August 24, 2007

ANOTHER MERGER TOO CLOSE TO CALL – BUT WITH LOTS OF QUESTIONS

In another of life’s timing ironies, Law.com published an article early on Friday, August 24, 2007 positing the question “Is All Quiet on the Law Firm Merger Front?” – and then late in the afternoon on Friday The Wall Street Journal ran an online article (subscription required) reporting advanced merger talks between Dewey Ballantine LLP and LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae LLP.  As I’ve done in prior postings where I’ve looked at other announced mergers (Mergers, Metrics, and Other Musings; A Merger Made in . . .?; and A Merger Too Close to Call), here is a quick LawBall analysis of the proposed Dewey/LeBoeuf merger.  Using data published in the 2006 AmLaw 200 and the 2007 AmLaw 200, at the end of the posting (and also included as a *.pdf attachment under Posting Attachments in the right-hand margin) are:

•    The 2005 and 2006 individual financial operating results for both firms.
•    The annual compounded growth rates from 2005 to 2006 for both firms.
•    A 2006 pro forma for the new firm.
•    A comparison of each firm’s 2006 operating results to the new firm’s pro forma.

Horse_race_photo_finish_hollywood_p As previously was the case with the prospective K&L Gates/Hughes & Luce merger, this merger is too close to call from a relative financial health or financial direction pre-merger perspective alone.  On the one hand, growth from 2005 to 2006 in revenues, profit, asset turnover (revenue per lawyer), and return on assets (ROA or profit per lawyer) all significantly favored LeBoeuf.  On the other hand, return on equity (ROE or profit per partner), leverage, and cost per lawyer growth from 2005 to 2006 all favored Dewey; although it certainly looks like Dewey’s improvement in leverage and ROE largely was the result of a decrease in partners from 110 to 92, as its profit and margin both fell in 2006.  LeBoeuf’s 2006 margin was better – 37.00% to 32.56% - than LeBoeuf’s, although both firms’ margin fell (LeBoeuf from 38.86% and Dewey’s from 34.27%).   Dewey’s 2006 asset turnover ($820,281) actually slightly was higher than LeBoeuf’s ($797,360), as was Dewey’s ROE ($1,445,652 to $1,428,571 for LeBoeuf).  With respect to ROA, which as I’ve said before I believe is a better indicator of a firm’s financial health since it is a good measure of the efficiency with which a business allocates its resources and eliminates the potentially distorting effects of financial leverage on operating results, LeBoeuf’s 2006 ROA ($295,031) was higher than Dewey’s 2006 ROA ($267,063).  LeBoeuf’s leverage in 2006 was 4.8421, while Dewey’s was 5.4130.  Although LeBoeuf’s costs per lawyer grew at a rate (14.28%) in 2006 nearly double Dewey’s cost per lawyer 2006 growth rate (7.64%), LeBoeuf’s actual 2006 cost per lawyer ($502,329) was lower than Dewey’s ($553,213).  Again repeating a comment from prior merger postings, this 1-year snapshot is interesting – but I’d like to see the panoramic view (a 5-year comparison) before I reached any significant conclusions about the relative financial health or direction of the 2 firms pre-merger.

On a post-merger pro forma basis the changes are minimal in size, but definitely show favorites.  In margin, ROA, and cost per lawyer, the pro forma changes resulting from the merger would favor Dewey – that is, on a pro forma basis a combined Dewey LeBoeuf would’ve performed better in 2006 with respect to margin, ROA, and cost per lawyer than Dewey performed on a stand-alone basis; while Dewey LeBoeuf would’ve performed worse than LeBoeuf standing alone in those 3 metrics.  On a post-merger pro forma basis, the changes in asset turnover, leverage, and ROE would favor LeBoeuf.

As I noted in the earlier merger postings, numbers aren’t the entire story to a successful M&A transaction; the transition and integration of the people, technology, and processes (including the typical law firm hot spots – culture and management) into the post-closing firm are critical.  The future success or failure of this announced merger likely lies with the firms’ post-merger transition and integration plan.  But, if I were a partner in either firm, I would ask a series of questions about the 2 firms’ comparative 2006 financial operating performance:  Why did LeBoeuf’s revenues grow 16.70% vs Dewey’s 4.08%?  Why did LeBoeuf’s profit grow 11.11% vs Dewey’s -1.12% decrease?  Why did LeBoeuf’s asset turnover grow 10.91% vs Dewey’s 4.91%?  Why did LeBoeuf’s ROA grow 5.59% vs Dewey’s -0.32% decrease?  Why did LeBoeuf’s costs per lawyer grow 14.28% vs Dewey’s 7.64%?  Are these changes 1-year anomalies or are they continuations of trends?

Dewey_leboeuf_merger_analysis

August 22, 2007

It’s the Delivered Value, Stupid . . . It Ain’t the Time Worked

Please accept my apology for the delay between postings.  Over the past several weeks, I’ve experienced the wedding of the eldest daughter of a very close friend, a death in the family, and the college graduation of a son.  I just couldn’t get too excited about writing a blog posting.

Hourglass The juxtaposition of 4 articles over the past few days finally has snapped me out of my writing lethargy.  Although the articles may appear to have little, if anything, in common, I believe they are representative of a simple business truism that is central to the success of any business model but that often is over-looked:  It’s the delivered value, stupid; and, more importantly with respect to the business of practicing law, it ain’t the time worked.

Let’s look at some of what the 4 articles had to say.  First came the news that Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld had been sued for $4.4 billion by ex-fund managers  of the Veras funds.   The article includes several interesting statements.  The article’s author says:

The suit illustrates the risks law firms face as they try to reap the rewards of representing private investment funds, including hedge funds and private equity funds. Such funds generate high legal bills for firms, but they are apt to strike back hard when they feel lawyers have led them astray.  (Underlining added for emphasis).

. . . Law firms are more in the line of fire because they play a much bigger role at investment funds than they do for corporate clients.

The article further reports:

Barbash [Barry Barbash, the head of the funds business at Wilkie Farr & Gallagher] said the hectic nature of the hedge fund business creates many stressful and difficult situations for lawyers.  Fund managers often call wanting to know right away if they can make a trade or not, leaving the lawyer feeling responsible for the outcome.

"I feel a lot of times like the closer on the mound," said Barbash.

Next came Baker & McKenzie’s press release  announcing it had achieved:

[A] 22% increase in per partner profits (PPP) over the previous fiscal year, taking its PPP above the US$1 million level for the first time.  The Firm has raised PPP by 63% since adopting a more focused global Firm Strategy three years ago.

The release further notes the firm’s fiscal year 2007 financial performance is the product of its efforts “to implement a firmwide Strategy that better leverages for our clients the extensive global platform we have been steadily growing over the past six decades” and one of its 5 key performance areas on which its strategy is focused is “better managing our talent to ensure consistently high quality of service globally.”

Then came the announcement that Atlanta-based Ford & Harrison had “tossed out billable hour requirements for first-year associates.”  According to the The National Law Journal, “The program aims to close the practical-skills gap of law school education and increase value to clients.”

Finally came the article in The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) that notes hourly rates for top lawyers are crossing $1,000 per hour.  The article included the following comment:

Considering a major-league baseball player can make the equivalent of $15,000 per hour, “$1,000 for very seasoned lawyers who can solve complex problems doesn't seem to be inappropriate," says Mike Dillon, the general counsel of Sun Microsystems Inc.

Critical to understanding the It’s the Delivered Value, Stupid . . . It Ain’t the Time Worked truism, and how  the 4 articles represent that truism, is coming to the realization:

  • It is value delivered to the customer that is key.
  • Value delivered is the result of total customer value minus total customer price.  Total customer value can consist of such elements as product value, services value, personnel value, and image value.  Total customer price can consist of such elements as monetary price, time cost, energy cost, and psychic cost.
  • The party that determines whether or not value has been delivered to the customer is not the product manufacturer or seller or the service-provider - it is the customer (or “client” in legal industry parlance) who determines whether or not value has been delivered to it.  And that determination may change from customer to customer and from product to product or service to service.  I’ve touched on this point before in prior postings.  In What’s All This Garbage About Business Models?, I quoted from noted corporate strategist Gary Hammel, who described the key link or “bridge” that exists between 2 - core strategy and customer interface - of what Hammel called the 4 major business model components as being:

“Customer benefits” - the particular bundle of benefits actually offered to the customer; the link between Core Strategy and Customer Interface; refer to a “customer-derived definition of the basic needs and wants that are being satisfied.”  (Underlining added for emphasis).

I noted In Is It a Business:

[T]here’s a misalignment between what lawyers want to sell and how they want to sell it and what the buying public wants to buy or how they want to buy it.  Cisco General Counsel Mark Chandler described this misalignment well when, in his recent speech at Northwestern School of Law’s 34th Annual Securities Regulation Institute, he said:

From the law firm think perspective, “sales” too often means a one to one relationship with a lawyer who bills by the hour. As a client, I can tell you what I want to buy is access to information, strategy, and negotiation, and, in the case of litigation, to courtroom skill as well.  (Underlining added for emphasis).

There’s a fundamental misalignment at work here. Law firms cannot afford to own the business risks of their clients, have a lot of employees to pay and also have to allocate the limited resources of extraordinary star partners. On the other hand, we clients want access to information and counseling and want to pay for value received. Put most bluntly, the most fundamental misalignment of interests is between clients who are driven to manage expenses, and law firms which are compensated by the hour.  (Underlining added for emphasis).

Again in What’s All This Garbage About Business Models?, I quoted from an interesting 2004 study of eLawForum (a link to the study is in the margin under “Articles of Interest”), conducted by Harvard Business School Professor Clay Christensen and Scott Anthony, who said:

. . . The growth of specialization means that most corporate legal work does not involve complex problem-solving. With the right experience, specialists can easily recognize patterns and apply familiar tools so that they do not need to “reinvent the wheel.” Pattern recognition dramatically increases efficiency. Hourly rates assume everything requires complex problem-solving. 

In other words, customer benefits - or perhaps total customer value - are needs and wants as defined by the customer that are being satisfied.  Unless you deliver those customer benefits and do so at a price (monetary or otherwise) that creates a desired net delivered value for the customer, you’re going to have serious business “issues.”  Many businesses have elements that have higher and lower areas of risk to them that create different value to their customers - and they are priced accordingly.  Without commenting here about the merits or non-merits of the Akin Gump lawsuit itself, lawyers representing hedge funds may be closer to the business “action” and may be more integral to the business-decision making process - as such they well may be providing higher total customer value to the customer at greater risk to the law firm, to compensate for which they charge a higher fee.  But, like in other businesses, if the customer believes the total customer value it receives isn’t enough or the total customer price it pays is too much, problems will arise.  Or, if you hire brand new employees who require on the job training before they can create anything that contributes to total customer value, but you pay them $160,000 per year while they’re being trained, you can’t expect the customer to pay for that on-the-job training.  But, if you can solve complex problems for customers, e.g., you can charge large amounts for that total customer value that aren’t necessarily related to the amount of time spent - as long as you don’t drive the total customer price to a point where the net delivered value is too low in the eyes of the customer.

It is understanding this fundamental relationship between total customer value and total customer price that underlies the Professional Asset Capability Matrix that I’ve mentioned in earlier postings.  And, it is recognizing more complex problem-solving and the strategic integration of knowledge as higher delivered value services that are key to the legal industry repositioning itself within the information value chain in ways that will enable it to compete successfully for the future.

Why is it that firms like Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz; Wiley Rein; Sullivan & Cromwell; Cahill Gordon & Reindel; Irell & Manella; Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Munger, Tolles & Olson; Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher; and, Quinn Emanuel Urquhrt Oliver & Hedges performed at such a level I chose them as my LawBall top 10 financial operating performance firms for 2006 from the 2007 AmLaw 200 in Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder?  I doubt that it’s because their business models simply are based on billing the most hours - I bet it’s because those models are built around creating the highest delivered value for their clients.  Are Richard Beattie of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, Stephen Susman of Susman Godfrey, and Benjamin Civiletti of Venable worth $1,000 per hour or more, their reported hourly rate per the WSJ article?  I honestly don’t know - only their clients do for sure.

August 07, 2007

THE YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS

Bluebonnets To do my recent posting about the proposed merger between Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Preston Gates Ellis, “an international firm without a headquarters office,” and Dallas-based Hughes & Luce (A Merger Too Close to Call), I had to go to the Texas Top 25 published in the Texas Lawyer’s 2006 and 2007 Firm Finance Surveys since Hughes & Luce’s gross revenues were not large enough to be included in The American Lawyer’s AmLaw 200.  Now armed with the information on the Texas Top 25, I thought it might be interesting, at least to readers in Texas-based firms, to see a LawBall-type analysis of the Texas Top 25 similar to the one I did recently (Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder) on the AmLaw 200.

As has been my custom, I’ve attached a *.pdf document (“Texas Top 25 Performance Statistics 2006” under the category “Posting Attachments" in the upper right-hand margin of this blog) that includes an analytic table showing the 2006 financial operating performance metrics for each of the firms in the 2007 Texas Top 25 and another table showing the firms’ relative ranking (1 – 25) within each performance metric.  The attachment also includes analytic tables showing the firms’ relative ranking based on both the simple summation of the firms’ rankings in each individual key LawBall metric category and the simple summation of the firms’ rankings in all individual LawBall metric categories.

As I noted before in the 2007 AmLaw 200 tour-concluding posting, I do believe beauty is in the eye of the beholder when evaluating a business – even a business involved in the practice of law.   And, again ever-mindful not only of personal influence on business evaluation, but also the oft-quoted bromide “There are 3 types of lies – lies, damn lies, and statistics,” I’ve included my own ranking of the Texas Top 25 to illustrate how each of us personally may place different levels of importance on separate performance metrics in evaluating a business. 

When I’m either evaluating a business for investment or purchase or identifying operating performance issues, I use the same metrics I’ve incorporated into LawBall.  Ultimately, however, I place the most importance on these 3 metrics, in order of their importance to me:

  • Return on assets (ROA or, in LawBall, profit per lawyer) (when financial capital is involved as opposed to intellectual capital, I’ll use return on invested capital).  I believe ROA is a good measure of the efficiency with which a business allocates its resources and may be a better indicator of a firm’s financial health and performance than return on equity (ROE or, in LawBall, profit per partner) as it eliminates the potentially distorting effects of financial leverage on operating results.  ROA is the product achieved from multiplying asset turnover by margin.
  • Asset turnover (revenue per lawyer in LawBall) – the measure of revenue being generated by the business’ asset base (“offense” in LawBall).
  • Margin – the measure of how much of the revenue generated is kept as profit (“defense” in LawBall).

I also subscribe to Warren Buffett’s view on the conservative use of leverage.

The biggest differences between the business evaluation I typically perform and the one I shared with you on the AmLaw 200 and share with you today on the Texas Top 25 is normally I:

  • Analyze a business over a 5-year operating period – not just a 1-year period.
  • Know more factually about the actual business in which the individual companies are engaged.
  • Include an estimated value of the business for investment/purchase purposes.  Obviously, that’s not applicable here.

Yellow_rose Here in order are my LawBall top 5 financial operating performance firms for 2006 from the 2007 Texas Top 25 published in Texas Lawyer’s 2007 Firm Finance Survey: Susman Godfrey; Vinson & Elkins; Baker & Botts; Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld; and Carrington, Coleman, Sloman & Blumenthal.  Below are 2 tables for my top 5 - one has the 2006 financial operating performance metrics for each of the firms, with my personal key metrics highlighted in blue, and the other has the firms’ relative ranking among the Texas Top 25 (1 – 25) within each performance metric, again with my personal key metrics highlighted in blue.  By clicking on the tables you can open a larger version.  The *pdf attachment also includes a list of the firms ranked (1 – 25) according to my 3 personal key metrics.

Lawball_texas_top_5_performance_2

Lawball_texas_top_5_ranking

Several brief observations:

  • When compared to the aggregate performances of both the Texas Top 25 and the AmLaw 200, the relative financial operating performance of the aggregate LawBall Texas Top 5 picks exceeded both the Texas Top 25 and the AmLaw 200 in margin, asset turnover, ROA, and ROE.   It also exceeded the aggregate Texas Top 25, but not the AmLaw 200, in leverage.  In other words, these 5 firms achieved better performance with more risk (more aggressive leverage) than that of the aggregate Texas Top 25, but with less risk (more conservative leverage) than the aggregate AmLaw 200.  However, the relative financial operating performance of the aggregate AmLaw LawBall Picks (Top 10) significantly exceeded that of the aggregate LawBall Texas Top 5 picks in every individual key metric category (margin, asset turnover, ROA, leverage, and ROE).  Again, I ask the following question regarding the relative financial operating performance of these firms:  What does that say about these 5 firms’ business models, particularly the firms’ strategy and the mix of the firms’ business demands and their assets (lawyers) to meet that demand as contemplated by the professional asset capability matrix in comparison to other firms?
  • Three (3) of the LawBall Texas Top 5 picks were among the 4 largest Texas Top 25 firms in terms of both the number of lawyers and the amount of gross revenue; while 2 of the LawBall Texas Top 5 picks were among the smallest firms in terms of the number of lawyers.  Susman Godfrey, which ranked 1st among the LawBall Texas Top 5 picks, and Carrington, Coleman, which ranked 5th among the LawBall Texas Top 5 picks, tied for the 3rd smallest number of lawyers (86) in the Texas Top 25.
  • By comparison to the LawBall Texas Top 5 picks, when summing up the Texas Top 25 rankings in each individual key metric category the top 5-ranked firms in order were:  Vinson & Elkins (1st); Baker & Botts (2nd); Akin Gump (tied for 3rd); Susman Godfrey (tied for 3rd); and Fulbright & Jaworski (tied for 5th) and Locke Lidell & Sapp (tied for 5th).
  • By comparison to the LawBall Texas Top 5 picks, when summing up the Texas Top 25 rankings in all of the metric categories the top 5-ranked firms in order were: Vinson & Elkins (1st); Baker & Botts (2nd); Akin Gump (3rd); Susman Godfrey (4th); and Fulbright & Jaworski (5th).

Trophy_with_blue_ribbon The *.pdf attachment also has easy to view individual tables that reflect the firms’ individual rankings (1-25) in all of the key metric categories of margin, asset turnover, ROA, financial leverage, and ROE versus the Texas Top 25 in the aggregate and the AmLaw 200 in the aggregate.   I encourage you to go through the attachment, to see where your firm falls within the data, to see where other firms that interest you fall with in the data, to look at what you consider to be the “best” or “top” firms, to compare relative performances, and to add several more years of your firm’s data to the mix and analyze it in terms of trends.  Most of all, I encourage you to question what insight this data gives you as to business models employed in the legal industry.

In an effort to make it easier for you to navigate through the *.pdf attachment, here’s a listing (in order) of the tables in the document:

  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed in Order of the LawBall Picks (Just the Top 5).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed in Order of the LawBall Picks (1-25).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of the LawBall Picks (1-25).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed in Order of Gross Revenues (the order of ranking chosen by the Texas Lawyer for its top 25).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed Alphabetically.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of Gross Revenues.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of Key Metrics Ranking.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of All Metrics Ranking.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed Alphabetically.
  • Margin Ranking.
  • Asset Turnover Ranking.
  • Return on Assets Ranking.
  • Financial Leverage Ranking.
  • Return on Equity Ranking.

Each table has a bookmark in the *.pdf document to make it easier for you to find the table.

July 31, 2007

THE DEVIL (OR MAYBE GEORGE STEINBRENNER) MADE LAW FIRMS DO IT

CautionDennis_miller_2_2 Oops – here comes another Dennis Miller-type rant.  And, frankly, it’s simply because I thought I’d heard it all.  First, I thought Armageddon must be upon us when I read in The New York Observer article Profits vs. Partners that Peter Zeughauser of The Zeughauser Group believes, with respect to law firm associate starting salaries,

[T]he next raise will be to $200,000 and could take place “as early as within the next six months. On the outside, 12 to 18 months. And a move to $250,000 after that.”

Then, if that wasn’t enough, after I’d been revived I read this morning at law.com, in an article from The National Law Journal entitled Firms Say Client Expectations Drive Up Associate Salaries (subscription required) that, “Law firms are blaming market demands for the latest round of associate salary raises . . .”  The apparent logic that it’s law firm clients’ fault that associate starting salaries are spiraling out of control can be found in these 2 sentences in the article:

First:

This summer's associate salary increases to $160,000 are a result of economic forces, say law firm leaders, that have required them to fall in line with competitors' pay in order to recruit top graduates from top schools.

And, then:

Those in law firm management admit that the raises make fledgling associates even less cost-efficient for law firms that hope they will stick around long enough to earn their keep. They also say, however, that their clients expect them to recruit law graduates from prestigious schools and those from the tops of their classes.

The topper for me, though, was this quote:

"What are firms to do?" said Rob Walters, a member of the executive committee at Houston-based Vinson & Elkins. "Associate salaries are out of whack."

DevilGeorge_steinbrenner_3 What?!  That sounds eerily like, “The Devil made me do it.  What am I to do?”  Or, maybe, that “It’s all George Steinbrenner’s fault.  I just can’t help it.”  Well, gee, I guess I’d expect law firms to do what every other business does –  manage your business and get the  costs under control!  Outside of politicians and professional baseball team owners, I’m not sure I’ve seen another group of people less willing to be accountable for their own actions than law firms.  That’s just my opinion – I could be wrong.

July 30, 2007

A MERGER TOO CLOSE TO CALL

As forecast earlier in the year by Hildebrandt International, Inc. when it reported 58 mergers and acquisitions involving U.S. law firms were completed in 2006, vs. 49 in 2005 and 48 in 2004, law firm merger activity continues in 2007.  The most recent merger announcement was the proposed transaction between Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Preston Gates Ellis (aka K&L Gates) and Dallas-based Hughes & Luce.  K&L Gates, historically labeled a Pittsburgh-based firm, now calls itself an international firm without a headquarters office.

In prior postings where I’ve looked at other announced mergers (Mergers, Metrics, and Other Musings and A Merger Made in . . .?), I’ve discussed LawBall-type analysis as a way to help law firm M&A candidates avoid the “synergy trap” that arises when most companies routinely overestimate the value of synergies they can capture from acquisitions.  As I noted in those earlier postings, certainly numbers aren’t the entire story to a successful M&A transaction; the transition and integration of the people, technology, and processes (including the typical law firm hot spots – culture and management) into the post-closing firm are critical.  But a LawBall-type analysis can lead one to ask critical questions that facilitate a deeper understanding of the strengths and weakness of both the pre- and the post-merger businesses.

Here, then, is a quick LawBall analysis of the proposed K&L Gates/Hughes & Luce merger.  Using data published in the 2006 AmLaw 200 and the 2007 AmLaw 200 and in the Texas Lawyer’s 2006 and 2007 Firm Finance Surveys, in LawBall format below at the end of the posting (and also included as a *.pdf attachment under Posting Attachments in the right-hand margin) are:

•    The 2005 and 2006 individual financial operating results for both firms.
•    The annual compounded growth rates from 2005 to 2006 for both firms.
•    A 2006 pro forma for the new firm.
•    A comparison of each firm’s 2006 operating results to the new firm’s pro forma.

One twist in the numbers from prior LawBall merger looks – K&L Gates itself is the product of a merger between Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Nicholson Graham and Preston Gates & Ellis announced late in 2006 and effective on January 1, 2007.  So, both the 2005 and 2006 numbers for K&L Gates are pro forma.

Affirmed_alydar This prospective merger is too close to call from a relative financial health or financial direction pre-merger perspective alone.  On the one hand, growth in revenues, return on equity (ROE or profit per partner), and leverage from 2005 to 2006 all favored K&L Gates.  On the other hand, growth in profit, asset turnover (revenues per lawyer), return on assets (ROA or profit per lawyer), and cost per lawyer from 2005 to 2006 all favored Hughes & Luce.  Hughes & Luce’s 2006 margin was significantly better – 38.79% to 25.23% - than K&L Gates’; and, although Hughes & Luce’s 2006 asset turnover ($527,273) actually was lower than K&L Gates ($582,305), the large margin differential resulted in Hughes & Luce’s 2006 ROA ($204,545) also being quite a bit higher than K&L Gates’ ($146,914).  Leverage hugely favored K&L Gates (4.5506 to 2.8085), and this resulted in K&L Gates’ 2006 ROE ($668,539) being higher than Hughes & Luce’s ROE ($574.468).  This 1-year snapshot is interesting – but as I’ve said before, I’d like to see the panoramic view (a 5-year comparison) before I reached any significant conclusions about the relative financial health or direction of the 2 firms pre-merger.

Not surprisingly, on a post-merger pro forma basis the changes in margin, ROA, and cost per lawyer favored K&L Gates – that is, on a pro forma basis a combined K&L Gates Hughes Luce would’ve performed better in 2006 with respect to margin, ROA, and cost per lawyer than K&L Gates performed alone, while K&L Gates Hughes Luce would’ve performed worse than Hughes & Luce alone in those 3 metrics.  On a post-merger pro forma basis, the changes in asset turnover, leverage, and ROE all favored Hughes & Luce. The future success or failure of this announced merger likely lies with the firms’ post-merger transition and integration plan.

Klgates_hughes_luce_merger

July 27, 2007

OVERCOMING PARADIGM BLINDNESS

Lady_justice While the doctrine of judicial precedent is a foundation of the U.S. common law system, it’s my been my observation over 30+ years that U.S. law firms all too often have extended adherence to precedent beyond the substance involved in the practice of law into the business of practicing law.  I previously mentioned this behavior in an earlier posting when I closed with the following quote from Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper:

I am now going to make you a gift that will stay with you the rest of your life. For the rest of your life, every time you say “We've always done it that way,” my ghost will appear and haunt you for twenty-four hours.

I didn’t realize it when I did the earlier posting, but this attitude of “we’ve always done it that way” is symptomatic of something that has been labeled “paradigm blindness,” which typically has been described as being the mode of thinking that:

The way we do it is the best because this is the way we've always done it.

Paradigm blindness also has been used to describe conduct in a number of settings, including the attitude of seeing the way you work as being “right” and building defenses to protect it instead of recognizing experimental evidence that should guide the way you work or the attitude of refusing to acknowledge experiences, facts and feelings that cannot be explained by old sets of assumptions.

Benchmark_symbol Benchmarking has been called a powerful management tool that can facilitate the fight to overcome paradigm blindness.  Lots of definitions of “benchmarking” can be found; and the one at www.businessdictionary.com is that “benchmarking” is the:

Measurement of the quality of a firm's policies, products, programs, strategies, etc., and their comparison with standard measurements, or similar measurements of the best-in-class firms. The objectives of this exercise are (1) to determine what and where improvements are called for, (2) how other firms achieve their high performance levels, and (3) use this information to improve the firm's performance. 

Benchmarking can be an effective competitive tool that improves a firm’s operating effectiveness by:

  • Exposing the firm to new ideas and new ways of doing things.
  • Helping to overcome resistance to change by demonstrating that new ideas and ways of doing things work since they’re being used by others.

At morepartnerincome, Tom Collins recently touched on benchmarking when he referred to the article The Four Principles of Enduring Success by Christian Stadler in the July-August 2007 edition of the Harvard Business Review.  In his article, Stadler said:

When your company is doing well, revenue is pouring in, and your stock is rising, how do you know if you could be doing better? How can you tell which of your management practices are making the difference and which are merely doing no visible harm? Benchmarking is the obvious answer, but not by comparing poor companies with good ones. The way to get at this problem is to compare good companies with even better ones.

It is that very philosophy that led to my month-long LawBall tour through Legalritaville that just concluded and is why I included both at each “division stop” a ranking of the top firms in the division and at the end of the tour my own ranking of the AmLaw 200.  There are law firms out there that from a financial operations perspective clearly perform better than others, and the other firms can learn from and improve their own performance by benchmarking against these top-performing firms.

For those that did not catch the conclusion of the Legalritaville tour in Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder, here again in order are my LawBall top 10 financial operating performance firms for 2006 from the 2007 AmLaw 200:  Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz; Wiley Rein; Sullivan & Cromwell; Cahill Gordon & Reindel; Irell & Manella; Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Munger, Tolles & Olson; Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher; and, Quinn Emanuel Urquhrt Oliver & Hedges.  As I noted in that posting, when compared to the aggregate performance of the AmLaw 200, the aggregate relative financial operating performance of the LawBall Top 10 picks significantly exceeded that of the aggregate AmLaw 200 in every individual key metric category (margin, asset turnover, ROA, leverage, and ROE) except for leverage.  In other words, these 10 firms achieved superior performance with slightly less risk (more conservative leverage) than that of the aggregate AmLaw 200.   In addition, on average the LawBall Top 10 pick firms were moderately sized.  The average gross revenues and profit achieved by the LawBall Top 10 firms was $489,200,000 and $272,450,000, respectively.  Also on average, these firms had 379 lawyers, 111 of whom were partners.

What can other firms learn from benchmarking against these LawBall Top 10 firms?  How did the LawBall Top 10 in the aggregate achieve a margin (55.69%) that nearly was 20% higher than that achieved by the aggregate AmLaw 200 (37.65%)?  How did the LawBall Top 10 in the aggregate achieve an asset turnover or revenue per lawyer ($1,290,765) that was 1.79 times as great as the asset turnover achieved by the aggregate AmLaw 200 ($720,808)?  The resulting product achieved by multiplying margin times asset turnover is return on assets (or profit per lawyer) – and the different margin and asset turnover levels of performance achieved by the aggregate LawBall Top 10 versus the aggregate AmLaw 200 resulted in a ROA for the LawBall Top 10 ($718,865) that nearly was 2.65 times that achieved by the AmLaw 200 ($271,403).  And, despite a more conservative use of leverage (3.4237 for the aggregate LawBall Top 10 vs. 3.7302 for the aggregate AmLaw 200), the aggregate LawBall Top 10 return on equity (or profit per partner) of $2,461,156 was 2.43 times as great as the ROE of $1,012,375 achieved by the aggregate AmLaw 200.

I’ve said often that I prefer to analyze a business over a 5-year operating period – not just a 1-year period.  But, having said that, the rather stark differential in 2006 financial operating performance between the LawBall Top 10 firms and many of the others in the AmLaw 200 should make it clear that there is no room in the business of practicing law for paradigm blindness.  “This is the way we’ve always done it” just won’t cut it and must be overcome.  How did the firms in the LawBall Top 10 achieve their high performance?  What do they know, what do they do, and what policies, products, programs, and strategies (to name just a few things) do those firms possess that the other firms don’t know, don’t do, or don’t possess?   Perhaps some of the answers can be found in the 4 principles of enduring success that Stadler discovered in his benchmarking study discussed in his article:

  1. Exploit before you explore. In managing growth, the tension between leveraging existing assets and developing new ones is well known. Great companies have a clear priority: exploitation.  (The LawBall Top 10 firms seem to have figured this one out as they generate much more revenue from their assets than do the other AmLaw 200 firms.)
  2. Diversify your business portfolio. Great companies are adaptive. They diversify their supply bases, products, customers, and geographic markets.  (Might they also be doing a better job of matching their assets with the demand of their business – a concept envisioned by the professional asset capability matrix?)
  3. Remember your mistakes. Great companies do not fall into the same trap twice. Meaningful stories are passed on from one generation to the next from which successive generations draw clear object lessons.  (I know – getting lawyers to admit mistakes is tough!)
  4. Be conservative about change. Great companies go through radical change only at very select moments in their history, and they do so cautiously.  (As I’ve noted before, I think one of those select moments is facing the legal industry now.)

July 23, 2007

Oops! A Goof!

Oops - I goofed.  In my posting earlier today, Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder, I made a typo in the bullet point paragraph where I discussed return on assets - and that goof could lead to some confusion.  Where I wrote "Return on assets (ROA or, in LawBall, profit per partner) . . ." (bold emphasis added) I meant, and should've written:  "Return on assets (ROA or, in LawBall, profit per lawyer) . . ." (underlined emphasis added).  I've now corrected the goof in the actual posting - and my sincere apology to anyone who's read the posting with the error and got confused.

And - my thanks to Kevin Funnell who politely pointed out my stupidity in an e-mail!

BEAUTY IS IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER

Img_0006_6 David Hume, in his Essays, Moral and Political, wrote:

Beauty in things exists merely in the mind which contemplates them.

So, I believe, is beauty in the eye of the beholder when evaluating a business – even a business involved in the practice of law – whether one is evaluating the business for investment or simply as an operating entity.  Warren Buffett has offered that a stockholder and a business owner should look at ownership of the business in the same way and said, “I am a better investor because I am a businessman and a better businessman because I am an investor.”

The beholder’s view of beauty in business evaluation becomes relevant to today’s posting as the LawBall tour of Legalritaville has concluded and I’ve attached a *.pdf document that includes, among other things, an analytic table that shows the 2006 financial operating performance metrics for each of the firms in the 2007 AmLaw 200 and another table that shows the firms’ relative ranking (1 – 200) within each performance metric.  The attachment also includes analytic tables that show the firms’ relative ranking based on both the simple summation of the firms’ rankings in each individual key LawBall metric category and the simple summation of the firms’ rankings in all individual LawBall metric categories.  The *.pdf document is located in the right-hand margin under the category “Posting Attachments” as “AmLaw Top 200 Performance Statistics.”

Ever-mindful not only of the personal influence on business evaluation and how that might affect each individual reader’s view of the performance statistics, but also the oft-quoted bromide “There are 3 types of lies – lies, damn lies, and statistics,” I thought I’d include my own ranking of the Top 200 as an illustration of how each of us personally may place different levels of importance on separate performance metrics in evaluating a business.  Buffett and Peter Lynch (What’s Good for the Goose Is Good for the Gander . . . And Maybe Even Better) have provided insights into their investment philosophies over the years that have pointed to the personal nature of investing and, by extension of Buffett’s comment, business ownership.   These nuggets have included items whose actual application and implementation will differ from person to person such as:  stay within your “circle of competence”; find companies with simple and understandable businesses (that have consistent operating histories and favorable long-term prospects); determine your tolerance for risk, your objectives, and your attitude; look for and focus on companies with high profit margins and high earnings rates on equity capital without undue leverage, accounting gimmickry, and the like; and, understand the nature of the companies you own and the specific reasons for holding the stock.  From Buffett’s “An Owner’s Manual” also comes his personal view on the use of leverage:

We use debt sparingly and, when we do borrow, we attempt to structure our loans on a long-term fixed-rate basis. We will reject interesting opportunities rather than over-leverage our balance sheet. This conservatism has penalized our results but it is the only behavior that leaves us comfortable, considering our fiduciary obligations to policyholders, lenders and the many equity holders who have committed unusually large portions of their net worth to our care. (As one of the Indianapolis “500” winners said: “To finish first, you must first finish.”)

When evaluating a business for investment, purchase, or identifying operating performance issues – whether it’s engaged in the practice of law or some other business - I use the same metrics that I’ve incorporated into LawBall.  However, ultimately I place the most importance on these 3 metrics, in order of their importance to me:

  • Return on assets (ROA or, in LawBall, profit per lawyer) (when financial capital is involved as opposed to intellectual capital, I’ll use return on invested capital).  I believe ROA is a good measure of the efficiency with which a business allocates its resources and may be a better indicator of a firm’s financial health and performance than return on equity (ROE or, in LawBall, profit per partner) as it eliminates the potentially distorting effects of financial leverage on operating results.  ROA is the product achieved from multiplying asset turnover times margin.
  • Asset turnover (revenue per lawyer in LawBall) – the measure of revenue being generated by the business’ asset base (“offense” in LawBall).
  • Margin – the measure of how much of the revenue generated is kept as profit (“defense” in LawBall).

I subscribe to Buffett’s view on the conservative use of leverage.

The biggest differences between the business evaluation I typically perform and the one that I share with you today of the Top 200 is that normally I:

  • Analyze a business over a 5-year operating period – not just a 1-year period.
  • Know more factually about the actual business in which the individual companies are engaged.
  • Include an estimated value of the business for investment/purchase purposes.  Obviously, that’s not applicable here – and my view on the likelihood of U.S. law firms “going public” has been published previously (Public Ownership Ethics Issue a Red Herring).

Here in order are my LawBall top 10 financial operating performance firms for 2006 from the 2007 AmLaw 200:  Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz; Wiley Rein; Sullivan & Cromwell; Cahill Gordon & Reindel; Irell & Manella; Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Munger, Tolles & Olson; Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher; and, Quinn Emanuel Urquhrt Oliver & Hedges.  Below are 2 tables for my top 10 - one contains the 2006 financial operating performance metrics for each of the firms, with my personal key metrics highlighted in blue, and the other contains the firms’ relative ranking among the AmLaw 200 (1 – 200) within each performance metric, again with my personal key metrics highlighted in blue.  By clicking on the tables you can open a larger version.  The *pdf attachment also includes a complete list of the firms ranked (1 - 200) according to my 3 personal key metrics.

Lawball_picks_performance_6

Lawball_picks_ranking

Several brief observations:

  • When compared to the aggregate performance of the AmLaw 200, the aggregate relative financial operating performance of the LawBall Top 10 picks significantly exceeded that of the aggregate AmLaw 200 in every individual key metric category (margin, asset turnover, ROA, leverage, and ROE) except for leverage.  In other words, these 10 firms achieved superior performance with slightly less risk (more conservative leverage) than that of the aggregate AmLaw 200.  What does that say about these 10 firms’ business models, particularly the firms’ strategy and the mix of the firms’ business demands and their assets (lawyers) to meet that demand as contemplated by the professional asset capability matrix?
  • On average, the LawBall Top 10 pick firms were moderately sized.  The average gross revenues and profit achieved by the 10 firms was $489,200,000 and $272,450,000, respectively.  Also on average, the LawBall Top 10 pick firms had 379 lawyers, 111 of whom were partners.
  • By comparison to the LawBall Top 10 picks, when summing up the AmLaw 200 rankings in each individual key metric category the top 10-ranked firms in order were:  Wiley Rein; Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Quinn Emanuel Urquhart Oliver & Hedges; Cahill Gordon & Reindel; Cleary Gottlieb & Hamilton; Millbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy; Sullivan & Cromwell; and, Schulte Roth & Zabel.
  • By comparison to the LawBall Top 10 picks, when summing up the AmLaw 200 rankings in all of the metric categories the top 10-ranked firms in order were:  Dechert; Latham & Watkins; Wiley Rein; Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Kirkland & Ellis; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom; Sullivan & Cromwell; and, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher.

Trophy_with_blue_ribbon The *.pdf attachment also has easy to view individual tables that reflect the firms’ individual rankings (1-200) in all of the key metric categories of margin, asset turnover, ROA, financial leverage, and ROE versus the AmLaw 200 in the aggregate.   I encourage you to go through the attachment, to see where your firm falls within the data, to see where other firms that interest you fall with in the data, to look at what you consider to be the “best” or “top” firms, to compare relative performances, and to add several more years of your firm’s data to the mix and analyze it in terms of trends.  Most of all, I encourage you to question what insight this data gives you as to business models employed in the legal industry.

In an effort to make it easier for you to navigate through the *.pdf attachment, here’s a listing (in order) of the tables in the document:

  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed in Order of the LawBall Picks (Just the Top 10).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed in Order of the LawBall Picks (1-200).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of the LawBall Picks (1-200).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed in Order of Gross Revenues (the order of ranking chosen by The American Lawyer for its top 200).
  • 2006 Financial Operations Performance – Listed Alphabetically.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of Gross Revenues.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of Key Metrics Ranking.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed in Order of All Metrics Ranking.
  • 2006 Financial Operations Ranking – Listed Alphabetically.
  • Margin Ranking.
  • Asset Turnover Ranking.
  • Return on Assets Ranking.
  • Financial Leverage Ranking.
  • Return on Equity Ranking.

Each table has a bookmark in the *.pdf document to make it easier for you to find the table.

July 18, 2007

MIDDLE ATLANTIC “TRUMPS” OTHER DIVISIONS

Randy_quaid In the immortal words of Russell Casse (Randy Quaid’s character in Independence Day) as he  Img_0007_3 approached the alien space ship, “Hello, boys!  I’m back!”  And, although much less dramatic and without nearly the fanfare, I’m back also from my Florida trip.  Absolutely great margaritas and even better beaches!  Now that I am back, LawBall wraps up its journey through Legalritaville with its final stop - the Middle Atlantic division as shown on the U.S. Census Bureau’s Map of the Census Regions and Divisions of the United States.

Donald_trump_2 As one might expect from a division that includes 2 states from the heart of Donald J. Trumpland, size influenced the simple ranking of the firms based on all of the LawBall metric categories, where Philadelphia-based Dechert ranked 1st; while leverage influenced the simple ranking of the firms based on LawBall’s key metric categories, where New York-based Cravath, Swaine & Moore ranked 1st.  And, when looking beyond the performance of the individual firms to the aggregate performance of the Middle Atlantic division in comparison to the aggregate performance of the AmLaw 200, the division (if you’ll please pardon the horrible pun – I’m still under the influence of the margaritas) simply “trumped” the other divisions.

According to the Census Bureau map, the Middle Atlantic division includes the states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.  The division includes 58 firms from the 2007 AmLaw 200 (2006 operating information) – 40 in New York, 15 in Pennsylvania, and 3 in New Jersey.  The AmLaw 200 firms in the Middle Atlantic division’s 3 states are:

  • New Jersey (3):  Gibbons; Lowenstein Sandler; McCarter & English.
  • New York (40):  Boies, Schiller & Flexner; Brown Raysman Millstein Felder & Steiner; Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft; Cahill Gordon & Reindel; Chadbourne & Parke; Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton; Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle; Davis Polk & Wardwell; Debevoise & Plimpton; Dewey Ballantine; Epstein Becker & Green; Fitzpatrick, Cella, Harper & Scinto; Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy; Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson; Hughes Hubbard & Reed; Jackson Lewis; Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman; Kaye Scholer; Kelley Drye & Warren; Kenyon & Kenyon; Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel; LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae; Nixon Peabody; Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy; Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; Proskauer Rose; Schulte Roth & Zabel; Shearman & Sterling; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Skadden Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom; Stroock & Stroock  Lavan; Sullivan & Cromwell; Thacher Proffitt & Wood; Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz; Weil, Gotshal & Manges; White & Case; Willkie Farr & Gallagher; and, Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker.
  • Pennsylvania (15):  Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll; Blank Rome; Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney; Cozen O’Connor; Dechert; Drinker Biddle & Reath; Duane Morris; Fox Rothschild; Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Preston Gates Ellis; Morgan, Lewis & Bockius; Pepper Hamilton; Reed Smith; Saul Lewis; Stevens & Lee; and, Wolf, Block, Schorr and Solis-Cohen.

As has become my custom, I’ve placed my observations before the analytic tables and have placed the tables at the end of this posting.  The tables include one that contains the 2006 financial operating performance metrics for each of the firms in the Middle Atlantic division and a second that shows the firms’ relative ranking (1 – 58) within each performance metric.  By clicking on the tables you can open a larger version.  I’ve also attached the tables as a *.pdf document in the right-hand margin under the category “Posting Attachments” as “Legal Industry Middle Atlantic Division Metrics 2006.”

Several observations:

  • When compared to the aggregate performance of the AmLaw 200, the aggregate relative financial operating performance of the Middle Atlantic division exceeded that of the aggregate AmLaw 200 in every individual key metric category.  Also,
    • Nearly ½ of the division’s firms, 25 (43%), exceeded the aggregate AmLaw 200’s margin of 37.65%.
    • 31 (53%) of the division’s firms exceeded the aggregate AmLaw 200’s asset turnover (revenue per lawyer) of $720,808.
    • 29 (50%) of the division’s firms exceeded the aggregate AmLaw 200’s return on assets (ROA or profit per lawyer) of $271,403.
    • 41 (71%) of the division’s firms exceeded the 3.7302 financial leverage achieved by the aggregate AmLaw 200.
    • 33 (57%) of the division’s firms achieved a return on equity (ROE or profit per partner) that exceeded the aggregate AmLaw 200’s ROE of $1,012,375.
  • When summing up the Middle Atlantic divisions’ firm rankings in each individual key metric category, the top 5-ranked firms all were New York City-based:  Cravath, Swaine & Moore (1st with 39 points); Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison (2nd with 49 points); Sullivan & Cromwell (3rd with 57 points); Simpson Thacher & Bartlett (4th with 58 points); and, Cahill Gordon & Reindel (5th with 59 points).  It is interesting to note that Cravath garnered no individual key metric category 1st place rankings, and it’s highest ranking was 3rd place (both in asset turnover and ROE).  The highest ranking achieved in any key metric category by Paul, Weiss was 8th (in ROE).   Meanwhile, 6th place Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz (60 points) ranked 1st in 3 categories (asset turnover, ROA, and ROE) and 2nd in margin.  (Those totals are not included in the tables for space reasons but are included for all of the firms in the *.pdf attachment).
    • The juxtaposition of these 3 firms illustrates why ROA is a good measure of the efficiency with which a business allocates its resources and may be a better indicator of a firm’s financial health and performance than ROE, as it eliminates the potentially distorting effects of financial leverage on operating results – and why simple ranking systems epitomize the oft-quoted bromide, “There are 3 types of lies – lies, damn lies, and statistics.”  When eliminating the firms’ leverage ranking from the ranking points (Wachtell was 55th, Cravath 22nd, and Paul, Weiss 10th), Wachtell had 5 points (an average key metric category ranking of 1.25 when excluding leverage) and Cravath had 17 points (an average ranking of 4.25).  Both firms played really good “offense” and “defense” – as captured by Wachtell’s ROA of $1,585,492 (ranked 1st) and Cravath’s ROA of $646,552 (ranked 4th) (remember:  ROA = margin x asset turnover).  Paul, Weiss, on the other hand, scored 39 points (a 9.75 average ranking) when excluding leverage and achieved an ROA of $474,695) – a good performance, but not on par with Wachtell and Cravath’s relative performances within the division.  Wachtell’s ROA was 2.45 times that of Cravath and 3.34 times that of Paul, Weiss.  In fact, Wachtell’s ROA was 1.97 times that of the 2nd ranked ROA firm (Sullivan & Cromwell with an ROA of $804,348).
    • What was the effect of leverage – “special teams” play?  Besides it’s impact on the simple key metric category rankings as noted above, the firms’ relative ROE performances (remember:  ROE = ROA x leverage; it’s also margin x asset turnover x leverage) were:  Wachtell - $3,974,026 (1st place); Cravath - $3,017,241 (3rd place); and, Paul, Weiss - $2,495,413 (8th place).  Both Cravath and Paul, Weiss used leverage to improve their individual ROE ranking from their individual ROA ranking – and the relative ROE disparity between Wachtell and the firms also narrowed as a result of leverage:  Wachtell’s ROE was only 1.32 times that of Cravath and 1.59 times that of Paul, Weiss.  Another example of the leverage’s effect:  Boies, Schiller & Flexner ranked 19th with an ROA of $363,830 (Wachtell’s ROA was 4.36 times greater), but used it’s 1st place ranking in leverage (8.3929) to vault to a 2nd place ranking in ROE with an ROE of $3,053,571 (Wachtell’s ROE was 1.30 times greater).  Don’t forget, though, that leverage can be toxic – in good times it can be a rocket fuel boost to ROE, and in bad times it can be a firebomb accelerant as diminishing or slower-growing revenues lead to lesser amounts remaining for distribution as profit to partners.
  • When summing up the firms’ rankings in all of the metric categories, Dechert ranked 1st (115 points).  Paul, Weiss ranked 2nd here, too (117 points).  Simpson Thacher and Sullivan & Cromwell exchanged places, with Simpson Thacher ranking 3rd (118 points) and Sullivan & Cromwell 4th (120 points).  Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton ranked 5th (121 points).  Firm size likely had a hand in the ranking changes when moving from summing only the key metric categories to summing all of the metric categories.  Gross revenue and profit by their nature are pure size metrics – each simply measures the amount – and the larger the amount in each category the lower the relative score.  When looking at Dechert and Cleary Gottlieb – 2 firms that were not in the top 5 firms in the key metric category only rankings but moved to 1st and 5th, respectively, in the all metric category rankings – both firms ranked in the top 10 in both gross revenue and profit and replaced 2 firms that were not.  In addition, Deckert’s greater number of lawyers than Cravath – a lawyer to lawyer ratio of 2.21 to 1 – when paired with costs that bore a smaller relative differential – Deckert’s cost to Cravath’s cost ratio was 1.37 to 1 - contributed to Deckert’s having a significantly better cost per lawyer ranking (23 to 55) than Cravath.  The net ranking points “swing” among those 3 additional categories (39 points for Deckert and 83 for Cravath for a favorable 44 point swing for Deckert) was enough for Deckert to vault from 13th in the key metric only category ranking to 1st in the all metric category ranking and to knock Cravath from 1st in the key metric ranking to 6th in the all metric ranking.  With a lawyer to lawyer ratio of 3.45 to 1 and a cost to cost ratio of 4.36 to 1, Cleary Gottlieb did not have a cost per lawyer advantage when compared to Cahill Gordon (38th ranking to 17th), but its significant gross revenue and profit size advantage was enough for the net point swing among those 3 additional categories (50 points for Cleary Gottlieb and 74 for Cahill Gordon for a favorable 24 point swing for Clearly Gottlieb) to move it from 11th in the key metric only category ranking to 5th in the all metric ranking and to move Cahill Gordon from 5th in the key metric ranking to 8th in the all metric ranking.

Trophy_with_blue_ribbon The *.pdf attachment also has easy to view individual tables that reflect the firms’ individual rankings in margin, asset turnover, ROA, financial leverage, and ROE versus the Middle Atlantic division in the aggregate and the AmLaw 200 in the aggregate.

Next up will be a posting that includes a 2006 Financial Operations Ranking of the complete AmLaw 200.

Here’re the tables:

Middle_atlantic_performance

Middle_atlantic_ratings

July 10, 2007

LEGALRITAVILLE POTPOURRI

I25I40 I65 Due to The American Lawyer’s methodology of ranking the U.S. law firms by gross revenues, LawBall’s meandering journey through Legalritaville became even more so as 2 of the divisions (as shown on the U.S. Census Bureau map)  - the Mountain and the East South Central – contained just 2 AmLaw 200 firms each.  For convenience sake – my writing and your reading obviously more than travel on the U.S. Interstates – I decided to tour both divisions together.  In this segment of the tour, the “South rose again,” as Birmingham-based Bradley Arant Rose & White ranked 1st when looking at both the key LawBall metric categories and all LawBall metric categories.

The 2 divisions include the 8 Mountain division states of Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, New Mexico, Montana, Utah, Nevada, and Wyoming and the 4 East South Central division states of Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Tennessee.  The 2 divisions include only 4 firms from the 2007 AmLaw 200 (2006 operating information) – 1 each based in Birmingham, Phoenix, Denver, and Memphis.

The AmLaw 200 firms in the Mountain and the East South Central divisions’ 12 states are:

  • Alabama (1):  Bradley Arant Rose & White.
  • Arizona (1):  Snell & Wilmer.
  • Colorado (1):  Holland & Hart.
  • Tennessee (1):  Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz.

Once again, I’ve put my observations before the analytic tables and have placed the tables at the end of this posting.  The tables include one that contains the 2006 financial operating performance metrics for each of the firms in the Mountain and East South Central divisions and a second that shows the firms’ relative ranking (1 – 4) within each performance metric.  By clicking on the tables you can open a larger version.  I’ve also attached the tables as a *.pdf document in the right-hand margin under the category “Posting Attachments” as “Legal Industry Mountain East South Central Divisions Metrics 2006.”

Several observations:

  • When compared to the aggregate performance of the AmLaw 200, the aggregate relative financial operating performance of the 2 divisions did not exceed that of the aggregate AmLaw 200 in any single key metric category.
    • Both Bradley Arant Rose & White (53.48%) and Holland & Hart (42.91%), though, achieved margins that exceeded the aggregate AmLaw 200’s margin of 37.65%.
    • No firm in the division exceeded either the aggregate AmLaw 200’s asset turnover (revenue per lawyer) of $720,808 or the aggregate AmLaw 200’s return on equity (ROE or profit per partner) of $1,012,375.
    • Only Bradley Arant ($284,722) achieved a return on assets (ROA or profit per lawyer) that exceeded the $271,403 ROA achieved by the aggregate AmLaw 200.
    • Only Snell & Wilmer (5.7917) exceeded the 3.7302 financial leverage achieved by the aggregate AmLaw 200.
  • When summing up the Mountain and East South Central divisions’ firm rankings in each of the key metric categories, Birmingham’s Bradley Arant finished 1st with 9 points, ahead of 2nd ranked Snell & Wilmer (12 points) of Phoenix by 3 points.  Bradley Arant garnered 1st place rankings in asset turnover (“offense”), margin (“defense”), and ROA; a 4th place ranking in leverage (“special teams”); and a 2nd place ranking in ROE.  Snell & Wilmer scored a 4th place ranking in margin; a 2nd place ranking in asset turnover, which resulted in a 4th place ranking in ROA; a 1st in leverage; and, a 1st in ROE.  As was the case in the West North Central division, Bradley Arant’s offensive (asset turnover) and defensive (margin) performances led to a large enough advantage in ROA performance (remember, ROA = asset turnover x margin) that the aggregate 7-point ratings advantage in those 3 key metric categories was too much for Snell & Wilmer’s 3-point leverage (special teams) and 1-point ROE ratings advantages to overcome.  Holland & Hart finished with 14 points, and Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz finished with 15 points.  (Those totals are not included in the tables for space reasons but are included for all of the firms in the *.pdf attachment).
  • When summing up the firms’ rankings in all of the metric categories, Bradley Arant again finished 1st (16 points).  Holland & Hart and Snell & Wilmer exchanged places, as Holland & Hart finished 2nd with 20 points and Snell & Wilmer finished 3rd with 21 points.  Baker, Donelson again finished 4th with 23 points.

Trophy_with_blue_ribbon The *.pdf attachment also has easy to view individual tables that reflect the firms’ individual rankings in margin, asset turnover, ROA, financial leverage, and ROE versus the consolidated Mountain and East South Central divisions in the aggregate and the AmLaw 200 in the aggregate.

Today’s posting is the last one for about a week, as I take some time off to attend a friend’s wedding and to enjoy some of Florida’s glorious beaches.   When I return, the Legalritaville tour will pick up with the Middle Atlantic division – the final division - that includes the states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.  Then, instead of a movie that shows the tour’s highlights after its last stop in the Middle Atlantic, the highlights will be captured instead in a subsequent posting that includes a 2006 Financial Operations Ranking of the complete AmLaw 200.  A tantalizing thought, isn’t it?

Here’re the tables, while I go pack my SPF 70 sunblock and Tommy Bahama shirts:

Sunblock_2         Tommy_bahama_4












Mountain_east_south_central_perform

Mountain_east_south_central_ranking