Asia-Pacific

Check out this week's top Asia-Pacific news on the Asia Pacific Headline page.

Follow RoF

For all the breaking news, follow RoF on Twitter and Facebook

         
   

Results

Find out how your firm did in the RollOnFriday UK Firm of the Year and Australian Firm of the Year surveys 2011.

Fast Track

Fast Track is the easiest way to get a training contract or vac scheme. It puts you in touch with some of the best firms in the UK and all in under five minutes. If you type fast.

Weekend

Make the most of your free time. Weekend features the best exhibitions, shows and outings for this and next weekend.

TCs here

Want to know more about the training contracts at individual firms? Training Applications features brochures, information and application details for leading firms.

UK City Firms

Clyde & Co (London)

Our view...

At the time of writing, the paint was barely dry on new Clyde & Co. That's the merged firm of Clyde & Co and Barlow Lyde & Gilbert. CCBLG 2.0. As the name suggests, years of history vanished when Clydes - an international shipping behemoth - subsumed BLG, a firm which had gone through some stormy weather (BLG's turnover fell 6% to £80.8m last year), and was happy to take refuge in the Clyde's dry harbour. And vanished beneath the waves. "Merger"? Well, maybe...

We originally predicted that the merger would see Clydes zoom further up the financial rankings, and potential revenues should be over £300m. But Mystic RoF also said that "Clydes is likely to be very much in the driving seat."

As this is all new, it's hard to get a handle on how it's working out for everyone involved - especially the BLG-ers. The ex-firm's management had certainly been thrusting young bucks, snapping up the cream of the Halliwells insurance practice. but had also lost partners to...Clyde & Co. So perhaps the takeover was just a lovely big happy reunion. Let's wait for the waves to subside...

Clydes, along with Holman Fenwick & Willan and Ince & Co, was traditionally one of the three great shipping firms in the City. This wasn't necessarily a good thing: collision work has been declining thanks to better maritime regulation and training, and protection and indemnity clubs are, well, clubbing together to drive their lawyers' rates down as well as bringing more work in-house. As European expertise in the field increases, more work is also going to Netherlands, Belgium and Germany, whose rates are generally cheaper than in the UK.
 
In view of these changes Clydes decided to diversify and expand. And so far it seems to have made a huge success of it. Turnover been rising since 2005 - credit crunch or not - and the firm's 2010-11 results showed that turnover was up 10% on the previous year, at £212m. The firm now has a total of 164 partners and profits per equity partner of £605,000 last year - that's nearly £80,000 more than Holman Fenwick & Willan.
 
Clydes currently has a strong international presence with 24 offices worldwide - having recently added New Jersey and Saudi Arabia to the list - and it makes a big play of its international presence. Which is perhaps unsurprising given that 42% of the firm's revenue is generated outside the UK. And this trend is likely to continue as the firm has just announced that it will be merging with Canada's Nicholl Paskell-Mede September 2011.

A good spread of international offices means that there are opportunities for trainees to spend their second or third seats overseas - in Dubai, Hong Kong, Singapore or, err, Piraeus. We know where we'd rather go. The firm also has a Guildford office that famously pays London rates. Rather less famously it also expects its lawyers to work London hours, but given the lower living costs which normally come with provincial offices this still sounds like a pretty good deal.
 
Shipping is still important, but insurance and reinsurance and now aviation are also very strong sectors. It's now a proper full service law firm, with the profits and overseas offices to match. Clydes' corporate and commercial practice now makes up almost 30% of its worldwide turnover. This explains why its assistants reckon they work harder than at the other, traditional shipping firms - but with targets at a fairly gentle 1430 hours it still compares very favourably with the bigger City outfits.
 
The main reason for this is that unlike most City firms, the majority of Clydes' work is still litigation rather than corporate. Inevitably this sort of practice doesn't require the level of all-nighters you'll experience at more transaction-led firms, and it's great news if you fancy ending up as a litigator. But possibly not the first choice if you want to specialise in M&A .
 
Assistants seem to enjoy their work, the “very friendly atmosphere with no stay late culture” and the fact that it's clearly an ambitious, business-like firm. Although the go-getting, slightly aggressive atmosphere probably wouldn't suit shrinking violets, the offices are “falling apart around our ears”- but are set to be replaced with swanky new Aldgate offices this August - and there are grumbles about what are perceived to be “terrible partnership prospects for women”.

And the firm fared badly in RollOnFriday's Firm of the Year survey, propping up the latter half of the table just above potential merger partner Beachcroft.  The low placing may be partly be explained by the fact that salaries are reasonable rather than spectacular. But many will think that the shorter hours compensate for this.

Grumble aside this is “a great place to work with nurturing and encouraging partners and a great team of assistants who look out for each other”. Allied with an expanding overseas network, rapidly rising profits and reasonably civilised hours it's a solid choice.

For more information on Clyde & Co click here
For more information on Clyde & Co click here

Salary

Salary (1st seat trainee): £35,000
Salary (NQ): £59,000
Salary (1PQE): £64,000
Salary (2PQE): £66,000
Salary (3PQE): £72,000
Salary (Salaried partner):

Bonus Scheme

Bonus scheme: Yes
Typical bonus as % of salary
- NQ: 0%
- 1PQE: %
- 2PQE: %
- 3PQE: %
- 4PQE: %
- 5PQE: %
- Partner: %

Training

Grant for GDL: £7,000
Grant for LPC: £7,000
Training places per year: 22
% of trainees retained: 88%

RollOnFriday Firm of the Year Scores

Salary: 63%
Development: 58%
Work/Life: 67%
Openness: 53%
Biscuits: 74%
Toilets: 69%
Social: 65%
Firm of the year overall score: 63%

Benefits

Holiday allowance: 25
Flexi holiday: No
Pension: Contributory between 4% & 8%
Healthcare: Yes
Maternity policy: Enhanced. Full pay for 13 weeks, £200 a week for another 13 weeks.
Target hours: 1430
Childcare vouchers: Yes
Gym: Subsidised membership off site
Restaurant: Subsidised Starbucks
24 hour photocopying support: No
24 hour secretarial support: No
Other: Option to buy a further 5 days holiday each year

Your Views

Feel free to enter your comments on the news story below, subject to our terms and conditions. Please note that comments are subject to moderation and so will not appear immediately.

Please keep it nice. Thanks.

Be the first to add your view