GSSV

Due Diligence

Introduction

In any investment, merger, acquisition, or strategic alliance, informed decision-making is critical. This is where Due Diligence comes in—a systematic investigation to verify the financial, legal, and operational health of a business before entering into a significant transaction. Due diligence is a critical process in business transactions, investments, and mergers & acquisitions (M&A). It involves a detailed examination of a company’s financial, legal, operational, and tax aspects to assess risks, uncover liabilities, and validate opportunities.

What is Due Diligence ?

Due Diligence is the process of evaluating a business, individual, or contract before entering into a proposed transaction. It is typically conducted by an independent Chartered Accountant or advisory firm on behalf of the buyer, investor, or lender. It involves a thorough investigation and analysis of a company or asset to identify risks, verify information, and ensure compliance before making significant decisions.

Objectives of Conducting Due Diligence

Key goals include :-

  • Verifying financial health and profitability
  • Identifying contingent liabilities and compliance lapses
  • Validating ownership and IP rights
  • Assessing valuation justification
  • Ensuring statutory and tax compliance
  • Understanding operational risks and opportunities

When is Due Diligence Required ?

Due diligence is essential for:

  • Mergers & Acquisitions
  • Venture Capital / Private Equity Investments
  • Business Restructuring or Joint Ventures
  • Loan Syndication or Bank Funding
  • Franchisee & Strategic Alliances
  • Initial Public Offering (IPO)
  • Vendor/Customer Onboarding (in B2B transactions)

Why is Due Diligence Important?

  • Risk Identification: Discover hidden liabilities, financial irregularities, Uncovers potential liabilities or legal issues before finalizing a deal.
  • Informed Decision-Making: Provides a clear, factual basis for investment, acquisition, or partnership decisions.
  • Regulatory Compliance:
    • Ensures all transactions adhere to legal and governmental guidelines, avoiding future penalties.
    • Checks adherence to tax and regulatory laws.
  • Supports Valuation: Ensures fair pricing based on real financial health.
  • Value Assessment: Determines the true worth and sustainability of the business or asset under consideration.
  • Builds Trust: Provides transparency between buyers and sellers.

Types of Due Diligence Services Offered

Type

🔍 Focus Area

Financial Due Diligence

  • Review of Books of accounts, accounting policies, and internal controls & ratios
  • Examines financial statements, cash flows, and debt obligations.
  • Key checks:
    • Revenue recognition policies
    • Working capital trends
    • Contingent liabilities 

Legal Due Diligence

  • Reviews contracts, licenses, Litigation history, Title documents & intellectual property rights.
  • Key checks:
    • Pending lawsuits
    • Compliance with labour laws
    • Property ownership documents

Tax Due Diligence

  • Direct tax, GST, TDS, pending assessments
  • Assesses tax liabilities, pending disputes, and compliance.
  • Key checks:
    • Income tax, GST, and transfer pricing issues
    • Tax audit history 

HR & Payroll Review

  • Evaluates employee contracts
  • Organizational structure
  • PF/ESI compliance
  • CTC verification

Operational Due Diligence

  • Supply chain, SOPs, internal control systems
  • Evaluates business processes, supply chain, and efficiency.
  • Key checks:
    • Inventory management
    • IT systems and cybersecurity risks

Commercial Due Diligence

  • Analyses market position, competition, and growth potential.
  • Key checks:
    • Customer concentration risks
    • Industry trends 

Strategic Due Diligence

Business model, competition, SWOT analysis

Secretarial Due Diligence

ROC filings, shareholding pattern, board processes

IT & Data Due Diligence

ERP systems, cybersecurity, software licenses

Asset & Intellectual

Verifies ownership and value of physical and intangible assets

Step-by-Step Due Diligence Process

A Structured Due Diligence approach tailored to each client’s needs:

Step 1: Engagement Understanding

  • Define transaction scope, client expectations, and areas of concern
  • Define the scope and objectives based on the transaction type.

Step 2: Preparation and Planning

  • Assemble a multidisciplinary team (financial, legal, tax, and sector experts)

Step 3: Document Checklist and Data Room Access

  • Request documents—financials, tax returns, ROC filings, contracts, etc.
  • Gather financial records, contracts, tax filings, and operational reports.

Step 3: Analysis and Verification

  • Scrutinize statements, validate transactions, test controls, analyse ratios
  • Financial Analysis : Analyse historical and current financials, cash flows, and debt obligations i.e., verify balance sheets, P&L statements, and cash flows.
  • Legal Review : Examine corporate structure, Contract, Check compliance, Litigation risks, and regulatory approvals
  • Tax Review: Scrutinize Tax filings, Potential liabilities, and benefits
  • Operational Review: Assess business processes, supply chain, and HR matters

Step 4: Risk Identification

  • Identify red flags (e.g., declining profits, pending lawsuits),
  • Identify and quantify risks, such as contingent liabilities,
  • Identify and quantify regulatory exposures, or operational weaknesses
  • Identify Inconsistencies and off-balance sheet items

Step 5: Reporting

  • Prepare a comprehensive due diligence report summarizing findings, highlighting risks, and recommending actions

Step 6: Post-Due Diligence Support

  • Support in negotiation, valuation adjustments, and compliance rectification

Documents Typically Reviewed During Financial Due Diligence

Document

Purpose

Past Year’s  Audited Financial Statements

Trend analysis and accuracy check

Trial Balance and Ledger Extracts

Detailed transaction review

Bank Statements

Cash flow verification, revenue reconciliation

GST Returns

Input/output matching, compliance

TDS Returns

Verification of tax compliance

Loan Agreements

Identification of liabilities and terms

Fixed Asset Register

Asset ownership and depreciation check

Debtor & Creditor Aging Reports

Credit risk and working capital assessment

ROC Filings (MCA)

Shareholding pattern, board structure

Key Red Flags Detected Through Due Diligence

Financial Red Flag

  • Unrecorded liabilities or off-balance-sheet items
  • Inconsistent revenue growth
  • High debt-to-equity ratio
  • Unexplained cash withdrawals

Legal Red Flags

  • Tax defaults or pending litigation
  • Pending regulatory penalties
  • Unresolved employee disputes
  • Non-compliance with statutory filings

Operational Red Flags

  • Overdependence on a single supplier
  • Poor inventory turnover

Other’s

  • Discrepancies in revenue recognition or expense booking
  • Undisclosed related party transactions
  • Poor internal controls or absence of documented SOPs
  • Inflated valuations not backed by financial performance

Due Diligence vs. Audit: What’s the Difference ?

Aspect

Due Diligence

Audit

Objective

Identify risks and verify information for a transaction

Provide assurance on the reliability of financials

Scope

Broader (legal, financial, tax, operational, etc.)

Primarily financial statements

Level of Assurance

Comfort about risks and opportunities

High (but not absolute) assurance

Outcome

Detailed report with findings and recommendations

Audit opinion on financial statements

Common Challenges in Due Diligence

  • Incomplete or inaccurate information from the target entity
  • Time constraints leading to rushed analysis
  • Complex regulatory environments and cross-border issues
  • Hidden liabilities or off-balance-sheet items

Pre-Requisite of Consultant (Chartered Accountant) for Due Diligence ?

  • Experienced Team: CA professionals with legal, tax, and financial expertise
  • Multi-Domain Capability: Sector-specific audit and advisory experience
  • End-to-End Support: From pre-deal review to post-deal assistance
  • Customised Reporting: Focused on business goals and investment rationale
  • Confidential and Independent: Strict confidentiality and unbiased assessment

Conclusion

Due diligence is not optional—it’s essential for risk-free business decisions. Due diligence is more than a checkbox—it is a strategic tool that safeguards investments, enhances transparency, and builds trust. A professionally conducted due diligence gives clarity, confidence, and control either at the time of buying a business, entering a partnership, or raising capital, For chartered accountants, mastering due diligence is essential to deliver value-added advisory and protect the interests of all stakeholders involved