Mills and reeve football story1/8/2023 The combined firm brings Mills & Reeve to nearly 1,000 staff and 116 partners in offices in Birmingham, Cambridge, Leeds, London, Manchester and Norwich. The firm was created in 2007 following the merger of Maxwell Batley and Winward Fearon. The merger with Maxwell Winward will complete on 1 June, adding a total of eight partners to Mills & Reeve’s London office at Monument Place.Ī well-regarded specialist outfit, Maxwell Winward will add 22 lawyers to the combined firm in real estate, construction, corporate, dispute resolution and projects. Mills & Reeve head of international Tom Pickthorn commented: ‘With the uncertainties and opportunities arising from Brexit, it is more important than ever that we can provide our clients a seamless services in these key a move to enhance its London real estate team, LB100 firm Mills & Reeve is to tie up with City real estate boutique Maxwell Winward, adding £5.8m to its topline. Graf von Westphalen, which was once part of Osborne Clarke’s European alliance before breaking into separate parts around the turn of the Millennium, has five offices across Germany in Berlin, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg and Munich, while Van Benthem & Keulen is based in Utrecht. It also has joint legal training programmes and secondee exchanges with both firms. The East Anglia-based national firm has worked with each for around 10 years in M&A, private equity, flotations, corporate finance, employment law and commercial disputes. The UK firm said last week it had signed affiliation agreements with Graf von Westphalen in Germany and Van Benthem & Keulen in The Netherlands. In other international news, the instability surrounding Brexit has led to Mills & Reeve formalising two decade-long relationships it has in Europe. ‘Consistent with our wider strategic goal to have a strong presence in all of the major financial centres of the world and with our client-led initiative in Japan, we now intend to open in Tokyo in the first half of 2018.’Īn Ashurst spokesperson said Burrows was leaving the firm’s Tokyo office by mutual consent, adding that the Japanese business was performing well and that firm intended to grow it further. Mayer Brown chairman Paul Theiss said the firm wanted to establish an on-the-ground presence in Japan after clients told them it was needed. Rupert Burrows, Ashurst Tokyo’s former managing partner, will lead a new team at Mayer Brown as it looks to expand its offering in Japan in 2018.īurrows has been based in Ashurst’s well-established Tokyo practice for the past 20 years, is fluent in Japanese and highly regarded for his oil and gas, chemical and infrastructure work. Mayer Brown will open a new office in Tokyo next year after hiring the former head of Ashurst’s Tokyo office.
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