Dr McDeal
What is my business worth?
Is there a “right” way to value a business? Or is it all just guesswork?
Valuation experts tie themselves
in knots when they champion the
latest “definitive” valuation technique.
What may be right for one
kind of business in a specific sector
at a particular point in§ time
may be completely wrong for
another.
Profit has for many years been
the most popular measure of
value. By applying a multiple
to a company’s sustainable
profitability, you can derive a
capital value (ie “How many
years’ profit am I willing to pay
for this target?”). In the last 10
years, the market has favoured a
broad spectrum of definitions of
profit: earnings (profit after tax),
EBIT (earnings before interest
and tax) and EBITDA (earnings
before interest, tax depreciation
and amortisation).
The preferred definition at the
moment appears to be EBIT. EBIT
multiples can range from as little
as 3.5 times for a small contracting
business to five or six times
for a successful product based
manufacturing business, to
eight or nine times for a higher
growth technology or business
services company. Applying the
multiple to EBIT gives you a “gross” valuation, out of
which you must deduct any
debt and onto which you
should add any cash on the
balance sheet.
So what factors influence the value of my company?
There is no 100 per cent
accurate valuation technique.
Large groups and private equity
houses prefer to value companies
based on cash flow over the
period of ownership or
investment. Particular industries
develop their own “back of the
envelope” valuations, which can
be quite telling. Ultimately, the
market is the only true measure.
There is a correlation between
higher multiples and businesses
with high growth, critical mass,
good customer spread and
strong trade or consumer brands.
Businesses that are smaller, heavily
dependent on an owner or a
few customers and have “lumpy”
project based fees tend to attract
lower EBIT multiples as a direct
reflection of their “riskier” profile.
So what is my business really worth then?
Conventional wisdom has it
that it’s worth whatever a
purchaser’s prepared to pay for
it. Wrong! A company is not
what a single purchaser thinks
it’s worth but what several
purchasers think, each having
the same information on the
business and fully aware that
it’s in competition with other
bidders to acquire the asset.
It’s dangerous for any
adviser to proffer a valuation
based on a business’ bare
numbers, without having a good
grasp of purchaser or investor
appetite. If there is no interest
among purchasers, the business
will not be sold and therefore
has no cash value at present.
If so, groom the business for
several years or concentrate
on income over capital. Telling
an entrepreneur close to
retirement that their business
has no current cash value is
never easy - but an unsuccessful
sale or IPO is time consuming,
distracting and costly.
OK, forget the sale, it’s a lifestyle business – then what?
A common obstacle to doing
deals arises when the owners’
perception of value rests solely
on how big a lump sum they
require to generate the same
income as they did when they
owned the business.
A relatively small business
with sales of £5m and profit
before tax of £600,000 can
generate the shareholders an
income of £500,000 each year.
However, the “market” value
of the business may be £3.3m -
reduced to £3m of “net”
proceeds after capital gains tax.
In the current low interest
rate environment, that cash may
generate income of as little as £150,000 per annum.
But the shareholders need £500,000, which means
they need to achieve a cash
value closer to £10m. Not a
chance!
If the shareholders’ focus is
on maximising income rather
than de-risking and extracting a
capital sum, they shouldn’t be
considering a sale.
How about a good old fashioned MBO valuation?
The valuation placed by a private
equity player on your business
will be derived in a very different
way to a trade buyer.
Trade purchasers will value a
company on the basis of
quantifying the synergistic or
strategic benefits of making the
acquisition and, frankly, how
badly they want to do the deal.
Financial investors have no
synergies or strategic benefits to
extract. The amount that they
can afford to pay for your
business is linked to how much
debt and equity finance your
business can afford to support
going forward.
This means that you rarely see
the variances in valuation among
competing private equity houses
as you do with competing trade
purchasers.
Some investors will gear the
business up more aggressively
than others or will be willing
to see a lower return on their
equity investment. Ultimately,
however, the potential valuation
will be capped by the strength
of your business’ cash flow and
its balance sheet. That’s not to
say that private equity investors
may not pay the highest price
for your business.
No easy answers, are there?
Valuation is an art not a science.
There is only one right answer:
let the market tell you how
much your business is worth.
But do talk to the experts
before you push the button
on a sale or IPO to avoid
disappointment. Valuation is
very subjective: beauty truly
is in the eye of the beholder -
so make sure that your business
is a stunner!
Creating a competitive
tension between buyers can
dramatically increase the value
of your business, so always
be wary of “sweetheart” deals,
where you negotiate with a
single purchaser.
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