Personal bio
Marcus is an international arbitration and technology lawyer at Lindsay Francis & Mangan, where he represents clients in high-value international commercial and investment treaty arbitrations / litigation spanning a wide range of matters. Marcus pursued his undergraduate degree in Law at the University of Cambridge (Sidney Sussex College) in the United Kingdom, and graduated from Harvard Law School with a Master of Laws as a Dean’s Scholar. His main areas of interest in the legal discipline are primarily focused on technology law. During his time at Harvard Law School, Marcus was awarded the Harvard Law Dean’s Scholar Prize for finishing top of his cohort in the Computer Science (CS50) for Lawyers module led by Professor David Malan, the Gordan McKay Professor of the Practice of Computer Science. Marcus also formerly served as a Research Associate to Emeritus Professor Hal Scott, the past Governor of the American Stock Exchange (2002-2005), where he held the position of data lead for the 24th Edition of Scott & Gelpern’s International Finance: Transactions, Policy, and Regulation. As a result, he conducted extensive data intensive research on relevant areas such as Equity Market Structures, Swaps, International Capital Markets, Debt Financing and Project Financing.
Marcus graduated from Cambridge with a First Class Honours, having been twice elected a Leonard Coling Law Scholar and awarded the Sidney Sussex Law Tripos Prize for his outstanding academic achievements, which includes an exceptional starred first-class mark with distinction in Equity. During his time at Cambridge, Marcus served as an associate editor for the Singapore Comparative Law Review, a leading Singapore – UK Law Journal patronized by the former Chief Justice of Singapore, Justice Chan Sek Keong. He has edited major submissions from distinguished members of the legal fraternity, such as Lord Neuberger from the UK Supreme Court. Marcus has published in leading law journals and blogs such as the Cambridge Law Review, the Tulane Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property, the Broad Street Humanities Review as well as the Singapore Comparative Law Review. He has also written for various law blogs administered by leading UK Higher Education Institutions such as the University of Oxford and the London School of Economics, having won several prizes in the process. This includes a nomination by Justice Chan Sek Keong for the best Public Law Article in the 2021 Edition of the Singapore Comparative Law Review. Marcus’s article, “Unravelling the Gordian knot for Data Trusts – The next leap forward for Equity?”, has also been recognized by the Fifty-Fifth Selected Bibliography on Computers, Technology and The Law (50 Rutgers Computer & Tech. L.J. 411) as one of "the most important and timely articles on computer, technology, and the law", and on the American Bar Association’s “Probate and Property” 2025 issue as a selected literature on Data Protection. Marcus has also held work experiences with leading firms and chambers such as Temple Chambers and Des Voeux Chambers in Hong Kong, Allen & Overy LLP in London, and Cooley LLP in Boston, US (as part of the Harvard Law Entrepreneurship Project).
Marcus is part of Stanford University’s Moonshot Alliance, having spent 2019 at Stanford University as a Stanford Environmental and Water Studies Scholar where he led a team-based moonshot project through ‘imagining the impossible’. Marcus also holds the Certified Information Privacy Professional (A/E/US) qualification and the CIPM as well. Marcus has been admitted as a Fellow (FCIArb) of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (CIArb), the highest grade of membership, where he is qualified to act as an arbitrator and on CIArb's dispute panel of neutrals. Marcus is also a Grace Hopper Scholar at the University of Pennsylvania, where he graduated with a Master of Computer and Information Technology Degree (Summa Cum Laude), specializing in AI and Natural Language Processing. He also serves as an Adjunct Faculty at the NUS Faculty of Law, where he teaches the compulsory third-year law module ‘LC2017 – Law and Technology’ to LLB and LLM students.
Marcus is a triple-qualified lawyer (Singapore, New York, and England & Wales) and has ranked on the Singapore Institute of Legal Education’s Commendation List for being the top ten Candidates in the 2023 Part B Bar Examinations having achieved three distinctions. Marcus completed his Relevant Legal Training and Practice Training at Allen & Gledhill LLP from 2022-2024 under the mentorship of Dr Stanley Lai, S.C., where he specialized in matters relating to Technology Transactions, Litigation and International Arbitration. He also had the privilege of serving as an Assistant Manager and Policy Maker at the Infocomm Media Development Authority and Personal Data Protection Commission of Singapore, where he represented Singapore in international forums on issues such as Data Protection, Competition Law, Antitrust, and Mergers & Acquisitions (especially in the domain of overseas TMT mergers).