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Glossary

Open Kimono

An informal M&A term describing the practice of providing full, unrestricted access to a company's confidential information, books, and records during due diligence or negotiations.

What Does Open Kimono Mean?

“Open kimono” is informal M&A and business jargon describing a situation where a party provides complete, transparent access to its confidential information — financial records, operational data, strategic plans, and other sensitive material — without significant restriction or redaction. The phrase implies a level of disclosure that goes beyond standard due diligence access, suggesting full transparency and the removal of informational barriers between parties.

While the term has fallen out of favour in professional settings due to cultural sensitivity concerns, the underlying concept — full information access in M&A — remains a critical aspect of deal processes.

Context in M&A

When Full Disclosure Occurs

SituationDescription
Exclusive negotiationsAfter a preferred bidder is selected, the seller may grant unrestricted data room access
Strategic partnershipsWhen two companies exploring a combination need full mutual visibility
Management buyoutsManagement already has deep knowledge; the financial sponsor receives equivalent access
RestructuringCompanies in financial distress provide full disclosure to potential acquirers or creditors
Confirmatory due diligenceAfter an indicative bid is accepted, the buyer receives full access to confirm assumptions

Information Typically Disclosed

CategoryExamples
FinancialDetailed management accounts, tax records, audit workpapers, bank statements
CommercialCustomer contracts, pricing details, pipeline data, competitive intelligence
LegalLitigation files, regulatory correspondence, disclosure schedules
OperationalCost structures, employee records, IT systems, supply chain details
StrategicBoard minutes, strategic plans, internal presentations, M&A pipeline

Information Access Levels in M&A

The level of disclosure typically escalates through the deal process:

StageAccess LevelTypical Contents
TeaserMinimalAnonymous business overview
Post-NDALimitedConfidential information memorandum, high-level financials
Phase 1 due diligenceModerateData room with organised documents, management presentations
Phase 2 / confirmatoryExtensiveFull data room access, expert sessions, site visits
Full disclosureUnrestrictedComplete access to books, records, and management

Risks of Full Disclosure

For the Disclosing Party

  • Competitive intelligence — sensitive information may be shared with a competitor posing as a buyer
  • Price erosion — full disclosure of problems can reduce the buyer’s willingness to pay
  • Employee concern — detailed employee information may cause anxiety if leaked
  • Regulatory risk — sharing certain information may create antitrust or insider trading complications

Protective Measures

  • NDA with specific restrictions — limit use of information to evaluating the transaction only
  • Clean room arrangements — sensitive competitive data reviewed only by independent advisors
  • Staged disclosure — information released progressively as the deal advances
  • Standstill provisions — prevent the recipient from using the information for hostile purposes
  • Data room controls — watermarked documents, download restrictions, activity monitoring

According to Intralinks Deal Flow Predictor data, virtual data rooms in M&A transactions typically contain 5,000 to 50,000+ documents, with the volume of disclosed information increasing significantly at each stage of the deal process.

APAC Context

Australia — full disclosure in Australian M&A follows a progressive model, with the most sensitive information (such as customer details and employee terms) disclosed only to shortlisted bidders. Clean team arrangements are common for competitor-buyer situations.

Japan — information disclosure in Japanese M&A tends to be more gradual and relationship-dependent than in Western markets. Full disclosure often requires building trust over multiple meetings, and Japanese sellers may be reluctant to provide certain information until they are confident in the buyer’s seriousness and cultural fit.

India — full disclosure in Indian transactions is particularly important given the regulatory complexity and the risk of undisclosed contingent liabilities. Buyers in Indian M&A typically insist on extensive disclosure, including tax assessments, regulatory correspondence, and related-party transaction details.

“Full transparency in M&A is a privilege, not a right — it is earned through the progression of the deal process and protected by robust confidentiality frameworks,” observes Daniel Bae, founder of Amafi. “In APAC cross-border transactions, the pace and depth of disclosure must be calibrated to local business customs and regulatory requirements.”


Managing information access in M&A across Asia Pacific? Amafi helps companies and investors structure due diligence processes with appropriate safeguards. Learn more.