The fee gap Can international firms still charge double? 中外法律服务费率差异‘鸿沟’能否持续? ALB Special Report: Chengdu 2010 Rich pickings in Sichuan 成都律所中高端业务发展逐步加速 China’s most improved in-house team? Why GCL-Poly’s legal team is ahead of the crowd 保利协鑫公司法务团队专访 CHINA www.legalbusinessonline.com 2010年度ALB中国法律大奖获奖名单揭晓 Simply the best! All the winners of 2010 ALB China Law Awards revealed ISSUE 7.5 n DEALS ROUNDUP n UK, US REPORTS n LATERAL MOVES n APPOINTMENTS n LATEST CAPITAL MARKETS DATA
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The fee gap Can international firms still charge double?中外法律服务费率差异‘鸿沟’能否持续?
ALB Special Report: Chengdu 2010 Rich pickings in Sichuan 成都律所中高端业务发展逐步加速
China’s most improved in-house team? Why GCL-Poly’s legal team is ahead of the crowd 保利协鑫公司法务团队专访CHINA
www.legalbusinessonline.com
2010年度ALB中国法律大奖获奖名单揭晓
Simply the best!
All the winners of 2010 ALB China Law Awards revealed
ISS
UE
7.5
n DEALS ROUNDUP n UK, US REPORTS n LATERAL MOVES n APPOINTMENTS n LATEST CAPITAL MARKETS DATA
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ALB China-advert 4.pdf 10/23/2009 3:14:24 PM
News | editorial >>
1www.legalbusinessonline.com
IN THE FIRST PERSON
Wisdom: Knowing what to overlook
The ascendancy of PRC firms was widely anticipated: the rapidity of it was not. Local firms are now powerful, financially strong, and, in the case of the top-notch firms, already expanding globally. Their increasing market strength – not only in terms of winning mandates
from inbound investors and foreign companies but also attracting top talent – has put greater pressure on their foreign counterparts.
The key question this gives rise to is whether any international firm can really grow to a substantial size in China given they have to contend with now not only restrictions on practice but also increasingly stiff competition from PRC firms for cross-border deals.
Inseparable from the whole question is the fact that the fee gap between international and local firms is creating a natural market segmentation.The days of international firms trying to be ‘all things to all people’, and receiving mandates from their foreign clients as a matter of course, are long over. In today’s market they have to focus on their core strengths. “One of the main challenges for the development of international firms in the region is maintaining focus. Even though the competition is intensifying, the problem that a lot of them face is that they tend to lose focus and start chasing opportunities which don’t make a lot of sense,” said Arthur Mok, the former managing partner of Hogan & Hartson in Shanghai.
Mok recently traded in his position at the newly merged Hogan Lovells for partnership in the smaller US firm Ropes & Gray. The rationale, he said, was that he could stay focused on his own practice, which is in the private equity, M&A and capital markets areas.
As the pioneering 19th century American philosopher William James advised, “the art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook”. International firms’ prospects in China may be far from gloomy, but only if they manage to move up the value chain ahead of their PRC counterparts and employ a laser-like focus on what they should and should not offer to their new and existing clients.
“Fund establishment exemplifies the current trend for JVs in the PRC real estate market and the growing influence of the asset management businesses of the PRC banks”Anthony Webster, Maples and Calder (p6)
“We do value external counsel’s extensive expertise and knowledge in many other areas of the law. Their logistics, know-how, precedents and experience in solving similar legal issues are invaluable to us”Susan Wu, GCL Poly (p38)
“Most US firms are moving away from commodity work such as FDI, because the local firms take over that space. They can do that work more efficiently and at a more affordable rate”David Wang, Paul Hastings (p43)
CHINA
The days of international firms trying to be ‘all things to all people’, and receiving mandates from their foreign clients as a matter of course, are long over
ISSUE 7.52
CONTeNTs >>
contents
The Updates section of ALB China is sponsored by the following firms:
Arbitration editor
International tax editor
26 COVER STORY
Azmi & Associates is reputably known as one of Malaysia’s leading firms in the areas of Mergers & Acquisitions, Capital & Debt Market, Corporate & Commercial, Energy & Utilities, Restructuring, Projects, Construction, Privatisation and Financing, Litigation and Arbitration and is also rapidly building its reputations in the areas of Intellectual Property and information technology.
Investment into Malaysia
SIAC is an independent, not-for-profit organisation, providing the international business community with a neutral, efficient and reliable dispute resolution institution in Asia. Most of the parties involved are non-Singapore parties; panel arbitrators are from all over the world; various contracts opt for non-Singapore law as the substantive laws; secretariats are multinational and multi-bilingual; and the arbitral awards are enforceable in over 140 signatory countries to the New York Convention.
Loo & Partners was founded in 1985 as a niche practice, handling mainly banking, corporate, securities and commercial work. With the support of a comprehensive network of correspondent law firms, the firm serves its clients in their regional needs. The firm has been regularly noted for its IPO, M&A and general corporate work.
Singapore editor
Guantao is a leading PRC firm with core businesses in capital markets, M&A, real estate, restructuring & insolvency, and energy & resources. With a team of nearly 150 lawyers nationwide, Guantao provides advice of high quality to clients home and abroad. Headquartered in Beijing, it has offices in Shanghai, Shenzhen, Xi’an, Dalian, Chengdu, Ji’nan, Xiamen, Tianjin and Hong Kong.
Beijing editor
AzureTax Ltd provides transparent strategic and ethical tax advice. Through our professional corporate and International, tax advisory and trustee services your tax plan is comprehensively implemented. Our tax advice provides independent innovative and rigorous solutions which deliver results and long-term accountability. Qualified UK, US, Hong Kong and PRC tax advisors. Tax filings for UK, US and Hong Kong Tax returns.
ANALYSIS8 Thefeegap:caninternationalfirmsstill
chargedouble?While local firms are moving even closer to their international counterparts in terms of breadth and quality of service, the difference in fees between the two remains wide – and unsustainable. ALB finds out whether the market is on the brink of profound change
10 PRCpartnershipappraisals:timetoliftthebarWithout a framework of checks and balances, law firms will end up strong-performing partners resenting their weaker-performing counterparts. This often leads to strong performers departing for firms where they can receive rewards that correspond more closely with their relative contributions
FEATURES36 In-housePerspective:GCL-Poly
Through a series of landmark transactions in recent years, GCL-Poly has become one of the largest players in the world’s solar power industry. ALB finds out how the in-house legal team’s functions have transformed it into a high-value-add part of the business
40 USfirmsinChinaThe global downturn didn’t stop more US firms from expanding by opening new offices in China and reaffirming the commitment to this market. With the continuing recovery and growth of China’s economy, ALB asks leading US firms what the year ahead holds for them?
46 ALBSpecialReport:Chengdu2010As Chengdu proceeds with its ambitious plans to become a commercial and financial centre for the South-west, local firms are gearing up for an expected surge in demand from the middle and upper market segments. An increasing influx of capital and investments into the region has also attracted outside interest in this nascent legal market
REGULARS13 News• King & Wood lures CC’s Beijing chief • Jun He’s triple whammy to new US office • Pressure from large firms forces Kingfield to
merge with Dacheng • Zhonglun W&D becomes third Beijing firm in
Taiyuan
2010 ALB China Law AwardsA full rundown of the winners from this year’s ceremony in Shanghai, featuring the very best performers the legal market has to offer
38
ALB CHINA ISSUE 7.5
46
Copyright Copyright is reserved throughout. No part of this publication can be reproduced in whole or part without the express permission of the editor. Contributions are invited, but copies of work should be kept, as ALB China can accept
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Firm:Osler,Hoskin&Harcourtlead lawyers: Jack Thrasher,Peter GlossopClient: Syncrude Canada
Firm:Blake,Cassels&Graydonlead lawyer: Michael LaffinClient: Sinopec
• Largest Asian oil company investment in Canada's oil sands to date. Led by Sinopec’s in-house team, managed by general counsel Shao Jingyang
• Blakes previously worked with Sinopec with their first foray into Canada with the Northern Lights Project
• In-house counsels at ConocoPhillips Canada, including vice president-corporate services and chief counsel Graham Vanhegan and Angela Avery, also worked on the deal
| M&A |
► ShoUgang gRoUP anD DeUTSChe Bank–hUaxIa Bank STake aCqUISITIon 首钢成为华夏第一大股东Value: US$3bn
Firm:Concord&PartnersClient: Huaxia Bank
Firm:FreshfieldsClient: Shougang Group
• Deal makes Shougang the largest shareholder of Huaxia, taking over Deutsche Bank
• Freshfields is long-term legal advisor to Shougang Group
Firm:ZhongLunlead lawyers: Su Min, Xu Zhigang, Zou XiaodongClient: Issuer
• Being the only Chinese company with approval from the US Food and Drug Administration to export finished heparin, Hepalink is the world’s biggest maker of the blood-thinner
• Hepalink’s offering is the largest IPO seen on Shenzhen stock exchange
• Zhong Lun has been Hepalink’s legal advisor for a decade
| equity MARKet |
► neW CenTURy ShIPBUIlDIng SIngaPoRe IPo 新世纪集团新加坡上市Value: US$731m
Firm:Jingtian&GongchengClient: Issuer
Firm:WongPartnershiplead lawyers: Raymond Tong, Tok Boon ShengClient: Issuer
arendt & Medernach China/hong kong l'occitane hong kong IPo 708 equity marketBaker & Mckenzie China/US/hong kong Ion geophysical Corporation–BgP stock sales and JV 400 Joint venture
China/hong kong China overseas land & Investment and ICBC JV and fund establishment 250 Joint ventureBlake, Cassels & graydon
Clifford Chance China/hong kong new World Development bond issuance 250 Debt marketChina/US International Paper Company–SCa acquisition 200 M&aChina/Singapore Fufeng convertible bonds issuance 120 equity market
Commerce & Finance China/US Charles River–Wuxi PharmaTech acquisition 1,600 M&aChina/Singapore new Century Shipbuilding Singapore IPo 731 equity marketChina/US agile Property high yield notes offering 650 Debt market
Concord & Partners China/germany Shougang group and Deutsche Bank–huaxia Bank stake acquisition 3,000 M&aConyers Dill Pearman
China/US agile Property high yield notes offering 650 Debt marketChina/hong kong new World Development bond issuance 250 Debt marketChina/Singapore Fufeng convertible bonds issuance 120 equity market
Cravath Swaine China/US Charles River–Wuxi PharmaTech acquisition 1,600 M&aDavis Polk China/US Charles River–Wuxi PharmaTech acquisition 1,600 M&a
China/US agile Property high yield notes offering 650 Debt marketDla Piper China/US China hydroelectric Corporation IPo 96 equity market
China/australia China Coal Import & export Company–MetroCoal limited JV 30 Joint ventureFangda Partners China/US Charles River–Wuxi PharmaTech acquisition 1,600 M&a
China/Singapore China Minzhong IPo 169 equity marketFreshfields China/hong kong l’occitane hong kong IPo 708 equity market
China/US Tencent holdings–Digital Sky Technologies acquisition 300 M&aChina/germany Shougang group and Deutsche Bank–huaxia Bank stake acquisition 3,000 M&a
Fried Frank China/hong kong asian Citrus holdings top-up placement 70 equity marketgide loyrette nouel China/France SeMMaRIS–Shenzhen agricultural JV Undisc. Joint ventureglobal law office China/US China hydroelectric Corporation IPo 96 equity marketgrandall legal group
China hainan Meilan International airport Company–hna airport holding Company acquisition
322 M&a
herbert Smith China/Mongolia Solartech Mongolian mine acquisition 192 M&ahopgood ganim China/australia China Coal Import & export Company–MetroCoal limited JV 30 Joint ventureJincheng Tongda & neal
China/hong kong lansen Pharma hong kong IPo 137 equity market
Jingtian & gongcheng
China/Singapore new Century Shipbuilding Singapore IPo 731 equity marketChina/hong kong l'occitane hong kong IPo 708 equity marketChina/US agile Property high yield notes offering 650 Debt marketChina/Singapore Fufeng convertible bonds issuance 120 equity marketChina/US China hydroelectric Corporation IPo 96 equity market
king & Wood China China Fiberglass–Jushi group acquisition 430 M&aChina/Singapore Fufeng convertible bonds issuance 120 equity market
linklaters China/hong kong l'occitane hong kong IPo 708 equity marketChina/hong kong new World Development bond issuance 250 Debt marketChina/Singapore Fufeng convertible bonds issuance 120 equity market
loeb & loeb China/US China hydroelectric Corporation IPo 96 equity marketMaples and Calder China/hong kong China overseas land & Investment and ICBC JV and fund establishment 250 Joint ventureMayer Brown China/US/hong kong Ion geophysical Corporation–BgP stock sales and JV 400 Joint ventureo’Melveny & Myers China/US Charles River–Wuxi PharmaTech acquisition 1,600 M&a
China/Singapore new Century Shipbuilding Singapore IPo 731 equity marketosler, hoskin & harcourt
Rajah & Tann China/Singapore China Minzhong IPo 169 equity marketSidley austin China/US agile Property high yield notes offering 650 Debt marketSkadden China/US Tencent holdings–Digital Sky Technologies acquisition 300 M&aStamford law China/Singapore China Minzhong IPo 169 equity marketSullivan & Cromwell China/US/hong kong Ion geophysical Corporation–BgP stock sales and JV 400 Joint ventureWalkers China/Mongolia Solartech Mongolian mine acquisition 192 M&aWongPartnership China/Singapore new Century Shipbuilding Singapore IPo 731 equity marketWoo kwan lee & lo China/hong kong new World Development bond issuance 250 Debt marketyuan Tai law offices China/Singapore China Minzhong IPo 169 equity marketzhong lun China Shenzhen hepalink IPo 878 equity market
Does your firm’s deal information appear in this table? Please contact [email protected] 61 2 8437 4700
company to be listed on the SGX; Singapore's second-biggest listing since CapitaMalls Asia
| equity MARKet |
► l'oCCITane hong kong IPo 法国L'OCCitAne赴香港上市Value: US$708m
• Issuer becomes the first French company to list on HKSE this year
| DeBt MARKet |
► agIle PRoPeRTy hIgh yIelD noTeS oFFeRIng 雅居乐发行保证优先票Value: US$650m
Firm:Jingtian&GongchengClient: Issuer
Firm:ConyersDill&PearmanClient: Issuer
Firm:SidleyAustinClient: Issuer
Firm:DavisPolklead lawyers: William Barron, John PatonClient: Initial purchasers
Firm:Commerce&FinanceClient: Initial purchasers
• Size of offering was increased from originally planned US$500m
• Sidley Austin is long-term legal advisor to Agile, representing the company in its IPO and debut debt offering in 2006
Zhang XuebingZhong Lun
William BarronDavis Polk
6
News | deals >>
ISSUE 7.5
| JOiNt VeNtuRe |
► Ion geoPhySICal CoRPoRaTIon–BgP SToCk SaleS anD JV iOn 和BGP 宣布成立陆上地震技术合资公司Value: US$400m
Firm:MayerBrownlead lawyers: Marc Folladori, Tristan Propst, Simeon Kriesberg, Scott Perlman, Martin Robertson, Ian LewisClient: ION
Firm:Baker&McKenzieClient: ION
Firm:Sullivan&Cromwelllead lawyer: Chun WeiClient: BGP
• BGP is a subsidiary of China National Petroleum Corporation
• Mayer Brown team gave legal advice on a wide range of issues regarding both onshore and offshore arrangements under general corporate, IP, finance, PRC and US regulatory and anti-trust laws
| M&A |
► haInan MeIlan InTeRnaTIonal aIRPoRT CoMPany–hna aIRPoRT holDIng CoMPany aCqUISITIon 美兰机场收购整合海南机场Value: US$322m
Firm:GrandallClient: Hainan Meilan International
• Hainan Meilan International Airport Company acquires HNA Airport Holding’s 54.5% stake from HNA Group and Kingward Investment
• Grandall is Hainan Meilan’s long term legal advisor and has represented the firm for more than ten years
• Zhejiang Narada Power Source principally engages in the research, development, manufacturing and sale of chemical power sources and new energy storage products
| M&A |
► ChIna FIBeRglaSS–JUShI gRoUP aCqUISITIon 中国玻纤全资控股巨石集团
Client: JV partners• China Overseas Land & Investment
established the US$250m Harmony China Real Estate Fund with co-investors ICBC International Investment Management and a subsidiary of China Overseas Holdings
• In connection with the establishment of the fund, the parties also agreed to set up JV entities to manage and administer the affairs
• Baker & McKenzie’s Hong Kong office acted as lead onshore counsel to the two JV parties
• Deal marks the first copper mining acquisition in Mongolia by a listed company
| CAPitAL MARKetS |
► ChIna MInzhong IPo 中国闽中食品新加坡iPO Value: US$169m
Firm:FangdaPartnersClient: Issuer
Firm:Rajah&Tannlead lawyers: Chia Kim Huat, Howard Cheam, Chen Xi, Benjamin BehClient: Issuer
Firm:StamfordLawlead lawyer: Soh Chun Bin Client: Sole bookrunner
Firm:YuanTaiLawOfficeslead lawyer: Wang DaofuClient: Sole bookrunner
• Deal is one of the largest S-Chip IPOs on the SGX since sub-prime crisis in 2008
• China Minzhong is a PRC-based integrated vegetables processor and is the first of its type to list on the Main Board of the Singapore Exchange
| CAPitAL MARKetS |
► lanSen PhaRMa hong kong IPo 朗生医药香港上市Value: US$137m
Firm:JinchengTongda&Neallead lawyers: Zheng Xiaodong, Liu YinhongClient: Issuer
• Lansen is principally engaged in the development, production and sale of specialty prescription Western pharmaceuticals for the treatment of autoimmune rheumatic diseases in the PRC
Firm:GideLoyrettelead lawyer: David BoitoutClient: Semmaris
• The JV gives SEMMARIS entry into the Chinese wholesale food market for the first time
• Gide is a long-standing legal counsel to the client, having advised Semmaris on corporate restructuring in France and on some others international development of their activities
Tommy TongHerbert Smith
David BoitoutGide Loyrette
Zhao XiaohongKing & Wood
CORRECTION#In the 'Going Boutique' news analysis on pg 13 in ALB China issue 7.4, the following information was incorrectly reported. Junyi law office did not merge with Jun He in 2007. In fact, Junyi had advanced merger talks with Wang Yadong (managing partner of the former Runbo law firm) when some of the Junyi partners decided to join Jun He. Runbo then merged with Junyi resulting in Run Ming Law Office, which is headed by executive partners Liu Yi (former Junyi managing partner) and Wang Yadong. ALB regrets the error.
The findings of the 2010 ALB China In-house Survey have sent out a positive message to law firms. According to the results,
only 17% of the polled legal departments stated their budgets for legal spend on external counsel have contracted compared to last year, and 49% have seen an increase in 2010 budgets.
However, clients and general counsels are under increasing pressure to manage the cost of external counsel, even if their budgets have been increased. “The higher hourly rate charged by an external counsel means its client would receive less legal support with the same budget. So we have to watch our external legal spending very carefully and ensure we have enough resources and appropriate support to meet the company’s legal needs,” said a Shanghai-based director of legal affairs in a US-headquartered Fortune Global 500 company.
The legal director also addressed the question of the price/value gap that exists in the services provided by international firms. “Some international firms’ charge-out rates (for partners in China) are too expensive even to top multinational companies. Their top-ranked professional service and quality advice are desirable to clients, but the additional value delivered is not enough to justify the additional cost,” he said.
Price alone won’t make the cutAs companies become more proficient at managing risk and build up their own in-house legal function, they stop outsourcing as a matter of course and instead engage external counsel only in particular circumstances. Usually these circumstances require high quality work, specialised expertise, and quick turnaround times. Firms are therefore getting increasingly less likely to win mandates on the basis of price along. It is the ability to provide international-standard legal services and lower-than –international-standard prices that constitutes a new winning proposition.
In the middle market, where mandates generally involve less significant offshore elements and can be handled by either PRC or international firms, leading domestic players currently enjoy an advantage.
“A good number of domestic firms are catching up with their international counterparts and are taking a more dominant role in servicing foreign companies in China – providing not only general corporate services but also corporate finance and transactional advice,” said Willie Uy, director of legal affairs of Hong Kong-listed property developer Shui On Land. “They are able to offer legal services that are compatible to services provided by many
► The hoURly RaTe DIFFeRenCeS BeTWeen InTeRnaTIonal FIRMS anD PRC FIRMS
Position Internationalhourlyrate(US$)
PRChourlyrate(US$)
Partners at top-tier firms
700-1,100 350-550
Associates at top-tier firms
350-500 150-400
Partners at mid-tier firms
450-750 200-350
Associates at mid-tier firms
200-350 50-250
Note: Rates are for general indication only; ‘PRC firms’ in the table refers to firms that primarily focus on corporate and
transactional work
international firms, whilst keeping their fee levels at a more reasonable level.”
In addition, Uy noted, these PRC firms have adopted the international model of delivering services through a team-based approach, which has added an additional degree of comfort for their foreign clients.
Partner moves: a market barometer In recent months, a growing number of partners, not only Chinese but also foreign lawyers, have left international firms to join local partnerships. These moves are an important indicator of the rise of PRC firms and in some cases represent a direct response to clients’ calls for more reasonable fees.
Former partner at Paul Hastings’ Beijing office Lin Huawei joined Global
AnAlysis >>
The fee gap:Can international firms still charge double?
While local firms are moving even closer towards their international counterparts in terms of breadth and quality of service, the difference in fees between the two remains wide. ALB finds out how sustainable this is, and whether the market is on the brink of profound change in this regard
News | analysis >>
9www.legalbusinessonline.com
“In the next five to ten years, the Beijing and Shanghai offices of international firms have to evolve to be able to provide the type of services which is currently provided out of their hong kong offices”
Robert Lewis AllBright
Law Firm as a partner in March this year. Lin, who focuses on M&A, PE and FDI matters, explained that his choice was due to a preference for charging more reasonable fees. “Clients are more aware of the levels of legal fees these days. Domestic and international firms charge very different rates and, given that, local firms are becoming the ‘go to’ firms, especially when they are increasingly capable of providing international business oriented services and advice,” Lin said.
Jun He is another firm that has recently secured the services of former partners at international firms.
In early May, it added James Zhu and Zoe Wang, previously the Beijing and Shanghai managing partners of US firm Perkins Coie, to its partner ranks. Although partner lateral hires from international counterparts were not unheard of in the past, Jun He’s senior partner David Liu said the necessity of it for PRC firms and the willingness of international partners to join local firms has never been greater.
“From the partners’ point of view, practising on a strong local platform is an increasingly attractive option,” said Liu. “At a local firm, they are able to leverage the firm’s extensive local resources and local legal support to provide higher quality and a wider range of services to clients. Equally importantly, they can offer a more attractive value proposition to existing and prospective clients, as the cost base in even the very top-tier PRC firms is still noticeably lower than that of international firms.”
Having more international lawyers will inevitably bolster PRC firms’ international capabilities and help close
the remaining gap between what local and foreign firms can offer in China.
Further evolutionInternational firms will undoubtedly feel more pressure from leading PRC firms, but their prospects are far from gloomy if they manage to move up the value chain. “With economic growth and the maturing of the local legal profession, local firms should be dominant in the local market. Foreign firms will play a role that’s similar to the role they play in other markets – handling high-end work that has significant cross-border elements, as they have lawyers who have offshore capability and local understanding,” said Robert Lewis, senior international legal consultant of AllBright in Beijing.
“In the next five to ten years, the Beijing and Shanghai offices of international firms have to evolve to be able to provide the type of services which is currently provided out of their Hong Kong offices. They will have to improve their overall positioning and deliver that nature and quality of cross-border offshore services,” he added.
The fee gap between top-tier PRC firms and international firms that are middle-market oriented will close over time. “As more and more PRC firms are recruiting internationally trained and qualified lawyers, their prices will gradually move towards international levels. Eventually, there will be less of a difference,” said Todd Bissett, a partner at US firm Sheppard Mullin’s Shanghai office. “One interesting question in the legal market today is about whether or not PRC firms are going to be constrained in going after cross-border work by their own price approach.”
► exoDUS: CoUnSel anD PaRTneRS oF InTeRnaTIonal FIRMS JoInIng PRC FIRMS (JanUaRy–May 2010)
Name From To PracticeRobert Lewis Lovells AllBright Corporate
Richard Lee Simmons & Simmons AllBright Corporate
Louis Meng K&L Gates AllBright Corporate
Lin Huawei Paul Hastings Global M&A, PE
David Fu Shearman & Sterling Global Corporate, FDI
William Lu Allen & Overy Jade & Fountain TMT
James Zhu Perkins Coie Jun He IP
Zoe Wang Perkins Coie Jun He IP
Steven Cui Jones Day Jun He IP
Rupert Li Clifford Chance King & Wood Capital markets
Gao Yan Jones Day Zhong Lun Energy
Scott Yu Jones Day Zhong Lun Corporate finance
► RoBeRT leWIS SeTS a PRIMe exaMPle Among a long line of lawyers leaving international firms to join local firms, Lovells’ former Beijing managing partner Robert Lewis is the most senior – he has nearly 20 years of China
practice experience in private practice and in-house. He joined AllBright as a senior international legal consultant in Beijing on 1 May 2010.
Among other reasons, Lewis has identified the fee differentials as an important factor in his decision to move. “The cost base and fee structure of international firms have created a natural market segmentation affecting their opportunities for growth and expansion in China. In certain important segments of the market, they would never be able to achieve the same scale and coverage as local firms,” said Lewis. “The only way to reduce charge-out rates is to have a lower cost base. Joining AllBright enables me to offer a new value proposition for both foreign and domestic clients – providing an international standard of service through a national network at a local price.”
At AllBright, Lewis’ services will be available at a new hourly rate of RMB3,200 – fully 45% less than his Lovells rate and equivalent to the rates charged by local partners in other leading domestic law firms. The lower end of the range of hourly rates for his new AllBright team will be RMB800, and in appropriate cases they can offer a blended hourly rate of RMB2,000.
It certainly works from a client perspective if a firm can provide great service at a low price, but to be able to provide that great service PRC firms need to have not only partners but also other legal professions, especially associates, who are capable of delivering. “Most of these high-calibre lawyers are expecting to be paid at international levels. The real question
is whether PRC firms are able to have the economies of scale in high-quality work to achieve that,” said Todd.
As the market continues to evolve, many industry participants envision that PRC firms and international firms should and will become equal partners who often co-counsel on a transaction for the same client. “For the most part, international and PRC firms are still selling different
products, focusing on onshore and offshore aspects respectively. In many transactions, clients will continue to need international counsels. PRC firms will always have advantages in the local market and be the primary gatekeepers to Chinese transactions. But the needs of the clients for international firms are not going to go away simply because of a price differential,” said Todd. ALB
News | analysis >>
11www.legalbusinessonline.com
The time has come where the issue of partner performance and quality of legal advice is now uppermost on law firms’
business agendas. Leaders in the legal sphere talk about how their firms only employ connoisseurs of the legal industry, but in reality many firms have given scant regard to quality-checking their partnerships by properly appraising the performance of partners regardless of their seniority.
One PRC firm that has embraced the importance of maintaining partnership standards is Global, which, five years ago, put together an appraisal system to gauge partner performance. Managing partner Liu Jinrong gathers a committee of around seven partners annually to review the performance of every partner, including themselves. Elements reviewed (these are subject to market changes annually) include economic (revenue brought in and number of billable hours) and management performance (managing practice team and potential complaints from colleagues and clients).
“We also assess contributions in other aspects, including marketing and public affairs management. These are included in the standard review package,” Liu said. In the event that a majority of the committee is of the view that the partner’s performance is not satisfactory, they will schedule a separate meeting to assess the problems and suggest measures to improve the situation. The target partner’s performance will then be closely monitored by the committee for the next 12 months.
Like Global, Han Kun’s appraisal system also revolves around both qualitative and quantitative elements. But while Han Kun reviews the annual revenue brought in by partners and their administrative contributions, the firm also places great importance on a partner’s project execution skills, the level of innovation shown and the types of legal advice given to clients. “There is no hard and fast rule for reviewing non-pecuniary elements. We also need to consider if a partner fits the whole corporate culture and how the other employees feel about that partner,” said Chao Yijun, a partner at Han Kun.
According to both Liu and Chao, partner appraisals at PRC firms are very flexible and highly discretional.
Partners are also judged on their integrity and professionalism – both notoriously hard to measure. “Once a partner fails these two elements, they would have failed the entire review,” said Global’s Liu.
Expansion plans and quality controlWhile some firms claim that they do have stringent exit strategies for underperforming partners, not many have ever had to let one go. Global, established in 1984, is a good example. “Our reviewing period is two consecutive years. If the partner fails both years then we will let them go, but we have never had to do so yet” said Liu.
Like Global, Jincheng Tongda & Neal (JT&N) has also never demoted or forced any partner to leave, although the firm does incorporate a specific clause upon partnership stating that if partners continuously fail to meet revenue targets, their partner titles will be stripped. “We do have rules as such but it has never been strictly enforced. I don’t think any of the local firms will implement such strict rules,” said Nancy Zhang, a senior partner at JT&N. She suggest that enforcement of exit strategies is rare across the legal industry in China. “This would affect a lot of firm partners across China,” she said.
But this does raise the question of why firms would keep partners who don’t deliver. Hubert Tse, a senior partner at Boss & Young, points out that the legal industry in China is still nascent. “We are still at a development stage where resources are being largely committed [to] business development and marketing. Further down the track, more attention will be placed on management and quality control of partnerships.”
It seems that the focus for most PRC firms is still on headcount increases and firm expansion – a sizeable partnership will usually allow the firm to win a greater market share. Yet some partners argue that there are other variables – for instance, over 2008 and 2009, which Liu describes as “turmoil years”,
Liu JinrongGlobal
► leVelS oF PaRTneRShIP aPPRaISal IDenTIFIeD By PRC laWyeRS
Entry-level partner
Inexperienced in many management skills but with a base-line ability and both potential and desire to improve. Performing well, particularly in financial terms.
Intermediate-level partner
Has overall experience and skills across the balanced scorecard, fulfilling early promise and contributing well to management in a number of areas. Still eager to learn.
Experienced partner
Partners who consistently contribute to the management and leadership of the firm, perform strongly in most areas, and are core to the firm.
Exceptional role model
Reserved for the “best in class” partners who are achieving fame and recognition in key areas. Partners who have moved from good to great
partners have been given some slack in terms of their set targets. Han Kun, on the other hand, takes into consideration each partner’s assigned responsibilities. “There are some exceptions,” said Chao. “If a partner has been appointed to head administrative work, the required billable hours will then be cut. And if partners are new to the firm and require more time to settle, we also give them more room to grow.”
Although the firm does assess its partners’ performance Chao notes that it doesn’t have a standard procedure to get rid of partners. “If a partner is not performing, we develop a solution together,” he said.
Move forward by letting goThe general picture then, is one of loose appraisal systems and even looser policies on weeding out poor performers from the partnership altogether. This strategy is followed by many firms in the name of growth. The only problem is that, without a framework of checks and balances, firms will end up with resentment being generated by strong-performing partners against their weak-performing counterparts, and this often leads to the strong performers departing for firms where they can receive rewards that correspond closer with their relative contribution.
International firms, at least up to this point, are more likely to have more effective partnership appraisal systems. An example is Clifford Chance’s recent new management plan to identify and address underperforming partners. Partners will be assessed
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12 ISSUE 7.5
by a 17-member committee, led by managing partner David Childs, and will be given a nine-to-12 months’ warning period for underperformance. The firm is further tightening its partner appraisal system by formalising an annual review process that will see partners across all offices appraised on the same criteria, including billing and business levels.
The long-term prosperity of firms worldwide depends mostly on the quality of their partnerships. Given the meteoric growth of firms here over the last decade, the quality differential may be greater here than anywhere else. Managing partners may have to have some difficult meetings if they are to ensure high quality extends right through to the last partner. ALB
“We do have rules for partnership appraisals but they have never been strictly enforced. I don’t think any of the local firms will implement such strict rules because this would affect many firm partners across China”
Nancy Zhang JT&N
Arthur Mok, partnerRopes & Gray
Favourite country to visit:Japan, specifically Tokyo. It’s so clean! My wife and I love the food and the kids can’t get enough of Disneyland.
Most memorable travel experience:
My first trip to Beijing almost 20 years ago. It was a time when folks still applauded after landing from the US. There were little yellow mian bao taxis everywhere, the Forbidden City had not yet been spruced up and there was an innocence to the city that seems to have been lost over the years.
What is the biggest trouble you face when on a trip:
Not having enough time to squeeze everything in.
Your favourite restaurant for a business lunch:
Din Tai Fung in Shanghai. It’s not fancy, but the food is good for the soul and their xiao long baos set the right tone for business discussions (rewarding if you handle with care!)
Zhong Yin has recently launched a Taizhou office, the firm’s first in
Zhejiang province, becoming the first national firm to take on the Taizhou market.
The Taizhou branch is a result of an invitation from the Taizhou municipal government. The invitation is part of the government’s extensive program of invitations to large-scale companies and service providers from first-tier cities. Zhong Yin’s role in Taizhou will be providing legal expertise in capital markets, PE, finance, corporate and legal risk sectors, to companies in Taizhou who have nationalising ambitions.
Taizhou is home to more than 3,000 enterprises, 95% of which are private companies, including Geely Automobile and QianJiang Motor. Auto parts & accessories, pharmaceutical and chemical, home appliance and ship manufacturing are among main industries of Taizhou.
Zhong Yin adds three and launches in Taizhou While there are currently 18 listed companies in the region, the municipal is aiming for a total of 50 listed companies by 2015.
In line with its expansion ambitions, Zhong Yin has recently hired a team of anti-dumping experts as part of its strategy to build its international trade remedy and WTO practices.
Both Jia Zheng and Song Xiangwei joined the firm from Dacheng while
► TaIzhoU–qUICk FaCTS• Number of law firms: 50• Number of lawyers: 370 • 2009 GDP: RMB202bn• More than 3,000 enterprises, 95% of which are
private companies• 18 listed companies now and 50 by 2015
Chen Jing joined from JunZeJun. The additions mean Zhong Yin’s team for international trade remedy and WTO work now numbers ten. ALB
CHinA >>
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14 ISSUE 7.5
partnership council, but it dawned on me recently that the sensibilities and perspectives are very different from the centre of a large firm,” said Li.
“So I’ve aspired to operate at the centre of a firm-wide executive management, where I can gain a much wider perspective of a firm's business and operations and develop different sensibilities. From my point of view, the most pronounced difference between my current and previous position is not 'local' versus ‘international’ but ‘centre’ versus ‘outskirt’.”
Although a certain level of competition exists between leading international and domestic firms, Clifford Chance and King & Wood have fostered a collaborative relationship, through co-counselling on a number of transactions for the same clients. Li noted that his appointment with King & Wood will increase this collaboration between the two firms, rather than reducing it.
He also made the point that although international firms’ being restricted
news in brief>> Beijing >>
Rupert LiKing & Wood
LEGISLATIVEAFFAIRSOFFICEAPPOINTSNEWDIRECTORThe Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council has promoted Song Dahan, the deputy director, to take over the helm as the former director Cao Kangtai retires. The LAO is an administrative office within the State Council which assists the Premier in providing legal advice and administrative laws to govern the behavior of government departments.
This includes advice on litigation, legal reconsideration, compensation, punishment, license, administrative charges and execution.
Rupert Li, previously the Beijing chief representative and partner
of Clifford Chance, has swapped his partnership at the Magic Circle firm for a senior management position with domestic powerhouse King & Wood.
Li joins King & Wood as international managing partner to lead the expansion of the firm's international business, including its Hong Kong office, and both inbound and outbound work for the firm. He will split his time between Hong Kong and Beijing. Apart from bringing additional technical expertise and market connectivity to King & Wood's capital markets and M&A practices, Li's previous experience as the sole representative for Asia on Clifford Chance's partnership council will also benefit King & Wood's management and governance.
For Li, the single most important motivation behind his decision to leave the top-tier international firm and join King & Wood is the opportunity to be at the centre of the firm's management and decision-making function. “It's a choice of professional development. I benefited from my tenure as a member of Clifford Chance’s firm-wide
COSLAPPOINTSNEWCOMPANYSECRETARYChina Oilfield Services Limited, a subsidiary of CNOOC listed in Hong Kong, has appointed Yang Haijiang as its new company secretary and authorised representative. He will replace Chen Weidong who resigned from the position to take up an appointment with another company.
Yang joined the company in 1998 and since 2003 has served as an in-house legal counsel in the corporate secretarial department, manager in charge of corporate governance and as a representative on securities matters. He has been responsible for handling legal-related matters of the board of directors, the board of supervisors and shareholders of the company.
ROUNDUP• DLA Piper recently appointed a 19-lawyer team from Simmons & Simmons to enhance the capabilities of
its existing 100-strong lawyer practice operating from Milan and Rome. The team includes four partners• Lovells promoted 21 lawyers to its partnership this year in the litigation, IP and finance practice
areas. It is the firm’s largest promotion since 2007, compared to the 19 and 18 made up in 2009 and 2008 respectively
• Addleshaw Goddard litigation partner Monica Burch has won the partnership’s backing to succeed senior partner Paul Lee following a contested election for the position of chairman of the firm’s board. Burch will take over from former managing partner and current chairman of the LLP Mark Jones
• Konstantin Mettenheimer and Guy Morton recently announced that they would not be taking on third terms as joint senior partners at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer. An election campaign is likely to be held in autumn, but the firm is yet to decide whether it will continue having a joint senior partner or instead opt for one lawyer to take on the role
• Scott Bowie was recently appointed to succeed Tim Shipton as head of Linklaters global investment management team. Shipton will continue in his role as co-head of Linklaters’ investment managers
• Reed Smith recently recruited four senior construction partners from Pinsent Masons, boosting its construction practice and leaving Reed Smith with just two London-based construction partners
• Walker Morris is set to scrap its executive chairman role once current chairman Peter Smart retires in May 2011. The role of executive chairman will be replaced by a non-executive chairman and managing partner
workloads. Given the working title “Fresh Work”, the scheme is aimed at former fee-earners who might be available to work either part-time or on a short-term basis during busy periods.
Changesafootforassociatesalariesin2010Clifford Chance has followed suit behind Freshfields to become the latest Magic Circle firm to unfreeze associate salaries. The firm raised rates for assistants as well as allowing them to progress through the lockstep system.
From 1 May, associates and trainees will enjoy increased rates by an average of 3%– NQs will now earn £61,500, up from £59,000 last year. An associate with one year’s PQE will now take home £68,000 and three-year PQE salaries have increased to £84,500. Trainees will also benefit from a small salary increases: first and second years will now earn £38,000 and £43,000.
Meanwhile, Linklaters has announced its associate pay scale for the coming year, maintaining its current rates after a reduction 12 months ago.
SJBerwincourtProskauerRoseformergerIts scope would always have been much narrower, but the talks around a merger between West Coast-headquartered US firm Orrick and UK player SJ Berwin were already underway even before the Hogan-Lovells merger had actually come into effect. Some industry observers saw the Orrick-SJ Berwin tie-up as the first in a possible series of UK-US reactions to the Hogan-Lovells coup. Alas, the talks fell over as most such discussions do – in the early stages. Not to be deterred, though, SJ Berwin is already pressing ahead with another potential US partner – Proskauer Rose. This merger is said to be driven by the funds practices of the two firms, who already have a working relationship. The combined firm would have revenues of approximately US$900m, putting it in the global top 30 by revenue.
Part-timerspatchupcapacityatFreshfieldsAn anticipated upturn in work levels later this year has prompted Freshfields to consider tapping into its network of alumni to handle increased
King & Wood lures Clifford Chance's Beijing chieffrom practising local law for many years has constrained their growth in China, they are still – and will – remain market leaders.
“In general, international firms are still leaders of the market in term of products, service standards and institutional relationships with clients. They've been in the market for much longer than PRC firms and institutionally they still have great advantages over PRC firms,” said Li.
“Twenty years is a short period of time for the development of the PRC bar, so the legal industry here is still nascent. International firms will remain market leaders for quite some time,” he added.
It's arguable whether local firms will overtake international firms as market leaders any time soon. However, the pattern seen recently in lateral partner movement, which has senior partners from top-tier international firms taking up leadership roles in PRC firms, definitely suggests that domestic firms are not only winning more important mandates on cross-border transactions but are also becoming increasingly attractive as places for senior partners to work. ALB
明国内律所不仅在跨境交易中赢得更重要的委托,而且成为越来越吸引高级合伙人加盟的理想工作之地。
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16 ISSUE 7.5
news in brief>>MORETRANSATLANTICMERGERSINTHEPIPELINE?Following the merger between US firm Hogan & Hartson and UK firm Lovells, a few other UK and US firms have initiated preliminary discussions on the possibility of a trans-Atlantic merger. City firm SJ Berwin recently revealed its strategy to explore mergers with US firms. It has entered into early-stage discussions around a potential tie-up with New York-based Proskauer Rose, following the collapse of its merger talks with Orrick in early May.
Meanwhile, New York outfit Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal have just announced a merger with Denton Wilde Sapte that will create a 1,400-lawyer firm.
FORMERHOGANHKMPGORDONNGJOINSOMMHogan & Hartson’s former Hong Kong managing partner Gordon Ng announced that his eponymously named firm, Gordon Ng & Co, has terminated its alliance with Hogans and would instead be entering into an association with O'Melveny & Myers, effective 1 May 2010.
Gordon Ng now serves as a partner in the corporate finance and capital markets practice of O’Melveny & Myers in Hong Kong.
霍金•豪森前任香港管理合伙人Gordon ng加盟OMM霍金•豪森律师事务所前任香港管理合伙人Gordon ng宣布,以其名字命名的律所Gordon ng & Co已解除与霍金的合作,并将于2010年5月1日起与美迈斯律师事务所结成新的联营。Gordon ng已加入美迈斯律师事务所香港办公室,成为企业融资及资本市场业务的合伙人。
LINKLATERS'HARVEYPROMOTEDTOGLOBALHEADOFLITIGATIONMarc Harvey has been appointed as the head of Linklaters’ global litigation practice. Harvey, who is currently the firm's joint managing partner for Greater China and head of litigation – Asia, Hong Kong, will replace Françoise Lefèvre, who returns to full-time client work. Stuart Salt, the firm’s Asia managing partner, said that Harvey’s appointment underscores both the importance of Asia in the firm’s global strategy and the growing profile of the region.
Jun He’s triple whammy prelude to new US officeFollowing the arrival at King
& Wood of Clifford Chance’s former Beijing chief Rupert Li as an international managing partner, Jun He has secured the service of three IP partners from leading US firms, in preparation for opening a new office in Silicon Valley. These two firms are at the pinnacle of the PRC legal industry, and are setting the pace in terms of hiring partners from international firms to support further internationalisation.
The new partners joining Jun He are James Zhu and Zoe Wang, who previously served as Beijing and Shanghai managing partners respectively of Seattle-based US firm Perkins Coie. They were among the key members establishing Perkins Coie’s Shanghai office, which opened in 2006.
Both are US-qualified lawyers and registered to practice before the US Patent and Trademark Office, and both focus on patent-related issues. Zhu primarily services the life sciences, medical device, chemical and material sciences sectors, while Wang prefers life sciences, nanotechnologies, data processing, and devices.
Steven Cui, the third new partner in Jun He’s IP practice group, is
admitted to the California bar and also registered to practice before the US Patent and Trademark Office. He joins King & Wood from Jones Day’s Beijing office, where he was a counsel practising IP law with an emphasis on patent procurement, technology transfer, and portfolio management. Before joining Jones Day in 2008, Cui spent seven years in-house at Genentech in San Francisco, where he was lead IP counsel for the company's most promising drug products.
“The arrival of the three new partners and their respective teams has bolstered the capabilities of our international IP practice group, and signals a new phase of growth for the firm in 2010,” said David Liu, a senior partner of Jun He. “They will be leading the development of our soon-to-be launched Silicon Valley office, and bring in many new PE and VC clients, who need strong patent legal advice and services when they invest into high-tech enterprises that are in growing and expanding stages.”
The firm, which had already established its New York office in 1993, is finalising its licence application for the Silicon Valley office and expects to complete the process within one month. ALB
ROUNDUP• Linklaters recently appointed Jean-Philippe Brisson as head of its US environment and climate change
practice in New York. He joins a four-partner team in the firm’s practice• US firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld has poached Hogan & Hartson’s Geneva office to launch its
own Swiss practice this month. The team will be led by Charles Adams, Hogan’s former Geneva office managing partner and co director of the firm’s international litigation and arbitration practice, and will continue to focus on international arbitration, international civil litigation, corporate and commercial law and giving tax advice to corporates and high-net-worth individuals
• Mayer Brown has launched a competition and distribution practice in Paris with the hire of partner Nathalie Jalabert-Doury from Carreras Barsikian Robertson & Associés, who joins the office as the new practice head
• Milbank Tweed recently hired Shearman & Sterling’s Latin American practice head Andrew Jánszky, to lead its new São Paulo office. Jánszky – previously Shearman’s Latin American head and managing partner in São Paulo – will arrive at Milbank with associate Tobias Stirnberg, who joins as partner
• Hogan & Hartson and Lovells may want to re-think their name post-merger, after it emerged that the Hogan Lovells name has already been trademarked by a road haulage company in Nebraska. If the name is not changed it could develop into a costly litigation battle
LovellsChicagoofficetoclosecurtainsLovells recently announced plans to close its seven-partner Chicago office, due to its underperformance for a number of years. Although the plan is still subject to partnership approval it is expected that the office will close at the end of October, six months after the firm’s merger with Hogan & Hartson goes ahead. However, firm officials stress that the closure has been under review for some time and is not related to the merger. Lovells is currently in discussions to see whether there is scope to transfer the Chicago partners to another office, although this is not guaranteed.
Meanwhile, Lovells US managing partner Marc Gottridge has vowed to continue building the firm’s New York presence, following its May merger with Hogan & Hartson.
BryanCavelookforUKtie-upSt Louis firm Bryan Cave has been active on the merger front for a number of years – an attempted large-scale tie-up with Squire Sanders failed but a useful one with Atlanta-based 220-lawyer firm Powell Goldstein went ahead
last year. Now, however, it has installed one of the key players behind the Powell move – litigation partner Rodney Page – as head of its London office, with a specific directive to find a UK partner firm. Bryan Cave’s London office had a tough 2009 and its UK and European growth ambitions needed the extra impetus. The most likely merger candidate will be a mid-rank firm with similar PEP.
MayerBrownslashesstaffMayer Brown recently cut 28 associates and counsel and 47 members of staff from its US offices in the firm’s third round of layoffs in 18 months. The firm said that “overall demand for legal services has not recovered fully” and “voluntary lawyer departures have been significantly lower than our normal levels”, as reasons. Mayer Brown’s recently released financial results revealed that revenues fell by almost 14% in 2009, along with a decline in total revenue from US$1.12bn to US$1.29bn. The firm’s London office also saw a double-digit decline in revenues, with turnover falling by 16% to £93.8m from £111.6m in 2008.
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18 ISSUE 7.5
UPDaTe >>
International Tax
oeCD and Council of europe agrees on revised treaty to help combat global tax evasion
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD ) said it agreed with European nations to modify a treaty designed to combat global tax evasion.
The revision of the so-called Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters aims to “align the convention to the international standard on information exchange for tax purposes by allowing for the exchange of bank information,”. The Council of Europe, representing 47 countries from Germany to the U.K., announced that the will be signed at an OECD meeting on 27-28 May in Paris.
“The convention is a unique instrument to counteract international tax avoidance and evasion,” OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria said in the statement. “The OECD and the Council of Europe have agreed to improve international cooperation to combat tax evasion and the standards set by the convention are being updated to reflect this new consensus.”
The convention was first introduced in 1995 and counts Azerbaijan, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Iceland, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Sweden, the UK, the US and Ukraine among its members while Canada, Germany and Spain haven’t yet ratified it. It will now be extended to developing countries to help them benefit from “the new, more transparent tax-cooperation environment,” the OECD said in the statement.
This Convention covers assistance in collecting both direct and indirect taxation such as VAT; most Double Taxation Agreements do not cover indirect taxes.
By Debbie Annells, managing director, AzureTax Ltd, Chartered Tax Advisers Suite 1010, 10/F Lippo Centre, Tower Two, 89 Queensway, Hong Kong www.azuretax.com, a member of AzureTax Group (Tel) +852 2123 9339 (direct line), (Main Line) +852 2123 9370, (Fax) +852 2122 9209 Registered with the Chartered Institute of Taxation for purposes of anti money laundering legislation.
Debbie Annells
CSRC offers guidance on Chinext sponsorship
On 19 March 2010, China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) issued the Guidelines on Further Duly Performing Sponsorship Work in Connection with ChiNext (the “Guidelines”), in an attempt to
reiterate ChiNext’s market orientation.
1. Market orientationThere have been 66 enterprises listing on ChiNext as of 12 March 2010. Amongst the applicants, most enterprises have met the requirements on “High and New” (High Technology, High Growth , New Economy, New Service, New Energy, New Material, New Agriculture ), but certain sponsors sponsored enterprises engaging in traditional business and without remarkable innovation capabilities because of their misunderstandings about the market orientation of ChiNext. Therefore, the Guidelines reiterates ChiNext’s market orientation, that is, to support the enterprises having indigenous innovative capabilities and strong growth prospects.
2. Key industries for sponsorshipIn accordance with the requirements of adjustment of the industrial structure and transformation of the mode of economic development, key candidates for sponsorship are enterprises in such sectors as new energy resources, new materials, information, biological and new medical pharmaceuticals, energy saving and environmental protection, aviation and aerospace, the sea, advanced manufacturing and hi-tech services, and enterprises in other sectors that have indigenous innovative capabilities and strong growth prospects.
Industries to be sponsored with prudence required by the Guidelines are enterprises in such sectors as textiles and apparel, utilities producing and supplying electricity, gas and water, real estate development and operation, and civil engineering construction, transport, alcoholic beverages, food and non-alcoholic beverages, finance, general service business, and industries with overcapacity and redundant construction that state industrial policies expressly seek to curb.
3. Sponsors’ obligationsThe Guidelines further requires a sponsor to perform the following obligations: a. To select, foster and sponsor enterprises that intend to
list on ChiNext in compliance with the state’s economic development strategy and industrial policy;
b. To perform the obligations with due diligence, pay close attention to the innovative capabilities and focus on the analysis of the effect of its indigenous innovation capabilities on its growth prospects; and
c. To make a comprehensive assessment of its growth prospects and full disclosure of the risks to its growth prospects, and issue an opinion on its growth prospects.
LIU Rong (刘榕), Guantao Law FirmEmail: [email protected] Tel: 86 10 66578066 / Fax: 86 10 66578016 Add: 17/F, Tower 2, Yingtai Center, No.28 Finance Street, Xicheng District, Beijing 100140, China
Beijing
Liu Rong
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19www.legalbusinessonline.com
UPDaTe >>
如何在马来西亚设立或发展业务
马来西亚依斯干达经济特区 – 第二个广东珠江三角?
在马来西亚国营投资机构公司(khazanah nasional Berhad)的领军下,依斯干达经济特区
(iskandar development Region)在2006年11月4日成功在柔佛州南部开发。通过向深圳经济特区)的成功看
Chinese trademark of a foreign company or the Chinese characters with identical or similar pronunciation to a well-known foreign language trademark to be registered as another’s enterprise name. This may cause great trouble to the foreign company when it expands its business in China.
We normally advise our clients to take appropriate actions as early as possible because a number of Chinese courts held that it is not proper to stop the use of an enterprise name existing more than 5 years even if said name constitutes infringement or unfair competition against a prior trademark.
Firm Profile Lifang & Partners Trademark and enterprise name
conflict cases soar in 2009
Recently, the Supreme People’s Court announced China’s 2009 top 10 intellectual property judicial cases, among which three are cases
concerning the conflicts between trademarks and enterprise names.
In the BMW vs. Shenzhen Shiji BAOMA Clothing Co., Ltd. et al, the court found that the Shenzhen company had confused the consumer by using BMW’s well-known Chinese trademark (which is pronounced baoma) in its enterprise name, and ruled that the defendant’s action had constituted trademark infringement and unfair competition against the plaintiff and ordered it to change its company name and pay 500,000 yuan in damages.
The conflict between trademarks and company names has been a hot issue for years. In China, trademarks are examined and approved by China Trademark Office, while the enterprise names are registered
with the Administration for Commerce and Industry (AIC) at different levels and in different regions. When examining the enterprise names, the AICs have neither a trademark database nor a centralized enterprise name database for their reference. Thus a lot of conflicts between trademarks and enterprise names occur.
In March 2008, the Supreme People’s Court released a new interpretation on handling disputes between registered trademarks, enterprise names and prior civil rights. According to the interpretation, in case that an enterprise’s name is judged to have infringed prior trademarks or constituted unfair competition, the court, in accordance with the law, shall order the defendant to stop using the name or regulate its use.
These kinds of conflicts arise not only between Chinese companies, but also between foreign companies and Chinese companies. It is not uncommon for the
20 ISSUE 7.5
Pressure from large firms forces Kingfield to merge with DachengThe recent merger between 20-lawyer
Beijing firm Kingfield and the country’s largest law firm by headcount – Dacheng – is proof that smaller firms are facing growing pressure due to the competition from larger rivals.
Kingfield, which was established in 2006 by partners Nancy Zhang, George Wang, Zhang Shuzhen and Tian Hui, officially merged into Dacheng’s Beijing headquarters in April. George Wang, Zhang Shuzhen and Tian Hui have been admitted to Dacheng’s senior partnership, while Zhang Jingwei and Tian Hong become partner and senior counsel. They bring an established aviation and shipping practice and team to Dacheng.
Nancy Zhang, however, chose to break away from the merger and joined JT&N (as senior partner) with her team of real estate and international business lawyers. Over the firm’s four-year practice, partners grew to realise that Kingfield, being a small-
scale firm, would continue to lose market share given the increasingly competitive market.
“It takes time to realise that the market is now different to how it was many years ago where competition was not as intense. Today, clients will always choose larger firms first,” said Nancy Zhang. “If you are a small firm, you will be in trouble because you become targets for larger firms. Larger firms will always try to poach partners from your firm,” she explained.
All four founding partners eventually conceded, chose to split and merged into Dacheng, which is known, famously or infamously, for its vast links with international allies and aggressive domestic expansion strategies. The firm launched 13 national branch offices (many via mergers and acquisitions) and consequently recruited over 140 partners and 250 fee earners during last year alone.
Contact UsAttorneys at Martin Hu & Partners (MHP Law Firm) have long been retained by well-known multinational companies and recognized by legal communities for their professional, efficient and often innovative services for clients since 1999.
artin Hu & Partners maintains both the international level of professional disciplines and the on-the-ground understanding of Chinese markets and extensive knowledge of industry-specific issues needed to handle complex cross-border transactions involving China.
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Zhonglun W&D becomes third Beijing firm in Taiyuan
Zhonglun W&D has launched its second domestic office this year
(after opening in Wuhan in January), this time in Taiyuan, Shaanxi province. The new office becomes the firm’s sixth domestic branches.
The Taiyuan office has five partners – Liu Yindong, Ji Yunfeng, Zhang Qiufeng, Deng Jiancheng and Hao Xiaoming – and 20 lawyers. All partners and lawyers joined from Shaanxi Cheng Cheng law firm, which is based in Taiyuan with a solid track record advising on real estate and construction-related issues and
► TaIyUan legal MaRkeT – The nUMBeRS • 116 law firms, 1,288 lawyers • 1 lawyer to 1,692 citizens in Shanghai• 1 lawyer to 2,650 citizens in Taiyuan
projects. Liu Yindong and Ji Yunfeng previously served as Cheng Cheng’s managing and deputy managing partners respectively.
Given that only two Beijng firms – Kangda and Xinmin – and no Shanghai firms have launched offices in Taiyuan, the market remains relatively untapped.
The Taiyuan branch is part of Zhonglun W&D’s national expansion plans, especially in the outer regions. It already has international offices in London, Paris, Riyadh and Lyon. ALB
May Tai Herbert Smith Partner Arbitration Shanghai
Jem Li Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft Partner Corporate M&A Beijing
Sun Zuan Yongheng Partners Partner Corporate, VC and dispute resolution Nanjing
Baldwin Cheng White & Case Partner Finance and restructuring Beijing
Kingfield JT&N
JT&NappointsnewseniorpartnerNancy Zhang, along with a team of lawyers, has recently left Kingfield Law Firm for Jincheng Tongda & Neal (JT&N).
Zhang becomes senior partner at JT&N and her team joins the firm’s real estate practice, adding a number of international clients to the roll. Prior to Kingfield, Zhang had also practiced with Hylands and Lehman, Lee & Xu.
Zhang chose to leave Kingfield in view of the increasing competition between domestic firms. “Competition in the legal industry will peak within the next 5-10 years and evidently, small-scale domestic firms like Kingfield will have a competitive disadvantage,” said Zhang. The appointment is also seen as Zhang’s breakaway from the decision by Kingfield to merge with Dacheng. Dacheng’s absorption of the firm will include senior partners Zhang Shuzhen, Tian Hui, Wang Yingbo and senior counsel Tian Hong.
Although Dacheng is the largest firm in China by headcount, Zhang chose to join JT&N for its higher business profile amongst international clients.
is one of few PRC lawyers experienced in the field of a ‘US Section 337’ investigation. She has represented clients in several of these cases such as Ink cartridge, l-lysine and floor board investigations.
She also offers advice and client services relating to IP protection and IP disputes in China, and CDM-related matters.
Cross-straitsworkdrivesLlinksappointmentLlinks is focused on Taiwan trade and dispute resolution work in its recent appointment of Chen Le as partner along with a team of key litigation and arbitration experts. Chen left Shanghai FXJ Law Firm, where she practised for eight years and was a director for two, to join Llinks. She will lead the firm’s Taiwan-related legal services team.
Aware of growing trade between China and Taiwan, Llinks believes that Taiwan-related legal services will soon become a specialised field of advice, with increasing investments in both regions prompting more interest in rights protection and investment opportunities. “Having worked with Taiwanese clients over the past two years, I will help to develop Taiwan-related legal advice at Llinks, especially for finance and venture capital projects,” said Chen.
JunHeaddsinternationaltradepartnerFollowing the joining of Zhou Yong as counsel in its international trade practice group earlier this year, Jun He has added additional capabilities to the practice group. The firm has recently hired Ran Ruixue, formerly a partner with East Associates, as partner in Beijing.
Ran is admitted in both China and the US, and
Nancy Zhang
Ran Ruixue
News | news >>
23www.legalbusinessonline.com
Jiangsu Sundy Yongheng Partners
YonghengPartnerstakestwotopartnershipFormer executive partner at Jiangsu Sundy Law Firm, Wang Hong has recently joined newly established Jiangsu firm Yongheng Partners as partner. He specialises in real estate and provide services to long-term clients such as Nanjing Urban Construction & Development, Nanjing Qinhuaihe Construction Development, Nanjing Chuangning Industry Development, Nanjing Public Station Construction & Development and the Bank of Communications (Jiangsu).
At the same time, the firm has promoted corporate lawyer Sun Zuan to partner. Sun joined Jiangsu FD Yongheng Law Firm in 2004 and followed a group of partners include Li Min and Chen Yingning as they splintered away to set up Yongheng Partners in May last year. Sun also serves as the deputy secretary-general of the Nanjing High-Tech Experts Association.
OnemoreforChinainNortonRose’sShanghaiteamFormer Allen & Overy of counsel Lynn Yang has recently joined Norton Rose’s Shanghai office as corporate and insurance partner. She will commence her partnership in July 2010.
Norton Rose officially merged with Deacons Australia earlier this year (the deal did not include Deacons Hong Kong) which has helped Norton Rose resource its Asian ambitions.
David Stannard, head of Norton Rose’s Asia practice, notes that Yang’s appointment is part of the firm’s aggressive business strategy for the Asia-Pacific region. The firm launched its Asian hiring spree last month, offering up to five banking and corporate positions for its Beijing office.
Ropes&GraygainsHoganShanghaiMPHogan & Hartson’s former Shanghai managing partner Arthur Mok has joined Boston-headquartered Ropes & Gray as a partner in the firm’s private equity and life sciences practices. His departure from Hogan took place two weeks before the Hogan Lovells merger completed on 1 May.
The main reason behind the move, he says, was the better compatibility between his practice focus and Ropes & Gray’s. “Ropes & Gray is a very different law firm from Hogan Lovells. The firm is much more focused on private equity, M&A and life sciences, the areas where I specialise. And they have plans to expand in China, so the timing is good for me to join,” said Mok.
Mok’s appointment with Ropes & Gray will not only help increase the firm’s offering to clients with interests in China but also expedite the firm’s plan to open a new office in Shanghai. He helped launch Hogan’s Shanghai office in 2004 and took on the role of the firm’s Shanghai managing partner in 2009.
A number of associates will join him from Hogan. Prior to the establishment of the Shanghai office, they will be working out of the firm’s Hong Kong office, which was opened in 2008, while Mok will be based in the Washington DC office and travel frequently to the region.
PaulHastingsgainsHogan’sBeijingMPPaul Hastings has appointed former managing partner of Hogan & Hartson’s Beijing office, Roger Peng, as partner in its Beijing office. Peng will work on M&A, PE, venture capital and commercial transactions, with a particular focus on the telecommunications, media and technology industries.
Peng believes that the firm’s collaboration culture and level of business orientation can help take his own practice to a higher level. “These attributes will help overcome the challenges ahead and will make the most significant difference to my career at this stage,” said Peng. “Challenges are inevitable, given that we are in an evolving and ever more competitive market,” he added.
Peng’s appointment came after the firm lost Hong Kong partner Joe Sevack to Troutman Sanders and China PE practice head Maurice Hoo to Orrick.
CMSChinasnitchesEvershedsIPpartnerfornewsectoralfocusSteve Yu has left his partner position at Eversheds and joined CMS China as partner and head of IP in its Shanghai office.
Yu brings along years of experience advising clients on cross-border IP licensing, establishment and operation of R&D centres, IP portfolio management, IP due diligence and enforcement of IP rights in civil and criminal actions. “We now see IP issues in almost every corporate transaction as well as all stages of doing business in China, and IP
Roger Peng
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ISSUE 7.5
Orrick’s global corporate head, Don Keller, said the appointment will help his firm focus on international PE transactions while retaining a focus on Asia.
TroutmansraidsPaulHastingstobuildsecuritiespracticeJoe Sevack has joined the Hong Kong office of Troutman Sanders as a partner in its securities and corporate governance practice group.
Sevack comes to the firm from Paul Hastings, where he was a partner for nearly four years; for six years prior to that he was a partner at Freshfields in Hong Kong. Sevack says that renewed investor confidence in high-yield debt should see a number of new deals come to market in the next few months.
PaulHastingslosesChinaPEheadtoOrrickThe head of Paul Hastings’ China PE practice Maurice Hoo has left the firm to become the co-head of global PE for Orrick in Hong Kong.
Hoo will share the role with Orrick’s London partner Peter O’Driscoll. He is expected to bring his clients with him, among which are PE firm Warburg Pincus and AIG Investments.
Maurice Hoo
所,他曾在普衡担任合伙人近四年(2006年至今);此前六年,他是香港富而德的合伙人。
Sevack表示,未来几个月中,投资者在高收益债券中的信心重塑,大量新交易将涌向市场。
Grandall
GrandallBeijingadmitsnewpartnerGrandall Beijing office has promoted capital markets lawyer Feng Xiaoyi as partner. Feng has been practising law for more than eight years, and has been involved in many IPOs, power and infrastructure constructions, foreign investments, and CDM projects.
Prior to joining Grandall Beijing, she worked as an in-house counsel at Peking University Founder Group.
CCspromotesonetopartnershipClifford Chance has elected Tim Wang to the partnership in Beijing. Wang is one of the five newly
Steve Yu
March 3rd, 2010, “the Carlyle&Fosun Fund” in partnership, whose business license was issued by Shanghai Administration of Industry and Commerce (SHAIC), was established jointly by the Carlyle Group, a well-known international investment fund, and the Fosun Group, a famous domestic enterprise. In view of a great growth potential of China’s economy, many noted international private equity funds are considering setting up RMB denominated private equity funds in partnership directly in China.
Contact Details: Dr. Wang Hao, Senior Partner 19/F Golden Tower, No.1, Xibahe South Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing, 100028, P.R.C Tel: 86-10-6440 2832 / 86-10-13801167481 Fax: 86-10-6440 2915 / 86-10-6440 2925 www.zhonglunwende.com
Firm Profile Zhonglun W&D
Law of the PRC on Foreign-invested Partnerships: A Significant Milestone for the Development of Foreign Investment Private Equity Funds in China
Partnership is one of the most important organizational forms of private equity funds. Though Law of the PRC on Partnerships has been
generally implemented, before March 1st 2010, there was no relevant law specifically regulating the foreign-funded partnerships, which made the establishment of foreign-invested private equity funds lack of legal basis in China.
Recently, the Management Measures on Foreign Enterprises or Individuals Founding Partnership Enterprises in China (Decree No.567 of the State Council) and the Management Measures on Registration of Foreign-invested Partnership Enterprises (Document No.47 of SAIC) are promulgated by Chinese governments. These two laws, coming into effect on March 1st, 2010, provide important legal basis not only for the foreign companies or individuals who are keen to carry on domestic investment with the form
of partnership, but also for the establishment of foreign-invested private equity funds in partnership within the PRC Mainland.
According to the laws and regulations, a registration system, rather than a customary examination and approval system, shall be applied to fund a foreign-invested partnership enterprise. However, this kind of foundation still shall be in line with the foreign investment industrial policies of the PRC. While a foreign-funded partnership is established, tax revenue, foreign exchange, customs and other formalities shall be gone through. Foreign-funded partnerships include foreign-funded general partnership (including special general partnership) and foreign-funded limited partnership.
The implementation of the Law of the PRC on Foreign-invested Partnerships and its relevant laws and regulations, propels foreign investment in private equity funds in partnership within China Mainland. On
24 ISSUE 7.5
Dr. Wang Hao
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promoted partners in Asia. A PRC national, Tim has advised on many of
the headline China deals in recent years, including Chinalco’s stake in Rio Tinto and the IPO of China Minsheng Bank, the largest offering on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in 2009.
HerbiesmakesShanghailawyerpartnerShanghai arbitration lawyer May Tai has been admitted to Herbert Smith’s partnership, as part of the firm’s annual partnership exercise. Tokyo disputes lawyer Gavin Margetson and Singapore energy lawyer Lewis McDonald are the two other lawyers in its Asia offices have been made partners. Currently, the firm has 272 partners globally.
White&CasepromotesB&FexpertWhite & Case bank finance and restructuring counsel, Baldwin Cheng, has recently been promoted to partner and relocated from Hong Kong to Beijing. He joined the firm in 2008 after spending three years working in London.
In Beijing, he will continue to advise clients in Hong Kong and Shanghai as part of the firm’s integrated Greater China finance practice.
His move to Beijing is also part of the embattled firm’s continuing efforts to place both English and US qualified lawyers throughout key Asian jurisdictions. But in recent times it has been losing partners as fast as it can make them up.
CadwaladerpromotesM&AlawyertopartnerCadwalader, Wickersham & Taft has recently promoted Jem Li, a lawyer in the firm’s corporate M&A department, to partner in its Beijing office.
Since 2004 Li has practised exclusively in China, working on a wide range of cross-border transactions in Asia. In recent years, Li has become particularly active in handling large and complicated outbound M&A and JV transactions involving mining assets outside of China. Prior to joining Cadwalader, he worked in a few other US law firms, including Cravath, Swaine and Moore. After spending about 20 years in the US, Li returned to China to practice law in 2004.
EVENTS | China Law Awards >>EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
While 2009 was a trying year of corporate collapse and market melancholy, a large
number of big-ticket, high-profile, innovative and complex deals nevertheless took place and many of them were nominated and short-listed for this year’s awards.
The US$3.4bn GCL-Poly-Jiangsu Zhongneng acquisition and Sinopec’s US$8.8bn takeover of Addax Petroleum, two of the best deals, took home the M&A Deal of the Year and Energy & Resources Deal of the Year awards respectively.
The in-house legal team of China Eastern Airlines also made their mark on the night, taking out the Chinese Company In-House Team of the Year, not least because of their work on the Shanghai Airlines merger and headline RMB7bn fund raising activity through A-share and H-share equity placement.
King & Wood was again the big winner overall, with the firm taking home a total of five trophies across a number of categories, including China Law Firm of the Year. International firms Freshfields and Conyers Dill & Pearman were also big winners, claiming three awards each.
Four categories made their debut at this year’s Awards. Shanghai ForTran claimed the award for Boutique Law Firm of the Year for their focus and expertise in taxation law. Anderson Mori & Tomotsune,
Bae Kim & Lee and WongPartnership, meanwhile, were recognised as having the best China operations of firms headquartered in Japan, Korea and Singapore respectively.
The finalists in each deal category were assessed against a range of criteria – size, complexity, breadth and innovation. Finalists in each firm and in-house category, meanwhile, were recognised for their outstanding client service as well as their ability to combine rigorous analysis with sound judgement when acting on important transactions, projects and cases throughout calendar year 2009.
ALB, together with all the award sponsors, would like to once more congratulate not only all the winners but also all the finalists for the excellence of work they have delivered under the most testing of market conditions. ALB
ALB Hong Kong Law Awardshong kong – 10►september►2010
www.albawards.com
►► deAL►AwArds►cATegoriesaward WinnerDEBT MARKET DEAL OF THE YEAR PRC Government RMB
bond IssueENERGY & RESOURCES DEAL OF THE YEAR
Sinopec - Addax Petroleum Acquisition
EQUITY MARKET DEAL OF THE YEAR China Minsheng Bank IPOWESTLAW CHINA AWARDM&A DEAL OF THE YEAR
GCL Poly - Jiangsu Zhongneng Acquisition
KNIGHT FRANK AWARDREAL ESTATE & CONTRUCTION DEAL OF THE YEAR
Glorious Property Holdings Restructuring
CHINA DEAL OF THE YEAR PRC Government RMB bond Issue
►► in-hoUse►AwArds►cATegoriesaward WinnerBANKING & FINANCIAL SERVICES IN-HOUSE TEAM OF THE YEAR
ICBC
JADE & FOUNTAIN AWARDINVESTMENT BANK IN-HOUSE TEAM OF THE YEAR
Morgan Stanley
CHINA LEGAL CAREER AWARDFOREIGN COMPANY IN-HOUSE TEAM OF THE YEAR
COSCO Pacific
CHINESE COMPANY IN-HOUSE TEAM OF THE YEAR
China Eastern Airlines
MWE CHINA LAW OFFICES AWARDCHINA IN-HOUSE TEAM OF THE YEAR
Morgan Stanley
►► firM►AwArds►cATegoriesaward WinnerBANKING LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Commerce & FinanceDISPUTE RESOLUTION LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
AllBright
INSOLVENCY & RESTRUCTURING LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
King & Wood
INSURANCE LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR King & WoodINTELLECTUAL LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
CCPIT
SHIPPING LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR GlobalTAX & TRUSTS LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
Llinks
RISING LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Run MingBOUTIQUE LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Shanghai ForTran OFFSHORE LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Conyers Dill & PearmanWEST CHINA LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR TahotaNORTH EAST CHINA LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
Deheng
ZHEJIANG LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Zhejiang T&CJIANGSU LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR JC MasterTIANJIN LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Winners SHENZHEN LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Grandall HONG KONG LAW FIRM PRC OFFICE OF THE YEAR
Deacons
GUANGZHOU LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR GuangdaSHANGHAI LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR FangdaBEIJING LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Jun HeJAPANESE LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Anderson Mori &
TomotsuneKOREAN LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR Bae Kim & LeeSINGAPORE LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR WongPartnershpMANAGING PARTNER OF THE YEAR King & Wood - Wang LingINTERNATIONAL LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
Freshfields
CHINA LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR King & Wood
EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
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EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
Many of the most important members of China’s legal profession were in attendance at this year’s ALB China Law Awards, to see the best and brightest talent in the country take the stage to receive their richly deserved trophies. Here are all the winners across the 37 Award categories
The winners revealed!
deals of the year
EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
DEBT MARKET DEAL OF THE YEAR
WINNER
►► Prc►governMenT►rMB►Bond►issUe
L-R: William Liu, Linklaters, He Fan, Haiwen
firms: haiwen & partners; Linklaters; Sidley austin Banks: Bank of China; Bank of Communications
Why:• RMB6bn debut public offering and institutional placement by
PRC government of RMB-denominated bonds in three tranches• first time PRC central government has issued Yuan-
denominated treasury bonds outside mainland – “major step in Hong Kong’s development as the offshore RMB settlement centre for the PRC” – and China’s first offshore bond issue since 2004
• “dealer exemption” was invoked for first time in 20 years – hence much shortened timetable but additional legal and regulatory risks which required mechanics to be put in place as part of contractual and due diligence arrangements to address them
Why:• at US$8.8bn, largest overseas energy acquisition done by
Chinese company to date; showed that Chinese energy companies have progressed to new level of capability in international acquisitions
• extremely complex, involving public tender offer for shares listed on two stock exchanges, redemption of bonds listed in UK, negotiations regarding two large outstanding credit facilities, and other oil and gas, securities, and international legal issues; covered 26 different oil & gas assets and multiple companies spanning five countries across Africa and the Middle East, as well as China, HK, Canada, Switzerland
• timing and confidentiality concerns posed by acquisition of public company presented challenges in terms of deadlines and restriction of access to the data room
L-R: Zhao Xiaohong, King & Wood; Alan Wang, Freshfields; Jean Thio, CC; Li Lin, USB Securities; Jimmy Leung, PWC; Charles Guan, Grandall
firms: Clifford Chance; Freshfields; grandall; king & WoodBanks: BOCI Asia; CICC; Hai Tong Securities; Macquarie Capital Securities; UBSAccountants: PwC
Why:• US$3.9bn IPO second largest in Hong Kong in 2009 and one
of few H-share IPOs of A-share listed companies; Minsheng is first and largest joint stock commercial bank in the PRC primarily founded by non-state-owned enterprises
• first IPO of financial institution since world entered completely different macroeconomic and regulatory environment under GFC; hence many highly complex regulatory and disclosure issues challenged legal teams
• took just over five-and-a-half months from kick-off to listing and just over three months from A1 filing to listing
►► gLorioUs►ProPerTy►hoLdings►resTrUcTUringfirms: allen & overy; Conyers dill & pearman; Mallesons Stephen Jaques; Maples and Calder; paul hastings; Zhong Lun
Why:• RMB3.7bn deal involved multiple securities across many
jurisdictions (such as PRC, Hong Kong, BVI and Cayman)• restructuring required additional security to be given, and
such security were to be put into effect by the security trustee pursuant to POA’s authorising them to do so and upon instruction of the noteholders) upon certain triggering events occurring; this allowed for noteholders to be protected without jeopardising negotiations and entering into of certain side financing and S&P agreements which required noteholder consent
L-R: Greg Knowles, Maples and Calder; Richard Hall, Conyers Dill & Pearman; Jenny Nip, Maples and Calder; Anthony Zhao, Zhong Lun; Fan
Rong, Mallesons Stephen Jaques; Paul Hart, Knight Frank
WESTLAW CHINA AWARD M&A DEAL OF THE YEAR
WINNER
►► gcL►PoLy–JiAngsU►zhongneng►AcqUisiTion
L-R: Heiner Braun, Freshfields; Yang Juan, Grandall; Jeff Layman, Milbank; Steven Robinson, Hogan & Hartson;
Steven Yao, Thomson Reuters Legal
firms: allen & overy; Conyers dill & pearman; Freshfields; grandall; hogan & hartson; Milbank Tweed; paul hastings; ropes & grayBanks: First Shanghai Capital; HSBC; ICBC Accountants: Deloitte
Why:• US$3.4bn merger between Chinese power supplier listed on
HKSE and manufacturer of solar polysilicon wafers was one of the largest merger and acquisition deals in Asia this year; as part of the consideration for the acquisition, GCL-Poly issued US$325m in high-yield secured notes
• required coordination and cooperation of large number of pre-IPO investors who were holding preferred shares, convertible notes and exchangeable notes, as well as a public shareholders’ approval process for GCL Poly; over 30 parties involved
• whitewash application was made to SFC to avoid need to launch mandatory general offer pursuant to Rule 26 of Code on Takeovers and Mergers
►► Prc►governMenT►rMB►Bond►issUefirms: haiwen & partners; Linklaters; Sidley austinBanks: Bank of China; Bank of Communications
Why: firms: Clifford Chance; haiwen & partners; Linklaters; Sidley austin Banks: Bank of China; Bank of Communications
Why:• RMB6bn debut public offering and institutional placement by
PRC government of RMB-denominated bonds in three tranches• first time PRC central government has issued Yuan-
denominated treasury bonds outside mainland – “major step in Hong Kong’s development as the offshore RMB settlement centre for the PRC” – and China’s first offshore bond issue since 2004
• “dealer exemption” was invoked for first time in 20 years – hence much shortened timetable but additional legal and regulatory risks which required mechanics to be put in place as part of contractual and due diligence arrangements to address them
L-R: Scott Guan, Jade & Fountain; Alex Cheng, Morgan Stanley
Qiu Jincheng, COSCO Pacific
CHINESE COMPANY IN-HOUSE TEAM OF THE YEAR
WINNER►► chinA►eAsTern►AirLines
FINALIStS
•►chinA►vAnKe•►gd►MideA►hoLding•►sinoPec•►shAndA
MWE CHINA LAW OFFICES AWARD CHINA IN-HOUSE TEAM OF THE YEAR
WINNER►► MorgAn►sTAnLey
FINALIStS
•►chinA►eAsTern►AirLines•►cosco►PAcific•►icBc
Qiu Jincheng, COSCO Pacific
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EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
firM awardsINSOLVENCY & RESTRUCTURING
LAW FIRM OF THE YEARWINNER
►► King►&►wood• team mainly focuses on debt-
restructuring practices and reorganisation of listed companies
• in 2009 seven listed companies reorganised their affairs according to the Law of the PRC on Enterprise Bankruptcy; the team participated in five of them, involving Suntek Technology and Dandong Chemical Fibre
FINALIStS •►rUn►Ming•►zhong►LUn
INSURANCE LAW FIRM OF
THE YEARWINNER
►► King►&►wood• represented most of China’s major insurance companies,
DISPUTE RESOLUTION LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
WINNER
►► ALLBrighT• has specialists that can advise on
matters ranging from white-collar criminal defense to anti-trust and anti-dumping international disputes
• high-profile matters in 2009 included the Danone-Wahaha shareholder dispute fiasco, in which the firm acted for KPMG
• acted (and is still acting) in ongoing high-profile joint venture dispute that spun out in 2009 into litigation in Beijing and arbitration in Hong Kong
►► coMMerce►&►finAnce• maintains leading position in banking,
involved in first public offering of a Chinese airline and a state-owned steel enterprise
• extensively involved in corporate financing transactions in China, representing issuers or underwriters in hundreds of deals
• noticeable deals include Sino-Forest Exchange Offer and Consent Solicitation, China State Construction & Engineering IPO, COFCO and Hopu Investments in Mengniu, and Agile Property Senior Notes offering
GuanGda Law Firm is one of the major full service law firms in China. We have more than 250 lawyers and other professionals and have offices in Guangzhou, Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.
Guangda has established seven practice sections: 1) corporate and securities, 2) real estate and construction, 3) litigation and arbitration, 4) international business, 5) banking and finance, 6) IPR, and 7) general, with expertise in corporate and securities, real estate and construction, transnational investment, and litigation and dispute settlement.
Guangda established the Sino-Global Law Alliance (SGLA) in September 2007 as a founder, together with one of the top ten international law firms, Lovell, and eight top domestic law firms in other major cities of China.
including PICC, China Life, CPIC and China Re• also assisted a number of foreign insurers and foreign
intermediaries in a wide range of projects, including, mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures, restructuring and reorganisation, financing, on and offshore public offerings, and regulatory compliance
• high-profile projects included PICC’s restructuring and Alltrust’s attracting of foreign investment
FINALIStS •►dAcheng•►grAndALL
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
WINNER
►► ccPiT• is the largest and oldest full-service IP
law firm in China with over 470 staff, including more than 170 patent and trademark attorneys, with nearly 40 having lawyer’s qualifications as well as more than 80 patent engineers
• main office is in Beijing; other offices in New York, Munich, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Guangzhou
• firm provides prosecution, litigation, transaction and consultation services relating to patent, trademark, copyright, trade secret, trade dress, domain name, anti-unfair competition and other IP-related matters
►► gLoBAL• has six partners specialising in maritime, shipping and related
matters and four of the partners are listed on the panel of arbitrators with China Maritime Arbitration Commission
• in 2009 the shipping teams handled more than three dozen maritime and shipping cases, including arbitrations before China Maritime Arbitration Commission and court actions before various maritime courts of the PRC Mainland
• represents a major shipping company in arbitration proceedings against a voyage charterer before China Maritime Arbitration Commission for a US$1.3m claim for outstanding freight owed by the charterer to the shipping company as the owner of the vessel
►► LLinKs• team is composed of professionals from prestigious law
schools and “Big Four” accounting firms, equipped with legal, tax and accounting knowledge as well as considerable taxation professional services experience
• in 2009, the trust team advised the firm’s trust house clients on several major deals, including the first QDII product at trust market, securities-related trust products, PE-related trust products, and trust products with TOT structure
• provided professional services of the highest calibre on these deals, combining technical excellence with commercial awareness and practical approaches to legal issues to help clients achieve their business goals
►► rUn►Ming• finalist in this award last year and has had another year of
strong growth both in terms of lawyer headcount, office space and clientele
Clare Lu, Llinks
32
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ISSUE 7.5
EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
• new partners include former Orrick IP lawyer Cheng Bing, former general counsel for Alstom China Charles Liang and former senior counsel at O’Melveny & Myers Kathy Yang
• aviation practice led by executive partner Liu Yi continues to lead the field, having been instructed by longstanding clients to advise on several landmark cases.
• Highlights include representing Airbus in the bankruptcy proceedings against East Star Airlines, the first airline declared bankrupt in China; representing SF Airlines for its purchase and subsequent passenger-to-freighter conversion of a Boeing 757-200 aircraft; and representing ICBC financial leasing company in the first tax-bonded aircraft lease of China
►► conyers►diLL►&►PeArMAn• advises on the laws of Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, the
Cayman Islands, Mauritius and Cyprus, focusing on the BRIC markets
• has launched in Sao Paulo, Moscow and Mauritius over the past two years
• 11 offices worldwide including Anguilla, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Dubai, Hong Kong, London, Mauritius, Moscow, Sao Paulo and Singapore
FINALIStS •►APPLeBy•►hArneys•►ogier•►wALKers
WEST CHINA LAW FIRM OF THE YEARWINNER
►► TAhoTA• large law firm in China’s midwest named “Best National Law
Firm”, has set up branches in Beijing, Shenzhen and Hong Kong
• won the title for “10 Fastest Growing Law Firms in China” and “30 Fastest Growing Law Firms in Asia”
• transformed specific general partner system in the firm and wiped out district restriction. Changed name to “Tahota Law
Firm” and gained Patent Agency awarded by the State Intellectual Property Office
FINALIStS •►exceedon►&►
PArTners•►soLTon►&►PArTners►•►yUnnAn►BA►qiAn►
LAw►groUP•►zhonghAo
NORTHEAST CHINA LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR
WINNER
►► deheng►LAw►firM►• in 2009 business volume, revenues and tax paid
increased 38.40%, 13.10% and 20% (comparing it with last year) respectively.
• Annual revenue is RMB72m placing the firm first in Shandong for ten consecutive years
• 66% of total revenue is from VIP accounts and regular customers with finance, real estate, foreign affairs, securities, investment, litigation, arbitration and corporate business.
►► zheJiAng►T&c• leading law firm, even while confronting the challenge of
reduced client demand and deal flow• dominant player in FDI, IPOs and corporate finance in the
Yangtze River Delta region in 2009• ranks at the fifth-fastest-growing law firms in China as
evaluated by ALB magazine• awarded prizes by Hangzhou
municipal government as one of the top service enterprises and also one of the 100 top competent groups for 2009 for its outstanding achievements in the legal service profession
number of western and South-East Asian foreign law firms
• member of International Alliance of Law Firms, played a dominant role advising on cross-border transactions, high-end corporate matters and projects in Jiangsu
FINALIStS •►fAngBen
•►JiAngsU►co-fAr•►JiAngsU►new►TALenT
TIANJIN LAW FIRM OF THE YEARWINNER
►► winners• engaged by Cargill
(major international provider of food, agricultural and risk management products and services from the US) to represent it in its anti-trust business concentration filing with China regulatory authorities such as Ministry of Commerce and State Commission of Reform and Development
• first anti-trust case handled by a law firm in Tianjin• entered into strategic collaboration agreements with Institute
of Finance and Taxation of Nankai University and collaboration agreements on environment law with the law school of Nankai University in 2009
FINALIStS •►Join►&►high•►zhAng►ying
SHENZHEN LAW FIRM OF THE YEARWINNER
►► grAndALL►(shenzhen)• under the leadership of executive partner Li Chun, who
is president of the Shenzhen Bar, the Shenzhen office has sustained a leading role in transactional legal services
• gained competitive edge by leveraging the firm’s new office in neighbouring Hong Kong
• among the leaders in advising on SMEs listings, the capital markets group was increased by adding ten new partners and 30 more legal staff in 2009
Myles Seto, Deacons, centre; and Deacons support team
• represents a number of Fortune 500 multinational companies in China, as well as domestic PRC businesses and Hong Kong companies
• committed substantial resources to its China practice and covers a broad range of legal areas, from traditional FDI through to IP matters and arbitration proceedings
• has a multi-lingual team that converses fluently in Mandarin, Cantonese and other Chinese dialects, as well as English and western languages
Wang Yadong, Run Ming
Yan Xizhong, Shanghai ForTran
L-R: Richard Hall, Conyers Dill & Pearman; Martin Crawford, Offshore Incorporations Group
L-R: Wesley Pan, Alpha & Leader; Yang Jianhong Tahota
►► Anderson►Mori►&►ToMoTsUne• first existing firm to open
Beijing office• has been devoted to
longstanding China and Japan economic relationship for more than a decade
• often represents Japanese companies and Chinese companies in various large M&A transactions, and also advised many Chinese companies in 2009, including China Unicom, Baidu, Air China, Shenhua Energy, Bank of Communication, Shanghai Electric
FINALIStS •►Mori►hAMAdA►&►MATsUMoTo•►oh-eBAshi
KOREAN LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR WINNER
►► BAe,►KiM►&►Lee• first Korean firm to establish a presence in China, opening its
Beijing office in 2004• has offices in both Beijing and Shanghai, with a full contingent
of PRC and Korean lawyers. Seoul office has a permanent team of PRC lawyers, and the practice group advises on cross-border
FINALIStS •►Bird►&►Bird•►JsM•►vivien►chAn►&►co
GUANGZHOU LAW FIRM OF THE YEARWINNER
►► gUAngdA• previous winner of this award, remains one of the top-tier
firms active in Guangzhou• has increased its offering in international trade and investment
with the appointment of several new partners including Kent Woo, who was previously a partner with Kingson, and Ling Na, a former partner of D&S
• acted for a large number of international and national clients in high-end investment, transactions, and litigation and arbitration cases in Pearl River Delta region
►► fAngdA►PArTners• Shanghai office has continued to have dominant market share
in high-profile transactions
L-R: Li Haibo, Winners; Qin Tao, Guangda
L-R: Zhang Yun, ALB; Zhang Wei, Luwan Justice Bureau
L-R: Liu Hongqiang, ACC; George Wang, Jun He
L-R: Hiroshige Nakagawa, Anderson Mori & Tomotsune
34
EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
ISSUE 7.5
EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
CHINA LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR WINNER
►► King►&►wood• one of the largest firms in China with more than 800 partners
and lawyers working across 16 offices• first PRC firm to have merged with a Hong Kong firm and
acquired Hong Kong law capacities
• outbound practice led by partner Xu Ping; international restructuring practice with partner Liu Yanling and Handel Lee has grown substantially
• key representative projects this year included acting for China Unicom in introducing the iPhone to China; the Wahaha Danone settlement; the global offering of China Minsheng Banking Corporation and listing on the HKSE; PRC anti-trust approval for two high-profile offshore M&A transactions (Pfizer/Wyether and Fiat/Chrysler)
corporate deals as well as regulatory matters and litigation in China• major projects include Guangzhou LCD Panel Project, a JV
between LG Display and the Guangzhou city government for US$4bn in total investments (with initial registered capital of US$1.33bn
FINALIStS •►Lee►&►Ko
SINGAPORE LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR WINNER
►► wongPArTnershP• in addition to the firm’s involvement in China Investment
Corporation’s acquisition of a stake in Noble Group, its China practice group has been involved in deals across a spectrum of industries, including banking, real estate, education and retail
• advised on award-winning deals, including acting for China Oilfield Services as Singapore counsel, relating to its acquisition of Awilco Offshore
FINALIStS •►drew►&►nAPier
MANAGING PARTNER OF THE YEAR WINNER
►► King►&►wood►–►wAng►Ling►• as managing partner has worked to help grow the firm to be
widely recognised as one of the most highly-regarded Chinese law firms
• works with the management team developing policies, long-term strategy and overview of the firm, particularly in developing business operations which include IT systems,
marketing and business development, knowledge management, training programs and HR
• one of the firm’s top dealmakers, recognised numerous times for her role in complex transactions as well as her overall expertise in banking, aircraft finance and other asset finance matters
►► freshfieLds• advised on 14 listings in 2009 including the five largest IPOs in
Hong Kong – these are five of the world’s ten largest IPOs for the year
• high-profile deals included Metallurgical Corporation of China and China Minsheng Banking Corporation
• advised OCBC Bank on its US$1.46bn acquisition of ING Asia Private Bank from ING Bank and Danone in the most high-profile commercial dispute seen in the region
L-R: Joseph HE Jun, WongPartnership; Qiu Suo, AllBright
Heiner Braun, Freshfields
L-R: Jin Liyu, King & Wood; Yu Tengqun, China Railway Group; Zhao Xiaohong, King & Wood
sPonsorsKnight FrankKnight Frank is the leading international property consultancy. The London-based firm, together with its New York-based global partner, Newmark Knight Frank, operates from 207 offices in 43 countries across six continents. More than 6,340 professionals handle in excess of US$886 billion worth of property annually. Knight Frank offices in Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Macau offer professional services across a comprehensive portfolio including: acquisitions, sales & leasing; asset management & investment; building and facilities management; development consultancy.
paul hart, executive director, knight FrankPaul is a Chartered Surveyor with a broad base of experience covering valuation, property due diligence, retail and development consultancy. Based in Hong Kong for 20 years, he has extensive property experience in Greater China. Paul was appointed an Executive Director in 2004 and he is a member of Knight Frank’s Greater China Board overseeing Knight Frank’s delivery of real estate services to support
capital market and private equity transactions in Hong Kong and China. Paul is also an advisor to HSBC on the management of their Hong Kong Estate including the disposal of repossessed properties.
China Legal CareerChina Legal Career (CLC) is the leading legal recruiting firm that provides top quality services for foreign law firms and MNCs in China. As a member of Mlegal Group, CLC draws on its extensive international resources to serve the top echelon of the legal markets in the US (offices in San Francisco and Palo Alto), UK (office in London) and China (offices in Beijing and Shanghai). By operating internationally for 20 years and in China for 4 years, Mlegal/CLC has already built a network and reputation in the market as the #1 choice for clients and legal professionals when it comes to legal recruitment and career development.
Frazer Xia, Founder and Managing director, China Legal CareerFounder and MD of CLC with 20 years business experience. He started his career in china when he returned to
China from his MBA study in the US in 1987. He was the EVP of a German MNC in Shanghai in the mid of 1990’s and a co-founder of Bexcel Management Consultants in 1998. In the early 2000’s he became the COO/CFO of an accounting/ERP company and the COO of a Cisco/Time Warner invested company in Beijing, Frazer founded CLC in early 2006 and has extensive connections in the market with senior legal professionals. He holds a MBA from the University of New York in 1986.
MWE China Law OfficesMWE China Law Offices is a Chinese law firm with a seasoned and integrated professional team based in Shanghai licensed to practise in the People’s Republic of China. MWE China’s practice includes advising on all areas of Chinese and international law, and the Firm is able to effectively service clients and their expanding interests in China and beyond. MWE China Law Offices is strategically aligned with McDermott Will & Emery LLP, a leading international law firm of 1,000 lawyers with 16 offices in the United States and Europe, to provide global companies based within and outside of China superior global client service with access to leading lawyers within China and around the globe.
John huang, Managing partner, MWe China Law officesJohn Z.L. Huang is the founding partner of MWE
EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
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EVENTS | China Law Awards >>
China Law Offices (MWE China) and serves as its managing partner. In brief, John focuses on creating practical comprehensive solutions for a diverse array of multinational corporate clients. Providing legal counsel in China for over 20 years, he has handled numerous landmark cross-border transactions and disputes for both Fortune 500 and well-known Chinese enterprises. John also has been nominated or has received several prestigious legal awards over the past 10 years, and he was named twice by ALB as one of the ‘Hot 25’ lawyers in China.
Jade & Fountain PRC Lawyers Jade & Fountain PRC Lawyers has emerged as one of the premier law firms in China. Tracing its history back more than 20 years, Jade & Fountain’s lawyers have been regarded as extremely knowledgeable and well-versed in many legal areas and boast an acute understanding of both global trends and local conventions. Jade & Fountain’s philosophy is grounded in being responsive, result-driven, and trustworthy in providing legal services to its clients. In 2009, Jade & Fountain has represented our clients in many high-profile projects, including advising on the Shanda Games’ Initial Public Offering (valued at over US$1billion), and also serving as counsel to GM in its 1% share transfer of Shanghai GM to SAIC.
Scott guan, Managing partner, Jade & Fountain prC Lawyers Scott Guan is Jade & Fountain’s managing partner. Scott has extensive experience in mergers and acquisitions, PE and VC investments, capital markets, foreign direct investment, dispute resolution, as well as general corporate and business advice.
Scott has practiced law with leading Chinese, Canadian and British law firms in Shanghai, Toronto and Hong Kong. Scott is continuously recognised in The International Who’s Who of Business Lawyers and other publications as one of the leading lawyers in China.
In addition to his practice, Scott is an adjunct professor with the Law School of Fudan University and is retained as an arbitrator by the Shanghai Arbitration Commission.
Thomson ReutersThomson Reuters Legal is a leading provider of information solutions to legal, tax, accounting, intellectual property, compliance and other business professionals, as well as government agencies. Thomson Reuters Legal is the largest publishers of legal textbooks and materials. We also offer a broad range of products and services which includes electronic databases of legal, regulatory and business information and news, and software to assist lawyers and accountants with practice management functions. We have been serving China’s legal professionals since 2002. Westlaw China online legal database is one of our key products. It is a powerful legal research tool customised for legal professionals in China.
Stephen yao, Chief executive oficer, Thomson reuters Legal ChinaStephen Yao is the CEO of Thomson Reuters Legal China. He is fully responsible for the development and growth of Thomson Reuters Legal in China, and formulation of the overall strategy of Westlaw China online legal database in the global market.
Prior to joining Thomson Reuters Legal in 2008, Yao served as the chief strategy officer of ChinaTimes Group in Beijing, as managing director for Asia-Pacific of Standard & Poor’s Fund Services and as general manager for the Northeast Asia of Dow Jones in Hong Kong. Yao was born in Taiwan and achieved his MBA in the US.
Offshore Incorporations GroupOffshore Incorporations Group (OIL) is Asia’s leading company formation specialist. OIL has 25 years of experience serving clients throughout Asia including leading professional firms, financial institutions and public listed companies. OIL has a highly experienced team of over 200 professionals, dedicated to providing company formation and a broad range of post incorporation services to our clients, and has recently opened a Shanghai office to provide full support to our clients in the PRC. By leveraging OIL’s expertise in company formation and strong alliances with trusted professional partners, clients receive unparalleled services and support that complement their business needs.
FeaTure | interview >>
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GCL-Poly: Powerful adviceThrough a series of landmark transactions in recent years, GCL-Poly has become one of the largest players in the world’s solar power industry. ALB finds out how the in-house legal team has transformed itself into a vital, value-adding part of the business
As China leads the world in developing and investing in clean-energy technologies to curb carbon emissions, Hong
Kong-listed GCL-Poly Energy Holdings has established itself as one of the top green energy operators in the country. It is one of the leading polysilicon and wafer suppliers in the world, and consequently the company’s in-house legal department has expanded and evolved as the company has grown.
Starting with one person in 2001, the in-house team now consists of 15 lawyers located across the Shanghai, Suzhou and Hong Kong offices, handling the legal affairs and managing risks for a company that owns 21 subsidiaries and associated power plants, a solar farm and several
polysilicon and wafer facilities. The legal team was selected as a finalist for the Foreign Company In-House Team of the Year Award at the recent ALB China Law Awards, recognised for being a first-class advisor to its company and the significant progress the team has made over recent years.
Susan Wu, the company’s chief legal officer for the power sector, is the founding member of GCL-Poly’s in-house team. Previously with a Shanghai law firm, she joined as the company’s first in-house lawyer in 2001 and helped build the in-house team to its current capacity. Wu sees a correlation between her team’s success and the senior management’s respect for the rule of law.
“The CEO and senior management
In-house perspectIve
team’s commitment to integrity and legal compliance forms a foundation for the in-house legal team to excel,” says Wu. “The team’s legal understanding, business acumen and depth and strength of technical expertise, in turn, are the key factors determining success.”
Many obstacles and challenges exist on the road to success. Wu believes her team’s main challenge lies in achieving the right balance between safeguarding the company’s legal compliance measures and proactively supporting business growth. “For a dynamic company like GCL-Poly, we are constantly seizing exciting opportunities for growth. Naturally one must be alert [to the fact] every potentially rewarding project comes with commensurate
risks,” she says. “We work closely with our company’s management, and other functional departments to formulate appropriate business strategy, and assist them in achieving and executing new business goals.”
To reach the right balance, Wu believes in-house counsel must strive to be value-adding members of the management team, as opposed to constantly raising obstacles. “In-house counsel, with their particular knowledge of the industry in which their company is engaged in, must be more innovative than external counsel. They should be more able to devise viable solutions for potential projects to move ahead and become successful business units,” she says.
Landmark transactions Since its inception, GCL-Poly’s in-house team has been involved in a diverse range of projects and investments, supporting the company to expand its green energy portfolio across cogeneration, biomass, incineration, wind and solar power sectors. “The in-house team has always had a strong and close working relationship with the investment department, and has developed a wealth of expertise in legal issues relating to all aspects of the company’s business,” says Wu.
The past four years, in particular, have seen the team playing an instrumental role in the company’s
milestone developments. These include its IPO on the HKSE in November 2007, and the US$3.4bn acquisition of Jiangsu Zhongneng Polysilicon Technology Development in July 2009. “The 2007 IPO marked a significant milestone in the life of GCL-Poly, and it served as a passage for the in-house legal team to reach a higher level of maturity,” says Wu.
“The IPO process has really tested our team’s abilities, but we’ve gained a tremendous amount of first-hand knowledge and experience on a wide array of issues and listing-related matters through working on the deal from the very beginning.”
In the 20 months leading up to the IPO launch the in-house team was extremely busy, working closely with the internal IPO execution team and 15 external advisors and intermediate institutions. These included the PRC, Cayman Islands, Hong Kong and international legal counsel, financial advisors and underwriters, all finding solutions for many complicated issues
during the preparation process. The in-house team played an important role in managing the data room, coordinating due diligence, restructuring, obtaining regulatory approvals, drafting the IPO's legal structure, negotiating listing plans and timetable, pre-IPO financing, as well as answering questions raised by all concerned parties and regulators and reviewing and finalising the prospectus.
“It’s a transformational process. Having been through the challenges and pressures during the IPO process, most of the projects and matters now seem easy to us,” says Wu. “In addition, as the company becomes a public company, it is paying increasing attention to related-party transactions, corporate governance, procedure and compliance, and disclosure issues. As a result, the in-house legal function’s importance within the company has been further elevated.”
Last July, GCL-Poly’s US$3.4bn acquisition of Jiangsu Zhongneng opened another exciting chapter for the
37www.legalbusinessonline.com
“In-house counsel, with their particular knowledge of the industry in which their company is engaged in, must be more innovative than external counsel. They should be more able to devise viable solutions for potential projects to move ahead and become successful business units"
Susan Wu GCL-Poly
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company’s growth. Upon completion, GCL-Poly became China’s largest – and one of the world’s leading –polysilicon producers. It was the in-house team which coordinated a large number of law firms and ensured the successful completion of this highly complex deal involving 30 parties. It was also the largest M&A deal seen in Asia in 2009, and was awarded “M&A Deal of the Year” at the ALB China Law Awards 2010 held recently.
Other major transactions that the in-house team assisted the company to complete have included the US$760m investment by China Investment Corporation at the end of 2009 and GCL-Poly’s acquisition of a controlling stake in Konca Solar this year.
Strong team leadership GCL-Poly’s flotation and strategic shift towards the solar power business means the in-house legal support must be strong and diverse. Thus, immediately after the 2009 acquisition, the company appointed Tong Kay Tak Tom as its vice president and general counsel in Hong Kong.
Tong, a practising solicitor in Hong Kong, was director and vice president in charge of legal affairs of Jiangsu Zongneng before he joined GCL-Poly. He brings extensive experience of
38
international corporate and capital markets practice to the in-house legal department, and is joined by another in-house counsel in Hong Kong.
As the solar power unit becomes a dominant part of the company’s business, GCL-Poly recently also named longstanding in-house counsel Dai Mengyang as director of the legal department. Dai, who joined in 2003, will oversee all legal matters for this new but rapidly expanding business unit. Currently he leads eight in-house legal staff working in Suzhou, while Wu and three other members of the in-house department in Shanghai focus on the provision of legal advice and services to the company’s power sector.
While continuing to provide excellent support for the power sector, GCL-Poly’s newly expanded in-house legal team can also now provide full support and advice on the company’s new projects and investments in photovoltaic material production and other solar energy projects, both at home and abroad.
Wu anticipates continued growth and new challenges in the legal department in the coming years. “Our
► gCl-Poly Deal hIghlIghTS Date Deal Value Firmsinvolved
11/2007 IPO and listing on HKEx
US$152m Grandall (Beijing), Coudert Brothers (in association with Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe), Conyers Dill & Pearman, Clifford Chance and Commerce & Finance Law Offices
7/2009 Acquisition of 100% equity interest in Jiangsu Zhongneng
US$3.4bn Allen & Overy, Conyers Dill & Pearman, Freshfields, Grandall (Beijing), Hogan & Hartson, Milbank Tweed, Paul Hastings and Ropes & Gray
8/2009 Placement of 1.3 billion new shares
US$471m undisc.
12/2009 CIC investment in GCL-Poly
US$709m Freshfields, Richard Butler in association with Reed Smith
3/2010 Acquisition of controlling stake in Konca Solar
► aBoUT The CoMPany:• Founded in 1996, and hired its first in-house
counsel in 2001• Listed on the HKEx in November 2007• 2009 revenue: RMB4,356m• Number of employees: 4,162• Number of subsidiary and associated power
plants: 21• Headquartered in Hong Kong with most
operations based in mainland China • Became one of the world’s largest polysilicon
producers upon its acquisition of Jiangsu Zhongneng in 2009
• Set plans to expand into the global Solar power generation market in November 2009
► aBoUT The In-hoUSe TeaM:• Consists of 15 in-house counsels located across
Hong Kong, Shanghai and Suzhou offices• Headed by Tong Kay Tak Tom, vice president and
general counsel in Hong Kong, Dai Mengyang, director of legal for solar business in Suzhou, and Wu Sijun, chief legal officer for the power sector in Shanghai
• Long-term legal advisors: Hogan & Hartson, Gordon Ng & Co, Conyers Dill & Pearman and Grandall (Beijing)
► gCl-Poly – qUICk FaCTS
“The team's legal understanding, business acumen and depth and strength of technical expertise, in turn, are the key factors determining success"
Susan Wu GCL-Polylegal function will have to keep pace
with the growth of our company and changing regulatory requirements. As the company expands its business globally, we’ll need to gain knowledge of the relevant law and regulations in overseas jurisdictions in which our company operates,” she says.
Leveraging external expertise Like most other in-house departments, GCL-Poly’s legal department needs to use outside firms for support in certain circumstances, and managing external counsels naturally forms part of the team’s responsibility. Wu says that the department enlists the services of external counsel in three main instances: for transactions in which legal opinions issued by law firms are required, to handle issues and matters that are outside of the in-house team’s expertise, and for complex projects and transactions that require extra resources and manpower.
In addition, the department calls on a large number of regional and local firms across the country for subsidiary-related work. In the past year, the type of work for which GCL-Poly’s in-house team mostly used external counsel was M&A transactions. The team has worked with Jun He’s Shanghai office, Grandall (Beijing), Zhejiang Sunshine, Hong Kong’s Gordon Ng & Co,
international firms Milbank Tweed, Hogan & Hartson and Freshfields and offshore firm Conyers Dill & Pearman.
When choosing which firm to engage as external counsel, “expertise in specific areas” is the top criteria cited by Wu. “For most day-to-day legal matters, external lawyers cannot match the in-house team in terms of understanding of the issues and speed of response,” she explains. “However, we do value external counsels’ extensive expertise and knowledge in many other areas of the law. Their logistics, know-how, precedents and experience in solving similar legal issues are invaluable to us. The in-house counsels are there to identify and leverage these advantages and design innovative structures and solutions. Fee levels are of a lesser concern when we select external counsel. What we value most is expertise, expertise and expertise.” ALB
The recent US/China Economic Dialogue discussions held between the two countries further cements their powerful business and bilateral relations. ALB examines the new playing field for 21st century deals
40
US firms in China
More than 50 representatives from over 40 government departments of both China and the US participated
in the Sino-US Strategic Economic Dialogue, held in Beijing in May. And as the world prepares for the powerhouse, deals between the two nations continue to roll out. Most recently, a tiny town in Mississippi announced a US$175m investment by China’s Anshan Steel in upstart Steel Development Corp.
Given the ceaseless dealflow between China and the US, lawyers are positive about the impending dialogue; that it will mark the continuation –post-GFC – of the most important bilateral economic relationship in the world. And it is no wonder that China’s law practices are being hailed as one of the few high-growth engines at this time.
Firms like O’Melveny & Myers have a bullish outlook. “I think China has come back faster than most markets. In the past few months, different practice areas like capital markets, private equity and FDI have revived quicker than others. We are well into recovery mode,” says Howard Chao, partner-in-charge of O’Melveny & Myers’ Asia practice.
Physical presence is pertinent Continued growth of the Chinese economy and increased global business ties have been the impetus for law firms to launch in the region. Most recently, Boston-based Ropes & Gray hired Arthur Mok as a partner to help open its planned Shanghai office, taking him from Hogan & Hartson. Since 2009, several firms – including Winston & Strawn, Latham & Watkins, Steptoe & Johnson, Kirkland & Ellis and Diaz Reus – have set up on the mainland.
“Over the past few years, there has been significantly more momentum by US firms wanting to have a physical presence on the mainland. Given the transactional activity flowing through this market, US firms are a lot keener on being here,” says Mok. “It is hard
Thomas ShoesmithPillsbury
David Tang, K&L Gates
FeaTure | US firms in China >>
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to understand the market and build relationships if you are not physically in the market,” he adds.
Besides being able to better identify business issues and understand corporate culture, having proximity to clients and sourcing business locally is also of the utmost importance. K&L Gates is a firm that exemplifies this concept, attributing its increasing mandates to proximity (having offices in Shanghai and Beijing) with clients. “Being on the ground for us is critical for what we do, because we need to be in constant contact with our clients,” says partner David Tang. “Having an actual physical platform on the ground has helped tremendously.”
In Morrison & Foerster’s case, proximity has not only boosted the firm’s relationship with existing clients, it also brought in new mandates that it otherwise wouldn’t have attained. “On some of our deals we wouldn’t have gotten the engagement and certainly wouldn’t have been able to support the work the way that we do, without a Beijing office. The work came in because we are here, we are at the front of the line for the client,” says Paul McKenzie, the managing partner of MoFo’s Beijing office.
According to McKenzie, the Beijing office plays an important management role by interfacing with clients in their own language and in a cultural manner that they are accustomed to. “Clients are worried about what they do not know, and having someone in the region who can help reassure them is always appreciated,” he explains.
Moreover, lawyers say that having an office where their clients are based instils credibility. Henry Liu, managing partner of Nixon Peabody’s China and Asia practice, adds that this is especially important for Chinese clients. “If you don’t have a solid local presence they just don’t find you credible,” he says.
Homebound China desk is more than integrationWith increasing on-the-ground competition, leaders in US law firms have been forced to ceaselessly develop new strategies in order to successfully differentiate their capabilities.
► US FIRMS In ChIna: oFFICe laUnCheS 2007- 2010
Firm Location Date
Covington & Burling Beijing July 2008
Dechert Beijing August 2008
Diaz Reus Beijing July 2009
Kirkland & Ellis Shanghai September 2009
K&L Gates Shanghai November 2008
Latham & Watkins Beijing January 2010
Loeb & Loeb Beijing October 2008
Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone
Shanghai October 2008
Morris Manning & Martin
Beijing April 2009
Nixon Peabody Shanghai March 2008
Ropes & Gray Shanghai pending
Steptoe & Johnson Beijing March 2010
Weil Gotshal Beijing June 2008
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
Shanghai November 2009
Winston & Strawn Beijing, Shanghai
November 2009
*This table does not purport to be exhaustive
Pillsbury has done so by building up not only its Shanghai office but also its China practice desk in the US.
The firm has about 20 lawyers focused exclusively on China work and another 20 who focus about half their billable time on the same. But what is unusual about this arrangement is the proportion of practitioners’ working location is divided.
“Most of our competitors have chosen to concentrate their team on the mainland but our team is evenly divided in both US and China,” says Thomas Shoesmith, a partner and leader of Pillsbury’s China practice. He sees the idea as a balanced follow-through offering, where clients can get exactly the same service all the way from the mainland to the US – be it on capital markets or M&A interests.
“Having that equal capability in both regions, clients can not only have access to all of us on the mainland, they can also access our practice in the US,” he says. “This includes very senior members at their call from both sides. They get a very robust service delivery because each one of us offers the entire range of talent from both US and China.”
“To us, it simply means that we are able to respond to our clients who are involved in China business but tend to have operations in both countries. But it is critical and essential as opposed to just being useful” Shoesmith adds.
Fair playgroundAccording to the American Bar Association, there are around 4,891 American lawyers in China (including Hong Kong) today, but under the restrictions imposed by the Chinese government, foreigners are not allowed to be admitted to the PRC bar and practise PRC law. In addition to that, Chinese nationals in US law firms have also been prohibited from practising PRC law. Yet PRC firms have been increasingly adding US capabilities, presenting a new set of challenges to on-the-ground American firms.
The intensity of competition is seeing US lawyers cry out for fair ground. “The increasing market strength of the Chinese national law firms is
“Most US firms are moving away from commodity work such as FDI, because the local firms take over that space. They can do that work more efficiently and at a more affordable rate.”
David Wang Paul Hastings
FeaTure | US firms in China >>
42 ISSUE 7.5
something we are all looking out for. Chinese firms are increasingly large and are adding more US capability. We now find ourselves competing with PRC law firms for international deals – so that is going to be a challenge,” says Shoesmith.
Chao from O’Melveny says that the challenge has presented itself much sooner than he had anticipated. “Chinese law firms are becoming more powerful, more capable and are financially very strong. They are actually starting to go global and it is something that many people didn’t expect to happen as quickly as it did happen,” he says.
One main concern is the rules surrounding legal practice. While foreign law firms have been prohibited on practising PRC law by the Chinese government, PRC law firms are allowed to practise US law. The circumstances, lawyers say, hardly create a level playing field. And given the speed to which local lawyers are picking up business, US firms are beginning to hope that a fair playground can soon be established.
Seeing the challenges that PRC firms have laid out before the US firms, American lawyers are driven to further advance their legal skills and offer new products and services. “You need to continue to be looking for new legal products,” says Shoesmith. He draws an example from structured finance work, an area of law that has not quite been established within the PRC legal system.
“over the past few years, there has been significantly more momentum of US firms wanting to have a physical presence on the mainland. given the transactional activity flowing down to this market, US firms are a lot keener on being here.”
Arthur Mok Ropes & Gray
► ToP 50 US FIRMS BaSeD on 2009 ReVenUe
Outof50top-grossingUSfirms• 5 firms (10%) do not have any China offices• 15 firms (30%) have two China offices• 11 firms (22%) have one China office• 19 firms (38%) have all three offices: Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
Rank Firm Lawyers Equitypartners
2009grossrevenue(US$m)
OfficesinChina
1. Baker&McKenzie 3,949 720 2,112 Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong
2. Skadden 1,860 435 2,100 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
3. Latham&Watkins 1,880, 444 1,821 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
4. JonesDay 2,469 797 1,520 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
5. Kirkland&Ellis 1,411 270 1,428 Shanghai and Hong Kong
6. SidleyAustin 1,588 304 1,357 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
7. White&Case 1,890 278 1,307 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
8. WeilGotshal 1,212 292 1,233 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
9. GreenbergTraurig 1,707 292 1,173 Shanghai
10. MayerBrown 1,657 274 1,118 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
11. MorganLewis 1,315 263 1,069 Beijing
12. K&LGates 1,706 295 1,035 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
13. DLAPiper 1,251 213 1,015 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
14. GibsonDunn 983 284 995 -
15. Sullivan&Cromwell
700 167 995 Beijing and Hong Kong
16. ClearyGottlieb 992 192 965 Beijing and Hong Kong
17. ReedSmith 1,427 315 942 Beijing and Hong Kong
18. WilmerHale 993 309 941 Beijing
19. Dewey&LeBoeuf 1,054 180 914 Beijing and Hong Kong
20. PaulHastings 917 193 889 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
21. Morrison&Foerster
1,005 256 884 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
22. SimpsonThacher 787 177 871 Beijing and Hong Kong
23. Hogan&Hartson 1,121 287 865 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
24. BinghamMcCutchen
922 161 860 Hong Kong
25. Orrick 1,018 187 848 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
26. DavisPolk 684 169 846 Beijing and Hong Kong
27. McDermottWill 968 255 829 Shanghai
28. O’Melveny&Myers
861 218 827 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
29. Shearman&Sterling
815 185 801 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
30. Ropes&Gray 904 252 790 Hong Kong and Shanghai (pending)
31. AkinGump 904 252 719 Beijing
32. Dechert 786 149 713 Beijing and Hong Kong
33. Winston&Strawn 843 184 705 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
34. King&Spalding 796 151 678 -
35. DebevoisePlimpton
686 144 668 Hong Kong and Shanghai
Henry LiuNixon Peabody
FeaTure | US firms in China >>
43www.legalbusinessonline.com
“This is relatively unknown locally because China doesn’t yet have the legal structure to permit those products – so when those legal structures appear, we have an edge,” he says. “But it also doesn’t last very long because local firms can learn very fast – so then we have to move on to another [area]. You just have to keep staying on the cutting edge. If you keep sticking to what you are comfortable with, pretty soon the Chinese firms will be passing you by.”
The fundamental differences in the operations and business structures between a PRC and Western law firm, at least, plays to the advantage of US firms. “If you peel back the layer of operations of a PRC law firm, it is very different from Western law firms. Under the model used by the majority of the PRC firms, it is hard to access the entire range of a firm’s services, because there are so many more incentives
“on some of our deals, we wouldn’t have gotten the engagement and certainly wouldn’t have been able to support the work the way that we do without a Beijing office. The work came in because we are here.”
Paul McKenzie Morrison & Foerster
► SIno-US CaPITal MaRkeTS DealS
Deal Firmsinvolved Dealvalue(US$)
China lodging group IPo Davis Polk, Simpson Thacher, Conyers Dill, Jun he and zhong lun 126
aird Belis, appleby, Davis Polk, Jones Day and linklaters 194
Shanda games Davis Polk, Conyers Dill, Commerce & Finance, Simpson Thacher and Jade & Fountain
1,000
Changyou.com IPo and nasdaq listing Campbells, Commerce & Finance, Davis Polk, goulston & Storrs and king & Wood
138
China natural gas nasdaq listing Dla Piper, han kun, Jiarui law Firm, loeb & loeb 50
Canadian Solar nasdaq follow-on offering
latham & Watkins 123
Wonder-auto Techonology IPo o’ Melveny, Tian yuan, Pillsbury, holland & hart and Beijing Ruidu 75
China Real estate Information Corporation IPo
Skadden, Fangda, Maples and Calder, Commerce & Finance, o’Melveny & Myers and Shearman & Sterling
248
*This table does not purport to be exhaustive
► SIno-US M&a DealS
Deal Firms Dealvalue(US$m)
Shanghai Jin Jiang hotels – Interstate hotels acquisition
Baker & Mckenzie, hogan & hartson, king & Wood and Paul Weiss 307
CIC–aeS Corporation stake acquisition
Cleary gottlieb 1,580
*This table does not purport to be exhaustive
► InTRa-aSIa CaPITal MaRkeTS DealS (WITh US FIRM RePReSenTaTIonS)
Deal Firmsinvolved Dealvalue(US$)
Ruinian International hong kong IPo Conyers Dill, grandall, Jingtian & gongcheng, Morrison & Foerster, Shearman & Sterling, lu, lai & li
115
Sands China IPo Davis Polk, MWe law Firm, leonel alves, Freshfields, advogados & notarios, Sidley austin, Walkers
2,500
Mingfa group IPo Dla Piper, o’Melveny, Maples and Calder, Commerce & Finance, grandall and Charltons
284
BBMg global offering haiwen & Partners, Jingtian & gongcheng, lovells and Paul hastings 884
China zhongwang IPo Commerce & Finance, Jingtian & gongcheng, Conyers Dill, Morrison & Foerster, Richards Butler and latham & Watkins
1,300
*This table does not purport to be exhaustive
for the individual partner to hang on to the work than to bring in other expertise from elsewhere in the firm,” says Shoesmith. “That gives foreign law firms an edge.”
Eye on capital marketsThe growth of PRC firms has not only brought about intense competition for international transactions, their increasing expertise has also disallowed later entrants to be very much involved in FDI work. “Most US firms are moving away from commodity work such as FDI, because the local firms take over that domain. They can do that work more efficiently and at a more affordable rate,” says Paul Hasting’s Shanghai managing partner, David Wang.
Consequently, US firms have since been nudged into doing more high-end work like cross-border listings. In 2009
FeaTure | US firms in China >>
44 ISSUE 7.5
there were nine IPOs of Chinese companies on the NASDAQ, including Shanda Games (advised by Davis Polk, Conyers Dill & Pearman, Commerce & Finance, Simpson Thacher and Jade & Fountain), which had one of the largest US IPOs and the largest capital raising for a Chinese company seen in 2009. Changyou.com (advised by Campbells, Commerce & Finance, Davis Polk, Goulston & Storrs and King & Wood) had one of the best-performing US stocks in 2009; China Real Estate Information (advised by Skadden, Fangda, Maples and Calder, Commerce & Finance, O’Melveny & Myers and Shearman & Sterling) introduced the first spin-off of a Chinese company listed on the NYSE.
While the US capital markets bring about some hopeful returns for US law firms, lawyers admit that a lot of that interest has now changed. US firms are having to deal with the fact that Chinese clients are not tapping into the US capital markets as much as they used to – and the response to that has been, in part, for many US firms to acquire a Hong Kong law capacity.
O’Melveny & Myers recently
appointed Gordon Ng, the former managing partner of Hogan & Hartson’s Hong Kong office, as a partner in its corporate finance/capital markets practice in Hong Kong. Ng has more than 17 years experience in guiding clients through corporate and financing transactions, both in Hong Kong and China. This synergy between Ng’s Hong Kong law capabilities and practice, and the firm’s existing relationships with leading banks and private equity firms, is likely to create new business opportunities for its China practice.
“Chinese companies’ listing interest has changed a lot over the years – it has been much less US-centric and become more Hong Kong- and Shanghai-centric,” Ng says. “It has also become less SOE-dominant and more private companies and PE funded company-dominant.” As evidence of this, competitor firm Paul Hastings reports that the firm is currently working on no less than 15 Hong Kong IPOs for Chinese clients.
Tang explains that the receptivity in Asian capital markets is due to having a positive attitude that has been lacking in the western regions. “Investor appetite in Asia is very high. Companies want to list now because they see it may
“Chinese law firms are becoming more powerful, more capable and are financially very strong. They are actually starting to go global and it is something that many people didn’t expect to happen as quickly as it did”
Howard Chao O’Melveny & Myers
► ToP 50 US FIRMS BaSeD on ReVenUe (ConT)
Rank Firm Lawyers Equitypartners
2009grossrevenue(US$)
LocationsinChina
36. Foley&Lardner 937 178 667 Shanghai
37. PaulWeiss 653 116 666 Beijing and Hong Kong
38. GoodwinProctor 835 207 658 Hong Kong
40. Fullbright&Jaworski
905 332 643 Beijing and Hong Kong
41. Hunton&Williams 863 245 615 Beijing
42. MilbankTweed 534 119 602 Beijing and Hong Kong
43. Wachtell 231 86 585 -
44. Covington&Burling
653 209 583 Beijing
45. BakerBotts 722 92 575 Beijing and Hong Kong
46. Cravath 477 92 569 -
47. Vinson&Elkins 693 206 562 Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong
48. BryanCave 996 202 555 Shanghai and Hong Kong
49. Alston&Bird 820 152 551 -
50. WilllkieFarr 591 134 550 -
*Gross revenue and headcount numbers extracted from AmLaw 100
be possible to obtain high valuations for their listings. It is really a question of speed and pressure to go on the market as soon as possible, in order to catch the current investment climate,” he says. According to Tang, K&L Gates is in the midst of a big push with capital markets; it has been “all hands on deck” to make sure the firm can meet the increasing listing interest.
Moving beyond Asian capital markets, the general business outlook within the region is promising. There is a high level of confidence in being able to do business and to go across markets to look for opportunities. This attitude, which has been prevalent for the past 12 months or so, is a source of motivation for US firms to seek out new roles. “In the UK and US, the attitude is very different – after coming out of a very harrowing period, they are very conservative. That’s a big differential trend where Asia has the confidence which does not exist in former market leaders,” says Tang.
“A lot of investors are flocking to China because that positive attitude is all there.” ALB
Arthur MokRopes & Gray Gordon Ng
O’Melveny & Myers
•
Firm Profile K&L Gates
45www.legalbusinessonline.com
K&L GATES CONTACTS: David K.Y. TangManaging Partner, AsiaTel [email protected]
David is the Managing Partner, Asia for the firm and focuses his law practice in the areas of foreign investment, cross-border financings, joint ventures, mergers and acquisitions, and real property related transactions. He has 30 years of transactional experience in the Greater China market. David is a member of the American Law Institute and included in Best Lawyers and International Who’s Who of Business Lawyers. He served on the Board of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco from 2002 – 2008 and as its Chair from 2006 – 2008.
Clifford NgAdministrative Partner, Beijing, Shanghai, Singapore, Hong KongTel [email protected]
Clifford is the Administrative Partner for the K&L Gates Beijing, Shanghai, Singapore and Hong Kong offices. He provides strategic advice to many companies and their major shareholders. His mandates often involve investments in China, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia for North American and European clients, and for Asian clients in their investments in North America and Europe. Clifford’s clients are active in a broad spectrum of sectors from agriculture to media to technology.
Navin is a partner in K&L Gates Hong Kong office. He leads our corporate finance team in Hong Kong and his practice includes mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, public offerings, private placement of securities and rights issues, joint ventures and securities related legislation. Navin has practiced law since 1988.
Yujing is experienced in China cross-border corporate, foreign investment, regulatory, real estate, and finance practice and has worked with clients in the life sciences, pharmaceuticals, finance, IT, education, aerospace, and manufacturing. Prior to receiving her juris doctor in the United States,
Yujing practiced general commercial law in the PRC, where she received her license in 1988.
Ivan is a partner in the K&L Gates Shanghai office. He has over 15 years of legal experience, advising clients on various mergers and acquisitions, capital market transactions, private equity financings, direct investments, construction and property related transactions and general corporate matters in the Greater China region.
James is the Administrative Partner of the K&L Gates Taipei office. James represents issuers and borrowers in a variety of corporate finance transactions. His experience includes public offerings and private placements of equity, debt, convertible and other securities, export credit facilities, bank loans, securitization of accounts receivable, cross-border mergers and acquisitions, trade financing and derivative transactions.
Howard is a partner in the Shanghai and San Francisco offices. He has gained a reputation as a practical attorney who understands the culture and business objectives of technology companies. Howard has developed a practice focusing on intellectual property issues, representing Asian technology leaders and servicing their legal needs. He represents blue-chip technology clients as well as small, aggressive technology startups.
K&L Gates Greater China Offices: Beijing Suite 711-712, Tower W1, Oriental Plaza No.1 East Chang An Avenue Dongcheng District, Beijing, 100738 Tel +86.10.8518.8528 | Fax +86.10.8518.9299 Hong Kong 44th Floor, Edinburgh Tower, The Landmark 15 Queen’s Road Central, Hong Kong Tel +852.2230.3500 | Fax +852.2511.9515 Shanghai Suite 3705, Park Place, 1601 Nanjing Road West Jing An District, Shanghai, 200040 Tel +86.21.2211.2000 | Fax +86.21.3251.8918 Taipei 30/F, 95 Tun Hwa S. Road, Sec. 2 Taipei, 106 Tel +886.2.2326.5188 | Fax +886.2.2325.5838
K&L Gates LLP comprises nearly 2,000 lawyers practicing in 36 offices across three continents. The firm has one of the largest international practices
in Asia, offering clients seamless service through more than 80 legal professionals in six offices located in Beijing, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Singapore, Taipei and Tokyo.
K&L Gates China PracticeK&L Gates has a team of PRC lawyers who understand the domestic legal system and provide clients with direct access to the latest developments and the requirement of global standards. The lawyers regularly advise clients on investments in the PRC and assist in resolving issues regarding joint ventures, regulatory approvals, tax, employment, foreign ownership restrictions, foreign exchange controls, protection of intellectual property, contentious disputes, and repatriation of capital and profits.
The lawyers also assist clients on capital markets transactions including IPOs, listings on stock exchanges and PIPEs in Hong Kong, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Working closely with private equity funds and investment managers, as well as state owned enterprises, K&L Gates lawyers have rich experience in mergers and acquisitions and other financing transactions.
Key Facts and Attributes:• Made its mark in Asia with many “firsts,”
including assisting the first non-bank to obtain Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor status in China and the first Chinese company to list on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
• Listed as one of three American Lawyer Global 50 firms with the same six-office footprint in Asia.
• Named in 2009 among the Asia Legal Business ”Fast 30” as one of the fastest-growing law firms in Asia.
• Recently short-listed by The Lawyer as an “International Law Firm of the Year.”
• Fully integrated into the K&L Gates network of lawyers across 30 other offices in Europe, the United States, and the Middle East.
46 ISSUE 7.5
► qUICk FaCTS aBoUT ChengDU• Over 4,000 lawyers (8,000 in Sichuan)• Approximately 300 law firms (770 in Sichuan)• 2009 GDP reached RMB450bn, up 14.7% • More than 130 of the world’s 500 largest
companies have subsidiaries, assembly and manufacturing bases or R&D centres in Chengdu; among them are Intel, Sony, Toyota, Microsoft, foxconn, Citibank, Lafarge, Coca-Cola, GE, HSBC, and Hutchison Whampoa
• In the first quarter of 2010, the total amount of foreign direct investment in Chengdu reached US$1bn, an increase of 97% over the same period of last year
• In 2009 income from software and information services totalled RMB75.6bn, up 47% year-on-year
• In 2009 26,130 patent applications were filed by Chengdu companies, and 16,349 cases were authorised, the highest mandate for any city in West and Central China
Chengdu 2010:Land of abundance
The second anniversary of the Wenchuan earthquake that devastated Sichuan province was 12 May 2010. This year,
those affected have been given a breath of new hope, as the majority of the planned RMB1trn reconstruction projects have been completed. The economy and infrastructure of the province is not only restored but has emerged from the disaster even better than before.
Law firms in Chengdu, the capital city of Sichuan, have dedicated a considerable amount of time and effort towards aiding victims and supporting relief and rebuilding efforts in the past two years. With the reconstruction
work setting off a new upsurge in investments and transactions into the region, Chengdu’s law firms have now gained new growth momentum and become more involved in all aspects of the region’s economic development.
Tahota, Chengdu’s largest law firm by headcount and the winner of ALB’s West China Law Firm of the Year in 2010 and 2008, has reported 66% growth in revenue for the first quarter of this year, over the same period last year. And Cheng Shoutai, the founder and managing partner, is bullish on the prospects for the rest of this year and beyond.
“Just by looking at the soaring number of foreign banks and financial
aLB speCiaL repOrT | Chengdu 2010 >>
On track to become the financial and commercial centre of South-West China, Chengdu’s legal industry is undergoing significant changes. Most are driven by growing demand in the middle and upper market segments. ALB reports
institutions that have established branches in Chengdu and the top-grade office buildings newly added to downtown, anyone can get a good sense of how strongly and quickly the city has recovered from the tragedy and
47www.legalbusinessonline.com
transformed to triumph,” said Cheng. In the course of this transformation,
law firms are facing new opportunities and are standing at the threshold of a new phase of market dynamism. Tahota, for example, has been retained to provide local legal services and advice on the newly initiated Chengdu International Commerce Centre project, which is jointly developed by three major Hong Kong property developers – Sun Hung Kai Properties, Henderson Land Development and Wharf Holdings This will create an epoch-making new landmark on Chengdu’s skyline.
In addition, Tahota has recently opened its Chongqing branch as a strategic move to reinforce its market leadership in West China. “The synergy and interactions between the development of Chengdu and the other major regional centre, Chongqing, will generate incredible growth opportunities for firms that can straddle the two cities,” Cheng says.
Changing landscapeThe marketplace has seen many changes in recent years, including an increasing number of new entrants in the local market, partner defections and the rise to prominence of several key firms. The changing demands of an expanding portfolio of clients – from domestic SMEs to global MNCs – has driven Chengdu firms to actively acquire and improve their skillsets and capabilities. Ambitious lawyers are, at the same time, motivated to switch
led by Dingli’s former director Jiang Min and partners Zhang Jiarong and Gary Xiao, left the firm to set up Gu Yu, which focuses primarily on general corporate, foreign legal affairs, real estate and construction and government projects.
“We were approached by a few national firms to join them, but we’ve decided to build up a new brand from scratch ourselves. We believe the legal market in Sichuan has a lot to offer, particularly in the middle and upper market segments,” says Gary Xiao, the deputy head of foreign legal affairs division of Gu Yu. “So we strive to be strong local advisors, who are better positioned to service and benefit from the province’s economic growth.”
Xiao expects his firm to recruit ten more lawyers in the next few years, pushing the total number of legal practitioners towards 30.
It’s common practice for large Beijing firms to snare partners – even an entire team – from leading local firms to establish and expand their branch
► noTICaBle loCal aDVISoRSFirm Managingpartner Total
numberoflawyers
Office(s)
Tahota 泰和泰 Cheng Shoutai 程守太 139 Chengdu, Beijing, Shenzhen, Dalian, Chongqing, Hong Kong
Sichuan Jun He 四川君合* Qin Zejun 秦泽均 60 ChengduSifangda 四方达 Li Shiliang 李世亮 52 ChengduShowme 守民 Liu Shoumin 刘守民 49 ChengduDingli 鼎立 Shi Jie 施杰 48 ChengduYingji 英济 Wang Nengchun 王能春 44 Chengdu, ChongqingHuitao 汇韬 Li Qijun 李启军 31 ChengduYuanxu 元绪 Xie Jiazuo 谢佳佐 28 Chengdu, BeijingYun Kui 运逵 Yang Yunkui 阳运逵 26 ChengduKangwei 康维 Gu Peidong 顾培东 18 ChengduNote: Numbers of lawyers were obtained from the website of Chengdu Bar Association and each law firm on 12 May 2010.*Sichuan Jun He is not affiliated with Beijing Jun He.
aLB speCiaL repOrT | Chengdu 2010 >>
Cheng ShoutaiTahota
“anyone can get a good sense of how strongly and quickly the city has recovered from the tragedy and transformed to triumph”
Cheng Shoutai Tahota
penetrated the Sichuan market in a different way. In 2007 it established a strategic alliance with leading local firm Sifangda, which has been administered and operated as an office of Grandall since. The relationship has been beneficial for both firms – they are contemplating a full integration in the near future, upon receiving approval from the regulators.
Zhang Ruji, the managing partner of King & Wood’s offices in both Chengdu and Chongqing, relocated to the Chengdu office in 2001 and assisted with the setup of the firm’s Chongqing office in 2006. “As the scale and sophistication of Sichuan enterprises’ projects continues to grow, these clients increasingly prefer to hire bigger and more established national firms as their external counsel. By joining national firms, local lawyers generally can have a more prestigious platform to develop large corporate clients, boost their exposure in handling larger projects and [have] access to a wider range of resources,” he says
Staff movements, however, are in both directions – reflecting the dynamics of the market. While many lawyers have left local practices to join national firms, some have departed national firms to take up more senior roles in local partnerships. For example, several senior associates and partners at King & Wood left to join local firms as partners and even practice heads. “A steady level of personnel movements between leading
platforms to seek an increased chance of working on more lucrative and complex transactions.
Dingli, one of the larger local firms, has lost a number of corporate partners in the past year, some going to Beijing firms such as Dacheng and Ying Ke. In 2009 a team of lawyers
offices. In 2007, Dacheng poached senior partners to lead its Chengdu team, from local firms Yinzheng, Huitao and Hesheng. In the same year, Zhonglun W&D hired a partner from leading full-service local firm Yingji for its Chengdu opening.
Grandall Legal Group, however,
Zhang RujiKing & Wood
48
aLB speCiaL repOrT | Chengdu 2010 >>
ISSUE 7.5
national firms and local firms is critical for transferring knowledge, spreading good practices and lifting the bar in the local industry,” says Zhang.
In 2006, Liu Bin, a former partner with King & Wood, was appointed to the partnership of Tahota, boosting the capability and expertise of Tahota’s capital markets and securities team. As lead partner, in 2009 he acted as the issuer’s advisor in the IPO and listing of Chengdu Guibao Science Technology, on Shenzhen’s newly-launched ChiNext board. The company was among the first batch of 28 companies to be listed on this board.In the same year, Liu also advised Sichuan Changhong on successfully issuing RMB3bn of convertible corporate bonds on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. In doing so, Tahota becomes one of the few local firms that have a track record of completing both an IPO and debt market deals.
Regional financial centreLast September, JPMorgan Chase Bank (China) opened its fifth China branch in Chengdu – a key development for the city’s plan to become a financial centre for the South-west region. “Chengdu is an important economic, financial and cultural centre in South-West China. The city is uniquely positioned to serve the development of enterprises in the region and we are delighted to make Chengdu our home,” said Heidi Miller, chief executive officer of JPMorgan Treasury & Securities Services, at the Chengdu opening ceremony.
Major international financial institutions – including Citigroup, HSBC, Standard Chartered Bank, ABN AMRO, BNP Paribas, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ – all have established their branches in the city. The number of Chinese and foreign-invested banking institutions stationed
in Chengdu has reached 45 so far. Domestic banks also have developed vigorously; the People’s Bank of China has set up its South-West China headquarters in Chengdu, and almost all domestic banks and securities brokerage firms have located their regional headquarters or branches here.
The prosperous financial sector in Chengdu has led to strong demands for banking and finance-related legal services and products. Many local firms claim that banking and finance is a main focus area for them and has been one of the fastest-growing practices. Sifangda has enjoyed an average growth rate of 20% in annual revenues over the past few years, and has seen over 70% of its income coming from non-contentious corporate and advisory work since 2008. A large number of these mandates come from banks and financial institutions.
“The flourishing of [the] local economy is luring more banks and financial institutions to the city to capitalise on the economic growth. The local government’s efforts in promoting Chengdu as a regional financial hub are also influential,” says Li Shiliang, founder and managing partner of Sifangda. “I’m confident that more investments will be channelled into the financial sector, and, therefore, the relevant practice areas at local firms will be even more buoyant.”
Sichuan Yuanxu, led by managing partner Xie Jiazuo, is known locally for its expertise in finance, capital markets and insurance practices. The firm has serviced an array of banking, insurance and investment firms. “Given the continuing development and maturation of Chengdu’s financial industry, I foresee the potential for our current practice to double in size and revenue in the coming years,” Xie says.
“a steady level of personnel movements between leading national firms and local firms is critical for transferring knowledge, spreading good practices and lifting the bar in the local industry”
Zhang Ruji King & Wood
► BeIJIng FIRMS In ChengDUFirm Managingpartnerof
ChengduofficeNumberoflawyersinChengdu
Yearestablished
King & Wood 金杜 Zhang Ruji 张如积 23 1998Guantao 观韬 Qiu Guangli 仇光莉 12 2001Dacheng 大成 Leng Yunsong 冷云松 14 2001Zhong Yin 中银 Li Xinwei 李新卫 14 2003Zhonglun W&D 中伦文德 Wang Zhijian 王志坚 13 2007Huatai 华泰 Chang Xiaoyi 常孝义 7 2007Huicheng 惠诚 Hao Xueyu 郝学余 3 2009Yingke 盈科 Zeng Wenzhong 曾文忠 n/a 2010Note: Numbers of lawyers were obtained from the website of Chengdu Bar Association and each law firm on 12 May 2010
例如:股东利用公司法人格、实施犯罪,法院在刑事诉讼中也应当揭开公司面纱。又如,欧共体条约第85条第1款规定,禁止直接或间接设定买卖价格或者其他交易条件,以对欧共体共同市场的自由竞争产生阻碍、限制或扭曲。在imperial Chemical industries Ltd. v. Commisssion eC一案中,欧共体委员会调查发现,三种价格稳定的染料在一定时期内同时涨价,原因在于母公司通过电传给所有子公司下达了指令。欧共体委员会和法院都认
As a growing number of the firm’s Sichuan clients are expanding their business into Beijing, many Beijing companies are looking to invest into Sichuan, Xie has masterminded the establishment of its Beijing branch, which opened in March. “The Beijing office will serve as a gateway for us to expand our corporate and advisory practices and a window for us to keep updated with the latest legislative and regulatory changes as well as business intelligence,” he says.
With a well-established and accessible banking and finance mechanism, Chengdu naturally becomes a nurturing ground for high-tech and IT start-up companies. The city has already cultivated a large pool of fast-growing quality enterprises, which are planning to go public and to fund their next phase of growth.
In the past three years, about 20 Sichuan-based companies have launched IPOs and listed on stock exchanges at home and abroad. King & Wood advised on 10 of the 20 IPOs,
demonstrating its clear dominance in this market segment. The firm has already received mandates for more than 30 IPOs by Sichuan companies. “Judging by the number of companies that are planning a public float and the considerable number of companies that are eligible for an IPO, Chengdu definitely has the strongest economy in West and Central China,” says Zhang.
aLB speCiaL repOrT | Chengdu 2010 >>
► ChengDU: heaDlIne TRanSaCTIonS 2009-2010Deal Value
(US$m)Firmsinvolved
United Eagle Airlines restructuring 1,000 Tahota, Jun HeDiageo–Chengdu Yingsheng Investment acquisition
925 Haiwen & Partners, Freshfields, Slaughter & May
Guibao Science Technology IPO on ChiNext 44 TahotaSichuan Tengzhong–Hummer acquisition Undis. Jun He, Shearman & Sterling
He anticipates larger firms, including Zhong Lun and AllBright, will establish themselves in this nascent market. “The wealth gap between the eastern regions and the western regions is narrowing and will continue to narrow. This impetus will translate into an exponential growth in demand for legal services, in all disciplines and at all levels,” he says. ALB
50
MarkeT DaTa | M&A >>
ISSUE 7.5
Greater China M&A Activity - Quarterly Trends
League Table of Financial Advisors to Greater China M&A (Jan 01, 2010 - May 14, 2010)League Table of Legal Advisors to Greater China M&A (Jan 01, 2010 - May 14, 2010)
27-Apr-10 Wheelock Properties Ltd Wheelock & Co Ltd 889
Charles River Laboratories Inc Davis Polk & Wardwell; Advising financial advisor (JPMorgan):Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
6-May-10 Hua Xia Bank Co Ltd (27.15% stake)
Deutsche Bank SA; Shougang Group Corp; and State Grid Corporation
Concord & Partners Law Offices 3,042Freshfields
2357-May-10 Arc of Triumph Development Co Ltd (40% stake)
Power Link Fortune Ltd International Entertainment Corporation
Zhengda Energy Development (China) Co Ltd
28-Apr-10 Shandong Century Electric Power Development Co Ltd (84.31% stake)
Huadian Power International Corporation Ltd
346
AnnouncementDate
Target Company Target/SellerLegal Advisor
Bidder Company Bidder Legal Advisor Seller Company Deal Value(USDm)
Greater China Legal Business ISSUE 7.6
Top 10 Announced Deals - Greater China (17 April, 2010 - 14 May, 2010)
Valu
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MARKET DATE | M&A >>
M&A TRANSACTIONS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
Notes: Based on announced deals, including lapsed and withdrawn bids, from 17 April 2010 to 14 May 2010•Based on geography of either target, bidder or seller company being China, Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan•Includes all deals valued over USD 5m. Where deal value not disclosed, deal has been entered based on turnover of target exceeding USD 10m•Activities excluded from table include property transactions and restructurings where the ultimate shareholders' interests are not changed•League tables are ranked by volume•Q2 10 * = 1 April 2010 to 14 May 2010
Rank House Value (USDm) Deal Count
1 Jones Day 2,490 13
2 Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer 4,538 11
3 Allen & Overy 2,702 6
4 King & Wood 1,198 6
5 Grandall Legal Group 486 6
6 Clifford Chance 1,235 5
7 DLA Piper 79 5
8 Slaughter and May 38,683 4
9 Simpson Thacher & Bartlett 37,232 4
10 Linklaters 7,740 4
Based on geography of either target, bidder or seller company being China, Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan
Rank House Value (USDm) Deal Count
1 Deutsche Bank 42,435 9
2 Morgan Stanley 31,681 8
3 Credit Suisse 42,145 6
4 Citigroup 37,492 6
5 China International Capital 8,164 6
6 JP Morgan 7,338 6
7 Goldman Sachs 44,560 5
8 Optima Capital 523 5
9 Somerley 2,881 4
10 KPMG 1,864 4
Based on geography of either target, bidder or seller company being China, Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan
In association with
26-Apr-10 SCA (Asian packaging business)
International Paper Co Allen & Overy Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget SCA 200Advising seller:Clifford Chance
BG Group Plc28-Apr-10 Seabank Power Ltd (50% stake)
Advising seller:Linklaters
Cheung Kong Infrastructure Holdings Ltd
Simmons & Simmons 322
Q103
Q209
Q210*
Q110
Q409
Q309
Q109
Q203
Q303
Q403
Q104
Q204
Q304
Q404
Q105
Q205
Q305
Q405
Q106
Q206
Q306
Q406
Q107
Q207
Q307
Q407
Q108
Q208
Q308
Q408
MarkeT DaTa | capital markets >>
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DeBT CapiTaL MarkeTs TraNsaCTiONs LisT China, Hong kong25 apr – 22 Mayissuer proceeds (usDm) issue Date Currency Bookrunner(s) sector
CHiNaCNPC 2,930.6 04/28/10 CNY Industrial & Comm Bank China; Bank Communications (Shanghai) Energy and PowerPetroChina Co Ltd 2,929.6 05/19/10 CNY Agricultural Bank of China; Bank of China Ltd Energy and PowerPetroChina Co Ltd 2,929.6 05/19/10 CNY Industrial & Comm Bank China; Bank Communications (Shanghai) Energy and PowerMinistry of Railways(China) 1,465.3 04/28/10 CNY Bank of China Ltd; Agricultural Bank of China Government and AgenciesAnshan Iron & Steel Group Corp 732.2 05/11/10 CNY Agricultural Bank of China; Industrial & Comm Bank China MaterialsWISCO 586.0 05/04/10 CNY Industrial & Comm Bank China MaterialsEerduosi State-Owned Ast Mgmt 410.0 05/11/10 CNY Chinalion Securities Co Ltd FinancialsDalian Equipment Manufacturing 366.3 04/30/10 CNY China Securities Co IndustrialsTianjin TEDA Group Co Ltd 322.3 05/04/10 CNY China Construction Bank Real EstateRenhe Commercial Holdings Co 297.2 05/13/10 USD Bank of America Merrill Lynch; Bank of China International; JP Morgan; UBS Investment Bank Real EstateShanxi Coking Coal Grp Co Ltd 219.8 04/27/10 CNY Shanghai Pudong Development Bk MaterialsFu Shun City Constr Invest 219.7 05/11/10 CNY Jianyin Securities; First Capital Securities IndustrialsShanghai Oriental Pearl Co Ltd 190.4 05/13/10 CNY China Merchants Bank Media and EntertainmentNanchang Urban Construction 175.8 04/30/10 CNY Guosheng Securities Co Ltd IndustrialsSinochem Corp 146.5 04/28/10 CNY CITIC Securities; China Citic Bank Energy and PowerJizhong Energy Group Co Ltd 146.5 05/04/10 CNY Bank of China Ltd; Industrial & Comm Bank China FinancialsYima Coal Ind Grp Co Ltd 146.5 05/06/10 CNY China Minsheng Banking Corp MaterialsChina Nonferrous Metal Mining 146.5 04/26/10 CNY China Everbright Bank MaterialsBeijing Tourism Group 131.8 05/06/10 CNY China Securities Co Consumer Products and ServicesFantasia Holdings Group Co Ltd 117.9 05/05/10 USD Bank of America Merrill Lynch; Citi; UBS Investment Bank Real EstateInner Mongolia Hi-Tech Hldg 117.2 04/29/10 CNY Bohai Securities Co Ltd High TechnologyJin Tan Constr Asset Invest 117.2 05/12/10 CNY Chinalion Securities Co Ltd FinancialsYunnan Tin Group Co Ltd 102.5 05/06/10 CNY China Citic Bank; China Minsheng Banking Corp MaterialsCOSCO Container Shipping Co 87.9 04/28/10 CNY China Citic Bank; CITIC Securities IndustrialsBoComm-HK 50.0 04/26/10 USD Standard Chartered Bank PLC Financials
HONg kONgMCE Finance Ltd 592.0 05/12/10 USD Deutsche Bank Securities Corp; Bank of America Merrill Lynch; RBS; ANZ Banking Group; Citi;
Commerzbank AG; Credit Agricole; National Australia Bank; UBS Investment BankFinancials
Li & Fung Ltd 399.4 05/06/10 USD Citi; HSBC Holdings PLC; JP Morgan Consumer Products and ServicesKowloon Canton Railway Corp 102.8 05/07/10 HKD RBS IndustrialsHK Land Treasury Services 72.1 05/14/10 SGD DBS Bank Ltd FinancialsHongkong Electric Finance Ltd 60.5 05/03/10 HKD HSBC Holdings PLC Financials
equiTy CapiTaL MarkeTs TraNsaCTiONs LisTChina, Hong kong25 apr – 22 Mayissuer proceeds (usDm) issue Date Currency Bookrunner(s) sector
CHiNaPing An Ins(Grp)Co of China 1,246.1 05/13/10 HKD Goldman Sachs & Co FinancialsSichuan Kelun Pharm Co Ltd 732.5 05/20/10 CNY Sinolink Securities Co Ltd HealthcareHangzhou Hikvision Digital 498.0 05/13/10 CNY China Merchant Securities Co High TechnologyLiao Ning Oxiranchem Inc 336.2 05/04/10 CNY China Securities Co Ltd MaterialsShenzhen Aisidi Co Ltd 329.5 05/13/10 CNY Pingan Securities Co Ltd Consumer Products and ServicesShanghai Electric Group Co Ltd 325.3 05/12/10 CNY UBS Securities Inc; Credit Suisse Founder Sec Ltd IndustrialsRainbow Department Store Co 293.5 05/17/10 CNY China Merchant Securities Co RetailZibo Qixiang Tengda Chem Co 275.0 04/29/10 CNY Huatai United Securities Co MaterialsXinjiang Tianshan Cement Co 225.5 04/28/10 CNY Hongyuan Securities Co Ltd MaterialsHenan Xindaxin Materials Co 222.5 05/04/10 CNY Hualin Securities Co Ltd MaterialsHainan Honz Pharm Co Ltd 219.7 05/11/10 CNY Haitong Securities HealthcareGuizhou Bailing Grp Pharm 216.8 05/20/10 CNY Hongyuan Securities Co Ltd HealthcareZhejiang Jiaxin Silk Corp Ltd 215.9 04/26/10 CNY Everbright Securities Co Consumer StaplesGlodon Software Co Ltd 212.4 05/07/10 CNY Huatai Securities Consumer Products and ServicesChina NavInfo Co Ltd 210.0 04/29/10 CNY China Securities Co Ltd IndustrialsNVC Lighting Tech Co Ltd 196.3 05/12/10 HKD Goldman Sachs & Co; HSBC Investment Bank Asia Ltd IndustrialsXuchang Yuandong Drive Shaft 183.2 04/29/10 CNY Central China Securities IndustrialsZhejiang Aishida Electric Co 165.2 04/26/10 CNY Hongyuan Securities Co Ltd Consumer StaplesDo-Fluoride Chemicals Co Ltd 155.8 04/29/10 CNY Pingan Securities Co Ltd MaterialsWolong Electric Group Co Ltd 142.1 05/14/10 CNY Haitong Securities Energy and PowerJanus(Dongguan) Precision 131.8 05/04/10 CNY Pingan Securities Co Ltd Consumer Products and ServicesGuangzhou Echom Science&Tech 127.3 05/17/10 CNY Sinolink Securities Co Ltd TelecommunicationsJiangsu Yoke Technology Co Ltd 123.1 05/07/10 CNY Huatai Securities MaterialsChina Kinwa High Tech Co Ltd 114.8 05/14/10 CNY Dongguan Securities Co Ltd MaterialsWuhu Token Science Co Ltd 110.7 05/11/10 CNY Pingan Securities Co Ltd MaterialsZhejiang Kangsheng Co Ltd 105.4 05/17/10 CNY Sinolink Securities Co Ltd IndustrialsZhongyuan Special Steel Co Ltd 104.1 05/20/10 CNY Haitong Securities MaterialsHunan Hansen Pharmaceutical 99.7 05/07/10 CNY Hongyuan Securities Co Ltd HealthcareJiangsu Changfa Refrigeration 97.5 05/13/10 CNY Jiangnan Securities Co Ltd IndustrialsHebei Hengxin Mobile Bus Co 96.6 05/04/10 CNY Pingan Securities Co Ltd TelecommunicationsFujian Sunnada Commun Co Ltd 87.9 05/17/10 CNY Pacific Securities TelecommunicationsShenzhen H&T Intelligent 85.6 04/26/10 CNY Guosen Securities Co Ltd High TechnologyYouyuan International Hldg Ltd 82.7 05/20/10 HKD HSBC Investment Bank Asia Ltd Consumer StaplesJiangsu Jiujiujiu Technology 82.4 05/07/10 CNY GF Securities MaterialsLanzhou Haimo Technologies Co 77.4 05/04/10 CNY Everbright Securities Co Energy and PowerCharm Communications Inc 74.2 05/04/10 USD Credit Suisse Media and EntertainmentLansen Pharmaceutical Hldgs Co 71.2 04/30/10 HKD Piper Jaffray Inc HealthcareWinall Hi-tech Seed Co Ltd 68.8 05/11/10 CNY Guoyuan Securities Co Ltd Consumer StaplesGuizhou Changzheng Elec Co Ltd 66.5 05/06/10 CNY Minsheng Securities IndustrialsJinkoSolar Holding Co Ltd 64.2 05/13/10 USD Credit Suisse High TechnologyShenzhen Infotech Tech Co Ltd 61.5 05/11/10 CNY First Capital Securities Consumer Products and ServicesShenzhen Das Intellitech Co 60.0 05/20/10 CNY China Jianyin Investment Ltd High TechnologyGuoguang Electric Co Ltd 53.8 05/11/10 CNY Southwest Securities Inc High Technology
HONg kONgCOSCO Pacific Ltd 601.3 04/29/10 HKD JP Morgan Securities Asia Pte; Goldman Sachs & Co IndustrialsDoxen Energy Group Ltd 128.5 05/18/10 HKD Taifook Securities Group Ltd RetailChow Sang Sang Holdings Intl 128.5 04/27/10 HKD Bank of America Merrill Lynch Consumer Products and ServicesTUL 109.5 04/29/10 HKD Morgan Stanley HealthcareUnited Power Investment Ltd 60.1 05/20/10 HKD Sun Hung Kai Investment Svcs; Get Nice Capital Ltd RetailChina Precious Metal Resources 53.6 04/29/10 HKD Oriental Patron Securities Ltd; Cantor Fitzgerald Inc Consumer StaplesNeo Telemedia Ltd 52.7 05/14/10 HKD Kingston Securities Limited Media and EntertainmentOP Financial Investments Ltd 38.4 05/04/10 HKD Kingston Securities Limited FinancialsInterchina Holdings Co Ltd 36.8 04/28/10 HKD Kingston Securities Limited Financials
Deputy General Counsel (10+ yrs pqe) Shanghai A world leading IT company is seeking a senior lawyer who is ready to take on a General Counsel role within one year. You must have over ten years of experience in corporate, commercial and compliance matters, ideally at an IT or software company. FCPA experience is a must. Native mandarin and excellent English required. Ref: 8938/CB
China Legal Counsel (6+ yrs pqe) Beijing Do you have substantial experience in the IT, telecom or a related industry? Our client, a Fortune 500 IT company, is seeking a talented lawyer to cover a wide range of legal matters. The successful candidate has a mix of corporate, commercial and litigation experience and a working knowledge of regulatory and compliance issues as they affect the IT industry. Fluent English and native Mandarin required. Ref: 8920/CB
Brand Protection Manager (5+ yrs pqe) Hong Kong Help lead the anti-counterfeiting programs for a world famous fashion brand. This position liaises with local enforcement officials and is responsible for securing evidential chains. You must have at least five years of hands-on experience in IP investigation, enforcement and litigation at a multinational company, preferably in the luxury or retail industry. Must have fluent English and Mandarin; Cantonese, Italian, or French would be a plus. Ref: 8933/CB
Senior Legal Manager (4-6 yrs pqe) Beijing An experienced legal manager is needed to support the activities of a well-known US conglomerate. This role covers a wide range of issues, including contracts, litigation, investigations and liaising with government bodies. Management skills and fluent Mandarin are needed to succeed. Ref: 8915/CB
Legal Counsel (3+ yrs pqe) Shanghai Great opportunity with the expanding team at this Hong Kong based financial services firm. The ideal candidate is PRC qualified and has proven experience in property funds, financing, asset management and private equities. Native Mandarin and good English required. Ref: 8859/CB
Private Practice
Senior Associate - M&A (7+ yrs pqe) Hong Kong This respected Australian law firm needs an experienced lawyer to handle M&A, joint ventures, outsourcing and corporate or commercial transactions. Experience in a financial institution or IT/telecom-munications role is strongly desired. Mandarin language skills would be a plus. Ref: 8923/CB
Senior Associate (5-8 yrs pqe) Shanghai Join the team of this international law firm and work closely with a partner overseeing the Asia region. The incumbent will cover M&A, private equities and venture capital work. US JD graduates preferred, fluent Mandarin and good English a must. Ref: 8925/CB
Litigation Associate (5-7 yrs pqe) Shanghai Are you a PRC qualified lawyer with a US LLM? Our client, a well known international law firm with a strong commercial litigation practice, is seeking a senior associate to help lead its talented team. Native Mandarin and fluent English required. Ref: 8926/CB
Banking and Finance Lawyer (3+ yrs pqe) Beijing Focus on lending, asset finance, project finance and derivatives at this top-tier UK law firm. The ideal candidate has PRC qualification, a law degree from a top Chinese school and relevant experience at an international or top-tier Chinese law firm. Excellent academics, native Mandarin and fluent English language skills required. Ref: 8910/CB
Paralegal – Hong Kong This elite UK law firm is seeking a trilingual paralegal to support a key team in its Hong Kong office. Hong Kong IPO and M&A experience with PRC qualification required. Only candidates who are fluent in Cantonese, Mandarin and English will be considered. Ref: 8928/CB
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