Personally I favor Fluke but you should make your decision based on your own needs - general bench or repair work, logging requirements if any, voltages present, etc. You really can't go wrong with a Fluke but if you need logging etc on a daily basis and you only want one meter, there are other options, an Agilent 1272A or 1252B for example.
Also, there are lots of cheap logging meters so you could have a Fluke for a daily driver and use the cheapie for occasional logging tasks. I do repair work and although I have owned and do own 5 1/2 and even 6 1/2 digit models I cannot think of a time I ever needed more than 4000 counts to troubleshoot an actual problem. For this type of work the Fluke 87V (6000 counts in basic operation) is superlative. The accuracy is rated .025% DC but usually runs about 8x or so better than spec'd, it does capacitance to 10,000uF (unlike the III which goes to 5uF), temperature (unlike earlier versions I and III), can do 20,000 counts if needed without slowing down appreciably (unlike the earlier versions). Rugged, reliable, safe, does not drift with time, and is fixable if it ever does break (which is pretty unlikely).
I can tell you this as someone who has owned more meters than most and had ten or so meters laying around which I could grab for a given task - the Fluke 87V is the one I grab when I need a reading I can rely on without a second thought.