Litigation trends for 2025: what will this year hold for business and commercial disputes?
Emerging Themes in Financial Regulation & Disputes 2025
What’s New for M&A and EU Competition Law in 2025
BCLP Arbitration Survey 2024: Arbitration and the Challenges of Corruption
White Collar Team obtains unprecedented resolution for Merck KGaA subsidiary
Litigation Team of the Year: The Lawyer Awards
BCLP announces dedicated DEI Taskforce
Litigation & Dispute team
News & Insights
News
Jun 18, 2025
Jun 18, 2025
BCLP Partners Jonathan B. Potts and Charlie Weiss Recognized for Exoneration Work and Systemic Reform
News
Jun 17, 2025
Jun 17, 2025
OpenAI Nonprofit Commission Appointment Underscores Depth of BCLP’s AI Offering
Insights
Jun 12, 2025
Jun 12, 2025
Hong Kong High Court grants injunction to enforce restrictive covenants
In two separate decisions in April 2025[1], the Hong Kong High Court first refused, but then allowed, an IT company’s application for an interlocutory injunction to enforce post-termination restrictive covenants against its former employee and his newly set-up rival company.
News
Jun 11, 2025
Jun 11, 2025
BCLP Earns Top Rankings in the 2025 Legal 500 US Guide
Insights
Jun 11, 2025
Jun 11, 2025
Importers who paid IEEPA tariffs that were later ruled unlawful seek refunds
Insights
Jun 05, 2025
Jun 05, 2025
Construction industry participants beware: CISG and CISOP and their impact on overseas procurement
It is common for construction industry participants to source various machinery, materials or components from overseas for construction projects in Hong Kong, or to have part of the construction and fabrication or assembly works carried out outside Hong Kong before transporting them into Hong Kong.
There are two pieces of recent legislation that have a potential impact on these “overseas” procurement activities. They are (i) the Sale of Goods (United Nations Convention) Ordinance (Cap. 641) which came into effect in December 2022, and (ii) the Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance (Cap. 652) which was gazetted on 27 December 2024, with the bulk of which coming into operation in August 2025.
In this article, we will explore the changes brought about by these two pieces of legislation, and what those procuring such works or items should do and pay attention to when they source from international suppliers or contractors for construction projects in Hong Kong.
Insights
May 19, 2025
May 19, 2025
HK court grants worldwide Mareva and appoints interim receivers in aid of enforcing arbitral awards
Insights
May 13, 2025
May 13, 2025
Fake legal authorities – AI hallucination or professional negligence?
Artificial intelligence (“AI”) has the potential to make significant changes to various aspects of the practice of law. It is possible that many lawyers will incorporate AI in doing legal work, one way or the other and to some degree or other, in the foreseeable future.
However, while AI is a powerful tool at lawyers’ disposal, work generated by AI can contain errors, and AI has the potential to “hallucinate”, i.e. make up false information or something that does not in fact exist.
In two recent court cases in Canada and the UK, the lawyers submitted to the courts case authorities that did not exist, leading the other side’s lawyers and the court to suspect that those cases had been (mis-)generated by the use of AI.
Insights
May 02, 2025
May 02, 2025
Georgia Passes Tort Reform Package Signaling Important Shift in Future Litigation