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George F.
Schoen

Partner, Corporate

gschoen@cravath.com
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George F. Schoen is Co-Chair of the Global Mergers and Acquisitions Practice. He focuses his practice on mergers, acquisitions and joint ventures, including hostile and contested transactions. Mr. Schoen also regularly counsels corporations and their directors on fiduciary duty and corporate governance matters.

Mr. Schoen has also represented numerous companies in defending against hedge fund activism. Recent examples include representing:

  • ARIAD Pharmaceuticals in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan and in its settlement agreement with Sarissa Capital
  • Avon in its nomination agreement with Barington Capital
  • Barnes & Noble in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan (which was upheld by the Delaware Chancery Court and the Delaware Supreme Court) and in its successful proxy contest against Ron Burkle and Yucaipa
  • Cameron International in connection with share accumulations by JANA Partners and in its interactions with Elliott Management
  • Casey’s General Stores in its interactions with a group of investors led by JCP Investment Management
  • Disney in its support agreement with Third Point and its successful proxy contests against Trian and Blackwells
  • Hertz in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan in response to an activist investor reported to be Carl Icahn
  • Jones Group in its settlement agreement with Barington Capital
  • Occidental Petroleum in Carl Icahn’s written consent solicitation of Occidental shareholders and Occidental’s subsequent nomination agreement with Carl Icahn
  • Olin in its cooperation agreement with Sachem Head Capital Management
  • Southwest Gas in its proxy fight and settlement agreement with, and its response to an unsolicited tender offer from, Carl Icahn

Mr. Schoen has extensive deal experience in many industry sectors, particularly in the media and technology sectors. Notable transactions include representing:

Consumer and Retail

  • Casey’s General Stores in connection with the unsolicited acquisition proposal by Alimentation Couche-Tard, and related hostile tender offer and proxy contest
  • The Jones Group in acquisitions and dispositions aggregating more than $4.2 billion in value, including the sale of Barneys New York to Istithmar, the sale of its Polo Jeans business to Polo, the acquisitions of Gloria Vanderbilt and Stuart Weitzman, and its sale to Sycamore Partners
  • The special committee of Pepsi Bottling Group in connection with Pepsi’s $5.7 billion unsolicited offer for, and ultimate acquisition of, Pepsi Bottling

Energy and Natural Resources

  • Cameron International in its $15 billion sale to Schlumberger and in the creation of the OneSubsea joint venture with Schlumberger
  • John Wood Group in its £2.225 billion acquisition of Amec Foster Wheeler
  • Newcrest in its A$28.8 billion acquisition by Newmont
  • Occidental Petroleum in its $57 billion acquisition of Anadarko, topping Anadarko’s original agreement with Chevron, and the $8.8 billion sale of Anadarko’s African assets to Total and $10 billion investment by Berkshire Hathaway

Financial Institutions

  • Deutsche Boerse in the proposed $10 billion merger of equals with NYSE Euronext and in connection with the competing offer from NASDAQ OMX and Intercontinental Exchange

Healthcare

  • AveXis in its $8.7 billion acquisition by Novartis
  • GW Pharmaceuticals in its $7.2 billion acquisition by Jazz Pharmaceuticals
  • Johnson & Johnson in the separation of Kenvue, its $16.6 billion acquisition of Abiomed and the takeover contest for Guidant Corporation and its acquisition of Pfizer’s consumer healthcare business
  • King Pharmaceuticals in its acquisition of Meridian Medical Technologies
  • The board of directors of Par Pharmaceutical Companies as independent legal counsel in the $1.9 billion sale to certain affiliates of TPG Capital

Industrials

  • AerCap in its $28 billion acquisition of International Lease Finance Corporation from American International Group
  • Dowlais in its pending £1.16 billion combination with American Axle & Manufacturing 
  • GKN in the £8.1 billion unsolicited offer from Melrose and the proposed $6.1 billion combination of its Driveline business and Dana
  • Martin Marietta in its $2.05 billion acquisition of aggregates operations from Blue Water Industries, the $2.1 billion sale of its South Texas cement business and related concrete operations to CRH, its $2.3 billion acquisition of Lehigh West Region, its $1.625 billion acquisition of Bluegrass Materials and its $3.2 billion acquisition of Texas Industries
  • Nalco in its $8 billion merger with Ecolab
  • Olin Corporation in numerous acquisitions and dispositions, including its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical and the sale of its metals business to KPS Capital Partners
  • Parker Hannifin in its $3.675 billion acquisition of LORD
  • Precision Castparts in its $37 billion acquisition by Berkshire Hathaway

Media and Entertainment

  • Disney in its $85 billion acquisition of 21st Century Fox, overcoming an interloper bid by Comcast to its original $66 billion agreement; the $10.6 billion sale of the Fox Regional Sports Networks to Sinclair; the $3.47 billion sale of its interest in the YES Network to an investor group including the Yankees and Sinclair; ESPN’s strategic alliance with PENN Entertainment to launch ESPN BET; Endemol Shine’s acquisition by Banijay Group; the sale of FoxNext Games to Scopely; and the sale of a majority stake in Fox TeleColombia & Estudios TeleMexico to ViacomCBS
  • Hibu Group in the sale of its U.S. business to H.I.G. Capital
  • Time Warner in its $109 billion acquisition by AT&T
  • Warner Media in its investment in NewTV, as part of its $1 billion initial funding round

Technology and Telecommunications

  • Aras in its substantial growth investment from GI Partners
  • EMBARQ in its $11.9 billion merger with CenturyTel
  • Frontier Communications in its pending $20 billion acquisition by Verizon and its $8.6 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of assets from Verizon
  • IBM in transactions aggregating more than $30 billion in value, including its acquisition of the StreamSets and webMethods platforms from Software AG, the sale of select IBM software products to HCL Technologies, the sale of its x86 server business to Lenovo, the sale of its retail store systems business to Toshiba TEC and its acquisitions of Truven Health Analytics and the product and technology businesses of The Weather Company, as well as its Watson joint venture with Mubadala
  • Micro Focus in its $6 billion acquisition by OpenText
  • Northrop Grumman in the $3.4 billion sale of its federal IT and mission support business to Veritas Capital
  • Outbrain in its $900 million acquisition of Teads
  • Scientific Games in its C$775 million acquisition of NYX Gaming Group, its $5.1 billion acquisition of Bally Technologies and its acquisition of Spicerack Media
  • WiseTech Global in its $414 million acquisition of Blume Global from Apollo and EQT and in its $230 million acquisition of Envase Technologies from Firmament
  • Xerox in the $1.05 billion sale of its information technology outsourcing business to Atos and its $1.5 billion acquisition of Global Imaging Systems

Transportation

  • Delta Air Lines in its acquisition of 49% of Virgin Atlantic from Singapore Airlines and in Delta’s related trans-Atlantic joint venture with Virgin
  • United Airlines in its strategic alliance with Continental Airlines and in its transatlantic joint venture with Continental, Lufthansa and Air Canada

Mr. Schoen has been repeatedly recognized as a leading lawyer in M&A by, among others, Chambers USA, The Legal 500 US and IFLR1000. He has also been recognized by The Legal 500 US for his transactional work in the telecoms and broadcast industry, as well as for his work in activism defense and his transactional work in the technology industry. Mr. Schoen was named a “Dealmaker of the Year” by the New York Law Journal in 2022 and The American Lawyer in 2019, one of “Hollywood’s Top 20 Dealmakers” by The Hollywood Reporter in 2018 and one of “500 Leading Lawyers in America” by Lawdragon from 2016 through 2023. Additionally, he has been named by Lawdragon as one of the “500 Leading Dealmakers in America.” Mr. Schoen’s work on behalf of Olin Corporation in its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical was featured by the Financial Times in its annual FT North America Innovative Lawyers 2016 report. He has also served on the Mergers, Acquisitions & Corporate Control Contests Committee of the New York City Bar Association and has chaired the Practising Law Institute’s “Preparing for Shareholder Activism: What You Need To Be Doing Now” conference.

Mr. Schoen was born in Queens, New York. He received a B.A. from Cornell University in 1994 and a J.D. with honors from the University of Chicago Law School in 1998.

Mr. Schoen joined Cravath in 1998 and was elected a partner in 2005. He served as Co‑Chair of the Firm’s Diversity Committee from 2016 to 2022, and from 2011 to 2014, served as the Firm’s Corporate Hiring Partner.

Mr. Schoen has also represented numerous companies in defending against hedge fund activism. Recent examples include representing:

  • ARIAD Pharmaceuticals in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan and in its settlement agreement with Sarissa Capital
  • Avon in its nomination agreement with Barington Capital
  • Barnes & Noble in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan (which was upheld by the Delaware Chancery Court and the Delaware Supreme Court) and in its successful proxy contest against Ron Burkle and Yucaipa
  • Cameron International in connection with share accumulations by JANA Partners and in its interactions with Elliott Management
  • Casey’s General Stores in its interactions with a group of investors led by JCP Investment Management
  • Disney in its support agreement with Third Point and its successful proxy contests against Trian and Blackwells
  • Hertz in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan in response to an activist investor reported to be Carl Icahn
  • Jones Group in its settlement agreement with Barington Capital
  • Occidental Petroleum in Carl Icahn’s written consent solicitation of Occidental shareholders and Occidental’s subsequent nomination agreement with Carl Icahn
  • Olin in its cooperation agreement with Sachem Head Capital Management
  • Southwest Gas in its proxy fight and settlement agreement with, and its response to an unsolicited tender offer from, Carl Icahn

Mr. Schoen has extensive deal experience in many industry sectors, particularly in the media and technology sectors. Notable transactions include representing:

Consumer and Retail

  • Casey’s General Stores in connection with the unsolicited acquisition proposal by Alimentation Couche-Tard, and related hostile tender offer and proxy contest
  • The Jones Group in acquisitions and dispositions aggregating more than $4.2 billion in value, including the sale of Barneys New York to Istithmar, the sale of its Polo Jeans business to Polo, the acquisitions of Gloria Vanderbilt and Stuart Weitzman, and its sale to Sycamore Partners
  • The special committee of Pepsi Bottling Group in connection with Pepsi’s $5.7 billion unsolicited offer for, and ultimate acquisition of, Pepsi Bottling

Energy and Natural Resources

  • Cameron International in its $15 billion sale to Schlumberger and in the creation of the OneSubsea joint venture with Schlumberger
  • John Wood Group in its £2.225 billion acquisition of Amec Foster Wheeler
  • Newcrest in its A$28.8 billion acquisition by Newmont
  • Occidental Petroleum in its $57 billion acquisition of Anadarko, topping Anadarko’s original agreement with Chevron, and the $8.8 billion sale of Anadarko’s African assets to Total and $10 billion investment by Berkshire Hathaway

Financial Institutions

  • Deutsche Boerse in the proposed $10 billion merger of equals with NYSE Euronext and in connection with the competing offer from NASDAQ OMX and Intercontinental Exchange

Healthcare

  • AveXis in its $8.7 billion acquisition by Novartis
  • GW Pharmaceuticals in its $7.2 billion acquisition by Jazz Pharmaceuticals
  • Johnson & Johnson in the separation of Kenvue, its $16.6 billion acquisition of Abiomed and the takeover contest for Guidant Corporation and its acquisition of Pfizer’s consumer healthcare business
  • King Pharmaceuticals in its acquisition of Meridian Medical Technologies
  • The board of directors of Par Pharmaceutical Companies as independent legal counsel in the $1.9 billion sale to certain affiliates of TPG Capital

Industrials

  • AerCap in its $28 billion acquisition of International Lease Finance Corporation from American International Group
  • Dowlais in its pending £1.16 billion combination with American Axle & Manufacturing 
  • GKN in the £8.1 billion unsolicited offer from Melrose and the proposed $6.1 billion combination of its Driveline business and Dana
  • Martin Marietta in its $2.05 billion acquisition of aggregates operations from Blue Water Industries, the $2.1 billion sale of its South Texas cement business and related concrete operations to CRH, its $2.3 billion acquisition of Lehigh West Region, its $1.625 billion acquisition of Bluegrass Materials and its $3.2 billion acquisition of Texas Industries
  • Nalco in its $8 billion merger with Ecolab
  • Olin Corporation in numerous acquisitions and dispositions, including its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical and the sale of its metals business to KPS Capital Partners
  • Parker Hannifin in its $3.675 billion acquisition of LORD
  • Precision Castparts in its $37 billion acquisition by Berkshire Hathaway

Media and Entertainment

  • Disney in its $85 billion acquisition of 21st Century Fox, overcoming an interloper bid by Comcast to its original $66 billion agreement; the $10.6 billion sale of the Fox Regional Sports Networks to Sinclair; the $3.47 billion sale of its interest in the YES Network to an investor group including the Yankees and Sinclair; ESPN’s strategic alliance with PENN Entertainment to launch ESPN BET; Endemol Shine’s acquisition by Banijay Group; the sale of FoxNext Games to Scopely; and the sale of a majority stake in Fox TeleColombia & Estudios TeleMexico to ViacomCBS
  • Hibu Group in the sale of its U.S. business to H.I.G. Capital
  • Time Warner in its $109 billion acquisition by AT&T
  • Warner Media in its investment in NewTV, as part of its $1 billion initial funding round

Technology and Telecommunications

  • Aras in its substantial growth investment from GI Partners
  • EMBARQ in its $11.9 billion merger with CenturyTel
  • Frontier Communications in its pending $20 billion acquisition by Verizon and its $8.6 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of assets from Verizon
  • IBM in transactions aggregating more than $30 billion in value, including its acquisition of the StreamSets and webMethods platforms from Software AG, the sale of select IBM software products to HCL Technologies, the sale of its x86 server business to Lenovo, the sale of its retail store systems business to Toshiba TEC and its acquisitions of Truven Health Analytics and the product and technology businesses of The Weather Company, as well as its Watson joint venture with Mubadala
  • Micro Focus in its $6 billion acquisition by OpenText
  • Northrop Grumman in the $3.4 billion sale of its federal IT and mission support business to Veritas Capital
  • Outbrain in its $900 million acquisition of Teads
  • Scientific Games in its C$775 million acquisition of NYX Gaming Group, its $5.1 billion acquisition of Bally Technologies and its acquisition of Spicerack Media
  • WiseTech Global in its $414 million acquisition of Blume Global from Apollo and EQT and in its $230 million acquisition of Envase Technologies from Firmament
  • Xerox in the $1.05 billion sale of its information technology outsourcing business to Atos and its $1.5 billion acquisition of Global Imaging Systems

Transportation

  • Delta Air Lines in its acquisition of 49% of Virgin Atlantic from Singapore Airlines and in Delta’s related trans-Atlantic joint venture with Virgin
  • United Airlines in its strategic alliance with Continental Airlines and in its transatlantic joint venture with Continental, Lufthansa and Air Canada

Mr. Schoen has been repeatedly recognized as a leading lawyer in M&A by, among others, Chambers USA, The Legal 500 US and IFLR1000. He has also been recognized by The Legal 500 US for his transactional work in the telecoms and broadcast industry, as well as for his work in activism defense and his transactional work in the technology industry. Mr. Schoen was named a “Dealmaker of the Year” by the New York Law Journal in 2022 and The American Lawyer in 2019, one of “Hollywood’s Top 20 Dealmakers” by The Hollywood Reporter in 2018 and one of “500 Leading Lawyers in America” by Lawdragon from 2016 through 2023. Additionally, he has been named by Lawdragon as one of the “500 Leading Dealmakers in America.” Mr. Schoen’s work on behalf of Olin Corporation in its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical was featured by the Financial Times in its annual FT North America Innovative Lawyers 2016 report. He has also served on the Mergers, Acquisitions & Corporate Control Contests Committee of the New York City Bar Association and has chaired the Practising Law Institute’s “Preparing for Shareholder Activism: What You Need To Be Doing Now” conference.

Mr. Schoen was born in Queens, New York. He received a B.A. from Cornell University in 1994 and a J.D. with honors from the University of Chicago Law School in 1998.

Mr. Schoen joined Cravath in 1998 and was elected a partner in 2005. He served as Co‑Chair of the Firm’s Diversity Committee from 2016 to 2022, and from 2011 to 2014, served as the Firm’s Corporate Hiring Partner.

Education

  • J.D., 1998, University of Chicago Law School
    with Honors
  • B.A., 1994, Cornell University

Admitted In

  • New York

Professional Affiliations

International Bar Association

  • Corporate and M&A Law Committee

New York City Bar Association

  • Mergers, Acquisitions & Corporate Control Contests Committee

Rankings

The American Lawyer

  • Dealmaker of the Year (2019)

Best Lawyers in America

  • Corporate Law (2023)

Chambers USA

  • Corporate/M&A - New York (2024‑2011)

The Hollywood Reporter

  • Hollywood’s Top 20 Dealmakers (2018)

IFLR1000

  • Mergers and Acquisitions - US (2024-2015)

Lawdragon

  • 500 Leading Lawyers in America (2025‑2016)
  • 500 Leading Dealmakers in America (2024-2021)

The Legal 500 US

  • M&A/Corporate and Commercial: Large Deals, $1bn+ (2024, 2023, 2022, 2018, 2013, 2012, 2010, 2009)
  • Media and Entertainment: Transactional (2021, 2020)
  • Shareholder Activism: Advice to Boards (2024, 2023, 2019)
  • Technology Transactions (2024‑2011)
  • Telecoms and Broadcast: Transactions (2021-2018, 2016, 2015, 2012, 2011, 2010)

New York Law Journal

  • Dealmaker of the Year (2022)

Deals & Cases

April 07, 2025

IBM’s Acquisition of Hakkoda

On April 7, 2025, IBM announced it has acquired Hakkoda Inc., a leading global data and AI consultancy. Hakkoda will expand IBM Consulting's data transformation services portfolio, adding specialized data platform expertise to help clients get their data ready to fuel AI‑powered business operations. Cravath is representing IBM in connection with the transaction.

Deals & Cases

February 03, 2025

Outbrain’s Acquisition of Teads

On February 3, 2025, Outbrain Inc. (“Outbrain”), a technology platform, announced the closing of its acquisition of Teads, a global omnichannel platform, from Altice. The two companies will merge their offerings to create an omnichannel outcomes platform for the open internet, and will operate under the name Teads. Outbrain, Altice and Teads have amended the previously announced share purchase agreement. Under the terms of the revised agreement, Outbrain will be paying a total consideration of approximately $900 million, consisting of $625 million upfront cash and 43.75 million shares of common stock of Outbrain valued at approximately $263 million. Cravath is representing Outbrain in connection with the transaction.

Deals & Cases

January 29, 2025

Dowlais Group plc’s £1.16 Billion Recommended Cash and Share Combination with American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc.

On January 29, 2025, Dowlais Group plc (“Dowlais”), a specialist engineering group focused on the automotive sector, and American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc. (“AAM”), a leading automotive and mobility supplier, announced that their boards have reached agreement on the terms of a recommended cash and share combination. Under the terms of the combination, each Dowlais shareholder will be entitled to receive 0.0863 new AAM shares, 42 pence in cash and up to 2.8 pence in the form of dividends to be paid prior to completion. Dowlais shareholders will own approximately 49% of AAM upon closing. The offer values Dowlais at approximately £1.16 billion.

Deals & Cases

September 05, 2024

Frontier’s $20 Billion Acquisition by Verizon

On September 5, 2024, Verizon Communications Inc. and Frontier Communications Parent, Inc. (“Frontier”), the largest pure‑play fiber provider in the U.S., announced they have entered into a definitive agreement for Verizon to acquire Frontier in an all‑cash transaction valued at $20 billion. Cravath is representing Frontier in connection with the transaction.

Deals & Cases

April 04, 2024

Disney’s Successful Proxy Contest Against Trian and Blackwells

On April 3, 2024, The Walt Disney Company (“Disney”) announced that, based on the tabulation of its proxy solicitor, it appears that Disney’s full slate of 12 directors has been elected by a substantial margin over the nominees of Trian and Blackwells at Disney’s 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. Cravath is representing Disney in connection with this matter.

Publications

November 20, 2024

Ben Joseloff, George Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. Author U.S. Chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2025”

Cravath partners Benjamin G. Joseloff, George F. Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. co‑authored the U.S. chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2025,” which was published by Global Legal Group on November 15, 2024. The chapter examines U.S. foreign investment review policy and the law, regulations and procedures of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), including both jurisdictional and substantive considerations, as well as recent developments.

Publications

November 20, 2023

Ben Joseloff, George Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. Author U.S. Chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2024”

Cravath of counsel Benjamin G. Joseloff and partners George F. Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. co‑authored the U.S. chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2024,” which was published by Global Legal Group on November 16, 2023. The chapter examines U.S. foreign investment review policy and the law, regulations and procedures of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), including both jurisdictional and substantive considerations as well as recent developments.

George F. Schoen is Co-Chair of the Global Mergers and Acquisitions Practice. He focuses his practice on mergers, acquisitions and joint ventures, including hostile and contested transactions. Mr. Schoen also regularly counsels corporations and their directors on fiduciary duty and corporate governance matters.

Mr. Schoen has also represented numerous companies in defending against hedge fund activism. Recent examples include representing:

  • ARIAD Pharmaceuticals in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan and in its settlement agreement with Sarissa Capital
  • Avon in its nomination agreement with Barington Capital
  • Barnes & Noble in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan (which was upheld by the Delaware Chancery Court and the Delaware Supreme Court) and in its successful proxy contest against Ron Burkle and Yucaipa
  • Cameron International in connection with share accumulations by JANA Partners and in its interactions with Elliott Management
  • Casey’s General Stores in its interactions with a group of investors led by JCP Investment Management
  • Disney in its support agreement with Third Point and its successful proxy contests against Trian and Blackwells
  • Hertz in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan in response to an activist investor reported to be Carl Icahn
  • Jones Group in its settlement agreement with Barington Capital
  • Occidental Petroleum in Carl Icahn’s written consent solicitation of Occidental shareholders and Occidental’s subsequent nomination agreement with Carl Icahn
  • Olin in its cooperation agreement with Sachem Head Capital Management
  • Southwest Gas in its proxy fight and settlement agreement with, and its response to an unsolicited tender offer from, Carl Icahn

Mr. Schoen has extensive deal experience in many industry sectors, particularly in the media and technology sectors. Notable transactions include representing:

Consumer and Retail

  • Casey’s General Stores in connection with the unsolicited acquisition proposal by Alimentation Couche-Tard, and related hostile tender offer and proxy contest
  • The Jones Group in acquisitions and dispositions aggregating more than $4.2 billion in value, including the sale of Barneys New York to Istithmar, the sale of its Polo Jeans business to Polo, the acquisitions of Gloria Vanderbilt and Stuart Weitzman, and its sale to Sycamore Partners
  • The special committee of Pepsi Bottling Group in connection with Pepsi’s $5.7 billion unsolicited offer for, and ultimate acquisition of, Pepsi Bottling

Energy and Natural Resources

  • Cameron International in its $15 billion sale to Schlumberger and in the creation of the OneSubsea joint venture with Schlumberger
  • John Wood Group in its £2.225 billion acquisition of Amec Foster Wheeler
  • Newcrest in its A$28.8 billion acquisition by Newmont
  • Occidental Petroleum in its $57 billion acquisition of Anadarko, topping Anadarko’s original agreement with Chevron, and the $8.8 billion sale of Anadarko’s African assets to Total and $10 billion investment by Berkshire Hathaway

Financial Institutions

  • Deutsche Boerse in the proposed $10 billion merger of equals with NYSE Euronext and in connection with the competing offer from NASDAQ OMX and Intercontinental Exchange

Healthcare

  • AveXis in its $8.7 billion acquisition by Novartis
  • GW Pharmaceuticals in its $7.2 billion acquisition by Jazz Pharmaceuticals
  • Johnson & Johnson in the separation of Kenvue, its $16.6 billion acquisition of Abiomed and the takeover contest for Guidant Corporation and its acquisition of Pfizer’s consumer healthcare business
  • King Pharmaceuticals in its acquisition of Meridian Medical Technologies
  • The board of directors of Par Pharmaceutical Companies as independent legal counsel in the $1.9 billion sale to certain affiliates of TPG Capital

Industrials

  • AerCap in its $28 billion acquisition of International Lease Finance Corporation from American International Group
  • Dowlais in its pending £1.16 billion combination with American Axle & Manufacturing 
  • GKN in the £8.1 billion unsolicited offer from Melrose and the proposed $6.1 billion combination of its Driveline business and Dana
  • Martin Marietta in its $2.05 billion acquisition of aggregates operations from Blue Water Industries, the $2.1 billion sale of its South Texas cement business and related concrete operations to CRH, its $2.3 billion acquisition of Lehigh West Region, its $1.625 billion acquisition of Bluegrass Materials and its $3.2 billion acquisition of Texas Industries
  • Nalco in its $8 billion merger with Ecolab
  • Olin Corporation in numerous acquisitions and dispositions, including its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical and the sale of its metals business to KPS Capital Partners
  • Parker Hannifin in its $3.675 billion acquisition of LORD
  • Precision Castparts in its $37 billion acquisition by Berkshire Hathaway

Media and Entertainment

  • Disney in its $85 billion acquisition of 21st Century Fox, overcoming an interloper bid by Comcast to its original $66 billion agreement; the $10.6 billion sale of the Fox Regional Sports Networks to Sinclair; the $3.47 billion sale of its interest in the YES Network to an investor group including the Yankees and Sinclair; ESPN’s strategic alliance with PENN Entertainment to launch ESPN BET; Endemol Shine’s acquisition by Banijay Group; the sale of FoxNext Games to Scopely; and the sale of a majority stake in Fox TeleColombia & Estudios TeleMexico to ViacomCBS
  • Hibu Group in the sale of its U.S. business to H.I.G. Capital
  • Time Warner in its $109 billion acquisition by AT&T
  • Warner Media in its investment in NewTV, as part of its $1 billion initial funding round

Technology and Telecommunications

  • Aras in its substantial growth investment from GI Partners
  • EMBARQ in its $11.9 billion merger with CenturyTel
  • Frontier Communications in its pending $20 billion acquisition by Verizon and its $8.6 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of assets from Verizon
  • IBM in transactions aggregating more than $30 billion in value, including its acquisition of the StreamSets and webMethods platforms from Software AG, the sale of select IBM software products to HCL Technologies, the sale of its x86 server business to Lenovo, the sale of its retail store systems business to Toshiba TEC and its acquisitions of Truven Health Analytics and the product and technology businesses of The Weather Company, as well as its Watson joint venture with Mubadala
  • Micro Focus in its $6 billion acquisition by OpenText
  • Northrop Grumman in the $3.4 billion sale of its federal IT and mission support business to Veritas Capital
  • Outbrain in its $900 million acquisition of Teads
  • Scientific Games in its C$775 million acquisition of NYX Gaming Group, its $5.1 billion acquisition of Bally Technologies and its acquisition of Spicerack Media
  • WiseTech Global in its $414 million acquisition of Blume Global from Apollo and EQT and in its $230 million acquisition of Envase Technologies from Firmament
  • Xerox in the $1.05 billion sale of its information technology outsourcing business to Atos and its $1.5 billion acquisition of Global Imaging Systems

Transportation

  • Delta Air Lines in its acquisition of 49% of Virgin Atlantic from Singapore Airlines and in Delta’s related trans-Atlantic joint venture with Virgin
  • United Airlines in its strategic alliance with Continental Airlines and in its transatlantic joint venture with Continental, Lufthansa and Air Canada

Mr. Schoen has been repeatedly recognized as a leading lawyer in M&A by, among others, Chambers USA, The Legal 500 US and IFLR1000. He has also been recognized by The Legal 500 US for his transactional work in the telecoms and broadcast industry, as well as for his work in activism defense and his transactional work in the technology industry. Mr. Schoen was named a “Dealmaker of the Year” by the New York Law Journal in 2022 and The American Lawyer in 2019, one of “Hollywood’s Top 20 Dealmakers” by The Hollywood Reporter in 2018 and one of “500 Leading Lawyers in America” by Lawdragon from 2016 through 2023. Additionally, he has been named by Lawdragon as one of the “500 Leading Dealmakers in America.” Mr. Schoen’s work on behalf of Olin Corporation in its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical was featured by the Financial Times in its annual FT North America Innovative Lawyers 2016 report. He has also served on the Mergers, Acquisitions & Corporate Control Contests Committee of the New York City Bar Association and has chaired the Practising Law Institute’s “Preparing for Shareholder Activism: What You Need To Be Doing Now” conference.

Mr. Schoen was born in Queens, New York. He received a B.A. from Cornell University in 1994 and a J.D. with honors from the University of Chicago Law School in 1998.

Mr. Schoen joined Cravath in 1998 and was elected a partner in 2005. He served as Co‑Chair of the Firm’s Diversity Committee from 2016 to 2022, and from 2011 to 2014, served as the Firm’s Corporate Hiring Partner.

Mr. Schoen has also represented numerous companies in defending against hedge fund activism. Recent examples include representing:

  • ARIAD Pharmaceuticals in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan and in its settlement agreement with Sarissa Capital
  • Avon in its nomination agreement with Barington Capital
  • Barnes & Noble in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan (which was upheld by the Delaware Chancery Court and the Delaware Supreme Court) and in its successful proxy contest against Ron Burkle and Yucaipa
  • Cameron International in connection with share accumulations by JANA Partners and in its interactions with Elliott Management
  • Casey’s General Stores in its interactions with a group of investors led by JCP Investment Management
  • Disney in its support agreement with Third Point and its successful proxy contests against Trian and Blackwells
  • Hertz in the adoption of its shareholder rights plan in response to an activist investor reported to be Carl Icahn
  • Jones Group in its settlement agreement with Barington Capital
  • Occidental Petroleum in Carl Icahn’s written consent solicitation of Occidental shareholders and Occidental’s subsequent nomination agreement with Carl Icahn
  • Olin in its cooperation agreement with Sachem Head Capital Management
  • Southwest Gas in its proxy fight and settlement agreement with, and its response to an unsolicited tender offer from, Carl Icahn

Mr. Schoen has extensive deal experience in many industry sectors, particularly in the media and technology sectors. Notable transactions include representing:

Consumer and Retail

  • Casey’s General Stores in connection with the unsolicited acquisition proposal by Alimentation Couche-Tard, and related hostile tender offer and proxy contest
  • The Jones Group in acquisitions and dispositions aggregating more than $4.2 billion in value, including the sale of Barneys New York to Istithmar, the sale of its Polo Jeans business to Polo, the acquisitions of Gloria Vanderbilt and Stuart Weitzman, and its sale to Sycamore Partners
  • The special committee of Pepsi Bottling Group in connection with Pepsi’s $5.7 billion unsolicited offer for, and ultimate acquisition of, Pepsi Bottling

Energy and Natural Resources

  • Cameron International in its $15 billion sale to Schlumberger and in the creation of the OneSubsea joint venture with Schlumberger
  • John Wood Group in its £2.225 billion acquisition of Amec Foster Wheeler
  • Newcrest in its A$28.8 billion acquisition by Newmont
  • Occidental Petroleum in its $57 billion acquisition of Anadarko, topping Anadarko’s original agreement with Chevron, and the $8.8 billion sale of Anadarko’s African assets to Total and $10 billion investment by Berkshire Hathaway

Financial Institutions

  • Deutsche Boerse in the proposed $10 billion merger of equals with NYSE Euronext and in connection with the competing offer from NASDAQ OMX and Intercontinental Exchange

Healthcare

  • AveXis in its $8.7 billion acquisition by Novartis
  • GW Pharmaceuticals in its $7.2 billion acquisition by Jazz Pharmaceuticals
  • Johnson & Johnson in the separation of Kenvue, its $16.6 billion acquisition of Abiomed and the takeover contest for Guidant Corporation and its acquisition of Pfizer’s consumer healthcare business
  • King Pharmaceuticals in its acquisition of Meridian Medical Technologies
  • The board of directors of Par Pharmaceutical Companies as independent legal counsel in the $1.9 billion sale to certain affiliates of TPG Capital

Industrials

  • AerCap in its $28 billion acquisition of International Lease Finance Corporation from American International Group
  • Dowlais in its pending £1.16 billion combination with American Axle & Manufacturing 
  • GKN in the £8.1 billion unsolicited offer from Melrose and the proposed $6.1 billion combination of its Driveline business and Dana
  • Martin Marietta in its $2.05 billion acquisition of aggregates operations from Blue Water Industries, the $2.1 billion sale of its South Texas cement business and related concrete operations to CRH, its $2.3 billion acquisition of Lehigh West Region, its $1.625 billion acquisition of Bluegrass Materials and its $3.2 billion acquisition of Texas Industries
  • Nalco in its $8 billion merger with Ecolab
  • Olin Corporation in numerous acquisitions and dispositions, including its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical and the sale of its metals business to KPS Capital Partners
  • Parker Hannifin in its $3.675 billion acquisition of LORD
  • Precision Castparts in its $37 billion acquisition by Berkshire Hathaway

Media and Entertainment

  • Disney in its $85 billion acquisition of 21st Century Fox, overcoming an interloper bid by Comcast to its original $66 billion agreement; the $10.6 billion sale of the Fox Regional Sports Networks to Sinclair; the $3.47 billion sale of its interest in the YES Network to an investor group including the Yankees and Sinclair; ESPN’s strategic alliance with PENN Entertainment to launch ESPN BET; Endemol Shine’s acquisition by Banijay Group; the sale of FoxNext Games to Scopely; and the sale of a majority stake in Fox TeleColombia & Estudios TeleMexico to ViacomCBS
  • Hibu Group in the sale of its U.S. business to H.I.G. Capital
  • Time Warner in its $109 billion acquisition by AT&T
  • Warner Media in its investment in NewTV, as part of its $1 billion initial funding round

Technology and Telecommunications

  • Aras in its substantial growth investment from GI Partners
  • EMBARQ in its $11.9 billion merger with CenturyTel
  • Frontier Communications in its pending $20 billion acquisition by Verizon and its $8.6 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of assets from Verizon
  • IBM in transactions aggregating more than $30 billion in value, including its acquisition of the StreamSets and webMethods platforms from Software AG, the sale of select IBM software products to HCL Technologies, the sale of its x86 server business to Lenovo, the sale of its retail store systems business to Toshiba TEC and its acquisitions of Truven Health Analytics and the product and technology businesses of The Weather Company, as well as its Watson joint venture with Mubadala
  • Micro Focus in its $6 billion acquisition by OpenText
  • Northrop Grumman in the $3.4 billion sale of its federal IT and mission support business to Veritas Capital
  • Outbrain in its $900 million acquisition of Teads
  • Scientific Games in its C$775 million acquisition of NYX Gaming Group, its $5.1 billion acquisition of Bally Technologies and its acquisition of Spicerack Media
  • WiseTech Global in its $414 million acquisition of Blume Global from Apollo and EQT and in its $230 million acquisition of Envase Technologies from Firmament
  • Xerox in the $1.05 billion sale of its information technology outsourcing business to Atos and its $1.5 billion acquisition of Global Imaging Systems

Transportation

  • Delta Air Lines in its acquisition of 49% of Virgin Atlantic from Singapore Airlines and in Delta’s related trans-Atlantic joint venture with Virgin
  • United Airlines in its strategic alliance with Continental Airlines and in its transatlantic joint venture with Continental, Lufthansa and Air Canada

Mr. Schoen has been repeatedly recognized as a leading lawyer in M&A by, among others, Chambers USA, The Legal 500 US and IFLR1000. He has also been recognized by The Legal 500 US for his transactional work in the telecoms and broadcast industry, as well as for his work in activism defense and his transactional work in the technology industry. Mr. Schoen was named a “Dealmaker of the Year” by the New York Law Journal in 2022 and The American Lawyer in 2019, one of “Hollywood’s Top 20 Dealmakers” by The Hollywood Reporter in 2018 and one of “500 Leading Lawyers in America” by Lawdragon from 2016 through 2023. Additionally, he has been named by Lawdragon as one of the “500 Leading Dealmakers in America.” Mr. Schoen’s work on behalf of Olin Corporation in its $5 billion Reverse Morris Trust acquisition of the chlorine value chain business of Dow Chemical was featured by the Financial Times in its annual FT North America Innovative Lawyers 2016 report. He has also served on the Mergers, Acquisitions & Corporate Control Contests Committee of the New York City Bar Association and has chaired the Practising Law Institute’s “Preparing for Shareholder Activism: What You Need To Be Doing Now” conference.

Mr. Schoen was born in Queens, New York. He received a B.A. from Cornell University in 1994 and a J.D. with honors from the University of Chicago Law School in 1998.

Mr. Schoen joined Cravath in 1998 and was elected a partner in 2005. He served as Co‑Chair of the Firm’s Diversity Committee from 2016 to 2022, and from 2011 to 2014, served as the Firm’s Corporate Hiring Partner.

Education

  • J.D., 1998, University of Chicago Law School
    with Honors
  • B.A., 1994, Cornell University

Admitted In

  • New York

Professional Affiliations

International Bar Association

  • Corporate and M&A Law Committee

New York City Bar Association

  • Mergers, Acquisitions & Corporate Control Contests Committee

Rankings

The American Lawyer

  • Dealmaker of the Year (2019)

Best Lawyers in America

  • Corporate Law (2023)

Chambers USA

  • Corporate/M&A - New York (2024‑2011)

The Hollywood Reporter

  • Hollywood’s Top 20 Dealmakers (2018)

IFLR1000

  • Mergers and Acquisitions - US (2024-2015)

Lawdragon

  • 500 Leading Lawyers in America (2025‑2016)
  • 500 Leading Dealmakers in America (2024-2021)

The Legal 500 US

  • M&A/Corporate and Commercial: Large Deals, $1bn+ (2024, 2023, 2022, 2018, 2013, 2012, 2010, 2009)
  • Media and Entertainment: Transactional (2021, 2020)
  • Shareholder Activism: Advice to Boards (2024, 2023, 2019)
  • Technology Transactions (2024‑2011)
  • Telecoms and Broadcast: Transactions (2021-2018, 2016, 2015, 2012, 2011, 2010)

New York Law Journal

  • Dealmaker of the Year (2022)

Deals & Cases

April 07, 2025

IBM’s Acquisition of Hakkoda

On April 7, 2025, IBM announced it has acquired Hakkoda Inc., a leading global data and AI consultancy. Hakkoda will expand IBM Consulting's data transformation services portfolio, adding specialized data platform expertise to help clients get their data ready to fuel AI‑powered business operations. Cravath is representing IBM in connection with the transaction.

Deals & Cases

February 03, 2025

Outbrain’s Acquisition of Teads

On February 3, 2025, Outbrain Inc. (“Outbrain”), a technology platform, announced the closing of its acquisition of Teads, a global omnichannel platform, from Altice. The two companies will merge their offerings to create an omnichannel outcomes platform for the open internet, and will operate under the name Teads. Outbrain, Altice and Teads have amended the previously announced share purchase agreement. Under the terms of the revised agreement, Outbrain will be paying a total consideration of approximately $900 million, consisting of $625 million upfront cash and 43.75 million shares of common stock of Outbrain valued at approximately $263 million. Cravath is representing Outbrain in connection with the transaction.

Deals & Cases

January 29, 2025

Dowlais Group plc’s £1.16 Billion Recommended Cash and Share Combination with American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc.

On January 29, 2025, Dowlais Group plc (“Dowlais”), a specialist engineering group focused on the automotive sector, and American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc. (“AAM”), a leading automotive and mobility supplier, announced that their boards have reached agreement on the terms of a recommended cash and share combination. Under the terms of the combination, each Dowlais shareholder will be entitled to receive 0.0863 new AAM shares, 42 pence in cash and up to 2.8 pence in the form of dividends to be paid prior to completion. Dowlais shareholders will own approximately 49% of AAM upon closing. The offer values Dowlais at approximately £1.16 billion.

Deals & Cases

September 05, 2024

Frontier’s $20 Billion Acquisition by Verizon

On September 5, 2024, Verizon Communications Inc. and Frontier Communications Parent, Inc. (“Frontier”), the largest pure‑play fiber provider in the U.S., announced they have entered into a definitive agreement for Verizon to acquire Frontier in an all‑cash transaction valued at $20 billion. Cravath is representing Frontier in connection with the transaction.

Deals & Cases

April 04, 2024

Disney’s Successful Proxy Contest Against Trian and Blackwells

On April 3, 2024, The Walt Disney Company (“Disney”) announced that, based on the tabulation of its proxy solicitor, it appears that Disney’s full slate of 12 directors has been elected by a substantial margin over the nominees of Trian and Blackwells at Disney’s 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. Cravath is representing Disney in connection with this matter.

Publications

November 20, 2024

Ben Joseloff, George Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. Author U.S. Chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2025”

Cravath partners Benjamin G. Joseloff, George F. Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. co‑authored the U.S. chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2025,” which was published by Global Legal Group on November 15, 2024. The chapter examines U.S. foreign investment review policy and the law, regulations and procedures of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), including both jurisdictional and substantive considerations, as well as recent developments.

Publications

November 20, 2023

Ben Joseloff, George Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. Author U.S. Chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2024”

Cravath of counsel Benjamin G. Joseloff and partners George F. Schoen and G.J. Ligelis Jr. co‑authored the U.S. chapter for the International Comparative Legal Guide’s “Foreign Direct Investment Regimes 2024,” which was published by Global Legal Group on November 16, 2023. The chapter examines U.S. foreign investment review policy and the law, regulations and procedures of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), including both jurisdictional and substantive considerations as well as recent developments.

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