David Fox is an American lawyer with a specialty in public companies mergers and acquisitions. He was with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom for over 20 years, where he was a partner and a member of the executive team before moving to Kirkland & Ellis in 2009.
Fox was born in New York City in 1958. His father was Seymour Fox, a rabbi and Jewish educator, and mother was Sarah Kaminker, a city planner. His family immigrated to Jerusalem when he was nine years old.
At 25, Fox returned to New York, where he began his career with Skadden. Some notable transactions led by Fox at Skadden include the $6.6 billion leveraged buyout of Toys "R" Us and the sale of Aztar Corporation to Columbia Sussex for $2.75 billion.
In 2009, Fox left Skadden for Kirkland & Ellis, where he developed their M&A practice. At the time of his departure, Fox was one of the highest-paid lawyers at Skadden and it marked the first time a partner had left the firm for a competitor. At Kirkland, he oversaw the New York office, was a member of the executive committee and developed the M&A practice, which rose from 90th to first in global M&A rankings and helped the firm become the highest-grossing law firm in the world.
Fox has also been active in the M&A ecosystem of Israel. Some of the Israeli deals he handled include the sale of Koor IndustriesâÂÂs stake in Makhteshim Agan to ChemChina for $2.4 billion and Teva Pharmaceuticals' acquisition of Cephalon for $6.8 billion.
In addition to practicing law, Fox serves on a number of boards and has taught at his alma mater, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In 2018, The Deal honored Fox with its first ever M&A Lifetime Achievement award. In 2020, he stepped down from the executive committee at Kirkland.
Fox has two brothers, filmmaker Eytan Fox and MIT Linguistics professor Danny Fox.