0 results for 'Fish'
Showcasing Resilience of the Industry, Am Law 100 Firms Turn in Strong 2023
After taking a couple of body blows in 2022 and not knowing how the legs would hold up, Big Law was just waiting to counter.The 2024 Am Law 100: Ranked by Average Compensation - All Partners
Average Compensation–All Partners increased by 6.2% in 2023. Seventy-two firms posted increases, compared with 41 the previous year. Twenty firms posted double-digit gains, while five firms posted double-digit losses.The 2024 Am Law 100: Ranked by Profits Per Lawyer
Profits per lawyer is an alternative way of looking at firm profitability, intended to reduce the influence of factors such as leverage. The average is about $518,000, and the list-topper is about $3.04 million.The 2024 Am Law 100: Ranked by Profits Per Equity Partner
For the Am Law 100 as a whole, average PEP was up by 9.3% in 2023. Thirty-seven firms had growth rates of at least 10%, compared to 14 last year. Twenty firms had declines in 2023.The 2024 Am Law 100: Ranked by Revenue Per Lawyer
For the Am Law 100 as a whole, average revenue per lawyer, the metric that we've long regarded as the most reliable measure of a firm's financial health, increased by 4.9%. In 2023, eighty-five firms posted a gain in RPL.View more book results for the query "Fish"
See How Pa. Firms Fared in The 2024 Am Law 100 Gross Revenue Ranking
Fifty-four firms posted gross revenue of $1 billion or more in 2023, four more than in 2022. Ninety firms reported gains in gross revenue.The 2024 Am Law 100: Ranked by Gross Revenue
Fifty-four firms posted gross revenue of $1 billion or more in 2023, four more than in 2022. Ninety firms reported gains in gross revenue.The 2024 Am Law 100: Ranked by Gross Revenue
Fifty-four firms posted gross revenue of $1 billion or more in 2023, four more than in 2022. Ninety firms reported gains in gross revenue.Testing SCOTUS's 'Unmistakable Trend' in Shadow of Trump Prosecution
'Fischer' presents an interesting test of whether SCOTUS will continue its "unmistakable" message that courts should not assign federal criminal statutes a potentially wide-ranging scope "when a narrower reading is reasonable." To court watchers, the odds appear to be against affirmance. The case's potential impact on the Trump prosecution makes it all the more intriguing.Trending Stories
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