The Definitive Business Valuation Methods Cheat Sheet

Introduction: Understanding Business Valuation

Business valuation is the process of determining the economic value of a business or company. It provides a quantitative assessment of what a business is worth, which is essential for transactions such as mergers and acquisitions, sales, investments, tax reporting, litigation, and strategic planning. This cheat sheet covers the most widely used valuation methodologies, their applications, strengths, weaknesses, and the formulas needed to apply them correctly.

Core Valuation Principles

PrincipleDescription
Fair Market ValuePrice at which a business would change hands between willing parties, with neither under compulsion and both having knowledge of relevant facts
Going ConcernAssumption that the business will continue to operate into the foreseeable future
Future BenefitsValue is based on expectations of future benefits, not just historical performance
Risk-Return RelationshipHigher risk investments require higher returns to compensate investors
Time Value of MoneyA dollar today is worth more than a dollar in the future

Income-Based Valuation Methods

Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Method

Definition: Values a business based on projected future cash flows discounted back to present value using an appropriate discount rate.

Formula:

Enterprise Value = Σ [FCF_t / (1 + r)^t] + [Terminal Value / (1 + r)^n]

Where:

  • FCF_t = Free Cash Flow in period t
  • r = Discount rate (WACC)
  • n = Number of periods in the projection
  • Terminal Value = FCF_n+1 / (r – g)
  • g = Long-term growth rate

Key Components:

  • Free Cash Flow Projection: Typically 5-10 years of detailed projections
  • Discount Rate: Usually the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)
  • Terminal Value: Represents all cash flows beyond the projection period
  • Sensitivity Analysis: Testing results with different assumptions

Best Used For:

  • Companies with predictable cash flows
  • Growth companies not yet at steady state
  • Businesses with significant expected changes in future performance

Strengths:

  • Theoretically sound approach focusing on business fundamentals
  • Accounts for time value of money and risk
  • Can incorporate changing growth rates and margins over time

Limitations:

  • Highly sensitive to assumptions and inputs
  • Complex and time-consuming
  • Challenging for businesses with volatile cash flows

Capitalization of Earnings Method

Definition: Converts a single representative earnings figure into value by dividing by a capitalization rate.

Formula:

Business Value = Net Income / Cap Rate

Where:

  • Cap Rate = Discount Rate – Long-term Growth Rate

Best Used For:

  • Stable, mature businesses with consistent earnings
  • Limited growth expectations
  • Simple business models

Strengths:

  • Simple to calculate and understand
  • Works well for businesses with stable operations
  • Requires less detailed forecasting than DCF

Limitations:

  • Cannot account for changing growth rates or margins
  • Oversimplifies complex businesses
  • Heavily dependent on selecting appropriate capitalization rate

Market-Based Valuation Methods

Comparable Company Analysis (Trading Multiples)

Definition: Values a business based on how similar publicly traded companies are valued in the market.

Common Multiples:

MultipleFormulaBest For
P/E (Price to Earnings)Market Cap / Net IncomeProfitable companies, comparing within same industry
EV/EBITDAEnterprise Value / EBITDACapital-intensive businesses, comparing companies with different debt levels
EV/RevenueEnterprise Value / RevenueHigh-growth or pre-profit companies
EV/EBITEnterprise Value / EBITComparing companies with different depreciation policies
P/B (Price to Book)Market Cap / Book ValueAsset-heavy businesses, financial institutions

Best Used For:

  • Companies in industries with many comparable public companies
  • Benchmark valuation check
  • Initial valuation range estimation

Strengths:

  • Market-based, reflecting actual investor sentiment
  • Relatively simple to calculate
  • Provides current market perspective

Limitations:

  • May be affected by market sentiment and bubbles
  • Requires truly comparable companies
  • Limited by availability of public company data
  • May not account for company-specific factors

Precedent Transaction Analysis

Definition: Values a business based on prices paid in recent acquisitions of similar companies.

Common Multiples: Same as Comparable Company Analysis, but based on actual transaction values rather than trading values.

Additional Considerations:

  • Control premiums (typically 20-40% above trading values)
  • Strategic synergies
  • Transaction timing and market conditions

Best Used For:

  • M&A scenarios
  • Majority stake valuations
  • Industry-specific valuation norms

Strengths:

  • Reflects actual transaction values rather than theoretical values
  • Incorporates control premiums and strategic considerations
  • Provides real-world valuation benchmarks

Limitations:

  • Limited transaction data may be available
  • May include synergies specific to particular buyers
  • Transaction details often not fully disclosed
  • Market conditions may have changed since precedent transactions

Asset-Based Valuation Methods

Book Value Method

Definition: Values a business based on its net asset value (assets minus liabilities) from the balance sheet.

Formula:

Book Value = Total Assets - Total Liabilities

Adjusted Formula:

Adjusted Book Value = Adjusted Assets - Adjusted Liabilities

Best Used For:

  • Asset-intensive businesses
  • Companies with significant tangible assets
  • Liquidation scenarios
  • Holding companies

Strengths:

  • Simple to calculate from financial statements
  • Provides clear asset-based floor value
  • Objective with minimal assumptions

Limitations:

  • Ignores intangible value and goodwill
  • Based on historical costs, not current market values
  • Does not consider future earning potential

Adjusted Net Asset Method

Definition: Modified version of book value that adjusts asset and liability values to reflect current market values.

Common Adjustments:

  • Real estate at current market value
  • Inventory at net realizable value
  • Equipment at replacement cost less depreciation
  • Identification of unrecorded assets and liabilities
  • Adjustment for obsolete inventory or uncollectible receivables

Best Used For:

  • Real estate holding companies
  • Manufacturing companies with significant fixed assets
  • Investment companies
  • Businesses being valued for liquidation

Strengths:

  • More accurate reflection of current asset values than book value
  • Accounts for unrecorded assets and liabilities
  • Provides clearer picture of liquidation value

Limitations:

  • Requires significant effort to appraise individual assets
  • Still doesn’t capture full going-concern value
  • May miss intangible value (brand, customer relationships, etc.)

Hybrid and Industry-Specific Methods

Excess Earnings Method

Definition: Combination of asset and income approaches that values tangible assets at adjusted book value plus a premium for intangible value.

Formula:

Business Value = Adjusted Net Asset Value + (Excess Earnings × Multiple)

Where:

  • Excess Earnings = Actual Earnings – (Adjusted Net Asset Value × Expected Return Rate)

Best Used For:

  • Small to medium-sized businesses
  • Professional practices
  • Businesses with significant identifiable intangible assets

Strengths:

  • Considers both asset values and earning power
  • Useful for businesses where both assets and earnings contribute to value
  • Can separate tangible and intangible components of value

Limitations:

  • Relies on many subjective assumptions
  • Requires appropriate benchmark rate of return
  • Historical rather than forward-looking

Rule of Thumb Methods

Definition: Industry-specific valuation shortcuts based on observed practices in specific sectors.

Common Examples:

  • Retail: 0.3x-1.0x annual revenue + inventory
  • Professional services: 0.5x-1.5x annual revenue
  • Manufacturing: 4x-6x EBITDA + inventory
  • SaaS businesses: 4x-10x ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue)
  • Medical practices: 0.6x-0.8x annual revenue
  • Insurance agencies: 1.5x-2.0x annual commission revenue

Best Used For:

  • Quick estimates
  • Very small businesses
  • Sanity checks on other methods
  • Highly standardized industry segments

Strengths:

  • Simple and quick to apply
  • Based on industry practices
  • Easily understood by industry participants

Limitations:

  • Oversimplified
  • May not account for company-specific factors
  • Often outdated or too general
  • Limited theoretical foundation

Discount Rates & Capitalization Rates

Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)

Definition: Average rate that a company is expected to pay to finance its assets, weighted by the proportion of debt and equity in its capital structure.

Formula:

WACC = (E/V × Re) + (D/V × Rd × (1-T))

Where:

  • E = Market value of equity
  • D = Market value of debt
  • V = E + D
  • Re = Cost of equity
  • Rd = Cost of debt
  • T = Corporate tax rate

Cost of Equity Calculation Methods

Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)

Formula:

Re = Rf + β × (Rm - Rf)

Where:

  • Rf = Risk-free rate (typically 10-year government bond yield)
  • β = Beta (measure of stock volatility relative to the market)
  • Rm = Expected market return
  • (Rm – Rf) = Market risk premium (typically 4-7%)

Build-Up Method

Formula:

Re = Rf + ERP + SP + IRP + CSRP

Where:

  • Rf = Risk-free rate
  • ERP = Equity risk premium
  • SP = Size premium
  • IRP = Industry risk premium
  • CSRP = Company-specific risk premium

Discount Rate Adjustments for Private Companies

FactorTypical Premium Range
Size premium2-6% additional premium
Lack of marketability10-35% discount
Lack of control (minority interest)15-30% discount
Key person dependence5-15% additional premium
Customer concentration5-15% additional premium
Limited access to capital2-5% additional premium

Valuation Adjustments and Discounts

Adjustment TypeTypical RangeApplication Point
Control premium20-40%Applied to equity value derived from trading multiples
Minority interest discount15-30%Applied to pro-rata share of enterprise value
Lack of marketability discount (DLOM)10-35%Applied after minority discount (if applicable)
Key person discount5-20%Applied to enterprise value
Excess/non-operating assetsVariesAdded to enterprise value

Financial Metrics for Valuation

Earnings Measurements

MetricFormulaBest Uses
Net IncomeRevenue – All ExpensesP/E ratio, statutory valuations
EBITRevenue – COGS – Operating ExpensesOperating performance, EV/EBIT multiple
EBITDAEBIT + Depreciation + AmortizationEV/EBITDA multiple, capital-intensive businesses
Adjusted EBITDAEBITDA ± Non-recurring itemsMore normalized measure for valuation
Seller’s Discretionary Earnings (SDE)Net Income + Owner Salary + Benefits + Non-recurring expensesSmall business valuation

Cash Flow Measurements

MetricFormulaBest Uses
Operating Cash FlowNet Income + Non-cash expenses ± Working Capital ChangesBusiness health assessment
Free Cash Flow (FCF)Operating Cash Flow – CapExDCF valuation
Unlevered Free Cash FlowEBIT(1-T) + D&A – CapEx – ΔNWCEnterprise value DCF analysis
Levered Free Cash FlowUnlevered FCF – Interest(1-T) + Net BorrowingEquity value DCF analysis

Industry-Specific Valuation Factors

Technology Companies

  • Key Metrics: ARR, MRR, CAC, LTV, Churn Rate, Growth Rate
  • Common Multiples: EV/Revenue, EV/ARR, Revenue Growth-Adjusted Multiples
  • Valuation Drivers: Growth rate, gross margins, scalability, TAM

Financial Services

  • Key Metrics: AUM, NIM, Efficiency Ratio, Risk-adjusted returns
  • Common Multiples: P/B, P/E, EV/AUM
  • Valuation Drivers: Asset quality, regulatory capital, recurring revenue

Retail

  • Key Metrics: SSS, Revenue per Sq Ft, Inventory Turnover
  • Common Multiples: EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue, P/E
  • Valuation Drivers: Brand strength, omnichannel presence, location quality

Manufacturing

  • Key Metrics: Gross Margin, ROIC, Capacity Utilization
  • Common Multiples: EV/EBITDA, EV/EBIT
  • Valuation Drivers: Automation level, product differentiation, supply chain control

Healthcare

  • Key Metrics: Patient Volume, Reimbursement Rates, EBITDARM
  • Common Multiples: EV/Revenue, EV/EBITDA, EV/Patient
  • Valuation Drivers: Regulatory compliance, payor mix, reputation

Common Valuation Mistakes and Solutions

MistakeWarning SignsSolutions
Unrealistic projectionsGrowth exceeding industry norms, hockey stick forecastsBenchmark against industry growth, use probability-weighted scenarios
Inconsistent application of multiplesCherry-picking multiples, inconsistent peer groupClearly define selection criteria, apply consistent methodology
Inappropriate discount ratesRates inconsistent with risk profile, poor justificationBuild up from risk-free rate, benchmark against industry, test sensitivity
Ignoring working capital needsFCF overstated, growth capital requirements overlookedInclude normalized working capital in projections and terminal values
Failing to normalize earningsInconsistent treatment of non-recurring itemsClear adjustments for one-time items, owner compensation, related party transactions
Overlooking post-valuation adjustmentsMissing discounts/premiums, control vs. minority confusionApply appropriate discounts and premiums for specific situation

Valuation Process Best Practices

  1. Document Purpose and Standard of Value

    • Clear statement of valuation purpose
    • Standard of value definition (FMV, investment value, etc.)
    • Valuation date specification
  2. Thorough Analysis of the Business

    • Financial performance review (3-5 years minimum)
    • Management interviews and site visits
    • Industry and competitive analysis
    • SWOT assessment
  3. Multiple Method Application

    • Apply several appropriate methods
    • Reconcile value ranges
    • Weight results based on reliability for the specific business
    • Perform sensitivity analysis
  4. Proper Documentation

    • Assumptions clearly stated
    • Data sources identified
    • Methods justified
    • Limitations addressed
    • Professional standards followed

Resources for Further Learning

Books

  • “Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies” by McKinsey & Company
  • “Investment Valuation” by Aswath Damodaran
  • “Financial Valuation: Applications and Models” by James Hitchner
  • “Business Valuation Bluebook” by Chad Simmons
  • “Valuing Small Businesses and Professional Practices” by Shannon Pratt

Online Resources

  • Damodaran Online (pages.stern.nyu.edu/~adamodar/)
  • NACVA (National Association of Certified Valuators and Analysts)
  • American Society of Appraisers (ASA)
  • Business Valuation Resources (BVR)
  • AICPA Business Valuation Resources

Professional Designations

  • CVA (Certified Valuation Analyst)
  • ABV (Accredited in Business Valuation)
  • ASA (Accredited Senior Appraiser)
  • CBA (Certified Business Appraiser)
  • CFA (Chartered Financial Analyst)

Remember: Business valuation is both an art and a science, requiring professional judgment along with technical application. The selection and weighting of methods should always reflect the specific circumstances of the business, the purpose of the valuation, and the availability of reliable data.

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