• March 2, 2009 |

    Davis Polk leads a raft of firms on $50bn Citi recap

    Government-backed recapitalization of Citigroup in the latest of a string of deals to refinance struggling banking giants.The complex deal agreed with the Treasury Department will increase the Government's stake in Citi to as much as 36%. The deal sees up to $27.5bn (£19bn) in preference shares converted into common stock, which the Government, which owns $45bn (£31.25bn) in Citi preference shares, will match up to $25bn (£17.3bn) of conversions.Davis Polk is advising Citi and negotiating with the private investors, a group that includes Capital Research Global Investors and Capital World Investors, the Government of Singapore Investment Corp (Singapore's sovereign wealth fund) and the Saudi prince Alwaleed bin Talal. The Kuwait Investment Authority also plans to participate in the exchange, according to several lawyers involved in the talks.The Davis Polk team consists of Randall Guynn, M&A partners Gar Bason, Louis Goldberg and Michael Davis and tax partners Avishai Shachar and Neil Barr.Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton advised Citi on drafting the various securities agreements, a complicated task considering there are all sorts of contingency agreements should Citi shareholders vote down the exchange plan.Simpson Thacher & Barlett is advising the Treasury.Investor's counsel include Hogan & Hartson for bin Talal, a loyal Hogan client since before the first Persian Gulf War, according to Hogan partner Bruce Gilchrist. The prince's holdings illustrate the complications of the deal. He holds both preferred and common shares, meaning the exchange he agreed to may end up diluting the value of common stock he already owns, lawyers say.Several sources say Gibson Dunn & Crutcher advised the Kuwaiti authority, but Steven Guynn, who advised the authority in its initial $3bn (£2.1bn) investment in Citi preferred stock last year, declined comment.Sidley Austin reprised its role advising Singapore's sovereign wealth fund. Sidley has been representing the fund in various investments for more than 15 years.The Capital Group relied on in-house counsel, says Andrew Felner, the deputy GC for Citi who handled much of the internal work on the exchange plan.Citi's shares dropped about 40% upon the deal's announcement, mostly over fears that the exchange will dilute the value of common shares. Citi, which lost about $28bn (£19.4bn) last year, also agreed to eliminate the dividend on preferred stock and re-jig its board of directors so that a majority of directors are new and independent.Cleary will also be handling Citi's disclosure work and filings with federal regulators. Partners David Lopez, Neil Whoriskey and Jeff Karpf are leading the firm's team.

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  • February 12, 2009 |

    Profits dip at Sullivan, Skadden and Davis Polk

    Wall Street leaders Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom, Sullivan & Cromwell and Davis Polk & Wardwell have all posted falling profits for 2008, it has emerged, despite the trio avoiding year-on-year declines in revenues. The Am Law Daily reports that Skadden managed to remain the highest-grossing law firm in the US top 100 to date, eking out a 1.4% increase in gross revenue to reach a 2008 total of $2.2bn (£1.47bn). In a dreadful year for M&A, Skadden's corporate practice was relatively strong, particularly in representing takeover targets.Gross revenue at Sullivan and Davis Polk, both of which logged thousands of hours in hectic bailout-related work in the last quarter of 2008, was flat. Sullivan grossed $985m (£670m) and Davis Polk $789m (£537m) - both exactly matching their 2007 results.

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  • February 4, 2009 |

    Back in the game

    On 23 July the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation's general counsel, Robert Bostrom, rang Randall Guynn, head of the financial institutions group at Davis Polk & Wardwell. Davis Polk was not one of Freddie Mac's outside law firms - Covington & Burling did its regulatory and disclosure work, and Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft did its routine corporate work. But Bostrom needed an equity products specialist. Regulators, concerned about the lender's massive exposure to the US mortgage market, had demanded that it shore up its core capital. But with Freddie Mac shares trading at gutter levels, issuing billions of dollars in new equity could backfire.

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  • January 20, 2009 |

    Dealmaker of the Week: Davis Polk & Wardwell's George 'Gar' Bason

    You might call Davis Polk & Wardwell's George 'Gar' Bason the Citi lawyer who never sleeps.In recent weeks, as the extent of Citi's problems have emerged,…

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  • January 16, 2009 |

    Davis Polk wins deal double on Citi restructuring

    Davis Polk & Wardwell has landed two roles advising Citi on its business redistribution and its joint venture with Morgan Stanley. The US giant is advising Citi with a team from its New York office, including corporate chief George Bason, corporate partners Louis Goldberg and Marc Williams, tax partners Avishai Shachar and Neil Barr and financial institutions cheif Randall Guynn.

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  • January 12, 2009 |

    Taylor Wessing secures triple hire in Paris

    Taylor Wessing has bolstered its Paris arm after recent losses in the French capital with the hire of two new partners and a senior associate. The firm has moved to shore up the office with the hire of Simon Christiaen and Evelyne Friedel as partners. Christiaen joins from Landwell, where he was a partner, while Friedel arrives from Jones Day, where she was a counsel. Senior associate Valerie Aumage has joined from Field Fisher Waterhouse in Paris.Christiaen is an intellectual and industrial property lawyer with a particular focus on patent law related issues. Friedel focuses on economic and commercial law and is also a competition litigator.

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  • January 8, 2009 |

    Cleary seals hire of Citi GC for capital markets team

    Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton has boosted its New York capital markets practice with the rehire of Edward Greene from Citi. Greene is general counsel of Citi's institutional clients group. He joined the banking giant in 2004 from Cleary.Greene, who is currently based in London, will relocate to New York to rejoin the firm in February. His joined Cleary in 1982, prior to which he was general counsel of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as well as director of the Division of Corporation Finance.

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  • December 10, 2008 |

    Behind the veil

    On Monday, January 21, 2008, back when extreme stock volatility was still a novelty, world equity markets plunged 6% with no full explanation apparent. Then, on Thursday, the mystery abated when at least a partial explanation for the sell-off appeared. The French bank Societe Generale (Soc Gen) announced that a young trader named Jerome Kerviel had somehow, without the bank noticing, bet A50bn that stock markets would rise. Soc Gen had spent the past few days desperately selling his positions - and set a new standard for rogue trading losses at A6.4bn. Hit by scandal and a potential legal mess, Soc Gen did what plenty of other rich and powerful French institutions would do in such a situation: It hired Jean Veil.

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  • December 8, 2008 |

    CC announces bonus cutbacks for US associates

    Clifford Chance (CC) has become the latest firm to cut back bonuses for US associates, with the announcement that it is to halve its year-end payouts. The US arm of the magic circle firm will award bonuses ranging from a pro-rated $17,500 (£12,000) for first-year associates to $32,500 (£22,000) for eighth-year associates - a significant decrease on last year, when the firm awarded bonuses ranging from $35,000 (£24,000) to $65,000 (£44,500).The new figures put CC in line with its US competitors, after a raft of Stateside firms, including Davis Polk & Wardwell, Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom and Cravath Swaine & Moore, slashed bonuses in response to the economic downturn.

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  • December 2, 2008 |

    Davis Polk cuts associate bonuses

    Davis Polk & Wardwell has announced that it is to halve associate bonuses, following similar moves by other US firms over the last two weeks, reports The Am Law Daily. The US firm says 2008 bonuses will range from a pro-rated $17,500 (£11,800) for first-year associates to $32,500 (£22,000) for eighth and ninth years. Those amounts match the reduced rates announced on 24 November by Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. Last year, Davis Polk bonuses began at $35,000 (£23,700) and topped out at $65,000 (£44,000).In a firmwide memo sent out yesterday (1 December), the management committee thanked associates, and noted that the year posed a "challenging economic environment."

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