The Legal 500

King & Spalding LLP

LEVEL 15, AL SILA TOWER, SOWWAH SQUARE, PO BOX 130522, ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
Tel:
Work +971 2 596 7000
Fax:
Fax +971 2 596 7077
Web:
www.kslaw.com
Email:

United Arab Emirates : Banking and finance

Within Banking and finance, King & Spalding is a third tier firm,

King & Spalding is particularly noted for its Islamic finance and capital markets expertise. In 2012, the group represented Warba Bank as mandated lead arranger of a highly structured $460m debt financing, which was the first ever shari’ah-compliant exchangeable financing in the Middle East. Islamic finance expert Rizwan Kanji led on that deal and is highly recommended, as is Nabil Issa.

United Arab Emirates : Corporate and M&A

Within Corporate and M&A, tier 4

King & Spalding’s three-partner corporate practice runs the gamut of transactional work in the region, acting for a client base that includes Islamic and conventional financial institutions, venture capital and private equity funds, and investment companies such as Abraaj Capital. Highlights included advising NBK Capital on its exit from Jeddah-based Hanco, a fleet leasing and rental company in Saudi Arabia, and acting for Al-Futtaim on its acquisition of Al Sawani, the regional distributor for Guess and Benetton. Nabil Issa is highly recommended.

United Arab Emirates : Investment funds

Within Investment funds, King & Spalding is a second tier firm,

King & Spalding’s practice handles fund formation, structuring and transactions for private equity fund sponsors, financial institutions and high-net-worth individuals. It has seen renewed interest in SME investments, and advised Dubai Silicon Oasis Authority on the establishment of a shari’ah-compliant venture capital fund focusing on Dubai and the wider MENA region. Islamic finance expert Jawad Ali, Nabil Issa and Benjamin Newland are recommended.

United Arab Emirates : Projects and energy

Within Projects and energy, King & Spalding LLP is a third tier firm,

King & Spalding’s projects practice ‘works well under pressure and is good value for money, all while providing first-class advice’. It handles power and infrastructure mandates, including PPP projects, across the Middle East for clients such as Sadara Chemical Company and Tourism Development & Investment Company. Highlights included representing Abu Dhabi National Exhibitions Company in a major energy infrastructure PPP project in Abu Dhabi. Tim Burbury has ‘a huge amount of legal and commercial projects knowledge, particularly in relation to district cooling projects’.


Further information on King & Spalding LLP

Please choose from this list to view details of what we say about King & Spalding LLP in other jurisdictions.

United Arab Emirates

Offices in Dubai and Abu Dhabi

Germany

Offices in Frankfurt

France

Offices in Paris

Latin America: International firms

London

Offices in London

Russia

Offices in Moscow

Singapore

Offices in Singapore

Saudi Arabia

Offices in Riyadh

Switzerland

Offices in Geneva

United States

Offices in Washington DC, New York, Houston, Atlanta, Austin, Charlotte, San Francisco, and Redwood Shores

Legal Developments in United Arab Emirates

Legal Developments and updates from the leading lawyers in each jurisdiction. To contribute, send an email request to
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  • Construction Law & Practice, as published in The European Lawyer (Thomson Reuters)

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    The Emirate of Dubai has long been a centre for trade and commercial activity and such activity will inevitably generate disputes. In Arabic culture, traders endeavour to settle their disputes by negotiation, either between themselves or under the guidance of a leading citizen. The growth of international trade and investment has brought a wider range of disputes and Dubai has sought recently to place itself as a centre for commercial dispute resolution. Parties to international contracts are generally unwilling to submit their disputes to the Dubai Courts, with proceedings conducted in Arabic, and therefore international contracts generally include provisions for disputes to be resolved by arbitration. The law is developing rapidly in Dubai and the purpose of this article is to provide an insight into current arbitration practice at this exciting stage of its development.
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    In this article Anthony Edwards considers the extent to which the Dubai legal framework has served the construction industry in terms of protecting parties from the consequences of what happens when the boom times turn to bust. This article is the first in a series by Hadef & Partners’ Engineering & Construction Group.