An equipment distributor was under contract at $1.6M based on $300K in "cash flow." But: ❌ $200K in obsolete inventory was included at full value❌ Gross margins were declining—under 18%❌ Owner did sales, sourcing, and account management❌ 2 largest customers = 58% of revenue ✅ Adjusted FCF: ~$155K✅ Normalized value: ~$925K 📌 Cash flow pays … Continue reading ⚠️ Red Flag Case Study: Stale Steel and Phantom Margins
7a Business Valuation Field Notes
Welcome to 7(a) Business Valuation Field Notes — a running series of insights, strategies, and quick reads pulled directly from our content library. Designed for SBA lenders, brokers, and business buyers, these posts break down complex valuation topics into practical, bite-sized guidance you can actually use. Whether you’re navigating fair market value, tackling SOP compliance, or trying to make sense of goodwill and cash flow, this is your go-to resource for grounded valuation clarity — straight from the field.
🧠 Valuation Insight: Inventory Can’t Carry the Deal
⚙️ In equipment distribution, high revenue can be misleading if: Inventory is overvalued or slow-moving Gross margins are razor-thin Owner plays multiple critical roles (sales, procurement, ops) Customer base isn’t recurring or contract-based 📌 Don’t let top-line revenue distract from thin margins or inventory drag. Normalize cash flow, and separate inventory value from goodwill.
🎁 Resource Drop: CPA Firm Valuation Checklist
📘 We just dropped our CPA Firm Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders. Includes:✅ Personal vs. enterprise goodwill test✅ Owner comp vs. buyer comp normalization✅ Staff support + systems review✅ Seasonality and client retention analysis✅ Addbacks that don’t fly with underwriters 📩 Click here to grab your copy.
⚠️ Red Flag Case Study: The Vanishing Client List
A small firm reported $160K in free cash flow and asked $900K. But: ❌ Owner did all tax prep and client relationships❌ No W-2 staff, no CRM, no formal retention system❌ 75% of clients were friends/family/long-term loyalists❌ Buyer was new to public accounting After normalizing for owner compensation and personal goodwill risk, true value: ~$380K … Continue reading ⚠️ Red Flag Case Study: The Vanishing Client List
🧠 Valuation Insight: Goodwill ≠ Transferability
🧾 A CPA firm may show strong earnings—but is the value transferable? Red flags in accounting practice valuations: 90%+ of clients tied to the owner personally No staff or systems in place High seasonality with no retention strategy Addbacks include “off-season” travel and vehicles 📌 Goodwill must be enterprise-based, not just personal rapport. That’s what … Continue reading 🧠 Valuation Insight: Goodwill ≠ Transferability
🎁 Resource Drop: Manufacturing Valuation Checklist
📘 New for SBA lenders: Our Manufacturing Valuation Checklist Covers:✅ Owner-engineer wage adjustments✅ Customer and contract risk flags✅ CapEx vs. depreciation sanity checks✅ Asset-heavy vs. income-heavy guidance✅ Red flags from the shop floor 📩 Click here to grab your copy.
⚠️ Red Flag Case Study: $2.1M… or $1.1M?
A manufacturer claimed $490K in free cash flow and $2.1M in value. But: ❌ 70% of sales came from a single aerospace client❌ CapEx averaged $90K/year—report showed $0❌ No market replacement wage for owner-engineer❌ Machinery valued at historical cost, not FMV ✅ Final value after adjustments: $1.12M✅ Deal restructured and saved 📌 Manufacturing deals require … Continue reading ⚠️ Red Flag Case Study: $2.1M… or $1.1M?
🧠 Valuation Insight: Manufacturing Is an Asset + Cash Flow Hybrid
🏗️ Manufacturing companies can’t be valued on earnings alone—asset reinvestment, equipment age, and customer concentration matter too. 📌 Common mistakes in underwriting: Depreciated equipment valued at book value CapEx totally omitted or mismatched to reality No adjustment for single-client exposure Owner wages too low for technical oversight If you ignore the factory floor, the value’s … Continue reading 🧠 Valuation Insight: Manufacturing Is an Asset + Cash Flow Hybrid
⚠️ Red Flag Case Study: The $50K Shrinkage Surprise
A $1.1M liquor store purchase price was based on $260K in seller’s discretionary cash flow. But: ❌ Inventory was not included but was being purchased separately❌ Owner took home $80K in cash sales annually—not reported❌ No CapEx allowance for cooler replacement❌ Payroll did not include 2 working family members ❌ Over $50K of inventory constituted … Continue reading ⚠️ Red Flag Case Study: The $50K Shrinkage Surprise
🧠 Valuation Insight: Liquor Stores Aren’t Just About the Bottom Shelf
🍷 Liquor store valuations are often oversimplified—but they come with unique risks: Inventory misclassified or misvalued High reliance on cash sales or unrecorded revenue Unrealistic gross margins compared to industry benchmarks Owner’s lifestyle expenses flowing through the P&L 📌 Inventory cycles, weekend labor coverage, and shrinkage all matter when estimating cash flow.
