Firm Profiles
IN-DEPTH RESEARCH REPORT
on Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
- - Financial Information
- - Compensation
- - Billing Rates
- - Lateral Partner Moves
- - Pro bono
- - Key Contacts
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
- Designation: National
- Head Count: 1,334
- Gross Revenues: $1,230,000,000
- Revenue Per Lawyer: $920,000
- Profits Per Partner: $1,550,000
- Year Over Year Change: 1
When Morgan, Lewis & Bockius does something, it tends to do it in a big way. There are the billion–dollar revenues, the massive roster of lawyers, the far–flung network of offices (22 across the globe), and the long list of A–list clients (including nine of the top ten companies in the Fortune 100). There is the firm’s big list of practice areas, too, which run the gamut from transactional and litigation to regulatory and intellectual property.
Morgan, Lewis’s labor and employment lawyers are particularly renowned. The group took top honors in The American Lawyer’s 2006 Labor and Employment Litigation Department of the Year contest, and was named a finalist in 2004, 2008, 2010, and 2012 (the competition is held every two years). The firm also scores above average on several key noneconomic law firm measures. It ranked fifty–ninth of 200 firms on The American Lawyer’s 2011 Pro Bono Report (with lawyers averaging 52 hours of volunteer legal work) and in the top third of firms (fortieth of 126) on our 2011 Midlevel Associates Survey. On diversity, Morgan, Lewis fares somewhat less well: minorities compose 14 percent of all U.S. lawyers and nearly 7 percent of U.S. partners, ranking it eighty–third of 200 firms on The American Lawyer’s 2011 tally.
While Morgan, Lewis’s revenue put it among the top tier of Am Law 100 firms, it has never topped the chart on profitability. Indeed, the firm’s profits per partner put it within the top 50. Morgan’s revenue per lawyer also places it around the middle of the pack. The firm gets its share of headline transactions—helping Pep Boys in its $1 billion buyout—but prides itself on handling important “operations” work, the blocking and tackling required by Corporate America.
Like many of its peers, Morgan, Lewis saw its transactional practices take a significant hit during the economic downturn. The firm ranked thirty–eighth of 84 firms on The American Lawyer’s Recession Performance Index, which measured performance between 2007 and 2009. Layoffs in March 2009 saw the departure of 55 attorneys, mostly associates, as well as 161 support staff.
Like many firms, Morgan, Lewis is looking to Asia for growth. It opened in Tokyo in 1988, one of the first western firms to land there. MLB didn’t get to Beijing until 2006, but it has created a dedicated Greater China Practice, with partners from five practices handling investments and disputes, in and out–bound.
—Updated as of 1/1/12
Firm Rankings
| Survey | Rank | Year Over Year Change | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Am Law 100 | 12 | 1 | Gross revenue |
| Am Law 200 | 12 | 1 | Gross revenue |
| NLJ 250 | 14 | no change | Lawyer head count |
| The A-List | 33 | 7 | Overall excellence |
| Pro Bono Scorecard | 59 | 26 | Pro-bono commitment |
| Diversity Scorecard | 78 | 5 | Minority head count |
| Midlevel Associates Survey | 40 | 26 | Job satisfaction |
| Summer Associates Survey | 5 | N/A | Summer programs |
In the News
Early Rain Doesn't Deter Big Winners at Bar Assn. 5K
Manny D. PokoTilow : The Legal Intelligencer : May 24, 2013
Before the 34th annual Philadelphia Bar Association 5K Charity Run, held on May 19, it had been raining all morning and started to pour at approximately 8 a.m., 30 minutes before the race was scheduled to start.
Summer Programs Still in a Drought
David Gialanella : New Jersey Law Journal : May 23, 2013
Summer hiring at New Jersey firms fell off in 2013, exhibiting no signs of a rebound from the stagnancy of the last four years.
Eversheds Hires Beijing Managing Partner
Jessica Seah : The Asian Lawyer : May 22, 2013
London-based Eversheds has hired a managing partner and a special counsel for its new Beijing office. A specialist in energy-related transactions, Ingrid Zhu-Clark joins as Beijing office head from Morgan Lewis; she headed Dewey & LeBoeuf's Beijing office for over a decade. Special counsel Jay Ze joins from Spanish law firm Uria Menendez.
Nominees to NLRB Get Mixed Reception From Senate Committee
Jenna Greene : The National Law Journal : May 21, 2013
All five nominees to the National Labor Relations Board appeared Thursday before a sharply divided U.S. Senate committee. Democrats urged their speedy confirmation while Republicans called the board biased and called upon two nominees serving under recess appointments to resign.
Eversheds Hires Beijing Managing Partner
: The Asian Lawyer : May 20, 2013
The U.K. firm has brought aboard former Dewey & LeBoeuf Beijing office head Ingrid Zhu-Clark.
NLRB Nominees Get Mixed Senate Reception
Jenna Greene : The National Law Journal : May 17, 2013
All five nominees to the National Labor Relations Board appeared Thursday before a sharply divided U.S. Senate committee. Democrats urged their speedy confirmation while Republicans called the board biased and called upon two nominees serving under recess appointments to resign.
Labor Board Nominees Get Mixed Senate Reception
Jenna Greene : The National Law Journal : May 16, 2013
All five nominees to the National Labor Relations Board appeared Thursday before a sharply divided U.S. Senate committee. Democrats urged their speedy confirmation while Republicans called the board biased and called upon two nominees serving under recess appointments to resign.
Asia Deal Digest: May 16, 2013
Tom Brennan : The Asian Lawyer : May 16, 2013
* Davis Polk on a $4 billion bond offering for China's CNOOC* Allen & Overy advising Sinopec Engineering on its $2.7 billion IPO* Four Wall Street firms take on AsiaInfo-Linkage's $890 million take-private deal
Labor Board Nominees Get Mixed Senate Reception
Jenna Greene : The National Law Journal : May 16, 2013
All five nominees to the National Labor Relations Board appeared Thursday before a sharply divided U.S. Senate committee. Democrats urged their speedy confirmation while Republicans called the board biased and called upon two nominees serving under recess appointments to resign.
State Bar Launches Global Law Week
Rick Kopstein, Photographer : New York Law Journal : May 15, 2013
Through Friday, multiple law firms and other groups will open their doors to attorneys, legal professionals, clients and colleagues from New York and around the world to discuss major issues in the international practice of law.
- Adams and Reese
- Akerman Senterfitt
- Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld
- Allen & Overy
- Ashurst
- Baker & McKenzie
- Brown Rudnick
- Buist Moore
- Cahill Gordon & Reindel
- Carlton Fields
- Clayton Utz
- Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
- Clifford Chance
- Cooley
- Davis Polk & Wardwell
- Dewey & LeBoeuf
- Diamond McCarthy
- DLA Piper
- Dorsey & Whitney
- Dreier LLP
- Freehills
- Freshfields
- Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
- Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson
- Herbert Smith
- Herrick, Feinstein
- Hogan Lovells
- Howrey
- Jones Day
- K&L Gates
- Kirkland & Ellis
- Latham & Watkins
- Linklaters
- McKool Smith
- Minter Ellison
- Moore & Van Allen
- Morrison & Foerster
- Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough
- Nexsen Pruet
- Nixon Peabody
- Norton Rose
- O?Melveny & Myers
- Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart,
- Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe
- Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein
- Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker
- Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pitman
- Potter Anderson & Corroon
- Proskauer Rose
- Reed Smith
- Richards, Layton & Finger
- Ropes & Gray
- Ruden McClosky
- Shea & Gould
- Shearman & Sterling
- Simmons & Simmons
- Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
- Stroock & Stroock & Lavan
- Sullivan & Cromwell
- Weil, Gotshal & Manges
- White & Case
- Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
- Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice
