Guide to Due Diligence – Process | Objective | Need

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  • 13 Min Read
  • By Taxmann
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  • Last Updated on 9 April, 2025

Due Diligence

Due Diligence refers to a comprehensive and systematic investigation, audit, or review conducted before entering into a business transaction, such as a merger, acquisition, investment, or partnership. It is performed to evaluate the financial, legal, operational, and strategic aspects of a business or individual to identify potential risks, liabilities, and opportunities.

Table of Contents

  1. Overview and Introduction of Due Diligence
  2. Objectives
  3. Need for Due Diligence
  4. Factors to Be Kept in Mind While Conducting Due Diligence
  5. Process and Stages
  6. Types of Due Diligence
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1. Overview and Introduction of Due Diligence

FAQ 1. How is due diligence an interactive process?

A Due diligence is an interactive process that includes –

  • Inquiring financial and operational data
  • Analysing financial and operational data
  • Interpreting financial and operational data
  • Assessment of risks and opportunities

FAQ 2. What key points describe due diligence?

Key points –

  • It is not limited to accounting analysis but has a business-oriented approach;
  • It analysis the information on the basis of the actual facts;
  • Considers the industry of the target company;
  • Examines the business affairs having a significant impact on the prospects of the business;
  • Explores significant business practices and business models;
  • Examination of relevant aspects of the past, present and near future of the business;
  • Assesses the advantages and risks associated with a particular transaction.

2. Objectives

FAQ 3. How is the SWOT analysis of the target business carried out as part of due diligence?

  • Generally, the SWOT analysis of any business carried out as a part of due diligence to reveal the strengths and weaknesses of not only the financials but also intangibles.
  • To perform effectively, the potential buyer needs to be clear about the goals and motives for acquiring the target company, as well as the value the buyer is attempting to create with the purchase.
  • For example, if there is a legal risk, such as an outstanding lawsuit, that will not only jeopardize the financial stability of the company but also the loyalty of existing customers. This will erode the target company’s market of customers by a new and stronger competitor. The target company’s talent is the asset desired, and much of this depends on employee relations and accordingly cultural issues have to be addressed in time.

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3. Need

FAQ 4. What is the need for due diligence?

The needs are as follows –

  • To confirm that the business is what as it appears;
  • To create a trust between two unrelated parties;
  • To access the risks and opportunities of a proposed transaction;
  • To reduce the risk of post transaction;
  • To investigate into the affairs of business as a prudent business person;
  • To confirm all material facts related to the business;
  • Representation & warranties for indemnification.

4. Factors to Be Kept in Mind

FAQ 5. How a key step in any due diligence exercise is to develop an understanding of the purpose for the transaction?

  • A key step is to develop an understanding of the purpose for the transaction.
  • The goal is to provide the party proposing the transaction with sufficient information to make a reasoned decision as to whether or not to complete the transaction as proposed.
  • It should provide a basis for determining or validating the appropriate terms and price for the transaction incorporating consideration of the risks inherent in the proposed transaction.

Hence, we can conclude that the given statement is correct that – A key step in any due diligence exercise is to develop an understanding of the purpose for the transaction.

5. Process and Stages

FAQ 6. How should care be taken during the diligence to adhere to certain hospitality issues?

During the diligence, care should be taken to adhere to certain hospitality issues, like –

  • Be warm and receptive to the professionals who are conducting diligence.
  • Enquire on the Due Diligence team.
  • In case of any corrections – admit and rectify.

As regards the process of diligence, as a professional care should be taken to scrutinize every document that is made available and ask for details and clarifications, since the Due diligence is a time bound activity and is needed to be wrapped up at the earliest.

However, the company may be provided an opportunity to clear the various issues that may arise out of the diligence.

FAQ 7. What are the outcomes of due diligence reports?

Outcomes of reports are as follows –

Deal Breakers In their report, the findings can be very glaring and may expose various non-compliances that may arise – any criminal proceedings or known liabilities.
Deal Diluters The findings arising out a diligence may contain violations which may have an impact in the form of quantifiable penalties and in turn may result in diminishing the value of company.
Deal Cautioners It covers those findings in a diligence which may not impact the financials, but there exist certain non-compliances which though rectifiable, require the investor to tread a cautious path.
Deal Makers Which are very hard to come by and may not be a reality in the strict sense, are those reports wherein the diligence team have not been able to come across any violations, leading them to submit what is called a ‘clean report’.

6. Types

FAQ 8. What is the sin brief about legal due diligence and transactions to be covered?

A legal Due Diligence is a process of assessing all legal risks associated with organisation structure, its assets, contracts, securities, contracts, intellectual property, etc. of the target company.

It is a safeguarding process to understand the strength and weakness of the organisation with maximum information available. It ensures safe execution of transaction with minimum issues in future.

Transactions covered –

Initial Public Offer/FPOs/QIPs Commercial Agreements
Private Equity Leveraged Buy Outs
Joint Ventures General Compliance Requirement
Mergers & Acquisitions Corporate Restructuring

FAQ 9. Merger and Amalgamation aims at stability, development and expansion of business prospects, the decision being based on a prudent due diligence process. What is the process in a tabular form involving the buyer and seller?

Stages For Buyers For Seller
Preparation Stage
  • M&A strategy formulation
  • Preparation of list of potential Targets
  • Appoint external advisor for evaluation of targets
  • Short list targets
  • Create due diligence team
  • Structure a business plan
  • Preparation of list of potential buyers
  • Appoint external advisor
  • Shortlist buyers
Pre-Diligence
  • Approach targets
  • Negotiation of initial terms
  • Execute non-disclosure agreement
  • Compilation of list of data required
  • Approach buyers
  • Negotiate initial terms
  • Execution of non-disclosure agreement
  • Creation of data room
Due Diligence
  • Inspection of data room
  • Analysis of private documents
  • Evaluation of risk and return
  • Structure the terms and conditions
  • Assistance in data room
  • Setting deadlines for offer
Negotiations
  • Make final offer
  • Negotiate and agree on terms
  • Compile final offers
  • Select best offer
  • Negotiations
Post Diligence Post-merger integration and cultural adjustments Termination of data room and ownership exchange

FAQ 10. What is the due diligence for takeovers?

  • The Takeover Due diligence is generally conducted in different domains; Financial, Legal, Taxation, social life, environment, etc.
  • The Takeover Due diligence covers the history of the company, past performance, the present, and the future of a company. In effect, it must respond to certain requirements of the buyer, i.e., maximize financial or non-financial benefits, and negotiate the risks of failure.
  • Therefore, takeover due diligence is useful in allowing the buyer to confirm his or her decision of the sale, or in negotiating the conditions of the sale.
  • The takeover due diligence is having a great importance for a business as it synthetically expresses the overall value of the target enterprise.
  • Thus, taking over a company brings inevitable risk, some of which can cause great detriment to the company. Due diligence allows the company to avoid a tragic end after being taken over.

FAQ 11. What is the due diligence for the issue of securities?

The scope and comprehensiveness of the Issue of Securities due diligence is important not only from a legal standpoint to avoid liability but also from a reputational perspective as the reputation of the company and its promoters and other participants may be significantly vanished, if on a later date it appears that the company and other participants are failed to uncover and disclose to prospective investors critical issues relating to the issuer or the Securities.

FAQ 12. What are a few of the items that need to be seen while conducting due diligence?

Few of the items that need to be seen while conducting due diligence is –

  • A schedule and copies of all consulting agreements, agreements regarding inventions, licenses, or assignments of intellectual property.
  • Schedule of patents and its application.
  • Schedule of copyrights, trademarks and brand names.
  • Pending patents clearance documents.
  • Any pending claims case by or against the company in violation of intellectual property.
  • Details of Indian and international patents with the company.
  • Details of threatened claims if any.

FAQ 13. What is environmental due diligence?

Environmental due diligence analyses environmental risks and liabilities associated with an organisation. This investigation is usually undertaken before a merger, acquisition, management buy-out, corporate restructure etc.

Environmental due diligence provides the acquirer with a detailed assessment of the historic, current and potential future environmental risks associated with the target organisation’s sites and operations. It involves risk identification and assessment with respect to –

  • Details of environmental permits and licenses.
  • Hazardous substances used in the Company’s operations.
  • Copies of all correspondence with environment authorities.
  • Litigation or investigations if any on environmental issues.
  • Contingent environmental liabilities or continuing indemnification obligations, if any.
  • Review of the environmental setting and history of the site.
  • Assessment of the site conditions.
  • Operations and management of sites.
  • Confirm legal compliance and pollution checks from regulatory authorities etc.

FAQ 14. What is labour law due diligence and its scope?

The purpose of a labour due diligence to conduct a comprehensive review. The compliance from a labour law perspective in order to identify gaps before an authority audit, any non-compliances relating to the inappropriate application of labour law regulations and to allow company to correct errors and deficiencies.

The labour law due diligence is to identify gaps and minimize labour law and payroll deficiencies before any regulatory action.

However, it is important in case of the merger and acquisitions, takeovers, IPOs, joint ventures and winding up/liquidation of the companies.

The scope of the labour law due diligence extends to all the labour & employment related central, state and local laws, rules and regulations applicable to the company.

During the payroll and labour due diligence the auditor should examine and review the following areas –

  • Labour law regulations and agreements;
  • Employment contracts, amendments to employment contracts;
  • Information, job descriptions;
  • Legal declarations/agreements regarding termination of employment;
  • Maintenance of records Labour law regulations and agreements;
  • Employment contracts, amendments to employment contracts;
  • Information, job descriptions;
  • Legal declarations/agreements regarding termination of employment;
  • Maintenance of records.

FAQ 15. What are the various heads of due diligence of competition law?

Due diligence of competition law may be made under the following heads –

  1. Due diligence of various agreements (both existing and proposed)
  2. Due diligence on dominance and its likely abuse if any, (existing)
  3. Due diligence on combinations (i.e., effect of proposed Mergers & Acquisition)

Due Diligence of various agreements includes –

  • Agreements relating to production, supply and distribution of goods or services
  • Agreement if any with competitor relating to production, marketing or bidding, price etc.
  • Agreements with customers and distributors.
  • Purchase agreements.
  • Non-compete covenants.
  • Technology transfer/technical know-how agreements.
  • Concession agreements.

Due diligence on abuse of dominance, if any includes –

  • Examination as to the existence of dominance.
  • Examination of relevant market, whether product or geographical Areas.
  • Cases of abuse if any.

Due diligence on regulation of combinations –

  • Nature of combination.
  • Acquisition of share, voting rights, assets or control or merger/amalgamation etc.
  • Examination of total value of Assets or Turnover and the valuation methodology.
  • Status of merger notification to be filed with CCI.
  • Status of dominance after merger.

FAQ 16. What is FEMA due diligence, and what is its coverage?

The FEMA Due diligence helps to avoid damaging circumstances and is helpful in ensuring compliance of Foreign Exchange laws. It covers all types of cross border transactions – import, export, debt funding, equity capital infusion, transfer of shares etc.

The following are covered –

  • Capital Accounts transactions
  • Current account transaction
  • Currency Transactions
  • Regulations, Master Directions and Circulars issued by RBI
  • FDI Policy, approvals
  • Setting up of Business through Liaison office, Branch office, project office, wholly owned subsidiaries, joint ventures, foreign institutional investors, and foreign venture capital investor, Non-Resident of India/ person of Indian origin.

FAQ 17. What is FCRA due diligence?

The Foreign Currency (Regulation) Act, 2010, the FCRA Rules, 2011, and FCRA Amendment Rules, 2015 were respectively enacted to regulate the inflow of foreign funds received by NGOs.

  • The FCRA, 2010 replaces the erstwhile Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act of 1976. The FCRA legislation state that an organization cannot receive funding from a foreign source, unless it is registered under the Foreign Currency (Regulation) Act, 2010 or has obtained special government approval for a specific project.
  • Also, the registered NGOs need to comply with various post-registration requirements, as detailed in the provisions of the Act and its rules of enforcement. NGOs in India are categorized under three legal categories – society, trust, and a limited company.
  • These may be founded for a specific cultural, economic, educational, religious, or social purpose. These organizations are heavily regulated by respective state and government agencies.
  • The most important reporting requirement under the FCRA is the submission of annual returns. All NGOs are required to submit their annual returns to the central government (MHA) within nine months from the closure of the previous financial year.

FAQ 18. What is the difference between financial and tax due diligence?

Financial due diligence

  • Financial due diligence provides peace of mind to both corporate and financial buyers by analysing and validating all the financial, commercial, operational and strategic assumptions being made.
  • It also review the company’s projection and basis of such projections, capital expenditure plan, schedule of inventory, debtors and creditors, etc. Also, the process involves analysis of major top customer accounts, fixed and variable cost analysis, analysis on gross margins, customers with high profit margins and their contract period, internal control procedures etc.

Tax Due Diligence –

The Financial Due Diligence can further extend to tax due diligence which covers the Diligence on various taxes the company is required to pay and which ensure that the proper calculation with no intention of under-reporting of taxes. Status of any tax related case running with the tax authorities.

The tax due diligence comprises an analysis of –

  • tax compliance
  • tax contingencies and aggressive positions
  • transfer pricing
  • identification of risk areas
  • tax planning and opportunities

FAQ 19. What are the focus areas of financial due diligence?

Focus areas are as follows –

  • Quality of earnings, gross margin & cash flows
  • Quality of assets – Working Capital
  • Net Debt
  • Potential liabilities & commitments
  • Separation/Structuring/Integration Issues
  • Related Party Transactions

FAQ 20. What is bank due diligence and objective of conducting it?

The Bank conduct due diligence whenever the company intends to borrow the money from the bank.

The main objective of conducting due diligence by the bank are –

  • Verification of details of directors/promoters.
  • Statutory and procedural compliances by the company
  • Examining the existing or previous charges created by the company in respect of loans and their satisfaction.
  • Knowing the defaulting status of the directors, etc.

FAQ 21. What is ethical due diligence?

  • Ethical Due Diligence measures ethical character of the company and identify the possibilities of ethical risks, which is a non-financial risk.
  • It may relate to reputation, governance, ethical values etc.
  • It helps an organization to decide whether the partner is ethically viable.
  • This is an effective reputation management tool for any type of business decisions. Ethical due diligence of management of a company involves assessing employees in terms of their fit with the ethical culture and values of the organization.
  • Ethical performance assessment is also used as one of the parameters of the career development and promotion within the organization.

FAQ 22. What is strategic due diligence?

Strategic due diligence tests the strategic rationale behind a proposed transaction and analyses whether the deal is commercially viable, whether the targeted value would be realized.

It considers factors such as value creation opportunities, competitive position, and critical capabilities. Strategic due diligence focuses on determining how much adequate, realistic, and attainable is a deal’s value. It is broader and considers micro and macro-environmental factors of a business, connecting the legal and financial consideration with a long-term focus. Essentially strategic due diligence determines the question, “Whether a business plan can hold up to the market realities?”

FAQ 23. What is operational due diligence and its benefits?

  • Operational Due Diligence diagnoses of the organization’s historical and current operational performance, cost structure, map of potential synergies.
  • It aims at the assessment of the functional operations of the target company, connectivity between operations, technological up gradation in operational process, financial impact on operational efficiency etc.
  • It involves verifying operational matters such as the various facilities, office layout, sitting capacity etc.

Benefits –

  • It also uncovers aspects on operational weakness, inadequacy of control mechanisms etc.
  • It also gives a better picture of the kind of cost the buyer is going to incur in case they plan to go for expansion.
  • It verifies the various facilities owned by the target company and whether all costs are captured in the financials or not.

FAQ 24. What are the essentials of information technology due diligence?

Essentials of IT due diligence –

  • Analysing IT processes and systems of the organisation.
  • Determining the current cost and investment in IT.
  • Assessing the infrastructure of the company establishes IT Security.
  • Analysing the efficiency of Business systems and softwares.

FAQ 25. What do you mean by the term Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA)? What are its functions and content?

A non-disclosure agreement is defined as a legally enforceable contract that creates a confidential relationship between a person who holds some kind of trade secret and a person to whom the secret will be disclosed.

The Confidentiality agreements typically serve three key functions –

  • To protect sensitive information. By signing an NDA, participants promise to not divulge or release information shared with them by the other people involved. If the information is leaked, the injured person can claim breach of contract.
  • In the case of new product or concept development, a confidentiality agreement can help the inventor keep patent rights. In many cases, public disclosure of a new invention can void patent rights. A properly drafted NDA can help the original creator hold onto the rights to a product or idea.
  • Confidentiality agreements and NDAs expressly outline what information is private and what’s fair game. In many cases, the agreement serves as a document that classifies exclusive and confidential information.

Content of the Non-Disclosure Agreements –

  • Definitions and exclusions of confidential information; Definitions of confidential information spell out the categories or types of information covered by the agreement. This specific element serves to establish the rules or subject/consideration of the contract without actually releasing the precise information.
  • Obligations from all involved people or parties; and time periods. At the same time, nondisclosure agreements often exclude some information from protection. Exclusions might comprise information already considered common knowledge or data collected before the agreement was signed. Additionally, Time periods are also commonly addressed in NDAs and usually require that the party receiving the information stays mum for a number of years. This specific information is usually up for negotiation.

FAQ 26. What do the clauses ‘No Title to Use’ and ‘No Obligation to Disclose, No Representations’ in a Non-Disclosure Agreement typically mean?

The Model contents of the clauses to be included in the Non-Disclosure Agreement are as under –

No title of Use –

Nothing contained in this Agreement shall be construed as conferring upon the Receiving Party any right of use in or title to Confidential Information received by it from the Disclosing Party, other than as expressly provided.

No Obligation to Disclose, No Representations –

Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed as?

  • creating an obligation on any of the Parties to disclose particular information; or
  • creating an obligation on the parties to negotiate; or
  • as a representation as to the accuracy, completeness, quality or reliability of the information.

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Taxmann Publications has a dedicated in-house Research & Editorial Team. This team consists of a team of Chartered Accountants, Company Secretaries, and Lawyers. This team works under the guidance and supervision of editor-in-chief Mr Rakesh Bhargava.

The Research and Editorial Team is responsible for developing reliable and accurate content for the readers. The team follows the six-sigma approach to achieve the benchmark of zero error in its publications and research platforms. The team ensures that the following publication guidelines are thoroughly followed while developing the content:

  • The statutory material is obtained only from the authorized and reliable sources
  • All the latest developments in the judicial and legislative fields are covered
  • Prepare the analytical write-ups on current, controversial, and important issues to help the readers to understand the concept and its implications
  • Every content published by Taxmann is complete, accurate and lucid
  • All evidence-based statements are supported with proper reference to Section, Circular No., Notification No. or citations
  • The golden rules of grammar, style and consistency are thoroughly followed
  • Font and size that's easy to read and remain consistent across all imprint and digital publications are applied