Due Diligence on a Moroccan SME: Complete Guide for Investors and PE Funds
How to conduct rigorous due diligence on an unlisted Moroccan company: official sources, documents to obtain, financial and legal red flags. The investment team's guide.
Due diligence on a Moroccan SME has specificities that teams accustomed to European markets must anticipate. The availability of public information is more limited, accounting practices vary, and the informal economy plays a role that official documents alone do not always capture.
This guide is designed for investment teams β PE funds, family offices, corporate M&A β conducting due diligence on unlisted Moroccan companies. It covers sources to consult, documents to obtain, and red flags to watch for.
Phase 1 β Preliminary Verification (Desktop DD)
Before any significant engagement, a preliminary due diligence on public sources allows rapid qualification of the target and identification of potential deal-breakers.
Legal identity: Confirm the company's existence via its ICE (Common Business Identifier) and RC number. Check the consistency between the commercial name used and the legal name in the registry.
Legal form and capital: SARL, SA, SNC β the legal form determines filing obligations, governance, and deal structure. Very low share capital (< MAD 10,000) for a company reporting tens of millions in revenue is a point to explain.
Directors and history: Identify current legal representatives. Check if they have mandates in other companies. A director involved in many parallel structures warrants particular attention.
Sanctions and PEP screening: Cross-reference director and shareholder names against international sanctions lists (OFAC, EU, UN) and Politically Exposed Persons registers.
SYNTA-IQ centralizes these preliminary checks and presents them in a structured interface, working directly with official registries and a network of local partners who verify and enrich each data point.
Phase 2 β Financial Due Diligence
Financial due diligence on a Moroccan SME is based on analysis of filed financial statements, but also on understanding the potential gap between official accounts and economic reality.
Documents to obtain: - Complete financial statements for the last 3 to 5 fiscal years - Tax filings for the last 3 years - Bank statements for the last 12 months - Internal management dashboard (if available) - Statutory auditor reports
Key indicators to analyze: - Revenue trend: organic growth or client acquisition? - Gross margin and value-added rate: reveals cost structure - Operating income vs net income: identify recurring exceptional items - Equity and debt levels: supplier debt is often underestimated - Net cash: very positive cash can conceal under-distribution to shareholders
Morocco-specific considerations: The gap between declared and real revenue is a reality in some sectors. Cross-referencing VAT and corporate tax declarations helps verify the data. The presence of a statutory auditor (mandatory for SA, optional for SARL below threshold) and the quality of their report are important signals.
Phase 3 β Legal Due Diligence
Legal due diligence on a Moroccan SME covers three main areas.
Title and governance: Verify the exact capitalization table. Who owns what? Are there unregistered shareholder agreements, options, or dilutive instruments? Updated articles of association must reflect the exact capital situation.
Material contracts: Identify contracts at risk in the event of a change of control (change of control clauses, exclusivity agreements, distribution agreements). In Morocco, important commercial relationships often rely on verbal agreements that must be formalized before closing.
Litigation and hidden liabilities: Query the commercial court registry. Check for ongoing proceedings against the company. Unprovided social (CNSS) and tax liabilities are a classic issue with Moroccan SMEs β require up-to-date tax and social standing certificates.