Taylor Wessing

UK Top 200 position: 18
Asia-Pacific International 50 rank: 29

The Asia Pacific profile is an edited version of a full write-up that appears in The Lawyer Asia Pacific 150, a comprehensive analysis of the legal market in the region that ranks the top 100 local firms and leading 50 international players by headcount. For more information and to purchase your copy please click here

Global turnover for Taylor Wessing broke through the £200m barrier in 2011–12, with UK revenue pushing past the £100m marker too.

The 10 per cent increase across the board, the second successive year of rises, saw global turnover hit £212.5m and average UK profit per equity partner (PEP) top £600,000 — a rise of almost 12 per cent on 2010–11’s figures of £537,000.

Taylor Wessing has separate profit pools in the UK, Europe, the Middle East and Asia, but its estimated global PEP of £407,000 for 2011–12 is significantly below the UK-only figure, although it was up slightly from £402,000 in 2010–11.

Innovation is the buzzword at Taylor Wessing. UK managing partner Tim Eyles retains a close watching brief on the Hong Kong market. Indeed, Eyles has his eyes to the east generally, which he sees as a source of natural growth for clients who wish to move from saturated sectors and, consequentially, a major focus area for growth. To this end, Taylor Wessing made Singaporean firm RHT Law a network office, pushing fee-earner headcount to more than 900. This was swiftly followed by a merger with Austrian firm e/n/w/c. This merger added eight new offices in six jurisdictions, bringing the total number of the firm's offices to 22.

The Dubai and Singapore practices are growing and acting as hubs for hubs for the Middle East and South-East Asia. The firm will also hope to make further headway in Asia, the Middle East and Europe, where it has ultra-high-net-worth families as clients, as the result of its global key client initiative, which is aimed at improving cross-selling firmwide. The firm sees its private wealth clients as ‘mini-conglomerates’ that don’t need to rely on leverage from the banks to do deals.

Another 12 months of expansion was underlined by 19 lateral hires during the year, mainly in specialist areas such as pensions (evidenced by the hire of Jones Day partner Rosalind Connor), financial services regulatory (partner Alix Prentice from Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft) and banking (partner Elisabeth Gaunt from Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe). More recent lateral hires include: Mike Turner (TMT); James Goold and Edward Waldron (private equity); and Amanda Nelson (private client).

The new Tech City office in Shoreditch contributed towards the corporate practice bringing in £26m of UK turnover for 2011–12, slightly behind the £30m in litigation fees for 2011–12. Indeed, Taylor Wessing has positioned itself at the front of the queue for US technology companies establishing business in the UK.

The firm is instructed for the trustee of the Madoff estate and counts McLaren, Rutland, Canada Life, Panasonic, PwC and Grant Thornton as key clients.

Eyles said litigation was underscored by a strong performance in intellectual property (IP) technology, private wealth and commercial disputes. Its international profile and high-value client base means patent protection and trademark instructions were virtually recession-proof. And with many of its financial services clients operating in strict regulatory environments, the firm expects more work in this sector.

Asia Pacific

No. of lawyers: 79
Offices: 3

Taylor Wessing (TW) claims to be one of the first global firms to crack the China market, being awarded a licence to open in Shanghai back in 1996. It now runs an office in Beijing, which advises on foreign direct investment, M&A, private equity, restructuring, banking and finance and real estate. The firm also claims that its office in the capital “maintains a close exchange with various government authorities on central and local levels”.

In 2012 the firm struck a joint venture deal with RHTLaw in Singapore. And the practice's biggest recent regional move was in Singapore, when in April 2013 it was reported to have brought on board corporate and securities specialist Richard Tan as a partner, having lured him from local firm Colin Ng & Partners.

A TW spokesperson says the firm is happy with maintaining its existing arrangement in Singapore and is not tempted yet by a full integration. The firm prefers to stand by its wider model in the region, combining local cultural and market knowledge with international capability and expertise.

In addition to the corporate and securities field, Taylor Wessing's Singapore offering focuses on banking and finance, intellectual property and technology, litigation and dispute resolution, and real estate.

Briefings from Taylor Wessing

  • 'Greek Yogurt' trademark decision

    The claimants in this case were Greek yogurt manufacturer FAGE and its UK distributor. FAGE had been making Greek yogurt in Greece and selling it in the UK for 30 years.

  • UKIPO rejects Chanel JERSEY application

    The UKIPO has rejected an application by Chanel to register JERSEY for skincare products, soaps, perfumes, cosmetics and toiletries.

View more briefings from Taylor Wessing

Analysis from The Lawyer

  • Money 317

    Crunch boom

    Financial disputes are starting to dominate the English courts as the long-awaited fallout from the downturn finally comes to town

  • EU Parmliament

    Patent by numbers

    A single patent court system for Europe and the high-profile ‘phone wars’ are putting IP at the heart of clients’ business strategies

View more analysis from The Lawyer

Overview

5 New Street Square
London
EC4A 3TW
UK
http://www.taylorwessing.com

Turnover (£m): 212.5
PEP (£k): 407
EPP (£k): 364
Total lawyers: 705
Total partners: 311
No. of lawyers (Asia Pacific): 79
Offices (Asia Pacific): 3

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