Title: How To Value Your Business
1How To Value Your Business
- Presented to the 43rd Annual Business
Administration Conference - NRMCA
- October 24,2001
- New Orleans
2How To Value Your Business
- What is Value?
- Everything is worth what its purchaser will
pay for it - Publius, 1st century BC
- Appraised Value
- Market Value
- These are two different numbers - affected by
timing and the nature of the transaction - The house next door story
3How To Value Your Business
- Why are Businesses Valued?
- Financing
- Internal sale
- Divorce/Stockholder suit
- Estate-planning purposes
- Tax purposes
- Property/Estate taxes
- Loss of management
- Buy-sell agreements
- ESOP
- Condemnation
4How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods
- Multiples of Earnings Before Interest, Taxes,
Depreciation Amortization (EBITDA) - Discounted Free Cash Flow Method
- Cost to Recreate (asset value approach)
- Price per annual production yard
5How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Multiples of
EBITDA - EBITDA is defined as Earnings Before Interest,
Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization - It defines, in any single period, the amount of
cash the business generates to pay principle,
interest, taxes, and capital expenditures - It is the single most reliable tool used today to
measure the performance of a business
6How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Multiples of
EBITDA - What period?
- Last 12 months?
- Average of the last three years?
- Two ways to examine EBITDA
- Actual
- Recast
- The results will be in a high-low range
7How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Multiples of
EBITDA - Recast EBITDA will translate into these values
- 3.5 to 5 times for ready mixed and concrete
products operations - 5 to 9 times aggregate operations (maybe more?)
8How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Discounted Free
Cash Flow Method - Defined as the future cash flows earned by the
Companys assets, discounted to present value - Or, the cash that is left after all expenses to
service principle and interest.
9How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Discounted Free
Cash Flow Method - Approaches
- Free Cash Flows - defined as earnings before
interest and after taxes (EBIAT), plus
depreciation, less capital expenditures and
changes in working capital. - This is calculated over ten years...or as long as
possible - Add the terminal value at the end of the
projection period
10How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Discounted Free
Cash Flow Method - Results are then discounted
- A discount rate range is applied, based on
current market conditions (inflation rates are
key) - The net numbers based on these discount rates
establishes a range of values called the Weighted
Average Cost of Capital (WACC) - This determines the total enterprise value -
after deducting debt, it established the equity
value to the owners.
11How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Cost to
Recreate (asset value approach) - Examine price of both new and used equipment, in
place - cost of land/cost of erection
- working capital
- permitting period (and impact of opportunity
cost) - start-up losses
- Compare to actual market value of existing assets
- Not looking at appraised values (orderly/forced
liquidation approaches.) Looking strictly at the
market
12How To Value Your Business
- Appraised Valuation Methods Price Per
Production Yard - All methods combined lead to a range of
appraised value - This is compared to a rule of thumb value
approach price per annual production yard - This may range from 25 - 50
13How To Value Your Business
- Market Valuation Methods
- Always just a variation on appraisal methods, but
with a much more subjective approach - Variables include
- the Purchasers perception of the market
- the financial condition of the Seller
- cost of greenfielding as an option to a purchase
14How To Value Your Business
- Market Valuation Methods
- Multiples of EBITDA - may be affected by
- Fleet age and condition
- Condition of plants and other equipment
- Recent history/trends of Company revenues and
earnings - Recent market history/trends
- Local market outlook
15How To Value Your Business
- Market Valuation Methods
- Discounted Free Cash Flow Method - may be
affected in the same ways - Value can be manipulated by the Purchaser
- steeper discount rates for calculated Net Present
Value - Accelerating plant/truck demand schedules,
affecting capex rates - Adjustments in projected market growth
16How To Value Your Business
17How To Value Your Business
18How To Value Your Business
19How To Value Your Business
20How To Value Your Business
- Market Valuation Methods
- Cost to Recreate (asset value approach) -
- May only be considered as an option to
greenfielding, in the case of a new market
entrant - Often simply a comparative value analysis as a
bolt-on acquisition in the case of an existing
market player
21How To Value Your Business
- Market Valuation Methods
- Other Approaches
- Platform Opportunity - If the Seller is a larger
player in the market, value can vary widely if
the Purchaser is motivated enough to seek an
entry into the market (remember the house next
door story) - Bolt-On Acquisition - If that is the perception,
value is usually less than a Platform Opportunity
22How To Value Your Business
- Summary
- There is a difference between appraisal and
market value methods - Each has its own purpose and place in
establishing how a business is valued - The two approaches do not always produce the same
value equation, particularly in changing market
conditions