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Firms
Hungry for More Lawyers in Russia
Richard Lloyd
The American Lawyer
01-07-2008
Although
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
has been in Moscow since 1992, its office in the Russian capital is
still rather modest. Around 30 attorneys handle a typical Skadden
diet of high-end corporate finance work. But reinforcements are
available on short notice. The firm has Russian visas for every one
of its 115 lawyers in London, to avoid the usual overnight delay in
visa processing whenever extra English- and U.S.-qualified lawyers
are needed on the ground in Russia.
The demand for extra
lawyers is high. Typically, at any one time about 35 of Skadden's
London lawyers are involved in Russian work and making good use of
their visas. Since the
1998 financial crisis, when
most foreign firms scaled back -- Skadden had little more than a
nameplate in Moscow for more than a year -- the Russian legal market
has been transformed by Russia's booming economy. Vladimir Putin has
brought political stability and, although due to step down as
president, looks set to continue to play a prominent role in
government. Meanwhile, high oil prices mean that Russia is awash in
petro-dollars. Between 2002 and 2006, GDP almost trebled from $345
billion to $984 billion.
Capital markets practices,
in particular, are in overdrive, as increasing numbers of Russian
companies go public. The IPO surge has fueled considerable growth at
the established international firms in Moscow.
Clifford Chance has gone
from around 40 lawyers in 2002 to more than 130 today.
White & Case, another local leader, has seen its
office boom from around 10 lawyers in 1998 to almost 100 today -- a
track record that helped former Moscow head Hugh Verrier
become chairman of the firm
in October. Thus far, Moscow has not seen an influx of new entrants
into the market, but that may be changing. Last fall, the United
Kingdom's
Simmons & Simmons became the
first firm to launch in Moscow since
Jones Day's 2004 debut,
hiring the former general counsel of Russian investment bank
Renaissance Capital to lead a finance practice.
"There's so much business
here that new entrants are bound to be successful," enthuses veteran
Baker & McKenzie partner
Paul Melling, who set up Baker's office in 1989. For many firms, the
biggest problem remains finding enough bodies to do the work.
London has been the biggest
beneficiary of the boom. Thanks in part to the greater regulatory
demands of New York, the United Kingdom has emerged as the favored
place for Russian companies to go public, and English law has become
the governing law of choice for many Russian corporate finance
deals. That has meant plenty of work for London lawyers and bankers:
International law firms are finding that the road to success in
Moscow runs through the City of London.
To put the IPO boom into
context: From 1994 through 2004, Russian companies raised a total of
$1.6 billion in all markets. In the first six months of 2005, as the
market began to heat up, Russian companies, such as steel giant
Evraz Group
S.A., raised a total of $2.4 billion on the London
Stock Exchange and its subsidiary markets, most often the
Alternative Investment Market (AIM). Since 2005, the pipeline of
IPOs has swelled to include the $10.6 billion London float of
OAO
Rosneft Oil Company in July 2006, the $1 billion-plus
offering of steel company
OAO Severstal in London in
November 2006, and Russian savings bank
Sberbank's
$9 billion offering in early 2007. While the credit crunch has put a
brake on the flow of listings -- the multibillion-dollar London IPO
of aluminum giant
RUSAL was postponed in
September because of market turmoil -- lawyers say there is still a
glut of companies looking to list overseas or in Russia.
Although London has become
the IPO market of choice for Russian businesses, U.S. firms have
taken their fair share of the work. Most of the documentation may be
written under English law, but the style is one that U.S. attorneys
can easily recognize.
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton,
for instance, advised Rosneft and Sberbank on their listings and has
generally emerged as issuer's counsel of choice, typically appearing
beside
Linklaters, the go-to firm
for underwriters.
Debevoise & Plimpton,
Dewey & LeBoeuf, Skadden and
White & Case have also all profited from Moscow's corporate finance
boom. The model that Skadden, Cleary and Debevoise have followed is
to develop highly focused, überprofitable corporate finance
practices of no more than 30 lawyers. In contrast, the leading U.K.
players --
Allen & Overy, Clifford
Chance and Linklaters -- all have more than 50 lawyers covering a
wider range of practices.
To meet the increased
demand, international firms have hastily rebuilt their Russian
practices after cutbacks during the late 1990s crisis. Cleary,
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
and Linklaters have all moved partners to Moscow from New York and
London. But as Freshfields's Moscow head Jacky Baudon admits,
finding lawyers willing to move to Moscow can be tough. He says he'd
willingly take more: "I don't even need them to speak Russian."
London-based backup remains
crucial. Skadden is not the only firm to regularly deploy U.K.-based
lawyers on Russian deals.
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld's
30 Moscow attorneys, acting for clients such as Russian oil and gas
giant OAO
Lukoil, regularly call on another 20 lawyers based in
London. Cleary partner Daniel Braverman, who has been a lead partner
on many of the firm's Russian IPOs, including Rosneft and Sberbank,
is based in London, while Dewey & LeBoeuf's Brian Zimbler splits his
time between Moscow and London.
International firms have
begun to make their first Russian partners: most recently, Dmitri
Kovalenko at Skadden in 2007 and Murat Akuyev at Cleary at the start
of 2008. But the supply of Russian lawyers remains tight. "It's a
unique market, in that the economy and legal market have grown more
quickly than the system can produce lawyers," says Moscow- and
London-based Skadden partner Pranav Trivedi. U.S. and U.K. firms
tend to hire lawyers who have graduated from one of a handful of
elite Russian law schools (such as the
Moscow State Institute of International
Relations) and who typically have a second law degree
from an American or British law school. "We could hire 10 attorneys
tomorrow if we could find them," says White & Case partner Eric
Michailov. Also competing for lawyers are local corporations and
investment banks, both Russian and foreign.
Between an overabundance of
work and the scarcity of talent, firms can find themselves stretched
too thin. Last year
Latham & Watkins lost both
its Moscow-based partners. Capital markets partner Varun Gupta left
for A&O in April, and in August former practice head Anya Goldin-"the
queen of the IPO," according to Gupta-became general counsel of
Russian technology, telecoms and real estate conglomerate
Sistema
JSFC. Latham moved quickly to fill the void,
hiring capital markets partner Mark
Banovich from Dewey & LeBoeuf in September.
"Latham is very committed
to Moscow," Banovich says, citing aggressive plans to build the
office from around 15 lawyers today to 40 within a few years. In the
meantime, the firm might consider following Skadden's lead and
arranging visas for its London attorneys. Missing out on Moscow's
boom is a play that few can afford to make.
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