Meet the bankers making the $109 billion beer deal of the decade happen
AB InBev raised its offer for SABMiller to £44 ($67.62) a share, valuing the brewer at £71.2 billion ($109.4 billion).
The means a lot of work for Wall Street firms who are advising the companies on both sides.
Lazard is the lead advisor to Anheuser-Busch InBev.
Three banks are advising SABMiller: JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley and, notably, Robey Warshaw, a 3-year-old, nine-person advisory boutique.
Deutsche Bank is acting as corporate broker.
Here's what we know so far about which bankers are in on the deal:
Lazard
Alexander Hecker
Hecker is co-head of consumer and retail investment banking at independent investment bank Lazard.
He worked on the InBev-Anheuser Busch deal in 2008 in addition to the more recent Warren Buffett-3G Capital acquisition of Heinz. He has also previously worked on AB InBev's acquisition of Grupo Modelo, and AmBev's acquisition of Cerveceria Nacional Dominicana.
Hecker has a history of working with 3G Capital, the Brazilian private equity giant behind AB InBev. He also worked with the firm to take Burger King and Playboy Industries private.
Jean Greene
Green is a managing director at Lazard. She joined the firm in 1999, and has worked on deals involving Tyco, ITT, and Bon-Ton's acquisition of Saks. Before joining Lazard, Greene covered oil and gas companies at Smith Barney.
Robey Warshaw
Simon Robey
Robey co-heads the London-based boutique with Simon Warshaw. Before founding his boutique advisory firm three years ago, he was head of UK investment banking and co-head of global mergers and acquisitions at Wall Street giant Morgan Stanley.
In addition to being a star dealmaker, he's also a professional standard singer, according to Financial News. He's chairman of the Royal Opera House board.
Simon Warshaw
Warshaw was the head of investment banking at UBS before joining Robey to form their boutique advisory firm.
He also worked on another giant transaction involving a US company and a UK-listed firm, working with Vodafone on the sale of its stake in Verizon Wireless to Verizon. That deal was valued at $130 billion.
JPMorgan
John Muncey
Muncey is head of JPMorgan's corporate finance team in the UK. He joined the bank from UBS. He was a managing director in the European consumer team at that bank.
Muncey has a history of expertise in the liquor and beverage industry. According to the FT, his clients include liquor giant Diageo and UK brewer Scottish and Newcastle, in addition to Cadbury Schweppes, Kraft, and Germany's Tchibo.
Dwayne Lysaght
Lysaght is JPMorgan's head of UK mergers and acquisition.
He has worked on a number of deals involving North American buyers and UK targets. He advised UK insurer Brit on its sale to Canadian peer Fairfax earlier this year, and previously worked with AbbVie on its aborted deal with UK pharmaceutical company Shire.
Morgan Stanley
Henry Stewart
Stewart runs UK and Irish investment banking for Morgan Stanley. He is a specialist in the consumer sector and a longtime adviser to SABMiller.
Paul Baker
Baker is an old-school British banker who heads corporate broking for Morgan Stanley. He assumed that role in 2004. Corporate broking is a practice unique to the UK, where public companies name one or more companies as retained advisers.
Goldman Sachs
Gilberto Pozzi
London-based Pozzi is a consumer sector specialist and was promoted earlier this year from his role as head of M&A in Europe, the Middle East and Africa to global cohead of mergers and acquisitions. He joined Goldman in 1995 as an associate, and made partner in 2008. He has previously worked on deals for Unilever, Kraft Foods and Jimmy Choo.
Mark Sorrell
Sorrell is cohead of UK investment banking at Goldman Sachs, and is known as an excellent M&A technician. His father, Martin, is the chief executive of advertising giant WPP, while his two brothers also worked at Goldman Sachs for a period. Jonathan Sorrell is now chief financial officer at hedge fund man Group, while Robert Sorrell joined Moelis & Co in London last year.