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Aedamar Comiskey
Aedamar is Linklaters Global Head of Corporate and specialises in public and private M&A and regulatory and corporate governance advisory work. She is the lead relationship partner and boardroom adviser for many of the firm's FTSE clients. Aedamar recently led a number of high-profile M&A deals including advising Unilever on its defence of Kraft Heinz company's US$145bn approach; Visa Europe on its €18.37bn sale to Visa Inc; Amec Foster Wheeler on Wood Group's £2.2bn recommended offer; HSBC on the US$5.2bn sale of its Brazilian bank to Banco Bradesco; and Amlin on Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance's £3.48bn recommended offer.Aedamar is also a non-executive director of FTSE company, Hames Fisher and Sons plc.  
Aileen Buchanan
Aileen Buchanan
Aileen is a counsel in our ESG team. She has a breadth of experience assisting clients with a wide range of ESG-related issues including regulation, governance and strategy, disclosure frameworks, and identifying and addressing ESG considerations in M&A transactions and major project financings.
Aisling  Zarraga
Aisling Zarraga
Aisling is a corporate partner who advises on a wide range of corporate and commercial matters around the world. Her main areas of practice include public and private M&A, corporate restructurings and joint ventures, acting for a range of listed and international companies. Aisling acts for companies across a wide range of sectors. In addition, she is the Global Co-Head of Linklaters' Life Sciences and Healthcare Sector and is well-known for her work advising global pharmaceutical companies, biotechs, healthcare services providers and life sciences companies. Aisling also has significant experience in the mining sector, acting on a number of M&A transactions and providing boardroom advice. Aisling is listed as a ‘Leading Individual’ in Legal 500 for ‘Life Sciences and Healthcare’ and ‘Mining and Minerals’.
Alasdair Smith
Alasdair Smith
Alasdair is a Managing Associate in the Linklaters London Pensions practice. He has a wide range of experience, including in relation to bespoke funding arrangements, scheme restructurings, contingent assets and multi-jurisdiction corporate transactions.
Alex Woodward
Alex Woodward
Alex is Co-Head of the Financial Sponsors practice within Linklaters. Alex advises private equity and other financial sponsor clients on transactions including leveraged buy-outs, consortium deals, public takeovers, carve-outs and exits (including by way of IPO) across a variety of sectors. Alex has particular experience in advising sponsor clients on complex cross-border transactions.
Alexander Naidenov
Alexander Naidenov
Alexander Naidenov is a U.S. partner in our London office and focuses on high yield and acquisition finance. He was previously with Cravath Swaine & Moore in New York and London. Alek has extensive experience in sponsor-driven financings, representing underwriters, issuers/sponsors and bridge lenders, including AnaCap (AnaCap Financial), Apollo (Lottomatica, Gamenet, Verallia), Bain (Edcon), Bridgepoint (Miller Homes, THOM, Care UK), Carlyle (Hexaware, SierraCol), Cerberus (WFS, Haya), CVC (Multiversity, GEMS Education, Tendam), EQT (Dometic), Hillhouse (Philips Domestic Appliances), KKR (A.T.U), PAI (Marcolin, Nuance), Qualium (Quick Restaurants), Rhône (Fluidra, Nestle Waters, Eden Springs, S&B Minerals), Triton (Assemblin, Bormioli, Ovako, Dematic, Orion Engineered Carbons), Unitas (Hyva), Warburg Pincus (AA) Alek has also worked on a number event-driven corporate leverage financings, including Kedrion, AMS/Osram, Eir, VistaJet, Corte Inglés, Hertz, CGG Veritas, Welltec, Perform Group, Viridian, Moto, Johnston Press, Carmeuse, Interxion, Dixons, SICPA (NOMA), Millicom, Gallery Group Alek is also involved in high yield restructurings, on creditor or debtor side, including Haya, Seven Energy, Towergate, Klockner Pentaplast, Eircom, WIND Hellas, Countrywide, Almatis, Safilo, Jazztel, Hilding Anders, Truvo and DSI.
Alexandra Beidas
Alexandra Beidas
Alex leads Linklaters’ Global Employment and Incentives Team, and has a very broad practice. She advises on significant corporate transactions (including public company takeovers, private M&A and IPOs) as well as a wide range of advisory and governance matters including board and senior management hires and terminations; workforce engagement; Directors’ Remuneration Policies and Reports; share dealings and disclosures; share plans; ESG and pay transparency.
Andrew Jennens
Andrew Jennens
Andrew regularly acts for bank and fund clients on complex sponsor-backed European leverage finance transactions, including term loan B, bank and bond and unitranche financings. Andrew also has experience in transactions that cross over between leveraged and infrastructure finance and fund finance. His work is also guided by his experience working on distressed situations and restructurings.
Andrew Vickery
Andy is Head of the firm’s Structured Finance Group. He is a specialist in structured finance and real estate finance. He has extensive experience in securitisations, warehouse financings, loan portfolio sales/acquisitions, sale-leasebacks and credit tenant leases and single property and property portfolio financings. Andy also leads the firm’s practices in Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS) and Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS) transactions in the UK, Europe and further afield. Andy regularly acts for the issuers and arrangers on covered bond programmes throughout the world, including those for RBS, Nationwide Building Society and Leeds Building Society in the UK, DnB Bank, the Sparebank 1 Alliance and KLP in Norway, OP Mortgage Bank in Finland, Alpha Bank in Greece, the NAB in Australia, BNZ in New Zealand and DBS and UOB in Singapore. He also leads on a number of key client relationships and is one of the firm’s bank sector leaders.
Andrew Hughes
Andrew Hughes
Andrew Hughes has over 15 years experience as a partner at Linklaters handling complex commercial dispute resolution, investigations and crisis management. He has extensive experience of High court and appellate litigation, regulatory and criminal investigations and select committee inquiries. Andrew is currently acting for a number of major banks and corporates on a range of matters spanning across all areas of his practice.
Andy Bruce
Andy Bruce
Andy leads the firm’s Global Real Estate practice. He has extensive experience in the acquisition, financing, development, letting and disposal of all types of commercial real estate both in the UK and internationally. Work highlights Ranked in the Hall of Fame for Real Estate in Legal 500, Andy has led on many major real estate transactions. Highlights include advising: Development transactions: Lendlease on: >  its joint venture with Starwood Capital to acquire the £3.5bn Silvertown Quays, London urban renewal project; >  the £1.9bn Birmingham Smithfield City Centre development covering 17 hectares; and >  the £2bn ongoing redevelopment of Elephant & Castle, London, comprising 300,000 sqm of new build and mixed use development Several high-profile Middle Eastern investors and developers on their development schemes in the UK and the Middle East. Investment deals: Obayashi on the £140m+ purchase of 60 Gracechurch Street, London and its proposed development. City Developments Limited on their £395m purchase of St. Katherine Docks, a 23-acre landmark mixed use scheme. Ho Bee Land on their £718m acquisition of The Scalpel landmark office building in the City of London. A major pan-European core fund as it expands across Europe. A consortium member on its investment in a €6.4 billion global portfolio of approximately 900 hotels. Lettings: Ramsbury as landlord/developer on the pre-let of 220,000sqft office space to accountancy firm BDO as its new London HQ. Glencore as tenant on the pre-let of their HQ premises in Hanover Square. Sale and leasebacks: Several clients on sale and leaseback transactions (including leasehold liability transfers and virtual assignments), including a major financial institution on a large multi-jurisdictional structured sale and leaseback.
Angus Graham
Angus Graham
Angus is a partner in the London leveraged finance practice. Angus represents underwriting banks and alternative capital providers on institutional financing transactions, with a particular focus on leveraged buyout, infrastructure and other acquisition financings. He also has experience advising on regulatory-driven and structured finance transactions, as well as restructurings. Angus has completed extended secondments within the leveraged finance team at Goldman Sachs and the private credit group at PSP Investments, and was seconded for 18 months to the firm’s New York office, where he focussed on US and Latin American financings and restructurings.
Anna Mitchell
Anna Mitchell
Anna is a partner in the antitrust & foreign investment group at Linklaters. She has almost 15 years’ of experience advising clients on a range of complex competition matters, in particular complex UK and EU merger control, UK public takeovers, global foreign direct investment and market studies. More recently, she has been guiding clients through the new EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation. She is well recognised in the market and, in particular, has recently been named in the Global Competition Review “40 under 40” 2023 for Foreign Investment Control, as a “Shining Star” in Antitrust 2023 by W@Competition, as a “Future Leader” in Who’s Who Legal: Competition and as a “Next Generation Partner” in Legal 500’s rankings.
Arjun Muddu
Arjun Muddu
Arjun is a Partner in the firm’s Equity and Debt Capital Markets group in London and has over 20 years’ experience advising investment banks, corporates, financial institutions and sovereign clients on a wide range of debt capital markets products. These include EMTN programmes, regulatory capital issuances, investment grade and sub-investment grade offerings and sovereign and supranational issuances, liability management transactions, corporate restructurings and bank recapitalisations. Since joining the capital markets practice, Arjun has worked to develop the firm’s liability management practice across the global network and has advised on the most complex and innovative liability management transactions in the past years.
Atish Shah
Atish Shah
Atish is a Managing Associate in the firm's Banking practice. He has experience advising banks and corporate clients on a range of cross-border and domestic financings, including financial restructurings, with a particular focus on private and public acquisition, crossover credit and general investment grade financings. Atish also has experience of acting on emerging markets, real estate finance and margin lending transactions. Atish spent nine months on secondment to Barclays’ Loans Execution team.
Ben Dulieu
Ben Dulieu
Ben advises on a wide range of debt, equity-linked and equity issues in the international capital markets. He has particular experience in convertible and exchangeable bonds, standalone bond issues, Medium Term Note (MTN) programmes, liability management and associated listing and regulatory rules and regulations. Ben has developed a reputation as one of the leading lawyers in the London market for complex equity-linked transactions in particular, being involved in numerous “first of a kind” fund raisings. Ben is co-head of the firm’s Swiss desk and has particular experience in assisting Swiss corporates in accessing the international capital markets. He was seconded to the firm’s offices in Singapore (from 1998 to 2000) and in Paris (from 2000 to 2001) and has also spent time on secondment at one of the firm’s investment bank clients.
Benedict James
Benedict James
Benedict has broad finance and derivatives experience in the banking and  structured financial products markets, acting mainly for financial institutions but also for major corporates. Benedict particularly specialises in advising financial institutions on the prudential  and structural regulatory landscape, especially the changes resulting from the recent financial and political crises. His practice combines market-leading advisory expertise with a transactional structured-finance offering designed to assist institutions address the challenges of the new regulatory settlement. He advises many of the leading UK, European, US and Asian banks on structural change as well as regulatory capital, liquidity and leverage ratio requirements. He has also advised a number of CCPs across the world, and/or their clearing members, on the structuring of their platforms, particularly from an insolvency and regulatory capital perspective.
Bradley Richardson
Bradley Richardson
Bradley advises a very broad range of clients on strategic remuneration and share scheme matters, including advising on incentives aspects of complex public and private takeovers, as well as regularly acting for financial sponsors in respect of both acquisitions and the design and implementation of management incentive arrangements. Bradley is a leading adviser in respect of financial services regulatory matters, advising a broad range of very prominent clients, being well known in the sector and being actively involved with leading industry bodies. Bradley is currently advising global leading banks on the high-profile removal of the “bonus cap”, and was quoted extensively in the national press on the subject. Key clients include Lloyds Banking Group, Anglo American, GlaxosmithKline, Bank of America and Royal Bank of Canada.
Bruce Kilpatrick
Bruce Kilpatrick
Partner in the Addleshaw Goddard competition group, based in London, specialising in UK and EC competition and merger control law. Represents clients across a wide variety of sectors, including financial services, IT, industry, transport and retail and has acted on a wide range of cases in the UK and EC. These include: advising clients in recent CMA competition investigations (including construction and e-books); advising clients on recent merger control investigations (including Omnicell/Surgichem and Alliance Medical/IBA Molecular); advising clients in CMA market studies, market investigations, including retail banking, private motor insurance, PPI and NI banking.
Bruce White
Bruce has been a partner at Linklaters since 1995 and heads up Linklaters’ infrastructure practice. With nearly 25 years of experience, his most notable deals include advising on the establishment, governance and financing of the Green Deal Finance Company Limited and the Thames Tideway Tunnel Project. His most recent and current transactions include advising on: the restructuring and refinancing of the Cory riverside EfW business; on a potential financing vehicle for the infrastructure needs of LA Metro; the financing of the two Ferrybridge EfW plants; the termination of the Severn River Crossings concession and numerous refinancings.
Cara Hegarty
Cara Hegarty
Cara has over 15 years' experience of advising on the design and implementation of executive and all-employee incentive arrangements and pay reporting requirements. She also works on public and private transactions, leading on many of the team's most complex transactions and sensitive advisory matters. Her key clients include Experian, BP, Capita, Unilever, National Grid, WPP and Rothesay Life.
Carl Fernandes
Carl Fernandes
Carl Fernandes is a London-based Partner in the global Financial Regulation Group. He has extensive experience in advising banks, broker-dealers, asset managers and private banks on a broad range of complex financial services regulatory issues in both Europe and Asia, including as to the scope of licensing requirements, market conduct requirements and restrictions and appropriate risk management systems and controls. Carl was head of the Asian Financial Regulation Group at Linklaters for five years before returning to London. Carl’s focus will be on assisting clients to navigate and implement the necessary changes to comply with key institutional market reforms in Europe and to defend regulatory enforcement action arising out of conduct in these markets.
Caroline Courtney
Caroline Courtney
Caroline has extensive experience advising corporates, banks, financial institutions and sponsors on a range of complex cross-border financing transactions, including syndicated lending, loan and leasing transactions in the maritime and aviation sectors, acquisition finance, mining and distressed lending. In 2017, Caroline completed an eight-month secondment to the structuring team within the Global Credit Trading division of Deutsche Bank, supporting their special situations (transport, infrastructure and energy), direct lending and credit solutions teams. Caroline practiced in an Irish law firm before joining Linklaters in 2013.
Carson Welsh
Carson Welsh
Carson is widely acknowledged as a leading debt capital markets lawyer, advising on the full range of debt capital markets transactions, including issues of senior debt, regulatory capital, corporate hybrid debt, equity-related debt and liability management and restructuring exercises. Carson has extensive experience of acting for issuers and underwriters on major bank recapitalisations and issues of loss-absorbing instruments by bank and insurance companies. He worked on the development of all of the post-CRD IV bank, and Solvency II insurance, capital products, often advising on the first such products in countries across Europe. Carson is a member of the firm’s Partnership Board, the governance body responsible for strategic and core decisions, and led the firm’s Equity and Debt Markets Group from 2007 to 2012. Earlier in his career, Carson worked in the firm’s Hong Kong office, working on a range of emerging markets matters.
Cecil Quillen
Cecil is a London-based US partner who is the leader of the firm’s global US securities and corporate practice. He works on a broad spectrum of securities and finance matters, with a special emphasis on cross-border offerings of high-yield and other covenant-intensive debt securities, and has wide expertise in offerings of debt, equity, regulatory capital and structured securities in established and emerging markets, as well as in liability management transactions and restructurings. Cecil speaks regularly at a variety of professional conferences, is an officer of the Securities Law Committee of the International Bar Association, chairing its Underwriting and Distribution Subcommittee, and sits on the Advisory Committee for Securities Regulation in Europe of the Practising Law Institute.
Cecil D Quillen III
Cecil D Quillen III
Cecil is a London-based US partner who is the leader of the firm’s global US securities and corporate practice. He works on a broad spectrum of securities and finance matters, with a special emphasis on cross-border offerings of high-yield and other covenant-intensive debt securities, and has wide expertise in offerings of debt, equity, regulatory capital and structured securities in established and emerging markets, as well as in liability management transactions and restructurings. Cecil speaks regularly at a variety of professional conferences, is an officer of the Securities Law Committee of the International Bar Association, chairing its Underwriting and Distribution Subcommittee, and sits on the Advisory Committee for Securities Regulation in Europe of the Practising Law Institute.
Charles Jacobs
Charles Jacobs
Charlie is Linklaters' senior partner and chairman and a corporate partner who focuses on public and private M&A and international capital raisings and regulatory and corporate governance standards. He has been the outstanding name in the mining sector worldwide for many decades. He also advises on many of the largest M&A deals in the market, most recently for SAB Miller on its $100 billion takeover by ABI-InBev and Steinhoff's JSE spin-off of its African assets. Charlie is a key boardroom adviser to many of the firm’s largest clients including Glencore, Arcelor Mittal.
Charlotte L Morgan
Charlotte Morgan has a wide range of experience in the energy and infrastructure sector. On the infrastructure side Charlotte leads the team advising Thames Water in respect of the £4.1bn super sewer Thames Tideway project, creating a new structure for investment in infrastructure projects. She continues to advise a consortium of 3i, Siemens and Innisfree on the circa £1.5bn rollingstock procurement for Thameslink. In new power generation she is advising Centrica in respect of its new nuclear joint venture with EdF and 2Co in respect of the first to market carbon capture and storage project in the UK. In transmission she advised Transmission Capital in respect of their successful purchase Offshore Transmission Operator assets at Robin Rigg, Gunfleet Sands, Ormonde and Barrow and in respect of the bids for Lincs, Gwynt y Mor and London Array. She is currently advising National Grid and Elia in respect of the UK-Belgium interconnector.
Chris Medley
Chris Medley
Chris advises bank and fund clients on cross-border debt financings, refinancings and restructurings. He has a particular focus on sponsor-backed leveraged acquisition finance and routinely works on the largest and most complex sponsor-backed financing structures in the European leverage finance market, including term loan B financings, bank and bond structures, unitranche financings and post-IPO financings. Chris frequently works with, and is well known to, leading underwriting banks on underwritten term loan B financings and is likewise well known to direct lenders on unitranche financings. Chris was previously seconded to the leveraged finance and high-yield teams of JP Morgan and Citibank, which gives him a deep understanding of the internal workings of origination, credit and execution teams, allowing him to provide practical and tailored advice to bank, fund and sponsor clients. He also spent two years on secondment to the firm’s Madrid office and speaks Spanish.
Chris Staples
Chris Staples
Chris is a sector leader for our Energy & Utilities practice and co-head of our Global Commodities practice. He has extensive experience advising clients across multiple sectors including the energy, natural resources and chemicals industries in relation to M&A, joint ventures and sector specific regulatory issues.  His practice focuses primarily on leading a wide range of energy and natural resources transactions and matters.  In addition to M&A and joint ventures, he also advises on commodity sale and purchase transactions, repos and prepays, energy and commodity market regulatory and the allocation and management of environmental and climate change risks including advising on associated regulatory enforcement matters.  He is a market leader in advising on economic and fiscal instruments for climate and environmental protection.
Christian Ahlborn
Christian Ahlborn
Christian is a Partner in the Linklaters London competition practice. He specialises in EC competition law and EC state aid control, UK competition law and German competition law, including notifications to EC and national competition authorities.
Christianne Williams
Christianne Williams
Christianne is a highly regarded finance lawyer, with extensive experience advising lenders and borrowers on complex cross-border leveraged finance transactions. She has particular expertise in high yield financings for companies across Europe and emerging markets, including notably in the natural resources sector. Christianne also regularly advises on debt liability management transactions and restructurings.
Christopher Bellamy KC
Christopher Bellamy KC
Sir Christopher Bellamy QC is the Chairman of the Linklaters Global competition practice. Sir Christopher set up what is now the Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) and held the post of president from 1999 to 2007. The CAT hears appeals from regulatory decisions by the OFT and other regulators under the Competition Act 1998 and Articles 101 and 102 of the EU Treaty, appeals under the Communications Act 2003, reviews in relation to merger and market investigations under the Enterprise Act 2002, and certain damages actions. As president, he was responsible for case management, interlocutory and interim applications, chairing the main hearings and preparing and delivering the judgments. Prior to joining the CAT, from 1992 to 1999 Sir Christopher was one of 15 judges of the Court of First Instance (CFI), now the General Court of the EU. He was president of a five-judge chamber from 1996 to 1999. Cases where he participated covered a wide range of EU law including: anti-dumping; competition; freedom of information; free movement of goods; international law; pharmaceutical regulation; trademarks; and state aid. Before becoming a judge at the CFI, Sir Christopher was one of the leading QCs at the competition and EU law Bar in London.
Colin Chang
Colin Chang
Colin Chang is a U.S. Partner in our London office and focuses on high yield and acquisition finance. He joined Linklaters from White & Case in Paris and London in January 2020. Colin has extensive experience representing underwriters, issuers and private equity sponsors in high yield offerings and bridge-to-high yield financings in both the European and U.S. markets, including offerings by Endeavour Mining, Ontex, Casino, Rubis Terminal, CGG, Doc Generici, Burger King France, Fives, iQera, Fnac Darty, Air Liquide, Quick Restaurants, Elis, Europcar, Faurecia, Novacap, Novasep, Rexel, Invitel and Treofan. Colin also has extensive experience in high yield restructurings, having represented high yield issuers Solocal, Novasep, Wind Hellas and Treofan.
Damien Gomez
Damien Gomez
Damien advises financial institutions, corporates and insolvency practitioners on UK, international and cross-border restructuring and insolvency matters. In addition to UK and European situations, he also has a particular focus on the Middle East, having advised on a number of restructurings and formal insolvency process in the region. Damien’s experience includes bank debt and bond restructurings (consensual and otherwise), contingency planning, security enforcements, pre-pack administrations and other insolvency procedures. He has worked across a range of sectors, including infrastructure, financial services / financial institutions, retail, consumer, hospitality, oil and gas, construction and aviation / aviation services. During his career at Linklaters, Damien has also spent over a year on secondment to a UK bank’s special situations team. Damien is one of the firm’s Trainee Recruitment Partners, responsible for the firm’s graduate recruitment programme in the UK. He has participated in several community investment programmes, including mentoring students from local schools. He is a member of the firm’s HeForShe steering committee and is actively invested in the firm’s diversity and inclusion mission.
Danelle Le Cren
Danelle Le Cren
Danelle is a New York law-qualified senior banking partner who splits her time between London and New York and advises on complex domestic and cross-border finance transactions, including leveraged and acquisition finance and restructuring/workout matters. She has specialist expertise in U.S. and European Term Loan B (TLB) transactions. Danelle also advises on corporate, infrastructure, asset, ECA, project and tax-based finance transactions. Danelle is also the lead U.S. relationship partner for a number of the firm’s major banking clients.Work Highlights:Danelle has led on a number of significant and complex banking transactions. Examples of her experience include advising:  the initial lenders under a US$1.5 billion term loan facility to AT&T to finance the purchase of telecommunications equipment in the United States and Mexico Sibanye Gold Limited on its US$2.7 billion financing of the acquisition of Stillwater Mining Company the administrative agent for the sensor secured lender group under a US$700m loan to Atlas Resources Partners, an oil and gas company operating in the U.S. in connection with a pre-packaged Chapter 11 plan and the related exit facility Steinhoff International Holdings N.V., a South African-based international retailer, on the US$4bn financing of its acquisition of U.S. retailer, Mattress Firm Holding Corp. the administrative agent for the senior secured lender group to Memorial Production Operating LLC, an oil and gas company operating in the US in connection with the restructuring of its US$925 credit facility the administrative agent on the restructuring of US$320m credit agreement for a company that operates major container terminals in the U.S. the administrative agent on a senior secured US$300m covenant-lite TLB and revolving credit facility refinancing for Hudson Products Holding, a U.S.-based manufacturer of heat exchangers the administrative agent on a senior secured US$200m of finance for H.I.G. Capital’s acquisition of ATX Networks, a developer of radio frequency and digital video processing equipment  
Daniel Tyrer
Daniel Tyrer
Daniel is the Global Head of the Energy & Infrastructure practice, based in London. He is widely recognised as a leading projects practitioner with nearly 25 years’ continuous experience specialising in upstream oil and gas, LNG, pipeline, refinery and petrochemical plant related project development, project finance and private equity transactions across EMEA and the CIS.
David Irvine
David Irvine
A market leader in finance, David Irvine brings years of experience and extensive knowledge to private equity sponsors and private credit funds in major cross-border leveraged and acquisition financing transactions. David also advises on recaps, minority back-leverage, special situations financings, margin loans, fund level financings and restructurings.
David Watkins
David Watkins
As head of the firm’s planning team, David has significant experience in all aspects of town planning and development activity. His experience includes negotiating planning permissions for large and complex projects, co-ordinating major public inquiries, and obtaining all planning consents, as well as having in-depth knowledge of compulsory purchase orders, road closure orders and statutory agreements. He is well known for his planning successes involving mixed use developments. Since the early 1990’s David has been heavily involved in advising clients on securing permission to build a series of tall buildings in the City of London, which has changed the face of the City and led to the development of tall buildings in other areas of London.Work highlights David has led on a wide range of the market’s most prominent planning applications. These include advising: Aroland Holdings on the development of a 300m tall building to be known as 1 Undershaft on the site of the Aviva Tower, which, when completed, will be the City of London’s tallest skyscraper Bloomberg on the redevelopment of the three-acre site comprising Bucklersbury House, Walbrook, London to create two new buildings British Land on the redevelopment of 122 Leadenhall Street as a 48-storey, 220m tower in the City of London British Museum on the redevelopment of the northwest corner of the Museum’s Grade I listed Bloomsbury Estate to provide a World Conservation and Exhibition Centre comprising five interconnected glazed pavilions Great Portland Estates on the redevelopment of Rathbone Place, a 2.5-acre site adjacent to Oxford Street to create a new mixed use development Grosvenor and Native Land as joint developers of Neo Bankside (next to Tate Modern Gallery) involving the construction of five new buildings with mixed retail/residential use
Deepak Sitlani
Deepak Sitlani
Deepak is a Partner in the derivatves and structured products group. He is a specialist in structuring and documenting documenting of derivative transactions across the full spectrum of asset classes, including OTC equity derivatives, credit derivatives, interest rate and commodity derivatives. Deepak acts for a wide range of entities, including investment banks, corporates, investment managers, share scheme trustees and pension fund trustees. He has also acted for ISDA on Brexit, the EU Benchmark Regulation, the development of fallbacks to IBOR, the posting of Japanese collateral as initial margin, the 2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions and a template emerging markets equity option confirmation. He is a regular speaker on a wide range of derivatives topics as well as at ISDA sponsored conferences.
Duncan Barber
Duncan Barber
Duncan is a leading practitioner in the insurance sector. He has extensive experience in all types of corporate transactions within the sector, including public and private M&A, reinsurances, distribution arrangements, financings and securitisations. Duncan also advises on insurance regulation including the impact of the Solvency II Directive and the UK leaving the EU. Duncan has led on many of the transformative transactions within the insurance sector throughout the past 25 years, including advising on several of the demutualisations of the 1990s/early 2000s, on with-profits reorganisations by major insurers and on the increased use of longevity reinsurance as an innovative structure to reduce risk on pension fund liabilities. He has also advised on many transfers of life and non-life insurance business. Duncan is responsible for managing the firm’s relationships with several of the firm’s key insurer clients. He led the firm’s insurance sector group for 10 years. Duncan has advised or led on, many of the insurance sector’s highest profile transactions. These include advising:   Lloyds TSB (now Lloyds Banking Group) on its £7bn acquisition of Scottish Widows and the subsequent demutualisation, which, in addition to being a high-profile, high-value transaction, required the negotiation of bespoke protections for Scottish Widows’ policyholders, including negotiating with regulators a series of unprecedented capital reserves   Old Mutual on its takeover of the Swedish-headed global insurer Skandia, which was, at the time, the highest value takeover ever in the insurance sector. This involved preparing a UK prospectus for Old Mutual which, once approved in London, was then passported for use in Sweden and other European jurisdictions and also required obtaining regulatory approval in about 30 jurisdictions   Swiss Re’s “Admin Re” life and pensions business on its acquisition of Guardian Assurance from Cinven and management of Guardian Assurance, which involved detailed due diligence given Swiss Re was buying from private equity sellers, and was signed at a time when there remained uncertainty as to the approach being applied by the regulators to insurers under Solvency II including the subsequent Part VII transfer of the business of Guardian Assurance to ReAssure Limited   Aviva UK Life on the transfer of the whole of the long-term life insurance business of Friends Life Limited and Friends Life and Pensions Limited to Aviva Life & Pensions UK Limited by way of a court-sanctioned insurance business transfer Scheme  the Association of British Insurers and various UK insurers on the implications of, and contingency planning for, Brexit  Generali Group on the disposal of its entire shareholding in Generali Nederland (and its subsidiaries) to ASR Nederland   Duncan is also a contributory author to A Practitioner’s Guide to The FSA Regulation of Insurance.
Eamonn Doran
Eamonn Doran
Eamonn is a Consultant in the Linklaters London competition practice. He specialises in UK and EC merger control and antitrust regulation. Work has included clients from a number of sectors – banking, brewing, general insurance, health insurance, chemicals, publishing, manufacturing – and given him significant experience in dealing with competition authorities in London and Brussels.
Edward Chan
Edward Chan
Edward specialises in complex structured financings, particularly those with elements driven by regulatory or tax requirements. Edward also works with various financial institutions on prudential regulatory matters, such as advising on regulatory capital and liquidity requirements, bank ringfencing, and in relation to recovery and resolution planning. Edward regularly advises insurers and pension schemes on the collateralisation and custodial aspects of longevity risk transfers, and has particular experience in both security and title transfer collateralisation arrangements. Edward leads the firm’s initiative on artificial intelligence, and has been advising on the use of technology to enhance and optimise current legal processes.
Edward Smith
Edward Smith
Edward is a senior funds partner, and one of the firm’s global investment management sector leaders. He is a specialist in the structuring, marketing and establishment of real estate, private equity and infrastructure funds, carried interest and co-investment schemes and other forms of asset management arrangement, advising both managers and a number of large institutional investors. Edward has considerable knowledge in listed funds, and, working in collaboration with the firm’s equity capital markets lawyers, he advises issuers, underwriters and alternative asset managers on permanent capital vehicles and other listed funds. Edward is knowledgeable in the use of funds techniques and practices into other forms of corporate transaction, such as joint ventures, investment clubs and similar arrangements. Edward has particular knowledge of the implications of the EU Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD), and has also been advising a number of clients on the impact of the referendum decision by the UK to leave the European Union, particularly on the issue of passporting rights. Edward was based in Hong Kong between 2009 and 2012, as head of the Funds practice, and he continues to service Asian funds, as well as supervise some aspects of the funds work of the firm’s Hong Kong office from London.Work highlights: Prologis on the structuring and set up of a £1 billion joint venture with CBRE Global Investment Partners for the purpose of acquiring land, developing buildings and operating and holding logistics real estate assets in the UK Prologis its €2.4bn joint venture with Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) Barings (formerly Cornerstone) on the establishment of the Barings European Core Property Fund, utilizing the new Luxembourg special limited partnership structure Eurocastle Investment Limited on its innovative €75m tender offer A leading UK headquartered alternative asset manager on a series of acquisitions of minority interests in asset management businesses; A number of large sovereign investors on a series of investments into leading private equity, real estate and infrastructure funds Mitsubishi Corporation on two fund vehicles to create a global strategic investment alliance, bringing together funds into an alliance
Elaine Keats
Elaine Keats
Elaine is a partner in the firm’s Equity & Debt Markets Group in the Capital Markets department in London. She has extensive experience in the full range of debt capital markets products, including standalone debt offerings, retail bonds, euro medium term note programmes, regulatory capital, hybrid bonds and liability management transactions. Elaine founded the firm’s Liability Management practice in 2005 and has spearheaded its development ever since throughout Europe and Asia and also leads the firm’s relationship with a major US investment bank.  In addition to fee earning work, Elaine is a mentor as part of Linklaters’ Women’s Leadership Programme, developed in conjunction with Cranfield School of Management to help managing associates maximise their potential with a greater proportion of women to reach partner level. Elaine has won the Euromoney LMG Europe Women in Business individual award for Best in Debt Capital Markets for six consecutive years from 2013 to 2018.
Euan Clarke
Euan Clarke
Euan is a specialist in insolvency litigation. His practice covers contentious and advisory insolvency and restructuring, banking disputes and fraud and regulatory investigations. He has particular experience advising banks, financial institutions, companies and insolvency practitioners in relation to contentious issues arising from complex restructuring, insolvency and corporate distress situations, especially those with a cross-border element. Euan is also a past-President of the Insolvency Lawyers’ Association.Euan was one of the core group of partners who has been advising the administrators of the Lehman Brothers companies in the UK, since day one. Other significant cases include Toys r Us, Enron, MG Rover, Beaufort Securities and Irish Bank Resolution.Recent cases include acting for Nero Holdings Limited, on its recent CVA, including defending a challenge brought by certain landlord creditors, and Intu Properties advising on the restructuring and subsequent insolvency of the Intu group of companies.
Fiona Hobbs
Fiona is a leading energy and infrastructure specialist. Recent deals include advising: ENI on the unitisation of Areas 1 and 4, Mozambique, the Lenders (JBIC, NEXI, AfDB, ECIC and commercial lenders) on the $2.4b financing of the Nacala pit to port railway in Malawi and Mozambique, HS1 on the renegotiation of its power supply arrangements and HS1’s shareholders on the sale of HS1. Fiona’s other key clients include KNOC and The Department of Transport.
Georgina Kon
Georgina Kon
Specialise in advising both public and private sector clients on complex domestic and international IT, outsourcing and information governance matters (including data privacy and freedom of information matters). Shortlisted for Legal Advisor of the Year 2016 by the National Outsourcing Association.
Giacomo Reali
Giacomo Reali
Giacomo Reali is a US-qualified partner who focuses on high yield bonds and leveraged finance transactions across Europe. Giacomo has extensive experience representing financial institutions, private equity sponsors and corporates in cross-border financing transactions, including high yield bond offerings, acquisition and bridge financings, pre-/post-IPO financings, private placements and liability management transactions. In addition, Giacomo also has a particular expertise in preferred equity and distressed financings. Over the course of his career, Giacomo has worked on several market-leading transactions, including advising on the financings for Altice International, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Block Communications, Cabot Financial, Cerba, CMA CGM, CMC-Ravenna, Colfax, Consolidated Minerals, EnQuest, European Investment Bank, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Global Closure Systems, Harbour Energy, HudBay Minerals, Impax Laboratories, Klöckner Pentaplast, Labco, Limacorporate, Picard Surgelés, Pro-Gest, Scientific Games, Signature Aviation, SISAL, TeamSystem, Tekni-Plex, Tereos, Virgin Media, and WillScot-Mobile Mini.
Greg Reid
Greg Reid
Over 25 years’ experience of International Commercial Arbitration and Litigation, including conduct as counsel of numerous arbitrations under the ICC, LCIA, UNCITRAL and ICSID rules and ad hoc proceedings. Particular expertise in the areas of Energy and Infrastructure Projects. Co-author of the Linklaters Dispute Toolkit and author of numerous articles on arbitration topics and a regular speaker at arbitration conferences.
Harry Eddis
Harry Eddis
Harry has long-standing expertise in financial markets regulation, and regularly advises banks, broker-dealers, investment managers and other financial services institutions on all issues related to their regulated status. In addition, he offers guidance on perimeter issues, such as authorisation requirements, market abuse and market conduct requirements, as well as wholesale market infrastructure. Recently, Harry has been advising on MiFID II and Brexit issues for a broad range of financial service institutions as well as industry bodies. Harry is a market-leading expert on clearing platforms, advising both banks and Central Clearing Counterparties (CCPs) on a number of projects involving the structure of clearing arrangements across a wide range of product types, including credit default swaps (CDSs), IRS, commodities and foreign exchange (FX) products. Harry has leveraged his regulatory and market expertise over the years in relation to FinTech, advising BrokerTec and SwapsWire on the establishment of electronic trading and post-trade platforms. Harry continues to be a leader in this field, currently advising a consortium of banks on FinTech issues and being a regular speaker at FinTech events. Harry spent more than four years with a major investment bank, covering equity derivatives, advising on the structuring and distribution of derivative products. This experience gave Harry particular insight into the way in which financial institutions operate and a deep understanding of complex financial instruments.Work highlights: Harry has an extensive financial regulatory practice. The breadth of his practice includes advising, among others: Regulatory change: advising on the implications of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID2). Other recent matters have included advising on market conduct, the foreign exchange (FX) remediation programme, the senior managers regime (SMR), the impact of the senior management arrangements, systems and controls (SYSC) regime and Client Assets and Money (CASS) implementation New structures: advising on the creation and structuring of trading and clearing platforms, including NASDAQ, OTCDeriv and a consortium in the process of setting up a precious metals exchange and clearing platform Pre-contentious regulatory: advising on various FX reviews and remediation and market conduct investigations, including advising major banks on their policies and procedures to comply with the senior managers function (SMF) Contentious regulatory: advising a number of major banks on FX manipulation investigations and market abuse and conduct reviews, as well as carrying out “Shadow S166” reviews alongside regulators Financial sector corporate activity: advising on the financial regulatory aspects of IPOs and other corporate transactions
Iain Wagstaff
Iain Wagstaff
Iain is a partner in the corporate practice who specialises in public and private mergers and acquisitions, IPOs, secondary capital raisings and joint ventures. He acts for corporates, financial sponsors and investment banks. He has completed two client secondments at leading investment banks. Iain’s recent experience includes advising BC Partners and Pollen Street Capital on their acquisition of Shawbrook, Stonegate on its offer for Revolution Bars, Hutchison on its potential £9.5 billion acquisition of O2 and Three’s acquisition of UK Broadband, Bill Kenwright and others on the sale of Everton Football Club to Farhad Mosiri, Centrica on the acquisition of ENER-G, Siemens on the £1.742bn acquisition of the international automated rail business of Invensys plc and the £950 million acquisition of Rolls Royce’s energy business; GDF SUEZ on its €20.2bn reverse takeover of International Power plc and subsequent €9.5bn recommended cash offer for the minority stake; GDF SUEZ on the disposal of 30% of its upstream oil and gas business to China Investment Corporation and the disposal of its North Sea assets to Total; Fresnillo on its demerger, redomicile and listing on the London Stock Exchange; initial public offerings for Investec, Biffa, Aldermore, CMC Markets, Card Factory, Manx Telecom and Just Eat; Capital Shopping Centres on the acquisition of the Trafford Centre and defence of hostile approach from Simon Property Group; and on secondary capital raisings including those by British Land, intu Properties, Investec and Meggitt.
Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter
Ian is a partner in the Linklaters corporate department who focuses on public and private M&A, international capital raisings and joint ventures. He advises a number of the firm's major clients in the mining sector worldwide, and also advises professional services firms and networks on structure and governance. Ian is a relationship partner for a number of the firm's key mining clients, including Glencore, KAZ Minerals, and Endeavour Mining.
Ian Callaghan
Ian Callaghan
Ian advises corporates, investment banks and alternative credit providers on public and private acquisition financings, cross-border syndicated lending, margin lending, fund financing arrangements and other structured financings. Ian spent eight months on secondment to BNP Paribas’ loan syndication and trading team from 2009 to 2010 and eight months on secondment to Alcentra from 2013 to 2014, assisting their Collateralised Loan Obligation (CLO), direct lending and special situations teams.
Ian Andrews
Ian Andrews
Ian Co-heads the Infrastructure & transport sector at Linklaters. He has been involved with the infrastructure practice for over 25 years and has advised sponsors and funders on infrastructure financings and acquisitions in almost every country in Europe. His recent experience includes advising Borealis Infrastructure and Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan (OTPP) on the sale of HS1 and the original £2.1 billion purchase; AIMCO, Borealis Infrastructure, Ontario Teachers and Wren House on their successful acquisition of London City Airport (European M&A deal of the year, Infrastructure Journal Awards 2017); funders on the purchase of National grid’s UK gas distribution business (NGGD) (the biggest ever energy infrastructure deal); the refinancing of Budapest Airport’s debt package and bond financing following the successful €1.3bn refinancing three years ago, on which Ian also advised (European airport deal of the year, PFI Awards 2015); the private shareholders on the extension of the concession for Athens Airport and the potential further privatisation by the Greek State; funders on the acquisition by Chinese investors of Urbaser SA in Spain; Public Sector Pensions (PSP) on their acquisition of Hochtief Airport, with interests in Athens, Budapest, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Sydney and Tirana Airports; Borealis Infrastructure, AP1, AP3 and Folksam on their €6.6bn acquisition of Fortum Distribution in Sweden (now Ellevio), the largest ever Nordic infrastructure acquisition (European M&A deal of the year, Project Finance International Awards 2015) and Allianz and Borealis Infrastructure on acquisition of Net4Gas.
Ian Karet
Ian specializes in intellectual property and technology and covers commercial work and disputes. He is a qualified arbitrator and mediator. Significant cases include Merck v Merck, ICC royalty arbitration, Aerotel v Telco, Actavis v Merck, 32Red v William Hill and Tate & Lyle v Roquette. He is a solicitor advocate and a qualified arbitrator and mediator.
Ildar Bagautdinov
Ildar Bagautdinov
Ildar advises financial institutions and corporates in international banking deals with a particular focus on structured and limited recourse financings across the globe (including the CIS and other emerging markets). He also advises on margin loans. Ildar spent a few months in the firm’s Moscow office and was seconded to Citi in London (in 2010).
Iyesogie Igiehon
Iyesogie Igiehon
Iyesogie is a Managing Associate and has experience advising clients in relation to a broad range of environmental, social and governance matters. A key aspect of her work involves reviewing and analysing new regulatory developments and providing practical advice for clients on how to navigate their compliance obligations. Iyes also has extensive experience in supporting clients with the development of ESG strategies, including climate transition and decarbonisation plans. She has a wealth of experience in transactional matters, advising regularly on ESG aspects of mergers and acquisitions, public listings and project finance, as well as advising financial institutions on the application of, and compliance with, sustainable finance legislation. Iyesogie is experienced in dealing with anti-bribery and corruption and modern slavery matters in a transactional and advisory context and regularly advises on confidential risk and investigatory matters.
James Godfrey
James Godfrey
James is a banking lawyer with experience in advising on a wide range of finance transactions, including real estate finance, syndicated corporate financings and leveraged acquisition finance. He has built strong relationships with several leading funds and banks in helping them to develop their real estate finance businesses, particularly with respect to highly structured, cross-border deals. James was seconded to a global investment and securities bank for nine months in 2018 and 2019, where he worked in the loan negotiation group.
James Warboys
James Warboys
James represents companies, financial stakeholders, advisory firms and insolvency practitioners on transactions across the full spectrum of restructuring and insolvency (R&I) in multiple jurisdictions and sectors, including distressed M&A, debt-for-equity swaps, liability management exercises, bond restructuring, alternative credit and other new money financings and distressed debt investments. James regularly advises distressed credit funds and other alternative capital providers on secondary debt and new money investments. He works in close collaboration with the Firm’s corporate, capital markets, banking and other practices across jurisdictions to undertake capital structure analysis and to develop innovative investment structures and strategies. James was based in Hong Kong as a partner for 5 years and has extensive experience of advising and lending on big ticket restructuring and insolvency in Asia. James undertook a year-long secondment in 2013 to the global restructuring group at the Royal Bank of Scotland, during which he worked in the high-flow business team with large international banking clients to address distressed situations, particularly in the financial institution and shipping sectors.
James Simpson
James Simpson
James has extensive experience representing private equity firms, corporate issuers and investment banks in connection with high yield bond offerings and acquisition financings as well as private placements of debt securities, tender offers and other liability management exercises.
James Wootton
James Wootton
James is a corporate partner based in London and is Global Co-Head of our Equities practice and advises companies, financial institutions and funds on a wide range of corporate, M&A and capital markets matters. He specialises in particular in equity capital markets transactions and  in recent years has advised Wise on its London direct listing, Alphawave IP, Allied Irish Banks, TSB Banking Group and Countryside Properties, among others, on their London IPOs, and the underwriters on the IPOs of Oxford Nanopore Technologies,  Clydesdale & Yorkshire Banks, Royal Mail and ConvaTec. He also operates at the forefront of regulatory developments across the equity capital markets space and regularly advises banking industry groups in this area.
James Martin
James Martin
James advises arrangers, corporates and sponsors on all areas of bank lending, including global loans, syndicated finance, margin loans (often connected with IPOs) and restructuring across Europe and the emerging markets. Until his return to the firm’s London office in 2013, James led the firm’s Middle East banking practice, and he continues to lead high-profile, Middle East-related transactions. James helped develop lending structures involving a combination of Islamic and conventional finance and pioneered transactions involving jumbo pre-IPO syndicated margin loans and hybrid fund financings using proxies for LTVs.  
James Inglis
James Inglis
James is a corporate partner based in the London office, and is a specialist in public and private M&A and equity capital markets transactions. He is a relationship partner for a number of clients, including Rio Tinto, Novartis, Jardine Matheson, United Technologies Corporation, Takeda and Kier Group. He also works extensively with investment banks, including Credit Suisse, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley.
Jason Manketo
Jason Manketo
Global Chair of Equities.  Advises clients on the life cycle of their equity capital markets activities, from early-stage private placements through to IPOs and secondary market capital raisings, including accelerated bookbuildings and rights issues, as well as cross-border M&A and debt capital market transactions. He advises across multiple sectors, including fintech, financial services and consumer sectors, and markets, including the UK, MENA and Benelux region. He is also a member of the firm’s cross-practice ESG team, with a particular focus on ESG disclosure and governance issues, and has been at the forefront of the development of the European SPAC market, advising sponsors and underwriters in connection with SPAC IPO and de-SPAC transactions on the Amsterdam and London stock exchanges.
Jessica Jenner
Jessica Jenner
Jess is a partner in the Corporate and Structured Lending Group based in London, specialising in real estate finance.  She represents global real estate investors and developers, private equity real estate, CRE clearers and real estate debt funds. Jess has experience of contingency planning, debt restructurings and distressed debt activity and was seconded to The Royal Bank of Scotland’s Global Restructuring Group in 2009 to work on their distressed CRE loan book and followed on to a further secondment in 2011 to Blackstone’s BREDA advising the team on the work-out of the Isobel loan portfolio. Jess is recognised as a Leading Individual by Legal 500.
Jo Jimenez
Jo Jimenez
Jo is a counsel in the Leveraged Finance team based in London. She has extensive experience advising private equity sponsors, corporate borrowers and commercial and investment banks in relation to a wide variety of domestic and cross-border financing transactions, including leveraged and acquisition finance, general corporate finance and restructurings.
Jo Windsor
Jo Windsor
Specialist in International and Domestic Corporate Recovery and Insolvency and in banking transactions. Experience includes acting for borrowers and lenders in English, US, Norwegian, Slovak, Swiss, French, Thai and Indonesian restructurings and acting for both insolvency practitioners and creditors in administrations, receiverships and liquidations. Experience in banking includes acting for both lenders and borrowers in syndicated facilities and structured financings.
John Pickett
John Pickett
John is a senior Energy & Infrastructure lawyer and is one of the firm’s Energy sector leaders. He has a particular focus on the power and renewables sector and leads Linklaters’ renewables practice, advising on a wide range of financing, M&A and regulatory mandates. Key roles include advising on most of the UK’s offshore windfarms including Lincs, Beatrice, Race Bank, Dudgeon and Triton Knoll; advising the South African Government on the design and implementation of their renewables procurement programme and advising the UK National Grid on its role as the Delivery Body for EMR, including leading the team drafting the Capacity Market Rules.
Jonathan De Lance-holmes
Jonathan De Lance-holmes
Jonathan is a senior partner in the firm’s Investment Management group, and is widely acknowledged for his experience in both UK and international private funds, including private equity, infrastructure, real estate and hedge funds. Jonathan advises sponsors and major international investors, including major private equity and other alternative equity houses and sovereign wealth funds, on structuring, spin-off, fundraising, transactions and products. He also counsels managers on all governance and regulation aspects arising out of the creation and operation of funds. Jonathan has led on many of the market’s most significant funds’ transactions. His experience includes advising: SoftBank Group Corp on its US$100bn SoftBank Vision Fund, which will be the largest private equity-style fund ever established, investing globally in the technology sector Aermont Capital LLP (formerly PW Real Assets LLP) on the establishment of their latest €1.5bn European real estate fund  BlackRock on their European and Asian real estate private funds Numerous manager groups and financial institutions on establishment and spin-offs of private equity, infrastructure and hedge fund managers, including EMSO, Squarepoint, InfraRed and Terra Firma Cinven on their €5 billion Fifth Fund fundraise BC Partners and Terra Firma on a number of large-scale private equity fundraisings a major Asian sovereign wealth fund on a variety of substantial and sponsor investor commitments to US and European private equity and infrastructure funds and on its investment in the GP of a major pan-European private equity house and its funds
Juliana Leite de Barros
Juliana Leite de Barros
Juliana is a Partner in the Restructuring & Insolvency team based in London. She has extensive experience advising creditors (including banks and other financial investors), corporate debtors, financial sponsors and insolvency practitioners on a broad range of restructuring and insolvency matters across multiple jurisdictions and sectors. Juliana has a particular focus on complex cross-border corporate debt restructurings, bank/bond restructurings, debt-for-equity swaps and UK schemes of arrangement, as well as advising on formal insolvencies and business recovery. She is adept at developing strategic solutions to the most complex situations. During her time at Linklaters, Juliana has spent time in Hong Kong and on secondment to the Loan Capital Markets team at the Royal Bank of Scotland (Natwest). Juliana is a Linklaters diversity champion.
Kanyaka Ramamurthi
Kanyaka Ramamurthi
Kanyaka is a corporate partner based in London who advises on a wide range of corporate and commercial matters across different sectors but with a focus on the insurance sector. She has a broad base of experience including public and private M&A, equities, general corporate advisory and, more recently, transactional and advisory work in the insurance sector, including Part VII insurance business transfers and Solvency II expertise.  Kanyaka has spent time in the firm’s Sao Paulo and Tokyo offices as well as on secondment to Vodafone and Aviva. Recent experience includes advising: AXA on the sale of its UK Life & Savings businesses which included 3 separate sales to the Phoenix Group, Standard Life and LCCG; Aviva on its corporate reorganisation following its acquisition of Friends Life, including on two Part VII transfers (confidential), and on Solvency II matters; Britvic on its successful defence against a takeover bid by AG Barr, and on a cash placing to fund an acquisition; various investors on the sale of House of Fraser to Sanpower; Aviva on its disposal of its Turkish non-life business to a private equity consortium and the sale of Aviva Investors Central European Properties Sarl and its subsidiaries to Lone Star Capital Investments Sarl (confidential); AXA on its partnership with the Africa Internet Group.
Kathryn Griffiths
Kathryn Griffiths
Kathryn is a managing associate in the firm’s Real Estate department. She specialises in real estate M&A and joint venture transactions, as well as mainstream commercial real estate transactions, bringing together corporate and real estate law and adopting a hybrid approach to the sector. She has experience in transactions across all asset classes including commercial property, logistics, hotels, retail and student accommodation. Work highlights Transactions of significance where substantial involvement can be disclosed include advising: City Developments Limited on the entry into a joint venture with Galliard and the acquisition by that joint venture of Morden Wharf Gamuda Berhad on the entry into a joint venture with Castleforge and the acquisition by that joint venture of Winchester House from CIC Cale Street Partners: advising on the acquisition financing of the family-owned Fenwick flagship department store on Old Bond Street, London for a mixed-use redevelopment Ho Bee Land on the acquisition of the Jersey company which owns ‘The Scalpel’, the landmark office tower at 52 Lime Street in London Nuveen on the “CHOP” pan-European office platform A joint venture held by Permodalan Nasional Bhd and Employees Provident Fund on the £1.6bn acquisition of the commercial and retail assets at Battersea Power Station Katara Hospitality on the acquisition of the Grosvenor House Hotel on Park Lane
Katie Coltart
Katie Coltart
Katie is a patent litigation specialist with a wealth of experience across the life sciences, telecoms and technology sectors. Katie is well-versed in dealing with major cross-border matters requiring significant coordination across multiple forums, and with a degree in chemistry and biology she is well-placed to advise on highly technical subject matters. Katie has worked on the litigation of patents across a broad spectrum of technological subject matters, including those relating to antibody and other protein biologics, biosimilars, biological product development and screening platforms, medical devices, medical diagnostics and sequencing technologies, 2G, 3G, 4G and 5G telecommunications, connected cars, consumer products and FRAND/SEP licensing.
Liam Robinson
Liam Robinson
Liam is a Partner in the Restructuring & Insolvency team based in London with extensive experience of advising on cross-border restructurings, recapitalisations, opportunistic and special situations financings and distressed M&A transactions. Liam regularly advises funds, banks, corporates, financial sponsors and their portfolio companies on a wide range of complex debt structures and across a number of sectors, asset classes and geographies. During his career at Linklaters, Liam has spent time in both the Hong Kong and Madrid offices and has spent time with the special situations team of a credit fund in London. He has also recently completed a secondment to a large UK FTSE listed company where he acted as interim Chief General Counsel having advised the group over a 2 year period on a number of complex asset disposals and refinancing options.
Mark Blyth
Mark Blyth
Mark heads Linklaters’ Pensions Disputes practice. He is acknowledged as one of the leading UK pensions disputes lawyers and advises employers, trustees, insurers and professional services firms on the most complex, high-value and novel pensions disputes with the Pensions Regulator and before the Courts. These typically concern scheme funding, re-structuring, benefit design, construction of scheme rules, rectification and professional negligence.
Mark O'Neill
Mark O'Neill
Mark is a highly experienced banking lawyer and one of the market’s most renowned practitioners in real estate finance. Mark acts for bank and non-bank lenders and borrowers on all types of real estate finance transactions. The range of transactions on which he advises include investment and development financing, senior and mezzanine financing and commercial mortgage-backed securitisations (CMBS),  financing for all property types (office, retail, residential, warehouse, hotel and leisure) and loan portfolios. He has advised on financings in the UK, Europe and elsewhere.Work highlights:Mark has advised on many of the market’s most significant property financings. These include advising: various banks on the development financing of many of the office towers at Canary Wharf in London, including 25 Canada Square, 25 Bank Street and 25 Churchill Place RBS and other banks on the development financing for the Grosvenor Group of a retail-led development of the 42-acre Liverpool One site in central Liverpool Deutsche Bank on the first German CMBS (Centro Oberhausen Shopping Centre) and for Eurohypo on the first Irish CMBS (a portfolio of Dublin offices) GE Capital on the acquisition of the Bradford & Bingley real estate loan portfolio a leading investment bank  on the financing of a portfolio of European warehouses for ProLogis a syndicate of banks on the financing of the Santander headquarters complex outside Madrid– one of the largest single asset REF  financings in Europe
Marly Didizian
Marly Didizian
Marly specialises in all types of global sourcing, supply chain and technology arrangements. She has particular expertise in complex business carve-outs and works across sectors including healthcare, consumer, financial sponsors, media, telecoms, financial services and data-driven businesses. She is also the global co-head of the firm’s Healthcare and Life Sciences sector. Marly supports clients throughout the full lifecycle of their most important transformations and projects, from initial structuring and procurement to contentious and non-contentious renegotiations and terminations. Her deals often involve cutting-edge uses of technology, data and supply chain, often within complex regulatory frameworks. She is also experienced in media and broadcasting transactions and related regulation, having been seconded to both the BBC and Ofcom. Marly is ranked in MergerLinks’ top 5 leading female M&A lawyers in EMEA specialising in commercial carve-outs, and was voted one of the Hot 100 Lawyers by The Lawyer for her sourcing work.
Martin Elliott
Martin Elliott
Martin is a senior real estate partner who advises on commercial property work of all types He has particular knowledge of development-related work for both developers and investors, including transactions involving the development and acquisition of designer outlet centres. Martin also has considerable experience of real estate transactions involving shopping centre and retail, office and mixed use development. Additionally, Martin advises on corporate transactions involving real estate assets, together with corporate flotations, acquisitions, disposals and joint ventures.Work Highlights: Martin has led on many of the market’s major commercial real estate deals. Highlights include advising: Lend Lease on the £696m sale of its 30% interest in the Bluewater Shopping Centre to Land Securities Lend Lease on the sale of its interest in the Chapelfield Shopping Centre in Norwich to Capital Shopping Centres for £260m The Leadenhall Building EC3 (The “Cheesegrater”) - development and key letting of major parts of the building development and letting of premises 1- 8 Merry Hill and sale, in Brierley Hill near Dudley, West Midlands Printworks Manchester – development, letting and sale of innovative City Centre leisure development
Martyn Hopper
Martyn Hopper
Martyn advises financial institutions on regulatory matters. Prior to returning to private practice in 2004 he spent over nine years working as a senior lawyer at the UK Financial Services Authority, latterly as Head of Department in the Enforcement Division. He has extensive experience advising investment banks, retail banks, insurers, asset managers and listed companies on regulatory compliance problems. He has advised on “crisis management” on discovery of major compliance failures,  conducted numerous internal investigations and represented clients in regulatory investigations, enforcement actions and related civil litigation across the financial services sector. His client work has included some of the highest profile cases brought by the regulators over the past decade and has involved him regularly representing clients before regulators, tribunals and the higher courts (including applications for judicial review of regulators). He has extensive experience of managing multi-jurisdictional regulatory issues and investigations  touching Europe, the US and Asia-Pacific. Martyn also regularly advises clients on compliance risk management issues. His areas of particular interest and experience include insider dealing and market manipulation, unauthorised trading incidents, corporate disclosure issues, governance and risk control in financial institutions, senior management responsibilities, management of conflicts of interest, suitability of financial products and portfolio management, financial promotions, fair treatment of customers and other conduct of business standards in respect of investment, banking and insurance products. Martyn’s recent clients have included UBS, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, Lloyds Banking Group, RBS, Santander, Bradford & Bingley, Zurich, Prudential, Capita Financial and a number of asset management firms.  Recent significant client matters on which he worked have included advising and representing UBS in relation to the Adoboli US$2.3billion unauthorised trading incident, representing UBS in the FSA’s Upper Tribunal proceedings against senior manager John Pottage and acting for the applicant in the judicial review of the FSA in R v FSA on the application of C. He has had a significant role advising clients on most of the major regulatory investigations and inquiries resulting from the banking crisis.
Maryam Adamji
Maryam Adamji
Maryam is a partner in our energy & infrastructure team in London. She is an energy and infrastructure specialist advising on the development, financing and regulation of energy and infrastructure projects globally, as well as on the refinancing and sale and purchase of these assets.
Matthew Harding
Matthew Harding
Matt represents debtors, officeholders and stakeholders on a wide range of restructuring and insolvency matters, including corporate/financial restructurings, distressed M&A and formal insolvency. Matt has a vast amount of experience of cross-border insolvency proceedings, including administrations, liquidations, schemes of arrangement, voluntary arrangements and personal bankruptcy. He has specialist knowledge of bank resolution having advised both regulators and financial institutions in relation to a number of significant global matters. Matt regularly advises banks and financial institutions and has been involved in some of the most significant insolvencies of recent years, including playing a prominent role advising the administrators in the insolvency of Lehman Brothers International (Europe). Matt was seconded to Lehman Brothers between October 2013 and January 2015, firstly as a member of the in-house legal team and then working as the liaison between the respective Linklaters and PricewaterhouseCoopers teams, heading a team that was available to advise on ongoing issues.
Matthew Plaskow
Matthew Plaskow
Matthew is a corporate real estate partner with deep sector specific real estate expertise and a dedicated focus on real estate M&A transactions and joint ventures. He has experience in the acquisition, disposal and development of real estate in UK and European markets across a range of asset classes including commercial real estate, retail, hotels, logistics and student accommodation. His clients include institutional and private equity investors, developers and asset managers. Work highlights Transactions of significance where substantial involvement can be disclosed include advising: Cromwell Property Group on the sale of its €3.9bn European fund management platform and associated co-investments to Swiss real estate investor Stoneweg for €280m City Developments Limited on the entry into a joint venture with Galliard and the acquisition by that joint venture of Morden Wharf Gamuda on the entry into a joint venture with Castleforge and the acquisition by that joint venture of Winchester House from CIC Ho Bee Land on the acquisition of ‘The Scalpel’, the landmark office tower at 52 Lime Street in London GIC: advising on its acquisition of approximately 95% stake in the Sani/Ikos hotels group from approximately €2.3bn. PSP on the entry into a joint venture with Lendlease for the development of Milano Santa Giulia, a new district in Milan, Italy TIAA (Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association) on its disposal of a stake in the EUR5bn “CHOP” pan-European office platform A joint venture held by Permodalan Nasional Bhd and Employees Provident Fund on the £1.6bn acquisition of the commercial and retail assets at Battersea Power Station Katara Hospitality on the acquisition of the Grosvenor House Hotel on Park Lane Lendlease on the entry into a joint venture with Starwood and the subsequent acquisition by the joint venture of The Silvertown Partnership which holds an interest in Silvertown Quays.
Matthew Bland
Matthew Bland
Matthew is a corporate partner based in the London office. He advises on a wide range of corporate, corporate finance and commercial matters across various sectors but with a focus on the bank and financial institutions and pharmaceuticals sector. His main areas of practice include domestic and international mergers and acquisitions (both private and public), where he has particular experience leading complex and cross-border transactions, corporate restructurings and joint ventures, as well as domestic and international initial public offerings, rights issues and other equity capital markets transactions. Key clients include Lloyds Banking Group, TSB, Rothesay Life, Goldman Sachs, Julius Baer, Novartis, Spirent Communications and Thames Water.
Max  Krasner
Max Krasner
Max advises creditors, debtors and insolvency office holders on complex multijurisdictional financial restructurings, formal insolvency proceedings, contingency planning, security enforcement and distressed M&A transactions.
Michael Honan
Michael Honan
Michael is a corporate partner who focuses on public and private M&A, joint ventures, reorganisations and corporate governance. Michael is a central member of Linklaters’ infrastructure M&A team and is also a key adviser to a number of Linklaters’ most important multinational corporate clients, in particular in the consumer sector. He has advised on a number of high profile M&A deals in the market, for example the multi-billion pound disposal of High Speed 1 by OMERS Infrastructure and Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan and the disposal by Nestlé of its global ice cream business.
Michael Cutting
Michael Cutting
Michael is a partner in the Competition/Antitrust practice, based in London.  He has significant experience of both competition and regulatory law in the UK and across Europe. He also has considerable experience of the application of competition law in the energy, utilities, food & beverages, leisure and transport sectors and works with his clients to guide them through complex merger control, behavioural and other regulatory issues. Michael was Global Head of the Linklaters Competition/Antitrust practice from 2011 to 2015 and lead the London Competition/Antitrust group from 2004 to 2009.  He is co-chair of the Joint Working Party on Competition Law of the Law Society and Bar Council.
Michael Voisin
Michael is Global Head of Capital Markets and a partner in the Derivatives and Structured Products Group in London. Michael specialises in sophisticated financial products, including securitised, exchange traded and OTC derivatives, repackagings, investment fund products and financing, CDOs, and note and warrant programmes . Recent experience includes derivatives clearing, regulation and regulatory capital treatment (including the FIA CCP Risk Review), benchmarks , longevity derivatives, acting for the UK administrators of Lehman Brothers, ISDA on the drafting of the 2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions and Brexit and Eurozone matters.
Michael Bennett
Michael Bennett
Michael is the firm’s Global Head of Dispute Resolution and has over 20 years’ experience in managing legal, regulatory, political and reputational risk in commercially sensitive situations and handling the related disputes. He has been based in London, New York and Asia and focuses particularly on all contentious aspects of large scale M&A and advising clients on various aspects of crisis management, helping navigate potential civil and criminal exposure alongside regulatory, parliamentary and media sensitivity (usually with a cross-border dimension). He has significant experience advising on fraud investigations and corruption risk, dealing with the SFO and other international regulatory bodies.
Mike Bienenfeld
Mike Bienenfeld
Mike is a US corporate and capital markets partner based in London. His practice focusses on equity and debt capital markets, public M&A and SEC advisory work. He is the co-head of the SEC compliance function at Linklaters, and established the firm’s SEC Transactions and Compliance Group. Mike is SEC counsel to some of the largest international companies listed on the NYSE and NASDAQ, and has significant experience advising on listings and IPOs on the major stock exchanges across the US, Europe and South Africa, event-driven rights issues and equity placings, private capital raising and debt capital markets transactions.
Nadia Swann
Nadia Swann
Nadia Swann is one of the senior partners in Linklaters’ Financial Regulation Group. She has over 20 years experience advising on all aspects of financial services regulation for investment banks, funds, corporates and insurers including general regulatory structuring advice and documentation, Brexit, MiFID II, broker-dealing, M&A, regulatory corporate governance and policy management, legal risk and regulatory themed reviews, board effectiveness reviews, regulatory culture reviews, senior management training including preparation of CEOs and non-executive directors for PRA/FCA registration interviews, regulatory investigations and enforcement, financial promotion, market abuse, money laundering, bribery act issues, sanctions and suspicious activity reporting. She is listed as a leading individual in Chambers who cite her "enviable experience advising on a wide range of regulatory and compliance matters" and "her skill in handling MiFID II developments and preparing executive and senior managers". She has been ranked in the FN100 Most Influential Women in Finance for the fifth consecutive year. She is also the Deputy Chair of Linklaters' Partner Election Committee.
Narayan Iyer
Narayan Iyer
Narayan is a finance partner and one of the Indian market’s leading international lawyers. He is head of the firm’s India practice, which advises corporates and financial institutions on outbound and inbound investments, projects and financings.  Narayan has a broad finance practise, acting for major banks, financial sponsors and corporates. He has particular expertise in acquisition and structured financings, loan portfolio acquisitions and financings, real estate financings and inbound and outbound transactions. He has significant experience in the energy and infrastructure sectors.  Between 2010 and 2013, Narayan was a partner of TT&A, Linklaters’ best friend law firm in India. Prior to that, he was based in Linklaters’ office in Singapore having started his career as a trainee with Linklaters in London.Work highlights:Narayan has acted on many high-profile finance deals. These include advising: Standard Chartered Bank on the sale of a portfolio of loans in India, the first in a series of similar deals in India as part of the government’s directive to banks to focus on the robustness of their balance sheets the lending and underwriting banks on the refinancing of US$6.9bn worth of debt uninsured by the Tata Corus Group Brookfield Property Partners on the acquisition and financing of Unitech’s Indian real estate portfolio Enron on the US$3bn Dhabol power project (since renamed Ratnagiri Gas and Power), the first ever inward investment into the India power sector the sponsor and borrowers on the Sakhalin LNG project, the world’s largest integrated oil and gas project and the largest LNG financing in Russia the banks on financing and reorganising Essar Oil’s debt portfolio
Nemone Franks
Nemone Franks
Advises on complex, high-value commercial contracts for the exploitation of intellectual property rights, including IP licensing, franchising, and R&D arrangements, and on the treatment of intellectual property rights in the context of corporate and finance transactions, in particular cross-border M&A with complex IP and IT separation issues across a broad range of industries and sectors and Private Equity IP-rich transactions. Advises on strategies for protecting and enforcing intellectual property rights and on trade mark, design right, copyright and passing off disputes
Nicholas Le Masurier
Nicholas Le Masurier
Nick specialises in restructuring, insolvency and special situations. He has over 20 years’ experience advising stakeholders on a broad range of restructuring, insolvency and other matters involving financial distress, including acting for senior, second lien and mezzanine creditors, bondholders, distressed and special situation investors and distressed corporates. He has a particular focus on complex multi-jurisdictional financial restructurings, schemes of arrangement, restructuring plans, security enforcement exercises and insolvencies.
Nick Marshall
Nick Marshall
Partner and solicitor-advocate in the Employment practice with particular expertise advising on employment litigation, employee disputes, contentious matters, whistleblowing and conduct investigations. He has led a number of clients’ successful defenses (at first instance and on appeal) to high-profile, high-value and reputationally sensitive employment claims in the UK and Singapore.
Nick Syson
Nick Syson
Nick is a market-leading leveraged finance specialist. He acted on his first leveraged buyout in 1988, he set up the firm’s leveraged finance practice in 2001 with Gideon Moore and he was Co-Head of the Leveraged Finance Practice until 2016. Nick was elected by the Partners to the firm’s supervisory board for consecutive terms and he remains on the firm’s audit committee. He is also the firm’s Health and Wellbeing Partner. Within his practice, he advises arranging banks on financial sponsor-backed leveraged finance transactions and coordinating bank and steering committees on debt restructurings. He also advises on bank/bond financings. Nick has been involved in a number of pioneering developments in the leveraged finance sector, most recently acting for the underwriters on the financings for both the acquisition of Coty and the bid for MasMovil, being the financing transactions that reopened the European leveraged loan market post Covid19 and, prior to that, on a number of transactions that established and evolved the European cov-lite leveraged loan product. He has also acted on some of the early “Opco/Propco” financings (in which the finance is divided between operating companies and property-owning businesses), regulatory life insurance arbitrage transactions, transactions involving hedging uneven cashflows, infrastructure acquisition financings and numerous debt restructuring transactions. Nick was based in Singapore for two years where he focused on, and developed his knowledge of, regional debt restructuring.
Nicola Rabson
Nicola Rabson
Lead employment partner of Employment practice. An exceptional litigator, appearing regularly in the High Court and Employment Tribunal. Nicola is a strategic and trusted advisor for clients on their most sensitive and high-profile employment disputes, HR, executive, culture and diversity-related employment issues, conduct investigations and crisis management mandates. She has exceptional expertise advising businesses on the enforcement of restrictive covenants, team moves and senior and executive appointments and terminations and is at the forefront of market trends and developments in the employment and HR space, including workplace activism and the future of work.
Nigel Jones
Nigel Jones
Nigel helps organisations and individuals realise their potential. He is a scientist turned lawyer, with over 30 years’ experience of advising on a broad range of contentious and non-contentious IP-related projects. They include assisting pharmaceutical companies to resolve complex international patent disputes and working with companies, PE houses and investment banks on M&A, JV, collaboration and finance transactions. He also has qualifications and experience in mediation and business coaching, and holds a number of advisory board and NED/trustee roles. He is also a co-founder, and current chair, of the City Mental Health Alliance.
Nikunj Kiri
Nikunj Kiri
Nik is a partner in the Financial Regulation Group in London.  He has extensive experience of advising banks, broker-dealers, insurers, asset managers, wealth management firms and listed companies on regulatory and compliance matters, with a particular focus on contentious regulatory and compliance risk management issues.  Nik’s contentious regulatory experience includes conducting internal investigations and reviews following the discovery of suspected compliance failures; assisting clients in managing section 166 skilled persons’ reviews; advising clients in relation to managing communications with regulators; representing clients in FSA/FCA investigations and enforcement proceedings (including representing clients before the Regulatory Decisions Committee, in the Upper Tribunal and in the higher courts); advising clients in relation to the development and implementation of past business reviews and redress/remediation programmes; and assisting clients in managing civil litigation risks arising out of regulatory failings. Nik also regularly advises clients on compliance risk management issues, including advice on the practical implications of regulation for their business practices and governance arrangements, and strategies for mitigating and managing regulatory and conduct risks.  Nik’s work in this area covers a diverse range of topics, from senior management responsibility, governance and risk management frameworks to conflicts of interest, insider dealing, market abuse, client money, fair treatment of customers, complaint handling and other conduct of business issues. Nik also regularly advises listed companies, corporate brokers and sponsors in relation to the disclosure and control of inside information, the LR8 sponsor regime and other Listing Rule/DTR compliance matters.
Olga Petrovic
Olga Petrovic
Olga is Head of the firm’s Asset Finance practice and co-head of the Transportation sector group. She has extensive experience in transactions involving a range of aviation and maritime assets, including loan and lease financings, ECA-backed debt, asset and corporate acquisitions and joint ventures, and restructuring and enforcement. Olga also advises on loan portfolio transactions, general banking and borrowing base / asset based lending transactions.  
Oliver Edwards
Oliver Edwards
Oliver has particular expertise in margin lending and structured facilities and has worked on complex margin loans for many different financial institutions, as well as advising several banks on liquidity financings to other financial institutions. Oliver spent time on secondment working in the legal departments of two leading global financial institutions (Barclays in 2005 and J.P. Morgan in 2010), that provided him with invaluable experience of their internal operations and a deep understanding of their requirements of external lawyers. In addition to his practice role, Oliver is also Linklaters’ UK Diversity Partner.  
Oliver Sceales
Oliver Sceales
Oliver brings significant experience in structuring and executing sponsor-backed leveraged acquisition finance transactions in the European market. Oliver’s particular focus is acting for financial sponsors on leveraged buy-outs across the capital structure. Oliver is the co-head of Linklaters’ Leveraged Finance practice. He has been a partner since 2016 and joined Linklaters’ banking team in 2006. Before joining the firm, Oliver worked for Allens, Linklaters’ integrated alliance partner in Australia.
Owen Clay
Owen Clay
Owen leads one of the firm’s fours corporate M&A groups in London and was co-head of Linklaters’ energy sector for seven years. Owen has a broad practice including corporate finance, public and private mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures, demergers and issues of compliance and corporate governance. Owen manages the firm’s relationship with Centrica, Britvic, Mitie Group, Genel Energy and Arcadia. Over the years, Owen has done a lot of work for the firm’s largest corporate clients, including BP, BAE Systems, Glencore and Anglo American. Experience includes acting for Glencore in relation to its acquisition of shares in Rosneft, acting for Sir Philip Green in relation to the sale and settlement of the BHS pensions dispute with the Pensions Regulator, acting for Home Retail Group in relation to its takeover by J Sainsbury, acting for Britvic on its successful defence against a proposed takeover by AG Barr, advising BAE Systems in relation to the formation and restructuring of the MBDA joint venture, advising Korean National Oil Corporation on its successful hostile takeover of Dana Petroleum, advising Centrica on its £2.2 bn rights issue to fund the formation of its nuclear joint venture with EDF and advising BP in relation to the takeover of Burmah Castrol and the sale of Innovene to Ineos.
Pam Shores
Pam Shores
Global Head of US Capital Markets and Global Co-Head of Equity Capital Markets. Advises clients on the life cycle of their equity capital markets activities, from early stage fundraising through to IPOs and secondary market capital raisings, including placings and rights issues, as well as on debt capital markets transactions. She has led the teams on many of the firm’s most complex cross-border capital markets transactions and has experience across many industry sectors.
Pathik Gandhi
Pathik Gandhi
Pathik has a wide range of experience advising arranging banks, credit funds, financial sponsors and corporates across the credit spectrum on leveraged and acquisition financings (both syndicated and private debt), infrastructure financings, NAV financings and restructurings. He has a particular focus on sponsor-backed and cross-border leveraged finance and acquisition financing structures, having worked on several covenant-lite TLB financings, direct lending / unitranche structures, infrastructure financings, NAV financings, bridge financings, public acquisition financings, bank / bond financing structures and financial restructurings.
Patrick Plant
Patrick Plant
As a senior partner in the firm’s Real Estate Department, Patrick has considerable experience in real estate transactions, advising investors, developers, lenders and tenants on all aspects of commercial real estate in the UK. Patrick has advised on numerous international real estate projects on behalf of listed real estate companies, sovereign wealth funds and investment banks in Asia, the Middle East and Continental Europe. Patrick also has specialist expertise in hotel and leisure properties, including management and franchise agreements. Patrick was seconded to the firm’s Hong Kong and Frankfurt offices, and has worked in Australia as a corporate lawyer for a major Australian law firm. Work highlights Throughout his career, Patrick has led on many of the market’s major commercial real estate transactions. Highlights include advising: a major US corporate on the acquisition and the development of an iconic new European HQ in London Ramsbury on the acquisition of the Debenhams store, Oxford Street, and the former Dickins & Jones building on Regent Street, London a major European bank on the development of its new London HQ a major US investment bank on the development of its new European HQ InterContinental Hotel Group (IHG) on the sale and manage back of a portfolio of Holiday Inn hotels in the UK, the market’s first major sale and manage back transaction HSBC on its sale and leaseback at Canary Wharf the Safra family on its acquisition of Plantation Place, London Allied London on the development, leasing and subsequent investment sales at Spinningfields, Manchester Linklaters on its own UK and global premises strategy
Paul Joseph
Paul Joseph
Paul advises on the full range of both contentious and non-contentious intellectual property matters. His contentious work has included the litigation and arbitration of copyright, patent, trade mark, data, confidential information and IP licence disputes. On the non-contentious side, he advises on global IP licensing, commercialisation and joint venture arrangements, IP structuring and intellectual property issues arising in the context of M&A, joint ventures, and IPOs. He has extensive technology, FinTech, media and retail sector experience.
Pauline Ashall
Pauline Ashall
Partner in the firm’s derivatives and structured products group. Acts for banks, other financial intermediaries and end-users in relation to derivatives, whether in securitised or OTC form, and relating to a wide range of underlying asset classes, including funds, equities and commodities. She also advises on financial regulatory issues, OTC clearing, exchange-traded derivatives, stocklending, repos, global custody, prime brokerage and collateral management. She acted for the administrators of Lehman Brothers International (Europe) from 2008 – 2015 in relation to Lehman’s prime brokerage business. 
Peter Bevan
Peter Bevan
Peter is Global Head of Linklaters’ Financial Regulation Group and is one of the firm’s global Investment Managers sector leaders. Peter has developed close working relationships with the firm’s banking and investment management clients. His practice includes all aspects of financial markets regulatory advice for broker-dealers and investment banks. Peter advises investment managers, private banks, hedge funds and private equity funds on regulatory issues affecting them. He also advises clients on regulatory investigations into areas such as market conduct, client money compliance and transaction reporting failures. Peter has particular experience of new product development and marketing, trading issues such as market abuse and regulatory structuring advice. Earlier in his career, Peter was seconded to both Bankers Trust and Nomura, advising and assisting with the establishment of their respective securities financing businesses.Work highlights:Peter has developed a wide-ranging financial regulatory practice. The breadth of his practice includes, advising on, amongst others: Regulatory change: advising numerous banks and investment firms on the implementation of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MIFID2) and other regulatory reform initiatives New structures: advising on the creation and structuring of trading and clearing platforms, both internal crossing systems operated by firms and new market entrants including Turquoise (an equities trading platform created by nine major investment banks) and ForexClear, an FX clearing platform operated by LCH.Clearnet (acting for a consortium of clearing banks) Cross-border work: advising international banks on their European structures, to comply with regularly changing European regulations affecting financial institutions, including Brexit Contentious regulatory: advising clients on both LIBOR and FX manipulation investigations, and before that leading the team advising Citi in the first multi-jurisdictional manipulation case, involving Euro sovereign bond trading, which involved negotiating with eight different regulators Financial sector corporate activity: advising RBS on its ongoing structural reorganisation that has involved sales of businesses, including Worldpay, and the ring-fencing of its investment and retail banking operations 
Philip Gore
Philip Gore
Phil specialises in real estate finance, with a particular focus on development and highly-levered, structured transactions. Phil advises lenders (including banks and funds) and borrowers on all types of UK and cross-border real estate finance transactions, and has acted on highly complex, structured portfolio financings and restructurings. Phil spent a year on secondment at M&G Investments in 2016 sitting with the Real Estate Finance team.
Rachel Barrett
Rachel Barrett
Rachel leads the Firm’s global ESG practice. She has deep expertise and exceptional breadth of experience advising on existing and incoming ESG regulation and soft law standards, ESG strategy and disclosures, sustainable finance products and frameworks, ESG governance and risk management and on stakeholder activism, litigation risk and crisis management.
Rebecca Jarvis
Rebecca Jarvis
Rebecca is the Global Co-Head of Banking at Linklaters and a partner in the Restructuring and Insolvency team, comprising specialists throughout Europe, the Americas and Asia and handling the world's most challenging and significant domestic and cross-border assignments. Rebecca advises creditors, (including banks and other financial investors and steering committees) insolvency office holders, and corporate debtors and their directors in all aspects of non-contentious restructuring and insolvency work. With a remarkable breadth of practice and extensive experience, Rebecca has acted on a wide range of workouts, business recoveries, stressed financings and administrations and liquidations. Rebecca has also advised on a series of real estate and corporate restructurings in many jurisdictions, including, currently, on the restructuring of Abengoa in Spain, the largest ever European restructuring involving three separate processes, including a Spanish judicial confirmation, an English company voluntary arrangement (CVA) and U.S. Chapter 11 proceedings.
Richard Spedding
Richard Spedding
Richard has an M&A practice which is both domestic and cross border. He is particularly renowned for his expertise on the UK Takeover Code. For public takeover work, his client base encompasses quoted companies, financial sponsors and funds. Richard was instrumental in setting the market norms for electronic acceptance of all UK takeovers. Richard also regularly advises public companies on board governance, shareholder activism, private M&A and demergers. Richard also provides comprehensive advice on the FCA Listing Rules, Disclosure and Transparency Rules (DTRs), the Prospectus Rules and the AIM Rules
Richard Godden
Richard has been a partner at Linklaters for over 25 years during which time he has advised on a wide range of transactions and issues in various parts of the world. He looks after corporate clients, professional services organisations, investment banks and other institutions. Richard’s experience includes his time as secretary at the UK Takeover Panel and a secondment to the Hong Kong office. He also served as global head of client sectors, responsible for Linklaters’ industry sector groups, and was a member of the global executive committee. Richard is now senior relationship partner for a number of clients.  He is also a member of the UK Takeover Panel.
Richard Coar
Richard Coar
Richard specialises in advising clients in the energy and infrastructure space. He has over 15 years’ experience of advising sponsors, lenders, contractors and governments on the development, acquisition/disposal and financing of a wide range of assets and projects around the world. He is co-head of both Linklaters’ Global Renewables Group and of Linklaters’ Global Construction offering.
Richard Hodgson
Richard Hodgson
Richard specialises in complex, cross-border restructuring and insolvency matters, having worked in the field for over 16 years, with a particular focus on representing insolvency officeholders, creditors, corporate debtors, directors and other stakeholders, including on contingency planning. Richard’s most recent experience has spanned a wealth of sectors, including the financial services / financial institutions, consumer, retail, manufacturing and oil and gas sectors. He has particular expertise in distressed M&A acting for both private equity and trade purchasers and insolvency practitioners as sellers. Richard also advises a number of financial institution clients, regulators and other stakeholders on matters relating to bank financial restructuring, bank resolution/failure, compliance with BRRD and related matters. Richard was part of the original Linklaters team that led on the Lehman Brothers collapse in 2008 and continues to act for the administrators of LBIE.
Richard Cumbley
Richard Cumbley
Richard is global practice head of Linklaters technology, media and telecoms practice. His practice focusses on advising large multinationals and governments on complex information management, data privacy and government data access issues. He also works on large-scale technology related sourcing, IT and services contracts, in both contentious and non-contentious environments.
Richard Ginks
Richard Ginks
Richard is a partner in our energy & infrastructure group with over 25 years’ experience advising on the structuring, development, acquisition and financing of energy and infrastructure projects, and working across a broad range of sectors and geographies. Richard previously spent four years heading our energy team in South East Asia, and has developed a particular focus on structured commodity products and financing including hybrid RBL facilities and limited recourse financings of minority shareholder interests in projects.
Richard Bussell
Richard Bussell
Richard is a partner in Linklaters' Restructuring and Insolvency team, comprising specialists throughout Europe, the Americas and Asia. Richard is based in London but has extensive cross-border and international experience, advising creditors (including banks and other financial investors and steering committees), insolvency office holders and corporate debtors and their directors on a wide range of workouts, business recoveries, stressed financings and insolvencies.
Roger Barron
Roger Barron
Roger is a specialist in corporate law, including public and private mergers and acquisitions, demergers and reorganisations and corporate finance. He has a wide range of sector expertise, including media, telecoms, energy and utilities. Roger is also a key boardroom adviser to a number of the firm’s FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 clients, offering strategic guidance and counsel on corporate governance. Roger has mainly been based in the firm’s London office with earlier international secondments to Hong Kong, Singapore and Moscow, as well as acting for major clients on transactions in Germany. Recent transactions have included National Grid’s gas distribution network sale, Deutsche Bourse’s proposed merger with London Stock Exchange, E.ON’s demerger of Uniper and the sale of Argus Media.
Rohan Saha
Rohan Saha
Rohan has a wide range of experience advising banks and credit funds across the credit spectrum on a number of products with primary focus on financial sponsor backed cross-border debt financings. He has worked on various financing structures and products, and is particularly well versed with incurrence based term loan B financings, unitranche / direct lending structures, super-senior revolving credit facilities, bank/bond structures and junior/subordinated credit products. He has advised creditors on some of the largest and most complex European leveraged finance transactions in the past few years. Rohan was seconded to the leveraged finance team at Credit Suisse in 2018 and is able to use the experience gained on the secondment to provide practical and tailored advice to bank and fund clients. Rohan is one of the diversity and inclusion champions in the banking department in London and is focused on promoting under-represented diverse talent within the firm. Rohan joined Linklaters in 2011 and joined the banking team in 2013.
Rowland Light
Rowland Light
Rowland advises on the full range of restructuring and insolvency transactions, including complex multi-jurisdictional restructurings, schemes of arrangement, contingency planning, security enforcements and distressed M&A transactions for all participants, including creditors (including banks and credit funds), corporates and insolvency office holders. Rowland has significant experience acting for companies, private equity sponsors and their portfolio companies, advising boards on strategy and complex workouts. He has a track record of working with credit funds in special situations. He has worked across a range of sectors, with significant experience in restructurings in the energy, infrastructure and consumer sectors. Rowland was seconded to the European special situations group of a leading global investment bank for seven months in 2019.
Sarah Opie
Sarah Opie
Sarah is a managing associate in the pensions team, advising trustees and corporates on contentious and non-contentious matters. Sarah’s contentious experience includes advising a number of trustees on issues identified in scheme documentation (including in the context of de-risking transactions), advising on rectification of Scheme rules, advising on member complaints, including before the Pensions Ombudsman, advising on challenges to Trustee decisions and advising on regulatory interventions by the Pensions Regulator.
Sarah Parkhouse
Sarah Parkhouse
Sarah advises on all aspects of financial markets regulation, acting for investment banks, asset managers, wealth managers, retail banks, custodians and proprietary trading firms. She has a particular focus on regulatory issues arising in the private wealth management and retail sectors having spent some time on secondment to a major retail bank in 2010. She has also advised extensively on client money and AML issues as well as on senior manager culture and governance. She regularly advises her clients in relation to regulatory investigations and enforcement matters and has extensive experience in supporting transactions in the financial services sector. Sarah has helped a number of clients manage their cross border regulatory risk, often obtaining advice across multiple jurisdictions to identify licensing and conduct risks, then guiding her clients to reach the best pragmatic solution to manage those risks. She is currently advising clients on the impact of Brexit to their business model. She particularly enjoys leading large-scale regulatory change projects, tracking developing legislation from the policy stage, through to draft legislation, client impact assessment and project planning, implementation and business as usual. Sarah was based in the Linklaters’ New York office during 1993 and 1994, where, among other mandates, she worked on a number of debt and equity capital markets transactions for banks and corporates based in South America. In 2010 Sarah undertook a four month secondment to the retail legal team of a major high street bank. She is regularly called upon to provide training and present on regulatory developments to her clients and in 2014 featured in Financial Times Timewise UK’s 50 most powerful part-timers.Work highlights:Sarah enjoys a wide variety of regulatory work, reflecting the diversity of her client base.  She includes among recent highlights: Implementation of the Alternative Investment Fund Manager Directive for a major asset manager, involving the restructuring of their fund management business, the establishment of a SuperManco and the migration of over 20 funds to the new platform Undertaking an extensive multi-jurisdictional licensing and conduct review involving obtaining and digesting detailed advice from over 100 jurisdictions across a wide range of financial services and products to support a client’s cross border risk management programme Supporting a number of clients through regulatory investigations and S166 Skilled Persons reviews on a range of topics including suitability of advice, client money issues, AML compliance and regulatory compliance of product disclosure materials Implementation of the Senior Manager and Certification Regime for a number of clients Acting on implementation of Ring-fencing legislation for a major high street bank Advising a range of clients from both the Sell-side and Buy-side on the impact and implementation of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II)  
Sarah Mook
Sarah Mook
Sarah specialises in large, complex debt and equity restructuring matters. She has a particular focus on debtor advisory and capital structure solutions, including bank debt restructurings, distressed mergers and acquisitions, exchange offers and structured financing. Sarah has extensive cross-border and international experience advising corporate debtors and their directors across Europe, Middle East and Africa. Prior to joining Linklaters, Sarah worked for 12 years at Goldman Sachs in London as a managing director in the restructuring advisory and financing group. Prior to joining the investment bank, she also spent 14 years working as a lawyer in private practice.
Sarah Wiggins
Sarah Wiggins
Sarah is a board room adviser and regularly works on a wide range of corporate transactions often with a cross-border element and high profile crises and investigations. Sarah is the firm’s global head of clients and sectors, and her experience spans the oil and gas, chemicals, real estate, professional services, insurance and FMCG sectors.Sarah leads on several key relationships with a number of the firm’s significant clients, including BP, Reckitt Benckiser and PwC. “I am a trusted adviser to company boardrooms, offering clients practical, business-focused advice that is strongly aligned with their commercial requirements and objectives.” For 16 months in 2015/16 Sarah acted as interim general counsel of Reckitt Benckiser. Sarah advised on a number of acquisitions, including RB’s acquisition of Hypermacas’ contraceptive business, the reorganisation of various interests of Manon in China and RB’s $17.9 billion acquisition of Mead Johnson Nutrition Company (completed July 2017). Also, Sarah led a legal team of internal and external lawyers in relation to a number of business critical investigations – including the DoJ and FTC investigations and related proceedings (arising from certain matters relating to the RB Pharmaceuticals Business prior to its demerger in December 2014 from Indiviour PLC) and the high profile crisis management issue facing one of RB’s subsidiaries, Oxy RB (“Oxy RB”), in relation to deaths and injuries caused by a humidifier sanitiser which Oxy RB produced and sold in South Korea between 2001-2011. The matter involves substantial civil and criminal litigation in Korea. She has also advised, amongst other things, on (i) the development of a wide-ranging compensation plan designed to satisfy local requirements and United Nations guidance; (ii) engagement with the United Nations Special Rapporteur; (iii) engagement with a committee of the Korean National Assembly (the equivalent of a UK Parliament select committee) and associated engagement with the Korean law making process; and (iv) engagement with the UK-government and regulators. The matter exemplifies her ability to manage complex multi-jurisdictional, cross disciplinary matters affecting a FTSE100 company. The case is politically and publicly significant in Korea.Sarah was seconded to BP's head office for eight months in 2012/13, where she worked closely with the general counsel and deputy general counsel on a number of market-related and crisis management issues, including criminal settlement with the DoJ, as well as reinforcing her knowledge of the current key issues to consider for corporate energy transactions.Sarah was listed as one of 2014’s star lawyers in The Lawyer’s annual Hot 100 list, and was profiled in The Law List by Powerful Media in 2015 and in 2017 was named an Acritas Star Law in a new global database of client nominated Star Lawyers.
Satindar Dogra
Satindar Dogra
As head of the firm’s London office Dispute Resolution practice, Satindar is widely acknowledged as an expert in corporate crime and fraud. He counsels clients on strategies, policies and procedures to comply with the UK Bribery Act, the Proceeds of Crime Act and Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) rules, as well as offering expert advice on investigations. Satindar is also a specialist on anti-bribery and sanctions, including advising more than 70 clients in relation to the European Union’s Russian sanctions regime.
Scott Simpson
Scott Simpson
Scott acts for and advises banks, asset managers, alternative investment managers and hedge funds on a broad range of situations and practice areas including acquisition/leveraged finance, real estate finance, special situations financings and cross-border restructurings.
Simon Price
Simon Price
Simon is a highly experienced real estate lawyer with versatile expertise in corporate real estate transactions, including joint ventures and acquisitions and disposals of real estate assets and holding structures. He advises developers and investors on the full scope of contractual arrangements, including leases, management and development agreements. He has specialist knowledge concerning development projects, the financing of investments and dealing with insolvent or distressed assets and structures. Simon also has particular experience in the hotel sector, acting for investors, developers and funders on hotel and branded residences transactions throughout the UK, Europe and the Middle East and on the negotiation of operator agreements. Work highlights: Simon has advised on a wide range of high-profile real estate deals. These include advising: TIAA on the establishment of a three-way joint venture with the Swedish national pension funds, Forsta AP-Fonden and Andra AP-Fonden, to create a £3bn office fund with assets in the UK, France and Germany and on the acquisition of 60 Great Portland Street, London W1 a North American pension fund on its formation of a £1bn joint venture with Aviva Life over a portfolio of real estate assets in central London Brookfield on the disposal of a 50% interest in the Principal Place London office development project to the Italian asset management company Antirion SGR, based on an asset value of £763m Meyer Bergman, a real estate investment management firm, on the acquisition of a portfolio of 14 residential development sites from Tesco for £250m and ongoing development advice a Middle Eastern investor on the acquisition of a five-star London hotel for £280m TIAA on the acquisition of the Lakeside Extra Retail Park and Tunnel Retail Park from Hammerson for £93m Brait, the South African private equity group, on the acquisitions of New Look Retail and Virgin Active gyms
Simon Firth
Simon Firth
Simon specialises in the structuring of derivative products, the provision of derivatives advice and litigation. He regularly advises participants in the financial markets about the interpretation of standard form documentation and the legal implications of key developments.
Simon Branigan
Simon Branigan
Simon has extensive experience advising corporates, financial institutions and investment trusts on mergers and acquisitions (both public and private), joint ventures and equity capital markets transactions. He has been involved in some of the most complex and high-profile multi-jurisdictional transactions over the last few years.Simon’s experience spans the mining, retail and consumer, and oil and gas sectors. He has extensive experience in the financial services sector, and is co-head of the firm’s bank sector.
Sinead Casey
Sinead Casey
artner since 2019, Sinead has particular expertise in advising on the employment aspects of crisis management mandates, internal and external investigations with regulatory and/or criminal aspects and strategic employment advisory work. Sinead also frequently advises clients on employment disputes before the High Court and the Employment Tribunal and senior executive exits and appointments as well as employment aspects of business sales. Sinead is a frequent commentator in the media on employment issues and has appeared on Women’s Hour and the Economist Film and been quoted in multiple trade and press publications talking about topical and evolving issues including hybrid working, menopause, employment issues arising from AI and potential reform of non-compete restrictions.
Steve Smith
Steve Smith
Steve specialises in real estate finance transactions of all kinds, with a particular emphasis on more structured and/or distressed transactions. He has extensive experience of advising on multi-disciplinary and cross-border real estate finance transactions in the most demanding circumstances. Selected relevant experience relevant to the leisure sector includes advising: the senior lenders on the restructuring of the Arora Airport Hotel portfolio the senior lenders on the restructuring of debt secured on a portfolio of UK Hilton Hotels the senior lenders on the restructuring of a portfolio of Travelodge Hotels the sponsor on the refinancing of the Lanesborough Hotel the mezzanine lenders on the refinancing of a series of European hotels held by a pre-eminent private equity firm.
Stuart Bedford
Stuart is based in London and was the former head of the London corporate division. He has broad experience in private equity, on both buy-outs and growth fund deals and more generally in mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and capital raisings. Stuart has extensive transactional experience in emerging markets, particularly South-East Asia and Africa. A former head of the Energy Sector, Stuart has been involved in a broad range of energy and natural resources deals. Key clients include Carlyle, Oaktree Capital, TIAA-CREF, Anglo American, Noble Group, Sumitomo Corp, Temasek, Standard Chartered Bank and ANZ.
Toby Grimstone
Toby Grimstone
Toby specialises in international banking deals. He has wide-ranging knowledge advising banks and borrowers in syndicated and secured bank financings, with a particular focus on corporate lending, event-driven, structured and limited recourse financings (including commodities, structured trade and export financings in emerging markets). Toby leads the firm’s relationship with a number of major mining and banking clients and is one of the firm’s mining sector leaders. Toby is actively involved in the firm’s Africa practice and is also co-head of the firm’s Nigeria desk and a member of the coordinating committee covering the firm’s alliance with South Africa’s premier law firm Webber Wentzel. Toby spent three years in the firm’s Singapore office and was seconded to Credit Suisse (in 2001) and Barclays (in 2007), equipping him with first-hand knowledge of the banking sector and deep insight into the relationship between banks and law firms.
Tom Waller
Tom Waller
Tom is a banking partner with extensive transaction experience and expertise in advising on and executing financial sponsor-backed leveraged, covenant-lite and acquisition finance transactions. Tom acts for financial sponsors, private equity funds, investment banks and borrower/issuers on a range of domestic and cross-border financing transactions, including leveraged loans, incurrence-based and covenant-lite financings, infrastructure, unitranche, senior, TLB and super senior facilities, high yield bonds, bridge facilities, bank/bond financings, refinancings and restructurings. Tom has particular experience and expertise in covenant-lite, incurrence-based bank/bond documentation and capital structures which is at the forefront of the European leveraged finance market. Tom is based in London and has worked at Linklaters for over 10 years. Tom was recently recognized as one of ’40 under 40’ rising legal practitioners in private equity (Legal Week, British legal awards) and as one of the Top Financing Lawyers in EMEA by Mergerlinks.
Tom Watkins
Tom Watkins
Tom is a partner in the real estate team. With a background in corporate law, Tom acts on a range of corporate transactions where real estate is the fundamental asset, including on public and private M&A deals, joint ventures and restructurings. Tom has a varied client base, with particular experience acting for institutional investors on investments in the UK and European real estate markets. He has been involved in transactions across all sectors, including commercial property, logistics, hotels, retail and student accommodation, and has particular expertise of cross-border portfolio transactions.Work highlights Tom has led on many high-profile real estate transactions. His experience includes advising: A major US pension fund and its JV partner on its acquisition of a EUR700m portfolio of retail malls located in Spain, Italy and Poland Brookfield on its £4.6bn hostile takeover of Songbird Estates, the holding company of the Canary Wharf Estate AustralianSuper, the Australian superannuation fund, on two separate transactions to acquire a combined 67% interest in the Kings Cross redevelopment project alongside developer Argent A North American pension fund on: its JV with a listed UK REIT and the acquisition by the JV of a £1bn portfolio of logistics assets in Poland, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands its acquisition of three portfolios of student accommodation with an aggregate value in excess of £1bn its JV with a listed UK insurer and the acquisition by the JV of a £1bn portfolio of prime office/retail assets A private investor on the £400m acquisition of 334-338 Oxford Street A US hedge fund on its acquisition of two UK real estate portfolios CBREGI on several acquisitions/disposals, including the Angel Central Shopping Centre and several London office assets Lendlease on its £750m disposal of the Bluewater shopping centre
Tom Wells
Tom Wells
Tom is a senior banking partner who has a wide-ranging banking practice specialising in structured finance, margin lending and corporate finance. He acts for leading financial institutions and a number of corporate borrowers operating across a variety of sectors and jurisdictions. Tom works closely with the firm’s Pensions and Insurance groups assisting banks, insurers and corporates with bespoke collateral and funding arrangements designed to address pension scheme deficits or facilitate large insurance-related transactions. He also advises on the recent legislation requiring UK banks to “ring-fence” their retail operations from their other banking activities. Tom is responsible for managing the firm’s relationship with a major German banking client. He is a leader of the firm’s bank sector, as well as being a group leader within the Banking practiceWork highlights:Tom has led on many banking transactions. Most recently, these include advising: numerous banks on margin lending transactions, with underlying shares in the UK, Russia, Spain, Portugal and Israel a major UK bank on collateralisation of its obligations under various pension schemes the lenders of John Laing’s £400m syndicated facilities the lenders of Harrods’ £850m syndicated facilities Graff Diamonds on its US$470m senior secured facilities House of Fraser on its £225m senior secured facilities Kier on its £380m corporate and acquisition facilities and €100m schuldschein Redrow on its corporate and development facilities Deutsche Bank on the £1.8bn disposal of the commercial real estate loan book of Deutsche Postbank London branch
Tony Bugg
Tony Bugg
Tony is widely acknowledged as the preeminent restructuring and insolvency lawyer in the UK. Over the past 20 years, Tony has been involved at the top level on many of the most significant restructuring or insolvency deals. Most notable was his leading role as the principal lawyer from September 2008 onwards advising the administrators in the insolvency of Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (LBIE). He also specialises in strategic planning and advisory work and distressed M&A. Throughout his career, Tony has acted for the full range of businesses regarding insolvency and restructuring, including insolvency administrators, creditors and debtors. His clients comprise all the major accounting firms, prominent banks, financial institutions, private equity and hedge funds, distressed investors and insolvency practitioners. Tony has also held principal roles in the firm’s management. He was global head of the restructuring and insolvency practice between 2006 and 2016, and then became the firm's global practice head of Banking between 2016 and 2019.
Tracey Lochhead
Tracey Lochhead
Tracey is a corporate partner who advises on a wide range of corporate, corporate finance and commercial matters across various sectors but with a focus on the bank and financial services sector. She acts for private equity houses, banks and corporate on public and private mergers and acquisitions, loan portfolio sales, corporate restructurings and joint ventures as well as equity capital market transactions. Tracey’s experience includes advising Cerberus on its acquisition of the Northern Rock entity and £13bn of mortgages; Investec of the sale of its UK mortgage business Kensington Group, together with other mortgage assets, to funds managed by Blackstone Tactical Opportunities Advisors and TPG Special Situations Partners; and Glencore on its merger with Xstrata.
Vanessa Harvard-Williams
Vanessa Harvard-Williams
Vanessa is a consultant at the firm, focusing on ESG and sustainability. She was previously the head of the firm’s global environmental and climate change practice, founded the firm’s ESG practice and co-headed the Risk and Resilience and Crisis Management teams. Vanessa is member of the UK Transition Plan Taskforce Delivery Group (TPT) and a member and interim chair of the UK Export Guarantee Advisory Group.
Verity Egerton-Doyle
Verity Egerton-Doyle
Verity is a partner in Linklaters’ London Antitrust & Foreign Investment Group and co-head of the UK technology sector team and Co-Head of Games and Interactive Entertainment. Verity has over a decade of experience across advisory, investigatory and transactional aspects of competition law in the EU and the UK, including representing clients in both regulatory appeals and stand-alone antitrust litigation before the UK courts. She is particularly familiar with the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority, having spent time on secondment to the CMA’s mergers group, during which she sat on the CMA’s Mergers Intelligence Committee. Verity has particular expertise in competition issues related to market power in dynamic and innovation-driven markets. She is recognised as a leading expert on competition and regulatory issues in the tech sector and on platform regulation regimes.
Yohan Liyanage
Yohan Liyanage
Advises on a broad range of contentious and non-contentious IP projects, including UK and multi-jurisdictional patent litigation, IP licences and commercialisation arrangements, and the IP aspects of cross-border M&A, joint ventures and IPOs.