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Businessman with briefcase, file photo. REUTERS Yuriko Nakao

Report on law firm industry is cautiously optimistic for 2013

1/14/2013 COMMENTS (0)

By Casey Sullivan

Jan 14 (Reuters) - Two legal advisers are cautiously optimistic about the direction of the U.S. legal industry in 2013, according to a Citi Private Bank and Hildebrandt Consulting report released on Monday.

Dan DiPietro, chairman of Citibank's Law Firm Group, and Brad Hildebrandt, a law firm consultant, released a co-written advisory showing that law firm expenses in 2012 dropped from 2011 levels and that some practice areas experienced growth -- two positive indicators for 2013.

The report, based on surveys of 205 U.S. law firms by Citibank and 116 by Thomson Reuters Peer Monitor Index, traced the 2012 fall in expenses to the recession, when firms delayed updating technology and other systems.

In 2011, with the economy on the mend, law firms began updating, which resulted in a number of "catch-up" expenses, the report said.

"If this catch-up factor has now played out, 2013 could show more moderate expense growth," the report said.

The report was mildly optimistic about demand for legal services in 2013, citing a 4 percent increase in labor and employment and a 1 percent increase in corporate work in 2012. The report also cited signs of an improving overall economy based on housing market and employment data.

Over the past four years, demand for legal services has been flat, at 0.4 percent, while in the years between 2004 and 2008 demand rose 3.7 percent, the report said.

Clients continue to pressure firms to bring down costs using a variety of strategies, from tweaking fixed billing rates to negotiating alternative fee arrangements. Some clients, for example, are refusing to pay for online research, according to the report.

The failure of some of the country's largest law firms has served as a reminder of the ongoing financial strain in the legal industry. In the last five years, eight large U.S. law have folded; in the prior two decades, the number was 18.

Hildebrandt, the law firm consultant, said he believes law firms increasingly are aware of the missteps of others and are becoming more proactive in tackling financial issues with a variety of solutions.

"Most dissolutions are preventable," he said.

Hildebrandt is an adviser to Thomson Reuters.

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