Inbound & Outbound M&A · GCC · Cross-Border Structuring · Dubai

Cross-Border M&A
UAE & GCC

The UAE is one of the most active cross-border M&A markets in the world — a hub for inbound acquisitions from Asia, Europe, and the Americas, and a launchpad for GCC-based businesses expanding globally. We advise on both sides of the transaction: buyers acquiring into the GCC and UAE-based businesses making acquisitions abroad.

In brief: Cross-border M&A is a transaction where buyer and seller sit in different jurisdictions. More than half of GCC M&A activity is cross-border. Corvian Advisory manages these deals end to end from Dubai: target or buyer identification, dual-jurisdiction due diligence, valuation, structuring across free zone, mainland, DIFC and ADGM frameworks, and negotiation through to close. Principal-led by a CFA Charterholder and Chartered Accountant. Fees agreed upfront.

CFA Charterholder Chartered Accountant Cross-Border M&A Buy-Side & Sell-Side Fixed Fee Big 4 Trained
Credentials CFA InstituteICAI Chartered AccountantCross-Border M&ABig 4 TrainedUAE Free Zone StructuringGCC Regulatory

Cross-Border M&A Advisory
From Dubai to the World

Cross-border deals are more complex than domestic transactions — different regulatory frameworks, foreign ownership rules, currency considerations, and cultural dynamics all need to be managed alongside the core deal process. We help clients navigate all of this from a single point of contact in Dubai.

Inbound M&A
Inbound Acquisitions into UAE & GCC

For international buyers seeking to acquire businesses in the UAE or wider GCC, we provide buy-side advisory covering target identification, commercial and financial due diligence, deal structuring, and negotiation support. We understand GCC regulatory frameworks and free zone structures — and how to navigate them efficiently.

Target identification and screening in UAE & GCC
Commercial and financial due diligence
UAE mainland vs. free zone structuring
Foreign ownership rules and regulatory navigation
Valuation and deal negotiation support
Outbound M&A
Outbound Acquisitions from UAE & GCC

UAE and GCC-based businesses are increasingly active acquirers in global markets — driven by diversification strategies, sector consolidation, and the ambition of regional champions to build international platforms. We support GCC buyers making acquisitions in Asia, Africa, Europe, and beyond.

International target identification and outreach
Buy-side financial and commercial due diligence
Cross-border deal structuring and tax efficiency
Valuation and bid strategy
SPA negotiation and transaction execution support
Deal Structuring
Cross-Border Transaction Structuring

The structure of a cross-border transaction matters enormously — for tax efficiency, regulatory compliance, ease of future exits, and practical operability. We work with legal advisors to design transaction structures that work across multiple jurisdictions and align with the commercial objectives of both parties.

Holding company and SPV structuring
UAE free zone and DIFC structuring for M&A
Cross-border tax efficient deal structures
Earn-out and deferred consideration structures
Post-acquisition integration planning
Sell-Side
Cross-Border Sell-Side Advisory

For UAE and GCC business owners seeking to sell to international buyers, we provide sell-side advisory — preparing the business for sale, running a structured process to attract qualified international buyers, and managing the negotiation through to completion. We position GCC businesses effectively for global acquirers.

Vendor due diligence and sale preparation
Information memorandum for international buyers
International buyer identification and approach
Competitive sale process management
Negotiation and SPA completion support

The Corridors We Work
Where GCC Capital Meets Global Markets

Every corridor has its own regulatory logic, negotiation culture, and tax landscape. These are the routes where we have direct transaction experience and established counterparty networks.

UAE ↔ India

The busiest corridor in the region. Indian promoters acquiring UAE platforms for market access and tax efficiency, and GCC capital acquiring Indian operating businesses. Key issues: FEMA regulations, ODI/FDI routes, withholding tax on exit, and India-UAE DTAA planning.

UAE ↔ Saudi Arabia

Vision 2030 has made KSA the largest M&A growth story in the GCC. UAE businesses acquiring or being acquired for Saudi market entry. Key issues: MISA licensing, Saudization requirements, RHQ rules, and zakat versus corporate tax treatment.

GCC ↔ Europe & UK

GCC family offices and corporates acquiring European industrial, healthcare, and consumer assets; European strategics buying GCC distribution and service platforms. Key issues: FDI screening regimes, works councils, and EU withholding tax structures.

UAE ↔ Singapore & SEA

Two hub economies with complementary reach. Singapore holding structures meeting UAE free zone structures in technology, logistics, and trading deals. Key issues: substance requirements, IRAS and FTA positions, and dual-hub group design.

UAE ↔ East Asia

Japanese, Chinese, and Korean strategics entering the GCC through acquisition rather than greenfield. Long diligence cycles, consensus-driven negotiation, and high documentation standards. We manage process expectations on both sides.

USA ↔ GCC

US strategics and funds with GCC mandates, and GCC groups acquiring US technology and services businesses. Key issues: CFIUS considerations, Delaware versus ADGM holding structures, and US tax reporting for GCC ownership.

The Cross-Border Process
Six Stages, Two Jurisdictions, One Advisor

The core M&A process is the same as a domestic deal. What changes is that every workstream runs in two legal, tax, and cultural systems at once. Our role is to hold the whole picture together.

01
Strategy & Structuring Design

Define the acquisition or exit thesis, screen the corridor-specific regulatory constraints early, and design the outline holding and acquisition structure before approaching counterparties. Structure decided late is money lost.

02
Target or Buyer Identification

Proprietary search across both markets: on-market and off-market targets for buyers, or qualified strategic and financial buyers for sellers. Outreach is confidential and NDA-first in both jurisdictions.

03
Valuation & Offer Strategy

Independent valuation reflecting both markets: currency of cash flows, country risk premia, comparable multiples in each jurisdiction, and the price impact of deal structure, escrow, and earn-out mechanics.

04
Dual-Jurisdiction Due Diligence

Financial, tax, and commercial diligence covering both sides: quality of earnings, UAE Corporate Tax and VAT position, EOSB liabilities, counterparty-jurisdiction tax exposures, transfer pricing, and repatriation mechanics.

05
Negotiation & Documentation

Heads of terms, SPA negotiation support alongside counsel in each jurisdiction, warranty and indemnity architecture, conditions precedent covering both regulators, and completion mechanics including funds flow across borders.

06
Close & Integration

Regulatory approvals, completion accounts, and the first hundred days: entity consolidation, banking and treasury setup, visa and payroll migration, and reporting integration across the combined group.

What Changes When a Deal
Crosses a Border

A useful summary for boards and investment committees weighing a cross-border acquisition against a domestic alternative.

DimensionDomestic UAE DealCross-Border Deal
Typical timeline4 to 9 months6 to 12 months; longer in regulated sectors
Regulatory approvalsSingle regime (mainland, free zone, DIFC or ADGM)Two or more regimes, plus FDI screening in many markets
Tax workstreamUAE CT (9%), VAT, free zone qualificationBoth jurisdictions plus treaty relief, withholding taxes, and exit taxes
Currency riskMinimal (AED pegged to USD)Deal currency vs cash flow currency mismatch; hedging often required
Due diligenceOne accounting and legal frameworkTwo frameworks; reconciliation of standards (IFRS, local GAAP)
Negotiation dynamicsShared market normsDifferent expectations on pace, exclusivity, and documentation depth
Integration complexityModerateHigh: entities, treasury, payroll, and reporting across borders
Advisory scopeStandard mandateTypically 20-40% larger scope across dual workstreams
Key Takeaways
  • Cross-border transactions account for more than half of GCC M&A activity, and the UAE is the region's natural deal hub.
  • Structure is the single biggest value lever: free zone, mainland, DIFC, ADGM, and treaty decisions should be made before heads of terms, not after.
  • Expect 6 to 12 months from mandate to close and plan diligence across both jurisdictions from day one.
  • Currency, repatriation, and withholding tax mechanics belong in the financial model, not in a post-signing surprise.
  • One senior advisor coordinating both sides prevents the most common failure mode: workstreams that never talk to each other.

Cross-Border M&A UAE
Frequently Asked Questions

What is cross-border M&A and why is the UAE a hub for it?+
Cross-border M&A is a transaction where the buyer and seller are based in different jurisdictions. The UAE is one of the world's most active cross-border M&A hubs because of its position between Asia, Africa, and Europe, its free zone and DIFC/ADGM legal frameworks, 100% foreign ownership in most sectors, and a deep base of family offices and sovereign-linked investors. Cross-border transactions represent more than half of all GCC M&A activity.
Can a foreign company buy 100% of a UAE business?+
In most sectors, yes. Since the 2021 amendments to the UAE Commercial Companies Law, 100% foreign ownership is permitted for most mainland activities, and free zone entities have always allowed full foreign ownership. Certain strategic sectors retain restrictions or licensing requirements. Whether you acquire a free zone entity, a mainland LLC, or a DIFC/ADGM holding company has different regulatory, tax, and operational implications that should be assessed before signing.
How long does a cross-border acquisition involving the UAE take?+
A typical cross-border mid-market transaction involving the UAE takes 6 to 12 months from mandate to close. The additional time versus a domestic deal comes from dual-jurisdiction due diligence, regulatory approvals on both sides, currency and repatriation planning, and documentation governed by more than one legal system. Regulated sectors such as healthcare and financial services extend the timeline further.
What are the biggest risks in cross-border GCC deals?+
The most common failure points: incomplete understanding of local regulatory and ownership rules, the gap between reported and normalised earnings in owner-managed GCC businesses, currency mismatch between deal currency and cash flow currency, tax leakage from poor structuring, and cultural misalignment in negotiation and integration. Every one of these is manageable when advisory support is engaged early rather than after heads of terms.
Which corridors does Corvian Advisory cover?+
The most active corridors we advise on are UAE-India, UAE-Saudi Arabia, GCC-Europe (including the UK and Germany), UAE-Singapore, and UAE-East Asia (Japan, China, South Korea), plus inbound interest from the United States. We work alongside local counsel and tax advisors in the counterparty jurisdiction and coordinate the full process from Dubai.
How much does cross-border M&A advisory cost?+
Cross-border advisory follows the same transparent structure as our domestic mandates: a monthly retainer during the search or preparation phase plus a success fee on completion, agreed in a signed engagement letter before work begins. Standalone components such as cross-border financial due diligence or an independent valuation are available at fixed fees. Cross-border scopes are typically 20-40% larger than domestic equivalents because of the dual-jurisdiction workstreams.

Cross-Border M&A UAE
Buy-Side. Sell-Side. Fixed Fee.