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judge:"Steven Andrews"
court:Florida
topic:"Civil Appeals"
practicearea:Lobbying
"Steven Andrews" AND Litigation
"Steven Andrews" OR "Roger Dalton"
Litigation NOT "Roger Dalton"
"Steven Andrews" AND Litigation NOT Florida
(Florida OR Georgia) judge:"Steven Andrews"
((Florida AND Georgia) OR Texas) topic:"Civil Appeals"
3,608 results for 'Morgan Morgan/////////////////////////////////' You can use Search Constraints to get even better search results
June 25, 2010 |
Slaughter and May and Allen & Overy (A&O) have taken a lead role as online grocer Ocado looks to go public. Slaughters is taking the lead for the retailer, which is offering employees and all customers who have spent more than £300 with Ocado since the beginning of the year the chance to invest, in addition to institutional investors.
1 minute read
June 22, 2010 |
Herbert Smith has won a role on what is set to be the world's largest-ever initial public offering (IPO) as the Agricultural Bank of China (AgBank) gears up to go public. The UK top 10 law firm is advising the underwriting banks on the landmark listing, which was initially valued at as much as $30bn (£20.2bn), although market estimates have since been tempered by a drop in China's stock market, with a figure of $23bn (£15.5bn) now thought to be more likely.
1 minute read
June 21, 2010 |
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman has hired a five-partner team from Nixon Peabody's New York office, reports The New York Law Journal. The exact size of the team is still being finalised and could reach 20 lawyers, said Pillsbury chairman James Rishwain. The departing partners include Mats Carlston, Nixon Peabody's former head of global finance.
1 minute read
June 18, 2010 |
Herbert Smith has won a role on what is set to be the world's largest-ever initial public offering (IPO) as the Agricultural Bank of China (AgBank) goes public. The UK top 10 firm is advising the underwriting banks on the landmark listing, which was initially valued at as much as $30bn (£20.2bn), although market estimates have since been tempered by a drop in China's stock market, with a figure of $23bn (£15.5bn) now thought to be more likely.
1 minute read
June 17, 2010 |
A sweeping shake-up of banking regulation has met with a cool reception from City lawyers with doubts raised about the move to largely abolish the Financial Services Authority (FSA). The overhaul, which was announced last night (16 July) by Chancellor George Osborne at the annual Mansion House speech, will see a major increase in power for the Bank of England, which will take on a new remit to police market risk.
1 minute read
June 16, 2010 |
DLA Piper is to defend itself for a second time against a high-profile disability discrimination claim after a ruling this week from the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT). In a judgment handed down yesterday (15 June), EAT president Mr Justice Underhill sent the claim to be heard again in an employment tribunal later this year.
1 minute read
June 11, 2010 |
Weil Gotshal & Manges has taken a lead role advising on the DKK12.4bn (£1.4bn) initial public offering (IPO) of Danish food company Chr Hansen. The Weil Gotshal team advising on the flotation was headed up by capital markets partners James Cole and Peter Schwartz, assisted by associates Jesse Zigmund, Aparna Ravi and Augustine Bourne.
1 minute read
June 9, 2010 |
Former McDermott Will & Emery partner Michael McFall has been found not guilty in the insider trading case brought against him by the Financial Services Authority (FSA). McFall was acquitted in Southwark Crown Court on 3 June after a unanimous verdict was delivered by an 11-member jury in just an hour and a half.
1 minute read
June 4, 2010 |
Well, you win some you lose some. On the day that the Financial Services Authority (FSA) announced its largest-ever civil fine, against JP Morgan, the City watchdog also suffered a defeat in its high-profile attempt to secure an insider trading conviction against three men, two of them former City lawyers. The first case illustrated once more the FSA's sometimes melodramatic determination to reinvent itself as a get-tough enforcer for the post-crunch age, with the regulator seemingly now digging out the grand rhetoric for every fine over fifty quid.
1 minute read
June 3, 2010 |
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has handed out a record £33.32m fine to JP Morgan in the latest sign of a tougher regulatory stance from the City watchdog. The penalty, which was announced today (3 June), was handed out after JP Morgan failed to protect client money by keeping it with its own money for almost seven years between 2002 and 2009 following the merger of JP Morgan and Chase Manhattan.
1 minute read