• March 12, 2008 |

    Visa to shell out $15m in fees on landmark IPO

    White & Case is in line for a bumper pay-day after it emerged that client Visa is to shell out $15m (£7.45m) in legal fees and expenses for its long-awaited initial public offering (IPO), writes The American Lawyer. Visa disclosed details of its legal fees in an amended registration statement filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) last week ahead of this month's IPO, which the company says could net a US record $18.8bn (£9.33bn) in stock sales.

    1 minute read

  • March 3, 2008 |

    Wall Street Journal parts ways with GC

    The Wall Street Journal has parted company with general counsel Stuart Karle, writes the Legal Times, following the change of ownership at the iconic business publication. Karle, vice president and of the Journal since 1992, was asked to leave the publication on Thursday (28 February).

    1 minute read

  • February 28, 2008 |

    Simpson Thacher conflict hands Sullivan role on Microsoft's landmark approach for Yahoo!

    Sullivan & Cromwell has been drafted in to advise Microsoft on its landmark $44.6bn (£22.7bn) attempted takeover of internet giant Yahoo! after New York rival Simpson Thacher & Bartlett was conflicted out. Simpson Thacher last week confirmed that it had been forced to withdraw from the deal due to a conflict that could not be resolved. The firm had initially been handed the lead role for Microsoft, as reported by legalweek.com (4 February).

    1 minute read

  • February 27, 2008 |

    Howrey sets up IP team in Madrid office

    Sullivan & Cromwell has been drafted in to advise Microsoft on its landmark $44.6bn (£22.7bn) attempted takeover of internet giant Yahoo! after New York rival Simpson Thacher & Bartlett was conflicted out. Simpson Thacher last week confirmed that it had been forced to withdraw from the deal due to a conflict that could not be resolved. The firm had initially been handed the lead role for Microsoft, as reported by legalweek.com (4 February).

    1 minute read

  • February 21, 2008 |

    Sullivan seizes lead on Microsoft's Yahoo bid

    Sullivan & Cromwell has been drafted in to advise Microsoft on its landmark $44.6bn (£22.bn) attempted takeover of internet giant Yahoo after New York rival Simpson Thacher & Bartlett was conflicted out. Simpson Thacher this week confirmed that it had been forced to withdraw from the mandate due to a conflict which could not be resolved. The firm had initially been handed the lead role for Microsoft, as reported by legalweek.com on 4 February.

    1 minute read

  • February 20, 2008 |

    Up from the ashes

    The ladies' room at Clifford Chance's (CC's) New York office is replete with small luxuries usually found in the dressing rooms of private clubs - moisturising lotion, hair spray, mouthwash and fragrance, among other niceties. But what really stands out are the bottles of Molton Brown soap perched to the right of each basin. Fine English soap gracing the counters of a washroom in midtown Manhattan is a minor yet telling detail. Like Molton Brown, CC is an institution that has transformed itself into an international brand - albeit one that has had a hell of a time keeping some of its US partners in line since a messy 2000 merger with New York's Rogers & Wells.

    1 minute read

  • February 15, 2008 |

    Cohen Milstein lands $200m BA-Virgin settlement

    Class action giant Cohen Milstein Hausfeld & Toll has won a landmark victory in the US courts after securing a $200m (£102m) settlement from British Airways and Virgin in relation to price-fixing, it was announced today (15 February). The settlement will see £73.5m put aside for just over five million UK residents who will have until 2012 to claim up to £20 for a return flight after both airlines admitted to price-fixing fuel surcharges on flights between August 2004 to March 2006.

    1 minute read

  • February 11, 2008 |

    Those BHP mandates – credit crunch? What credit crunch?!

    Oh, for a part in BHP Billiton’s battle for mining rival Rio Tinto Group. While the two Anglo-Australian mining giants keep a long line of legal…

    1 minute read

  • February 7, 2008 | International Edition

    US firms move to protect European partners as dollar slump continues

    A growing number of leading US law firms are moving to shield European partners and associates from the prolonged slump in the dollar, it has emerged. Firms including Latham & Watkins and Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe are reviewing provisions for partners in overseas offices, while several elite Wall Street firms have already moved to guarantee packages for UK-based associates.Both Latham and Orrick already have hedging provisions in place to offset currency risk but are now reviewing their models in a bid to remain competitive in Europe. Crucially, many firms claim the poor exchange rate has made lateral partner recruitment in the City much more difficult.

    1 minute read

  • February 7, 2008 |

    US firms move to protect European partners as dollar slump continues

    A growing number of leading US law firms are moving to shield European partners and associates from the prolonged slump in the dollar, it has emerged. Firms including Latham & Watkins and Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe are reviewing provisions for partners in overseas offices, while several elite Wall Street firms have already moved to guarantee packages for UK-based associates.Both Latham and Orrick already have hedging provisions in place to offset currency risk but are now reviewing their models in a bid to remain competitive in Europe. Crucially, many firms claim the poor exchange rate has made lateral partner recruitment in the City much more difficult.

    1 minute read