Chinese investment in Europe increased by 55 per cent to €31.4 billion in 2015, according to a Cuatrecasas Gonçalves Pereira/ESADE Business & Law School report.
In the short term, banking and finance-related work will sustain many law firms in Lisbon, but the longer term outlook is more uncertain and legal market consolidation is looking likely
M&A, real estate and finance matters are keeping Portuguese lawyers busy, but the firms that prosper in the coming years will be those that effectively plan for a new economic landscape
As client demands change it increasingly makes sense for large law firms in Portugal to organise their lawyers into industry-focused teams rather than according to legal practice areas, says Maria João Ricou, managing partner
Good yields in the Portuguese real estate market, along with growth in the tourism sector are generating a significant amount of work for lawyers, according to Duarte Garin, managing partner of Uría Menéndez-Proenç
Significant investment in the financial, real estate and tourism sectors set to continue, while clients’ data protection concerns increase
Adjusting to the impact of artificial intelligence on the legal sector is one of the key challenges facing law firms, says João Caiado Guerreiro, managing partner of Caiado Guerreiro.
As Lusophone Africa suffers the effects of lower oil prices, law firms in Lisbon are turning their attention to more unfamiliar jurisdictions