A three-decade run at a global firm ended after one of London's heavyweight arbitration figures bolted for a disaggregated platform that lets lawyers pocket most of their fees.
Knowles signs on at Keystone Law
Knowles signs on at Keystone Law
- Ben Knowles locked down a partner gig at Keystone Law in London.
- Knowles previously ran Clyde & Co's international arbitration practice.
- Keystone's arbitration squad already runs 27 lawyers deep.
- Hermes Marangos came aboard from Signature Law in 2024.
- Ben Knowles carries 30-plus years of complex international arbitration work.
- His client roster spans governments, state bodies, and VC investors.
- Knowles leans heavily into Middle East and Saudi-linked matters.
- Shareholder fights across fintech and banking fall under his belt.
- Ben Knowles had chaired Clyde & Co's disputes unit since 2017.
- Keystone's flat setup and zero management duties pulled him over.
- His Middle East-focused practice runs from London with no regional office load.
- Conflict-of-interest risk drops without his old firm's insurer ties.
- Keystone Law went public on AIM in 2017, after a 2002 launch.
- Self-employed lawyers on the platform pocket as much as 75% of fees.
- Revenue hit £54m in the half-year ending 31 July 2025.
- Adjusted pre-tax profit jumped 20% to £7.3m in that period.
- Clyde & Co confirmed Knowles left the partnership chasing fresh opportunities.
- No replacement will fill the international arbitration head position.
- Arbitration work gets absorbed into sector-specific practice groups going forward.