

5. Hong Kong protests: Twitter and Facebook remove Chinese accounts [via BBC News]

6. US delays Huawei trade ban for another 90 days [via BBC News]

7. Dechert caught up in Middle East hacking claim [via The Law Society Gazette]

8. Social mobility boost for aspiring solicitors [via The Law Society Gazette]

9. UK sees record foreign investment in tech start-ups [via BBC News]

10. Government finances weaker than expected in July [via BBC News]

11. Dentons appoints ‘mindfulness’ chief to boost wellbeing [via The Law Society Gazette]

12. New adventures beckon for senior women leaders [via The Law Society Gazette]

13. Dealwatch: Paul Hastings and Slaughters react on nuclear sale as Magic Circle duo imbibes Greene King takeover

14. In-house: Trustpilot bags former Skyscanner legal chief as Gowling scores sole Commonwealth Games mandate

In-house: Trustpilot bags former Skyscanner legal chief as Gowling scores sole Commonwealth Games mandate

Adding to recent high-profile in-house appointments, former Skyscanner legal chief Carolyn Jameson (pictured) has been appointed chief legal and policy officer at consumer review website Trustpilot, while Gowling WLG has become sole legal adviser to the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games.

GC Powerlist-regular Jameson, who earlier in the year announced her departure from high-profile travel metasearch engine Skyscanner after six years, will oversee global legal and public affairs at Trustpilot from the UK and Denmark.

She also joins the company’s executive leadership team, reporting to chief executive Peter Holten Mühlmann, and replaces former general counsel (GC) Kasper Heine. Jameson ran a legal team of 12 at Skyscanner and was involved in its £1.4bn acquisition by Chinese online travel giant ctrip.com in 2016.

Jameson said: ‘I am hugely excited to be joining Trustpilot at a time when it is continuing to grow more important every day.’

Muhlmann added: ‘[Jameson’s] experience in helping brands navigate the issue of trust online makes her a fantastic addition to the team. As Trustpilot continues to grow and continue its ambition to bring consumers and businesses together, Jameson’s expertise will only help improve the experiences of everyone using the platform.’

Her move to Trustpilot follows former Worldpay GC Ruwan de Soyza decamping to FTSE 100 technology company Halma earlier in the month. Jameson, meanwhile, was replaced at Skyscanner by former Deliveroo legal head Rob Miller.

Elsewhere, Gowling has won a competitive tender to be exclusive legal advisers to the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games for the next three years.

A team from the firm will advise on a range of legal matters, including brand reputation and disputes management, led by partner and Commonwealth board member Michael Luckman, alongside the event’s chief legal officer Caroline McGrory.

Commonwealth event chief executive Ian Reid said it already works closely with Gowling: ‘This is a very exciting time as we’ve just passed our three years to go milestone and our profile and workload is really starting to increase.’

Gowling chief executive David Fennell added: ‘This appointment builds on our strong track record of advising on major projects across the public and private sectors’.

By Legal Business anna.cole-bailey@legalease.co.uk

Dealwatch: Paul Hastings and Slaughters react on nuclear sale as Magic Circle duo imbibes Greene King takeover

August has proved to be active with big-ticket deals prompting inbound investment to the UK with the disposal of John Wood Group’s nuclear business to US-based Jacobs Engineering Group, as well as the sale of Greene King to Hong Kong’s CKA Group.

Paul Hastings advised Jacobs Engineering Group on its acquisition of John Wood Group’s nuclear business in the UK, Europe and the Far East for a cash consideration of roughly £250m.

The deal is part of Wood’s strategy to offload its non-core areas and to lower its debt levels following its acquisition of Amec Foster Wheeler in 2017. The deal is subject to conditions including competition clearance and is expected to close in the first quarter of 2020.

Jacobs, a New York Stock Exchange listed company, is a provider of technical services and has an expansion strategy for its complementary areas of aerospace, technology and nuclear.

The Paul Hastings team, led by London-based M&A partner Roger Barron, included managing partner Ronan O’Sullivan and M&A partner Matthew Poxon, both in London.

John Wood Group was advised on the transaction by a Slaughter and May team led by corporate partners Simon Nicholls and Filippo de Falco and included competition partners Lisa Wright and Bertrand Louveaux, pension and employment partners Padraig Cronin and Daniel Schaffer as well as data protection partner Rebecca Cousin.

Barron told Legal Business: ‘This is just the sort of deal that I joined Paul Hastings to do – transatlantic M&A for a major US company, where we can provide the sector expertise as well as deal execution capability on both sides of the pond.

‘Jacobs has a very clear strategy for using M&A to expand into profitable and complementary areas. This is seen as a good business and works well with their existing strategy. For this deal about 90% of the business is UK. You could see this as a US company being confident in the prospects of a UK business,’ added Barron.

Meanwhile, Linklaters won a lead mandate advising pub giant Greene King on its proposed £2.7bn sale to Hong Kong real estate group CKA, with Clifford Chance (CC) advising the buyer.

The 220 year old Suffolk-based brewery has around 2,700 pubs, restaurants and hotels nationally. Its acquisition follows the takeover of Ei Group by Stonegate Pub for £1.3m last month.

The Linklaters team was led by corporate partners Dan Schuster-Woldan and Nick Rumsby while Lee Coney and Nick Rees led the CC team which also included Alex Nourry (antitrust), Sonia Gilbert (employment) and Matt Taylor (real estate).

Norton Rose Fulbright advised HSBC, the financial adviser to CK Asset Holdings. CKA has agreed to the terms of the acquisition which include a 51% premium on the value of Greene King through its recently formed Cayman Islands based subsidiary CK Bidco.

The Norton Rose team was led by corporate partner Paul Whitelock.

Elsewhere a Ropes & Gray London team, led by private equity partner Philip Sanderson and finance partner Malcolm Hitching, advised private equity firm Duke Street on the acquisition of railway holiday provider, Vacation by Rail.

The US acquisition, funded partially by English law governed facilities, brought together the firm’s English and US law expertise. The deal follows the acquisition of Great Rail Journeys, escorted rail holiday provider, by Duke Street Capital from ECI a year ago.

Andrew Arons at Williams, Bax and Saltzman in Chicago acted for the sellers.

Sanderson told Legal Business: ‘The deal reflects an important trend of PE backed businesses like GRJ seeking growth in the US. This has become increasingly important for ambitious mid-market businesses where a strong European platform is proven and allows PE to support the next step into the US. We are regularly helping businesses in this way.

“The European summer deal market has been favourable for few in PE. The paucity of deals has naturally combined with high price for the deals that do come to market. The B word has left the market as uncertain as it has been for many years and so bolt ons for PE have become a popular means to generate activity from within the portfolio. Better what you know, is a factor in that, as well as the potential for economies and bargains from smaller strategically important deals.’

By Legal Businessmuna.abdi@legalease.co.uk

Kennedys looks to ensure next stage of growth with first managing partner

Kennedys has appointed its first global managing partner following a sustained period of growth which has seen turnover increase 70% in the last five years on the back of expansion into 37 international offices.

Suzanne Liversidge (pictured), who joined the insurance and shipping specialist as the head of its Sheffield office in 2010, was today (20 August) appointed the firm’s first managing partner. She will work alongside the firm’s senior partner of more than 20 years, Nick Thomas, who was re-elected to a fifth term in 2017.

Liversidge is a member of the firm’s global strategy, R&D and innovation boards and leads its Women in insurance network. The managing partner position was established to work with Thomas on the strategic and operational management of the firm: last year its revenue broke through £200m for the first time.

‘Kennedys is a firm with great ambition, and I am looking forward to working even more closely with Nick and colleagues to continue, and improve upon, the excellent work that we are doing in the UK and Europe, Asia-Pacific, North America and Bermuda and Latin America and the Caribbean,’ Liversidge commented. ‘I’m honoured to have this opportunity to take Kennedys to the next stage of its evolution working alongside Nick and the global strategy board.’

Thomas added: ‘We’ve experienced significant growth in recent years and there is still much more to achieve as a firm. Suzanne has a deep understanding of the insurance industry, our clients and our global network having worked with all Kennedys’ offices.’

Liversidge became the first female president of the Sheffield Chamber of Commerce in 2011, and is a member of the professional network for members of the LGBT+ community who work in the insurance sector, Link.

Alongside an 11% increase in turnover for the year to 30 April 2019, fee-earner headcount at Kennedys grew 7% to exceed 2,000 for the first time. The firm made a number of lateral hires last year, most recently a 10-lawyer team – including two partners – from Norton Rose Fulbright.

The increase in revenue followed the coming together of various investments Kennedys has made in the last few years: the firm merged with US insurance firm Carroll McNulty & Kull in 2017, with revenue in the region up 16% to £35.9m this year.

The Asia-Pacific region similarly saw revenue increase by over a quarter to £35.7m, while Latin America more than doubled to £6.2m, with the firm establishing three new associations in each of the Dominican Republic, Guatemala and Panama in March. Kennedys’ UK revenue was up 8% to £126m.

Thomas told Legal Business in June the firm still needed to fill obvious gaps on the West Coast of the US and in other parts of Europe and would look for opportunities in those areas as they arose.

By Legal Business.

Trainee pay increases to £55,000 at Weil

The London office of Weil, Gotshal & Manges has announced that trainees will receive a pay increase of up to 10%.

First year trainees will now earn £50,000, up 9% from £46,000, and those in year two will be remunerated with £55,000, 10% more than the previous £50,000 offering.

Meanwhile, Weil has also announced a 100% autumn retention rate.

Other firms paying trainees £55,000 a year include Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, Milbank, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and Vinson & Elkins.

Compare how much you could earn as a trainee and newly-qualified solicitor using our comparison table.

Revolving doors: Expansive Goodwin makes another City tech play as Dechert and Quinn hire further afield

Following a string of hires to expand its London office this year, Goodwin Procter has again added to its City technology and life sciences practice with the hire of partner Ali Ramadan from Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe.

Ramadan has experience in venture capital, cross-border M&A and private equity transactions for technology businesses. He acts for start-ups, high-growth companies and investors operating in the technology, fintech, proptech and digital media industries.

Goodwin has been in full-on expansion mode in the City in recent months, in July adding a significant string to its bow in the form of a four-partner technology and life sciences team from Taylor Wessing.

That team hire of Taylor Wessing’s head of life sciences Malcolm Bates, David Mardle, Tim Worden and Adrian Rainey was another step in Goodwin’s stated ambition to bolster its London bench in this specialist sector.

Ramadan told Legal Business: ‘The attraction to Goodwin was really their technology platform. It’s a great firm with a great reputation in tech, at the cutting edge of all these deals. I’m looking forward to working together with UK and US teams in terms of helping to build out the lifecycle tech practice here in London.’

Co-chair of Goodwin’s technology practice Anthony McCusker told Legal Business: ‘We’ve seen the lifecycle practice in London and Europe develop closely to how we see it in the US.

‘We think we’re well positioned to gain market share and continue to be active. Investors and companies look to the people that are best positioned to help them. Our expectation is that if there’s less work to spread around, they’ll continue to work with a firm like ours. Whether there’s a slowdown in the market or not we think that not being aggressive to build for what the market needs would be a big mistake,’ McCusker added.

Also acquisitive recently has been Dechert, with the Philadelphia-headquartered outfit hiring Philip Dowsett to its private equity, corporate and investment funds practice in Dubai.

Dowsett was previously a partner at Morgan, Lewis & Bockius in Dubai and is a seasoned lawyer in cross-border mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures, private equity investments, disposals, restructuring and takeovers, as well as corporate governance and investment fund structuring.

He has represented and advised numerous private equity groups in the region over the last ten years, with clients including Dubai International Capital, NBK Capital Partners, Abraaj, Amanat Holdings, Greenstone Equity Partners and Sico Trucial.

Dowsett told Legal Business: ‘On the private equity, M&A and funds side, there’s really no better firm on those practices than Dechert in the region. The real estate practice is one of the leading ones in the region.’

Regional managing partner Chris Sioufi told Legal Business: ‘The market has been more difficult for the last two years in the region because of the geopolitical tensions. We have seen a slowdown in foreign money coming into the region but we have positioned ourselves to be able to take advantage of outflows of money and assist our regional clients who are either setting up or investing in funds in other jurisdictions or doing acquisitions out of the region.’

The hire of Dowsett follows those of real estate partners Stephen Kelly and Sarah Mahood last year in Dubai.

Elsewhere, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan has hired international arbitration partner Mark McNeill in New York at the expense of the London office of Shearman & Sterling.

McNeill has experience in advocacy and representing companies and states in numerous commercial and investment treaty arbitrations. He focuses on intellectual property, technology, nuclear construction, pharmaceuticals, business combinations, oil & gas, taxation, mining, insurance, and reinsurance.

McNeill told Legal Business: ‘Quinn Emanuel has some of the best trial lawyers in the world. If you like going to trial then it’s just a great place to be.

‘There’s a remarkable geographic shift to Asia in particular. You have more disputes arising from parties based in Asia. More cases in Africa and a lot of infrastructure projects which inevitably are giving rise to disputes. I see mining claims and still very high oil & gas claims,’ McNeill added.

Shoosmiths also grew its real estate team with the hire of planning and development partner Karen Howard from DLA Piper. She has experience in strategic planning on large regeneration schemes and advises across sectors including residential, offices, industrial, retail, hotels and leisure.

Howard commented: ‘I joined Shoosmiths because what motivates me is the ethos of teamwork here and pulling together with my colleagues across the UK. The people here are super-friendly and it’s inspiring to join Shoosmiths at a time when the firm is growing.’

By Legal Business.

In-house: Aviva reveals new adviser panel after first review since 2013

Ten firms have secured spots on FTSE 100 insurer Aviva’s refreshed legal panel, with RPC, Eversheds Sutherland and Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner winning new appointments.

The two-lot panel covering the group and investor businesses came into effect on 1 July after the previous panel, last reviewed in 2013, ran its course. It will run on an initial three-year term.

Slaughter and May, Allen & Overy (A&O), DLA Piper, Eversheds, Pinsent Masons and RPC have been appointed to the group panel, while Ashurst, Addleshaw Goddard, Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner and CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang were assigned to the insurer’s investors panel.

Aviva’s head of legal operations Caroline Brown told Legal Business the legal team is increasingly looking at its advisers’ approach to diversity and inclusion as well as firms’ abilities to support the legal team around innovation.

Group general counsel (GC) Kirsty Cooper (pictured) said in this year’s GC Powerlist the company was looking to streamline its external panel: ‘Everyone is focused on the bottom line and wants to make sure we are getting a quality service and value for money. It’s not about headcount in legal, it’s about overall value and cost.’

Slaughters, A&O, Ashurst, DLA , Pinsents and Addleshaws all featured on Aviva’s 2013 panel, the review of which was led by former Aviva UK Life GC Monica Risam and included international and UK work and lower-cost national work.

By Legal Business.

Friday Rundown

The rundown of this week’s top news stories.

  1. Facebook letter fails to satisfy DCMS chair Damian Collins [via BBC News]
  2. Registered European lawyers given until 2021 to requalify [via The Law Society Gazette]
  3. Law and order: Extra £85m for CPS to tackle violent crime [via BBC News]
  4. SRA recruits candidates for second super-exam pilot [via The Law Society Gazette]
  5. Irwin Mitchell’s profit boost as firm joins brand big-league [via The Law Society Gazette]
  6. Media giants Viacom and CBS to merge in latest mega-deal [via BBC News]
  7. Trump delays some tariffs on Chinese imports [via BBC News]
  8. Are the markets signalling that a recession is due? [via BBC News]
  9. New High Court judges all Oxbridge barristers [via The Law Society Gazette]
  10. 5 of the world’s biggest economies are at risk or recession [via CNN]
  11. ‘We can’t reach the women who need us’: LGBT YouTubers suing the tech giant for discrimination [via The Guardian]
  12. Members join queue of collapsed Ince creditors [via The Law Society Gazette]
  13. ‘Depressing’ super-exam reports fail the test, say law teachers [via The Law Society Gazette]

White & Case announces 89% autumn retention rates

US firm White & Case has announced an 89% autumn retention score.

The London office will be keeping on 16 of its 18 trainees this September, who will qualify into antitrust/competition, capital markets, commercial litigation, international arbitration, mergers & acquisitions, asset finance, banking, project development and finance.

This year’s retention score is higher than the previous rounds of 75%, 84% and 81%.

Partner Inigo Esteve commented, ‘with continuing strong client demand for English law services in London and across our offices globally, the business need for English law qualified lawyers continues to increase despite ongoing economic and political uncertainties, including Brexit’.

The 16 newly-qualified solicitors will receive a starting salary of £105,000.

Melissa Butler, White & Case office executive partner in London, adds: ‘White & Case trainees join a firm with a reputation for supporting its lawyers throughout their careers and a strong track record for internal promotions to partner’.

In-house: Skyscanner lands former Deliveroo legal chief as GC and company secretary

Recently departed Deliveroo legal chief Rob Miller has been named Skyscanner’s general counsel (GC) and company secretary following Carolyn Jameson’s departure from the high-profile travel metasearch company earlier this year.

Miller (pictured) will oversee Skyscanner’s global legal, regulatory and public affairs function, leading a team of 12 lawyers, and comes as the Scotland-based company embarks on a strategic shift. GC Powerlist-regular Jameson was at the company for six years and was involved in the company’s £1.4bn acquisition by Chinese online travel giant ctrip.com in 2016.

Miller is a seasoned senior in-house lawyer, and was most recently chief legal officer at takeaway delivery service Deliveroo. Prior to that, he was legal chief at London-based tech firm Improbable, where he led the $502m Series B Funding from Softbank, the largest-ever venture financing round for a private British company and the largest Series B investment in Europe.

Between 2012 and 2017 he was chief legal officer and company secretary at video game developer King, where he led its $7.2bn IPO on the New York Stock Exchange and eventual sale to Activision Blizzard for $5.9bn.

Bryan Dove, Skyscanner’s chief executive, said: ‘[Miller’s] experience of working with fast-growing companies as they evolve will help us to create amazing experiences that offer unique value for travellers. We’re excited to have him on board and I’m confident he will play a pivotal role in helping to shape Skyscanner’s future.’

Miller added: ‘Skyscanner is one of the UK’s pre-eminent tech companies and without a doubt one of the global leaders in the travel industry and has been on an incredible trajectory over the past number of years.’

Miller left Deliveroo in January and was replaced by Chantelle Zemba, who was previously corporate and compliance chief at the start-up.

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