When does a private-equity fund need broker due diligence?
Most PE funds run KYC on the GP and the target. The intermediaries — placement agents, broker-dealers, local consultants — slip through. Here is when that is fine, when it is dangerous, and where to start.
PE diligence is a layered cake. The fund of funds checks the GP. The GP checks the target. Everyone checks the deal team. Almost nobody checks the brokers, placement agents, or local consultants standing between the fund and a foreign government-affiliated investor.
Three scenarios where broker DD is non-optional
- A placement agent introduces a sovereign-wealth-fund LP. The agent is the FCPA exposure surface.
- A target in an emerging market depends on a single sales agent for >30% revenue and that agent deals with government-procurement.
- A deal involves a "consultant" whose role is vague, whose UBO is opaque, or whose fee structure is unusual.
What good broker DD looks like
A defensible broker DD pass: full UBO cross-verification against company-house registries, OFAC + UN + EU + UK + World Bank sanctions screen for every named UBO and director, ICIJ Offshore Leaks check, prior FCPA / DPA history, adverse-media (GDELT) and litigation (CourtListener + BAILII + CanLII + AustLII) sweep, and a deterministic FCPA red-flag verdict.
That is exactly what DueVestor Type D delivers — typically in under an hour, for $40 per subject, with a clear PROCEED / PROCEED_WITH_NOTES / DENIED at the top of the report so the IC can move.