news

Shearman & Sterling will wind down its office in Seoul following an internal review of “strategic priorities,” a Shearman spokesperson said ahead of the firm’s planned merger with Allen & Overy.  

The integrated firm, Allen Overy Shearman Sterling, if approved by a partner vote expected to take place in October, will have an office in the South Korean capital, the spokesperson said.

The lawyers at Shearman’s Seoul office already have arrangements in place, and the closure is not connected to the proposed merger, the spokesperson added.

The former leader of Shearman’s Korea outpost Anna Chung, who also helped set up the office, took her practice to Ashurst in May.  

Shearman’s Korea practice will continue to operate from its international offices, particularly its Asian offices in Tokyo, Singapore and Hong Kong, with its New York and London branches also playing a key role, the spokesperson said.

Shearman opened its Seoul outpost in 2019 and has focused on advising Korean clients on a full range of project-related work across the power, LNG, oil and gas and petrochemical spectrum.

The merger plan with A&O was announced in May. The tie-up would be one of the largest law-firm mergers in recent years, resulting in a firm with around 3,900 lawyers across 49 offices worldwide.

TO CONTACT EDITORIAL TEAM, PLEASE EMAIL ALBEDITOR@THOMSONREUTERS.COM

Related Articles

SG: Pinsents hires veteran energy lawyer from Shearman

by Mari Iwata |

Pinsent Masons MPillay, the Singapore office of UK law firm Pinsent Masons, has recruited senior energy and infrastructure expert David Clinch as a partner in Singapore from Shearman & Sterling, where he was an of counsel.

CC, Romulo, Shearman, V&A guide $3.9 bln Philippine network financing

by Mari Iwata |

Clifford Chance and Romulo Mabanta Buenaventura Sayoc & de los Angeles have advised the lenders on the $3.9 billion financing of Dito Telecommunity’s 4G and 5G telecommunications network in the Philippines, with Shearman and Sterling and Villaraza & Angangco advising Dito.

Shearman, AMT, White & Case, MHM act as Japan’s Benesse goes private for $1.78 bln

by Mari Iwata |

Shearman & Sterling and Anderson Mori & Tomotsune are advising Japanese educational services provider Benesse Holdings on a 270-billion-yen ($1.78 billion) management buyout (MBO) plan proposed by Swedish investment house EQT AB Group, represented by White & Case. Mori Hamada & Matsumoto act for the all stakeholders on this MBO scheme.