From the Inside Out.
Capital Markets & Fundraising Advisory
Financial advisory support for businesses accessing public and private capital markets — from IPO preparation and equity fundraising to debt structuring and investor-grade financial reporting.
Accessing Capital — What It Takes
Whether you are raising equity from private investors, listing on a public exchange, or accessing the debt capital markets — the quality of your financial information, the credibility of your financial story, and the robustness of your financial infrastructure determine whether you succeed and at what terms.
Institutional investors, lenders, and public market participants all apply sophisticated scrutiny to the businesses they back. A company that approaches a capital raise with incomplete financials, inconsistent reporting, or unexplained historical performance will face difficult questions, lower valuations, and often, failed processes. Preparation is everything.
Finerio prepares businesses for capital events — upgrading financial reporting, building the financial models investors expect, preparing the documentation capital markets participants require, and ensuring the financial story presented to the market is accurate, credible, and compelling.
Three Capital Pathways We Support
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Initial Public Offering (IPO) – listing on the DFM, ADX, or an international exchange. We prepare the financial reporting, historical financials, working capital report, pro-forma statements, and MD&A for the IPO prospectus.
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Private Equity & Equity Fundraising – raising capital from private equity firms, family offices, sovereign wealth funds, or strategic investors. We prepare investor-grade financial models, management presentations, and the financial narrative that supports your valuation.
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Debt Capital Markets – raising bank debt, sukuk, bonds, or other debt instruments. We prepare the financial information, covenant analysis, and lender presentations that support debt raisings and refinancings.
IPO Readiness & Advisory
Preparing a business for a public listing — assessing the gap between current financial reporting standards and listing requirements, upgrading accounting policies, preparing 3-year audited IFRS financial statements, drafting the Working Capital Report, building pro-forma financials for any acquisitions, and supporting the financial sections of the IPO prospectus.
Investor-Grade Financial Modelling
Building the financial model investors will interrogate — a fully integrated three-statement model (P&L, balance sheet, cash flow) with detailed operational drivers, multiple scenarios, sensitivity tables, and a KPI dashboard. The model must be transparent, auditable, and capable of withstanding the detailed scrutiny of sophisticated institutional investors and their advisors.
Equity Fundraising Support
Supporting businesses through private equity or strategic fundraising — preparing investor-grade financials, management presentations, and data room content; advising on valuation positioning; preparing for and supporting investor due diligence; and helping management understand and respond to the financial aspects of investor term sheets and shareholder agreements.
Debt Capital Markets & Bank Financing
Financial advisory support for debt raisings — structuring the financing, preparing the financial information package for lenders, modelling covenant headroom, advising on the financial terms of the facility, and preparing for lender due diligence. For sukuk and bond issuances, we support the financial sections of the offering document and the financial reporting required during the life of the instrument.
MD&A & Financial Narrative Preparation
The Management Discussion & Analysis (MD&A) is the section of every prospectus and annual report where management explains the financial results to investors. We draft and review the financial sections of MD&A — ensuring they are accurate, consistent with the audited financial statements, compliant with disclosure requirements, and present the business's financial story in the most compelling and credible way.
Ongoing Investor Reporting Support
After a capital raise, the reporting obligations begin. We support businesses with their ongoing investor reporting requirements — quarterly management accounts for PE investors, half-year reviewed financials for listed companies, covenant compliance certificates for lenders, and KPI disclosures — ensuring every reporting obligation is met on time and to the standard investors expect.
Independent. Integrated. In Your Corner.
What makes Finerio Deals & Advisory practice different — and why it matters for your transaction.
Financial Reporting Depth Others Lack
Our advisory team combines deal experience with deep financial reporting expertise — IFRS, accounting standards, audit methodology, and tax. This means our due diligence findings are grounded in accounting reality, our valuations are audit-defensible from day one, and our financial models are built on numbers that actually reconcile to the balance sheet. Pure deal advisors without accounting depth miss things we don't.
Truly Independent Advice
We do not earn transaction fees contingent on deals completing. Our income does not depend on a deal happening — which means our advice is genuinely independent. We will tell you when a deal does not make financial sense, when a valuation is unrealistic, or when due diligence has surfaced risks that should be deal-breakers. True independence is rare in M&A advice. It is the foundation of what we offer.
Specialist at the Right Scale
The Big 4 deliver excellent transaction services — at a cost and pace that often does not work for mid-market UAE transactions. We bring the same analytical rigour, technical standards, and quality of advice at a scale and commercial model that works for transactions between AED 10 million and AED 2 billion. Our clients get senior attention, not a team of juniors.
UAE & GCC Market Knowledge
UAE M&A, valuations, and restructuring operate in a specific regulatory, commercial, and cultural context — free zone structures, family business dynamics, UAE CT and VAT implications of deal structures, DIFC and ADGM frameworks, and the specific requirements of UAE capital markets regulators. Our practice is built on this market, not adapted from a global template.
Questions we hear from clients every week.
Plain-language answers to the most common questions about M&A, due diligence, valuations, capital markets, and restructuring advisory.
EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation, and Amortisation. It is the most widely used measure of a business's operating profitability in M&A — because it strips out the effects of financing decisions (interest), tax structures, and non-cash accounting charges (depreciation and amortisation), leaving a proxy for the cash profit generated by the core business. Most businesses in M&A transactions are valued as a multiple of EBITDA — for example, "8x EBITDA" means the buyer is paying eight times the annual operating profit of the business. The critical issue, however, is which EBITDA number is used — sellers typically present an "adjusted" or "normalised" EBITDA that excludes one-off costs and adds back non-recurring items. A key output of financial due diligence is independently verifying and challenging that normalised EBITDA figure.
Enterprise Value (EV) is the total value of the business as a whole — the price you would pay to acquire 100% of the business debt-free and cash-free. It represents the value of the underlying business operations. Equity Value is the value of the shareholders' stake in the business — i.e., what you actually pay for the shares in a transaction. The relationship is: Equity Value = Enterprise Value − Net Debt (debt minus cash). If a business has an enterprise value of AED 100 million and net debt of AED 20 million, the equity value — the price paid for the shares — is AED 80 million. Understanding this distinction is fundamental to structuring and pricing any M&A transaction correctly.
The working capital peg is the agreed "normal" level of working capital (current assets minus current liabilities) that the business needs to operate — and that the buyer expects to be in the business at completion. If the business is delivered with more working capital than the peg (a surplus), the seller receives additional consideration. If delivered with less (a shortfall), the buyer receives a price reduction. Getting the peg right — based on a thorough analysis of historical working capital seasonality and trends — is one of the most commercially significant aspects of deal structuring. A peg set too high hands the seller a windfall; too low hands it to the buyer. Disputes about working capital are among the most common post-closing conflicts in M&A, and they are almost always resolved in favour of the party with better financial analysis.
A Purchase Price Allocation (PPA) is required under IFRS 3 — Business Combinations — whenever one company acquires another. The total price paid for the acquisition must be allocated across all of the identifiable assets and liabilities of the acquired company at their fair values on the acquisition date, with any residual amount recorded as goodwill. This is not optional. If you have acquired a business and are preparing IFRS financial statements, you are required to have performed a PPA. Many UAE businesses complete acquisitions and then record everything as goodwill — which is incorrect under IFRS 3 and will be challenged by external auditors. Identified intangible assets (such as customer relationships, brand, and technology) must be separately recognised and amortised, which affects future reported profits. We perform PPAs that are technically rigorous, auditor-ready, and completed within the 12-month IFRS 3 measurement period.
The answer is almost always: earlier than you think. A UAE IPO on the DFM or ADX requires a minimum of 3 years of audited IFRS financial statements, a Working Capital Report confirming sufficient liquidity for 12–18 months post-listing, and a financial reporting infrastructure capable of meeting the ongoing obligations of a listed company. Building this from scratch typically takes 18–36 months. Businesses that begin the process 6 months before their intended listing date consistently encounter delays, discover historical accounting issues that need to be restated, and face the pressure of compressing a multi-year preparation into an unrealistic timeline. An IPO readiness assessment — understanding precisely what gaps exist between your current financial infrastructure and listing requirements — is the most valuable first step, and the earlier it is taken, the more options management has to address the findings.
Financial restructuring is a voluntary process — the company and its creditors agree to modify the terms of existing obligations (extending maturities, reducing interest rates, converting debt to equity, or partial write-offs) to give the business a sustainable capital structure and a genuine opportunity to recover. It is conducted out of court and is the preferred outcome for all parties, because it typically preserves more value than formal insolvency. Insolvency is a formal legal process — initiated when a company is unable to pay its debts as they fall due or when its liabilities exceed its assets — governed in the UAE by Federal Law No. 9 of 2016 on Insolvency (as amended). Insolvency involves court proceedings, the appointment of official administrators or trustees, and a structured realisation of assets for the benefit of creditors. Financial restructuring, when pursued early and with credible financial analysis, avoids insolvency in the majority of cases. The earlier restructuring conversations begin — ideally before covenant breaches or missed payments — the wider the range of available options and the better the outcomes for all parties.
Valuation multiples in the UAE vary significantly by sector, business quality, growth profile, and market conditions — and there is no single "right" multiple. As a general framework: high-quality recurring-revenue businesses (technology, healthcare, professional services) typically trade at EV/EBITDA multiples of 8x–15x or more. Industrial and trading businesses with stable but less differentiated cash flows typically range from 4x–8x EBITDA. Real estate and asset-heavy businesses are often valued on a net asset value (NAV) basis rather than earnings multiples. Early-stage or high-growth businesses without stable EBITDA are typically valued on revenue multiples or discounted future cash flow. UAE-specific factors — free zone structures, reliance on key-person relationships, concentration of revenue with a small number of customers, and the absence of a long track record of IFRS-compliant financial statements — can all compress multiples relative to comparable businesses in more developed markets. Our valuations are grounded in observable market data and adjusted for business-specific factors with transparent, documented reasoning.
Working on a deal or raising capital?
Whether you are buying, selling, raising funds, restructuring, or simply need an independent valuation — our Deals & Advisory team is ready to help. No obligation — just a focused conversation about your situation.
