The best build tool is the one you write yourself. Every project’s build process is unique, and often individual projects need to be built multiple different ways.
If you don’t want to write your own build tool, then you should use: Ant or Maven
Ant is a build tool; Maven is a build system:
What this means is that with Maven, you don't need to decide your directory layout, build targets, versioning scheme, management of dependencies, etc. This is all designed for you. It also means you will be working against the tool somewhat if you don't like the default.
The benefits are that most of the common tools you want to build into your build system (CheckStyle, FindBugs, Unit Testing, Unit Coverage, JDepened...) are all available without any additional development work. In addition, there is a well-defined framework for extending the build system by building plugins (btw - using Ant to build plugins is trivially easy). Also, there is nice integration with IDEs so that developers are using the same build information as the auto-build system.
The trade-off is that unless you are starting from scratch, you will probably need to refactor your source code to be in line with what Maven expects. The trade-off for not having to build everything from scratch is that you sometimes spend time figuring out how to coax Maven to do what you want, how you want it done.