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David Hudd
David Hudd is co-leader of Hogan Lovells’ finance practice group. He advises on all types of capital markets and structured finance transactions, including derivatives and securitisations.

Hudd is listed in Chambers’ Guide as a leading individual in structured finance and securitisation and in the Legal 500’s Legal Experts as an expert in capital markets, derivatives and structured products and securitisation. Following 13 years’ experience at another city law firm and in investment banking, Hudd joined Hogan Lovells as a partner in 1994.
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News from Hogan Lovells
Hogan Lovells advises Hermes Real Estate Investment Management on ownership swap
Hogan Lovells hires tax disputes partner Rupert Shiers
Hogan Lovells advises Valneva on €40m capital increase
Hogan Lovells advises mandated lead arrangers on acquisition of The Gym
Hogan Lovells advises ID Logistics on acquisition of CEPL
News from The Lawyer
Herbert Smith Freehills London tax litigator exits for Hogan Lovells
Teenagers visit City firms to launch Clegg's social mobility awards
CC, Hogan Lovells, Proskauer sky high on Empire State Building IPO
Ashurst and Slaughters bag roles on Morrisons delivery deal with Ocado
Hogan Lovells and Simpson Thacher bite into record $17bn Apple bond
Briefings from Hogan Lovells
New summer timetable — settlement agreements and other reforms
The new Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act renames compromise agreements ‘settlement agreements’.
Can't pay, must pay — Employment Tribunal's costs award against claimant upheld
The claimant brought various claims against the council, a previous employer from whom she had TUPE transferred and also against a number of individual colleagues.
Analysis from The Lawyer

Charge of the lit brigade
The Lawyer’s latest Top 50 litigation firms list shows that business for dispute specialists is roaring along while new in-depth detail reveals the winning strategies

Light and shade
The Russian legal market faces a new era as the government opens the door to greater business transparency, but not everything is open to scrutiny


