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Home advantage: why winning M&A/PE deal teams work with platforms from their home turf

June 18, 2026

Football managers talk endlessly about home advantage: familiar ground, supportive crowds, conditions that favour the home side. In European M&A and private equity, a similar concept is now reshaping technology choices – digital sovereignty and the preference for platforms built and governed on “home turf”.

For deal platforms, this is no longer a theoretical debate. Tightening rules on data and AI mean that where and by whom a platform is operated can materially change the risk profile of a transaction.

From EU policy to practical procurement criteria

Digital sovereignty has shifted from political slogan to practical procurement criterion. European institutions have spent years signalling that control over cloud, data and AI is now a strategic objective. Today, that stance is turning into concrete expectations for businesses and their advisers.

Advisory firms increasingly describe digital sovereignty as a strategic capability. Boards, GCs and DPOs are expected to know where data sits, which laws apply and how vendor choices affect jurisdictional exposure. For real estate, M&A and PE teams, whose data rooms often hold the most sensitive information a company will ever share, this creates clear pressure to favour platforms that are native to the European regulatory environment.

Why EU‑hosted is not the same as EU‑sovereign

A common misconception is that hosting data “in an EU region” of a global hyperscaler automatically delivers digital sovereignty. In reality, many experts now warn that EU hosting alone does not guarantee full protection.

Three questions matter in practice:

  • Who ultimately owns and controls the platform, and which jurisdictions can demand access to data?
  • Where do operations and support actually run, and do any of those processes cross borders outside of Europe?
  • How easy is it to exit and move data if regulations, strategy or partners change?

If a provider is controlled by a non‑European parent, foreign laws such as the US CLOUD Act can still apply even when data physically resides inside the EU. Operational processes such as telemetry or backup may quietly move data out of Europe. Proprietary architectures and high egress fees can make it difficult to switch providers, even when regulation or risk appetite demands it.

By contrast, truly sovereign European platforms are designed around:

  • European legal entities, infrastructure and contracts, placing them squarely under European law
  • Deployment models that keep sensitive workloads in European data centres
  • Auditable security frameworks that avoid hidden dependencies on non‑European third party services

Hometurf platforms in the deal cycle

The case for hometurf platforms becomes particularly strong at three points in the deal lifecycle.

1. Preparing and running the data room

During sell‑side preparation and buy‑side due diligence, deal platforms often process:

  • Extensive personal and confidential data (employee, customer and supplier information)
  • Highly sensitive commercial information (pricing, IP, trade secrets)
  • Regulated data (financial institution portfolios, energy assets, health‑related datasets)

A sovereign European deal platform offers:

  • Clear GDPR alignment and data‑processing agreements under EU law
  • Encryption, finegrained access control and audit trails
  • Confidence that live customer data will not be used to train the platform’s AI systems or unwillingly leave the secure deal environment.

This reduces the need for complex contractual carve‑outs or additional mitigation measures during live deals.

2. Deploying AI in due diligence

AI‑driven document review and analysis is now central to due diligence. It accelerates reviews, surfaces risks earlier and helps teams cover more ground in less time. But when these capabilities are delivered by non‑sovereign vendors or bolted on with APIs, they can also introduce new risk.

Typical concerns include:

  • Data leak risks if models run outside the EU or general-purpose public AI tools (such as ChatGPT, Claude, etc.) are integrated via APIs
  • Limited transparency on how prompts, content and outputs are stored or reused
  • Difficulty evidencing compliance with emerging AI and sector guidelines

Using AI that is built in-house on European home turf, fully integrated into a sovereign data room, keeps sensitive documents and insights inside a familiar legal and operational context. This reduces risk while preserving the speed and productivity that AI brings.

3. Postdeal archiving and disputes

Once the deal is done, attention moves on. But the archive of the data room remains critical:

  • For future exits or refinancings
  • For regulatory reviews
  • For potential disputes or claims

Storing this archive with a non‑EU provider can embed long‑term jurisdictional and access risk. By contrast, a sovereign archive solution can provide a clear long-term advantage if the transaction is ever revisited.

Practical questions for platform selection

For deal teams, CFOs and CIOs reviewing their transaction infrastructure, a home‑turf mindset can be translated into practical questions:

  • Is the provider an EU‑based company, bound exclusively by EU law?
  • Where are servers and support operations located?
  • Are all (if any) sub-processors for storing or processing the data located in Europe?
  • Can the provider confirm it has never disclosed European-hosted customer data to non‑European authorities?

Home advantage as a long‑term edge

In football, home advantage does not guarantee success, but it can give teams a measurable edge on familiar ground. In the same way, working with advanced AI-powered platforms from your home turf can compound benefits across years of deals:

  • Less time negotiating and re‑negotiating data‑processing and sovereignty carve‑outs
  • Fewer surprises when regulations tighten or guidance changes
  • Stronger trust from LPs, regulators and counterparties who recognise European governance standards
  • A closer partnership with technology providers whose interests are aligned with European strategic autonomy

In an environment where market access, regulation and technology are increasingly intertwined, that home advantage is becoming hard to ignore.

Make home advantage part of your deal strategy

Just as football teams perform best on familiar ground, deal teams benefit from platforms built and governed within their regulatory environment. See what to look for when evaluating providers.

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