How to Sell Your Business - Baker Tilly 050907

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Simon MacGovern Realising the value of your business

description

How to sell your business, expert advice on valuing your business and how, when, who to sell you business to.

Transcript of How to Sell Your Business - Baker Tilly 050907

Page 1: How to Sell Your Business - Baker Tilly 050907

Simon MacGovern

Realising the value of your business

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Baker Tilly

• A leading professional services firm• Client base from OMB to PLC• Ranked 7th in the UK by fee income• 260 partners, almost 2,000 staff across 28 UK offices• A strong regional network with major offices in all key cities

throughout the UK• Represented internationally through our membership of

Baker Tilly International – 8th largest international alliance of accountancy firms

• Core services are: Audit, Corporate Finance, Restructuring & Recovery and Tax.

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WHERE IS THE VALUE?

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Theoretical Value

Multiple of turnoverMultiple of earnings

EBITEBITDAP/E

Net AssetsDiscounted cash flowIndustry-specific measures

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Worked Example (1)

ABC LimitedTurnover £15mEarnings before interest and tax £1mLong term debt £250,000Surplus cash £500,000

Illustrative EV/EBIT multiple 6x

Enterprise Value: 6 x £1m = £6mPlus cash +£500,000Less debt -£250,000Equity value £6.25m

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Worked Example (2)

ABC LimitedTurnover £15mEarnings before interest and tax £1mLong term debt £250,000Surplus cash £500,000

Illustrative turnover/EBIT multiple 0.5x

Enterprise Value: 0.5 x £15m = £7.5mPlus cash +£500,000Less debt -£250,000Equity value £7.75m

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Valuation (continued)

So why the difference?£6.25m vs. £7.75m

Value depends on your perspective…

Example (1): Standalone investment?Example (2): Bolt-on to existing business?

Simon MacGovern
This is a basic example to illustrate why different buyers may employ different valuation methods. The stand-alone example uses an EBIT multiple as it is assumed that the business will continue to earn similar profits in future - and profits are what are being bought.The bolt-on example assumes that the purchaser can impose its own gross margins / cost structure - hence a turnover multiple may be how they choose to value the business.
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Valuation (continued)

“The true value of a business is what someone is prepared to pay for it”

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What actually drives value?

Profit? Yes, but also…

Customer baseChannels to marketIntellectual property/know-howKey individualsReputationThe right place at the right time

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Case study

Specialist design/manufacturing company

Turnover £1.8mEmployees 6Historic net assets £19k

Price paid £7-9m

Why?

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Case study (1)

Significant strategic value to the eventual buyer (based in Australia). For them the business provides…

Access to a rapidly growing segment of the marketClient base in a particularly affluent industryMarket leading productsProtected by key IP assetsUniquely talented management (design expertise)

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Valuation - conclusion

Theoretical valuation is interesting, but may have limited meaning in a ‘real’ transaction situation.

The key to the value of a business lies in its value drivers. Realising this value depends on how the business is sold, when and to whom…

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WHEN TO SELL?WHEN TO PREPARE?

(There is a difference!)

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Timing of sale

Timing can be driven by any number of factors…

Personal motivation (retirement, ill-health, financial needs, diminishing fulfilment)Condition of the overall marketFinancial performance of your businessLevel of transactional activity in your industry

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Timing of sale – market conditions

Market confidenceStock market levelsInterest ratesAvailability of debt / equity funding

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Timing of sale – business performance

Can price expectations be met?SeasonalityWorking capital positionNew contracts about to be secured?When is your year end?

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Timing of sale – deal activity

Is your industry flavour of the month?Appetite from Venture Capital, for example, can drive pricing upwards – herd mentalityIs your industry consolidating?Is regulatory change driving deal activity?

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Timing – Preparation

The key to getting your business to market in the right condition and at the right time is early preparation

Adequate time for groomingTax planningMarket testing/researchEngaging appropriate advisersFuture plans?

In some cases this may need to start several years in advance of the final transaction

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WHO WILL BUY?

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Buyers

Broad categories of buyer include:

CorporateTrade buyersStrategic buyers

FinancialMBO / MBIInstitutional

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Buyers

The most suitable type of buyer will depend the circumstances…

MBO can work if there is a willing (and capable) management team and if funding can be sourced

A strategic buyer may provide a greater chance of achieving a premium price

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CONCLUSION

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Conclusion

Consider your route to exit well in advance

This will allow you to:Prepare the business for saleGet the timing rightUnderstand what drives the valueIdentify who will buy the business…

Thereby maximising value

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The tax implications of selling your business

John Kingsley

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Taper Relief

• 10% CGT is the “holy grail”

• Trading company

• Unlisted or officer/employee or 5% of votes

• Non-trading company

• Officer/employee and <10% votes

• 75% taper relief after two years

• Rules changed on 6 April 2000

• Don’t assume: check your status!

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The Charge to Tax on Sale

• But is CGT the only tax payable?

• Some specific sale circumstances can lead to some or all of the sale proceeds being charged to income tax.

• Anti-avoidance provisions

• Always seek HM Revenue & Customs clearance(s)

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Consideration for the Sale

• Many different forms:

• Immediate payment

• Payment in instalments – no deduction for delay

• Contingencies – no allowance

• Unascertainable – but still has to be valued

• Earn-outs – no different from above

• Try to avoid receiving deferred consideration payable in cash

• Tax liability on value not yet received

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Consideration for the Sale

• Paper for paper exchanges

• No immediate tax liability

• Swap shares for shares

• New holding treated as acquired on the same date and at the same value as the original holding

• Swap shares for loan notes

• Must be held for at least six months

• Are they qualifying corporate bonds?

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CGT More Than 10%?

• Shares owned less than two years?

• Swap shares for shares or non-QCBs

• Shares became business assets in 2000?

• Time-apportionment of gain• Cannot ever get down to 10%

• Cannot reset clock by passing to spouse or trust

• Shares not business assets?

• Currently 30% CGT, minimum 24% after 2007

• Pre-sale dividend?

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CGT Less Than 10%?

• Many planning arrangements no longer available, but bespoke planning might be possible

• Generally can still use:

• Payments to pension scheme

• Non-resident planning• NR for more than 5 years

• NR for less in suitable country using DTA

• Offshore trusts for non-doms

• Planning required, well in advance

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QUESTIONS?