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    Herbert Smith Freehills

    Yesterday

    Corrs managing partner Gavin MacLaren.

    Mass exodus at Corrs after historic CEO pay package

    The country’s most talked about law firm faces mass partner flight – the largest batch in the legal sector for years.

    • Updated
    • Mark Di Stefano

    This Month

    Corrs still sits outside the big six - King & Wood Mallesons, Allens, Herbert Smith Freehills, Clayton Utz, Minter Ellison, Ashurst

    Top law firms locked in negotiations for lucrative panel

    Corrs, HSF, KWM and MinterEllison are yet to be appointed to the federal government’s legal panel, more than a month after an initial announcement.

    • Maxim Shanahan

    July

    Herbert Smith Freehills global CEO Justin D’Agostino began a second term as head of the firm in May.

    HSF’s Australian division outpaces global firm

    Herbert Smith Freehills’ Australian arm has booked revenue growth of 15 per cent, as profit per equity partner continues to rise.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Gilbert + Tobin, led by Sam Nickless (left) prefers full-equity partners, while Kristin Stammer’s HSF is promoting lawyers to part-salary positions.

    Rapid growth puts pressure on law partnership structures

    Almost two-thirds of new legal partners are now on a part-salary arrangement as rapid growth puts pressure on equity allocations.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Herbert Smith Freehills partners Anna Sutherland (left, joint global managing partner for disputes) and Danielle Kelly (global director of culture and inclusion).

    More law firms hit gender targets as partnership gap narrows

    A record number of law firms now have more than 40 per cent female partnerships, but part-owner gender ratios contrast sharply with the engine room.

    • Maxim Shanahan
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    June

    Energy transition lights a rocket under law firms

    Law firms are streaking ahead of the broader economy, adding partners as deals return and the energy transition offers decades of lucrative work.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Ella White and Olivia Burgess

    Challenger firms increase pay in fight for top-tier legal talent

    Clients, social positions and work-life balance are among the factors in-demand graduates are looking for in a firm – but high rates of pay don’t hurt.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Miriam Stiel of Allens.

    Top law firms question AI’s usefulness

    The technology, which has been touted as a revolution in legal practice, will streamline basic tasks but is likely to have limited impact on core legal work.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Atticus co-founder and senior software engineer Misha Wakerman, co-founder and chief operating officer Saul Wakerman, chief executive Thom Mackey and co-founder and senior software engineer Mitchell Brunton.

    Under-the-radar Melbourne software firm worth $90m after VCs pounce

    Atticus has built a roster of clients including BHP, CBA and numerous top law firms for its software that verifies documents are truthful.

    • Paul Smith
    Treasury’s Alex Heath says action, honesty and detail are key to avoiding greenwashing claims.

    Honesty and action key to limiting ‘real’ greenwashing

    The risk of regulatory crackdowns should not turn companies off making climate change commitments, provided they manage them well.

    • Hannah Wootton

    May

    Ruslan Kogan, CEO of Kogan.com, is in the firing line over an options sale back to the company weeks out from a poor trading update.

    Membership crackdown could hurt Kogan.com’s ‘north star’

    Investors are betting regulation changes to lucrative membership programs will hurt the retailer’s major profit driver at a time earnings are already under pressure.

    • Carrie LaFrenz and Tom Richardson
    AAT

    Law graduates are about to crack a salary record

    Top-tier graduates will earn more than $100,000 this year – in Sydney only – but law firms remain tight-lipped on pay rates despite moves towards transparency elsewhere.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Russell Mailler is one of two executives replacing the late Juan Martinez at HWL Ebsworth.

    HWL Ebsworth anoints ‘co-pilots’ to replace the late Juan Martinez

    Australia’s largest legal partnership, HWL Ebsworth, has new leaders who are hoping for “not such a combative relationship with the media”.

    • Michael Pelly

    April

    Energy focus as Ashurst, Allens, Freehills appoint new partners

    Energy and environment lawyers have led promotions at top-tier firms, as the legal industry targets the energy transition as the next big source of billings.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Seven West chairman Kerry Stokes.

    The damage done to Seven West Media from cocaine and prostitute claims

    Weeks of headlines haven’t dampened advertiser appetite for Seven’s footy ads, media buyers say. But that is not strictly true for its reputation and its board.

    • Sam Buckingham-Jones
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    Rebecca Maslen-Stannage, chair of Herbert Smith Freehills.

    Progress on free trade deal for foreign lawyers

    Australia and the UK have taken the first steps toward a free trade agreement for lawyers that will relax strict rules around the admission of foreign lawyers.

    • Michael Pelly
    Uber’s barrister has begun its defence against accusations it deliberately set out to harm GoCatch.

    ‘Not honourable, but lawful’: Uber justifies using spyware on rival

    Uber’s lawyers said taking private data from its rival GoCatch was not like burglary, and compared its lawbreaking to publishers selling Lady Chatterley’s Lover.

    • Paul Smith

    March

     Russell Mailler, chief strategy officer at HWL Ebsworth, is expected to be a contender to replace the late Juan Martinez

    Martinez lieutenant tipped to lead HWL Ebsworth

    Juan Martinez’s right-hand man is favoured to become the next leader of Australia’s largest legal partnership.

    • Michael Pelly
    Corrs Chambers Westgarth chief executive Gavin MacLaren.

    Employment lawyers dissent over Gavin Maclaren’s mega contract

    There was internal dissent to Corrs CEO Gavin MacLaren’s mega-contract extension. Some came from within its own employment ranks.

    • Mark Di Stefano
    SafetyCulture general counsel Peter Dunne said it is heartbreaking when a company gets its options scheme wrong.

    Tech star lends staff cash to buy its shares

    SafetyCulture, a $2.7 billion software firm, is helping staff buy more stock and is structuring its sales to avoid debts accrued by some US start-up workers.

    • Nick Bonyhady