• August 6, 2009 |

    Dealmaker: Peter Astleford

    Dechert funds heavyweight Peter Astleford on keeping things simple and thinking like a client

    1 minute read

  • August 3, 2009 |

    RUSAL dispute heads for UK court after appeal rejected

    Russian tycoon Oleg Deripaska has lost his appeal to block a $4bn (£2.4bn) dispute over his stake in aluminium giant RUSAL from being heard in the UK.

    1 minute read

  • July 17, 2009 |

    Twelve firms sign up for College of Law disputes training

    Twelve City law firms have signed up to the College of Law's dispute resolution training consortium. The programme of twelve courses concentrates on the basics of litigation and alternative dispute resolution, and will be taught to lawyers from zero to three years' post qualification experience. It follows similar pooled training programmes that have been introduced during recent years in the areas of corporate, property and banking.

    1 minute read

  • July 16, 2009 |

    Hedge fund and private equity lawyers gear up for battle over Euro regulation

    Lawyers to London's leading hedge funds and private equity houses are braced for a prolonged period of uncertainty and lobbying as the alternative investment industry wrestles with controversial European Commission (EC) reforms. With the fuss regarding the EC's draft directive on alternative investment fund managers (AIFMs) showing no sign of abating since it was unveiled on 29 April, legal advisers are expecting a high-stakes battle to influence reforms seen as a politically motivated assault.

    1 minute read

  • July 9, 2009 | International Edition

    International law firms: Batten down the hatches

    If ever there was a market to test the commitment of international firms to their London office, this would be it. Plummeting workloads and high operating costs have meant more so than ever the City is proving an expensive toehold.

    1 minute read

  • July 9, 2009 |

    International law firms: Batten down the hatches

    If ever there was a market to test the commitment of international firms to their London office, this would be it. Plummeting workloads and high operating costs have meant more so than ever the City is proving an expensive toehold.

    1 minute read

  • June 25, 2009 |

    Global disputes: Still waiting for the train to leave

    Over the last few months, international law firms have been gearing up for the long-awaited upturn in litigation, with a string of office openings and major hires. With the London Court of International Arbitration (LCIA) gaining in popularity in recent years, it is no surprise that the UK capital has been at the forefront of the action, alongside other major arbitration centres like New York and Paris. There have also been moves to bulk up on dispute resolution expertise in Asia and the Middle East.

    1 minute read

  • June 4, 2009 |

    McGrigors competition chief joins Fulbright in the City

    Fulbright & Jaworski has secured its first lateral partner hire in London for more than a year, with the US firm bringing in McGrigors competition head Rod Lambert. Lambert joins the disputes practice in Fulbright's City arm.

    1 minute read

  • May 15, 2009 |

    Chadbourne duo reject Dechert Moscow switch

    Chadbourne & Parke has announced that two of the five partners expected to join Dechert in Moscow have decided to remain at the firm. Earlier this week (11 May) Dechert announced the launch of a office in the Russian capital with the hire of a five-partner team from its US rival, but Chadbourne insisted that discussions with the partners were continuing. As as result of these discussions, two of the partner quintet - Mikhail Rozenberg and Jennifer Handz - have now opted against the move, while a Chadbourne spokesman also said that three counsel - Julia Romanova, Dmitry Gubarev and Olga Koniuhova - would be staying at the firm.

    1 minute read

  • May 13, 2009 |

    Dechert's top earners agree to take pay cut

    Dechert has confirmed that the firm's 36 highest-paid partners have agreed to take a cut in their annual drawings, reports The Am Law Daily. The news follows a report that firm chairman Barton Winokur would take a $1m (£657,000) pay cut.The Philadelphia Inquirer report cited an anonymous source who said Winokur disclosed the "self-imposed" pay cut at a conference of law firm leaders he attended late last month in California.Winokur (pictured) declined to comment on the Inquirer report, but a firm spokeswoman confirmed that Winokur, along wth 36 other Dechert partners, are taking pay cuts. The spokeswoman denied that Winokur's reduction amounts to $1m.

    1 minute read