Private Equity

  • March 06, 2024

    Sports Illustrated Betting Platform To Be Shut Down

    The turmoil at Sports Illustrated continued Wednesday as its partner 888 Holdings PLC announced that it was terminating its sportsbook agreement with the brand's parent company, saying the scale of operating costs in the United States has made the venture untenable.

  • March 06, 2024

    M&A Values Getting Boost Amid Election-Year Scramble

    The value of U.S. mergers and acquisitions as of Wednesday has doubled year over year, as economic concerns subside and deal-makers scramble to get deals done in an election year, but middle-market transaction activity isn't panning out as some had hoped. 

  • March 06, 2024

    50 Lawmakers Urge FTC To Probe Oil And Gas Consolidations

    A group of 50 lawmakers on Wednesday urged the Federal Trade Commission to investigate a recent string of mergers and acquisitions in the oil industry, saying this "longstanding consolidation trend" threatens to reduce choice and competition across the supply chain, suppress wages and make gas at the pump more expensive.

  • March 06, 2024

    NYCB Gets $1B Infusion, Names Ex-OCC Chief As CEO

    New York Community Bancorp Inc. has lined up a $1 billion investment from several institutional investors, including former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin's firm, in a deal guided by Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP and Sullivan & Cromwell LLP.

  • March 06, 2024

    Biopharmaceutical Biz Closes $259M Upsized Funding Round

    South San Francisco, California-based clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company Alumis Inc. on Wednesday announced that it closed its upsized Series C funding round after securing $259 million from venture capital investors.

  • March 20, 2024

    Fried Frank Hires 3 Private Equity Pros From Goodwin Procter

    Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson LLP has said it has snapped up three partners from Goodwin Procter LLP to join its London mergers and acquisitions private equity practice.

  • March 06, 2024

    PE Firm Continues Shedding Stake In Ads Biz For £47M

    An investment company backed by private equity firm Apax Partners said Wednesday that it has diluted its stake in online classifieds group Baltic Classifieds Group PLC and raised £47.3 million ($60.2 million) in the process.

  • March 05, 2024

    Oro Negro Bondholders Want Quinn Emanuel Sanctioned

    Bondholders in Mexican oil and gas company Perforadora Oro Negro asked a Florida judge on Tuesday to sanction Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP for continuing to represent the company's founders in a $30 million dispute despite a disqualification order.

  • March 05, 2024

    Wash. Appeals Judges Balk At Pot Investor's 2nd Fraud Suit

    A three-judge panel of Washington state appeals court judges appeared frustrated Tuesday with an investor who permanently dropped a fraud case against partners in a failed cannabis venture but then filed related claims in a neighboring county, questioning how he could argue he needed to wait for the second salvo to ripen when an email explicitly states otherwise.

  • March 05, 2024

    Gibson Dunn AI Leader On Weathering The AI Policy Blizzard

    Like a mountaineer leading a team through a snowstorm, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP's artificial intelligence co-chair Cassandra L. Gaedt-Sheckter is guiding companies developing and using artificial intelligence through a blizzard of new laws and regulations coming online in Europe and the U.S., saying that assessing AI risks is the North Star to mitigating them.

  • March 05, 2024

    FTC Chair Decries PE's Healthcare Impacts As Probe Starts

    Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan on Tuesday lamented what she deemed the "financialization" of healthcare resulting from private equity buyouts, in remarks coinciding with the launch of a multijurisdictional request for public comment on PE and other companies' growing control over the healthcare system.

  • March 05, 2024

    $1.2B 'King Of Pop' Music Catalog Deal Leads Top 10 Ever

    As a stable asset class that has fared well amid economic uncertainty, music catalogs have attracted much attention from both private equity firms and music industry corporations that are attuned to increasingly lucrative royalty fees and spikes in music streaming. Here, Law360 breaks down the largest music catalog-related asset sales ever, based on official announcements and media reports.

  • March 05, 2024

    EV Maker Proterra's Ch. 11 Plan Gets Thumbs-Up In Del.

    A Delaware bankruptcy judge on Tuesday approved the reorganization plan of commercial electric vehicle technology company Proterra, which entered Chapter 11 to overhaul nearly $200 million in funded debt, overruling a handful of remaining objections.

  • March 05, 2024

    Carrier Inks $1.4B Fire Biz Deal As Part Of Strategic Exit Plan

    Carrier Global Corp. said Tuesday it has struck an agreement to sell its industrial fire business to Sentinel Capital Partners for $1.425 billion, the latest step in the company's strategic plan to sell off certain business units and focus on its core ventilation business.

  • March 05, 2024

    EQT Lands $3.3B For Climate And Health Investments

    Swedish private equity giant EQT, advised by Kirkland & Ellis LLP, on Tuesday announced that it clinched its EQT Future Fund after securing €3 billion ($3.3 billion) in commitments, which will be used to invest across the climate and nature and health and well-being sectors.

  • March 05, 2024

    Disruptor Bank Monzo Valued At $5B After $430M Fund Raise

    Monzo Bank Ltd. said Tuesday that it has raised $430 million in its latest funding round, boosting the valuation of the British challenger bank to $5 billion as it eyes accelerating expansion.

  • March 04, 2024

    Turkey Cos., Burford Unit Fight Over Refused Swap's Meaning

    Turkey giants like Cargill, Perdue and Tyson trying to evade price-fixing allegations traded blows Friday in Illinois federal court with a Burford Capital affiliate over the meaning of a federal magistrate judge's ruling in separate litigation refusing to let a different Burford affiliate swap in as a plaintiff.

  • March 04, 2024

    FERC Slams Brakes On $1.1B Bridgepoint-ECP Deal

    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has blocked U.K. asset manager Bridgepoint Group PLC's proposed £835 million ($1.1 billion) purchase of Energy Capital Partners LP, saying the companies haven't shown the merger wouldn't affect competition in U.S. electricity markets.

  • March 04, 2024

    2 Ex-Latham Attys Join Freshfields As PE Practice Expands

    Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP welcomed two former Latham & Watkins LLP private equity mergers and acquisitions partners to its practice in New York on Monday, coinciding with the firm's strategy of expanding its private capital services globally.

  • March 04, 2024

    Activist Investors Up Macy's Takeover Offer To Roughly $6.6B

    Arkhouse Management Co. and Brigade Capital Management have boosted their offer to buy Macy's to roughly $6.6 billion from $5.8 billion, propelling the retailer's stock to a nearly 14% rally on Monday.

  • March 04, 2024

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    A Swedish music producer's takeover, a proposed award payable in Tesla shares, Truth Social stock squabbles, and an unusually blunt slap-down from the bench added up to an especially colorful week in Delaware's famous court of equity. On top of that came new cases about alleged power struggles, board entrenchment, consumer schemes and merger disputes.

  • March 04, 2024

    Sullivan & Cromwell-Led United Rentals Paying $1.1B For Yak

    Sullivan & Cromwell LLP is representing equipment rental giant United Rentals in a new agreement to buy the Yak roadway matting business from Morgan Lewis-guided Platinum Equity for $1.1 billion, United said in a statement Monday. 

  • March 04, 2024

    Vista Outdoor Rejects $2B Takeover Bid From MNC Capital

    Vista Outdoor Inc. has rejected a $2 billion takeover bid from MNC Capital Partners LP, saying the proposal does not take into account increased earnings the company will see when it separates its outdoor and sporting goods divisions.

  • March 04, 2024

    Alter Domus Valued At $5.3B Following Cinven Backing

    End-to-end technology-enabled fund administration company Alter Domus, advised by DLA Piper and Clifford Chance LLP, on Monday announced that it has secured a strategic investment from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP-advised European private equity shop Cinven that values the business at an enterprise value of €4.9 billion ($5.3 billion).

  • March 01, 2024

    Avalara Beats Investors' $8.4B PE Buyout Challenge For Good

    A Washington federal judge refused Friday to give another chance to a proposed shareholder class action alleging Avalara lied to win investors' support for an $8.4 billion private equity buyout, in an order finding the lead plaintiff failed again to show the tax software company made false statements.

Expert Analysis

  • Opinion

    Merger Guidelines Should Provide For Competition Trustees

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    Following the U.S. antitrust agencies' release of draft merger guidelines, retired U.S. Court of Federal Claims Chief Judge Susan Braden suggests a court-appointed competition trustee would help ensure U.S. competition without impairing economic prosperity.

  • When Investment Banks Can Sell Real Estate In Calif.

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    When investment banks sell businesses that own property in California, they may run into trouble if they are not licensed real estate brokers, unless the property is merely incidental to the deal at hand, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • Merger Guidelines' Broad Tack Ignores Recent Precedent

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    The U.S. Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission's new proposed merger guidelines are consistent with the Biden administration's expansive approach to antitrust enforcement, but they fail to grapple meaningfully with much of modern economic precedent and court decisions requiring greater agency rigor in merger analysis, say attorneys at Freshfields.

  • Perspectives

    Mallory Gives Plaintiffs A Better Shot At Justice

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    Critics of the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Mallory v. Norfolk Southern claim it opens the door to litigation tourism, but the ruling simply gives plaintiffs more options — enabling them to seek justice against major corporations in the best possible court, say Rayna Kessler and Ethan Seidenberg at Robins Kaplan.

  • FERC Order Affirms Increased Scrutiny Of Investor-Utility Ties

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    A recent Federal Energy Regulatory Commission order confirming more aggressive scrutiny of investors' exercise of control over public utilities through representation on their boards or the boards of companies holding interests in them means that both investors and utilities face significantly heightened compliance obligations, say attorneys at Akin.

  • To Survive Scrutiny, Banks Should Craft Careful D&O Policies

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    With banks and their boards facing intensified — and potentially costly — scrutiny after this spring’s bank failures, risk managers can prepare for potential shareholder demands, lawsuits or regulatory probes by designing a robust and targeted directors and officers coverage program, say Jose Lua-Valencia and Jesse Vazquez at Pillsbury.

  • Courts Can Overturn Deficient State Regulations, Too

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    While suits challenging federal regulations have become commonplace, such cases against state agencies are virtually nonexistent, but many states have provisions that allow litigants to bring suit for regulations with inadequate cost-benefit analyses, says Reeve Bull at the Virginia Office of Regulatory Management.

  • Tales From The Trenches Of Remote Depositions

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    As practitioners continue to conduct depositions remotely in the post-pandemic world, these virtual environments are rife with opportunities for improper behavior such as witness coaching, scripted testimony and a general lack of civility — but there are methods to prevent and combat these behaviors, say Jennifer Gibbs and Bennett Moss at Zelle.

  • Circ. Split May Have Big Effect On SEC Disgorgement Remedy

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    The Second Circuit’s recent U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Ahmed ruling follows equitable limitations on disgorgement imposed by the U.S. Supreme Court despite subsequent congressional amendment, provides guidance on rules that govern the remedy, and sets up a significant circuit split with the Fifth Circuit, says Elisha Kobre at Bradley Arant.

  • What's New In The DOJ-FTC Proposed Merger Guidelines

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    While this week's merger guidelines proposal from the Federal Trade Commission and U.S. Department of Justice initially appears to reflect well-established principles of antitrust law, a closer examination reveals a stark departure from the last 40 years of antitrust enforcement, say attorneys at Skadden.

  • Vice Bankruptcy Ruling Shows Contract Assignment Issues

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    A New York bankruptcy court’s recent ruling in Vice Media’s Chapter 11 case is likely to have implications for other cases involving the assignment of contracts by corporate entities, and may signal that Showtime will still face an uphill battle in trying to prove that its contract constituted personal services, says Debra Dandeneau at Baker McKenzie.

  • Level Up Lawyers' Business Development With Gamification

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    With employee engagement at a 10-year low in the U.S., there are several gamification techniques marketing and business development teams at law firms can use to make generating new clients and matters more appealing to lawyers, says Heather McCullough at Society 54.

  • Mallory Ruling Leaves Personal Jurisdiction Deeply Unsettled

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    In Mallory v. Norfolk Southern Railway, a closely divided U.S. Supreme Court recently rolled back key aspects of its 2017 opinion in Daimler AG v. Bauman that limited personal jurisdiction, leaving as many questions for businesses as it answers, say John Cerreta and James Rotondo at Day Pitney.

  • What Constitutes A Sale Of 'All' Company Assets In Del.

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    The recent ruling in Altieri v. Alexy by the Delaware Chancery Court is a useful reminder of the facts-intensive and nuanced nature of the judicial analysis as to what constitutes a sale of all or substantially all of a company's assets, and provides helpful guidance as to the factors the court views as most critical in making the determination, say attorneys at Fried Frank.

  • Despite Economic Ambiguity, Restructuring Still Strong In '23

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    Although the economy refuses to conform to any predictable script and public perception is middling at best, there's nothing confusing about restructuring activity in 2023, and it seems that restructurings will remain elevated at least through the end of the year and likely longer, says Michael Eisenband at FTI Consulting.

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