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Watson Farley & Williams opened an office in Hong Kong, in association with Lau, Leong & Co., in March 2012. [4] [5] [dead link ] Watson Farley & Williams opened an office in Frankfurt in January 2013 with a regulatory team focusing on the energy, infrastructure and real estate sectors. [6] [7] [8]
The deal will see Goldman Sachs commit to a 25-year lease of the 826,000 square foot site and are set to move into the building in summer 2019. The landmark transaction is the single largest UK real estate deal this year, and the second-largest ever, after the sale of the 'Walkie Talkie' building for $1.6bn, where DWF London lawyers reside.
HFW was founded in 1883, and its early expertise was representing maritime clients following shipwrecks and collisions. [2] It has since broadened its practice to focus on six core sectors globally: aerospace, commodities, construction, energy and resources, insurance and reinsurance, and shipping.
RP launched its publishes 12-page manifesto titled "A Brighter Future Tomorrow, Today", which highlights include minimum wage, reducing National Service to one year and capping the number of foreign workers. [108] Singapore Police Force released a list of 18 designated assembly centres, with applications opened for two days to the Political ...
Watson, Farley & Williams, a law firm based in London, UK; Windows for Workgroups, an operating system developed by Microsoft; Microsoft Word for Windows, a popular word-processing software; The World of Fine Wine, a wine magazine
Amrin was a solicitor at Watson, Farley & Williams Asia Practice LLP, and was also a member of National Council on Problem Gambling as well as the governing board of Nanyang Polytechnic. [6] He was a partner at the corporate practice of Joseph Tan Jude Benny LLP between July and October 2015. [7] [8] [9] [10]
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As it continues to do today, the Law Society Gazette has always provided an opportunity for solicitors to stay abreast of new advances in technology – in 1968 it was advertising training courses in the use of computers and in 1984 it promoted a new method of 'electronic mail' known as 'fax'.