Awards & Recognition
The Legal 500 US 2022 Recognized SRZ as a Leading Law Firm in 17 Key Rankings
June 2022
The Legal 500 US 2022 recognized Schulte Roth & Zabel as a leading law firm in 17 key rankings with the firm and lawyers described by client testimonials as “a deep bench [of] seasoned specialists,” “unusually dedicated to results both in terms of speed and meticulousness,” and “[having] remarkable insight, work ethic and tenacity.”
The key ranked practice areas included:
- Dispute Resolution
- Corporate Investigations and White-Collar Criminal Defense: Advice to Corporates
- Corporate Investigations and White-Collar Criminal Defense: Advice to Individuals
- General Commercial Disputes
- M&A Litigation: Defense
- Securities Litigation: Defense
- Finance
- Financial Services Regulation
- Structured Finance: Securitization
- Investment Fund Formation and Management
- Alternative/Hedge Funds
- Mutual/Registered/Exchange-Traded Funds
- Private Equity Funds (Including Venture Capital)
- Labor and Employment: ERISA Litigation
- M&A/Corporate and Commercial
- M&A: Middle-Market ($500M-999M)
- Shareholder Activism: Advice to Shareholders
- Real Estate
- Real Estate: Real Estate Finance
- Tax: US Taxes: Non-Contentious
The annual publication highlights the most cutting-edge and innovative practice teams by analyzing the strengths of law firms around the United States.
Practices
- Bank Regulatory
- Broker-Dealer Regulatory and Enforcement
- Complex Commercial Litigation
- Finance
- Hedge Funds
- Investment Management
- Litigation
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Private Equity
- Real Estate
- Securities Litigation and Class Action
- Shareholder Activism
- Regulatory and Compliance
- Tax
- SEC Enforcement and White Collar Defense
Related Insights
Alerts
On Feb. 16, 2024, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”), a bureau of the United States Department of the Treasury (“Treasury”), issued a notice of proposed rulemaking (“Proposed Rule”)[1] continuing the process of implementing regulations to combat illicit finance risks posed by abuse by some in the real estate market. The Proposed Rule would require certain persons involved in residential real estate closings and settlements to submit reports (“Real Estate Reports”) and keep accurate records of certain non-financed transfers of US residential real property. The reasoning behind the Proposed Rule is explained extensively in FinCEN’s December 2021 Anti-Money Laundering Regulations for Real Estate Transactions Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, which discusses “the opacity of shell companies or other legal entity structures to mask true beneficial ownership of a property and their involvement in real estate transactions.”[2]
Alerts
On Feb. 16, 2024, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”), a bureau of the United States Department of the Treasury (“Treasury”), issued a notice of proposed rulemaking (“Proposed Rule”)[1] continuing the process of implementing regulations to combat illicit finance risks posed by abuse by some in the real estate market. The Proposed Rule would require certain persons involved in residential real estate closings and settlements to submit reports (“Real Estate Reports”) and keep accurate records of certain non-financed transfers of US residential real property. The reasoning behind the Proposed Rule is explained extensively in FinCEN’s December 2021 Anti-Money Laundering Regulations for Real Estate Transactions Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, which discusses “the opacity of shell companies or other legal entity structures to mask true beneficial ownership of a property and their involvement in real estate transactions.”[2]
Alerts
On Feb. 16, 2024, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”), a bureau of the United States Department of the Treasury (“Treasury”), issued a notice of proposed rulemaking (“Proposed Rule”)[1] continuing the process of implementing regulations to combat illicit finance risks posed by abuse by some in the real estate market. The Proposed Rule would require certain persons involved in residential real estate closings and settlements to submit reports (“Real Estate Reports”) and keep accurate records of certain non-financed transfers of US residential real property. The reasoning behind the Proposed Rule is explained extensively in FinCEN’s December 2021 Anti-Money Laundering Regulations for Real Estate Transactions Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, which discusses “the opacity of shell companies or other legal entity structures to mask true beneficial ownership of a property and their involvement in real estate transactions.”[2]