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Business Valuations


How Companies are Valued

 

Individuals, businesses and the financial community value companies in a variety of ways.  Three significant approaches include:

  1. The Relative Value Approach

    With these methods, analysts determine whether a company is overvalued or undervalued by comparing its current Price/Earnings Ratio to one or more of the following indicators:

      a.  the past P/E multiple of similar companies;
      b.  certain financial ratios;
      c.  earnings and dividend growth rates.

    For example, according to this approach, if a company with a relatively higher P/E Ratio has a lower-than-average ROE, the company is potentially overvalued.

  2. The Asset Valuation Approach

    This method assumes that the value of a business is simply the book value of its assets (sometimes adjusted for replacement cost).  According to this approach, if the market price of a company is higher than it's book value, the company is potentially overvalued.

  3. The Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Approach

    In this approach, the value of the company is measured by estimating the expected future cash flows, and then "discounting" those future flows by the desired rate of return in order to determine the "present value" of the future cash stream.

The accounting-based indicators (e.g., earnings per share, return on investment and return on equity) used in the relative value and asset valuation approaches may have serious limitations:

  • They are influenced by arbitrary but equally acceptable subjective accounting conventions (such as LIFO vs. FIFO inventory accounting and various depreciation methods).
  • They do not take into account the following factors:
  1. various levels of risk (both business and financial) in different companies;
  2. the working capital and fixed capital investment needed for projected sales growth;
  3. dividend policy;
  4. the time value of money, where a dollar received today is worth more than a dollar received in the future because today's dollar can be invested to earn a return in the interim.

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True economic value is better measured by more objective net cash flows.  Valuation focuses on the risk-adjusted discounted stream of future cash flows.  

The DCF approach measures the value of a company by estimating the expected future cash flows, and then “discounting” those future cash flows by the buyer’s required rate of return in order to determine their present value. 

Two important aspects of DCF analysis include:

  • How an appropriate discount rate is determined; and

  • How the value beyond the short-term forecast period (“residual value”) is determined.

The discount rate must be such that it will reflect the relative levels of business and financial risk.  An appropriate discount rate can be derived from two factors:  the “risk-free” rate of return (as with government securities) and some premium for investing in the risk of a business venture.  Individuals who purchase businesses that have a high potential for success will usually look for opportunities with a minimum of 6% to 8% premium over risk free investments.  Why?  Because they are usually borrowing money at risk-free rates plus 2% or 3%.  The spread between their cost of money and required rate of return then becomes very small.

Residual value can be estimated in a variety of ways.  For example, one might consider what the potential sale price for the business would be at the end of the forecast period, and discount that sale price back to its present value.  The attached analysis uses the perpetuity method for estimating residual value.  It assumes that the company will continue to generate a steady cash flow in perpetuity.  The value of that cash flow is simply the cash flow divided by the required rate of return, the discount rate mentioned above.  That value, which materializes at the end of the forecast period, is then discounted back to present value to determine its worth today.

The value of the business, then, is the sum of the present values of the net cash flows in the forecast period plus the present value of the residual value at the end of the forecast period.

The Business Plan Store uses the discounted cash flow approach to business valuation.

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Following is a valuation of XYZ Company (client name not shown) that was prepared by The Business Plan Store:

ASSUMPTIONS
  Risk-free interest rate 5.00%
  Risk premium 11.00%
    Discount rate 16.00%
CASH FLOW FORECAST 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Sales $395,315 $461,244 $470,469 $479,878 $489,476
Pre-tax income 47,907 74,949 78,312 80,292 82,289
Income taxes 16,767 26,232 27,409 28,102 28,801
Net income 31,139 48,717 50,903 52,190 53,488
Plus:  Depreciation 22,354 22,354 22,354 22,354 22,354
Less: Increase in working capital 9,388 888 906 924 942
  Net Cash Flow $ 44,105 $ 70,183 $ 72,351 $ 73,620 $ 74,900
PRESENT VALUE OF CASH FLOWS
  2003 $  38,021
  2004 52,157
  2005 46,352
  2006 40,660
  2007 35,661
212,850
Present Value of Residual Value:
  Perpetuity Net Cash Flow (NCF) $ 74,900 
  Discount Rate 16.00%
  Future Value of Perpetuity NCF $468,125
  Present Value of Perpetuity NCF 222,880
Value of XYZ Company $435,730

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The Business Plan Store can help you value a company or business that you are planning to buy or sell.  For more information, contact us today!

 

 

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Suite 300
Harleysville, PA  19438
Call Us:  215-256-0663

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