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Preparing
a buy-sell agreement. | |
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Contemplating
the sale or purchase of a business. | |
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Handling
a gift of stock or partnership interest. | |
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Death or
disability of a shareholder or partner. | |
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Transferring
stock to an Employee Stock Ownership Trust. |
Two
major valuation considerations are market value and intrinsic value factors.
Intrinsic value factors are broken down into the following two
categories: earnings capacity and
other considerations.
This
is the preferred method. The
greater the market activity in a company’s stock, the more weight can be
placed on this method. This method
is not applicable, however, to partnerships or corporations where there has been
no trading activity. Even with
traded companies there can be serious limitations with this method, including:
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Lack of
stock transactions near the valuation date. | |
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Chance of
a manipulated market. This is one
controlled by major shareholders for their own benefit. | |
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Effect of
a boom or depression on the market price. | |
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Inability
to obtain control. This usually
occurs due to the unavailability of sufficient stock in the marketplace. |
If
the stock is traded over-the-counter or through an exchange, these prices will
prevail. The only exception is if
the amount of stock, added to the purchaser’s other holdings, will constitute
a controlling interest. That would
increase the value of the shares. If
both bid and ask prices are available, the mean price is used.
If
the fair market value cannot be determined by reference to market transactions
or to values set by arm’s length agreements, (buy-sell agreements, etc.) then
intrinsic factors must be taken into account.
The main categories under intrinsic value factors are earnings capacity,
current financial statements and other considerations.
Stock
market analysts use price earnings ratios as one of their major indicators.
A buyer is particularly concerned with the future earning power of the
company. The past earning power is
considered to estimate future earning power under these rules:
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Five
or more prior years earnings should be taken into account to predict earnings. | |
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Earning
trends (the progressive increase or decrease in net income) should be given more weight
than the average earnings for a five-year period. | |
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If
previous years show a loss (and it is not a manipulated loss), the loss should
be computed into the average. | |
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Determination
of earnings in both the year in which the valuation date occurs and later years is appropriate. | |
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Abnormal
economic periods should be considered. | |
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Abnormal
or non-recurring factors such as change in accounting methods, unusual
capital gains or losses, or heavy retirement plan contributions must be
weighted. | |
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The
salaries, employee benefits and other perquisites of shareholder officers
and their effect on earnings must be weighted. | |
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The
loss of a key person can have a dramatic effect on future earnings. |
Once
the average earning power is computed, the proper multiplier to capitalize that
power must be determined and applied. The
multiplier is directly proportional to the risk factor.
The greater the risk, the smaller the multiplier.
The best guide in determining a multiplier is to note comparable
multipliers of publicly traded companies. If
this is not possible, you might use comparable non-publicly traded companies.
After
comparable companies have been located, the average price-earnings multiplier of
their shares can be applied to the earnings of the stock to produce a valuation.
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Dividend-paying
capacity rather than previous actual paid dividends are another primary
consideration of the IRS. This is
quite close to an earnings factor. | |
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Book
value or book value-net asset factor can only be considered after it is
determined that the asset values on the books are close to their fair market
value. | |
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Too large a block or too small a block can result in a limited ability to
sell. Legal or contractual
restrictions on sale may also contribute to a lack of marketability.
There is no general rule on how large a marketability discount will apply
to a stock value. |
In
order to place the burden of proof concerning the actual value of a business in
the hands of the owner, the IRS has intentionally left the regulations vague. According to the IRS, the following relevant factors will
affect arrival at a fair market value:
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The
nature and history of the business. | |
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The
conditions and outlook for the specific industry and the general economic outlook. | |
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The
financial condition and book value of the business. | |
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The
earnings and dividend paying capacity of the corporation. | |
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Previous
sales of stock and the size of the block to be valued stock as compared
to the total outstanding stock. | |
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Comparison
of stock prices of corporations in the same or similar lines of business of
being actively traded in a free and open market, either on an organized
exchange or over-the-counter. | |
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The
existence of goodwill or the presence of other intangible value. |
A
BUSINESS EVALUATION ANALYSIS. The analysis can be
recomputed yearly to adjust for market and ownership conditions.
This
analysis provides numerical solutions incorporating the above factors, using
information that can be easily and quickly obtained.
The four methods that are averaged are:
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BOOK VALUE METHOD | |
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EARNINGS
CAPITALIZATION METHOD. | |
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STRAIGHT
CAPITALIZATION METHOD. | |
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YEARS
PURCHASE METHOD. |
The
analysis also averages all four of the above methods to arrive at a value
reflecting each of four accepted valuation formulas.
The averaging minimizes the impact that one technique might generate an
excessive value.
The
best solution to this complex situation is to arrive at an ARMS LENGTH value and
a contractual sale agreement funded with life insurance.
Determining the market value is the next best solution followed by
earnings capacity. The final
considerations are other intrinsic factors such as dividend paying capacity,
book value, marketability and goodwill.
If
the owner does not place a value on a business, the IRS will choose its own
method of valuation. This situation
rarely provides the taxpayer with a favorable solution.
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