Author: georgina.stanley@legalweek.com
24 May 2007 | 03:37
The top five US giant confirmed that its newly-qualified solicitors are now paid around £96,000 before bonuses, with the firm converting its standard US starting salary of $160,000 (£81,000) according to an exchange rate set two years ago.
Latham told Legal Week the firm is using a conversion rate of roughly $1.65 to the pound, which gives the pound a significantly lower value in comparison to the current exchange rate, which currently stands at almost $2/£1.
The bulk of Manhattan's legal elite currently pay a standard rate of $160,000 for newly-qualified lawyers in both London and the US, but a newly-qualified lawyer at Latham takes home £4,000 more a year than his or her equivalent at the local arm of US rival Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, which itself employs an outdated conversion rate of around $1.75/£1 - equating to £92,000 a year.
However, while many US firms operate a bonus system, lawyers in Latham's London office are not all guaranteed an award.
Cleary London partner Glen Scarcliffe commented: "All our offices have some kind of exchange rate protection so the Americans are taken care of."
Additional reporting by James Illman.
Have your say on the salary merry-go-round with the Legal Week Wiki 2007 salary special.
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