Watson Farley & Williams has promoted senior associate Andrew Nimmo to be the 10th partner of its Singapore office.
Cambridge law firm Taylor Vinters has set its expansionary sights on Singapore and the greater Asian market, by forming an alliance with Singapore firm, Keystone Law Corporation.
The managing partner and six lawyers who left Singapore firm Harry Elias Partnership in February have set up a new firm with the help of clients and other law firms.
Harry Elias Partnership has lost its managing partner of four years as well as four other partners in the space of just one week.
The commencement of a new legal year has brought about the appointment of four new senior counsels in Singapore.
Among the many firms around the region that are cutting a swathe or carving a niche, some stand tall above the rest. ALB singles out the top 30 performers by percentage revenue and headcount growth.
Managing partner of Singapore firm Harry Elias Partnership, Tan Chee Meng, has jumped ship for fast-expanding rival WongPartnership, and taken colleague Josephine Choo and a team of three associates with him.
With Hong Kong still lacklustre in comparison to its industrious past, Asia's regional markets are now the destinations of choice for construction practices eager for growth
ALB is proud to announce the finalists for this year's SE Asia Deals of the Year Awards, which will be held at the Marina Mandarin in Singapore on 2 June
A year of dealmaking has edged the legal spend at Asia's top 25 companies up, but as ALB discovered, that doesn't neccessarily translate into a cash bonanza for Asia's law firms
The public-private partnership model, hailed as the ultimate value for money solution to building infrastructure, is experiencing teething problems
ALB's inaugural ALB Deals of the Year Awards SE Asia will be held at the Fullerton Hotel in Singapore on 17 March
With the property market in the doldrums, the construction industry has suffered somewhat of a slump both locally and regionally. But industry players insist that things can only get better. Thin Lei Win reports.