Tag Business Buy

Why 2012 May Be the Year to Sell Your Business

by Tim Moore, Managing Partner, TR Moore & Company

As the marketplace continues to gain momentum, primarily in the manufacturing and oil and gas sectors, TR Moore & Company is seeing increased interest in exit and growth through acquisition from our client base. And with tax hikes expected for 2013 and private equity players anxious to invest, 2012 may be the year to transact. Consider these two factors working in your favor in 2012:

Buyers Are Ready

With the capital overhang that remains and urgency by private equity investors to deploy it, we expect 2012 to remain a seller’s market. Representing possibly the largest prospective pool of business buyers today, these investors are estimated to be holding some half trillion dollars in uninvested cash. Likewise, financial buyers who sat out the economic downturn are ready to begin growing through acquisitions once again.

Taxes Are Increasing

On the tax front, a potential double whammy awaits businesses in 2013:

  1. The capital gains tax rate will rise from 15 percent to 20 percent if the Bush-era tax cuts aren’t renewed at the end 2012.
  2. Additionally, a recent Tax Policy Center blog post points out that taxpayers also face a 3.8 percent tax on investment income greater than $250,000, including capital gains on transactions, as a result of 2010’s health care reform legislation.

Together, this represents a total increase from 15 percent to nearly 25 percent in capital gains tax. Consider what the potential scenarios mean for after-tax proceeds on a business sale:

As the chart illustrates, for every $1 million in proceeds, businesses selling in 2013 face an additional $38,000 in tax due to health care reform, and another $50,000 in increased capital gains taxes – a difference of nearly $100,000.

Keep in mind that these numbers are based on a perfect sale scenario – your tax may be even greater depending on factors such as your entity type, deal structure and estate planning situation.

The bottom line is that it’s a great time to sell and there are plenty of hungry buyers for your deal. We’re looking forward to helping our sellers find the right one in 2012. 

Tim Moore is managing partner at TR Moore & Company, the Houston location of top CPA firm Doeren Mayhew. Leveraging nearly 30 years experience, Tim also leads the firm’s Mergers & Acquisitions Division, specializing in building business value, marketing companies for sale, analyzing after-tax proceeds and negotiating on behalf of the client.

Securities Offered Through Grant Williams, LP. Member FINRA & SIPC.

 

Recap: 5 Tips Surrounding an M&A Deal

“What if my competitor is trying to buy me out?” This business owner concern was among many addressed by Managing Partner Tim Moore and Certified M&A Advisor Steven Silverman during a roundtable discussion held on Nov. 11 for local entrepreneurs. Also on hand was a TR Moore & Company client who recently went through a business sell-side transaction, and shared her M&A experience and what the process entails. Insight included:

  1. Know your optimal timing. Typically, the best time to sell is when a business is on the rise. Profitability and high growth attract the buyer’s eye. In some cases, once a business has reached its peak, the buyer will begin to question how much of the business is left to grow.
  2. Be aware of perceived versus actual business value. Often when deals are on the table and the seller is experiencing rapid growth, his perception of business value changes, and deals fall through the cracks. Keep in mind that the economic and industry climates are never certain. Also, maintain accurate financial information and normalized numbers to produce a realistic valuation of the company.
  3. Always be prepared to sell. Simply said, “You never know when a buyer will come knocking with the right sale price.”  Therefore, owners should run their business in line with eventual goals to sell. Whether your timeline is 90 or 900 days, you’ll be increasing your business value to potential buyers.
  4. Consider your personal goals. There are many personal questions to ask, including, “How will selling my business contribute to my desired personal goals? Will I have enough money to live comfortably once I sell?” If you answer “yes,” then you’re ready to sell. If you answer “no,” then continue focusing on building business value.
  5. Your management team will be an important consideration. Buyers always ask, “If I buy your company, and you’re leaving, who will run the business?” Most buyers, particularly a private equity group, will want to ensure a strong management team is in place, whereas a strategic buyer may already have a team.

To be put on our invitation list for our next M&A discussion, please contact April Morgan at 713.789.7077 or via email.

Market Valuations, Trading Multiples Remain Top Owner Concerns

Attendees of M&A Insight 2011 weighed in on top challenges related to exiting their businesses at the March 31 discussion featuring panelists from Doeren Mayhew firm TR Moore & Company, Haynes and Boone, Fennebresque & Co. and Main Street Capital Corporation. With market valuations and industry trading multiples topping the list once again this year, greatest concerns included:
  1. Market valuation of my company (52%)
  2. Trading multiples for my industry (43%)
  3. Exit alternatives (38%)
  4. Value drivers (29%)
  5. Marketing my business for sale (24%)

From left: David Magdol of Main Street Capital Corporation; Thomas McCaffrey of Haynes and Boone; Tim Moore of TR Moore & Company

Panelist Tim Moore, managing partner and leader of the Mergers & Acquisitions Division at TR Moore & Company, said he sees the valuation gap between buyer and seller expectations beginning to close.

“Earnings visibility is becoming more clear to buyers, and seller expectations are coming down from the valuation multiple highs of 2006 and 2007 to more historical levels, with transactions currently completed at multiples of three to six times EBITDA,” Moore said.

In addition to exploring strategic alternatives to structure a deal, Moore also notes a buyer focus on the non-EBITDA value drivers of the business, including strengths such as management team, proprietary products and services and core assets.

“The stronger and more evident to the buyer these become, the higher multiple we are able to achieve for our sellers,” Moore said.

Panel moderator Kevin Griffin, managing director, Fennebresque & Co.

Moore noted the top value drivers businesses should consider:

  • Market position
  • Profitability as it relates to the competition
  • Diverse customer base
  • An experienced and capable management team
  • Proprietary products and services

“What we’re telling our clients is to start building these drivers back up within the business now, while you’re on the way back up,” Moore said. “What we saw a couple of years ago were businesses at maximum value, and then the market went over the edge and they missed their opportunity. Beginning to put those value drivers into place now will help ensure owners are ready to transact when their prime opportunity arises again.”

Securities Offered Through Grant Williams, LP. Member FINRA & SIPC.

SlideShare: M&A Insight 2011 – Bridging the Gap & Strategic Alternatives

Check out our slide deck from M&A Insight 2011, where local and national leaders in the mergers and acquisitions marketplace weighed in on:

  • Current M&A market trends and future outlook
  • Determining the right time to sell
  • How to bridge the price gap between buyer and seller
  • Achieving liquidity and other strategic alternatives, including selling a minority interest
  • And more

Securities Offered Through Grant Williams, LP. Member FINRA & SIPC.

Bridging the Price Gap Between Buyer & Seller: How an Earnout Can Help

by Tim Moore, CPA, Managing Partner, TR Moore & Company, A Doeren Mayhew Firm

With our M&A Insight panel covering how transactions are getting done in today’s environment only a few weeks away, I thought it was an appropriate time to talk about one strategy that can help prevent a deal from falling apart at the price negotiation stage.

An earnout provision sets a purchase price based on how well the acquired company performs after the deal closes. This allows buyers to pay less up front and sellers to potentially receive a higher amount than they otherwise might.

But earnouts can be complicated. Before you agree to structure your transaction this way, acquaint yourself with the risks.

Benefiting Both Parties

With an earnout, buyers pay only a portion of a company’s total purchase price at the deal’s closing. The balance is paid in installments as the acquired company achieves specific performance metrics and milestones that the seller and buyer have agreed on.

These milestones might involve performance in:

  • Revenue
  • Net profits
  • Cash flow
  • Earnings per share
  • Level of capacity utilization
  • The launch of new products or the acquisition of new customers

Appropriate Earnout Period

Deal participants must agree on an appropriate earnout period based on how long both parties project it will take to adequately measure the company’s performance and reach a total satisfactory estimated transaction payout. An earnout period that’s too short may encourage managers, in pursuit of short-term profitability, to neglect aspects crucial to the business’s long-term success such as product quality and customer service. But an earnout period that’s too long may drag out the process unnecessarily and delay payment to the seller.

Once performance metrics and milestones for the earnout have been set, deal participants should address potential issues that could impede the company’s ability to reach these goals after the acquisition is complete. These include a changing competitive landscape or a large-scale economic downturn. To protect against these events affecting future payments, sellers might want to consider negotiating alternative methods of measuring the company’s future performance in the earnout agreement.

When it Makes Sense

An earnout can be a good solution when sellers are confident that their company’s future performance will meet or exceed projections. Sellers, however, likely will want the company to be operated as a stand-alone unit during the earnout period. If the buyer is planning to fully integrate the acquisition into existing operations, it may be difficult to separate various functions, such as accounting and the allocation of expenditures, and to isolate performance — which will be necessary if the company is to reach the earnout agreement’s benchmarks.

While earnouts can net a higher price in the long run, sellers need to consider the possibility that they will never receive more than the closing price. The buyer could default or the company’s future performance could fail to meet the agreement’s terms. Though protections such as money in escrow or a letter of credit are options, sellers should think twice about an earnout unless they’re willing and able to accept only the initial amount.

Earnouts can be attractive to buyers who might not otherwise be able to finance a larger up-front payment. The buyer also may reap the benefits of a seller who’s motivated to reach operational or financial milestones and increase the value of the company.

Potential Power Struggles

Significant power struggles between parties also are possible. Sellers generally want input into how the company is run to help ensure it will meet performance targets. They can do this by structuring the earnout to require their consent to any significant business decisions, such as the sale or acquisition of major assets or the termination of key personnel. Buyers, on the other hand, desire the freedom to steer the business in the direction of their choosing and will want to ensure that the earnout provides them with the authority to do so.

The parties can head off another potential conflict by making sure the earnout agreement includes specific guidelines for the calculation of performance measures. A seller may choose to define control provisions in the purchase agreement to ensure buyer performance. The buyer, likewise, can implement control provisions to ensure contributions by the seller during the earnout period. The agreement also should address accounting matters that could cause discord down the line, such as allocation of the buyer’s corporate overhead, depreciation and taxes, and extraordinary events.

Sellers also should insist on protections in the event the buyer attempts to undermine the company’s performance to avoid payments. Accurate accounting and auditing methods can be tricky during an earnout, and the seller should define a process and schedule for reviewing and assessing performance as part of the purchase agreement.

Buyers, for their part, should negotiate provisions that preserve their economic interest in the business. If the seller maintains management control after the acquisition, the buyer may, for example, want to request the right to mandate the reduction of expenses if the business isn’t meeting its targets. Buyers also should be careful when agreeing to protective provisions that could force a barrier between the acquired business and other business units. This could lead to greater expenses that potentially diminish the benefits of the acquisition.

Heading Off Trouble

Earnouts can be a useful tool in getting a deal accomplished — but they aren’t without risk. Careful negotiation, attention to detail and comprehensive documentation can go a long way in eliminating risk and help achieve terms that lessen the odds for legal disputes in the future.

Tim Moore is managing partner at TR Moore & Company, where he also leads the firm’s Mergers & Acquisitions Division. To hear more insight on how buyers and sellers are bridging the price gap, register for M&A Insight 2011, where Tim will speak on a panel along with leaders from Main Street Capital Corporation, Haynes and Boone, and North Carolina investment banking firm Fennebresque & Co.

Securities Offered Through Grant Williams, LP. Member FINRA & SIPC.

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