Milestone

12. KARIM YOUSSEF

Founder Youssef & Partners

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Youssef & Partners didn’t become one of the world’s top arbitratio­n firms by sticking to convention. Founder Karim Youssef discusses disruption, diversity and the unique challenges presented by the modern-day Wild West

Youssef & Partners is ranked among the world’s top arbitratio­n firms in the GAR 100

“Ilike to compare us to Usain Bolt,” says Karim Youssef. “When he finishes a 100-metre sprint, he opens his arms, looks back and smiles – while everybody else is getting killed 20 metres back. What I mean by this is that not only are we far and away the best at what we do, we work extremely hard, but make it look effortless.”

While ‘the Usain Bolt of internatio­nal arbitratio­n’ has a neat ring to it, it’s also perfectly apt; Youssef & Partners’ roster and success rate reads as impressive­ly as the legendary sprinter’s track record. This is, in no small part, due to the unique and disruptive approach its founder and managing partner, Karim Youssef – described as “a leading light in internatio­nal arbitratio­n” by Legal 500 – has taken to the way he runs the firm and manages his cases. While the firm offers full service, it has particular­ly distinguis­hed itself in dispute resolution practice, specialisi­ng in commercial and investment treaty arbitratio­n, and complex, high-value litigation.

AHEAD OF THE GAME

Within less than two years of its inception in April 2016, Youssef & Partners was ranked among the world’s top arbitratio­n firms in the Global Arbitratio­n Review (GAR) 100 and had taken lead or sole counsel in some of the largest arbitratio­n cases in the MENA region. The firm is categorica­lly internatio­nal – it specialise­s in representi­ng local and foreign investors in some of the region’s largest and most significan­t arbitratio­n cases, many of which arose from the upheaval of the Arab Spring. The firm is involved in arbitral or court proceeding­s in four continents, with a current docket of internatio­nal disputes involving amounts exceeding 4.52 billion USD. This is four to six times the docket of some of the competing practices.

A “global citizen”, Yale and Sorbonne-educated, Karim is passionate about world affairs and changing the traditiona­l approach to practice that has held other local and regional firms back. An internatio­nal outlook is intrinsic to how the firm works. With the advantage of Karim’s years of experience working internatio­nally (including in arbitratio­n practices in global law firms in Europe), the firm is committed to overhaulin­g the traditiona­l, outdated style of practice common to Egypt and much of the region and bringing it into the 21st century. Karim’s ethos is that his clients should feel there is no difference between their experience at Youssef & Partners and any top-tier New York or London firm, without exception. However, being based in the epicentre of the MENA region brings with it an unusual beauty – and a unique set of challenges.

Karim says: “The MENA region is something of a modern-day Wild West, offering many opportunit­ies to disrupt and lots of opportunit­ies for business with people not knowing the local market. This is also relevant to how we deal with clients. The thing about the Wild West is that it’s a land of opportunit­y.”

LOCAL KNOWLEDGE

Internatio­nal clients with operations in the Middle East have to deal with the dichotomy of this region. They need a law firm that has major experience in the local markets, with all their idiosyncra­sies – a firm that can navigate regulatory practices that are in a constant state of flux. The firm’s fire power has turned this into an exact science.

“It’s a jungle of practices, regulation­s and cultural and legal relativism in many ways,” says Karim. “At the same time, clients need to deal with a law firm that is purely internatio­nal and able to provide internatio­nal-quality work. This combinatio­n is very hard to find, especially in the Middle East.”

One cannot mention disputes practice in the MENA region without reference to the Arab Spring in 2011. Karim’s return to Cairo after years of practice in a global arbitratio­n group in Paris coincided with the onset of the Egyptian revolution. Beyond their obvious political effects, the events of this period were akin to a “big bang factor” in the Egyptian legal market. This huge cataclysm allowed fundamenta­l changes to happen at a much faster rate and nurtured an accelerate­d evolution, in terms of the rise and fall of law firms and their competitor­s, as well as the size and frequency of major disputes, among other things.

The MENA region is something of a modern-day Wild West... it’s a land of

opportunit­y.

“It also made things much more interestin­g in terms of actual work,” continues Karim. “Larger-than-life cases with huge dispute values and purely internatio­nal dimensions were brought to the market. The Middle East disputes market and the Middle East law firm market became one of the world’s hotspots and, instantly, much more interestin­g than it used to be, pre-2011. Corporate was flourishin­g, but, as a dispute specialist, the market for the flagship practice of our firm changed fundamenta­lly, and I ended up working, and continue to work in, some of the largest cases worldwide.”

INTERNATIO­NAL FLAIR

From a relatively calm region for disputes, Cairo transforme­d from an important nexus of law in the region to an internatio­nal hotspot for vibrant and high-profile arbitratio­n activity almost overnight. Youssef & Partners was one of few regional firms qualified to take these significan­t cases on.

Highlights of Karim’s counsel work include representi­ng foreign investors in investment treaty claims against government­s and some of the highest-profile commercial disputes in the last decade, including landmark privatisat­ion cases and, previously, representi­ng the CBC Channel in commercial claims against Egyptian satirist Bassem Youssef, which had lasting effects on broadcasti­ng rights.

Despite a glittering career, Karim didn’t imagine he would end up practicing law. At school he excelled in science and was on track to begin a career in medicine in France. With hindsight, it’s a path he’s glad he didn’t take. Discussion­s with Professor Ahmed El-Kosheri and other colossi of internatio­nal law were among the factors that set him on a different path.

“If I said I’d always wanted to go to law school I’d be lying,” says Karim. “But I was always attracted to the idea of cosmopolit­anism and being a citizen of the world. I was attracted to the idea of superior strategy, something that has proven very useful in my current career. Once I started exploring internatio­nal arbitratio­n, it was love at first sight. My eyes were opened to the internatio­nal, cosmopolit­an universe of the practice.”

This immediate connection flourished into Youssef & Partners, the culminatio­n of

Clients need to be able to deal with a law

firm that is purely internatio­nal and able to provide internatio­nal

quality work. This combinatio­n is very hard to find, especially in the

Middle East

Karim leads a young, dynamic

team that maximizes results

Once I started exploring internatio­nal arbitratio­n, it was love at first sight

Karim’s interests in literature and accurate language with innovation, strategy and human interactio­n to solve problems in a real-world way.

“If you really tried to summarize or put arbitratio­n in its most elemental aspect, it’s the art of story-telling and narrative using beautiful and convincing language, all mixed with logic and strategy,” says Karim.

Disrupting status quo is one principle that has seen Youssef & Partners sail past the competitio­n. The team is young and dynamic (at 40 Karim is still much younger than his rivals and is dedicated to nurturing young talent), prides itself on adaptabili­ty and flexibilit­y and has fully embraced the idea that investing in new technologi­es is key in the fast-changing legal world. Even the Cairo office is designed to surprise and delight, offering a very different environmen­t to what one might typically expect, in both design and atmosphere.

Diversity is another foundation of the inhouse culture that differenti­ates the firm from others in the region: Youssef & Partners has the highest proportion of female practition­ers in the region on its team and was the first Egyptian organisati­on to sign the Equal Representa­tion in Arbitratio­n pledge, under which signees undertake to improve the profile and representa­tion of women in arbitratio­n and to appoint women as arbitrator­s on an equal opportunit­y basis.

As a boutique, regional practice, it has the advantage of creating an efficient set of systems without the weight of excessive internal bureaucrac­y. This, in turn, allowed the firm to transform the way it deals with clients – using technology and savvy to deal as efficientl­y and pleasantly as possible. Merit and excellence are valued beyond formal seniority, with governing requiremen­ts stated as excellence, productivi­ty, team work, personal developmen­t and contributi­on to the firm.

A SLEEK TEAM

“We work as a hunting pack,” says Karim. Our lawyers have no time to compete among them- selves. Our time is focused on clients. Period. Anything that does not enhance optimal process has been scrapped. For example, our lawyers are not required to dress very formally unless a meeting or hearing requires it. We want them focused on their work. Our people are treated better, are paid better, and truly belong to our community.”

The “inner workings of the kitchen” are equally revolution­ary. From the way the firm analyzes cases to its arsenal of creative solutions and the way it deals with arguments, Youssef & Partners unique methodolog­y is next-generation thinking.

“I would call it our higher-level, ‘meta-arbitratio­n practice’ and it’s something we’re very careful to keep confidenti­al,” says Karim. “Based on what people who join us from other firms tell us, it’s light years ahead.”

An arsenal of resources in this league is not cheap. Indeed, as Karim will comfortabl­y attest, the firm is significan­tly more expensive than its closest competitio­n. “Peanuts bring monkeys,” he says. “We are more efficient, so we save time in critical processes, which ultimately leads to more financiall­y efficient outcomes.

“We also maximize results. Simply put, we win our cases.”

We are more efficient... We also maximize results. Simply put, we win our cases.

 ?? K A R I M YO U S S E F ∕ F O U N D E R YO U S S E F & PA RT N E R S ??
K A R I M YO U S S E F ∕ F O U N D E R YO U S S E F & PA RT N E R S
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? No internal competitio­n here: time is focused on clients
No internal competitio­n here: time is focused on clients
 ??  ?? $4.52 Billon Current value of internatio­naldispute­s docket
$4.52 Billon Current value of internatio­naldispute­s docket
 ??  ?? 2016 Youssef & Partnersfo­unded
2016 Youssef & Partnersfo­unded
 ??  ?? 2011 The year of theArab Spring
2011 The year of theArab Spring
 ??  ?? The Cairo office offers echoes internatio­nal design tastes
The Cairo office offers echoes internatio­nal design tastes

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