CMS: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox law firm |
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{{Wiktionary|CMS}} |
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| name = CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP |
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'''CMS''' may refer to: |
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| logo = [[File:CMS Cameron McKenna logo.svg|250px]] |
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{{TOC right}} |
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| headquarters = 78 [[Cannon Street]]<br>[[London]]<br>EC4N 6AF<br>[[United Kingdom]] |
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| num_offices = 74 |
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| key_people = Penelope Warne<br>(Senior Partner)<br>Stephen Millar<br>(UK Managing Partner)<ref name=gencon>{{cite web|url=https://cms.law/en/GBR/search/dp_eng?id=web&cx=people|title=People|accessdate=18 January 2018|publisher=CMS}}</ref> |
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| revenue = [[pound sterling|£]]735.2 million (2015/16)<ref name=thelaw21113>{{cite news|url=http://www.legalbusiness.co.uk/index.php/lb-blog-view/6635-financials-2015-16-growth-slows-at-cms-as-firm-posts-8-4-turnover-lift.article|title=CMS as group posts 8.4% lift |accessdate=24 February 2017|publisher=Legal Business}}</ref> |
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| profit_per_equity_partner = |
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| num_lawyers= 3500 (2016/17)<ref name=thelaw22115>{{cite news|url=http://www.legalweek.com/sites/annaward/2016/06/10/cms-breaks-e1bn-revenue-mark-with-8-4-rise-for-2015/?slreturn=20170124115638.article|title=CMS breaks €1bn revenue mark with 8.4% rise for 2015|accessdate=28 February 2017|publisher=Legal Week}}</ref> |
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| num_employees = |
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| practice_areas = General practice |
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| date_founded = 1 May 1997 (as partnership) 2 December 2004 (as [[LLP]])<ref>{{cite web|url=https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/OC310335|title=CMS CAMERON MCKENNA NABARRO OLSWANG LLP|website=Companies House}}</ref> ([[London]]) |
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| company_type = [[Limited liability partnership]] |
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| homepage = www.cms.law/en/GBR/ cms.law |
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}} |
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'''CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP''', trading as '''CMS''', is a [[Multinational corporation|multinational]] [[law firm]] headquartered in [[London]], [[England]]. It has over 250 [[Partner (business rank)|partner]]s and 74 offices across Europe, the Middle East, South America and Asia. |
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CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP is a member of the CMS organisation of law firms. When considered as a single firm, CMS is one of the ten largest law firms in the world (by number of lawyers: American Lawyer 2016).<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.legalweek.com/sites/legalweek/2016/09/26/the-global-100-the-worlds-top-ranked-firms-by-revenue-lawyers-and-partner-profits.article|title=The Global 100: the world's top-ranked law firms by revenue, lawyers and partner profits |accessdate=28 February 2017|publisher=Legal Week}}</ref> |
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==History== |
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The origins of the firm date back to 1779 and the law practice of T Hewitt. |
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In 1997 Cameron Markby Hewitt merged with fellow [[City of London]] law firm, McKenna & Co, to form Cameron McKenna (renamed ''CMS Cameron McKenna'' in 1999).<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.thelawyer.com/comment-and-analysis-two-plus-two-makes-five-at-cameron-mckenna/89764.article|title=Comment and Analysis: Two plus two makes five at Cameron McKenna?|date=28 July 1998|accessdate=13 December 2013|publisher=The Lawyer}}</ref> The firms of Cameron Markby and Hewitt Woollacott & Chown had merged in 1989 to become Cameron Markby Hewitt. Prior to that Cameron Kemm Norden of New Street, London, EC2, off Bishopsgate, merged with Markbys of London Wall, either in 1980 or 1981. After 17 years at Mitre House, near the Barbican, the firm moved into its Cannon Place headquarters in July 2015, situated above Cannon Street Station. |
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Henry Markby, a name partner in legacy firm Cameron Markby Hewitt, is alluded to (usually in an unflattering manner) in a number of [[Oscar Wilde|Oscar Wilde's]] [[Play (theatre)|plays]], most notably in ''[[The Importance of Being Earnest]]'', when [[Lady Bracknell]] says that her [[solicitor]]s are Markby, Markby and Markby. |
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Markby, who was [[President]] of the [[Law Society of England and Wales]] in 1887, had fallen out with [[Oscar Wilde|Wilde]], a former friend, for reasons unknown. |
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The [[partnership]] incorporated as a [[limited liability partnership]] in 2005. |
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In January 2008, CMS Cameron McKenna expanded its European presence through the acquisition of the Romanian law firm Hayhurst Robinson.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.solicitorsjournal.com/news/commercial/company/news-and-city-east-europe-mergers-offices-germany-and-moves-divorce|title=News and the city: East Europe mergers, offices in Germany and moves to divorce|date=3 February 2006|accessdate=13 December 2013|publisher=Solicitors Journal}}</ref> |
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In December 2013 it was announced that CMS Cameron McKenna would merge with the Edinburgh-headquartered law firm [[Dundas & Wilson]].<ref name=bbc121213>{{cite news|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-25358466|title=Dundas and Wilson to merge with London-based CMS|date=12 December 2013|accessdate=13 December 2013|publisher=BBC News}}</ref><ref name=thelaw121213>{{cite news|url=http://www.thelawyer.com/analysis/the-lawyer-management/merger-watch/cms-cameron-mckenna-partners-vote-yes-to-dundas-and-wilson-takeover/3013900.article|title=CMS Cameron McKenna partners vote yes to Dundas & Wilson takeover|date=12 December 2013|accessdate=13 December 2013|publisher=The Lawyer}}</ref> The merger completed on 1 May 2014.<ref name=bbc121213/><ref name=thelaw121213/> |
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In October 2016, CMS Cameron McKenna announced that it would merge with UK law firms [[Nabarro LLP|Nabarro]] and [[Olswang]] to create the world's sixth largest law firm by headcount. The merger completed in May 2017. CMS Cameron McKenna has been renamed to CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP, and will trade under the name CMS.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://cms.law/en/GBR/News-Information/CMS.-Nabarro-and-Olswang-combine-to-create-6th-largest-law-firm-in-the-UK-and-6th-largest-globally|title=CMS, Nabarro and Olswang Combine to Create 6th Largest Law Firm in the UK and 6th Largest Globally|date=10 October 2016|accessdate=27 October 2016}}</ref> |
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In 2017, CMS is ranking number 1 for M&A in Europe by deal count by Thomson Reuters and Bloomberg.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://cms.law/en/GBR/News-Information/CMS-most-active-M-A-firm-in-Europe-according-to-Bloomberg |title=CMS most active M&A firm in Europe according to Bloomberg |accessdate=28 February 2017|publisher=CMS Cameron McKenna}}</ref> |
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== Activity == |
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CMS provides advice across all types of commercial law; banking and finance, competition, corporate and M&A, dispute resolution, employment & pensions, environment, immigration, intellectual property, private equity, public procurement, real estate and tax. |
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CMS' services are concentrated in eight industry sector groups; consumer products, energy, hotels & leisure, infrastructure & project finance, insurance and funds, lifesciences, real estate & construction, and technology, media & telecommunications. |
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The firm specialises in the following areas: |
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* [http://eguides.cmslegal.com/arbitration# Arbitration] |
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* Banking & Finance |
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* [[Corporate law|Corporate]] and commercial |
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* [[Competition law|Competition]] & [[EU]] |
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* [[Dispute Resolution]] |
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* [[Employment]]& [[Pensions]] |
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* [[Energy]] |
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* [[Environment (biophysical)|Environment]] |
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* [[Infrastructure]] and [[Project Finance]] |
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* [[Insurance]] & [[Reinsurance]] |
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* [[Intellectual Property]] |
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* [[Real estate]] and [[Construction]] |
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* [[Tax]] |
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== Sector Groups == |
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The firm also operates along sector lines, focusing on the following industry groups: |
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* Consumer Products |
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* Energy |
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* Financial Services and Institutions – Banks, Insurers, Investment Business and Private Equity |
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* Hotels & Leisure |
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* Infrastructure & Project Finance |
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* Lifesciences |
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* Real Estate & Construction |
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* Technology, Media & Telecommunications (TMT) |
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==CMS Legal Services EEIG== |
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CMS is a founding member of CMS Legal Services EEIG, a [[European economic interest grouping]] of law firms, which was established with the objective to create a professional multi-jurisdictional legal and tax service organisation, headquartered in Europe. CMS currently has 3,000 legal and tax advisers across 65 offices, and boasts deep local expertise coupled with the most extensive footprint of any firm in Europe. The organisation's firms are branded with the preface 'CMS' as part of their respective names but remain [[independent business]]es. The acronym's letters derive from two of the founding firms, '''C'''ameron '''M'''cKenna and '''S'''igle (now CMS Hasche Sigle). The EEIG is organised and managed centrally by an executive committee based in [[Frankfurt]], [[Germany]]. {{Citation needed|date=January 2018}} |
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== Offices == |
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'''London''' |
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CMS, London office located above Cannon Street station is its headquarters. Having moved here in 2015 the office won best fit out of a workplace for London & South East at the BCO Awards 2016.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.bco.org.uk/Awards/Winners/2016/Fit_Out_of_Workplace_2016.aspx.article|title=Fit Out of Workplace Award |accessdate=28 February 2017|publisher=BCO}}</ref> |
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'''Scotland''' |
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CMS’ second largest office, Edinburgh, has been practicing law since 1759, following the combination with Dundas & Wilson in 2014. CMS’ Glasgow office was established in 1991 and has over 60 lawyers. The firm has also had a presence in Aberdeen for over 20 years. |
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'''CEE''' |
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Established in 1990, CMS has nine offices in Central and Eastern Europe. |
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== Revenue and profitability == |
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Revenues for the firm increased to €1.01bn (£735.2m) in 2015, up 8.4 per cent on the prior year's €934.5m. Meanwhile, net profits had grown by 6.8 per cent according to City AM.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cityam.com/243040/law-firm-cms-revenues-break-eur1bn-mark-although-notes-the-potential-for-brexit-has-caused-some-uncertainty-in-its-uk-market.article|title=Law firm CMS revenues break 1bn mark |accessdate=28 February 2017|publisher=CMS Cameron McKenna}}</ref> |
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== Diversity == |
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CMS is the official legal supporter of [http://prideinlondon.org/ Pride in London] on a pro bono basis. |
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== CSR == |
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[https://cms.law/en/GBR/About-Us/Corporate-Social-Responsibility/CMS-Law-Bursary The CMS Bursary Scheme] supports students from economically less privileged backgrounds from their initial application to university through to graduation. Four bursaries are each year, paying £2,500 towards each year of the recipient’s law degree. |
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CMS is a founding member of [http://www.primecommitment.org/ PRIME], the sector initiative that aims at offering work experience to young people from less privileged backgrounds who might otherwise not have the opportunity to access careers in the legal world. |
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In 2016 CMS received the [[Payroll Giving]] Gold Award 16 in recognition of the high percentage of UK employees giving to charities through the scheme. |
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The CMS global organisation has chosen [[Room to Read]] to be the CMS global charity for 2016/2017. |
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== Notable clients and cases == |
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'''Financial Institutions''' |
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* [[Deutsche Bank]] on a EUR 300m economic guarantee to an Italian life insurer relating to a synthetic fund. |
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* [[MetLife]] on its acquisition of Alico from AIG and CEE operations from Aviva, disposals of UK and Belgian life companies and its subsequent European reorganisation (described by PWC as the ‘largest and most complex European insurance group reorganisation ever undertaken’). |
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'''Infrastructure and project finance''' |
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* [[Department for Transport]] – Advising on a wide range of real estate agreements related to the sale of High Speed 1 (HS1) for GBP 2.1bn and on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link in general which included land acquisitions, leases at St Pancras and agreements with Network Rail |
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* [[Metronet]]/[[London Underground]] PPP – Advising on all aspects of its successful bids for the acquisition of two of the infrastructure companies responsible for the upgrade and maintenance of all rolling stock and signalling, stations, track and civil works on 8 of the London Underground lines. |
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'''Energy''' |
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* [[EDF Energy]] Renewables – on the Blyth Offshore Wind Demonstration Project (the largest consented offshore wind testing facility in the UK) near the port of Blyth in Northumberland. |
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* [[Repsol]] – on the sale of Repsol’s entire portfolio of offshore wind farms to Chinese state-owned State Development & Investment Corporation (SDIC). |
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'''Lifesciences and Healthcare''' |
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* [[Johnson & Johnson]] on the UK aspects of the sale of its Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics (OCD) business to The Carlyle Group for USD 4.15 billion. OCD is a global provider of screening and diagnostics solutions. |
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* [[Nestlé]] Health Science on a complex, cross-jurisdictional licence agreement for exclusive IP rights worldwide (except in Europe and Australia) to Lipid Therapeutics’ LT-02 compound. |
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'''Real Estate''' |
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* Aberdeen Property Trust on its purchase of one of the largest ever Private Rented Sector blocks of apartments in the UK. |
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* [[Imperial College]] on its Imperial West Campus redevelopment project (one of the largest development projects in London). |
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'''TMT''' |
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* [[Hewlett Packard]] on its multi-billion dollar IT outsource for a global financial institution, of its global data centre provision (with aspects of banking/trading apps transformation and a leading edge cloud solution) in Europe, Asia Pacific, North and South America. |
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* [[Telefónica]] on the EUR 8.55bn takeover of E-plus (Europe’s largest TMT transaction of 2013), and advising Telefónica Deutschland on its EUR 1.26bn IPO and EUR 3.62bn rights offering. |
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* [[BT Sport]] on the enforcement of its broadcasting exclusivity for Premier and Champions League games since the inception of those rights packages. |
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== Notable alumni == |
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* [[Shailesh Vara]], MP, NW Cambridgeshire |
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* Eilidh Wiseman, President, [[Law Society of Scotland]] |
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* [[Susan Calman]], Comedian |
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* Shanker Singham, Director of Economic Policy and Prosperity Studies, Legatum Institute |
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==See also== |
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* [[List of 100 largest law firms globally]] |
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* [[List of largest European law firms]] |
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==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
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== External links == |
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*{{Official website|http://cms.law/en/GBR}} |
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*[https://cms.law/en/INT/ CMS Organisation Website] |
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{{Law firms of the United Kingdom}} |
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[[Category:Law firms established in 1997]] |
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[[Category:Law firms based in London]] |
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[[Category:Intellectual property law firms]] |
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[[Category:Patent law firms]] |
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[[Category:Foreign law firms with offices in Hong Kong]] |
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[[Category:1997 establishments in England]] |
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==Organizations== |
==Organizations== |
Revision as of 17:22, 16 April 2018
File:CMS Cameron McKenna logo.svg | |
Headquarters | 78 Cannon Street London EC4N 6AF United Kingdom |
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No. of offices | 74 |
No. of lawyers | 3500 (2016/17)[1] |
Major practice areas | General practice |
Key people | Penelope Warne (Senior Partner) Stephen Millar (UK Managing Partner)[2] |
Revenue | £735.2 million (2015/16)[3] |
Date founded | 1 May 1997 (as partnership) 2 December 2004 (as LLP)[4] (London) |
Company type | Limited liability partnership |
Website | www.cms.law/en/GBR/ cms.law |
CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP, trading as CMS, is a multinational law firm headquartered in London, England. It has over 250 partners and 74 offices across Europe, the Middle East, South America and Asia.
CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP is a member of the CMS organisation of law firms. When considered as a single firm, CMS is one of the ten largest law firms in the world (by number of lawyers: American Lawyer 2016).[5]
History
The origins of the firm date back to 1779 and the law practice of T Hewitt.
In 1997 Cameron Markby Hewitt merged with fellow City of London law firm, McKenna & Co, to form Cameron McKenna (renamed CMS Cameron McKenna in 1999).[6] The firms of Cameron Markby and Hewitt Woollacott & Chown had merged in 1989 to become Cameron Markby Hewitt. Prior to that Cameron Kemm Norden of New Street, London, EC2, off Bishopsgate, merged with Markbys of London Wall, either in 1980 or 1981. After 17 years at Mitre House, near the Barbican, the firm moved into its Cannon Place headquarters in July 2015, situated above Cannon Street Station.
Henry Markby, a name partner in legacy firm Cameron Markby Hewitt, is alluded to (usually in an unflattering manner) in a number of Oscar Wilde's plays, most notably in The Importance of Being Earnest, when Lady Bracknell says that her solicitors are Markby, Markby and Markby.
Markby, who was President of the Law Society of England and Wales in 1887, had fallen out with Wilde, a former friend, for reasons unknown.
The partnership incorporated as a limited liability partnership in 2005.
In January 2008, CMS Cameron McKenna expanded its European presence through the acquisition of the Romanian law firm Hayhurst Robinson.[7]
In December 2013 it was announced that CMS Cameron McKenna would merge with the Edinburgh-headquartered law firm Dundas & Wilson.[8][9] The merger completed on 1 May 2014.[8][9]
In October 2016, CMS Cameron McKenna announced that it would merge with UK law firms Nabarro and Olswang to create the world's sixth largest law firm by headcount. The merger completed in May 2017. CMS Cameron McKenna has been renamed to CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP, and will trade under the name CMS.[10]
In 2017, CMS is ranking number 1 for M&A in Europe by deal count by Thomson Reuters and Bloomberg.[11]
Activity
CMS provides advice across all types of commercial law; banking and finance, competition, corporate and M&A, dispute resolution, employment & pensions, environment, immigration, intellectual property, private equity, public procurement, real estate and tax.
CMS' services are concentrated in eight industry sector groups; consumer products, energy, hotels & leisure, infrastructure & project finance, insurance and funds, lifesciences, real estate & construction, and technology, media & telecommunications.
The firm specialises in the following areas:
- Arbitration
- Banking & Finance
- Corporate and commercial
- Competition & EU
- Dispute Resolution
- Employment& Pensions
- Energy
- Environment
- Infrastructure and Project Finance
- Insurance & Reinsurance
- Intellectual Property
- Real estate and Construction
- Tax
Sector Groups
The firm also operates along sector lines, focusing on the following industry groups:
- Consumer Products
- Energy
- Financial Services and Institutions – Banks, Insurers, Investment Business and Private Equity
- Hotels & Leisure
- Infrastructure & Project Finance
- Lifesciences
- Real Estate & Construction
- Technology, Media & Telecommunications (TMT)
CMS Legal Services EEIG
CMS is a founding member of CMS Legal Services EEIG, a European economic interest grouping of law firms, which was established with the objective to create a professional multi-jurisdictional legal and tax service organisation, headquartered in Europe. CMS currently has 3,000 legal and tax advisers across 65 offices, and boasts deep local expertise coupled with the most extensive footprint of any firm in Europe. The organisation's firms are branded with the preface 'CMS' as part of their respective names but remain independent businesses. The acronym's letters derive from two of the founding firms, Cameron McKenna and Sigle (now CMS Hasche Sigle). The EEIG is organised and managed centrally by an executive committee based in Frankfurt, Germany. [citation needed]
Offices
London
CMS, London office located above Cannon Street station is its headquarters. Having moved here in 2015 the office won best fit out of a workplace for London & South East at the BCO Awards 2016.[12]
Scotland
CMS’ second largest office, Edinburgh, has been practicing law since 1759, following the combination with Dundas & Wilson in 2014. CMS’ Glasgow office was established in 1991 and has over 60 lawyers. The firm has also had a presence in Aberdeen for over 20 years.
CEE
Established in 1990, CMS has nine offices in Central and Eastern Europe.
Revenue and profitability
Revenues for the firm increased to €1.01bn (£735.2m) in 2015, up 8.4 per cent on the prior year's €934.5m. Meanwhile, net profits had grown by 6.8 per cent according to City AM.[13]
Diversity
CMS is the official legal supporter of Pride in London on a pro bono basis.
CSR
The CMS Bursary Scheme supports students from economically less privileged backgrounds from their initial application to university through to graduation. Four bursaries are each year, paying £2,500 towards each year of the recipient’s law degree.
CMS is a founding member of PRIME, the sector initiative that aims at offering work experience to young people from less privileged backgrounds who might otherwise not have the opportunity to access careers in the legal world.
In 2016 CMS received the Payroll Giving Gold Award 16 in recognition of the high percentage of UK employees giving to charities through the scheme.
The CMS global organisation has chosen Room to Read to be the CMS global charity for 2016/2017.
Notable clients and cases
Financial Institutions
- Deutsche Bank on a EUR 300m economic guarantee to an Italian life insurer relating to a synthetic fund.
- MetLife on its acquisition of Alico from AIG and CEE operations from Aviva, disposals of UK and Belgian life companies and its subsequent European reorganisation (described by PWC as the ‘largest and most complex European insurance group reorganisation ever undertaken’).
Infrastructure and project finance
- Department for Transport – Advising on a wide range of real estate agreements related to the sale of High Speed 1 (HS1) for GBP 2.1bn and on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link in general which included land acquisitions, leases at St Pancras and agreements with Network Rail
- Metronet/London Underground PPP – Advising on all aspects of its successful bids for the acquisition of two of the infrastructure companies responsible for the upgrade and maintenance of all rolling stock and signalling, stations, track and civil works on 8 of the London Underground lines.
Energy
- EDF Energy Renewables – on the Blyth Offshore Wind Demonstration Project (the largest consented offshore wind testing facility in the UK) near the port of Blyth in Northumberland.
- Repsol – on the sale of Repsol’s entire portfolio of offshore wind farms to Chinese state-owned State Development & Investment Corporation (SDIC).
Lifesciences and Healthcare
- Johnson & Johnson on the UK aspects of the sale of its Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics (OCD) business to The Carlyle Group for USD 4.15 billion. OCD is a global provider of screening and diagnostics solutions.
- Nestlé Health Science on a complex, cross-jurisdictional licence agreement for exclusive IP rights worldwide (except in Europe and Australia) to Lipid Therapeutics’ LT-02 compound.
Real Estate
- Aberdeen Property Trust on its purchase of one of the largest ever Private Rented Sector blocks of apartments in the UK.
- Imperial College on its Imperial West Campus redevelopment project (one of the largest development projects in London).
TMT
- Hewlett Packard on its multi-billion dollar IT outsource for a global financial institution, of its global data centre provision (with aspects of banking/trading apps transformation and a leading edge cloud solution) in Europe, Asia Pacific, North and South America.
- Telefónica on the EUR 8.55bn takeover of E-plus (Europe’s largest TMT transaction of 2013), and advising Telefónica Deutschland on its EUR 1.26bn IPO and EUR 3.62bn rights offering.
- BT Sport on the enforcement of its broadcasting exclusivity for Premier and Champions League games since the inception of those rights packages.
Notable alumni
- Shailesh Vara, MP, NW Cambridgeshire
- Eilidh Wiseman, President, Law Society of Scotland
- Susan Calman, Comedian
- Shanker Singham, Director of Economic Policy and Prosperity Studies, Legatum Institute
See also
References
- ^ "CMS breaks €1bn revenue mark with 8.4% rise for 2015". Legal Week. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
- ^ "People". CMS. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
- ^ "CMS as group posts 8.4% lift". Legal Business. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
- ^ "CMS CAMERON MCKENNA NABARRO OLSWANG LLP". Companies House.
- ^ "The Global 100: the world's top-ranked law firms by revenue, lawyers and partner profits". Legal Week. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
- ^ "Comment and Analysis: Two plus two makes five at Cameron McKenna?". The Lawyer. 28 July 1998. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
- ^ "News and the city: East Europe mergers, offices in Germany and moves to divorce". Solicitors Journal. 3 February 2006. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
- ^ a b "Dundas and Wilson to merge with London-based CMS". BBC News. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
- ^ a b "CMS Cameron McKenna partners vote yes to Dundas & Wilson takeover". The Lawyer. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
- ^ "CMS, Nabarro and Olswang Combine to Create 6th Largest Law Firm in the UK and 6th Largest Globally". 10 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
- ^ "CMS most active M&A firm in Europe according to Bloomberg". CMS Cameron McKenna. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
- ^ "Fit Out of Workplace Award". BCO. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
- ^ "Law firm CMS revenues break 1bn mark". CMS Cameron McKenna. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
External links
Organizations
Education
USA
- Calexico Mission School, a private school in Calexico, California, USA
- Cardigan Mountain School, a junior boarding school in Caanan, New Hampshire, USA
- Carpentersville Middle School, a public school in Carpentersville, Illinois, USA
- Caruso Middle School, a public school in Deerfield, Illinois, USA
- Cedar Middle School, a public school in Cedar City, Utah, USA
- Centennial Middle School, a public school in Snohomish, Washington, USA
- Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, local school district in North Carolina, USA
- Chicago Medical School, in North Chicago, Illinois
- Chickahominy Middle School, a public school in Mechanicsville, Virginia, USA
- Clarksville Middle School, a public school in Clarksville, Maryland, USA
- Colina Middle School, in Thousand Oaks, California, USA
- Colonia Middle School In Colonia, New Jersey, USA
- Community Middle School, a public school in Plainsboro, New Jersey, USA
- Creekwood Middle School, a public school in Kingwood, Texas, USA
India
- Church Mission Society High School, CMS High School, Thrissur, Kerala, India
- City Montessori School, in Lucknow, India
- CMS College Kottayam, in Kottayam, Kerala, India
Other
- Church Mission School, Pakistan
- C.M.S. Ladies' College, Colombo, Sri Lanka
Mathematics
- Calcutta Mathematical Society or CalMathSoc, a professional society for mathematicians at Kolkata, India
- Canadian Mathematical Society, a professional society for mathematicians
- Centre for Mathematical Sciences (disambiguation), several organisations
- Centre for Mathematical Sciences (Cambridge), the mathematics centre at Cambridge University
- Centre for Mathematical Sciences (Kerala), India
- Council for the Mathematical Sciences, a forum for mathematical societies in the UK
- Cyprus Mathematical Society, a non-profit society in Cyprus
Other
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a federal agency in the United States, part of the Department of Health and Human Services
- China Marine Surveillance, the maritime surveillance agency of the People’s Republic of China
- Church Mission Society, an evangelistic religious organization
- CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang, an international law firm based in London
- CMS Energy, a public utility in Michigan
- Colorado Medical Society, a non-profit organization of physicians in Colorado
- Court of Master Sommeliers, an organisation educating and certifying sommeliers
- Illinois Department of Central Management Services, a state agency
Computing
- Collection management system for a museum collection
- Color management system, a system for computers to control the representation of colors
- Content management system, a system for managing content and providing it in various formats
- Contact management system, an integrated office solution to record relationships and interactions with customers and suppliers
- Course management system, software that facilitates e-learning or computer learning
- Call management system
- Client Music Synthesis, a technology to transfer music files with extremely high data compression ratio
- CMS-2 (programming language), used by the United States Navy
- Code Morphing Software, a technology used by Transmeta
- Concurrent mark sweep collector, a garbage collector in the Oracle HotSpot Java virtual machine
- Configuration management system, now known as software configuration management
- Construction and management simulation, a type of simulation video game
- Conversational Monitor System, previously Cambridge Monitor System, an IBM mainframe operating system, also known as VM/CMS and CP/CMS
- Cryptographic Message Syntax, a cryptographic standard
Science
- Chronic mountain sickness, or Monge's disease, a disease caused by high altitude
- Congenital myasthenic syndrome, an inherited neuromuscular disorder
- Compact mass spectrometer
- Compact Muon Solenoid, a particle physics detector at CERN
- Cytoplasmic male sterility, in seed breeding
Other
- Cavity Monitoring System, a system for surveying stopes in an underground mine where it is not safe or possible to send a person
- Changeable-message sign, a variable road sign
- Charlotte Motor Speedway, a speedway in Concord, North Carolina, north of Charlotte
- The Chicago Manual of Style, a style guide for American English
- Chief master sergeant, a rank in the US Air Force
- Central Monitoring System, an Indian clandestine mass electronic surveillance program
- Certified Master Safecracker, an American trade qualification
- Cms (angel), a minor angel in Enochian occult tradition
- Community Management Statement, a document for defining the lot entitlements in a Community Title Scheme, a form of Strata title in Queensland, Australia.
- Conservation management system, a procedure for maintaining a species or habitat
- Constant maturity swap, in finance and investing
- Convention on Migratory Species, or the Bonn Convention, an intergovernmental wildlife conservation treaty
- Conventional Munitions Systems, Inc., a U.S.-based German-owned defense contracor with its headquarters in Tampa, Fla.
- Critical management studies, a left wing approach to management, business and organization