May 5, 2008
A "Bubble" in PPP?
A loyal reader, partner in an AmLaw 25, writes, under the topic "Could we be developing a 'bubble' in law firm PPP:"
Bruce: I'd be interested in getting your thoughts on the above question.
If you define a market "bubble," as a period when the expressed value of an asset (stocks or housing) exceeds the true market value of that asset, there seems to be an argument that there may be a bubble in the "share price" of law firms (represented by the Amlaw 100 anyway). That "share price," as that term has been used by some law firm leaders, is the profits per equity partner.
By my rough calculation, based on Amlaw 100 data, profits for AMLAW 100 firms has increased at a cumulative annual growth rate of over 11% for the years from 1999 to 2006. Although increased legal work may partially explain this growth, it appears more likely that law firms have increased their profits by pulling a few key levers: Increasing hours per lawyer, increasing leverage, and increasing rates. In fact, during that period, PEP grew almost 9% amongst the Amlaw 100 (the difference from gross profits to be explained in a minute). By contrast, the Dow increased only 1.2% during this period. Whereas during the bubble-building period of 1995 to 2000, it grew at 16% annually.
As has been widely discussed in the legal press, law firms' ability to continue pulling those levers is largely coming to an end. Most lawyers are working as hard as feasible. Clients are increasingly pushing back on rate increases (I just attended a session with in-house counsel where they noted that law firms should not expect to increase rates this year). While law firms attempt to increase their leverage, clients are increasingly resisting having their work done by associates. All of this means that 10% plus profit growth is not likely to continue.
This takes me back to the "share price" -- PEP. Law firms continue to feel substantial pressure to increase that share price out of fear that if they fail to do so, they will drop in the AMLAW 100 rankings, and lose the prestige that is associated with such rankings. (Even if law firms could continue to attract star talent by increasing the range in compensation to equity partners, they still perceive themselves to be limited by the average PEP they report). Thus, to continue to increase their PEP, they are starting to de-equitize partners, and close the door to new associates and income partners from moving up the ranks. (The latest example being Jenner & Block). In fact, if you look at the numbers from the AMLAW 100 from 2005 and 2006, you see that the number of equity partners actually declined from 2005 to 2006 (by about 0.4%). In contrast, the number of equity partners actually increased at an average annual rate of 2.7% from 1999 to 2005 (which accounts for the difference in the increase in profits (over 11%) and the increase in PEP (almost 9%)).
As the growth in gross profits starts to decline, law firms are still able to increase their PEP by reducing the number of equity partners, thereby increasing the "share price" of equity partnership. But, this increase will become increasingly unsustainable. As junior attorneys realize that the prospect of achieving equity status is less than slim (and may be non-existent), many of the motivational levers will no longer exist. After all, people do not typically invest in building a business if they do not believe they will be with that firm long term.
Corporate America has recognized this issue and attempts to reward employees with long-term incentive programs (currently options and stock grants; in prior generations this was done through pensions). By taking away the long-term incentive that comes with ownership, the "true" value of a firm starts to decline, even while the "perceived" value of a firm increases. As we have seen from the bubbles in the stock markets and the housing markets, when there is such a disconnect, there can be long and painful restructurings. Unfortunately, those who suffer the most in such bubbles are those who "bought in" at the height of the bubble -- investors who bought stock in 2000, homeowners who bought homes in 2005. Those who get out at the peak will reap the profits.
For law firms, the "new entrants" are junior partners and senior associates who are investing substantially in the hopes of joining the equity ranks and reaping the rewards. The older investors -- those who are running the firms and probably on law firm management committees, are the ones who are reaping the rewards. When it becomes apparent that law firms can no longer afford the high PEP they are reporting, it will be the younger lawyers who will bear the burden.
As with other bubbles, this is a self-reinforcing process -- as the PEP for firms increase from one year to the next, the pressure on all other firms to increase PEP by that amount increases. Law firms that fail to keep up their peers perceive themselves to be at risk of entering a downward spiral -- their perceived stature declines, they are no longer able to attract top talent; absent that top talent, they are not able to keep growing revenues, and profits decline, resulting in further declines to PEP. Thus, all market participants have a substantial incentive to continue to increase PEP, even if it is illusory. No firm can rationally "opt out."
The same is seen in other bubble markets. In the last days before the sub-prime bubble burst, the competition between companies led most banks to make business decisions (aggressively chasing deals with lower and lower underwriting standards) that were rational only on the theory that everyone else was doing it (otherwise known as "irrational exuberance" in 1999). When no one wants to buy the credit any more, the model fails and all the businesses fall together. In the legal market, that process will be slower because the transfer of ownership is slower -- the "buyers" are the associates and students coming up through the ranks. But, as the best of those lawyers recognize the lessoned value of law firm partnership, they will pursue alternative careers (investment banking, private equity, government, etc.).
Eventually, the law firm talent pool declines significantly, reducing the value that law firms provide to their clients. The crash may not be quick, and may take years before it becomes apparent, but it may still come, and may take a very long time (perhaps a generation) to rebuild the law firms as institutions.
There's much here.
I'd like to break it down into three components: The near term, the long term, and the structural issues.
Near term: Without question, we're in for a cyclical downturn in the growth of PPP, and, for some firms, an absolute decline. Double-digit increases in almost any measure in almost any business for a period of nearly a decade are bound to come to an end. Bull markets always do, hard as it seems to believe during the jolly times.
That's not to say firms can't take measures to mitigate the downward pressure:
- Redeploy lawyers in troubled practice areas to healthier ones;
- Use the opportunity of "shared pain" with your key clients to get closer to them;
- Adroitly stand by while the normal waves of attrition take their toll;
- Build or at least safeguard capacity in selected practice areas that you anticipate will emerge strongly from the downturn;
- And always, always, keep a sharp eye on costs--although, truth be told, you don't have much material flexibility here. You're not moving your offices to Brooklyn and you're not paying less than market for partners and associates.
Is this, then, a real problem near term?
I think not. Your lawyers understand what's going on in the economy and in their practice areas. They know when things are slow, when the new matter pipeline seems sluggish, when clients are avoiding phone calls and emails about paying. There's no reason to panic and, if you're comfortable with your long-term strategy and see no reason to change, sit tight. Indeed, I have predicted that as we emerge from this tunnel, new requirements in structured finance and other practice areas that have been hard hit will entail demand for more, not less, lawyering of the new products. In other words, this too shall pass.
Long term: Here the outlook is decidedly more mixed.
Our faithful correspondent has several well-taken points, which I'd like to reiterate:
- On the billable hour model, revenue = (rates) x (hours) x (realization)
- Add in a dimension for profitability, namely (^leverage)
- And you realize that each of these four measures has some intrinsic ceiling or maximum on it:
- Rates: $1,000/hour? £1,000/hour?
- Hours: 2,400? 3,000?
- Realization: >100%?
- And leverage: At some point, associates (particularly Gen X/Y) will say that the eye of the needle they're being expected to pass through is laughably small.
And yet the PPP "arms race" has no such intrinsic ceiling. $2-million/year? $4-million? Even these amounts are modest compared to the compensation that investment bankers, hedge fund managers, and private equity jockeys are earning, as they rub shoulders in the same neighborhoods and sit at the same conference tables as AmLaw 100 partners. The desperate measures firms will go to to compete in these leagues are evidenced by resort to the Death Star of de-equitizing partners.
Our correspondent is also quite correct to point out that no firm can (unilaterally) opt out of this PPP arms race—at least not unless they are prepared to risk the equivalent of a run on the talent bank, with all its suicidal implications. So is the only "rational" outcome going to be the wholesale disillusionment and disenfranchisement of a generation of associates, who will opt out of the entire Ponzi scheme and leave the AmLaw 100 in droves?
As inexorable as that outcome may sound, I have a higher degree of faith in the flexibility of firms—all firms in the economy, that is, not just AmLaw firms—to reform their ways when threatened with the prospect of a catastrophic collapse in the way they're used to doing business. Which brings us to:
Structural Issues:
All of these factors—the inherent limits of rates, hours, realization, and leverage; truly serious pushback from clients on fees; the difficulty of getting Gen X and Gen Y to serve as cannon fodder for the pyramid (an attitude which is surely more rational and enlightened than that of the Baby Boom generation, by the way)—lead me to predict that firms will find ways to change the 90-year-old Cravath Model. They will change it because they will have to, to survive.
What might this mean? For starters, I would be delighted to predict yet again the ultimate demise of the billable hour, knowing that I would be in distinguished, and consistently wrong, company—but that's a subject for another day. My pet theory on this, by the way, is that its demise will come when law firms find it in their own self-interest. More specifically, when law firms discover they might actually be able to charge fees based on "value to client" rather than "cost of production," but I can't say I'm holding my breath.
How else might firms change?
The bimodal associate/partner, up-or-out career path is, of course, already showing tremendous signs of stress and a variety of experimental tinkerings are well under way: Non-equity partners, most famously and most numerously, but also staff and contract attorneys, job-sharing, and the first baby steps towards career "time-outs" to provide the opportunity for such radical pursuits as starting a family.
At least as fundamentally, I believe the core processes by which law firms manage cases and deals must and will change. Mention "project management" to an average lawyer and you draw a blank, yet cases and deals are, at core, projects which must be managed. There is typically a critical path of activities, there are assets and resources to be deployed against the tasks to be done (each, yes, with a price), and there are more and less profitable and efficient ways to structure the project. Even if lawyers never learn these skills, why couldn't firms engage practice group managers to perform this function?
- Project management, .
- Combined with our ever more powerful knowledge management systems,
- And with all expected to briefly go back at the conclusion of a matter for an exercise in "lessons learned,"
Will enable firms to substantially enhance their economic performance even while weaning themselves away from the familiar ways of doing business.
Ultimately, our correspondent describes a future of unsustainable trends where, on the current model, the AmLaw firms hit a figurative brick wall. I believe we'll take decisive evasive action sooner. The demand for high-end legal services by the Fortune 500 and the FTSE 100 is not diminishing with globalization; it is increasing. The ongoing re-engineering of structured finance will not yield deals with fewer covenants, warranties, representations, and contingencies; it will yield deals with more of all of those, and probably some new features yet to be invented. Increasing cross-border and transnational economic activity requires lawyering of everything from immigration visas to multi-billion dollar project finance.
Mom and pop law firms cannot serve these needs; only the AmLaw 100, the UK 50, and their like, can. The scope of the future demand is, to my mind, utterly beyond question. Law firms with the scale and capability to match will step up to the plate. If our correspondent's envisioned future plays out, there may be different players on that future roster of sophisticated firms, but players there will be. After all, as Herbert Stein, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under Nixon and Ford, said of unsustainable trends: "They tend to stop."
Update, 6 May 2008.
A 3L at an Ivy League law school writes (emphasis supplied):
"Hi Bruce,
"As a graduating 3L, I thought I’d offer a couple observations on your piece about PPP.
"My main observation is that the trend towards diminished interest in becoming partner is growing more pronounced. In my class, I’m not sure I know a single person who would say that their goal was to become a partner. I know people who want to leave Big Law for all sorts of in house, investment banking, government, public interest, and other field. I know people who want to work for a few years, and then leave practice to raise a family. I am not sure I know anyone who wants to be a partner. This seems odd, because the rewards for rising to that level have never been higher. I suspect that this view is partly a result of the diminishing chances at making partner. Many students view it as so unlikely that it’s not a goal worth aiming for.
"I also am not sure that this is likely to change anytime soon. The bread and butter of Big Law looks, at least from my vantage point, to be work that requires considerable leverage. In a big case, or a big deal, there is a lot of junior and mid level associate work then there is partner level work. For an extreme example, consider the recent Bear Sterns deal with JP Morgan. The merger agreement itself is not very long, and surely the main points were the subject of careful attention from the most senior lawyers representing the parties. Meanwhile, there was an enormous amount of diligence to do, and the number of hours involved in reviewing all that almost certainly dwarfed the time spent on negotiation and drafting of the merger agreement.
"To successfully navigate this environment, which can perhaps be characterized as a high-turnover equilibrium, firms need to nurture the development of new partners. They further need to do so without giving the impression that everyone, or even very many, of their new associates will make partner. This has no doubt been a problem for many years at large law firms. My impression is that it will be a bigger problem in the future, because turnover has become so rapid. Managing the careers of young lawyers so that at least some of them grow to be partner material appears to be less of a priority than it used to be, and that is likely to hit the bottom line of firms that don’t worry about it.
"I fully expect some of my classmates to ultimately become partners. The challenge is that partnership has become so unlikely that it’s just not the career path that anyone expects for themselves. I suspect that the result will be good prospects abandoning the pursuit of partnership prematurely, and some who do make it stumbling into it. (This is closely related to the equity/non-equity partnership issue you just wrote about). Overall, I think that current law students look at their careers in a way that tends to narrow the pipeline of future partners – and does so beyond the narrowing that is inherent in the “tournament” approach that dominates. I assume that this is not to the long term benefit of law firms.
"Best Regards, [...]"
Can any partner in an AmLaw 100 firm read that and assume business as usual will suffice for the foreseeable future?
"Business as usual" meaning: The same half-hearted attempts at professional development and associate training and mentoring, the same bizarre and archaic bimodal career path, the blinkered pretense of being able to ignore the fact that the partnership tournament years coincide with prime child-raising years, and the assumption that since we lived through Parris Island it won't kill Gen X or Gen Y, and they'd just better get used to it.
If you believe changes are not afoot, I want to be able to live in the same reality distortion field you inhabit.
The future will look different than the past, and one thing we know to a certitude about the future: It will arrive. The only question is who will be prepared for it.
Posted by Bruce at May 5, 2008 8:05 AM | TrackBackPosted to Compensation | Finance | Globalization | Leadership | Partnership Structures | Practice Group Management | Strategy Printer-friendly version
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