The British publication The Lawyer has published the
UK equivalent of the AmLaw 100 called, inventively, the UK
100
.

While many of the firms will be unfamiliar to a US audience, there
are several interesting lessons to be drawn, particularly since The
Lawyer
has been doing this for five years now and they venture
some five-year "trend" comparisons:

  • Overseas expansion is anything but a guarantee of increased
    profitability:  In fact, of the four "Magic Circle" firms
    with the most aggressive overseas-growth plans, only one—Freshfields—has
    managed to pull off its investment with a profit-neutral impact.  (It
    didn’t hurt that Freshfields’ profit margin is in Microsoft-land
    at 45%.)  If this is sowing the seeds of future accelerating
    profitability (as the strategy’s defenders claim), we are still
    awaiting proof.
  • At the mid-range level (meaning, in the case of UK firms,
    annual revenues from, say, US$40–$140-million), specialization
    can pay off.  Even if that means,  harrumph, litigation.
  • Finally, mergers seem a viable route to higher profits/partner,
    although the devil is in the execution.

Here’s the full table, with one column I added converting the
revenue numbers from £(000) to US$(000).

As a completely unexpected, and delightful, bonus, The Lawyer provides
an additional article delving
into the accounting practices and even financial-collection metrics
of a sampling of firms.  [To the help with the jargon, work-in-progress,
a/k/a WIP, is the value of completed but unbilled work, and "lockup"
is the median period from delivering a bill to receiving payment.]

The main article ends on a speculative note, wondering whether
US/UK mergers are slated to return.  If so, you’ll hear about
it here.

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