Corporate Finance · Due Diligence
Financial & Tax Due Diligence
Every acquisition is only as sound as the numbers behind it.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
Every acquisition is only as sound as the numbers behind it. PNPC Global performs financial and tax due diligence for acquirers, investors, and lenders across India and India-UAE cross-border deals — pulling apart a target's financial statements, tax positions, and working capital to find what the data room does not volunteer. We are practising Chartered Accountants engaged to protect your capital, not a checkbox exercise run to close a deal on schedule. If the numbers do not hold up, we say so — before you sign, not after.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
Financial and tax due diligence is the investigative financial review an acquirer, investor, or lender commissions on a target company before committing capital — verifying that the financial statements, tax positions, and working capital profile presented by the target are accurate, sustainable, and free of material undisclosed risk. It sits between the term sheet stage (where price and structure are indicatively agreed) and the definitive agreement stage (where representations, warranties, and indemnities are locked in) — the diligence findings directly shape the final purchase price, the structure of price adjustments, and the specific protections written into the Share Purchase Agreement or Business Transfer Agreement.
Financial due diligence examines the quality and sustainability of earnings — normalising reported EBITDA for one-off items, related-party transactions priced off market, owner's personal expenses run through the business, and revenue recognition practices that may not withstand scrutiny under Ind AS or applicable accounting standards. It reviews working capital trends to establish a realistic peg for closing adjustments, examines the cash flow statement against the profit and loss to confirm that reported profit is actually converting to cash, and identifies contingent liabilities, off-balance-sheet exposures, and related-party arrangements that a standard audit opinion does not always surface with transaction-relevant granularity. Tax due diligence separately examines the target's direct tax positions (corporate tax computations, transfer pricing documentation, TDS compliance, carried-forward losses and their eligibility under Section 79 of the Income-tax Act on a change of shareholding), indirect tax exposure (GST input credit eligibility, classification disputes, e-way bill and e-invoicing compliance), open assessments and appeals across all years not yet time-barred, and any history of search, survey, or penalty proceedings that could crystallise into a liability post-acquisition.
The distinction between financial due diligence and a statutory audit is fundamental and frequently misunderstood by first-time acquirers. A statutory audit expresses an opinion on whether financial statements present a true and fair view in accordance with applicable accounting standards, for a general body of stakeholders, based on materiality thresholds set for that purpose. Financial due diligence is scoped specifically for a transaction, materiality is set relative to deal size and the acquirer's specific concerns, and the objective is not an opinion on fairness but a decision-useful analysis of what the numbers actually mean for price, structure, and post-closing risk allocation. A clean audit opinion does not substitute for due diligence — audits are not designed to catch related-party mispricing, non-recurring items dressed as recurring revenue, or contingent tax exposure the way a transaction-focused review is.
Cross-border India-UAE due diligence carries an additional layer. Where the target has a UAE subsidiary, branch, or trading relationship, the review must additionally examine UAE Corporate Tax compliance since its 2023 introduction, VAT registration and filing history, Economic Substance Regulations compliance for relevant activities, and the transfer pricing position on intercompany transactions under both India's Section 92 framework and the UAE's OECD-aligned transfer pricing rules. Where the acquirer is UAE-based acquiring an Indian target, FEMA and RBI reporting timelines for the eventual investment must be mapped during diligence, not discovered at closing. PNPC's presence in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai means this cross-border diligence is run by one coordinated team with visibility into both sides of the transaction.
When financial and tax due diligence is the right engagement
You have signed a term sheet or Letter of Intent to acquire a company, business unit, or controlling/minority stake and need independent verification of the financials before the definitive agreement is drafted
You are a PE or VC fund, family office, or strategic investor evaluating a target and need transaction-scoped analysis of earnings quality, working capital, and tax exposure — not a general-purpose audit opinion
A lender or NBFC requires independent financial verification of a borrower or acquisition target before sanctioning debt for a leveraged transaction
You are negotiating a purchase price adjustment mechanism (working capital peg, net debt, earn-out) and need a defensible, evidence-based basis for the numbers going into that mechanism
The target has related-party transactions, a promoter-driven cost structure, or informally documented arrangements that a standard audit would not have flagged with transaction-relevant scrutiny
You need vendor due diligence prepared proactively on your own company before going to market, to surface and address issues before a buyer's diligence team finds them
The transaction has an India-UAE cross-border dimension and you need tax exposure assessed across both jurisdictions by one coordinated team rather than two disconnected local advisors
When a different engagement may be more appropriate
You need a standalone valuation report for a statutory purpose (Rule 11UA share issuance, ESOP pricing, Ind AS 113 fair value) with no active acquisition — engage PNPC's dedicated Business & Share Valuation service directly
You need commercial market assessment, operational efficiency review, or legal title and litigation checks rather than financial statement and tax analysis — Commercial, Operational & Legal Due Diligence is the closer fit, often run in parallel with financial due diligence
You are evaluating an early-stage startup with limited financial history where the diligence question is more about founder quality, cap table cleanliness, and IP ownership than historical earnings quality — Investor & Startup Due Diligence is scoped for that stage
You need end-to-end deal advisory — origination, negotiation, and closing support — not just the financial review workstream — Buy-Side & Sell-Side M&A Advisory covers the full mandate, with financial due diligence as one component within it
The engagement is a routine annual statutory audit requirement with no transaction in contemplation — a standard audit engagement, not transaction due diligence, is what is required
The target is not yet identified and you are at the strategic evaluation stage of whether to pursue acquisitions at all — that conversation belongs earlier, before a specific due diligence mandate is scoped
Financial & tax due diligence compared to related assurance and advisory engagements
| Feature | Statutory Audit | Financial Due Diligence | Tax Due Diligence | Vendor Due Diligence | Commercial/Legal Due Diligence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary objective | Opinion on true and fair view of financial statements | Decision-useful analysis of earnings quality, working capital, and financial risk for a transaction | Assessment of historical and contingent tax exposure across all open years | Seller-commissioned pre-emptive review to surface issues before buyer diligence | Assessment of market position, operations, and legal/title risk |
| Who commissions it | Company itself, statutorily mandated | Buyer, investor, or lender | Buyer, investor, or lender | Seller, proactively before going to market | Buyer, investor, or lender |
| Materiality basis | Set per applicable auditing standards, general-purpose | Set relative to deal size and specific transaction concerns | Set relative to deal size and quantum of potential exposure | Set relative to anticipated deal size | Set relative to deal-specific risk tolerance |
| Typical scope period | Single financial year under audit | Typically 3 years historical financials plus latest available interim | Typically all years not yet time-barred under the Income-tax Act and GST law | Typically 3 years historical, mirroring anticipated buyer scope | Contracts, licences, litigation, and market data — no fixed year range |
| Output | Audit report and opinion with financial statements | Due diligence report — findings, normalised EBITDA, red flags, price/structure implications | Tax due diligence report — exposure quantification, indemnity recommendations | Vendor due diligence report shared with prospective buyers under NDA | Commercial/legal due diligence report |
| Effect on price | None directly — informational | Directly shapes headline price, adjustments, and escrow/holdback structure | Directly shapes tax indemnity, escrow, and specific indemnity clauses in the SPA | Sets seller's negotiating position and pre-empts price chips from buyer findings | Can affect price where commercial or legal risk is quantifiable |
| Relationship to the deal | Independent of any transaction | Central workstream feeding directly into negotiation and definitive agreement drafting | Runs alongside financial due diligence, often same team | Precedes buyer engagement — run before the sale process begins | Runs in parallel with financial due diligence, coordinated findings |
| Typical duration | 4–8 weeks depending on company size | 3–6 weeks depending on target complexity and data room readiness | 2–5 weeks, often combined with financial due diligence timeline | 3–6 weeks, run before buyer outreach begins | 3–6 weeks, run in parallel with financial workstream |
These engagements are frequently run together as a coordinated diligence exercise rather than as isolated silos — PNPC typically leads financial and tax due diligence and coordinates closely with legal counsel and, where engaged, a separate commercial diligence team, so findings are triangulated rather than delivered in disconnected reports. The right combination and depth of scope depends on deal size, sector, and the acquirer's specific risk appetite.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Generic Diligence Providers Skip | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scoping & Engagement Letter — Defining exactly what is and is not covered | We define scope in writing before work begins: which entities (including subsidiaries and step-down subsidiaries), which years, financial-only or financial-plus-tax, and the specific red-flag areas the client already suspects. A vague scope produces a report that misses the client's actual concern. We also agree materiality thresholds relative to deal size upfront, so findings are not diluted by immaterial noise or, worse, material issues dismissed as noise. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Data Room Review & Request List — Structured information request, not a generic checklist | We issue a due diligence request list tailored to the target's sector and the deal structure — not a generic 200-item template copied across every engagement. Gaps in what the target provides are flagged immediately as a finding in themselves: an inability to produce clean trial balances, bank reconciliations, or GST returns on request is itself informative about the target's financial discipline. | Week 1–2 |
| 3 | Management Interviews & Walkthroughs — Understanding the business behind the numbers | Numbers without business context mislead. We interview finance, sales, and operations leadership to understand how revenue is actually recognised, how related parties are actually priced, what one-off items genuinely will not recur, and what the target's own management believes are the business's real risks — often more candid in interview than in the data room documents. | Week 2–3 |
| 4 | Quality of Earnings Analysis — Normalising reported EBITDA to a transaction-relevant figure | We rebuild reported EBITDA by adding back genuinely one-off items and removing items presented as one-off that are actually recurring, adjusting related-party transactions to arm's-length pricing where material, and flagging revenue recognised in ways that may not survive scrutiny under applicable Ind AS standards (particularly Ind AS 115 on revenue from contracts with customers). The gap between reported and normalised EBITDA is frequently the single most consequential number in the entire negotiation. | Week 2–4 |
| 5 | Working Capital & Net Debt Analysis — Setting a defensible closing peg | We analyse 12–24 months of working capital trends to establish a realistic normalised level, rather than accepting a single balance-sheet-date snapshot that may be seasonally or artificially favourable. Net debt is reconstructed to include off-balance-sheet financing, related-party loans dressed as trade balances, and contingent liabilities that behave economically like debt. This feeds directly into the price adjustment mechanism negotiated in the SPA. | Week 3–4 |
| 6 | Related-Party Transaction & Governance Review | Promoter-driven private companies routinely run personal or related-party costs through the business, or price related-party transactions off market terms. We identify and quantify these — not to moralise, but because they distort normalised earnings and, where they continue post-acquisition, create ongoing related-party disclosure and transfer pricing obligations the buyer needs to plan for. | Week 3–4 |
| 7 | Direct Tax Due Diligence — Corporate tax, TDS, and carried-forward loss eligibility | We review computation of income for all open years, TDS compliance across specified payment categories (with the Section 40(a)(ia) disallowance and interest exposure this creates if defaulted), transfer pricing documentation for any cross-border or specified domestic related-party transactions, and — critically for share acquisitions — whether carried-forward business losses survive the change in shareholding under Section 79 of the Income-tax Act, which can materially affect the value of tax attributes the buyer is paying for. | Week 3–5 |
| 8 | Indirect Tax Due Diligence — GST exposure, input credit eligibility, and classification risk | We review GST return filing history and reconciliation between GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, and books, input tax credit eligibility and any credits claimed on ineligible categories under Section 17(5), classification and rate disputes on the target's specific goods or services, e-invoicing and e-way bill compliance, and any pending GST audits, notices, or assessment proceedings across all open periods. | Week 3–5 |
| 9 | Contingent Liability & Litigation Financial Impact Assessment | Working alongside transaction counsel on the legal facts, we quantify the potential financial exposure of pending tax assessments, GST demand notices, labour claims, and commercial litigation — translating legal risk into an indemnity, escrow, or price-adjustment recommendation rather than leaving it as an unquantified legal caveat in the report. | Week 4–5 |
| 10 | Cross-Border Review — UAE Corporate Tax, VAT, and Economic Substance where applicable | For targets with UAE operations, we review UAE Corporate Tax registration and filing compliance since its 2023 introduction, VAT registration and return history, Economic Substance Regulations compliance for relevant licensed activities, and the transfer pricing position on intercompany dealings between the Indian and UAE entities — coordinated by our Dubai office alongside the India-side review, not handed off to a disconnected correspondent firm. | Week 4–6, where applicable |
| 11 | Draft Report & Management Response — Findings validated before finalisation | We share draft findings with the client (and, where the engagement structure allows, seek target management's response to specific queries) before finalising the report — ensuring factual accuracy and giving the client the opportunity to direct follow-up queries on any finding that changes their view of the deal. | Week 5–6 |
| 12 | Final Report & Negotiation Support — Translating findings into deal terms | The final report is written to be usable directly in negotiation — not just a narrative of findings, but a clear recommendation on price adjustment, specific indemnities, escrow sizing, and closing conditions the findings justify. We remain available through SPA negotiation to explain and defend findings directly to the client's legal counsel and, where useful, in negotiation sessions with the counterparty. | Week 6, and through closing as needed |
| 13 | Post-Closing Support — Escrow release reviews and completion account disputes | Where the deal includes a completion accounts mechanism or an escrow tied to post-closing financial performance or indemnity claims, PNPC remains engaged to review completion accounts against the diligence baseline and support the client through any dispute resolution process — the diligence engagement does not end at signing. | As needed, post-closing |
Realistic timeline for a mid-market target with reasonably organised records: 4–6 weeks from engagement letter to final report. Complex targets with multiple subsidiaries, cross-border operations, or poor record-keeping can extend to 8–10 weeks. Timeline is directly dependent on data room readiness and management responsiveness — the single largest driver of diligence delay is not analytical complexity but slow or incomplete information provision by the target.
Certificate of Incorporation, Memorandum and Articles of Association, and all amendments to date
Complete shareholding pattern / cap table with all allotments, transfers, and any pending share-related disputes
Board and shareholder meeting minutes for the diligence period — particularly resolutions on related-party transactions, borrowings, and capital changes
Details of all subsidiaries, step-down subsidiaries, joint ventures, and associate companies with their respective financials
Any existing shareholders' agreements, joint venture agreements, or investor rights agreements currently in force
List of all statutory registers maintained — members, directors, charges, contracts with related parties
Audited financial statements for the last 3 financial years, plus latest available management accounts / interim financials
Detailed general ledger and trial balance for the diligence period, at a granularity sufficient to trace major account movements
Bank statements and bank reconciliation statements for all accounts for the diligence period
Fixed asset register with additions, disposals, and depreciation policy applied
Detailed revenue schedules by customer, product line, and geography for the diligence period
Accounting policies document and any changes in accounting policy or estimate during the diligence period, with reasons
Statutory audit reports, management letters, and any qualifications or emphasis-of-matter paragraphs raised by the auditor in the diligence period
Monthly trade receivables and payables ageing for the diligence period, with details of any written-off or doubtful balances
Inventory records including valuation methodology, ageing, and any slow-moving or obsolete stock provisions
Complete loan and borrowing schedule — lender, sanctioned amount, outstanding balance, security/charge created, covenants, and repayment schedule
Details of any related-party loans or advances, whether interest-bearing, and repayment history
Bank guarantee, letter of credit, and other contingent facility details outstanding as of the review date
Off-balance-sheet financing arrangements, if any, including operating lease commitments
Income tax returns (ITR) filed for the last 6 assessment years (or all years within the limitation period) with computation of income
Tax audit reports (Form 3CD) for the diligence period
Details of any pending income tax assessments, appeals, revisions, or search/survey proceedings, with current status and quantum involved
Transfer pricing documentation (Form 3CEB and accompanying study) for all international and specified domestic related-party transactions
TDS returns filed and any outstanding TDS demand or default notices, along with challan/payment evidence
GST registration certificates for all states of operation, GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, and GSTR-9/9C filed for the diligence period
Details of any pending GST notices, demand orders, or audit proceedings, with quantum and current status
Carried-forward business loss and unabsorbed depreciation schedules, with assessment order references where available
Complete list of related parties as defined under the Companies Act 2013 and applicable Ind AS, with relationship mapping
All related-party transaction agreements and pricing basis for the diligence period
Details of any loans, guarantees, or securities extended to or by related parties
Promoter and key management personnel remuneration details for the diligence period
Details of any personal expenses of promoters or their family members routed through company accounts
UAE Corporate Tax registration certificate and Corporate Tax returns filed since the tax's 2023 introduction
UAE VAT registration certificate and VAT returns filed for the diligence period
Economic Substance Regulations notification and report filings, where the UAE entity carries out a relevant activity
Intercompany agreements and transfer pricing documentation covering India-UAE transactions
UAE entity's audited financial statements and any UAE Free Zone or Mainland licence-related compliance records
Details of all pending litigation, arbitration, or regulatory proceedings involving the company, with financial exposure estimates
Material customer and vendor contracts, with attention to change-of-control, exclusivity, and termination clauses
Insurance policies in force and claims history for the diligence period
Details of any guarantees, indemnities, or contingent commitments given by the company on behalf of third parties or group entities
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Diligence Scoping | Term sheet or LOI signed | Scope defined in writing — entities, years, financial-only or financial-plus-tax, materiality thresholds, and specific red-flag areas the client already suspects, agreed before work begins. | Vague scope produces a report that misses the client's actual concern, or duplicates work the client's own advisors are already covering, wasting fee and time. |
| Fieldwork & Analysis | Data room opened | Structured request lists, management interviews, quality-of-earnings normalisation, working capital trend analysis, and tax exposure quantification carried out systematically, not as an ad-hoc document review. | Superficial review misses related-party mispricing, non-recurring items presented as recurring, and contingent tax exposure — issues that surface only after closing, when they are the buyer's problem alone. |
| Findings & Negotiation | Draft report issued | Findings translated into specific, negotiable deal terms — price adjustment recommendations, indemnity clauses, escrow sizing — not left as narrative observations the client's lawyer has to reinterpret. | Findings that are not translated into contract language do not protect the buyer. A report that says 'exposure exists' without a specific indemnity recommendation leaves the risk unallocated at signing. |
| Signing & Closing | SPA/BTA finalised | PNPC remains available to explain and defend findings directly in negotiation sessions and to review the final indemnity, warranty, and price-adjustment language against what diligence actually found. | Warranties that do not match diligence findings, or indemnity caps set without reference to quantified exposure, leave the buyer under-protected against risks that were actually identified during the process. |
| Completion Accounts / Escrow Period | Closing mechanics with deferred adjustment | Review of completion accounts against the diligence baseline; support through any dispute over working capital peg, net debt calculation, or earn-out metric achievement. | Disputes over completion accounts without an independent baseline from the original diligence work are harder to resolve and more likely to end in costly arbitration. |
| Post-Acquisition Integration | Deal closed | Findings from diligence — related-party arrangements to unwind, tax positions to regularise, accounting policies to align with the acquirer's group standards — are handed off as an action list for the integration team. | Issues identified but not acted upon during integration resurface in the first post-acquisition audit or tax assessment, when the seller may no longer be reachable for indemnity claims within the survival period. |
| Indemnity Claim Period | Warranty/indemnity survival window | Where a diligence-identified risk crystallises within the survival period agreed in the SPA, PNPC supports the client in preparing and substantiating the indemnity claim with reference to the original findings. | Indemnity survival periods are time-bound — typically 12–36 months depending on the category of claim. A crystallised risk not claimed within the window becomes an unrecoverable loss. |
What exactly is financial and tax due diligence, in plain terms?
It is an independent financial investigation of a company you are about to acquire, invest in, or lend to — checking whether the profit, cash flow, and tax position it presents are real, sustainable, and free of hidden exposure. It goes beyond reading the audited financial statements: it rebuilds the numbers to show what the business actually earns on a normalised basis, tests whether working capital and debt are what they appear to be, and quantifies tax risk sitting in open assessment years that could become the buyer's liability after closing.
How is due diligence different from a statutory audit — the target already has audited financials?
A statutory audit expresses an opinion on whether the financial statements present a true and fair view under applicable accounting standards, using materiality set for general-purpose reporting. Due diligence is scoped specifically for your transaction — materiality is set relative to your deal size and specific concerns, and the goal is not an opinion on fairness but a decision-useful analysis of what the numbers mean for price, structure, and risk allocation. An audit can be entirely clean and due diligence can still surface material issues an audit was never designed to catch — related-party mispricing, one-off items dressed as recurring revenue, or contingent liabilities that fall below audit materiality but matter enormously to a specific buyer.
How long does a typical financial and tax due diligence engagement take?
For a mid-market target with reasonably organised financial records, 4–6 weeks from engagement letter to final report is realistic. Complex targets — multiple subsidiaries, cross-border operations, or poorly maintained records — can extend to 8–10 weeks. The single largest driver of delay is not analytical complexity but how quickly and completely the target's management responds to information requests.
What is 'quality of earnings' and why does it matter so much to the deal price?
Quality of earnings analysis rebuilds the target's reported EBITDA into a normalised figure that reflects what the business will actually earn going forward — adding back genuinely one-off items, removing items presented as one-off that actually recur, adjusting related-party transactions to market pricing, and correcting revenue recognised in ways that may not hold up under applicable accounting standards. Since most valuations are built as a multiple of EBITDA, the gap between reported and normalised EBITDA can move the headline valuation by a material amount — often the single most consequential number in the entire negotiation.
What is a working capital peg and why should I care about it during diligence?
Most SPAs include a purchase price adjustment mechanism tied to working capital at closing — the buyer effectively pays (or receives credit) for how much or how little working capital is delivered relative to an agreed 'normal' level, called the peg. If the peg is set using a single, possibly seasonally favourable, balance-sheet-date snapshot rather than a trend analysis, the buyer can end up overpaying at closing regardless of how well the headline price was negotiated. We analyse 12-24 months of working capital trends during diligence specifically to establish a defensible, evidence-based peg.
What tax exposures does tax due diligence typically uncover?
Common findings include: TDS not deducted on specified payments (creating a 30% expense disallowance under Section 40(a)(ia) plus interest and penalty exposure), GST input tax credit claimed on ineligible categories under Section 17(5), transfer pricing positions on related-party transactions that lack contemporaneous documentation under Section 92D, carried-forward business losses that may lapse on change of shareholding under Section 79, and unresolved assessment or appeal proceedings where the quantum at risk was not adequately disclosed or provided for in the financial statements.
What happens to a target's carried-forward losses when I acquire it?
Under Section 79 of the Income-tax Act, a closely-held company's carried-forward business losses lapse unless shares carrying not less than 51% of the voting power are beneficially held by the same persons on the last day of the loss year and on the last day of the year the loss is sought to be set off — in effect, a change of more than 49% in the beneficial shareholding between those two dates breaks that continuity and extinguishes the losses — subject to specific exceptions, including relaxed conditions for certain eligible startups meeting DPIIT conditions. This means a straightforward share acquisition of a loss-making target can extinguish exactly the tax attribute the buyer may have been factoring into the valuation. Unabsorbed depreciation is treated differently and generally survives a change in shareholding.
Does GST due diligence matter as much as income tax due diligence?
Yes, and it is frequently under-scoped by less experienced advisors. GST exposure includes ineligible input tax credit claims, classification and rate disputes on the target's specific goods or services, mismatches between GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, and the books of account, e-invoicing and e-way bill compliance gaps, and pending demand notices or audit proceedings. Because GST liabilities carry interest that accrues continuously and can be assessed across multiple years, an unaddressed GST exposure can compound significantly by the time it crystallises post-acquisition.
What is the difference between buy-side and sell-side (vendor) due diligence?
Buy-side due diligence is commissioned by the acquirer to independently verify the target before committing capital. Sell-side, or vendor, due diligence is commissioned proactively by the seller before going to market — the same rigorous financial and tax review, but run to surface and address issues before a prospective buyer's own diligence team finds them. A well-executed vendor due diligence report, shared with prospective buyers under NDA, can shorten the buyer's diligence timeline, reduce last-minute price renegotiation, and demonstrate seller transparency that builds negotiating credibility.
Can financial due diligence findings actually change the negotiated price?
Yes — this is one of its primary purposes. Findings translate into deal terms in several ways: a lower normalised EBITDA directly reduces valuation if pricing is EBITDA-multiple based; identified contingent tax liabilities typically result in a specific indemnity with an associated escrow or holdback; working capital trend analysis sets the peg used in the closing adjustment mechanism; and material red flags can trigger a broader price renegotiation or, in serious cases, a walk-away from the deal entirely.
What is an escrow or holdback and how does diligence inform its size?
An escrow or holdback is a portion of the purchase price withheld at closing (typically held by an independent escrow agent, or retained by the buyer) to cover specific risks identified during diligence — most commonly quantified tax exposure, pending litigation, or completion account adjustments. Diligence directly informs both what gets escrowed and how much: the quantum should be calibrated to the buyer's genuine, evidence-based estimate of realistic exposure, not an arbitrary round number.
Do I need due diligence for a small acquisition, or is that only for large deals?
Deal size affects the depth and cost-efficiency of the diligence scope, not whether it is needed. Smaller acquisitions can carry proportionally larger risk to the buyer precisely because the target is less likely to have institutional-grade financial discipline, audited multi-year records, or documented related-party pricing. We scope diligence proportionate to deal size — a focused, efficiently-run review for a smaller transaction rather than an unnecessarily exhaustive process — but we do not recommend skipping it purely on the basis of ticket size.
What documents will PNPC need from the target to begin?
At a minimum: three years of audited financial statements and management accounts, detailed trial balances and general ledgers, income tax returns and computations for all open assessment years, GST returns and registration certificates, TDS returns and compliance records, loan and borrowing schedules, related-party transaction details, and cap table/shareholding records. The exact request list is tailored to the target's sector and the deal structure — we do not issue a generic template checklist.
Who typically commissions financial due diligence — buyer or seller?
Most commonly the buyer, investor, or lender, since the primary purpose is protecting the party committing new capital. Increasingly, sophisticated sellers also commission their own vendor due diligence proactively, particularly in competitive sale processes with multiple prospective buyers, where a clean, professionally prepared report shared under NDA can accelerate the process and support a stronger negotiating position.
What is related-party transaction risk and why does it come up so often in Indian mid-market deals?
Closely-held Indian companies frequently transact with entities owned or controlled by the same promoter family — property rentals, management fees, intercompany loans, or goods and services bought or sold between group entities. When these transactions are not priced at arm's length, they distort the target's reported profitability: costs can be inflated or deflated, and revenue with a related party may not represent a genuine, replicable market relationship. Diligence identifies and, where material, quantifies the adjustment needed to arrive at standalone, arm's-length economics.
How does due diligence handle a target with UAE operations?
We extend the review to UAE Corporate Tax registration and compliance since its 2023 introduction, VAT registration and filing history, Economic Substance Regulations compliance for relevant licensed activities, and the transfer pricing position on intercompany dealings between the Indian and UAE entities under both jurisdictions' rules. Our Dubai office coordinates this directly with the India-side team rather than routing it through a disconnected correspondent firm that loses transaction context.
Is due diligence only about finding problems, or does it also confirm value?
Both. Diligence exists to give the buyer an accurate, evidence-based picture — which includes confirming genuine strengths (a resilient customer base, well-managed working capital, clean tax compliance) as much as it surfaces risk. A diligence report that only lists negative findings without context on what is genuinely sound is not doing its job; the goal is an accurate picture that supports a well-informed decision, not a one-sided risk list.
What if diligence uncovers something serious enough to walk away from the deal?
That is a legitimate and, occasionally, the correct outcome of diligence. Our engagement is to give you an accurate picture, not to help a deal close regardless of what the numbers show. If findings reveal exposure that is unquantifiable, undisclosed fraud, or a fundamental misstatement of the target's earning capacity, we say so directly and explain the basis for that conclusion — even if it means the transaction does not proceed.
How does financial due diligence interact with legal due diligence?
They are complementary and should be coordinated, not run in silos. Legal due diligence (typically led by transaction counsel) covers title, contracts, litigation, regulatory compliance, and IP ownership. Financial due diligence quantifies the financial impact of legal findings — translating a pending litigation matter, for example, into an estimated financial exposure that then informs the indemnity or escrow structure. We coordinate directly with the client's legal counsel throughout the engagement so findings from both workstreams are triangulated into a single, coherent negotiating position.
What is the cost of a financial and tax due diligence engagement?
Fees are scoped to the specific engagement — driven by the number of entities, years covered, sector complexity, cross-border elements, and whether financial and tax diligence are combined or run separately. PNPC agrees a fixed or capped fee in writing before work begins, based on the scoping discussion in the engagement letter. We do not price diligence as a percentage of deal value — our fee is for the work performed, not contingent on the transaction closing.
Can PNPC perform due diligence if it also acts as the target's statutory auditor?
No. Where PNPC or an affiliated firm serves as the target's statutory auditor, we do not accept a diligence mandate on the same target for a prospective acquirer, to preserve independence consistent with Section 141 of the Companies Act and professional independence standards under the Chartered Accountants Act. We disclose any existing relationship with the target at the scoping stage and, where a conflict exists, either decline the engagement or arrange it through an appropriately independent team.
What is 'net debt' in a due diligence context, and why is it more than just bank loans?
Net debt in a transaction context includes not just formal bank borrowings, but also related-party loans functioning economically as debt, deferred or contingent consideration from prior transactions, unfunded statutory liabilities (like unremitted PF or overdue TDS that has effectively become a payable), and certain off-balance-sheet financing arrangements. Understating net debt inflates the equity value the buyer is effectively paying for. Diligence reconstructs a true net debt figure rather than accepting the balance sheet's labelled debt line alone.
How does diligence handle a target where financial records are informally maintained or partly outside the formal books?
This is a common reality with owner-managed Indian businesses transitioning to institutional ownership for the first time. We work with what is available, flag explicitly where records are incomplete or where informal practices (cash transactions, undocumented related-party arrangements) create genuine uncertainty, and quantify the risk of that uncertainty rather than either ignoring it or treating incomplete information as an automatic deal-breaker. The buyer needs to know precisely where the visibility gaps are, so the risk can be consciously allocated in the deal terms.
What is transfer pricing risk and does it apply to purely domestic Indian targets?
Transfer pricing rules under Section 92 of the Income-tax Act primarily govern international transactions between associated enterprises, but 'specified domestic transactions' between certain related domestic entities (above prescribed thresholds) are also covered under Section 92BA. A target with cross-border related-party dealings — even something as routine as management fees paid to or received from a foreign group entity — needs contemporaneous transfer pricing documentation (Form 3CEB) to defend the arm's-length nature of that pricing. Absence of proper documentation is itself a compliance and penalty risk that diligence flags.
Does due diligence review employee-related liabilities like PF, ESI, and gratuity?
Yes — statutory labour liability compliance is a standard component of financial due diligence. We review PF and ESI contribution and remittance history, gratuity valuation and funding adequacy (actuarial liability versus what is actually funded), bonus and statutory dues compliance, and any pending labour claims or disputes. Unfunded or underfunded gratuity liabilities in particular are a common finding that can represent a meaningful, quantifiable balance sheet exposure not always fully provided for.
How does PNPC ensure confidentiality during a due diligence engagement?
Every diligence engagement is governed by a signed engagement letter with explicit confidentiality obligations, and target information is accessed only by the specific engagement team under our firm's standard information security and access control protocols. Where PNPC is engaged on the sell-side for vendor due diligence, information shared with prospective buyers is controlled through staged disclosure under signed NDAs, with the most sensitive information released only to serious, qualified prospects.
What is the role of due diligence findings in drafting representations and warranties?
Representations and warranties in the SPA/BTA should reflect what diligence has actually established — a warranty that the target's financial statements are accurate and complete is only meaningful if diligence has tested that claim. We work with the client's legal counsel to ensure warranty language, indemnity carve-outs, and specific indemnities for known issues are calibrated precisely to what our findings support, rather than relying on generic boilerplate warranty language disconnected from the actual diligence outcome.
Can due diligence be conducted remotely, or does PNPC need physical access to the target's records?
The large majority of diligence work today is conducted through a secure virtual data room, with management interviews conducted over video call. Physical site visits remain valuable for inventory verification, asset condition assessment, and building qualitative understanding of the operation — particularly for manufacturing or asset-heavy targets — but are not a prerequisite for the core financial and tax analysis, which is largely document and data-driven.
What happens if the target refuses to provide certain information during diligence?
This is itself a material finding. Reasonable diligence scope and requests should be met with reasonable transparency from a genuine seller; persistent refusal or evasion on core financial or tax information — bank statements, tax returns, related-party details — is a strong signal that warrants escalation to the client and, often, a recommendation to either narrow the deal (via specific indemnities or a lower price) or reconsider proceeding at all.
Do PE and VC investors need a different flavour of due diligence than a strategic acquirer?
The core financial and tax methodology is largely consistent, but emphasis shifts. Financial investors (PE/VC) typically place heavier weight on scalability of earnings, management team quality and retention risk, and exit-readiness of the financial and tax position (since they will eventually need to sell again). Strategic acquirers often focus more on synergy realisation feasibility, integration cost, and how the target's financial systems will map onto the acquirer's existing processes. We tailor emphasis to the client type during scoping.
How does due diligence differ for a minority stake investment versus a full acquisition?
The financial and tax review methodology is broadly similar, but the risk allocation implications differ. A minority investor does not control the target post-investment and cannot unilaterally remediate issues found — so governance rights (board representation, information rights, veto rights on specified matters), rather than indemnities alone, become a more important tool for managing identified risk going forward. We flag this distinction explicitly in minority-stake engagements and coordinate with legal counsel on the shareholders' agreement terms that follow from diligence findings.
What if the acquisition target is a group of companies rather than a single entity?
Diligence scope must then map the entire group structure — every subsidiary, step-down subsidiary, and affiliate that is part of the transaction perimeter, along with the intercompany transactions, guarantees, and cross-holdings between them. A common and material finding in group acquisitions is intercompany guarantees or cross-liabilities that are not obvious from any single entity's standalone financial statements but materially affect the group's true consolidated risk profile.
Why should I engage PNPC rather than a large multinational advisory firm or a generic diligence provider?
A large multinational firm often staffs diligence with a junior team applying a standardised global methodology with limited context on Indian mid-market realities — informal related-party practices, GST-era compliance nuance, or the specific way closely-held family businesses actually run their books. A generic, low-cost diligence provider frequently produces a checklist-style report without the negotiation-ready specificity a buyer actually needs. PNPC is a practising CA firm with decades of hands-on experience in exactly this segment of the Indian market, combined with a genuine India-UAE cross-border capability most competitors do not have in-house.
Does PNPC support the client through negotiation, or does the engagement end at the report?
We remain engaged through negotiation and closing as standard practice, not as a separate add-on service. This includes explaining and defending findings directly to the client's legal counsel and, where useful, in negotiation sessions with the counterparty, reviewing the final SPA/BTA financial and tax clauses against what diligence actually found, and remaining available post-closing for completion account reviews or indemnity claim support within the survival period.
How does PNPC price a financial and tax due diligence engagement — fixed fee or hourly?
We scope and quote a fixed or capped fee based on the engagement letter — driven by number of entities, years covered, complexity, and whether financial and tax diligence are combined. This is agreed in writing before fieldwork begins, so the client has cost certainty regardless of how many findings or follow-up queries the review generates.
| Feature | Large Multinational Firm | Generic/Low-Cost Provider | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|---|
| Team seniority | Often junior-staffed with partner review only at sign-off | Variable, frequently outsourced or templated | Senior CA involvement throughout — not just at report review stage |
| Indian mid-market context | Standardised global methodology, limited local nuance | Basic checklist approach | Deep hands-on experience with closely-held Indian businesses, related-party practices, and GST-era realities |
| Findings usability | Comprehensive but sometimes generic narrative | Checklist-style, limited negotiation utility | Findings written to be directly usable in price and indemnity negotiation |
| Cross-border India-UAE capability | Requires coordination across separate country teams, context often lost | Not typically available | One coordinated team across Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai |
| Fee structure | Often significant, scaled to firm overhead | Low-cost but limited depth and support | Fixed, scoped fee agreed upfront — not deal-contingent |
| Post-report engagement | Frequently ends at report delivery, extra billed for negotiation support | Rarely available beyond the report | Remains engaged through negotiation, closing, and completion account/indemnity support |
| Independence discipline | Generally strong, but relationship conflicts can arise across a large firm's client base | Variable, not always formally managed | Proactively disclosed and managed — will not diligence a target we audit |
| Direct access to the engagement lead | Often routed through account management layers | Minimal ongoing access | Direct phone and WhatsApp access to your engagement CA throughout |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Scoping consultation and written engagement letter — entities, years, financial-only or financial-plus-tax, materiality, and specific concern areas agreed before fieldwork begins
- 02
Structured, sector-tailored due diligence request list — not a generic template
- 03
Management interviews and business walkthroughs to understand the numbers in context
- 04
Quality of earnings analysis — normalised EBITDA with clear reconciliation to reported figures
- 05
Working capital trend analysis and defensible closing peg recommendation
- 06
Net debt reconstruction, including off-balance-sheet and related-party financing
- 07
Related-party transaction identification and arm's-length pricing assessment
- 08
Direct tax due diligence — corporate tax, TDS, transfer pricing, and carried-forward loss (Section 79) analysis
- 09
Indirect tax due diligence — GST reconciliation, input credit eligibility, and classification risk review
- 10
Contingent liability and litigation financial impact quantification, coordinated with legal counsel
- 11
UAE Corporate Tax, VAT, and Economic Substance Regulations review for cross-border targets, coordinated from our Dubai office
- 12
Draft report review cycle with the client before finalisation
- 13
Negotiation support — direct engagement with the client's legal counsel on price, indemnity, and escrow recommendations
- 14
Post-closing support for completion account reviews and indemnity claim substantiation within the survival period
Before you sign, know exactly what you are buying. Speak directly with a PNPC Chartered Accountant who has run financial and tax due diligence across Indian mid-market and India-UAE cross-border deals since 1986 — and who will still be available to you through negotiation, closing, and the completion accounts that follow.