Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Nation & World

USN Current Issue

Legal change agent: Robert Link Jr.

By Tim Smart
Posted 10/3/04

Deep in the heart of Lower Manhattan is a maze of narrow thoroughfares where New York City's early commercial development flourished. Adjacent to the East River, the area became home to lawyers who thrived on handling cases that sprouted from the international trade plied across the open seas. Admiralty law was a legal specialty of the day, and those who were good at it prospered. Among those who practiced it best was a law firm known today as Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, a partnership that dates its heritage to 1792.

Today, though, admiralty law has given ground to the esoteric practice of crafting sophisticated financial instruments that enable the capital markets to spread multibillion-dollar risks around. Now, those same Manhattan streets wend their way through the heart of the global financial system. And you can still find Cadwalader lawyers at the center of commerce here, as well as in other financial power hubs such as London, Washington, D.C., and Charlotte, N.C.

The new era is reflected in changes at the firm, where chairman and managing partner Robert Link Jr. is trying to balance the deliberative nature of a law firm, with each partner enjoying a say in the operations of the practice, with 21st-century business, which demands razor-sharp, lightning-quick decision making. It is a delicate task: adhering to the firm's long history and tradition--Cadwalader counted Alexander Hamilton among its early clients--while maintaining a modern-day culture.

Despite its size, with 599 lawyers and a like number of administrative and support staff, Cadwalader does not try to be all things to all clients. In recent years, Link and other senior partners have reorganized the firm around a core group of high-margin practices centered on the financial services industry. "Back in the early '90s, we had developed very significant practices in structured finance and securitization, but we were still doing a lot of practice in areas that had kind of slipped," says the 49-year-old Link.

Link brings to his management task some true number-crunching skills. A partner since 1990, he joined the firm in 1987 after having practiced real-estate law in Atlanta and New York. He is an honors graduate in accounting from the University of Tennessee, where he also earned his M.B.A. and J.D. "Law firms now are run as businesses," he says. "We do $400 million plus in revenues. For us, it was about taking our strengths and slowly over time refocusing."

That strategy has helped Cadwalader reach a position of dominance among the cadre of firms providing legal services to the corporate powers of global finance. The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., or Freddie Mac, is a major client, as are many other big players in the capital and real-estate finance markets. Cadwalader was a pioneer in the securitization of financial assets, which allows lenders and others to package mortgages and other obligations into securities that can be sold to investors. The firm represented Freddie Mac in the first issue of collateralized mortgage obligations (popularly known as CMO s) and also led the way in the securitization of automobile loans with General Motors Acceptance Corp. and, with Goldman Sachs, the pooling of credit card debt.

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