• September 1, 2004 |

    Linklaters bags lead on record German buy-out

    Legal Week Reports

    1 minute read

  • September 1, 2004 |

    Junk bonds: high yield and high stakes

    The failure of London's finest to take a bigger slice of Europe's emerging high yield market bodes ill

    1 minute read

  • August 25, 2004 |

    Wachtell and Sullivan out in front on Intelsat

    New York firms scoop lead positions on $5bn Intelsat buy-out

    1 minute read

  • August 4, 2004 |

    Masons seals outsourcing deal for DEFRA

    Legal Week reports

    1 minute read

  • July 28, 2004 |

    Germany: The Second Phase

    The high-profile takeovers of three of Germany's most respected law firms by the UK magic circle at the end of the 1990s generated more than their fair share of headlines. But four years down the line, ructions at all three firms suggest the integration process has not gone as smoothly as could have been hoped. So what now for the big three? Sarah Gill reports

    1 minute read

  • July 28, 2004 |

    Germany: The Second Phase

    The high-profile takeovers of three of Germany's most respected law firms by the UK magic circle at the end of the 1990s generated more than their fair share of headlines. But four years down the line, ructions at all three firms suggest the integration process has not gone as smoothly as could have been hoped. So what now for the big three? Sarah Gill reports

    1 minute read

  • July 28, 2004 |

    Underpaid and getting nowhere

    Quietly not cracking the US

    1 minute read

  • July 28, 2004 |

    Underpaid and getting nowhere

    Quietly not cracking the US

    1 minute read

  • July 28, 2004 |

    Germany: All change

    With the German economy stubbornly refusing to reignite, the domestic German firms, like their UK rivals, have had time to focus on cultural issues, with some mixed results. It is the US firms now moving into the market that have been able to profit from these firms' losses. Sarah Gill reports

    1 minute read

  • July 28, 2004 |

    Germany: All change

    With the German economy stubbornly refusing to reignite, the domestic German firms, like their UK rivals, have had time to focus on cultural issues, with some mixed results. It is the US firms now moving into the market that have been able to profit from these firms' losses. Sarah Gill reports

    1 minute read