PE, RE lawyers to advise US government on bank deals

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, the law firm for private equity and real estate heavyweights like Blackstone, KKR and JC Flowers, will guide the government as it spends up to $250bn purchasing equity stakes in banks.

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett will advise the US government as it makes private equity-style plays, using $250 billion to buy preferred equity stakes in banks to shore up the US financial sector.

The New York-based law firm is among the dominant firms that work in the private equity real estate industry, notably representing private equity firms like The Blackstone Group and KKR.

STB also recently advised on the sale of Lehman Brothers to the UK's Barclays Capital and represented JC Flowers and Grove International in their €1.1 billion deal for a 24.9 percent stake in commercial real estate lender, Hypo Real Estate, which closed in July.

The government hired Simpson as the sole advisor for the emergency bank equity plan. Simpson is headed up by chairman Richard Beattie. Lee Meyerson, a New York partner who specialises in transactions involving financial institutions, will lead the contract.

The Wall Street Journal said in a report Tuesday that Simpson will counsel officials primarily on the structure of the programme.

The $250 billion bailout is part of the US government's $700 billion distressed assets relief program. The government has pledged to use the bail out package to buy the “toxic debt” of companies as a way to end the financial turmoil in global markets.

Other countries have made the same moves, including the UK, which pledged to pump £37 billion into the Royal Bank of Scotland, Lloyds TSB and HBOS.