Skadden Arps opened twin offices in Abu Dhabi and Washington D.C. this week and installed three partners lifted from Akin Gump, each specializing in investment management structures that sovereign wealth funds use to deploy capital into private markets. The hires—names withheld pending formal announcements—bring combined experience in fund formation, co-investment vehicles, and cross-border regulatory compliance for state-controlled allocators managing north of $5 trillion in combined assets under management across the Gulf Cooperation Council.
The Abu Dhabi presence targets Mubadala Investment Company ($302 billion AUM), Abu Dhabi Investment Authority ($1.03 trillion), and ADQ, the emirate's newer holding company that has absorbed 41 state-linked entities since 2018. The Washington team will handle CFIUS filings, Treasury compliance, and sanctions structuring—table stakes for any Gulf allocator buying into U.S. infrastructure, technology, or defense-adjacent sectors. Skadden already represents sovereign clients in London and New York but lacked dedicated desks in the Gulf's operational center and the U.S. regulatory nerve center.
This move follows eighteen months of unusually aggressive partner poaching across white-shoe firms competing for Middle Eastern LPs. Latham & Watkins added five partners in Riyadh in March. Kirkland & Ellis opened Dubai in January with eight laterals from Weil Gotshal. The pattern is structural: Gulf SWFs now co-invest directly in 64% of their private equity allocations, up from 41% in 2021, according to data from Preqin. Direct co-investment requires bespoke legal structures that can navigate U.S. securities law, EU reporting regimes, and Sharia compliance simultaneously—a narrow skillset that commands premium billing rates and sticky client relationships.
Skadden's timing reflects late recognition of a $340 billion problem. That figure represents the Gulf SWFs' estimated deployment into private markets in 2025 alone, much of it structured through vehicles that require ongoing legal maintenance: continuation funds, GP-led secondaries, separately managed accounts. The firm's competitors have already locked in panel positions with Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Qatar Investment Authority. Skadden's Abu Dhabi bet is that Mubadala and ADIA still allocate enough capital to support a second-tier advisor willing to staff locally and move faster than New York-based teams operating on twelve-hour delays.
Watch for Skadden's next hires in tax structuring and Islamic finance—both necessary to convert this beachhead into recurring mandates. Mubadala alone launched nine new fund vehicles in 2024, each requiring separate formation work. If the Abu Dhabi team wins even two of those mandates in 2026, the office pays for itself. The Washington desk's value depends on whether Treasury tightens CFIUS review timelines, currently averaging 91 days for sovereign-backed acquirers. Faster reviews mean less legal spend; slower reviews mean Skadden bills more but clients move less capital.
The real test arrives in Q4 2026, when Mubadala typically finalizes its annual co-investment budget and panel selections for the following year.