Valuation of Business
Valuation of Business
Valuation of Business
CHAPTER 1
EARNING PER SHARE
1. INTRODUCTION
This Accounting Standard is mandatory for all companies. However, disclosure of
diluted earnings per share(both including and excluding extra-ordinary item is not
mandatory for Small and Medium Sized Companies, as defined in the Notification.
Such companies are however encouraged to make these disclosures.
Earnings per share (EPS) is a company's net income (typically over the trailing 12
months) divided by its number of shares outstanding. EPS comes in two varieties, basic
and diluted. Basic EPS includes only actual outstanding shares of a company's stock,
while diluted EPS represents all potential stock that could be outstanding with current
stock option grants and the like. Diluted EPS is the more "conservative" number.
The Earning Per Share can be calculated as:EPS = (Total Company Earnings) / (Shares Outstanding)
1.1 DEFINITIONS
For the purpose of this standard, the following terms are used with the meanings
specified:
A financial instrument is any contract that gives rise to both a financial asset of one
enterprise and a financial liability or equity of another enterprise.
Share warrants or options are financial instruments that give the holder the right to
acquire equity shares.
Fair value is the amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability
settled, between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arms length transaction.
Equity shares participate in the net profit for the period only after preference
shares. An enterprise may have more than one class of equity shares. Equity shares
of the same class have the same rights to receive dividends.
A financial liability is any liability that is a contractual obligation to deliver cash or
another financial asset to another enterprise or to exchange financial instruments
with another enterprise under conditions that are potentially unfavourable.
1.2 OBJECTIVES
The objective of standard is to prescribe principles for the determination and
presentation of earnings per share which will improve comparison of performance
among different enterprises for the same period and among different accounting periods
for the same enterprises. The focus of this standard is on the denominator of the
earnings per share calculation. Even though earnings per share data has limitations
because of different accounting policies used for determining earnings, a consistently
determined denominator enhances the quality of financial reporting.
1.3 SCOPE
This Standard should be applied by all companies. However, a Small and Medium
Sized Company, as defined in the Notification, may not disclose diluted earnings per
share(both including and excluding extraordinary items).
In consolidated financial statements, the information required by this Statement
should be presented on the basis of consolidated accounting Standard (AS)21,
Consolidated Financial Statements, specifies the requirements relating to consolidated
financial statements. This statement should be applied in accounting for borrowing
costs.
In case of a parent(holding enterprise), users of financial statements are usually
concerned with, a need to be informed about, the results of operations of both the
enterprise itself as well as of the group as a whole. Accordingly, in the case of such
enterprises, this Standard requires the presentation of earnings per share information on
the basis of consolidated financial statements as well as individual financial statements
of the parent. In consolidated financial statements, such information is presented on the
basis of consolidated information.
1.4 ADVANTAGES
EPS is very easily to compute its value and comparing with the previous period in
performance.
EPS its help in measuring performance of the company by bringing the sign
indicators of company to continues with business.
EPS it considering the time factor by taking the current time in measuring
performance in relation to the extracted data.
1.5 DISADVANTAGES
EPS yields growth percentages that can be misleading or meaningless when based
on a small base or negative earnings from a prior period.
Although company management love to boast that they have increased EPS, its
worth remembering that earnings should increasethis is exactly what an investor
is looking for. Even placed in a savings account, an investors cash would earn more
each year due to compound interest (admittedly not much more these days).
EPS takes no account of a companys debt position and financial leverage, factors
that a discerning investor needs to be aware of.
EPS can be distorted by mergers and acquisitions. (For examples, regardless of the
actual value created, a deal will be earnings accretive if the acquirer's price-toearnings ratio is greater than the target's price-to-earnings ratio, including the
acquisition premium).
1. INTRODUCTION
ACCOUNTING Standard(AS)22, Accounting for Taxes on Income, issued by the
Council of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, comes into effect in respect
of accounting periods commencing on or after 1-4-2001. It is mandatory in nature for:
a) All the accounting periods commencing on or after 01-04-2001 in respect of the
following:
The Guidance note on Accounting for Taxes on Income, issued by the Institute of
Chartered Accountants of India in 1991, stands withdrawn from 1-4-2001.
1.1 DEFINITIONS
For the purpose of this statement, the following terms are used with the meanings
specified:
Accounting income (loss) is the net profit or loss for a period, as reported in the
statement of profit and loss, before deducting income tax expense or adding
income tax saving.
Taxable income (tax saving) is the aggregate of current tax and deferred tax
charged or credited to the statement of profit and loss for the period.
Timing differences are the differences between taxable income and accounting
income for a period that originate in on period and are capable of reversal in one or
more subsequent periods.
Permanent differences are the differences between taxable income and accounting
income for a period that originate in one period and do not reverse subsequently.
Unabsorbed depreciation and carry forward of losses which can be set-off against
future taxable income are also considered as timing differences and result in
deferred tax assets, subject to consideration of prudence.
1.2 SCOPE
This standard should be applied by companies. However, a Small and Medium Sized
Company, as defined in the notification, may not disclose diluted earnings per
share(both including and excluding extraordinary items).
In consolidated financial statements, the information required by this statement
should be presented on the basis of consolidated accounting Standard (AS) 21,
Consolidated Financial Statements specifies the requirements relating to consolidated
financial statements. This statement should be applied in accounting for borrowing
costs.
In case of a parent (holding enterprise), users of financial statements are usually
concerned with, and need to be informed about, the results of operations of both the
enterprises, this standard requires the presentation of earnings per share information on
the basis of consolidated financial statements as well as individual financial statements
of the parent. In consolidated financial statements, such information is presented on the
basis of consolidated information.
1.3
TAXABLE INCOME
There are various reasons for the above, which change the tax base itself. These causes
are:
a) Difference in the method of computation: The Income Tax Act provides specific
method of computation of income. The instances are:
i.
ii.
iii.
Allowance for depreciation based on Block of Assets carried for tax purpose and
on book value for account purpose.
iv.
The variation in the method and the rate of depreciation for two purposes.
b) Disallowance of expenses charged to Profit and Loss Account, as per the provisions
of the tax law. The instances are:
i.
ii.
iii.
c) Items deemed to be taxable income, but not treated as income for accounting
purpose.
d) Income exempted from tax but credited to Profit and Loss Account.
e) Deductions for tax purpose, out of profits but not considered as expenses for
accounts purpose.
f) Special tax applicable e.g. Minimum Alternate Tax.
g) Tax charged on Presumptive basis disregarding accounting profit.
h) Varying rate of tax for specific income e.g. for long term capital gains, lottery
winnings.
All these issues result in variation between Book profit and taxable income.
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VALUATION OF BUSISNESS
CHAPTER 3
1. INTRODUCTION
BUSINESS:
The etymology of business refers to the state of being busy, in the context of the
individual as well as the community or society. In other words, to be busy is to be doing
commercially viable and profitable work.
In economics, business is the social science of managing people to organize and
maintain collective productivity toward accomplishing particular creative and
productive goals, usually to generate profit.
The term business has at least three usages, depending on the scope|- the general
usage(above), the singular usage to refer to a particular company or corporations, and
the generalized usage to refer to a particular market sector, such as the record
business, the computer business, or the business community the community of
suppliers of goods and services.
VALUATION:
The dictionary meaning of Valuation is The act or process of assessing value or
price. Business valuation is the act or process of assessing value or price of financial
asset liability. Financial valuation involves valuation of assets as well as valuation of the
complete business.
BUSINESS VALUATION:
A business valuation determines the value of a business enterprise or ownership
interest. A valuation estimates the economic benefits that arises from combining a group
of physical assets with a group of intangible assets of the business as a going concern.
When valuation is done with the purpose of mergers or purchase, it estimates the price
that prospective informed buyers and sellers would negotiate at arms length for an
entire business or a partial equity interest. The methods used for the purpose usually
depend upon purpose.
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Financial and intangible assets and liabilities such as contracts, and intellectual
property.
ii.
Businesses.
iii.
accounting rules, standards, regulations and corporate governance practice. This has
been brought about sweeping changes to their traditional roles and requires them to
acquire new skills. One such area is business valuation.
Skills required from consultant/ professional accountant.
a) Understand of the concept and purpose of professional valuation within the
accounting profession.
b) Knowledge of taxation aspects-tax on sale, gains, creating tax saving entities.
c) Knowledge of Accounting standards related to business combination, intangible
assets, employee options and financial instruments.
d) Understanding of employee performance measurement criteria when valuation is
for stock options.
e) Awareness of issues impacting clients and ability to provide advice and direction
to respond to these issues.
Selection of consultant:
While selecting the consultant the organization should follow the procedures if any for
engagement of external consultant, applicable to the organization. Although, there might
be variations depending on need and purpose, the usual steps taken would be.
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i.
Determine whether the consultant has the competence and experience to perform the
engagement.
ii.
Determine whether the consultant has a conflict of interest with the organization.
Explore the situations or relationships which might give rise to conflict of interest. A
conflict could arise if the consultant has a relationship with a member of the
governing body or related to the interested third party. Be aware of other potential
conflicts of interest that may distract, or undermine, the work to be done.
iii.
Determine if the consultant has sufficient resources to perform the work in the time
frame specified.
iv.
v.
Determine the criteria that will be used to measure the consultant work and
document those criteria in an agreement with the consultant.
vi.
vii.
Since the consultant will have access to business information, some of which will be
confidential, the agreement should include a confidentiality clause.
viii.
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WORKING PAPERS.
The normal professional principles with respect to working papers are to be applied for
business valuations too. The consultant should ensure that he receives a letter of
representation and provide an engagement letter.
The working papers must enable a knowledge third party to understand the results of
valuation and estimates effects on business valuation .
II.
VALUATION REPORT.
The contents of the report should include the FOLLOWING:
1. Description of valuation engagement
a. Name of the client.
b. Engagement.
2.
3.
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III.
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II.
III.
neither takes into account the time value of money adequately. At the same time it is a
reflection of the current view of the market and hence is considered as a useful rule of
thumb, providing reasonableness checks to valuations arrived at from other approaches.
Accordingly, one may have to review a series of comparable transactions to determine a
range of appropriate capitalization factors to value a company as per this methodology.
IV.
V.
LIQUIDATION VALUE:
Liquidation value uses the value of the assets at liquidation. Liabilities are deducted
from the liquidation value of the assets to determine the liquidation value of the
business. Liquidation value can be used to determine the bare bottom benchmark value.
VI.
CAPITALIZATION METHODS:
This method calculates a businesss value by discounting the future business profits or
dividends flowing to the entitys owners, which is derived from future commercial
profits. There are two methods:
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DIVIDEND CAPITALIZATION:
Since most closely held companies do not pay dividends, when using dividend
capitalization consultants first determine dividend paying capacity of a business.
Dividend paying capacity depends on net income and on cash flow of the business.
To determine dividend paying capacity, near future capital requirements , expansion
plans, debt repayment, operation cushion, contractual requirements, past dividend
paying history of a business should be studied. After analysing these factors, per
cent of average net income and of average cash flow that can be used for the
repayment of dividends can be estimated. The dividend yield can be determined by
analysing comparable companies.
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4. COST OF VALUATION
The factors that influence the cost of a valuation are:
As an example, a valuation prepared for estate planning with a limited scope report will
cost significantly less than a valuation prepared for a high net worth divorce case that
requires a full scope report and expert testimony in a court proceedings.
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5.
BUSINESS
VALUATION
METHODS
AND
DIFFERENT
PRODUCTION RESULTS
Is it possible to use the income business valuation methods and arrive at different
results? Yes indeed! Consider two prospective business buyers doing the income
projections and assessing the risk of owning a given business.
Each buyer will likely have a different perception of the risk involved, hence their
capitalization and discount rates will differ. Also, the two buyers may have different
plans for the business, which will affect how they project the income stream.
Thus, even if they use the same valuation methods the resulting value conclusions may
be quite different. Put another way, the two buyers apply the so-called investment
value standard to determine the business worth. They measure the business value
differently, based on their unique ownership or investment objectives.
This flexibility of measuring the business worth to match ones objectives is one of the
greatest strengths of the income valuation approach.
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6.
KEY CONCEPTS
The following are some key concepts you will need to understand when valuing a
business.
Owners who work in their business are entitled to a fair salary for their work, just
as anyone else is. This is the concept of a fair salary for owner - the amount you'd
pay someone else to do the hands-on work you'd do. This amount includes
superannuation.
Keep in mind that fair salary is what you'd be willing to pay someone else to do
your job. It doesn't include additional amounts or an inflated salary you might be
willing to pay yourself.
For example, imagine you're considering buying a business for $100,000 and
the annual net profit is $70,000. You discover that this figure hasn't yet had a fair
salary for owner deducted which, given the hours you'd need to work on the
business, is $65,000. The net profit after deducting fair salary for owner is $5,000 the return you could expect if you put your $100,000 in a bank.
SUPER PROFIT:
Super profit is the excess a business might return you after you've taken out fair
salary for owner and fair return on net tangible assets. It's the amount you'd expect
to receive from the business after deducting what you'd receive if you got a job in
the business and invested the money you'd spend on the net tangible assets
elsewhere.
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CHAPTER 4
COMPANY PROFILE
Quest Profin Advisor Private Limited(Quest) is a Mumbai based Financial Advisors
established in 1994. Quest is promoted by professionals having an experience of more
than two decades in the field of Corporate Finance and Advisory. Quest has a dedicated
team of experience. Professionals specialized in a wide range of Financial Services and
corporate Laws.
Quest is the Financial Consultancy arm of a 20-year-old firm of Chartered accountants.
They are engaged in providing Corporate Advisory services to reputed Companies in
Financial Structuring. Project Funding, Private Equity, Loan Syndication, IPO
Management, Compliance, Due Diligence and Corporate Law matters. Over the years,
they have provided their services to a number of corporate clients including MNCs, NRI
as well as Indian companies. They are a team of MBAs/ Chartered Accountants, have
handled various types of assignments involving funds raising and corporate advisory
and earned reputation for their knowledge of corporate laws, diligence and task-oriented
approach and adaptation to the latest trends in the industry.
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We will see the calculation of value of the firm via the above methods with an
example. Shown below are the income statement and balance sheet of XYZ Ltd firm.
The data for 2010-11 is given. While projections are being made for the next five
years. The valuation of the firm is being made on going concern basis.
The companys cost of capital is 15% and it is growing at 3%.
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INCOME STATEMENT
SALES
(Rs Lakhs)
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
2015-16
5813.25
7145.7
8487.51
9877.56
9999.85
7.67
8.67
8.77
8.92
9.25
9.88
Misc. Income
Total growth
5729.89
5899.51
6002.41
6700.58
8500.54
9751.84
COGS
4927.46
4001.90
5769.85
5899.49
6148.79
7459.25
Direct
158.84
208.68
255.59
289.13
315.75
389.45
5086.30
5555.53
5987.65
6217.23
7896.64
8467.26
Gross Profit
643.60
700.46
745.65
789.65
809.78
845.23
Margin
11.23%
20.09%
21.86%
28.98%
28.97%
29.87%
209.61
357.89
399.45
412.87
487.65
512.45
Total
209.61
512.58
555.89
615.89
687.89
690.87
EBITDA
433.98
513.52
587.65
412.79
587.65
642.13
Margin
107.37
158.94
168.79
245.79
278.36
301.28
EBIT
433.98
588.65
612.13
678.93
725.31
876.32
Margin
212.76
232.79
245.87
287.65
345.78
387.65
PAT
27.61
29.87
29.99
30.15
30.56
31.12
Margin
0.48%
2.82%
8.55%
9.44%
9.56%
10.38%
2010-
2011-
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Domestic
5722.23
Exports
y-o-y
expenses
Total cost of
production
Admin
and
other
expenses
depreciation
Interest
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CASHFLOW
(Rs Lakhs)
2011-12
2012-13
2013-
2014-
14
15
2015-16
NPAT
167.87
1158.83
1178.87
1247.98
1832.85
Add:
7.37
8.14
8.45
8.99
9.24
Add: Interest
143.40
135.93
128.66
121.40
114.65
Operating
318.44
1302.92
1315.98
1378.37
1956.74
504.94
2479.62
289.63
429.63
321.50
800.00
1340.94
2479.62
289.62
429.50
321.50
(862.31)
(1018.18)
1369.34
1396.28
1698.63
(749.68)
(769.82)
900.30
782.89
844.47
Depreciation
cash flow
Investment in
WC
Investment in
Gross
Fixed
Assets
Net
Investment
Free
Cash
Flow
Discounted
Cash Flow
14579.04
Value at end
of
explicit
period
7248.36
Present
Value of the
above
Present
8256.37
Enterprise
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Value
1615.28
Less:
illiquidity
discount(20%)
6605.10
Net
Valuation
Discount Rate
15%
Growth
3%
after
rate
explicit
period
Intrinsic
Value
3606.64
3062.17
Total
6668.81
Less- Liabilities
Secured Loan
1830.48
Unsecured Loan
1267.72
3571.11
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Amount
167.87
1158.23
1362.56
Average Profit
896.22
13.2%
6787.87
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7. CONCLUSION
To conclude, a valuation provides the foundation for skilled business appraisers to
estimate what your business is worth. Valuation is frequently used in setting a price for
an enterprise that is being bought or sold. Professional valuations are now also being
used by financial institutions to determine the amount of credit that should be extended
to a company, by courts in determining litigation settlement amounts and by investors in
evaluating performance of company management. Lastly, a valuation is often required
under a variety of accounting and tax regulations.
Hence there are many important reasons that business owners should know the value
of their business long before they decide to sell.
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8. BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alfred Rappaport and Michael Mauboussin (Columbia Business School): How Do You
Assess The Value of A Company's "Real Options"?
Anderson, Patrick L., "Value of Private Businesses in the United States," Business
Economics (2009) 44, 87108.
Black, Fischer; Myron Scholes (1973). "The Pricing of Options and Corporate
Liabilities". Journal of Political Economy.
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