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BUSINESS VALUATION THEORY AND METHODOLOGY

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Title: BUSINESS VALUATION THEORY AND METHODOLOGY


1
BUSINESS VALUATIONTHEORY AND METHODOLOGY
  • Presented by
  • Patricia Cartwright
  • Vice President
  • Hill Schwartz Spilker Keller LLC

2
BUSINESS VALUATION
  • Business Valuation is the act or process of
    determining the value of a business enterprise,
    business ownership interest, security or
    intangible asset.
  •  
  • Source American Society of Appraisers, Business
    Valuation Standards

3
BUSINESS VALUATION
  • Some of the uses for a business appraisal
  • Transaction Support (Acquisition/Divestiture/Merg
    ers)
  • Bankruptcy     
  • Strategic Alliances (Joint Ventures/Partnerships)
  • Estate, Gift and Income Tax
  • Litigation Support
  • Marital Dissolution
  • Partnership Dissolution
  • Economic Damages
  • Infringement Damages 
  • Intercompany Transactions (Transfer Pricing)

4
BUSINESS VALUATION
More uses for a business appraisal
  • Corporate Federal and State Tax
  • Mergers, Acquisitions, Divestitures
  • Corporate Reorganization
  • Delaware Corporation
  • FIRPTA
  • Ad Valorem (Tangible and Business Enterprise)
  • Employee Stock Ownership Plans
  • Financing
  • Business Enterprise Investment
  • Equity Investment
  • Debt Investment
  • Asset Based (Collateralized by specific assets)
  • Financial Accounting (FASB Standards
    Requirements)
  • Asset Impairment Analyses (Tangible and
    Intangible)
  • Purchase Price Allocation
  • Goodwill

5
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS OF VALUATION
  • The Appraisal Foundation
  • The Board of Trustees of the Appraisal
    Foundation
  • The Appraisal Standards Board
  • The Appraisal Qualifications Board
  • Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal
    Practice (USPAP)

6
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS OF VALUATION
  • American Society of Appraisers (ASA)
  • Institute of Business Appraisers
  • Canadian Institute of Chartered Business
    Valuators (CICBV)
  • ESOP Association
  • American Institute of Certified Public
    Accountants (AICPA)
  • Association for Investment Management and
    Research (AIMR)

7
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS OF VALUATION
  • Internal Revenue Service
  • Revenue Rulings
  • (59-60, 68-609, 77-2-87, 83-120, 93-12)
  • Department of Labor
  • International Standards

8
GETTING STARTED
  • What do we need to know to get started?
  • Description of the business, Business ownership
    interest, or security to be valued.
  • If an interest, then a description of the
    specific ownership characteristics
  • Size of interest relative to total.
  • Degree of marketability (e.g. public, private,
    and related matters)
  • The date of value.
  • The standard of value.
  • The premise of value.
  • The purpose and intended use of the appraisal.

9
STANDARD OF VALUE
  • Without a careful definition of value, valuation
    conclusions will have little meaning.
  • Fair Market Value
  • Investment Value
  • Intrinsic Value or Fundamental Value
  • Fair Value

10
PREMISE OF VALUE
  • Value as a going concern
  • Value as an assemblage of assets
  • Value in an orderly disposition
  • Value in a forced liquidation

11
THE ENVIRONMENT OF VALUE
  • The appraiser shall gather, analyze, and adjust
    the relevant information necessary to perform a
    valuation appropriate to the scope of work. Such
    information shall include
  •  
  • Characteristics of the business, business
    ownership interest, or security to be valued,
    including rights, privileges, conditions,
    quantity, factors affecting control, and
    agreements restricting sale or transfer,
  • The nature, history and outlook of the business,
  • Historical financial information for the
    business,
  • The nature and conditions of relevant industries
    that have an impact on the business,

12
THE ENVIRONMENT OF VALUE
  • Economic factors affecting the business,
  • Capital markets providing information for
    example, available rates of return on alternative
    investments, relevant public stock market
    information, and relevant merger and acquisition
    information,
  • Prior transactions involving the subject
    business, an interest in the subject business, or
    the securities of the subject business, and
  • All other information relevant to the particular
    circumstances and characteristics of the subject
    business.
  •  
  •  
  • Source ASA Business Valuation Standards

13
APPROACH TO VALUE
  • There are three broad approaches to value
  • The Market Approach
  • The Cost Approach
  • The Income Approach

14
APPROACH TO VALUE
  • The three basic approaches are not discrete from
    each other, but interrelated.
  • The market approach correlates market comparative
    value observations with information from the
    subjects income statements (earnings measures)
    and balance sheets (asset measures).
  • The cost approach develops replacement cost
    relying on the assets utility. It reflects
    physical, functional and economic obsolescence
    based on the assets condition, comparative cost
    to operate, and income-generating capacity.
  • The income approach relies on discount and
    capitalization rates determined based on market
    information. Moreover, in developing projected
    income, the asset costs must be considered when
    projecting fixed asset investment or
    depreciation.

15
THE MARKET APPROACH
  • The recent sale of a similar asset is the best
    indication of the subject assets value. A major
    factor in applying the market approach is to
    collect reliable market data on the sale of
    similar or comparative assets. Comparative sales
    are analyzed and adjusted to reflect differences
    between the comparative and the subject.
  • Strength
  • Weakness

16
THE GUIDLINE COMPANY METHOD
  • This method is most useful in developing fair
    market value. The method is based on making
    comparisons between the subject company and
    active market transactions in or of a guideline
    company in whole or in part.

17
THE GUIDLINE COMPANY METHOD
  • CRITERIA FOR GUIDELINE COMPANY SELECTIONS
  • In analyzing whether or not a particular public
    company should be considered an appropriate
    guideline or which of the guideline companies are
    most comparative there are several important
    factors
  •  
  • Capital Structure Products
  • Credit status Markets
  • Depth of management Earnings
  • Experience of workforce Dividend-paying
    capacity
  • Competitive environment Position of company in
    industry
  • Stage of business development Amount and
    condition of underlying assets

18
THE GUIDELINE COMPANY METHOD
  • VALUE MEASURES
  • A value measure is a multiple computed by
    dividing the market value of the guideline
    companys total invested capital (MVIC)all
    equity and interest bearing debtby financial
    statement information. Value measures are
    computed on an operating basis, with nonoperating
    items removed.
  • Some income statement and balance sheet variables
    used to develop value measures for total invested
    capital
  • Net sales
  • Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT)
  • Earnings before depreciation, amortization,
    interest and taxes (EBDITA)
  • Debt free after tax cash flow (DFATCF)
  • Book value
  • Tangible book value
  • Adjusted book value
  • Adjusted tangible book value

19
THE COST APPROACH
  • The cost approach is based on the economic
    principle of substitution. That is, a willing
    buyer will pay no more to a willing seller than
    the cost associated with replacing the subject
    asset with an asset of comparable functional
    utility.
  • Replacement Cost
  • Reproduction Cost
  • Historic Cost

20
THE COST APPROACH
  • Replacement Cost New
  • ( - ) Physical Deterioration
  • ( - ) External or Economic Obsolescence
  • ( - ) Functional or Technological
    Obsolescence
  • ( ) Fair Market Value
  • Strength
  • Weakness

21
THE INCOME APPROACH
  • When an income-producing asset is purchased, what
    is actually being bought is a stream of
    prospective economic income (typically after tax
    cash flow). The income approach is founded on
    the economic principle of anticipation or
    expectation. As the name of the economic
    principle implies, the investor anticipates the
    expected economic income.

22
THE INCOME APPROACH
  • There are two principles methods within the
    income approach
  • The Discounted Cash Flow Method
  • The Capitalization of Cash Flow Method
  • In either case the income approach becomes a
    two-step process
  • Project future after tax cash flow as of the date
    of value.
  • Discount the projected after tax cash flow at a
    risk-appropriate discount rate and sum.

23
THE INCOME APPROACH
  • The following accounting equation presents the
    fundamental reality of a business balance sheet
    the value of a business total assets is
    equivalent to the value of its total debt and
    equity.
  • CA FA IIA UIA CD LTD E

24
THE INCOME APPROACH
  • BUSINESS ENTERPRISE VALUE
  • By deducting current debt from both sides of the
    balance sheet we arrive at the following
    equation
  • NWC FA IIA UIA LTD E
  • CA Current Assets
  • FA Fixed Assets
  • IIA Identified Intangible Assets
  • UIA Unidentified Intangible Assets
  • CD Current Debt
  • LTD Long-Term Debt
  • E Equity
  • NWC Net Working Capital (CA CD)

25
THE INCOME APPROACH
  • CALCULATING AFTER TAX CASH FLOW
  • To develop business enterprise value or total
    invested capital, the projected after-tax cash
    flow must be that available to both debt and
    equity investors

26
THE INCOME APPROACHDEBT-FREE AFTER TAX CASH FLOW
  • Revenues
  • Cost of Revenues
  • Gross Profit
  • Operating Expenses
  • Operating Profit
  • Depreciation Amortization
  • Tangible Asset Depreciation
  • Intangible Asset Amortization
  • Total Depreciation Amortization
  • Net Income Before Taxes
  • Federal State Income Taxes
  • Net Income After Taxes
  • Add Back
  • Depreciation Amortization
  • Deduct
  • Changes in Working Capital
  • Sustaining Capital Expenditures
  • Debt-Free After-Tax Cash Flow
  • Excludes Interest on Long-Term Debt

27
THE INCOME APPROACHWEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF
CAPITAL
  • The appropriate discount rate for use with
    debt-free after tax cash flow would be the
    weighted average cost of capital. The weighted
    average cost of capital (WACC) is the cost
    associated with the investments overall capital
    structure--the weighted average of the costs of
    all its financing sources.

28
THE INCOME APPROACHWEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF
CAPITAL
  • WACC (Ke x We) (Kd 1 t x Wd)
  • WACC Weighted average cost of capital
  • Ke Cost of equity
  • Kd Cost of debt
  • We of equity in the capital structure
  • Wd of debt in the capital structure
  • t Effective income tax rate

29
THE INCOME APPROACHWEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF
CAPITAL
  • Data Sources in Developing a WACC
  • The data you will need to develop a WACC will be
    the cost of equity (an equity discount rate), the
    cost of debt, the appropriate capital structure
    for the business being valued and the business
    effective income tax rate.

30
THE INCOME APPROACHWEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF
CAPITAL
  • Equity Discount Rate
  • The most common method of developing a equity
    discount rate is the Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • Ke Kf ß(Km - Kf ) ?
  • Ke Cost of equity
  • Kf Risk-free rate of return
  • ? Beta (Systematic Risk)
  • Km Market Return on Equity
  • ? Alpha (Unsystematic Risk)

31
THE INCOME APPROACHWEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF
CAPITAL
  • Cost of Debt
  • The appropriate measure of the cost of debt would
    be the typical yield to maturity available in the
    market on debt securities with a risk profile
    similar to the subject company.
  • Capital Structure
  • The appropriate capital structure will depend on
    the goal of the valuation analysis.

32
VENTURE CAPITAL RETURNS
  • In his text on the valuation of early stage
    technologies1, Richard Razgaitis provides some
    general guidelines on the risk-adjusted returns
    required by technology investors. These
    estimates are based on the authors own extensive
    experience. Definitions of the various risk
    levels vary, but generally follow the following
    short descriptions
  •  
  • 1 Early-Stage Technologies Valuation and
    Pricing, Richard Razgaitis, 1999.

33
VENTURE CAPITAL RETURNS
  • Expected venture capital returns for investments
    in companies in various stages of development1.
  • 1 QED Venture Capitalist Report

34
THE INCOME APPROACHDISCOUNTED CASH FLOW METHOD
  • A discounted cash flow model incorporates the
    quantity, variability, timing, and duration of
    debt-free after-tax cash flows attributable to
    the refinery. The model has a finite time span
    for the analysis, usually five to ten years,
    during which each forecasted annual debt-free
    after-tax cash flow is discounted to its
    date-of-value equivalent and summed. The value
    at the end of the models term, the reversion, is
    also forecast and discounted to its date-of-value
    equivalent. The sum of the discounted annual
    debt-free after-tax cash flows and the discounted
    reversion is the refinerys business enterprise
    value on the date of value.

35
THE INCOME APPROACHDISCOUNTED CASH FLOW METHOD
  • Present Value Interest Factor
  • Each debt-free after tax cash flow is discounted
    to its present value through multiplication by a
    present value interest factor which incorporates
    the WACC
  • PVIF 1/ (1 Kw) (t 0.5)
  • Where,
  • PVIF present value interest factor
  • Kw weighted average cost of capital
  • t individual year of cash flow

36
THE INCOME APPROACHDISCOUNTED CASH FLOW METHOD
  • Mid-Year Convention
  • The exponent of the denominator in the foregoing
    formula(t 0.5)is termed a mid-year
    convention. Its purpose is to better reflect the
    fact that cash flows are received continuously
    throughout the year and not at the end of the
    year. The mid-year convention assumes that cash
    flows are received in the middle of each year of
    the forecast.

37
THE INCOME APPROACHDISCOUNTED CASH FLOW METHOD
  • The Reversion
  • While the cash flows are discretely forecast over
    a finite time period, the refinery will typically
    have value at the end of that term. This value
    is called the reversion and is calculated using
    the Gordon Model
  • Vt CF(t 1) / (Kw G)
  • Where,
  • Vt value at the end of the models term
  • CF(t 1) cash flow in the year following the
    end of the models term
  • Kw weighted average cost of capital
  • G projected long-term growth rate
  • t final year of the model

38
SAMPLE DCF
39
THE INCOME APPROACHCAPITALIZATION OF CASH FLOW
METHOD
  • Capitalizing, for which a capitalization rate is
    used, is a process applied to normalized annual
    after-tax cash flow to convert that after-tax
    cash flow into an estimate of value. The
    capitalization of cash flow method, then,
    involves two steps
  • Estimating a normalized annual after-tax cash
    flow
  • Applying an appropriate capitalization rate.

40
THE INCOME APPROACHCAPITALIZATION OF CASH FLOW
METHOD
  • Normalized after-tax cash flow reflects the
    true cash-flow generating capacity of the
    investment uninfluenced by extraordinary,
    unnecessary or nonrecurring factors.
    Furthermore, an average of all necessary expenses
    at the projected revenue level must be reflected
    in the calculation of normalized after-tax cash
    flow.
  • If growth is expected from the base level of
    normalized after-tax cash flow, that expected
    growth must be reflected in the capitalization
    rate or denominator of the capitalization rate
  • C Kw G
  • Where,
  • C Capitalization rate
  • Kw Weighted Average Cost of Capital
  • G Expected annual compound growth rate of
    projected normalized after-tax cash flow being
    capitalized

41
SAMPLE CASE
  • NewTechCo
  • Pro Forma Income Statements
  • (000s)
  • Year Ending
  • 31-Dec-03 31-Dec-04 31-Dec-05 31-Dec-06 31-Dec
    -07 31-Dec-08 31-Dec-09 31-Dec-10
  • Sales 5,160 7,740 11,610 17,415 26,123 39,1
    84 58,776 88,163
  • Cost of Sales 3,939 5,121 6,657 8,654 11,250 14,62
    5 19,013 24,717
  • RD 1,032 1,548 2,322 3,483 5,225 7,837 11,755 1
    7,633
  • Gross Profit 189 1, 071 2,631 5,278 9,648 16,722
    28,008 45,814
  • Operating Exps.
  • Dep. Amort. 510 663 862 1,120 1,457 1,894 2,462
    3,200
  • S, G A 374 486 632 822 1,068 1,389 1,805 2,347
  • Other Expense 25 34 46 62 83 112 151 204
  • Total Operating Exps. 909 1,183 1,540 2,004 2,608
    3,394 4,418 5,751
  • NIBT lt720gt lt112gt 1,092 3,274 7,040 13,327 23,589
    40,063
  • Tax Expense 284 44 431 1,293 2,781 5,264 9,318 15,
    825
  • NIAT lt436gt lt68gt 660 1,981 4,259 8,063 14,2
    72 24,238

42
SAMPLE CASE
  • NewTechCo
  • Discount Cash Flow Model
  • (000s)
  • Year Ending
  • 31-Dec-03 31-Dec-04 31-Dec-05 31-Dec-06 31-Dec-
    07 31-Dec-08 31-Dec-09 31-Dec-10
  • NIAT lt436gt lt68gt 660 1,981 4,259 8,063 14,2
    72 24,238
  • Add Back
  • Depreciation Amort. 510 663 862 1,120 1,457 1,89
    4 2,462 3,200
  • Deduct
  • Increases to Wkg Cap. 32 516 774 1,161 1,742 2,612
    3,918 5,878
  • Capital Expenditures 510 873 1,172 1,580 2,157 2,9
    34 4,032 5,550
  • Debt-Free ATCF lt468gt lt794gt lt424gt 360 1,818 4,
    411 8,783 16,010
  • PVIF .8839 .6905 .5394 .4214 .3292 .2572 .2009 .
    1570
  • PVATCFs lt413gt lt548gt lt229gt 152 598 1,134 1,765 2,5
    13
  • Sum of PVATCFs 4,973
  • Reversion 11,470
  • Business Enterprise Value 16,443

43
BUSINESS VALUATIONTHEORY AND METHODOLOGY
  • Presented by
  • Patricia Cartwright
  • Vice President
  • Hill Schwartz Spilker Keller LLC
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