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N A V I G A T I O N

Benefits Offered by a CVA

Business valuation professionals provide many intangible benefits to their clients. Some of the benefits provided include:

Determination of Value
Selecting the most appropriate approach to determine value based on the purpose of the business valuation engagement.

Professional Affiliations
Many reputable business valuators are members of professional organizations.

Confidentiality
Engaging business valuation services assures that the details of your business remain confidential.

Litigation Support
Minimizing the potential risk of litigation is a primary objective. In the event litigation is unavoidable, the valuator can assist as an expert witness or recommend another qualified expert.

Third-Party Objectivity
Avoiding problems that can arise from questions of independence and objectivity is critical to ensuring a credible valuation. Compliance with Standards of Professional Practice provides assurance that the business valuator will treat your engagement consistently and without bias.

Specialized Training
Business valuation services are provided by professionals who are specifically trained through specialized educational programs, including those provided by NACVA.

Common Questions about Business Valuations

Can I Use Rules of Thumb to Value My Company?

Industry rules of thumb used by business owners to determine value usually give misleading results. Rules of thumb are formulas based on industry averages of companies sold using their sales price compared to either annual sales revenues or profits. As such, the actual sales price of an individual company is either higher or lower than the average. Seldom does a company's value fall right on the average. Furthermore, the value determination for a company up for sale will be different than the value determination made for purposes of divorce or for an estate tax calculation. These distinctions relate to the purpose of a valuation, which affects methodology and certain assumptions made by the valuator. All these distinctions impact value determination.

How Much Time Does It Take To Prepare a Business Valuation?

To perform a through analysis, make a qualified value determination, and prepare a proper report communicating the results of he business valuation easily requires 40 to 60 hours of work. Peculiar circumstances such as difficulties obtaining needed information, a unique and/or specialized industry, or a litigious situation requiring special care and preparation will often require more time to prepare the valuation.

Is Book Value a Good Indicator of Company Value?

Book value is almost never a good indicator of the value of a business, and usually much lower than the true value. Book value generally reflects only the cost of the company's tangible assets net of depreciation and liabilities, ignoring appreciated asset values and company intangible values such as goodwill.

Do Values of Privately Held Companies Correlate with Values of Public Companies?

Values of privately held enterprises are generally not comparable to publicly held enterprises for at least two distinct reasons:

  1. There is not a ready market of investors to buy stock in a private company. As such, in the value determination the valuator oftentimes deducts a "lack of Marketability Discount" from the company value determined to adjust for the cost required to take the company public and/or sell the business through a broker.
  2. Most privately held companies are much smaller in size than public companies. This increases the risk of ownership, or investment, in the enterprise. Consequently, the expected rates of return used by an investor, or prospective owner, to value a privately held business are typically higher than returns anticipated with ownership in a public company.

Can I really Expect to Receive Much Value out of My Company When I Retire?

Historically, owners of private companies have looked to cash flows and tangible assets for company value, with little consideration given to the goodwill of the enterprise. Consequently, at retirement they get less value than what otherwise might be possible, by selling only the tangible assets of the business or simply liquidating inventories and closing their doors. The fact of the matter is, much of America's wealth is tied up in privately owned companies and is attributable to business goodwill. These observations are further supported in a study of privately held companies conducted by Robert Avery and Michael Rendall at Cornell University and referenced by the WallStreet Journal in June 1996, with the following quote:

"The greatest transfer of wealth in history will occur in this country over the next decade; an estimated $10 trillion is expected to change hands, and much of this wealth is tied up in family business stock."




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John R. Janicek, CPA, P.C.
115 Shivel Drive
Hendersonville, TN 37075

Phone: 615.822.8315
Fax: 615.822.4959

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