Firm Profiles
IN-DEPTH RESEARCH REPORT
on K&L Gates LLP
- - Financial Information
- - Compensation
- - Billing Rates
- - Lateral Partner Moves
- - Pro bono
- - Key Contacts
K&L Gates
- Designation: National
- Head Count: 1,720
- Gross Revenues: $1,060,500,000
- Revenue Per Lawyer: $615,000
- Profits Per Partner: $900,000
- Year Over Year Change: 1
One has to feel for an historian researching the roots of K&L Gates. The firm has had more mergers than Larry King has had marriages. Luckily, its unions have worked out better: K&L ranked sixteenth on the 2011 Am Law 100 list with just over $1 billion in revenue. It has also proved to be the most recessionproof of the countrys big firms, ranking first on The American Lawyers Recession Performance Index, which measured growthor lack thereofbetween 2007 and 2009. While many of its peers took hits to the pocketbook, K&L Gates saw its revenue increase at a compound annual growth rate of 17 percent.
The firmwhich bolted into the upper reaches of The Am Law 100 when a merger between Pittsburghs Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Nicholson Graham and Seattles Preston Gates & Ellis was approved in December 2006numbers some 1,800 lawyers (including nearly 300 equity partners), and is organized into six core practice areas: corporate and transactional, financial services, intellectual property, litigation and dispute resolution, real estate, and policy and regulatory. But its business model is what truly sets it apart.
There is the growthviamerger strategy, of course, but also the firms legendary aversion to debt. K&L finances its operations solely through partner capital contributionsand insists that any firm it acquires pay off its debt.
Those capital contributions can be substantial, particularly given the firms comparatively low average partner compensation (129th on The American Lawyers 2011 survey). Revenue per lawyer and profits per partner are also middling (coming in at 129th and ninetythird, respectively, on the 2011 list). Along with its bigcity offices, K&L also operates in secondary markets like Anchorage and Fort Worth, where billing rates are lower.
Its probably not a business model thats everyones cup of tea, says K&Ls chairman and global managing partner, Peter Kalis. [But] a lot of those same cities that pull down the average [revenue per lawyer] also generate a lot of very substantial work for the large cities. Maybe too much work. Associate satisfaction is low compared to other large firms, with K&L turning in a 125th place finish on The American Lawyers 2010 Midlevel Associates Survey and a 105th place finish in 2011.
The firm has also suffered some highprofile embarrassments. In 2009 it was dumped from Microsoft Corporations preferred provider listeven though the Gates in its name refers to retired partner William H. Gates, Sr., father of Microsofts founder. And in August 2011, a former lawyer in K&Ls Hong Kong office admitted to stealing money from client accounts to pay his gambling debts (ironically, he was a member of the firms betting and gaming practice). Given K&Ls track record, he should have bet on the firm, instead.
Updated as of 1/1/12
Firm Rankings
| Survey | Rank | Year Over Year Change | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Am Law 100 | 18 | 1 | Gross revenue |
| Am Law 200 | 18 | 1 | Gross revenue |
| NLJ 250 | 8 | no change | Lawyer head count |
| The A-List | NR | N/A | Overall excellence |
| Pro Bono Scorecard | 134 | 10 | Pro-bono commitment |
| Diversity Scorecard | 115 | 6 | Minority head count |
| Midlevel Associates Survey | 105 | no change | Job satisfaction |
| Summer Associates Survey | 51 | 6 | Summer programs |
In the News
K&L Gates, Fish Face Sanctions Bid in HP Patent Row
Jan Wolfe : The Litigation Daily : May 14, 2013
Is the Natural Gas Industry in Pa. Creating More Legal Work?
Zack Needles : The Legal Intelligencer : May 14, 2013
While there is currently debate over whether the rise of the natural gas industry in Pennsylvania has created as many jobs as some had originally projected, there is little disagreement among attorneys and legal recruiters that there is, at the moment, plenty of legal work flowing from the drilling industry and, as a consequence, steady demand for oil and gas lawyers.
CORRECTION
: The National Law Journal : May 13, 2013
K&L Gates on Defense as Shareholders Gang Up on Star Scientific
Victor Li : The Litigation Daily : May 13, 2013
Newsmakers
: Texas Lawyer : May 13, 2013
MOVERS
: The National Law Journal : May 13, 2013
Adrienne Pitts joins Baker & McKenzie as partner in the Chicago office. Plus more law firm movers in this week's column.
Texas' Top Deals of 2012
Brenda Sapino Jeffreys : Texas Lawyer : May 13, 2013
The top 10 deals in Texas in 2012.
Law Firms and Laterals Keep Houston Market Humming
Tom Huddleston Jr. : The Am Law Daily : May 13, 2013
Taken together, Katten Muchin Rosenman's recent move into Houston and a spate of lateral hires shows that a boom in energy-related work continues to attract new Am Law firms to Space City while motivating those already doing business there to bulk up.
INADMISSIBLE: For Donald Verrilli, A Collective Embrace
: The National Law Journal : May 13, 2013
On April 25, veterans of the Supreme Court bar came together to show Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. some love and blunt the criticism that has been aimed at him. Plus: Lamberth's rebuke, putting the U.S. criminal code on a diet, Cooke's Michael Jackson connection, Moreno leaves DOJ, the Justice Potter Stewart Award, and Humenik joins Covington in this week's column.
The Churn: Lateral Moves in The Am Law 200
Diane Jeantet : The Am Law Daily : May 10, 2013
Alston & Bird adds four partners to its capital markets department on the East Coast; the vice-chair of Greenberg Traurig's pharmaceutical, medical device, and health care litigation practice has left for Jones Day; and Locke Lord expands its Hong Kong office with five new attorneys. The Churn is constant. Please send all announcements to thechurn@alm.com.
- Adams and Reese
- Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld
- Anderson Kill & Olick
- Arent Fox
- Arthur Cox
- Baker & McKenzie
- Brown Rudnick
- Buist Moore
- Cahill Gordon & Reindel
- Chadbourne & Parke
- Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
- Clifford Chance
- Cooley
- Covington & Burling
- Cravath, Swaine & Moore
- Davis Polk & Wardwell
- Dewey & LeBoeuf
- Diamond McCarthy
- Dickstein Shapiro
- DLA Piper
- Dorsey & Whitney
- Dreier LLP
- Duane Morris
- Eversheds
- Fish & Richardson
- Freehills
- Freshfields
- Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
- Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson
- Gunderson Dettmer Stough Villeneuve Franklin & Hachigian
- Heller Ehrman
- Herbert Smith
- Herrick, Feinstein
- Hogan Lovells
- Howrey
- Irwin Mitchell
- Jenner & Block
- Jones Day
- K&L Gates
- Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman
- Kirkland & Ellis
- Latham & Watkins
- Linklaters
- Mallesons Stephen Jaques
- McKool Smith
- Minter Ellison
- Moore & Van Allen
- Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
- Morrison & Foerster
- Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough
- Nexsen Pruet
- Nixon Peabody
- Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart,
- Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe
- Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein
- Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker
- Perkins Coie
- Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pitman
- Proskauer Rose
- Reed Smith
- Ropes & Gray
- Ruden McClosky
- Shea & Gould
- Shearman & Sterling
- Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton
- Simmons & Simmons
- Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
- Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
- Slaughter and May
- Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal
- Sullivan & Cromwell
- Vinson & Elkins
- Weil, Gotshal & Manges
- Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
- Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice
