• June 4, 2010 |

    A defeat for the FSA, but there's no turning the regulatory tide

    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 |

    CC takes lead role as FSA hands out record £33m fine to JP Morgan

    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

  • May 26, 2010 |

    Trio of firms lead $23.8bn Ukrainian cell company deal

    Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe, Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom and Magisters have lined up on a $23.8bn (£16.4bn) deal - the largest merger in Ukrainian history. The deal, completed on 21 April, saw Russia's Altimo and Norway's Telenor combine their stakes in cellular operators Russian Vimpelcom and Ukrainian Kyivstar GSM to create Vimpelcom.

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  • May 26, 2010 |

    Litigation: The long arm of the law

    The evolving state of extradition law calls to mind the process of ageing. One day you have not a care in the world. Seemingly, the next morning everything has changed and it hurts to put on your socks. The new day of extradition law is upon us. While we were looking elsewhere, the big decisions were made. For at least the past decade, the US has been aggressively reaching out to extradite citizens of other nations who have been charged with business crimes. Since the signing of the new extradition treaty between the US and the UK in 2003, the UK has evidenced its willingness to turn its own citizens charged with white-collar crimes over to the US for prosecution.

    1 minute read

  • May 20, 2010 |

    Links, Herbert Smith plug in for roles on £3.3bn National Grid rights issue

    Linklaters and Herbert Smith have taken lead roles on National Grid's £3.3bn rights issue as the energy giant gears up for a major programme of investment. The proceeds of the rights issue will allow National Grid to replace ageing assets, strengthen its infrastructure and upgrade UK networks to allow access to renewable sources of energy.

    1 minute read

  • May 19, 2010 |

    Citigroup names 'golden nine' line-up of UK firms in two-tier EMEA panel

    Citigroup has overhauled its external legal arrangements, creating two new panels of preferred law firms. The banking giant has unveiled new panels of advisers in the Europe, Middle East and Asia (EMEA) region and the US, formalising its previous roster of law firms.

    1 minute read

  • May 19, 2010 |

    US trio take lead roles on record CEE listing

    A trio of US firms have taken the lead on Central Europe's largest ever initial public offering (IPO), the $2.7bn (£1.8bn) listing of insurance company PZU. Dewey & LeBoeuf scored a role for PZU, Poland's biggest insurer, which listed on the Warsaw stock exchange for the first time last week (11 May). The team was led by Warsaw managing partner Jaroslaw Grzesiak, Warsaw partner Ireneusz Matusielaski and London partner Joseph Ferraro.

    1 minute read

  • May 19, 2010 |

    Taylor Wessing pensions chief joins Pinsents London office

    Pinsent Masons has bolstered its pensions practice with the hire of Taylor Wessing's UK pensions head Carolyn Saunders. Saunders is set to join the national law firm's London office as a senior partner in the pensions team later this year. She will work closely with Pinsents national head of pensions Alastair Meeks, and will advise employers and trustees on both contentious and non-contentious matters.

    1 minute read

  • May 19, 2010 |

    Shearman appoints London partner to top-level policy board

    Shearman & Sterling has appointed financial regulatory partner Barney Reynolds to its main policy board. Reynolds replaces London office managing partner Anthony Ward on the board after an election process. Reynolds becomes the sole non-US representative on the board, which deals with policy and recommending new lateral partner hires. It also deals with issues such as partner compensation.

    1 minute read

  • May 19, 2010 |

    The Am Law 100: No easy answers

    After five consecutive years of increasing their ranks and regarding layoffs as anathema, Am Law 100 firms abruptly changed course in 2009, blanketing their workforce with pink slips. Facing a deepening global recession, a dramatic decline in demand and pressure from clients to reduce costs, Am Law 100 firms laid off more than 3,000 lawyers, slashed the size of their incoming associate classes and pushed start dates back for months. The pain was as widespread as it was deep: 54 Am Law 100 firms reduced their total headcount last year, compared to only 22 of those 100 firms in 2008, and eight firms in 2007.

    1 minute read