Firm Profiles
IN-DEPTH RESEARCH REPORT
on Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP
- - Financial Information
- - Compensation
- - Billing Rates
- - Lateral Partner Moves
- - Pro bono
- - Key Contacts
Davis Polk & Wardwell
- Designation: New York
- Head Count: 787
- Gross Revenues: $950,000,000
- Revenue Per Lawyer: $1,205,000
- Profits Per Partner: $2,455,000
- Year Over Year Change: no change
The 160–year–old Davis Polk & Wardwell made its name as counsel to J. Pierpont Morgan and the companies the legendary financier put on the map. It did the legal work that created General Electric, United States Steel (the largest company in history when it was formed in 1901), and Morgan Stanley & Co. Many decades later, it advised on J.P. Morgan & Co’s $38.6 billion merger with Chase Manhattan Bank (creating JPMorgan Chase & Co in 2000).
More recently, Davis Polk litigators were the go–to lawyers for financial institutions sued over the financial crisis. Its work in reducing the exposure for Bank of America Corporation, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, and Citigroup Inc. helped earn the firm an honorable mention in The American Lawyer’s 2012 Litigation Department of the Year contest. (It also earned honorable mentions in 2006 and 2010.) The U.S. government was another major client during the crisis, with Davis Polk serving as counsel to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the U.S. Department of the Treasury in a series of multibillion–dollar transactions involving American International Group, Inc. (AIG).
Davis Polk has consistently placed, even during the downturn, in the top 15 in average partner compensation on our Am Law 100 rankings. It is one of the few transactional–heavy New York firms that saw an overall increase in its attorney rolls during the crisis. By other metrics, however, the firm fared less successfully. Drops in revenue–per–lawyer and profits–per–partner between 2007 and 2009 resulted in a respectable, but not spectacular, ranking on The American Lawyer’s Recession Performance Index (twenty–sixth out of 84 firms).
But better than average pro bono and midlevel satisfaction marks have helped put Davis Polk in the top ten on The American Lawyer’s A–List ranking (the firm placed ninth in 2011), and in September 2010 it was cited by The American Lawyer as having the highest percentage of women equity partners. Davis Polk may be an old–line firm, but it’s one that’s embracing a new generation.
—Updated as of 1/1/12
Firm Rankings
| Survey | Rank | Year Over Year Change | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Am Law 100 | 22 | no change | Gross revenue |
| Am Law 200 | 22 | no change | Gross revenue |
| NLJ 250 | 42 | 3 | Lawyer head count |
| The A-List | 6 | 3 | Overall excellence |
| Pro Bono Scorecard | 31 | 13 | Pro-bono commitment |
| Diversity Scorecard | 19 | 5 | Minority head count |
| Midlevel Associates Survey | 32 | 28 | Job satisfaction |
| Summer Associates Survey | 69 | 9 | Summer programs |
In the News
New Deals
Tania Karas and Tom Huddleston Jr. : New York Law Journal : May 23, 2013
Web giant Yahoo agreed Sunday to buy popular blogging and social media service Tumblr for $1.1 billion. Also, generic drug maker Actavis reached an agreement to acquire Irish rival Warner Chilcott in an all-stock deal worth $8.5 billion, including assumed debt.
Rue21 Sale Offers Retail Therapy for Three Am Law Firms
Tom Huddleston Jr. : The Am Law Daily : May 23, 2013
Buyout firm Apax Partners has agreed to pay $1.1 billion in cash for clothing company rue21, which markets affordable clothes to teenaged shoppers. Am Law 100 firms Simpson Thacher, Kirkland & Ellis, and Ropes & Gray are among the advisers on the deal.
Pandit Redux: Ex-Citi Boss Taps Davis Polk for Comeback
Brian Baxter : The Am Law Daily : May 20, 2013
Davis Polk & Wardwell is advising former Citigroup boss Vikram Pandit, who was forced out as head of the global banking giant last year, on his return to the financial services industry through his investment in India's JM Financial Group.
Latham, Davis Polk Lead as Actavis Buys Generic Rival
Tom Huddleston Jr. : The Am Law Daily : May 20, 2013
Generic drug maker Actavis has agreed to pay $5 billion in stock and assumed $3.5 billion in debt to acquire Irish rival Warner Chilcott. The deal comes less than a month after the collapse of a tentative deal that would have seen Actavis sold to Valeant Pharmaceuticals for $13 billion.
Davis Polk on $4 Billion CNOOC Bond Offering
Jessica Seah : The Asian Lawyer : May 16, 2013
The debt issue represents the largest U.S. dollar-denominated offering in Asia since 2003.
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
Four Firms on $890 Million China Take Private Deal
Tom Brennan : The Asian Lawyer : May 14, 2013
Telecom software company AsiaInfo-Linkage is the latest Chinese company to seek to de-list from a U.S. exchange.
Surging U.S. IPO Market Yields Gains for Cooley, Hunton
Brian Baxter : The Am Law Daily : May 14, 2013
U.S. companies have already raised $16.8 billion through initial public offerings so far this year and several Am Law 100 firms are reaping the benefits.
Financial Reform
: New York Law Journal : May 13, 2013
In this Special Report from the New York Law Journal: "Dodd-Frank Brings Regulatory Change to Investment Advisers," "Challenging a SIFI Designation," "New and Proposed Research Rules Create Compliance Challenges for Banks" and "Controlling the Risks of Shadow Banking."
Texas' Top Deals of 2012
Brenda Sapino Jeffreys : Texas Lawyer : May 13, 2013
The top 10 deals in Texas in 2012.
- Adams and Reese
- Akerman Senterfitt
- Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld
- Allen & Overy
- Ashurst
- Baker & Hostetler
- Baker & McKenzie
- Bingham McCutchen
- 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
- Dickinson Wright
- DLA Piper
- Dorsey & Whitney
- Dreier LLP
- Freehills
- Freshfields
- Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
- Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson
- Greenberg Traurig
- Haynes and Boone
- Herbert Smith
- Herrick, Feinstein
- Hogan Lovells
- Howrey
- Jenner & Block
- Jones Day
- K&L Gates
- Kilpatrick Townsend
- Kirkland & Ellis
- Kutak Rock
- Lane Powell
- Latham & Watkins
- Linklaters
- McCarter & English
- McDermott Will & Emery
- McKenna Long & Aldridge
- McKool Smith
- Minter Ellison
- Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo
- 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
- Perkins Coie
- Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pitman
- Potter Anderson & Corroon
- Proskauer Rose
- Reed Smith
- Richards, Layton & Finger
- Robinson & Cole
- Ropes & Gray
- Ruden McClosky
- Seyfarth Shaw
- Shea & Gould
- Shearman & Sterling
- Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton
- Simmons & Simmons
- Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
- Stroock & Stroock & Lavan
- Sullivan & Cromwell
- Sullivan & Worcester
- Weil, Gotshal & Manges
- White & Case
- Wiley Rein
- Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
- Winston & Strawn
- Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice
