Feature
posted 6 Feb 2006 in Volume 8 Issue 7
Competition and change: The Canadian legal landscape
In keeping with a competitive international market for legal services, law firms in Canada are fighting hard for coveted places in the top tier. Sandy Rubin reports.
When anyone asks about the Canadian legal market they invariably mean
The city has 21 firms battling for high-end deal work. But the landscape is dominated by the seven sisters, the tier-one firms known for their depth of corporate talent and presence at the table on virtually every deal of note.
Blake Cassels & Graydon LLP, Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP, Goodmans LLP, McCarthy Tétrault LLP, Osler Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, Stikeman Elliott LLP and Torys LLP make up the inner circle. The listing is alphabetical, and not by accident. Like true sisters, there is a strong streak of rivalry between
Challengers also abound among the senior tier-two players hoping to knock tier one firms out. Fasken Martineau LLP, Fraser Milner Casgrain LLP and Borden Ladner Gervais LLP, all large national firms capable of handling high-end corporate work, are not prepared to cede the fight, while Ogilvy Renault, a historic
With all the jousting for premium position, things can get bumpy. Some legal strategists doubt there will be enough top-end work a decade from now to sustain even seven tier-one Canadian firms, and there is speculation that a merger among the top ranks is inevitable.
Driving the stakes ever higher is concern that as the Canadian and US economies become more closely intertwined, some corporate work may migrate south.
Each of the seven sisters is supremely capable of handling complex deal work and litigation, and most have at least a rep office in
For Osler Hoskin & Harcourt, a powerhouse in M&A and corporate finance, its dominant corporate tax group is a defining feature. It’s a formidable combination and the firm has some serious talent starting with co-chair Clay Horner, recognised in Who’s Who Legal as
The firm was counsel to Adolph Coors Company on its merger with Molson Inc., a storied Canadian beer maker. The C$7.7bn transaction was not just large but complex – involving two control-group families and two dual-share capital structures.
Like Oslers, McCarthy Tétrault, which acted for long-term client Molson, considers the Molson-Coors deal its signature transaction. It was the largest cross-border deal in
McCarthys, Canada’s largest law firm with over 750 lawyers, has a dominant Toronto office but uses its offices in Calgary, Vancouver and Montreal to offer one-stop shopping on inbound US and international work.
Stikeman Elliott is unusual in that its offices in
With strong M&A players such as William Braithwaite in Toronto and Pierre Raymond in Montreal, Stikemans scoops up its share of domestic deals but also international work, particularly in Europe and Asia, with the help of small offices in Hong Kong, Sydney, New York and London.
Blake Cassels & Graydon, too, is frequently identified by a longstanding senior relationship – with the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, which it helped incorporate more than a century ago.
More recently, under senior banking practitioner Jim Christie, Blakes has beefed up key practice areas, assembling a particularly strong competition group in
Blakes opened an office in
When it comes to strength pound for pound, for two decades Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg was considered unequalled – partly a testament to its key practice groups, and partly to the reputation of its lead M&A practitioner, J-P. Bisnaire. Bisnaire left last year to become executive vice-president of Manulife Financial, leaving people wondering how Davies would fare.
To shore things up, the firm reached into the ranks of senior investment bankers and repatriated William Gula from Scotia Capital Inc., the investment banking arm of Scotiabank, where he was managing director and head of M&A.
Like Stikemans, Davies has a top-tier corporate presence in both
When you talk about differentiation, Torys has taken the most dramatic route. The firm has ignored Canadian markets outside
Torys has always had sterling relationships in corporate
Goodmans, the smallest and most entrepreneurial of the seven sisters, doesn’t have a big bank in its stable and has tailored its strategy accordingly. With M&A practitioners Stephen Halperin and Dale Lastman, the firm has a strong corporate team that represents high-end made-in-Canada businesses. It also still has one of the strongest insolvency groups in the country, despite recently losing Geoffrey Morawetz, one of the firm’s two star practitioners, to the bench.
The future
There is one thing the senior strategists at most law firms agree upon: the high-end Canadian legal market will not look the same in five years as it does right now. Structural change appears inevitable, whether through domestic mergers or joining with a large international player. Either way, the bets being placed on strategy today will tell the tale of tomorrow’s fortunes.
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