• October 31, 2007 | International Edition

    Herbies bags role next to Slaughters on upcoming listing of Turkish broadcaster

    Herbert Smith has landed a role alongside Slaughter and May on the upcoming London float of Turkish broadcaster Digiturk. The deal sees Herbert Smith instructed for co-ordinators and bookrunners Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan and Credit Suisse as Turkey's largest digital television company moves to complete a London listing in November. The move is expected to offer a 25% stake in the business with a value of around $550m (£270m).

    1 minute read

  • October 31, 2007 |

    Herbies bags role next to Slaughters on upcoming listing of Turkish broadcaster

    Herbert Smith has landed a role alongside Slaughter and May on the upcoming London float of Turkish broadcaster Digiturk. The deal sees Herbert Smith instructed for co-ordinators and bookrunners Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan and Credit Suisse as Turkey's largest digital television company moves to complete a London listing in November. The move is expected to offer a 25% stake in the business with a value of around $550m (£270m).

    1 minute read

  • October 31, 2007 |

    Brother, can you spare a tranche?

    When three private equity groups arranged to buy HD Supply early this summer, the deal looked like simply another in a long chain of blockbusters. Then sub-prime loan defaults shot up, banks tightened their lending policies, and the credit markets ran dry. With the real estate market already in a tumble, the long-term prospects of HD Supply, a division of The Home Depot that caters to building contractors, were uncertain. Like dozens of others signed before the credit market shut down, the deal was stuck in limbo. For lawyers at Debevoise & Plimpton, which represented the consortium of buyers, the work they would have done after the close - and time they would have billed - was suddenly in doubt.

    1 minute read

  • October 24, 2007 |

    Norton Rose leads on trophy Turkish buy-out

    Norton Rose has landed a leading role on one of the largest-ever private equity deals in Turkey, advising on the E910m (£634m) buy-out of private freight company UN Ro-Ro.

    1 minute read

  • October 10, 2007 |

    NY elite lead on $8.5bn Toronto-Dominion deal

    New York leaders Sullivan & Cromwell and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett have bagged lead roles on Toronto-Dominion Bank's $8.5bn (£4.2bn) acquisition of New Jersey-based Commerce Bancorp.

    1 minute read

  • September 26, 2007 |

    Outsiders turn to out-of-town talent in efforts to crack key Big Apple market

    Out-of-towners bank on sending in appellate big guns as one way of peeling the Big Apple; firms turn backs on flashy lateral hires

    1 minute read

  • September 22, 2007 |

    - The post-Lehman landscape: a Legal Week Wiki special

    The dramatic collapse of investment banking giant Lehman Brothers rocked financial markets around the world, as the credit crunch claimed its most high-profile victim to date. The days that followed saw a flurry of action as the financial world scrambled to make sense of events. Here's how Legal Week reported the post-Lehman fallout.

    1 minute read

  • September 21, 2007 |

    DLA Piper picks up two new partners in Asia

    DLA Piper has boosted its corporate and finance capabilities in Asia with the hire of two new partners from US rivals, it was announced today (21 September). Jones Day Singapore partner Stephen Peepels joins the transatlantic giant to head up its US-law capital markets practice in the region.

    1 minute read

  • September 19, 2007 |

    Shearman's London office loses senior pair

    Shearman & Sterling's London office is losing two senior lawyers with the relocation of capital markets partner David Beveridge to New York and the departure of executive compensation counsel Paula Holland to US rival Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr.

    1 minute read

  • September 19, 2007 |

    Cohen Milstein gets go-ahead for Virgin class action battle

    US litigation specialist Cohen Milstein Hausfeld & Toll has been given the green light to pursue its class action against Virgin.

    1 minute read