Pulse UK

  • March 04, 2026

    Reed Smith Boosts London NQ Salaries To £135K

    Reed Smith LLP has increased the salaries of newly qualified lawyers in its London office to £135,000 ($180,000) as competition for junior talent remains strong.

  • March 04, 2026

    DLA Piper Hires 4 New Partners In London And Luxembourg

    DLA Piper said Wednesday that it has hired four partners for its offices in London and Luxembourg, boosting its financial services, tax and private equity teams.

  • March 04, 2026

    SRA Closes Hunter's Solicitors Over Employee Dishonesty

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Wednesday that it has shut down Hunter's Solicitors LLP over suspected dishonesty by an employee, as interventions by the watchdog continue to mount.

  • March 03, 2026

    Hogan Lovells' Revenue Climbs 11% As Merger Looms

    Hogan Lovells' global revenue rose by almost 11% in 2025 to about $3.3 billion, the firm said Wednesday as it presses ahead with a planned partner vote on its proposed merger with New York‑based Cadwalader.

  • March 03, 2026

    Harvey Bolsters Team With New Acquisition, BigLaw Hires

    Harvey furthered its growth on Tuesday by acquiring an artificial intelligence-powered customer integration platform and hiring former BigLaw leaders to bolster its staff.

  • March 03, 2026

    PE-Backed Midlands Law Firm Acquires Local Rival

    FBC Manby Bowdler said Tuesday that it has acquired fellow Midlands law firm Jordans Solicitors, its first acquisition since it received backing from a London-based private equity firm.

  • March 03, 2026

    Pro-Israel Barrister Sues Piers Morgan After Podcast Clash

    A pro-Israel barrister has sued broadcaster Piers Morgan for defamation following a one-hour interview in June in which he frequently interrupted his British guest over what he called her "nonsense" defenses. 

  • March 03, 2026

    Hunton Adopts Wexler For Global Litigation Practice

    Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP has chosen to adopt Wexler's AI-powered fact intelligence platform for its global litigation practice, a move to boost lawyers' productivity as they work on complex disputes.

  • March 03, 2026

    SRA Faces LSB Queries Over PM Law's Abrupt Shutdown

    The legal industry's oversight watchdog has moved to scrutinize how effectively the Solicitors Regulation Authority identified and responded to risks to consumers before it intervened in PM Law Ltd. after the group abruptly closed.

  • March 03, 2026

    DLA Piper Fills Out Finance Team With 3 Akin Partners

    DLA Piper has brought on three former Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP finance partners, one of whom was tapped to lead its new cross-border, multidisciplinary global capital solutions team.

  • March 03, 2026

    Macfarlanes To Launch First US Office In New York

    Macfarlanes LLP said Tuesday that it will open a representative office in New York as it looks to strengthen its profile in the U.S. private capital market. 

  • March 03, 2026

    Legal, Audit Bodies Need Tighter AML Controls, FCA Warns

    Legal and accountancy professional bodies are failing to adequately enforce anti-money laundering rules for their member firms, a unit within the Financial Conduct Authority warned Tuesday.

  • March 03, 2026

    London Partner Moves Dip 26% To Start The Year After Spike

    Partner moves in London's legal market plummeted in the first two months of 2026 following "an unprecedented spike" a year earlier, although recruitment activity was still high by historical standards, data published by a legal recruitment consultancy revealed on Tuesday.

  • March 02, 2026

    Cadwalader Continues Restructuring Growth With UK, US Duo

    Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP announced on Monday that it is continuing to invest in its restructuring bench with two lawyers in New York and London.

  • March 02, 2026

    JPMorgan Lawyer Can't Revive Claim After Forging Letters

    A London tribunal has refused to reconsider its decision to throw out a former JPMorgan lawyer's discrimination claim after ruling that she forged medical letters to postpone a hearing.

  • March 09, 2026

    Simmons & Simmons Hires 2 M&A Partners In Europe

    Simmons & Simmons LLP has expanded its mergers and acquisitions operations in Germany and the Netherlands with the hire of two new partners, following a year of significant growth that prompted the firm to restructure its financial markets practice.

  • March 02, 2026

    Cadwalader Sees London Revenue Grow Before Hogan Deal

    Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP said Monday that its office in London has seen gross revenue increase to almost $75 million, as the firm moves forward with a proposed merger with Hogan Lovells.

  • March 02, 2026

    Rio Tinto's AI Push Pressures Law Firms To Share Savings

    As in‑house legal teams turn to artificial intelligence to boost their own productivity, they are increasingly losing patience with law firms that don't pass on similar efficiency gains, Rio Tinto's digital transformation manager said in an interview.

  • March 02, 2026

    Fired Paralegal Assistant Loses Bias Claim Over Monkey Pic

    A paralegal assistant has failed to prove that a colleague's email containing a monkey picture alongside a humorous caption was discriminatory and bosses at his law firm should have taken immediate action over it, an employment tribunal has ruled.

  • March 09, 2026

    Sullivan & Cromwell Hires Another Weil Finance Partner

    Sullivan & Cromwell LLP said Monday that it has recruited a partner from Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP to strengthen its acquisition finance practice in London, the firm's latest lateral hire from its U.S. rival as it expands in the English capital.

  • March 02, 2026

    SFO Denied Final Chance To Cut $128M From ENRC Damages

    The Serious Fraud Office cannot slash its potential payout to Eurasian Natural Resources Corp. by $128 million over its unsuccessful criminal investigation after Britain's highest court refused to weigh in on the case, the parties confirmed on Monday.

  • March 02, 2026

    Japanese Firm Anderson Mori Expands Into Paris

    Anderson Mori & Tomotsune said Monday that it has established a presence in Paris as the Japanese law firm continues its expansion in Europe following launches in London and Brussels.

  • February 27, 2026

    Swedish AI Co. Legora Opens Houston And Chicago Offices

    Sweden-based Legora, which offers a legal artificial intelligence platform, announced Friday the opening of two U.S. offices in Houston and Chicago, with the goal of growing its headcount to over 300 employees in the country this year as part of an international expansion stemming from the company's Series C capital raise late last year.

  • February 27, 2026

    OpenAI Cracks Down On Fake Law Firms Using ChatGPT

    ChatGPT owner OpenAI Inc. has banned a cluster of accounts for supposedly using its models to impersonate law firms in a recovery scam targeting fraud victims.

  • February 27, 2026

    AI Witness Statements Rules Risk Being Unhelpful To Lawyers

    Proposed rules that would require litigators to declare that they have not used artificial intelligence tools to prepare witness statements for trial could be unnecessary and impractical, lawyers say.

Expert Analysis

  • Opinion

    SRA Should Not Condemn Lawful Tax Avoidance

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    In suggesting that solicitors who facilitate tax avoidance breach its code of conduct, the Solicitors Regulation Authority fails to distinguish between legal tax avoidance and illegal tax evasion, says attorney Martin Kenney.

  • Proposed Arbitration Law May Be A Misstep For India

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    A proposed Indian law, which could have the effect of excluding non-Indians from acting as arbitrators, is threatening to undermine the country's ambition to become an important seat of international arbitration, says Sarosh Zaiwalla of Zaiwalla & Co.

  • British Overseas Territories Can Benefit From Transparency

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    British overseas territories have pushed back against a recent U.K. measure requiring them to create publicly accessible registers of companies' beneficial owners. However, considering global trends toward transparency, perhaps the territories should embrace the new rules as a force of good, says Simon Airey of Paul Hastings LLP.

  • Legal Technology Is Likely To Flourish In The UK

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    The U.K. may soon surpass the U.S. in legal technology, thanks to regulatory reform, law firm investment and an entrepreneurial environment, says Bridget Deiters of InCloudCounsel.

  • Law & Reorder: The Emergence Of The UK Legaltech Sector

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    Recent market dynamics are driving the U.K. legal industry to adopt nascent technologies in new service offerings as well as pre-existing solutions. The rise of legaltech should also lead to an increase in acquisitions by law firms striving to maintain relevance, says Jo Charles of Livingstone Partners LLP.

  • Why English Courts Are Prepared To Assist Cyber Victims

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    This year, a number of cases have illustrated how English courts are dealing with legal hurdles for cybercrime victims and making it easier to obtain a freezing order or injunction under such circumstances, says Fiona Cain of Haynes and Boone LLP.

  • Extradition To The United States: Fight Or Flight?

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    Recent extradition cases have demonstrated that individuals in the United Kingdom facing charges in the United States can either fight extradition proceedings tooth and nail, or voluntarily travel to the U.S. An approach carefully tailored to the facts of each case is required in order to best protect a requested person's interests, says Ben Isaacs of 7 Bedford Row.

  • UK Internal Investigations Are Taking An Ungainly Turn

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    The London High Court's decision in Serious Fraud Office v. Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation has a lot to say on the vitality of legal professional privilege and the conduct of internal investigations in the U.K., but its flawed logic and lack of pragmatism feel like the latest installment in SFO Director David Green's pushback against U.S.-style investigation procedures, say Matthew Herrington and Tom Best of Steptoe & Johnson LLP.

  • Once More Unto The Breach — Rehearing In Newman?

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    On Friday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York decided to seek appellate review of several aspects of the recent insider-trading decision in U.S. v. Newman and Chiasson. En banc rehearing petitions are rarely granted in any circuit, and are particularly rare in the Second Circuit, which hears the fewest number of rehearings of any circuit in the country, say Eugene Ingoglia and Gregory Morvillo of Morvillo LLP.

  • UK Tax Advisers Are Beyond Legal Advice Privilege

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    A recent judgment from the U.K. Supreme Court in one of the most significant decisions on legal advice privilege for many years. Prudential PLC v. Special Commissioner of Income Tax, which dealt a blow to tax advisers and other nonlegally qualified service providers who provide legal advice to their clients, confirmed that — consistent with the position in the U.S. — legal advice privilege only protects communications to or from a qualified lawyer, say Richard Hornshaw and Daniel Cohen of Bingham McCutchen LLP.

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