Audrey Leigh > Goodwin > New York, United States > Lawyer Profile

Goodwin
THE NEW YORK TIMES BUILDING
620 EIGHTH AVENUE
NEW YORK NY 10018
NEW YORK
United States
Audrey Leigh photo

Position

Partner

Career

Audrey Leigh is a partner in Goodwin’s Business Law Department and a member of its Real Estate Industry group. Ms. Leigh focuses primarily on public and private capital markets transactions and other corporate finance and general corporate transactions in the real estate, hospitality and specialty finance sectors. She has advised sponsors, investment banks, real estate investment trusts, specialty finance companies, and business development companies in a wide range of transactions, including initial and follow-on public offerings, private placements of debt and equity, and mergers and acquisitions. She also regularly advises public companies on corporate governance matters. Ms. Leigh joined Goodwin in April 2015.

Education

JD, New York University School of Law / BA, Columbia University, Barnard College (magna cum laude)

Lawyer Rankings

United States > Finance > Capital markets: debt offerings

Goodwin‘s debt capital markets practice is active as both issuer’s and underwriters’ counsel and has a particularly strong reputation for its convertible bonds expertise. James Barri is well known for representing investment banks as underwriters in 144A and public convertible note offerings, particularly in the tech and life sciences spaces. Ettore Santucci represents publicly traded REITs and real estate operating companies in connection with a range of securities matters. The two Boston-based partners jointly lead the group. John Servidio in New York has considerable experience handling convertible note offerings and leads the derivative and structured products practice which sits within the overarching capital markets group. Audrey Leigh in New York and Kim de Glossop in Silicon Valley are key contacts in the team; Leigh focuses on capital markets transactions in the real estate, hospitality, and specialty finance sectors, while de Glossop is well versed in convertible notes and investment-grade offerings in the tech and life sciences spaces.