0 results for 'King Wood Mallesons'
Death by a Thousand Cuts: Should Big Law Still Invest in Asia?
Some firms in Asia see lingering uncertainty and bad news as a sign that it's time to cut and run. But law firms cannot tout a global offering without having a presence in Asia, writes Jessica Seah in the Asia Legal Briefing.Death by a Thousand Cuts: Should Big Law Still Invest in Asia?
Some firms in Asia see lingering uncertainty and bad news as a sign that it's time to cut and run. But law firms cannot tout a global offering without having a presence in Asia, writes Jessica Seah in the Asia Legal Briefing.Are Chinese Firms Sidelining Big Law on Hong Kong Listings Work?
The sole legal advisers to issuers on many Hong Kong Stock Exchange IPOs are Greater China-based law firms. Big Law can't compete with Chinese firms on fees and justify the low margins that come with the listings, which are much smaller than the billion-dollar deals they handled in the past.Lawyers See Positive Outlook for Mergers & Acquisitions in Australia
They will face more hurdles, however, as Australian regulators, like their counterparts in many other countries and regions around the world, increase their scrutiny of M&A deals.Deal Watch: Kirkland, Simpson, Latham, Cravath Lead $13B Endeavor Buy
At least nine large law firms got a share of the work from Silver Lake's buy of Endeavor Group. The deal is another example of megadeals that are in bloom this year.View more book results for the query "King Wood Mallesons"
Boies Schiller Flexner Bounces Back With Revenue, Head Count Gains in 2023
After years of declining head count and revenue, the litigation shop is back in growth mode.Chinese Law Firms Announced 40 New Offices in 12 Months. Will the Investment Pay Off?
Chinese law firms are expanding aggressively within China, but top-tier Chinese firms have focused outward to international markets. With the Chinese cross-border deal market growing increasingly quiet, will these firms pivot toward mainland expansion?When Will Law Firms Learn? The Top-Down Approach Never Pays, and Always Bites Back
Latham & Watkins' decision to block automatic access for its Hong Kong staff to files and documents outside of Greater China was not necessarily wrong. But the way it implemented the change was tone-deaf. The firm's sin was its failure to communicate, writes Jessica Seah in the Asia Legal Briefing.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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