UAEServicesCorporate Finance, Valuation & Transaction AdvisoryDue DiligenceBuy-Side / Sell-Side M&A Advisory

Corporate Finance, Valuation & Transaction Advisory · Due Diligence

Buy-Side / Sell-Side M&A Advisory

Whether you are acquiring a UAE business or preparing to sell one, the deal is won or lost long before signing — in how the opportunity is sourced, how the numbers are presented and defended, and how the negotiation is sequenced against diligence findings.

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Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986

What Buy-Side / Sell-Side M&A Advisory is

Buy-Side / Sell-Side M&A Advisory is the practice of representing one party — the acquirer or the seller — through the full lifecycle of a merger or acquisition transaction, from opportunity identification or exit preparation through to deal structuring, negotiation, and completion. It exists because a transaction is not a single event but a sequence of interdependent decisions — valuation basis, deal structure, financing, tax positioning, and contractual protection — and a party without dedicated advisory support typically discovers the cost of a weak decision only after it is locked into a signed agreement.

On the buy side, PNPC's role begins with helping the acquirer define an acquisition thesis — what sector, size, and structure of target actually advances the acquirer's strategy — and, where instructed, sourcing and screening candidate targets against that thesis. Once a target is identified, we support valuation positioning, help structure an offer (share purchase versus asset purchase, cash versus deferred or earn-out consideration), coordinate the due diligence process across financial, tax, legal, and operational workstreams, and represent the acquirer's interests through negotiation of the Share Purchase Agreement or Business Transfer Agreement, translating diligence findings into specific price adjustments, warranties, indemnities, and escrow terms.

On the sell side, PNPC works with the business owner ahead of and through a sale process — preparing the business for sale (normalising financial statements, addressing obvious diligence red flags before a buyer finds them, and positioning the equity story), advising on an appropriate asking valuation, identifying and approaching credible buyers where a mandate to source buyers is given, managing the information memorandum and data room, and representing the seller's interests through negotiation, including anticipating and pre-empting the diligence findings a buyer's advisors are likely to raise.

UAE M&A carries specific structural considerations that a generic cross-border playbook does not capture. A target's mainland versus free zone status affects both its Corporate Tax profile under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 (9% on taxable income above AED 375,000, with Qualifying Free Zone Person 0% treatment on qualifying income for eligible free zone entities meeting conditions including maintaining adequate substance) and how a change of control interacts with its trade licence and any historical ownership arrangements. End-of-service gratuity liability under UAE labour law, WPS payroll compliance history with MOHRE, and VAT filing history with the Federal Tax Authority are recurring negotiation items that shape purchase price adjustments and indemnity clauses in nearly every UAE mid-market deal we advise on. Where a transaction spans UAE and India — a common pattern for our client base — FEMA overseas investment rules, Form 15CA/15CB certification for outbound consideration, and DTAA-informed structuring need to be sequenced alongside UAE completion mechanics, not addressed as an afterthought once UAE terms are agreed.

PNPC's core scope is financial, tax, and commercial advisory — valuation, deal structuring, financial modelling, due diligence coordination, and negotiation support on commercial and financial terms. Legal drafting of the Share Purchase Agreement, Business Transfer Agreement, and other binding transaction documents is led by UAE-licensed transaction counsel, whom we work alongside directly (or refer, where a client does not already have counsel engaged) so that financial and legal workstreams move in step rather than being reconciled after the fact.

The deliverable across a buy-side or sell-side mandate is not a single report but a managed process: a documented acquisition or exit strategy, a structured target or buyer pipeline where sourcing is in scope, a defensible valuation position, coordinated diligence findings mapped to negotiation terms, and hands-on presence at the table through signing and completion. Fees are scoped and agreed in writing at the engagement letter stage — typically a combination of a retainer for advisory time and, where sourcing or a specific transaction outcome is part of the mandate, a success-linked component — and depend on deal size, whether buyer or target sourcing is included, and transaction complexity. Throughout, we keep the client's negotiating position grounded in verified numbers rather than the counterparty's narrative, so decisions on price, structure, and walk-away points are made on evidence.

Mandate scoping also has to account for how the advisory itself is regulated. Corporate service providers and certain intermediaries facilitating company sales and asset transfers can fall within the UAE's Designated Non-Financial Business and Profession (DNFBP) categories under the AML/CFT framework overseen by the Ministry of Economy and the UAE Financial Intelligence Unit, so customer due diligence on both the client and, where relevant, the counterparty is built into how PNPC onboards a mandate, as standard practice for a regulated professional firm.

Jurisdiction also shapes which registrar process applies. A mainland LLC's change of control is registered with the relevant emirate's DED (or equivalent authority); a free zone company's is registered with its specific free zone authority — JAFZA, DMCC, RAKEZ, IFZA, Meydan, and others each run their own registrar and documentation requirements. DIFC and ADGM entities sit under their own common-law court systems and companies regulations, which also shapes how a warranty or indemnity dispute would ultimately be resolved if ever litigated. Our engagement scoping accounts for this from the outset rather than assuming one generic process fits every UAE entity type.

It is also worth being precise about what this service is not. It is not investment banking in the capital-markets sense — PNPC does not arrange public securities offerings or act as a licensed broker-dealer under Securities and Commodities Authority rules, and any transaction touching those regulated activities is referred to an appropriately licensed capital-markets intermediary. Nor is it a guarantee of outcome: a mandate improves the process, the evidence base, and the negotiating position, but market appetite, target scarcity, and counterparty behaviour remain outside any advisor's control, on either side of the table.

When buy-side or sell-side M&A advisory earns its cost

You are actively looking to acquire a UAE business — an existing mainland or free zone trading company, a competitor, or a strategic bolt-on — and need help defining the acquisition thesis, sourcing candidates, and running the process

You are a UAE business owner considering a sale, partial exit, or bringing in a strategic or financial investor, and need the business prepared, positioned, and represented through a sale process

You have identified a specific target or buyer already and need dedicated deal-team support to structure, negotiate, and close the transaction rather than running it internally alongside day-to-day operations

You are a cross-border acquirer (Indian, GCC, European, or other) entering the UAE market via acquisition and need a UAE-based advisor who understands both the jurisdiction and, where relevant, the India-side FEMA and tax sequencing

The transaction involves deferred consideration, an earn-out, or a completion accounts mechanism, and you need the underlying financial model and negotiation position built and defended by someone other than the counterparty's advisor

You are negotiating with a related party — a family member, business partner, or existing minority shareholder — and want an independent advisor structuring and documenting the process on commercially defensible terms

You need someone to coordinate financial, tax, and legal diligence workstreams into a single negotiation strategy, rather than receiving disconnected reports from separate advisors that you have to reconcile yourself

You want continuity from the advisory mandate into post-completion integration or, on the sell side, into the seller's post-exit tax and estate planning

You are weighing multiple potential acquisition targets or buyer approaches and need a structured screening process to prioritise where to commit exclusivity and diligence budget

Your board, investment committee, or family stakeholders require an independent advisor's involvement before authorising a transaction of this size

You are a free zone entity considering a change of majority shareholding and need to confirm, before terms are finalised, whether the transaction preserves Qualifying Free Zone Person status, licence continuity, and any activity-specific conditions with the relevant free zone authority

You are exploring a joint venture or strategic partnership as an alternative to a full acquisition or outright sale, and want the same standard of independent representation applied to negotiating contribution, governance, and exit-rights terms

When a narrower engagement may be more appropriate

You have already agreed price and structure directly with a known counterparty and only need standalone due diligence, without ongoing negotiation representation — a Pre-Acquisition Due Diligence Audit or Financial Due Diligence engagement is the more direct scope

You need a business valuation as a standalone deliverable — for financial reporting, a shareholder dispute, or a family settlement — with no active transaction process attached; a Business Valuation engagement is more proportionate

You are exploring a wholly new venture with no acquisition or sale counterparty involved — a Business Feasibility Study is the appropriate scope, not M&A advisory

The transaction is a very small-value asset or licence transfer where the cost of a full advisory mandate exceeds the transaction's scale — a limited-scope diligence and documentation review may be more proportionate

You already have an investment bank or corporate finance boutique leading the sell-side or buy-side process and specifically need financial due diligence support as a workstream, not overall deal leadership — a Financial Due Diligence or Pre-Acquisition Due Diligence Audit engagement fits that narrower role

The core open question is legal — contested share ownership, an active dispute, or contract enforceability — where UAE litigation or dispute-resolution counsel needs to lead before commercial advisory adds value

You want deal sourcing only, with no advisory support on structuring, diligence coordination, or negotiation once a candidate is found — a standalone Deal Sourcing & Partner Search engagement may be the better fit

You are past completion and need integration support rather than transaction advisory — Post-Merger Integration is the relevant engagement

You want a guaranteed sale price or guaranteed buyer within a fixed timeframe — M&A advisory manages and improves the process and the negotiating position; it cannot guarantee a market outcome

You need only a fairness opinion or an independent valuation for a board minute, shareholder circular, or regulatory filing, with no live transaction being negotiated — a standalone Business Valuation engagement is the more direct and proportionate scope

Structure Comparison

Buy-side and sell-side M&A advisory mandates for UAE transactions

Mandate TypeCore FocusTypical ClientSourcing IncludedKey Limitation
Buy-Side Full MandateAcquisition thesis, target sourcing, valuation, structuring, diligence coordination, negotiation through completionCorporate acquirer, family office, or investor with capital ready to deploy but no dedicated internal deal teamYes, where scoped — screening and approaching candidates against an agreed thesisMarket availability of suitable targets is outside the advisor's control; sourcing timelines vary with sector and target profile
Buy-Side Execution-Only MandateStructuring, diligence coordination, and negotiation on a target the acquirer has already identifiedAcquirer with a specific target already in hand, needing dedicated deal-execution capacityNo — target already identified by the clientAdvisor has less influence over deal terms already informally discussed between the parties before engagement
Sell-Side Full MandateExit readiness, valuation positioning, buyer identification, information memorandum, negotiation through completionBusiness owner or shareholder group preparing for a full or partial exitYes — identifying and approaching credible buyers under a confidential processAchievable price depends on market appetite and business readiness, not solely on advisory quality
Sell-Side Execution-Only MandateDeal structuring and negotiation representation where a buyer has already approached the seller directlyOwner who has received an unsolicited approach and needs independent representationNo — buyer already in contactSeller's negotiating leverage may already be affected by how the initial approach and informal discussions were handled
Financial & Tax Due Diligence OnlyVerification of the target's or seller's financial and tax position, without deal-leadership or negotiation representationParty that already has an advisor or investment bank leading the transaction and needs a dedicated diligence workstreamNot applicableDoes not include negotiation strategy, deal structuring, or buyer/target sourcing
Deal Sourcing OnlyIdentification and initial screening of acquisition targets or buyer candidates against an agreed profileClient who wants to build a pipeline before committing to a full advisory mandateYes — this is the core scopeStructuring, diligence, and negotiation support are separately scoped once a candidate is identified
Post-Deal Advisory HandoffTransition of the acquired entity or sale proceeds into ongoing accounting, tax, and compliance managementClient who has completed a transaction and needs continuity into operations or post-exit planningNot applicableAssumes a transaction has already completed; not a pre-deal engagement
Joint Venture Structuring MandateValuation of contributed assets or capital, governance and exit-rights negotiation, and tax structuring for a new joint venture rather than a full change of controlTwo or more parties forming a JV or strategic partnership rather than pursuing an outright acquisition or saleNot applicable — counterparty is typically already identifiedDeal outcome is a shareholders' agreement and JV structure, not a completed acquisition; governance and deadlock provisions require as much negotiation weight as entry valuation
Related-Party / Family Transaction MandateIndependent representation of one side — buyer or seller — in a transaction between family members, existing partners, or connected parties, with arm's-length documentation of price and termsFamily business succession, buy-outs between existing shareholders, or partner exitsNo — counterparty is already known and connected to the clientRequires particular discipline to avoid informal, undocumented arrangements that later generate disputes precisely because the parties already know each other
Cross-Border Buy-Side Mandate (India-UAE)UAE acquisition process coordinated with India-side FEMA overseas investment rules, Form 15CA/15CB certification, and DTAA-informed structuring for the acquirerIndian company or NRI investor acquiring a UAE target, or a UAE entity acquiring an Indian businessYes, where scoped — sourcing coordinated across both jurisdictionsSequencing dependency between the two jurisdictions' processes is the primary risk, not the underlying UAE or India workstreams individually

Mandate scope is agreed with you at the outset based on where you are in the transaction lifecycle — pre-thesis, target identified, or already in negotiation — and whether sourcing is required. Most first-time acquirers and first-time sellers benefit from a full mandate; parties with an existing counterparty typically need only structuring, diligence coordination, and negotiation support.

How it works
StageWhat HappensWho ActsTypical Output
Mandate Scoping & Engagement LetterBuy-side or sell-side objective clarified, mandate type agreed (full, execution-only, or sourcing-only), fee structure (retainer, success-linked, or combination) confirmed in writingPNPC engagement partner and client decision-makerSigned engagement letter setting out scope, fee basis, and confidentiality terms
Buy-Side: Acquisition Thesis & Screening Criteria / Sell-Side: Exit Readiness AssessmentFor buy-side, sector, size, structure, and valuation parameters defined for target screening. For sell-side, an initial review of the business's financials, licensing, and obvious diligence red flags is conducted before any buyer approach, so issues are addressed proactively rather than discovered by a buyer's advisorPNPC, with client sign-off on criteria or readiness gaps identifiedWritten acquisition thesis document, or sell-side readiness memo with prioritised remediation items
Target or Buyer IdentificationWhere sourcing is in scope, candidates are screened against agreed criteria, an initial approach made under confidentiality, and interest levels assessed before deeper engagementPNPC leads outreach; client approves each candidate before contactShortlist of qualified, interested candidates ranked by fit
Preliminary Valuation PositioningAn indicative valuation range is developed using appropriate methodology (comparable transactions, discounted cash flow, or asset-based, depending on the business) to anchor negotiation expectations before terms are discussedPNPC valuation team, informed by client-provided financials and market dataIndicative valuation range memo, shared internally, not disclosed to counterparty at this stage
Letter of Intent / Term Sheet NegotiationNon-binding heads of terms negotiated to establish price range, structure (share vs. asset deal), exclusivity period, and key conditions, while preserving the right to renegotiate or withdraw based on diligence findingsPNPC negotiates alongside client; transaction counsel reviews binding provisionsSigned LOI or term sheet, non-binding on price and completion
Due Diligence CoordinationOn the buy side, PNPC coordinates or conducts financial and tax due diligence on the target, liaising with legal counsel on the legal workstream. On the sell side, PNPC manages data room access and responses to the buyer's diligence requests, pre-empting likely findingsPNPC diligence team; transaction counsel for legal workstreamFindings report (buy side) or data room readiness log and response tracker (sell side)
Deal Structuring & Financial ModellingDeal structure finalised — consideration mix (cash, deferred, earn-out), completion accounts or locked-box mechanism, and tax-efficient structuring for both UAE and, where relevant, cross-border elementsPNPC, coordinating with tax advisory and transaction counselStructuring memo and supporting financial model
SPA / BTA Negotiation SupportDiligence findings and deal structure decisions translated into specific commercial terms for transaction counsel to draft into the Share Purchase Agreement or Business Transfer Agreement — price mechanism, warranties, indemnities, escrowPNPC works directly with transaction counsel; client makes final commercial decisionsNegotiated term sheet feeding directly into the SPA/BTA drafting process
Signing & Completion MechanicsConditions precedent tracked to satisfaction, completion accounts or working capital adjustment finalised, and funds flow coordinated through escrow or direct settlementPNPC, transaction counsel, and, where relevant, escrow agent or bankExecuted SPA/BTA and completed funds transfer
Post-Completion HandoffOn the buy side, transition into ongoing UAE accounting, tax, and compliance support for the acquired entity. On the sell side, advisory on structuring and deploying or planning around the sale proceedsPNPC, in coordination with client's ongoing finance functionHandover memo and, where instructed, a new ongoing engagement letter
UBO & Beneficial Ownership VerificationThe registered ultimate beneficial owner declaration for the target (buy-side) or the client's own entity (sell-side) is cross-checked against the actual share register, share certificates, and shareholder resolutions before the transaction proceeds to signingPNPC, cross-referencing corporate registry records against internal documentationConfirmed UBO position, or a correction action list where a mismatch is found
Regulatory & Licensing Change-of-Control NotificationOnce the transaction completes, the relevant DED, free zone authority, or sector regulator (where the target is a regulated entity) is notified of the change of ownership and the trade licence and any sector-specific licence updated accordinglyPNPC coordinates with transaction counsel and the relevant authority; client's authorised signatory executes filingsUpdated trade licence and, where applicable, sector regulatory confirmation reflecting the new ownership

A proportionate buy-side or sell-side mandate, from engagement letter to signed transaction, typically runs several months where sourcing is included, and considerably less where a specific target or buyer is already identified. Timelines depend materially on market conditions, counterparty responsiveness, and diligence complexity — factors outside the advisor's direct control.

Document Checklist
Mandate & Deal Parameters (From You)

Clear statement of whether the mandate is buy-side or sell-side, and whether sourcing of a target or buyer is required

Acquisition thesis parameters (sector, size, geography) for buy-side, or exit objectives and desired timeline for sell-side

Indicative valuation expectations and walk-away price sensitivity, where known

Details of any existing discussions, term sheets, or approaches already made with a specific counterparty

Corporate authorisation or board approval to proceed with a transaction of the contemplated size

Financial Records (Buy-Side Target / Sell-Side Own Business)

Audited or management-prepared financial statements for the past 3 financial years

Current management accounts, trial balance, and general ledger detail

Bank statements for all operating accounts, for revenue and cash-flow verification

Fixed asset register, inventory records, and details of outstanding debt or financing facilities

Aged receivables and payables schedules, and details of any related-party balances

Corporate & Licensing Documents

Trade licence and Memorandum & Articles of Association, current and historical, for every entity in the deal perimeter

Shareholder register, share certificate history, and confirmation of ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) records as filed

Board and shareholder resolutions authorising the proposed transaction or, on the sell side, authorising the sale process

Ejari or lease documentation for all premises, and any pending licence amendments or regulatory correspondence

Tax & Regulatory Compliance

FTA Corporate Tax registration confirmation and filing history, including any Qualifying Free Zone Person status

FTA VAT registration certificate and return filing history for the applicable look-back period

Confirmation of historical Economic Substance Regulations filing compliance for financial years before 1 January 2023, where relevant

Details of any FTA correspondence, audits, penalty notices, or unresolved queries

Employment & HR Records

Employee register with MOHRE labour card and visa status, and WPS payroll compliance history

End-of-service gratuity accrual basis and current provision, for comparison against a length-of-service recomputation

Details of any pending labour disputes or MOHRE complaints

Organisation chart identifying key-person dependency relevant to post-transaction continuity

Transaction-Specific Documents

Signed Non-Disclosure Agreement covering all parties engaged in the process

Any existing Letter of Intent, Term Sheet, or Heads of Agreement

Draft or template Share Purchase Agreement / Business Transfer Agreement, where available, for alignment of financial terms with legal drafting

Information Memorandum or teaser document, where a sell-side sourcing process is in scope

Banking & Financing Facilities

Loan and facility agreements for the target (buy-side) or the client's own business (sell-side), with particular attention to change-of-control clauses and covenants requiring lender consent

Any personal guarantee given by a departing owner over banking facilities, leases, or supplier accounts that will need to be released or replaced at completion

Bank authorised-signatory mandates and any security or charge registered over the relevant accounts

Where the buy-side transaction is debt-financed, term sheets or in-principle approvals from the financing bank or investor, to sequence financing conditions against the deal timeline

Cross-Border / India-UAE Coordination Documents

Group structure chart showing all UAE and India (or other jurisdiction) entities in the transaction perimeter

For an India-based acquirer or seller, documentation supporting FEMA overseas investment compliance and Form 15CA/15CB certification for outbound or inbound consideration

Evidence of DTAA-relevant tax residency status for parties where treaty benefits are being relied upon in structuring

Any existing intercompany agreements between UAE and overseas group entities that need to be reviewed or amended as part of the transaction

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggered ByPNPC CA GuidanceRisk If Ignored
Pre-Mandate StrategyDecision to explore an acquisition or a sale, before any counterparty is engagedAcquisition thesis or exit readiness assessed and documented before market engagement begins, so the process has clear, defensible parameters from the outset.Entering the market without defined criteria leads to wasted time on unsuitable candidates or an underprepared exit process that undermines negotiating leverage.
Sourcing & Initial ApproachMandate to identify targets or buyers confirmedCandidates screened and approached under confidentiality, with interest and fit assessed before deeper engagement or exclusivity is granted.Committing to exclusivity or extended discussions with a candidate that does not meet the underlying strategic or financial criteria.
Term Sheet & ExclusivityIndicative interest confirmed on both sidesNon-binding terms negotiated to preserve the ability to renegotiate or withdraw based on subsequent diligence findings, while establishing enough certainty for both sides to commit time to the process.A poorly drafted term sheet that inadvertently binds price or completion terms before diligence has been completed.
Due Diligence & StructuringData room access granted; deal structure under negotiationDiligence findings actively coordinated into the negotiation strategy and deal structure — consideration mix, completion mechanism, tax positioning — rather than treated as a separate, disconnected workstream.Diligence findings that are documented but never actually change price, structure, or contractual protection provide no real value to the client.
SPA / BTA NegotiationDraft transaction documents circulatedFinancial and commercial terms translated precisely into legal drafting instructions for transaction counsel, with PNPC and counsel working from the same findings and structuring assumptions.Misalignment between the financial advisor's understanding of agreed terms and what is actually drafted into the binding agreement.
Signing & CompletionTerms finalised; conditions precedent satisfiedCompletion mechanics — funds flow, escrow release conditions, and any regulatory or licence transfer steps — confirmed and tracked to satisfaction before consideration changes hands.Releasing funds or transferring ownership before a condition precedent, licence transfer, or regulatory approval is genuinely satisfied.
Post-Completion Integration or Proceeds PlanningDeal completesBuy-side: handoff into ongoing UAE accounting, tax, and compliance management for the acquired entity. Sell-side: advisory on structuring and, where relevant, cross-border tax planning around deployment of sale proceeds.A gap in statutory compliance immediately after completion, or unplanned tax exposure on sale proceeds that could have been structured in advance.
Earn-Out / Deferred Consideration True-UpDeal structure includes contingent or deferred considerationIndependent calculation support for earn-out targets or deferred payment triggers, using the same methodology agreed and documented at the negotiation stage, to avoid disputes over inconsistent treatment.Disputes between buyer and seller over earn-out calculations where the underlying accounting methodology was not agreed and documented upfront.
Post-Deal Dispute SupportBuyer or seller contests a price adjustment, completion accounts item, or warranty claimPNPC traces the disputed figure back to the negotiation record and underlying diligence evidence, so the client's position is evidenced rather than merely asserted.A claim raised without a clear evidentiary and negotiation trail behind it is far harder to substantiate against a counterparty disputing it.
Free Zone / Regulatory Change-of-Control NotificationShare transfer or ownership change completes in a free zone or regulated entityThe relevant free zone authority or sector regulator is notified promptly and the trade licence and UBO register updated, with Qualifying Free Zone Person conditions re-checked against the new ownership structure.A lapsed or unnotified change of control can put the trade licence into an irregular status or jeopardise continued Qualifying Free Zone Person treatment going forward.
Confidentiality Management Through the Market ProcessSell-side outreach to prospective buyers beginsInformation is disclosed in stages — blind teaser, then full Information Memorandum and data room only after a signed NDA and demonstrated genuine interest — maintained consistently for every approach throughout the process, not only at the outset.Premature or uncontrolled market knowledge of a sale process can unsettle staff, customers, or landlords, and weakens the seller's negotiating leverage with any single interested party.
Common mistakes to avoid
Sequencing Errors

Signing an LOI or term sheet that is inadvertently binding on price, rather than genuinely non-binding pending diligence findings, which gives away renegotiation leverage before the facts are known

Granting exclusivity to a buyer before validating that they are genuinely credible and capable of completing, leaving the seller off-market for the exclusivity period with nothing to show for it if the buyer stalls or walks

Starting a sell-side market process without an exit readiness review first, so obvious diligence red flags are discovered by a buyer's advisor mid-negotiation rather than addressed proactively on the seller's own timeline

Finalising buy-side financing terms before diligence findings that affect price or structure are known, requiring the financing conversation to be reopened late in the process

Agreeing an earn-out or deferred consideration structure without defining the exact accounting methodology for the underlying metric at signing, deferring an ambiguity that becomes a dispute later

Structuring & Documentation Pitfalls

Choosing a share purchase structure by default without weighing whether an asset/business transfer would better ring-fence identified historical liabilities

Assuming a free zone target's Qualifying Free Zone Person status automatically survives a change of control without checking whether the buyer's intended post-acquisition operating model keeps qualifying-income conditions satisfied

Treating financial and legal advisors as separate workstreams reporting through the client rather than working directly from the same findings, which produces drafting that does not match what was actually negotiated commercially

Overlooking that transferring employees in an asset deal still carry gratuity continuity implications under UAE labour law, despite the deal otherwise being structured to leave historical liabilities with the seller

Failing to check the shareholders' agreement for drag-along, tag-along, or pre-emption provisions before a sale process begins, only to discover a blocking minority shareholder mid-negotiation

UAE & Cross-Border Specific Pitfalls

Negotiating price without independently verifying the target's end-of-service gratuity accrual, which is frequently understated in seller-prepared management accounts relative to the true recomputed liability

Sequencing UAE completion mechanics without regard to India-side FEMA overseas investment rules or Form 15CA/15CB timelines on a cross-border deal, risking a UAE completion date the Indian side cannot realistically meet

Assuming DIFC or ADGM share-transfer mechanics and dispute resolution mirror a standard mainland or free zone process, when both jurisdictions operate under distinct common-law companies regulations and court systems

Neglecting to notify the relevant free zone authority or sector regulator of a completed change of control promptly, which can leave the trade licence in an irregular status

Frequently asked
What is the difference between buy-side and sell-side M&A advisory?

Buy-side advisory represents the acquirer — helping define what to acquire, sourcing and screening candidates where instructed, and negotiating the best possible price and terms on the acquirer's behalf. Sell-side advisory represents the business owner or seller — preparing the business for sale, positioning valuation, identifying credible buyers, and negotiating the best possible outcome for the seller. The two roles are structurally opposed in a single transaction, so PNPC represents only one party per deal — never both sides of the same transaction.

Practitioner noteClients occasionally ask if we can represent both sides to save cost on a related-party or family transaction. We decline — the conflict is real, and a transaction negotiated without independent representation on both sides tends to generate disputes later.
Do I need a full advisory mandate, or can PNPC just handle due diligence on a deal I am already negotiating?

If you already have a term sheet in place and are comfortable with the negotiation itself, a standalone due diligence engagement (Pre-Acquisition Due Diligence Audit or Financial Due Diligence) may be sufficient and more cost-effective than a full advisory mandate. A full mandate adds value where you need help with valuation positioning, deal structuring, sourcing, or hands-on negotiation representation — not just verification of the numbers.

Practitioner noteWe ask this directly at the first conversation, since scoping the wrong mandate type is the most common source of client dissatisfaction — either paying for sourcing you did not need, or missing negotiation support you did.
How does PNPC charge for buy-side or sell-side M&A advisory — retainer, success fee, or both?

Fee structures vary by mandate type and are agreed in writing at the engagement letter stage. A typical structure combines a retainer covering advisory time (scoping, structuring, diligence coordination, negotiation support) with a success-linked component where sourcing or a specific transaction outcome forms part of the mandate. Execution-only mandates, where a target or buyer is already identified, are more commonly retainer- or milestone-based without a success component.

Practitioner noteWe are explicit about fee structure before work begins — a client should never be surprised by how a success fee is calculated partway through a negotiation.
How long does a typical buy-side or sell-side mandate take from engagement to completion?

This varies significantly with mandate scope. A full mandate that includes sourcing a target or buyer typically takes several months from engagement to signed transaction, depending on market conditions and how quickly suitable candidates are identified. An execution-only mandate on an already-identified counterparty moves considerably faster, following a timeline closer to that of a standalone due diligence and negotiation process, though the exact duration still depends on diligence complexity and counterparty responsiveness.

Practitioner noteWe give an honest timeline estimate at the scoping stage based on market conditions in the specific sector, rather than a generic figure — sourcing timelines in a niche sector with few credible candidates look very different from a well-populated, competitive sector.
Can PNPC help me prepare my business for sale even before I have decided to actually sell?

Yes, and this is often the highest-value part of a sell-side engagement. An exit readiness assessment reviews your financial statements, licensing position, employment compliance, and related-party arrangements to identify issues a buyer's diligence team would likely flag, so they can be addressed on your own timeline rather than discovered mid-negotiation, where they weaken your leverage.

Practitioner noteThe businesses that achieve the smoothest, highest-value exits are almost always the ones where readiness work started well ahead of any buyer conversation — not the ones that start preparing only after a buyer has already made an offer.
What is the role of a Letter of Intent or Term Sheet in the process, and why does PNPC insist it stays non-binding on price?

A Letter of Intent or Term Sheet sets out indicative price, structure, and key conditions to give both parties enough confidence to commit time and cost to due diligence — but should remain non-binding on final price and completion (aside from customary confidentiality and exclusivity provisions), so that findings from due diligence can still be used to renegotiate, restructure, or withdraw. If price is effectively locked at the LOI stage, the leverage that diligence findings should provide has already been given away.

Practitioner noteWe review every LOI or term sheet before signing specifically to confirm this non-binding structure is preserved — a poorly drafted LOI can inadvertently commit a party before the full facts are known.
How does PNPC approach valuation for a UAE business in an M&A context?

Valuation methodology depends on the business — comparable transaction multiples where sufficient market data exists, discounted cash flow analysis for businesses with a predictable cash flow profile, or asset-based valuation for asset-heavy or early-stage businesses. In an M&A context, valuation is not a standalone academic exercise; it is a negotiation anchor, so we build the valuation to withstand scrutiny from the counterparty's own advisors, grounded in normalised (not headline) earnings and defensible assumptions.

Practitioner noteA valuation that cannot survive challenge from the other side's advisor is not useful in a live negotiation — we stress-test our own numbers before presenting them, anticipating the counterparty's likely pushback.
What is an earn-out, and when does PNPC recommend using one in a UAE transaction?

An earn-out is a deal structure where part of the purchase consideration is deferred and contingent on the target achieving specified post-completion performance targets, typically used to bridge a valuation gap between buyer and seller expectations, or where the seller's continued involvement post-completion is important to the business's success. We recommend earn-outs cautiously — they require clear, unambiguous metrics and accounting treatment agreed at signing, since disputes over earn-out calculation are one of the more common sources of post-deal conflict.

Practitioner noteWe insist on defining the exact accounting methodology for any earn-out metric in the SPA itself, not left as 'to be agreed' — ambiguity here is where earn-out disputes originate.
How does UAE Corporate Tax affect deal structuring decisions in M&A?

Whether a transaction is structured as a share purchase or an asset purchase has different UAE Corporate Tax implications for both parties — a share purchase generally transfers the target entity's tax history and any Corporate Tax exposure to the buyer, while an asset purchase can, depending on structure, ring-fence certain historical liabilities but may trigger different tax treatment on the assets transferred. Free zone targets require particular attention to whether their Qualifying Free Zone Person status, and the 0% rate on qualifying income, survives the change of ownership under the applicable conditions.

Practitioner noteWe model both structures' tax implications early in the structuring phase — the 'obvious' structure based on commercial logic is not always the most tax-efficient one once Corporate Tax positioning is properly analysed.
Does PNPC handle cross-border M&A between the UAE and India?

Yes, extensively. PNPC operates from Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad, and we regularly advise on transactions where a UAE entity is acquiring an Indian business, an Indian company is acquiring or investing in a UAE entity, or a group spans both jurisdictions. This requires coordinating UAE completion mechanics with India-side requirements — FEMA overseas investment reporting, Form 15CA/15CB certification for outbound remittances, and DTAA-informed structuring — under a single connected team rather than two disconnected country advisors.

Practitioner noteWe have seen cross-border deals stall late because the India-side FEMA filing sequencing was not planned alongside the UAE completion timeline. Coordinating both sides from day one avoids this.
What happens if PNPC's due diligence coordination uncovers a serious issue mid-negotiation?

The finding is raised with the client immediately, assessed for materiality, and translated into a specific negotiation response — a price adjustment, a specific warranty or indemnity, an escrow holdback, restructuring the deal (for example, from a share deal to an asset deal to ring-fence a liability), or, in serious cases, a recommendation to walk away. Because the LOI or term sheet is structured to remain non-binding on price, a serious finding at this stage can still meaningfully change the outcome.

Practitioner noteWe do not hold findings back for a single final report if they are time-sensitive to an active negotiation — the client should never be the last to know about something material.
Can PNPC represent me if the counterparty is a family member or existing business partner?

Yes, and independent representation arguably matters more, not less, in these situations. Related-party transactions carry a particular risk of informal historical arrangements and pricing that was never tested against market terms. Independent advisory representation on one side of the table creates a clear, evidenced, arm's-length basis for the transaction, which protects both parties from later disputes, not just the party we represent.

Practitioner noteWe have seen family and partner transactions proceed with less rigour than arm's-length deals on the reasoning that 'we already know each other' — and generate exactly the kind of dispute a properly structured, independently advised process would have prevented.
Does PNPC draft the Share Purchase Agreement, or only advise on commercial terms?

PNPC's core scope is financial, tax, and commercial advisory — we do not draft binding legal agreements. We work directly alongside UAE-licensed transaction counsel, translating negotiated commercial terms and diligence findings into specific drafting instructions for the SPA or BTA. Where a client does not already have transaction counsel engaged, we can refer to trusted UAE legal practices we have worked with regularly.

Practitioner noteThe most effective transactions we support have finance and legal advisors in direct contact throughout, not each working from a separate summary passed through the client — we set up that connection proactively.
What is the difference between a share purchase and an asset/business transfer in M&A structuring?

In a share purchase, the buyer acquires the shares of the existing legal entity and, with it, everything the entity is a party to — contracts, employees, tax history, and both known and unknown liabilities. In an asset or business transfer, the buyer acquires specified assets (and sometimes assumes specified liabilities and transferring employees) while the legal entity and its historical liabilities generally remain with the seller. Advisory input on which structure to pursue weighs tax treatment, liability exposure, and the practical mechanics of transferring licences, contracts, and employees.

Practitioner noteWe see buyers assume an asset deal fully insulates them from all seller liabilities — broadly true for undisclosed historical liabilities, but transferring employees under UAE labour law can still carry continuity-of-service implications for gratuity calculation that need specific structuring attention.
How does PNPC source acquisition targets or buyers when sourcing is part of the mandate?

Sourcing draws on PNPC's own network across the UAE and India professional and business community, sector-specific outreach based on the agreed screening criteria, and, where useful, coordination with business brokers or industry contacts. Every approach is made under confidentiality, and candidates are screened against the agreed thesis or buyer profile before being presented to the client, so time is spent only on genuinely qualified opportunities.

Practitioner noteWe are candid that sourcing quality and speed vary significantly by sector — a well-populated sector with many potential candidates moves faster than a niche sector with few credible players, and we set expectations accordingly at the outset.
What is a locked-box mechanism, and how does it differ from completion accounts?

A locked-box mechanism fixes the purchase price based on the target's financial position as at a pre-agreed historical date, with the seller warranting no value leakage between that date and completion, avoiding a post-completion price adjustment process entirely. Completion accounts, by contrast, calculate the final price based on the target's actual financial position at completion, with a true-up adjustment mechanism. Locked-box structures offer more price certainty for the buyer but require robust historical financial verification; completion accounts offer more accuracy but carry post-completion dispute risk if the methodology is not clearly agreed upfront.

Practitioner noteWe recommend locked-box structures where the target's financials are well-verified and the gap to completion is short; completion accounts where more time is expected to pass, or where financial verification confidence is lower at signing.
Does PNPC advise on financing the acquisition, such as bank debt or investor capital?

We advise on capital structure implications for deal terms — how a debt-financed versus equity-financed acquisition affects negotiating flexibility, completion timing, and lender consent requirements — and can coordinate with banking and investor relationships where relevant. Arranging the actual financing facility is typically a separate, specifically scoped engagement (see our Debt & Equity Advisory service), though we ensure the M&A negotiation timeline and the financing process are sequenced together, not run in isolation.

Practitioner noteA deal that stalls because financing was not sequenced alongside negotiation timing is a common, avoidable problem — we flag financing dependencies early in the structuring phase.
What happens to the M&A advisory relationship after the deal completes?

Many clients transition directly into an ongoing engagement — for a buyer, UAE accounting, VAT and Corporate Tax compliance, WPS payroll management, and Virtual CFO support for the acquired entity; for a seller, advisory on structuring and, where relevant, cross-border tax planning around deployment of the sale proceeds. This continuity means institutional knowledge built during the transaction carries forward rather than being lost to a new advisor starting from scratch.

Practitioner noteThe handoff is smoothest when the same team that ran the transaction also picks up the post-completion work — the context we build during negotiation is directly useful to how we manage the entity or the proceeds afterward.
Why should I engage PNPC rather than a large investment bank or a boutique M&A firm?

A large investment bank typically applies fee structures and process scale calibrated for significantly larger transactions than most UAE mid-market and SME deals, often with a junior deal team executing under a senior partner who is minimally involved day to day. A boutique M&A firm may offer sector focus but often lacks the UAE-specific tax and regulatory depth, or the cross-border India-UAE coordination, that PNPC brings as a practising Chartered Accountancy firm since 1986. Our engagement teams are senior-CA-led throughout, with fee structures proportionate to mid-market and SME transaction sizes.

Practitioner noteWe are candid that a large, multi-billion-dirham, cross-listed transaction is often better served by a large investment bank with matching scale and distribution. For the mid-market and family business segment that makes up the bulk of UAE M&A activity, our depth and continuity are the differentiator.
Can PNPC support a joint venture negotiation rather than a full acquisition or sale?

Yes. Joint venture structuring shares many of the same disciplines as M&A advisory — valuation of contributed assets or capital, governance and exit-rights negotiation, tax structuring, and due diligence on the counterparty — while the deal outcome is a shareholders' agreement and JV structure rather than a full change of control. We scope joint venture mandates using the same buy-side or sell-side representation framework, adjusted for the specific governance and exit-rights issues a JV raises.

Practitioner noteJV negotiations often under-invest in exit-rights and deadlock-resolution provisions relative to the entry terms — we push clients to negotiate these as hard as the initial valuation and contribution terms, since they matter most when the relationship eventually needs to end.
How does PNPC handle confidentiality during a live M&A process, particularly on the sell side?

All engagements begin with a signed engagement letter and Non-Disclosure Agreement covering PNPC, the client, and, on the sell side, every prospective buyer approached during the process. Buyer approaches are made under a blind or limited-detail teaser initially, with full information memorandum and data room access granted only after a signed NDA and demonstrated genuine interest, protecting the seller's commercial position throughout the market process.

Practitioner noteWe stage information disclosure deliberately on the sell side — competitors and unqualified parties should never have full financial and commercial detail before genuine, credible interest is established.
What happens if a free zone target's Qualifying Free Zone Person status does not survive the change of control?

Qualifying Free Zone Person treatment under UAE Corporate Tax depends on conditions being continuously satisfied — including maintaining adequate substance in the UAE and keeping non-qualifying revenue within the applicable de minimis threshold — and a change of ownership does not automatically breach these, but it can if the new owner changes how the entity actually operates. We review the target's qualifying-income composition and substance position as part of structuring, and flag before completion if the buyer's intended post-acquisition operating model would put continued 0% treatment on qualifying income at risk.

Practitioner noteThis is a forward-looking question, not just a historical diligence item — the buyer's plans for the target after completion matter as much as the target's compliance history to date.
Does PNPC need to register as a Designated Non-Financial Business or Profession (DNFBP) to advise on a UAE M&A transaction?

Corporate service providers and certain intermediaries facilitating company sales or asset transfers can fall within the UAE's DNFBP categories under the AML/CFT framework overseen by the Ministry of Economy and the UAE Financial Intelligence Unit. As a practising Chartered Accountancy firm, PNPC applies customer due diligence discipline to onboarding both the client and, where relevant, the counterparty, consistent with how a regulated professional firm operates — independent of whether a specific transaction itself triggers a formal filing obligation.

Practitioner noteWe do not treat AML/KYC discipline as a box-ticking exercise applied only where legally forced — it is baked into how every mandate is onboarded, buy-side or sell-side.
Does PNPC provide a fairness opinion, and is that the same as the valuation work done during a live deal?

A fairness opinion is a standalone written opinion, typically requested by a board or shareholder group, stating whether a specific transaction's terms are fair from a financial point of view — often for governance or minority-shareholder protection purposes. It differs from the ongoing valuation positioning work done inside an active buy-side or sell-side mandate, which is iterative and feeds directly into negotiation rather than standing as a one-time formal opinion. PNPC can scope a fairness opinion as part of, or separately from, a full advisory mandate, depending on what the board or shareholder group specifically needs.

Practitioner noteWe ask early whether a formal fairness opinion is actually required by the client's governance documents or shareholder agreement, since it changes both scope and the level of documentation we prepare to support the conclusion.
How does information disclosure actually work in practice on a sell-side process — teaser, blind CIM, full IM?

Disclosure is staged deliberately. An initial anonymised teaser (sector, size, and headline metrics, no identifying detail) tests interest without revealing the seller's identity. Once a prospective buyer signs an NDA and confirms genuine interest, a fuller Confidential Information Memorandum with identifying detail and more granular financials is shared. Full data room access — underlying ledgers, contracts, and management interviews — is reserved for buyers who have progressed to a term sheet or advanced diligence stage. This staging protects the seller's commercial position and limits exposure to unqualified or competitor interest.

Practitioner noteWe push back on sellers who want to skip straight to full disclosure with an eager early approach — the staging exists precisely to avoid over-exposing sensitive information before genuine interest and commitment are demonstrated.
Can a sell-side process run as a competitive process with multiple bidders, rather than a single negotiation?

Yes, and where sourcing is in scope, PNPC can run a structured, confidential process approaching multiple qualified candidates in parallel, using competitive tension to support valuation and terms. This requires more careful process management — synchronised information disclosure, common deadlines for indicative offers, and consistent handling of each bidder — than a single-buyer negotiation, but it is often the better route for a seller with genuine, broad market appeal.

Practitioner noteA competitive process only works if there are genuinely multiple credible candidates — running a 'competitive' process around a single realistic buyer usually just adds cost and delay without adding real leverage.
Can PNPC represent a minority shareholder looking to exit via a sale to the majority owner or a third party?

Yes. A minority shareholder exit carries its own dynamics — valuation methodology for a minority stake often differs from a control-block valuation, and the minority holder may have limited negotiating leverage or contractual exit rights depending on the shareholders' agreement. We review the governing shareholders' agreement first, since it frequently contains pre-emption rights, tag-along or drag-along provisions, or a pre-agreed valuation mechanism that shapes the entire process before commercial negotiation even begins.

Practitioner noteThe single most common gap we find in minority-exit mandates is a client who has not re-read their own shareholders' agreement in years — provisions negotiated at formation often materially constrain what is actually achievable at exit.
What happens if the buyer's financing falls through after terms are agreed but before completion?

This is one of the reasons the LOI or term sheet should remain non-binding on completion pending satisfaction of specific conditions precedent, including, where relevant, confirmed financing. If financing genuinely falls through, the transaction typically cannot complete on the agreed terms, and the seller (on a sell-side mandate) may need to return to a prior bidder or restart limited market outreach, while the buyer (on a buy-side mandate) needs an honest assessment of whether alternative financing is realistically available within a reasonable timeframe.

Practitioner noteWe recommend a financing condition precedent be explicit in the term sheet whenever a buy-side deal is debt-financed — an implied assumption of financing certainty is a frequent source of late-stage transaction failure.
What happens if diligence reveals a valuation gap between buyer and seller expectations that neither side will move on?

This is treated as a structuring problem, not just a negotiation impasse. Options we typically explore include an earn-out or deferred consideration mechanism to bridge the gap using future performance, a partial rather than full sale, adjusting the deal structure (share versus asset) to change the tax and liability allocation underlying each side's number, or, where the gap reflects a genuine, unresolvable difference in view on the business's prospects, acknowledging the deal may not be viable and advising accordingly rather than forcing a transaction that starts from a position of disagreement.

Practitioner noteNot every deal should close — we tell clients directly when a persistent valuation gap suggests the two sides fundamentally disagree about the business's future, since forcing a deal through in that situation usually just relocates the dispute to after completion.
What is the difference between exclusivity and a non-binding LOI, and how long is exclusivity typically granted for?

A non-binding LOI or term sheet sets out indicative price and structure without committing either party to complete. Exclusivity is a separate, usually binding provision within that same document, under which the seller agrees not to negotiate with other parties for a defined period, giving the buyer confidence to invest in diligence costs without a competing bidder undercutting the process mid-way. The length of exclusivity is negotiated case by case based on expected diligence complexity — it should be long enough for genuine diligence to complete, but not so long that it leaves the seller unreasonably exposed if the buyer stalls.

Practitioner noteWe push back on exclusivity periods requested purely to keep a seller off-market with no corresponding diligence progress — exclusivity should track a realistic diligence and negotiation timeline, not just buyer preference.
Does the M&A advisory mandate cover sector-specific regulatory approvals for a change of control, such as Central Bank consent?

Where the target operates in a regulated sector — financial services under UAE Central Bank oversight, for instance — a change of control may itself require regulatory notification or approval, separate from the standard trade licence amendment process. PNPC identifies this requirement during structuring and coordinates the approval process alongside transaction counsel, but the underlying regulatory application is typically led by counsel or a specialist regulatory advisor with direct standing before that regulator.

Practitioner noteWe flag sector-specific regulatory approval requirements at the earliest possible stage of structuring, since they can materially affect the realistic completion timeline and sometimes the deal structure itself.
What happens to employees during a UAE M&A transaction — do their contracts and visas need to be reissued?

In a share purchase, employees generally continue under their existing contracts with the same legal entity, so visas and labour cards typically remain unaffected by the ownership change itself. In an asset or business transfer, employees moving to a new legal entity generally require new employment contracts and, in most cases, new work permits and visa sponsorship transfers through MOHRE and GDRFA processes, which has continuity-of-service implications for gratuity calculation that need specific attention in deal structuring.

Practitioner noteBuyers structuring an asset deal specifically to avoid inheriting historical liabilities sometimes overlook that transferring employees still carry gratuity continuity considerations under UAE labour law — this needs to be priced into the deal, not treated as a clean break.
How does PNPC ensure the numbers used in negotiation would hold up if a dispute arose after completion?

Every valuation, quality-of-earnings adjustment, and structuring assumption used in negotiation is documented with its underlying source evidence and methodology at the time it is produced — not reconstructed retrospectively. This evidentiary discipline means that if a warranty claim, earn-out dispute, or completion-accounts disagreement arises later, the negotiating position can be traced back to a contemporaneous, evidenced basis rather than an after-the-fact justification.

Practitioner noteThe clients who fare worst in post-completion disputes are usually the ones who negotiated on numbers nobody wrote down the basis for at the time — we insist on documenting methodology as we go, not just the final figure.
What if the target has minority shareholders who will not consent to a sale?

This is a threshold issue reviewed early, since a share sale generally requires either unanimous shareholder consent or, where the shareholders' agreement and company constitution permit it, a drag-along mechanism compelling minority holders to sell alongside the majority on the same terms. Where no drag-along right exists and a minority holder refuses to sell, the buyer may need to proceed with a partial acquisition, restructure the offer, or the transaction may not be achievable on the intended terms at all.

Practitioner noteWe check the shareholders' agreement for drag-along and tag-along provisions before a sell-side process begins in earnest — discovering a blocking minority shareholder mid-negotiation, rather than at scoping, wastes significant process time and cost.
Can PNPC advise on bringing in a strategic or financial investor for a partial stake, rather than a full sale?

Yes. A partial stake sale to a strategic or financial investor uses much of the same advisory discipline as a full exit — valuation positioning, buyer identification, negotiation of governance and future exit rights — while the deal outcome is continued shared ownership rather than a clean exit. Governance terms (board composition, veto rights, future funding obligations) typically require more negotiation weight in a partial-stake deal than in a full exit, since the parties will continue working together afterward.

Practitioner noteWe push clients considering a partial sale to negotiate the governance and future-exit terms as hard as the initial valuation — the relationship that begins at signing has to actually function day to day afterward.
How does the advisory process differ where the target is a DIFC or ADGM entity rather than a mainland or standard free zone company?

DIFC and ADGM operate under their own common-law-based companies regulations and court systems, distinct from onshore UAE civil law and from other free zones' rules. Share transfer mechanics, registrar filing requirements, and — critically — how a warranty or indemnity dispute under the SPA would ultimately be resolved if litigated, differ in these jurisdictions from a mainland LLC or a standard free zone entity. Transaction counsel with specific DIFC or ADGM court experience is engaged for the legal workstream on these deals, working alongside PNPC's financial and tax advisory.

Practitioner noteWe confirm early which specific registrar and legal system governs the target — assuming DIFC or ADGM mechanics mirror a standard mainland or free zone process is a common and avoidable structuring mistake.
Who typically holds the escrow account in a UAE M&A completion, and how is it structured?

Escrow arrangements are typically held with a bank or a licensed escrow agent under an escrow agreement negotiated alongside the SPA, setting out release conditions (satisfaction of conditions precedent, expiry of a warranty claim period, or resolution of a specific identified risk) and the mechanics for either party to trigger release or contest a claim against the held funds. PNPC advises on sizing the escrow amount against specific identified diligence risk and reviews the release conditions, while the escrow agreement itself is typically documented by transaction counsel.

Practitioner noteWe size escrow holdbacks against our best quantification of a specific identified risk, not as an arbitrary percentage of price — an unjustified holdback amount is difficult for the other side's counsel to accept and can stall negotiation.
Does the sell-side mandate include drafting the Information Memorandum, and what does it typically contain?

Yes, where sourcing is part of the mandate, PNPC prepares or substantially contributes to the Information Memorandum — typically covering business overview, market position, historical and normalised financial performance, management and organisational structure, growth opportunity, and the proposed transaction structure — positioned to withstand scrutiny from a buyer's own diligence team rather than reading as a purely promotional document.

Practitioner noteAn Information Memorandum that overstates the business invites exactly the diligence pushback it was meant to avoid — we build it to be defensible under scrutiny, not merely persuasive on first read.
What happens if a rival buyer approaches the seller directly during a negotiated exclusivity period?

If exclusivity is a binding provision of the signed LOI or term sheet, an approach during that period is a breach the seller should decline to engage with substantively, referring the approaching party back once exclusivity expires (if the current process has not completed by then). We advise the seller to document any such approach, since it can be relevant context for future negotiation leverage if the current buyer's process ultimately does not complete.

Practitioner noteWe tell sellers explicitly, before signing exclusivity, that a genuinely committed rival approach during that window still needs to wait — breaching exclusivity to chase a second bidder mid-process usually damages trust with the first buyer without guaranteeing the second deal actually completes on better terms.
How does PNPC handle disagreement between co-shareholders on the buy-side about deal terms mid-negotiation?

We require the client to confirm, before active negotiation begins, who on their side holds authority to accept or reject terms in real time, since a negotiation cannot move efficiently if every point requires a fresh internal consensus process. Where genuine disagreement exists among co-shareholders about whether to proceed, at what price, or on what structure, we treat it as a client-side governance issue to be resolved before — not during — active deal negotiation, and flag the risk to the negotiation timeline if it remains unresolved.

Practitioner noteWe ask this question directly at scoping: who can say yes on your side, and does everyone with a vote actually agree on the walk-away price? Unresolved buy-side disagreement is one of the more common causes of a stalled negotiation we see.
What is the risk of running buy-side financing and due diligence in parallel rather than in sequence?

Running them in parallel can save time, but it means financing terms may be agreed on the basis of diligence findings that later change materially, or diligence may surface an issue that changes the amount or structure of financing actually needed, requiring the financing conversation to be reopened. We coordinate the two workstreams so financing terms are only finalised once diligence findings material to price or structure are known, even where the initial financing conversation with the lender or investor starts earlier to avoid losing time.

Practitioner noteWe sequence the client's conversation with their financing source so an in-principle approval is secured early, but the final financing terms are only locked once diligence has confirmed the price and structure the financing actually needs to support.
Why PNPC Global
FeatureDIY / Internal TeamLarge Investment BankPNPC Global
Dedicated deal capacityCompetes with day-to-day operating responsibilities, often the weakest link in a live negotiationDedicated, but junior-team-led on mid-market dealsSenior CA-led engagement team dedicated to the transaction throughout
UAE-specific structuring knowledgeLimited, particularly for first-time acquirers or sellersGlobal methodology, not always tuned to UAE gratuity, WPS, and Free Zone nuanceUAE-specific structuring built around Corporate Tax, gratuity, WPS, and Qualifying Free Zone Person considerations
Fee structure for SME/mid-market dealsNo advisory fee, but higher risk of an unfavourable outcomeFee structures calibrated for large transactions, often disproportionate for SME dealsRetainer and success-linked fees scoped and agreed in writing for the specific deal size
India-UAE cross-border coordinationNot typically available in-houseCoordinated through separate country offices, context often lost in handoffSingle team across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad
Diligence-to-negotiation integrationFindings and negotiation often handled by different, uncoordinated advisorsFindings report delivered; translation into negotiation strategy often left to the clientDiligence findings actively translated into price, warranty, indemnity, and escrow negotiation positions
Post-completion continuityEnds with the transaction; new advisor needed for ongoing complianceTypically a separate engagement, re-scoped from scratchSeamless transition into ongoing UAE accounting, tax, and Virtual CFO or post-exit advisory
Access to senior decision-makersDirect, but without market or deal-structuring expertiseOften filtered through a relationship manager and junior execution teamDirect access to the senior CA leading the mandate throughout
Confidentiality discipline on sell-side mandatesAd hoc, informal disclosure to interested partiesProcess-driven, but often standardised regardless of deal sensitivityStaged disclosure — blind teaser, then full IM and data room only after NDA and demonstrated genuine interest — applied consistently to every approach
Handling of related-party and family transactionsOften undocumented, relying on existing trust between the partiesAvailable, but at a fee structure rarely proportionate to a family or partner buy-outIndependent, arm's-length representation of one side with the same rigour as a third-party deal, protecting both parties from later disputes
Joint venture and non-full-exit structuringTypically handled informally between the parties' own teamsAvailable as a bespoke mandate, generally at large-transaction fee scaleSame buy-side/sell-side representation discipline applied to JV governance, contribution valuation, and exit-rights negotiation, scoped for mid-market size

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Acquisition thesis or exit readiness assessment, documented and agreed with you before market engagement begins

  2. 02

    Target or buyer sourcing and confidential initial outreach, where scoped, screened against agreed criteria

  3. 03

    Valuation positioning using comparable transaction, discounted cash flow, or asset-based methodology as appropriate

  4. 04

    Deal structuring advice covering share versus asset purchase, consideration mix, and completion mechanism

  5. 05

    Letter of Intent / Term Sheet review and negotiation, preserving your ability to renegotiate on diligence findings

  6. 06

    Coordination of financial, tax, and — alongside your legal counsel — legal due diligence workstreams

  7. 07

    Financial modelling for price scenarios, earn-out structures, and deferred consideration mechanisms

  8. 08

    UAE Corporate Tax and VAT positioning input for deal structuring decisions

  9. 09

    Direct liaison with transaction counsel to translate commercial terms into SPA/BTA drafting instructions

  10. 10

    Negotiation representation through signing, tracking conditions precedent to completion

  11. 11

    Cross-border India-UAE coordination for FEMA, Form 15CA/15CB, and DTAA-informed structuring where relevant

  12. 12

    Post-completion handoff into ongoing accounting, tax, and compliance support, or post-exit planning advisory

  13. 13

    Earn-out or completion accounts true-up support using the same methodology agreed during negotiation

  14. 14

    Confidentiality management, including staged information disclosure on sell-side mandates

Talk to PNPC before you approach a target or a buyer — the earliest advisory involvement is consistently where the most negotiating leverage is created.

Jurisdiction

🇦🇪
United Arab Emirates

Free zone, mainland & offshore

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